Tapestry

Taylor Swift commands a huge fan base — and for some, it borders on spiritual

There’s been a fervent fan base surrounding Taylor Swift and her brand of music since she burst onto the scene in 2006. But more recently, that devotion has been taken to new heights, particularly given the record-breaking success of her worldwide Eras Tour concerts and movie.

We gravitate toward celebrities who show us our potential, says researcher

High wide shot of people dancing in a club, with the camera focused toward the stage. Screens in the room read T. Swift Dance Party.
Miri Makin started TSwift Dance Party Canada with friend Victoria Morton in 2021. The Swift-inspired events have since been held across the country. (Submitted by Miri Makin)

When Francesca Gruppuso is faced with a tough decision, she asks a question: What would Taylor Swift do?

"You either go with what your mind is saying or you go with what your heart is saying," the 21-year-old fan told CBC Radio's Tapestry.

"I find a lot of the times, go with the heart.... And I personally think that's what Taylor does all the time, is she leads with her heart."

There's been a fervent fan base surrounding Swift and her brand of music since she burst onto the scene in 2006. But more recently, that devotion has risen to new heights, particularly given the record-breaking success of her worldwide Eras Tour concerts and movie.

A woman with long hair, wearing a taylor swift t-shirt, holds a bucket of pop corn and drink cup, both with a commemorative Eras Tour print.
Francesca Gruppuso poses next to a poster of Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour concert film. The 21-year-old also has tickets to see the concert live in November 2024. (Submitted by Francesca Grupposo)

And it's a relatively common experience for that devotion to border on spiritual for some fans, according to researcher Kathleen Riddell.

"[Fans] talk about ... how they adore and worship the celebrity," Riddell, who recently completed her PhD with the University of Waterloo's religious studies department, told CBC Radio's Tapestry.

"The reason I think that they do this is that religion is really the best analogous experience in order to articulate, one, how they feel about the celebrity, but two, about their experiences with their celebrity or their fans."

Gruppuso, of Stouffville, Ont., has been a Swift fan for most of her life. Her first memory of the star goes back to the 2009 film Hannah Montana: The Movie, in which Swift had a guest role.

Swift, wearing a sky blue dress, stands in front of a display that reads Taylor Swift The Eras Tour.
Swift attends the world premiere of her concert movie Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour in Los Angeles on Oct. 11. The movie has already broken ticket sales records. (Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)

Being connected to a community of Swifties has allowed Gruppuso meet other fans from all walks of life. Swift's massive repertoire also offers a song to help her process just about anything, she says.

Those anchor points have helped Gruppuso understand herself better and even made her coming-out experience easier, for example.

"She's never afraid to write a song about anything," she said. "Whatever she experiences in life, whether it could be, you know, a good thing or a bad thing, she writes about it."

Swift dance parties held across Canada

Meanwhile, Miri Makin loves Taylor Swift's music so much, she co-founded a Toronto-based company to celebrate it.

TSwift Dance Party Canada, which started in November 2021 with co-founder Victoria Morton, organizes events across the country that bring together Swifties as a DJ exclusively spins Swift's discography — all while raising money for charity.

"I think I've always been kind of jealous that I didn't have that built-in community with people who cared about the exact same thing that I did passionately, and now I do," Makin said.

Two women with their arms around each other stand in front of a gold foil curtain.
Makin, right, and Morton co-founded TSwift Dance Party. Proceeds from the events go to charity. (Submitted by Miri Makin)

Like Gruppuso, Makin says she feels like she's grown up with Swift. Makin is two years younger than the performer, who is 33, and says it feels like many of her milestones have aligned with Swift's.

"Any time she's written an album, it's come out a year or two later, which basically means that I'm going through whatever she was going through age wise when she wrote her music," she said.

We find ourselves connected to celebrities and art when they reflect what we want to see in ourselves, says Maja Djikic, a personality psychologist and executive director of the Self-Development Laboratory at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.

Fans use an artist's work — whether it's music, a book or another creation — to positively remind themselves of their "potential."

"Somebody could look at Taylor Swift and see her immense creativity or the freedom that she expresses when she's on stage, and that part of themselves ... could be saying, 'Oh, yes, I could do that,'" Djikic told Tapestry.

The relationship fans form with celebrities can offer a sense of intimacy even if there's no expectation or belief that the star will reciprocate. That's in some ways good, she says, because there's no possibility for rejection. On the other hand, that relationship can be simply a business transaction.

WATCH | How Swift and Beyoncé are packing not just stadiums: 

Taylor Swift and Beyoncé attempt to pack movie theatres like stadiums

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Music's two reigning queens of pop are attempting to replicate their stadium-filling success with film versions of their tours in theatres. Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour arrives in theatres Friday, while Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé is set to premiere in December.

"There is this person who might have economic incentive to do things that makes us believe that there is intimacy when really there is none," Djikic said.

"This kind of cultivation of potential intimacy ... could be sort of this dark side of fandom, because I don't imagine Taylor Swift is really looking for a lot of friends among her fans."

'Lifelong commitment'

Thousands of people have turned up for Makin's Swift-themed parties. It's an audience whose members are deeply in sync with each other, Makin says.

She recalls one recent Toronto event that saw more than 3,500 Swifties take to the dance floor. During All Too Well — the 10-minute version, a fan favourite — Makin looked out over the crowd to see everyone singing along. Swaying, she put up her hands, making a heart with her fingers, just as Swift does on tour.

"And I looked out and 3,500 people — I kid you not, every single person in the entire room — within 10 seconds had put up their own hands and were all just waving in time, eyes closed, singing the lyrics at the top of their lungs," she recalled.

"You see it at a Taylor Swift concert, but other concerts I've been to, you don't even see that kind of unanimous love for someone."

Swift stands on stage, mic in one hand and her other hand on her hip, wearing a body suit with gold and silver rhinestones.
Swift's Eras Tour will land in Toronto in November 2024. (Suzanne Cordeiro/AFP/Getty Images)

Part of Swift's success in courting such a devoted fan base is through the different "eras" of her career, Riddell says. For example, Swift firmly began as a country artist before moving into pop. And recently, with her Folklore and Evermore albums, the artist leaned into a more stripped-back, folk-style sound.

Riddell, who has studied fans of deceased artists John Lennon and Johnny Cash for her PhD dissertation, says the more distinct periods a celebrity has in their career, the more fans will gravitate toward them.

"When there's such a span of different ways the fan can identify with a celebrity, it's more likely that the fan will recognize themselves in the celebrity because there is such a multitude of locations of identification," she said.

As for Gruppuso, she says that she's part of Swiftie fandom for life — regardless of what future eras have to bring.

"It's very hard to break that connection when you feel so strongly about her music and her as a person," she said. "You feel like you're going to be there for as long as she's writing music — which, based on what she said, will happen for the rest of her life.

"So that's a lifelong commitment that I am very excited to continue."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story misspelled Francesca Gruppuso's surname. It has been corrected.
    Oct 23, 2023 10:18 AM ET

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jason Vermes

Journalist

Jason Vermes is a writer and editor for CBC Radio Digital, originally from Nova Scotia and currently based in Toronto. He frequently covers topics related to the LGBTQ community and previously reported on disability and accessibility. He has also worked as an online writer and producer for CBC Radio Day 6 and Cross Country Checkup. You can reach him at jason.vermes@cbc.ca.

Produced by McKenna Hadley-Burke, Sameer Chhabra, Arman Aghbali and Theo van Beusekom