Pennsylvania Jeweler Created Custom Friendship Bracelet For Taylor Swift From Travis Kelce
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JANUARY 28: Travis Kelce #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs celebrates with Taylor Swift after a 17-10 victory against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship Game at M&T Bank Stadium on January 28, 2024 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)
It all started here! Pennsylvania jeweler created a custom friendship bracelet for Taylor Swift from Travis Kelce. Taylor Swift grew up in Reading, and even though she moved to Nashville when she was 11, she’s keeping Pennsylvania close to her heart.
We all know the story by now. Travis Kelce went to see Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Kansas City in July 2023. He said on his New Heights podcast that wanted to give her the friendship bracelet he made for her with his number on it, but she didn’t meet anyone, or “at least she didn’t want to meet me.” The clip of Travis telling Jason Kelce the story went viral, and from what both Taylor and Travis said, Taylor got his number, texted him, and the rest is history. As Taylor even said in her Time Magazine Person of the Year article, “This all started when Travis very adorably put me on blast on his podcast, which I thought was metal as hell.”
Fast forward to this past weekend, 6 months after that podcast episode (which aired at the end of July), Taylor was on the field in Baltimore to celebrate Travis and the Kansas City Chiefs AFC championship win to head to the Super Bowl once again. Some people noticed her very specific Chief’s jewelry – a necklace, a #87 ring, and a bracelet. Well, it turns out, the bracelet was a very specific gift. A custom diamond tennis bracelet from Travis to Taylor, made by a jewelry company in Lancaster, PA!
The company is called Wove and they are a female-based company located in Lancaster. Needless to say, their sales went through the roof. From the Philadelphia Inquirer: “Within a 24-hour period, we saw a 2,260% increase in site traffic,” said Susan Bali, head of marketing at Wove. Sales jumped 477% that day, too. “We made the bracelet late last year for Travis [to give Taylor] and had we’ve been keeping it under wraps for a while. As soon as she wore it, the internet went crazy. From Sunday night until today [Tuesday] it’s been a whirlwind.”
What is so romantic is that Travis also had a bigger version made for himself as well! Matching custom friendship bracelets! So cute and so thoughtful!
17 Times the Grammys Got Record of the Year Wrong
The general field categories at the Grammys always seem to cause the most debate. In its history, one of the most highly debated categories has been Record of the Year.
Per the Recording Academy, the screening criteria for Record of the Year are the following:
“Recordings entered for consideration in this Category should represent the best overall achievement. The elements to be considered are the performance, production and engineering; secondary elements for consideration are songwriting/composition, arranging and performance of the backup vocalists and musicians, as applicable”
Clearly, all of those elements are subjective. Everyone has different ideas on what constitutes greatness in those elements. However, not every choice for Record of the Year has aged well.
We combed through all of the Record of the Year nominees and winners throughout the entire history of the Grammy Awards. Our list below spans seven decades, from the 1960s to the 2020s. Admittedly, we side with the Recording Academy on many of their Record of the Year choices. Despite this, there were some years we took issue with the song that was awarded this prestigious honor.
Many of our choices below certainly benefit from hindsight. The Grammy Awards are often a snapshot in time, and they can’t account for how well songs age. Meanwhile, some of the past Record of the Year winners can be viewed as “emotional” wins and honor certain artists posthumously.
Without further ado, here are 17 times we think the Grammys got Record of the Year wrong.
The 2024 GRAMMYs, officially known as the 66th GRAMMY Awards, will air live (8:00-11:30 PM, LIVE ET/5:00-8:30 PM, LIVE PT) on the CBS Television Network and will stream on Paramount+ (live and on demand for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers, or on demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the special airs).
Nicole Michalik is the afternoon drive host on 925XTU. She has been with the station for the past 5 years and was named CRS New Face of Country Music. Nicole always had a strong love for pop-culture and has been working in entertainment since her college internship. As a content creator for 925XTU, Nicole writes articles on Philly happenings, sports, celebrity relationships, pop culture moments and anything else she finds fun and exciting!