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Did Taylor Swift Lie When She Claimed She Quit Drinking During the Eras Tour?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

As you may already know, Taylor Swift’s drinking habits have come under scrutiny in recent weeks.

That’s mostly due to videos made by a content creator named E.B. Johnson.

Johnson’s line of inquiry began when Swifties began to allege that Taylor’s previous boyfriend, Joe Alwyn, was an alcoholic.

Taylor Swift attends the 66th GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 04, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
Taylor Swift attends the 66th GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 04, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Johnson countered that Taylor and her fiancé, Travis Kelce, seem to be pretty heavy boozers themselves/

In her previous video, Johnson noted that stories about Taylor’s alleged binge drinking date back to at least 2015.

In her latest, Johnson called into question Swift’s claim that she quit drinking in order to ensure optimal performance during the Eras Tour.

“Taylor Swift said that she stopped drinking during the Eras Tour,” Johnson began.

“In her own words, she stopped drinking after that ‘hilarious’ Grammy night because she didn’t want to do a show with a hangover.”

Johnson then pointed to several photos of Taylor drinking — usually at Kansas City Chiefs games — during the months of the Eras Tour.

“She said she quit drinking during the Eras Tour, and here’s, like, 30 pictures of her drinking during the Eras Tour. Girl’s having a good time; I won’t fault her for that,” she continued.

“You couple that with the stories about Travis,” Johnson added, pointing to a headline reading, “Travis Kelce Is Clapping Back At Claims Saying He’s ‘Always Drunk.’”

“I don’t know, man, why would she lie about drinking? She’s closing in on 40 years old. Why is she lying to her fans about having a drink if she clearly likes to have a drink? Seems a little suspicious to me,” she concluded.

For the most part, commenters seemed to agree that Taylor might have made some misleading comments about her drinking.

Taylor Swift arrives ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs v Baltimore Ravens game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on September 05, 2024 in Kansas City, Missouri.
Taylor Swift arrives ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs v Baltimore Ravens game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on September 05, 2024 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by David Eulitt/Getty Images)

“Spiraling into a mess of a person and regression of a person since April 2023,” wrote one user.

“I think she has a troubled relationship with alcohol. Her songs for a while all seemed to revolve around alcohol,” another added.

“If she has to lie about it, it’s because her drinking is actually a lot worse than what is being caught on camera,” a third chimed in.

Another person argued that the problem is not Taylor’s drinking, but the allegedly false claims that she’s made about her alcohol intake:

Singer-songwriter Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs attend the Men's Singles Final match between Taylor Fritz of the United States and Jannik Sinner of Italy on Day Fourteen of the 2024 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 08, 2024 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City.
Singer-songwriter Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs attend the Men’s Singles Final match between Taylor Fritz of the United States and Jannik Sinner of Italy on Day Fourteen of the 2024 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 08, 2024 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

“Not one person would give a f–k about how much she’s drinking if she wasn’t lying about how much she’s drinking. not one f–king person,” this commenter wrote.

Another argued that Taylor limited her boozing to tour hiatuses:

“Well these were all on her weeks long breaks, so she wasn’t really on your, no?” they commented.

As we’ve said in the past, substance abuse is a complex issue, and no one knows how much Taylor drinks or why she imbibes.

But Johnson’s certainly not incorrect when she points out that the pop icon seems to enjoy a glass of white wine.

Did Taylor Swift Lie When She Claimed She Quit Drinking During the Eras Tour? was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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5 Takeaways From the Mets Signing Bo Bichette for $126 Million

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Dolly Parton Marks 80th Birthday by Reimagining 50-Year-Old Hit With All-Star Female Lineup

In honor of Dolly Parton celebrating her 80th birthday on January 19, the country music icon has dipped into her timeless catalog to unveil a brand-new, star-studded rendition of “Light of a Clear Blue Morning.” It has been 50 years since Parton wrote this classic so to commemorate her birthday as well as this milestone, she tapped a powerhouse lineup of female hitmakers to help give it a new life.

