Unsplash
By Hannah Van De Peer
A Taylor Swift superfan has analyzed the lyrics of each song from her new album – and says her Charli XCX ‘disstrack’ is “just a fun joke.”
Claire O’Malley, 31, has been a Swiftie since the age of 11, when Taylor released ‘Teardrops on My Guitar’ from her debut self-titled album.
She first listened to the superstar’s newest release, “The Life of a Showgirl” as soon as she woke up this morning (3) – and has already noted down annotations on every song.
Having graduated with a master’s degree in literature from Trinity College, Dublin, in 2022, Claire’s hobby is to analyze her idol’s lyrics in forensic detail.
The 31-year-old believes the album explores Taylor’s life behind-the-scenes, including her relationship with Travis Kelce, the end of her fling with Matty Healy and the pressure to keep up a “facade of perfection.”
But when it comes to the album’s most “controversial” track so far, “Actually Romantic,” which allegedly hits out at fellow singer Charli XCX, Claire says it’s “just tongue in cheek” – and people shouldn’t take it so seriously.
Claire, an international education group director from Dublin, said: “Everyone likes to see people fighting and gossiping – but I think [the song] is more tongue-in-cheek.
“It’s just one part of an album telling a story about heartbreak, happiness, joy and betrayal.
“She’s giving us a glimpse behind the curtain – what it’s like to be world famous.”
Claire previously created a 78-page Google Document analysing Taylor’s 2024 offering ‘The Tortured Poet’s Department,’ which seemingly explored her relationship with Matty Healy in-depth.
While she hasn’t had time to put a document together today, she has “scribbled down” some thoughts about some of the songs, including ‘The Fate of Ophelia,’ ‘Actually Romantic’ and title track ‘The Life of a Showgirl,’ which features Sabrina Carpenter.
“It really picks up from where ‘Tortured Poets’ left off,” Claire said.
“The previous album depicted a break in Taylor’s psyche – due to her whirlwind romance, which the listener presumed was with Matty Healy.
“That relationship really broke her – and ‘Showgirl’ takes place immediately after that.”
Claire’s analysis of track one, ‘The Fate of Ophelia,’ explores the “death” of Taylor’s love life after breaking up with her ex.
She linked the title’s subject, Ophelia, to the Shakespearean character of the same name, and her mental decline throughout ‘Hamlet.’
“Ophelia in Hamlet was rejected by her lover – and she actually has a psychotic break,” Claire said.
“The actual fate of Ophelia in the play is that she dies.
“Taylor talks in this song about how her love life essentially ‘died’ – but now she has a new person, Travis Kelce, who prevents her from coming to Ophelia’s fate.
“It’s just such a good transition.”
The education director also says her favourite song from the album in the title track.
She added: “Taylor speaks through another character – Kitty, a showgirl – who tells Taylor it isn’t easy, and her life isn’t perfect.
“It’s essentially Taylor speaking through Kitty, to us, the listener.
“Plus, the song features Sabrina Carpenter – I love Sabrina Carpenter.”
One of the album’s “biggest” talking points is the track ‘Actually Romantic,’ which fans believe is a reply to Charli XCX.
The song includes the lyric: “I heard you call me ‘Boring Barbie’ when the coke’s got you brave.”
The ‘Brat’ singer allegedly wrote her song, ‘Sympathy is a Knife,’ about comparing herself to Taylor when the pair began operating in the same social circles.
Rosa Rafael
Charli’s lyrics, including ‘This one girl taps my insecurities/Don’t know if it’s real or if I’m spiraling,’ have been interpreted as a confession about her relationship with Taylor.
But Claire, who has listened to ‘Actually Romantic’ in full, says she doesn’t know why people are calling it a ‘diss track’ – and it’s just a lighthearted take on the situation.
“I’ve seen a lot of articles about this ‘diss’ – and, don’t get me wrong, it does seem to be a reply to Charli XCX,” she said.
“But I think what Taylor did here was really clever – ‘Actually Romantic’ is a song about taking cloaked insults as more of a compliment and even attraction.
“The guitar and drums even, funnily enough, remind me of another song – ‘Gives you Hell’ by the All American Rejects – which says ‘when you see my face, hope it gives you hell.’
“It’s just an added layer of it being a tongue-in-cheek song, not a serious ‘diss’ track.”