Buckling under pressure

Orthodox Swifties … enjoy the show!

Taylor Swift greets fans before a conversation at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. Photo: Wesley Lapointe/Los Angeles Times, Getty Images via JTA
Taylor Swift greets fans before a conversation at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. Photo: Wesley Lapointe/Los Angeles Times, Getty Images via JTA

You’re On Your Own, Kid, isn’t just the name of a track on Taylor Swift’s newest album — the phrase describes the way many of the pop star’s Jewish fans were feeling after she released the dates for her upcoming tour.

This week, Shabbat-observant Swifties voiced their disappointment with the dates, which were all slated for during or just after the end of the Jewish Sabbath, on Friday or Saturday nights. There was one scheduled for April 2, a Sunday, in Arlington, Texas.

In response, Swift added eight more shows to the US leg of her tour on Friday, all on weeknights, in cities such as Philadelphia, Seattle and Los Angeles. Many applauded the additions.

Swift’s Midnights album sold over a million copies in its first week, and she is now tied with Barbra Streisand as the female artist with the most albums to top the Billboard chart. The singer will take the Jewish Haim sisters, who feature in the music video for Swift’s song Bejeweled, along for part of the tour.

JTA

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