Joining her on the fresh recording is Lainey Wilson, her goddaughter Miley Cyrus, Queen Latifah, and Reba McEntire. Parton reignites the song through the recording and music video that also features David Foster on piano and The Christ Church Choir on backing vocals. Together, these artists and musicians combine their talents to share a message that encourages everyone to spread some love and hope in their days.

Dolly Parton; Photos Courtesy of YouTube
Dolly Parton; Photos Courtesy of YouTube

“You know, we’re living in troubled and uncertain times,” the country icon states in the opening of the video. “But we can’t let the darkness in.

“It’s time to wake up,” adds Queen Latifah, before Parton continues, “because I can see the light of a clear blue morning. Can you?”

The delicate piano keys slowly build over their vocals, offering a soft, tender melody that is soon overtaken by the unmistakable sounds of each of the artists’ voices whispering through the speakers. At first, they take turns carrying out the messages of hope, freedom, and renewal before coming together with soaring harmonies and a powerful spirit.

“I can see the light of a clear blue morning/ I can see the light of a brand new day/ I can see the light of a clear blue morning/ Oh, and everything’s gonna be all right/ It’s gonna be okay,” they sing on the chorus.

Parton acknowledged that this story was penned back in 1976 when she had found herself going through a moment of personal transition. Now, five decades later, Dolly revisits it with a fresh energy, transforming the classic into a celebration of perseverance and optimism for a new generation. The arrangement, which was produced by Dolly and Kent Wells and mixed by Chris Lord-Alge, offers reminder that even after the darkest nights, brighter days are ahead.

“I wrote ‘Light of a Clear Blue Morning’ during a season when I was searching for hope, and fifty years later that message still feels just as true. As I celebrate my 80th birthday, this new version is my way of using what I’ve been blessed with to shine a little light forward, especially by sharing it with some truly incredible women,” Parton shared.

Dolly Parton; Light of a Clear Blue Morning
Dolly Parton; Light of a Clear Blue Morning

One of Parton’s collaborators, country music sensation Lainey Wilson called “Light of a Clear Blue Morning” a “powerful song.” While celebrating a career milestone of her own this week, Wilson reflected on the opportunity to be a part of this recording, stating how honored she was considering how impactful Dolly Parton has been on her musical journey.

Whenever she asked if I could be a part of this, I was like, that will never get old to me. That will never get old to me. And when I found out who else is going to be a part of the song, it’s huge for her to kind of tip her hat to me like that by allowing me to be on this incredible song that has stood the test of time, that does mean so much,” she shared honestly.

Lainey Wilson, Dolly Parton, Michelle Wilson; Photo Courtesy of Instagram
Lainey Wilson, Dolly Parton, Michelle Wilson; Photo Courtesy of Instagram

The “Somewhere Over Laredo” goes on to say that she got to spend time in the studio with Dolly while recording this track and in doing so got to be coached by one of the greatest in the genre.

“I feel like I’ve known her from another lifetime. My mama got to spend some time with her. It was just a really special day. And I do not take it for granted that I even got to just spend a few hours with that woman. Everything that she says, I put it in my pocket. Just getting to know her and just, there’s so many layers to that woman and I’m thankful to have her in my life.”

Continuing her longtime tradition of giving back, Dolly Parton has announced that all proceeds from the song and its music video will support the pediatric cancer research program at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville, Tennessee, an organization that has been a cherished partner and cause for Parton for many years.

The post Dolly Parton Marks 80th Birthday by Reimagining 50-Year-Old Hit With All-Star Female Lineup appeared first on Country Now.

​Country Now

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12 ways the Trump administration dismantled civil rights law and the foundations of inclusive democracy in its first year

The second Trump administration has weakened federal civil rights law and is shredding the foundations of America’s racially inclusive democracy. imagedepotpro, iStock/Getty Images Plus

One year after Donald Trump’s second inauguration, a pattern emerges. Across dozens of executive orders, agency memos, funding decisions and enforcement changes, the administration has weakened federal civil rights law and the foundations of the country’s racially inclusive democracy.

