Why Taylor Swift is Time magazine's person of the year

Taylor Swift has been named Time magazine's Person of the Year, beating out the likes of finalists Barbie, King Charles and OpenAI founder Sam Altman.

Taylor Swift performing a concert on stage in costume.

The Eras tour currently has more than 145 dates. Source: AAP / George Walker

Key Points
  • Taylor Swift has been named person of the year by Time magazine.
  • Her world tour, Eras, currently has more than 145 dates.
  • Each concert generates $19 million in revenue.
Time magazine named US pop superstar Taylor Swift as its Person of the Year, calling the musical force of nature the "hero of her own story".

Swift has smashed industry records this year with both her tour and the film of the globetrotting musical cavalcade that is estimated to bring in over $3 billion (US$2 billion) of revenue as her adoring fans flock to see her in the flesh.

"Taylor Swift found a way to transcend borders and be a source of light... Swift is the rare person who is both the writer and hero of her own story," Time editor-in-chief Sam Jacobs wrote in a statement.

"Much of what Swift accomplished in 2023 exists beyond measurement. She mapped her journey and shared the results with the world: She committed to validating the dreams, feelings, and experiences of people, especially women, who felt overlooked and regularly underestimated."
The huge $141 million (US$92.8 million) opening earlier this year of Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour film set the tone for the 33-year-old Cruel Summer singer's 2023.

Advance ticket sales for the movie topped $152 million (US$100 million) worldwide, theater operator AMC said, making it the best-selling feature-length concert film in history.

"(Fans) had to work really hard to get the tickets... I wanted to play a show that was longer than they ever thought it would be, because that makes me feel good leaving the stadium," Swift told Time.
This year, Swift's blossoming romance with Kansas City Chiefs player Travis Kelce has also brought the NFL a whole new wave of fans as her hundreds of millions of social media followers checked out the two-time SuperBowl champion.

"For building a world of her own that made a place for so many, for spinning her story into a global legend, for bringing joy to a society desperately in need of it, Taylor Swift is TIME's 2023 Person of the Year," Jacobs said.

The Eras tour currently has more than 145 dates.
Taylor Swift on stage performing a concert.
Swift has smashed industry records this year with both her tour and the film of the globetrotting musical cavalcade bringing in billions of dollars in revenue. Source: AAP / Natacha Pisarenko
According to Pollstar, the industry magazine covering the performing arts, each concert generates over $19 million (US$13 million) in revenue, which would bring the tour total to around $2.8 billion (US$1.9 billion).

No artist or group has previously crossed the symbolic billion-dollar threshold.

Swift's defining tool has proved to be social media, through which she regularly interacts with fans.
Born in Pennsylvania, Swift started writing country songs on guitar in her early teens.

Her father shifted his job in financial services to the country music capital of Nashville to allow her a chance in the industry.

After winning a growing mainstream audience for her introspective country songs, Swift switched to a thoroughly pop direction for her fifth studio album — 1989, named after her year of birth.
"What makes Swift a cultural phenomenon is not only her musical prowess and versatility but the trademark authenticity she puts on each note and verse," Forbes magazine said in an article published in October.

Time first presented its Person of the Year award in 1927.

Last year's honoree was Volodymyr Zelenskyy as well as "the spirit of Ukraine" for the resistance the country has shown in the face of Russia's invasion.

Previous selections have included US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, Martin Luther King Jr., former German chancellor Angela Merkel, Pope Francis, and climate activist Greta Thunberg.

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4 min read
Published 7 December 2023 6:43am
Updated 7 December 2023 8:33am
Source: AFP



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