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SNL’s Latest Episode Accidentally Reignited One of Taylor Swift’s Messiest Feuds

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At this point, Taylor Swift could sneeze and it’d trend for a week. Her The Life of a Showgirl era has already sparked headlines from every angle — from Adele’s rumored irritation over record-breaking sales to some fans calling her 34 album variants “exhausting” and “money-grubbing” while others are fully embracing the record-breaking album’s opulent vibe.

Now, a single T-shirt that popped up on Saturday Night Live last night has become a central point in one of the “Cancelled!” singer’s alleged feuds.

During the Oct. 11 episode, Charli XCX made a surprise appearance as part of musical guest Role Model’s performance, wearing a T-shirt that read “Max’s Kansas City.” Within minutes, social media had decided the shirt was a dig at Swift — a nod, supposedly, to Kansas City Chiefs tight end (and Swift fiancé) Travis Kelce.

But before anyone crowns this as the start of a new feud or another Easter egg in Swift’s orbit, it’s worth noting the obvious: not everything that happens on live TV is a coded message. In fact, there are a lot of non-Swift related reasons the “Von Dutch” singer could have opted for the shirt.

Some eagled-eyed SNL fans were quick to note that Role Model had already been photographed wearing the same shirt during the show’s promos earlier in the week, suggesting Charli probably just borrowed it. Still, the timing was messy: Swift’s Showgirl lyrics are already under a microscope, and her fans love a pattern.

The speculation traces back to “Actually Romantic,” a track many listeners believe takes aim at Charli’s 2024 song “Sympathy Is a Knife.” Charli’s song includes the line, “Don’t wanna see her backstage at my boyfriend’s show,” which fans connected to her now-husband George Daniel, drummer for The 1975 — and by extension, Swift’s brief connection to frontman Matty Healy. Swift’s song, meanwhile, fires back with: “I heard you call me ‘Boring Barbie’ when the coke’s got you brave / high-fived my ex and said you’re glad he ghosted me.”

For her part, Charli has denied any feud, or at least denied starting one. “There are no diss tracks on the album,” Charli XCX told New York Magazine when Brat came out last year. “People are going to think what they want to think. That song is about me and my feelings and my anxiety and the way my brain creates narratives and stories in my head when I feel insecure and how I don’t want to be in those situations physically when I feel self-doubt.”

Swift, at her Release Party of The Life of a Showgirl, described “Actually Romantic” as a “love letter to someone who hates you,” saying it’s “about realizing that someone else has kind of had a one-sided, adversarial relationship with you that you didn’t know about. And all of a sudden they start doing too much and they start letting you know that actually, you’ve been living in their head rent-free and you had no idea.”

She added: “There can be this moment where it’s unveiled to you, through things that they do that are very overt. And, as I’ve gotten older, I’ve just started to be like, ‘Oh my God, you did so much with this. It’s flattering.’”

“That is, wow, that is very, very sweet of you to think about me this much, even if it’s negative. In my industry, attention is affection, and you’ve given me a whole lot of it.”

And yet, that Max’s Kansas City shirt carries its own history: the legendary New York club where the Velvet Underground recorded a live album, and a space Charli has publicly called a creative touchstone. She’s even teased wanting to make a “Lou Reed-era” record with Clairo after her Brat era.

Could the shirt have had multiple meanings — or even been a subtle callout? Sure. Is that what actually happened? Who knows. But did the internet find a way to make it about Taylor Swift? Of course it did.

Before you go, click here for more documentaries about strong women in music.