From the start, the U.S. was not built to include everyone equally. The Constitution protected and promoted slavery. Most states limited voting to white men. Congress restricted naturalized citizenship to “free white persons.” These choices were not accidents. They shaped who could belong and who could exercise political power, and they entrenched a racial political majority that lasted for generations.

That began to change in the 1960s. After decades of protest and pressure, Congress enacted laws that prohibited discrimination in employment, education, voting, immigration and housing.

Federal agencies were charged with enforcing those laws, collecting data to identify discrimination and conditioning public funds on compliance. These choices reshaped U.S. demographics and institutions, with the current Congress “the most racially and ethnically diverse in history,” according to the Pew Research Center. The laws did not eliminate racial inequality, but they made exclusion easier to see and harder to defend.

The first year of the second Trump administration marks a sharp reversal.

In a March 2025 speech to Congress, Trump spoke of dismantling DEI programs.

Cumulative retreat

Rather than repealing civil rights statutes outright, the administration has focused on disabling the mechanisms that make those laws work.

Drawing on over two decades of teaching and writing about civil rights and my experience directing a GW Law project on inclusive democracy, I believe this pattern reflects not isolated administrative actions but a cumulative retreat from the federal government’s role as an enforcer of civil rights law.

Over the past year, the president and his administration have taken a series of connected actions:

• On its first day in office, announced the end of all federal diversity, equity and inclusion programs, including diversity officers, equity plans and related grants and contracts.

• Shut down or sharply cut funding for federal programs aimed at reducing inequality, including offices focused on minority health, minority-owned businesses, fair federal contracting, environmental justice and closing the digital divide in broadband.

• Warned schools that diversity programs could jeopardize their federal funding, opened investigations into colleges offering scholarships to students protected under DACA – the Obama-era policy providing deportation protection for undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children – and signaled that colleges risk losing federal student aid if their accrediting agencies consider diversity.

• Revoked security clearances and access to federal buildings for employees at law firms with diversity policies. The FCC investigated media companies for promoting diversity and threatened to block mergers by companies with similar programs, leading several companies to drop their initiatives.

• Issued a government-wide memo labeling common best practices in hiring, admissions and other selection and evaluation processes – such as compiling diverse applicant pools, valuing cultural competence, considering first-generation or low-income status and seeking geographic and demographic representation – as potentially legally suspect. The memo warned that federal funding could be cut to schools, employers and state and local governments using such practices. Federal prosecutors reportedly investigated federal contractors that consider diversity, characterizing such initiatives as fraud.

• Weakened enforcement against discrimination by ordering agencies to stop using disparate impact analysis. That kind of analysis identifies disparities in outcomes, assesses whether they are justified by legitimate objectives, and intervenes when they are not. The Department of Justice, the EEOC, the National Credit Union Administration and other agencies complied and dropped disparate impact analysis. Because algorithmic systems typically operate without explicit intent, eliminating disparate impact analysis reduces federal agencies’ ability to detect and address discriminatory outcomes produced by increasingly automated government and private-sector decision-making.

Rescinded an executive order that barred discrimination by federal contractors, required steps to ensure nondiscriminatory hiring and employment, and subjected contractors to federal compliance reviews and record-keeping. This weakened a key mechanism used since 1965 to detect and remedy workplace discrimination.

A large group of people marching with signs urging passage of a civil rights bill.
Civil rights, union and religious leaders board a dedicated Pennsylvania Railroad train from New York to Washington, D.C., to march in support of the bill that would become the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Bob Parent/Getty Images

• Eliminated data used to track inequality, including rolling back guidance encouraging schools to collect data on racial disparities in discipline and special education. The administration also removed data used to identify racial disparities in environmental harms.

• Dismantled or sharply reduced civil rights offices across federal agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, the Social Security Administration and the Department of Education. About three-quarters of lawyers in the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division left.

