Online talk around Taylor Swift’s “The Life of a Showgirl” album in October was disrupted by a coordinated, “narrative manipulation” effort that accused the singer of promoting Nazism and MAGA ideology, according to a new report from the behavioral intelligence startup GUDEA.
The report flagged narratives pushed by inauthentic accounts across a number of platforms, including one claiming that “Taylor Swift is a Nazi,” an accusation that served as a “catalyst for a secondary, authentic conversation” comparing Swift to self-described Nazi and Hitler-loving rapper Ye (formerly Kanye West).
Users who weren’t engaging with conspiracy theories “nevertheless entered the conversation in response to the fallout created by inauthentic users” to defend the singer and to slam the “irrationality” of such a narrative, the report found.
“The pattern of inauthentic provocation [to] authentic user discourse is a hallmark of successful narrative manipulation,” GUDEA’s report reads.
“It demonstrates how small bursts of coordinated activity can reshape cultural perception by forcing mainstream audiences to respond to extremized framing.”
The report comes months after wild interpretations of Swift’s lyrics and imagery bubbled up online, including posts that connected a lightning-bolt-like necklace in her merch store to a Nazi SS symbol.
GUDEA also found a “significant user overlap between accounts pushing the Swift ‘Nazi’ narrative” and those part of a “separate astroturf campaign” attacking Blake Lively, a friend of Swift who is involved in a sexual harassment lawsuit against her “It Ends With Us” co-star and director Justin Baldoni.

Following Swift’s album release, she was accused of making racist swipes at her fiancé Travis Kelce’s ex-girlfriend after using the word “savage” on her song “Eldest Daughter.”
Some posts tried depicting her as a “trad wife” to Kelce and claimed she promoted white supremacy with the lyrics “got the whole block looking like you” on her song “Wi$h Li$t,” despite the line appearing to make a nod to her desire to start a family with her NFL star fiancé.
Others accused her of embracing far-right ideology, despite her history of backing Democratic candidates — such as former Vice President Kamala Harris — over the years.
Georgia Paul, GUDEA’s head of customer success, speculated to Rolling Stone magazine that the narrative-pushing efforts could serve as a test run for “nefarious actors” outside of the U.S.
“[They may] have reasons to see, ‘If I can move the fan base for Taylor Swift — an icon who is this political figure, in a way — does that mean I can do it in other places?’” Paul said.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.celebrity.land ’














