To the people calling yourselves Taylor Swift fans who showed up outside the wedding at Madison Square Garden: I’m disgusted.
None of us were invited. That was the point. It was a private event celebrating someone else’s wedding, not a fan meet-and-greet, not an Easter egg hunt, and definitely not an opportunity to chase a celebrity.
After everything that happened around Jack’s wedding rehearsals, you’d think people would’ve learned. Apparently not.
We don’t claim that behavior in this fandom. You’re not representing Swifties, you’re crossing boundaries. Privacy doesn’t disappear just because someone is famous.
A real fan wouldn’t:
• Wait outside a private wedding they weren’t invited to.
• Camp outside her homes.
• Crowd a friend’s wedding venue hoping to catch a glimpse.
• Wait outside recording studios.
• Linger outside restaurants where she’s been spotted.
• Follow her from place to place.
• Track her location in real time.
• Invade private moments with friends and family.
• Treat every public sighting like you’re entitled to her time or attention.
Supporting an artist means respecting them as a human being first. You can love Taylor, stream her music, go to her concerts, celebrate her achievements, and still respect her privacy.
If your idea of being a fan involves stalking, invading private events, or ignoring basic boundaries, that’s not fandom. That’s creepy behavior, and it gives the rest of us a bad name.