Pressured the Smithsonian to remove exhibits about racial injustice, restored Confederate monuments and military base names, and barred schools and teacher training programs from including material the administration labeled divisive, such as unconscious bias.

• Declared English the nation’s only official language, repealed a requirement that federal agencies provide meaningful access to government programs and services for people with limited English proficiency, and prompted the General Services Admininistration and the departments of Justice, Education and other agencies to scale back language-assistance requirements and services.

Attempted to limit birthright citizenship guaranteed by the 14th Amendment, and adopted practices that treat ethnicity and non-English accents as legitimate reasons for immigration stops.

The pattern is hard to miss

Taken together, these shifts have practical consequences.

When agencies stop collecting data on racial disparities, discrimination becomes harder to detect. When disparate impact analysis is abandoned, unfair practices with no legitimate purpose go unchallenged. When diversity programs are chilled through investigations and funding threats, institutions respond by narrowing opportunity. When history and language are recast as threats to unity, truth and freedom of speech and thought are suppressed and undermined.

A crowd of people gathered at the base of the Statue of Liberty.
Lyndon Johnson at the base of the Statue of Liberty on Oct. 3, 1965, before signing the Immigration and Nationality Act, which prohibited racial discrimination in the immigration process and repealed quotas heavily favoring immigration from northern and western Europe.
LBJ Library

Administration officials argue that these steps are needed to prevent discrimination against white people, promote unity, ensure “colorblind equality” and comply with a Supreme Court decision that struck down affirmative action in college admissions. But that ruling did not ban awareness of racial inequality, or neutral policies aimed at reducing it. Many of the administration’s actions rely on broad claims of illegality without providing specific violations.

The selective nature of enforcement is also telling.

Books about racism and civil rights were removed from military libraries, while books praising Nazi ideas or claiming racial intelligence differences were left untouched. The administration suspended admissions of refugees – over 90% of whom have been from Africa, Asia and Latin America in recent years – but then reopened the refugee program for white South Africans.

One year in, the pattern is hard to miss.

The administration is not simply applying neutral rules. It is dismantling the systems that once helped the U.S. move toward a more open and equal democracy. It is replacing them with policies that selectively narrow access to economic, cultural and educational participation.

The result is not simply a change in policy, but a fundamental shift in the trajectory of American democracy.

The Conversation

Spencer Overton is the faculty director of a program at GW Law that receives grants from non-profit foundations like the David & Lucile Packard Foundation, Democracy Fund, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Teyana Taylor Performs On The Tonight Show Following Golden Globes Win

Teyana Taylor Escape Room

Last week, Teyana Taylor became a first-time Golden Globe winner for her performance in One Battle After Another. This week, she visited The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon for an interview and a performance of her song “Hard Part” featuring Lucky Daye.

“My first televised performance in a long time,” Taylor shared in a statement, “and wow it felt so good to be back… thank you Jimmy Fallon for having us and welcoming me back with so much love, warmth, and open arms. We all had a blast!!”

YouTube Video
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In the performance, Taylor and Daye sit across from each other onstage in a living room setup, trading verses about a relationship gone wrong. They join together on the chorus, singing: “Can’t believe you never said it to me/I never said it’d be еasy/But the hard part is over with it.”

“Hard Part” is featured on Taylor’s 2025 record Escape Room, which is nominated for Best R&B Album at the upcoming 68th Annual Grammy Awards. Escape Room was Taylor’s return to music following a five-year hiatus, and her first album distributed by Def Jam. Of the record, she told Variety: “I poured my heart into every layer, from the story to the sound, to capture that journey we all take through the shadows of heartbreak… and guide you toward the lightness of healing.”

Taylor additionally sat down for an interview with Fallon, where he showed off her new Golden Globe statue. The pair talked about the viral clip of Leonardo DiCaprio chatting animatedly during a commercial break, and Teyana’s quest to figure out the context behind it. Originally, she believed she “broke the Da Vinci code,” when she told Access Hollywood that Leo was talking to her about Kpop Demon Hunters, but walked back that claim after calling her co-star. “Apparently he had two KPop Demon Hunter conversations that night, so KPop Demon Hunters was just in his mouth all night!”

Shop Teyana Taylor’s Escape Room on vinyl or CD now.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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Katie Maloney Pregnant? Her Fertility Journey, Explained

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If you follow Vanderpump Rules news on social media, you’ve probably seen the headlines.

The stunning announcements report that Katie Maloney is pregnant.

Some posts even throw a curve-ball by naming a very surprising baby daddy.

A lot of fans are shocked by the news. Hopefully, we can clear the air.

Katie Maloney on WWHL
‘Vanderpump Rules’ alum Katie Maloney on ‘Watch What Happens Live.’ (Image Credit: Bravo)

Is Katie Maloney really pregnant?

In recent days, headlines have exploded across social media.

The happy reports have asserted that Katie Maloney is expecting her first child, naming the father as boyfriend Nick Martin.

After all of the attempts to conceive with cheating ex-husband Tom Schwartz, that’s a surprise after only, what, a year and a half or less of dating.

In fact, these headlines and announcements came as a surprise to so many people that the same question kept popping up:

Does Katie know?

Katie Maloney with a purple background.
On the ‘Vanderpump Rules’ aftershow, Katie Maloney talks to the camera. (Image Credit: Bravo)

By that, people are implying that Katie herself does not “know” because she isn’t pregnant.

Indeed, she hasn’t posted an announcement of a pregnancy to social media.

The Vanderpump Rules alum also didn’t make the announcement in an interview.

Where do the smiling photos come from?

Well, some are suggesting that they might be generative AI. Which means that congratulations from fans may have been a bit premature.

A dark mode reddit screenshot.
Whoops! A fan jumped the gun by sharing “news” of Katie Maloney’s pregnancy in January 2026. As the comments suggest, it’s not true. (Image Credit: Reddit)

Why would someone make up a pregnancy story?

False headlines — not misleading headlines, not plays on words, not clickbait — exist. They’ve been around for years.

We did some digging, and the original page to which many of these “joyful” social media posts linked is no longer up.

What happens is that people can make a little bit money and a lot of (brief) clout for posting deliberate misinformation.

Not correcting lies, as we here at THG are doing. Also not for simply honest mistakes.

It’s easy to get attention when you can fabricate any story that you want.

Katie Maloney on Pump Rules.
On ‘Vanderpump Rules,’ Katie Maloney seems unsure of what she’s hearing. (Image Credit: Bravo)

Several years ago, when she was still married to Tom Schwartz, Katie shared her fertility journey on the Reality Life podcast.

Over a decade ago, Katie was in a horrific accident. She fell 25 feet through a skylight.

Bones broke, her jaw was broken, and she suffered a brain injury.

About a year later, she actually became pregnant, but this was at totally the wrong time.

Katie got an abortion. She knew that she was not mentally in a place to be a good parent. Very wise of her!

Katie Maroney at a restaurant on Pump Rules.
Here, we see Katie Maloney on ‘Vanderpump Rules.’ (Image Credit: Bravo)

Her fertility journey makes this feel so … insensitive

However, when she and Tom later tried to conceive, she found herself second-guessing past decisions — even though she acknowledged that they were irrational.

During her fertility journey, she also felt a little shamed by Lisa Vanderpump, even though Lisa meant well when she asked if Katie and Tom were “trying” well enough.

Don’t say that. C’mon, folks. We all love Lisa but she does miss sometimes.

As for the false reports of Katie expecting … if you believed it, that’s normal. It’s important to double-check where a headline is coming from before you believe.

It’s also good to double-check a news story before you repeat it. How many “congratulations” messages did Katie receive this week? That sounds uncomfortable, at best.

Katie Maloney Pregnant? Her Fertility Journey, Explained was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip