lang="en-US">

Music | Taylor Swift: Passive-Aggressive Stalker?
Site icon Overthinking It

Taylor Swift: Passive-Aggressive Stalker?

[Today, a consideration of Taylor Swift by frequent contributor Trevor Seigler. —Ed.]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTaPVlyEQc8

By about the third or fourth time (well, maybe the three hundredth or four hundredth time) I’d heard Taylor Swift’s hit single “You Belong With Me,” I began to think she might be mentally unstable. You can’t miss the song, it’s on the radio constantly and so catchy in its own right that you’ll be unwillingly humming it to yourself for days. But the lyrics leave Ms. Swift open to the possibility that she might be some sort of passive-aggressive stalker.

Swift is one of the least disposable of the current crop of pop-teen princesses, by virtue of the fact that she writes her own songs (always a good skill to have, once the professional songwriters you once enlisted to pen your hits go away) and because she straddles pop and country audiences with equal aplomb. When she falls out of favor with one, she’ll already have a ready-made audience in the other to avoid the “crossover curse” that seems to have damned Jessica Simpson to rodeos and barbecue cook-off contests.

Her latest single, set in the insular world of teenage heartbreak, isn’t on the surface something that warrants serious consideration from rock critics, but there’s more to the tune than the bouncy girl-power-fueled beat would suggest. Swift, singing in the first person, narrates a typical tale of a boy caught between two women, the slutty head cheerleader (the other woman) and the geeky but good-hearted girl next door (Swift, literally next door in the video, but more about that later). Swift makes her case that the boy really should be with her (indeed, that he “belongs” with her), but her latent possessiveness is offset by her crippling lack of self-esteem (after all, she wears t-shirts while the cheerleader girlfriend wears short skirts. What teenage boy would go for the dweeb in the shirt, right?). The song ends upbeat but still unclear as to whether she (the dweeb) gets her man, and Swift famously penned a more melancholy version of this tale with her first single, “Tears on My Guitar,” so we can only assume that she’s still there pining for a boy who prefers the flashy thrill of the high-school cheerleader to the quiet, steady love she seems to be offering.

That’s what we’re supposed to think about the song, anyway. But multiple listens (a fact of life in the Top 40 age, where even great songs are ruined by overexposure) hints that all is not what it seems. Because I am (against my will) so familiar with the song, I don’t even need the lyrics in front of me to make this argument. That argument is this: Swift, at least within the song, is kind of a stalker.

First off, the song begins with Swift apparently overhearing the guy’s end of a telephone conversation with his girlfriend, one that isn’t going well by the fact that she can infer that the other woman is “upset” over something he said (because, in typical obsessive-speak, she doesn’t “get your humor like I do”).

Red flags should go up right away: how the hell would she know that he’s on the phone with his sweetie? Swift naturally doesn’t offer any indication of how she came to possess this knowledge, whether it was as innocent as being in the room at the time (platonic study buddy for our beleaguered “man in the middle,” perhaps) or as sinister as being right outside his window, peering in through the bushes and snooping around his trash can for relics and souvenirs she can collect, much like a stalker would.

All questions about the possible creepiness of Swift’s (as the dweeb narrator) actions seem to be answered in the next set of verses, during which she shares a lazy stroll around town with the guy. Whew, at least we now know that he’s not just some distant object of affection unaware of her existence, but an actual acquaintance and even possible friend. The fact that she remarks on how she hasn’t seen his smile in such a long while (the one that, naturally, used to light up this whole town) indicates a relationship dating back long before her creepy overhearing of the phone conversation, and we as the listener are reassured that, whatever her feelings for this boy, her intentions are not as bad as, say, tying him up in leather chains in her basement and engaging in some bondage-and-domination role play.

But the nagging sense of something being a little off is reinforced by the insistent chorus, in which Swift practically pleads with the boy that he “belongs with” her. When I first heard the song, I thought if maybe I’d heard it wrong, that Swift was actually saying “you belong TO me,” not “WITH me.” To say that someone belongs “to” you is a standard pop-song cliché, coupling with the usual romantic intentions an inherent sense of potential danger, a possessiveness that stretches back across the eons of popular recorded music. It is, in some ways, the calling card of a stalker or potential stalker, someone whose contradictory needs to control someone while also degrading their own existence leads to some truly bad news in terms of their intended “other.” The narrator in Swift’s song seems to feel unworthy of Mr. Smile Lighting Up the Whole Town, while she also plots to undermine his relationship with the cheerleader by penning a laundry list of comparisons that inevitably paint her as the more suitable choice (she’s not as free and easy with her budding sexuality as the cheerleader, naturally). There’s a hint of anger and possible revenge, in fact, if he decides he does not belong with her (or to her, as the case may be).

That element of the song shares an uneasy association with past popular songs, mostly written by men, which seem to address the same issues of control and neediness tinged with the threat of retribution if the intended object of affection doesn’t choose accordingly. ? and the Mysterios’ hit single “96 Tears,” the Rolling Stones’ “Under My Thumb,” The Police’s “Every Breath You Take” and the Beatles’ “Norwegian Wood” are the ones that come to mind for me, songs that each present a scenario in which a lover potentially scorned or just ignored by the narrator has the tables turned or is threatened implicitly with something akin to dominance and/or surveillance. The level of obsession in “You Belong with Me” is matched perhaps only by “Every Breath You Take,” and the comparison is apt: both couch their messages of love denied (and therefore insisted on) in a rhythmic beat that softens the lyrical threat by making it so darn catchy. Honestly, how many people, when they first heard Sting talking about how he’ll “be watching you,” thought “man, that’s creepy, I don’t want to hear that song anymore”?

Swift, in terms of chronology, is young enough to still be in that stage where teenage love seems so damn important that you can’t help but get carried away (indeed, it seems like all her songs have that “high school heartbreak” template that worked so well for teen idols past and present). Compared to her peers (Miley Cyrus and her mysterious doppelganger “Hannah Montana”), Swift doesn’t seem to know anything but heartbreak and misery, and this can add fuel to the fire of her passive-aggressive approach to love and relationships. She’s going in with the mindset of herself getting hurt, but damn that boy if he does to her what some other guy did before. She’ll burn him in effigy in the form of a song for being a dolt (“Tears”) or swoon over his unavailable ass despite the fact that she knows everything about him (hello, stalking?) and is the one who, according to her at least, makes him laugh every time that he wants to cry over this other girl (“Belong”). Doctor, we have a potentially disturbed patient on the third floor, page the psychiatrist…

The video adds a whole new layer of potential interpretation to the song that just isn’t there from one (or repeated) listens. In a twist worthy of Peter Sellers, Swift takes on the role not just of the misunderstood love-struck nerd next door (again, literally in the video) but also that of her chief rival, the cheerleader whose memorable short skirt is in evidence here as she lures her man away from the park bench (and nerdy Swift, her thick glasses obviously obscuring her beauty as glasses tend to do in old-time movies) into her souped-up car and attempts to swallow his tongue while the geek can only look on and plot and scheme in her head.

The psychological implications of this are easy to jump to conclusions to: in the video, Swift is both the whore and the virgin, the saint and the slut. Really, the question isn’t which girl High School Heartthrob is gonna choose, it’s which Taylor Swift he’s gonna pick. In a scenario almost certainly lifted from one or more Eighties teen comedies, the protagonist is right next door to the cute but nominally unattractive girl (you know, the kind that reads and does well in school, nursing a secret crush all the while when she’s one lover’s leap away from the boy of her dreams), while his girlfriend is always just out of the frame until she shows up to demonstrate why he really shouldn’t be with her (though I’m guessing the rewards far outweigh the moral conflict for him at this point). Swift in effect divides her personality between that of the girl she is, namely the nice girl next door who doesn’t raise any of the boy’s blood pressure and the sexy girl across town who knows how to keep her man and sees any woman as a rival (even the geeky girl next door). I suspect that the idea of having the boy as a neighbor was meant to offset the questions raised in the lyrics about “riding to your house in the middle of the night”; of course she’d ride to his house in the middle of the night if she lives right next door. Nothing immoral implied here.

I’m not a trained doctor, but I am a pop culture fiend, and so when I began to theorize about the fact that Swift plays both roles in the video, I couldn’t help but wonder when Chazz Palmenteri was gonna drop his coffee mug when he realized that Swift’s nerdy character had compiled her list of characteristics from the bulletin board directly behind him (with the nice touch of “You Belong with Me China” imprinted on the bottom of the cup). After all, this opens a whole new theory on the song, and indeed the video: can we really trust that Swift is being truthful with what she’s describing? How much of this is in her head? Is the other woman merely a figment of her imagination, or is she (the geek) projecting her fact onto her (the cheerleader) because she really, really, really, really, REALLY thinks that the boy belongs with her?

For all the double time that Swift earns as both cheerleader and good-hearted band geek (in accordance with her line about “sitting on the bleachers” while her football-playing crush is cheered on by her evil doppelganger below), her bad girl isn’t that convincing. The cheerleader just happens to hook up with another player on the team (I’m guessing this is a prerequisite of playing on the team, maybe) right after Mr. Wonderful makes a touchdown. All of this is played out right in front of Swift-as-geek, naturally conforming to her supposition that the other woman isn’t right for him. Granted, we’re talking about a three- to four-minute music video; subtlety is not required or encouraged. We have to root for or against someone within a short enough time span as it takes to walk to the fridge for a beer and back.

When the guy goes to the dance alone (indicating via poster board to the dweeb that he wished that she was going), the cheerleader makes one last cameo appearance right as the lovers-to-be see one another from a crowded high school gym decorated to suggest romance under the sea. She tries to shoehorn him into conversation while our heroine (all dolled up and minus those horrible glasses that hid her beauty) shuffles in and finally gets her man. The villain of the piece can only look on in shock and disgust, then turn away in a huff to no doubt engage some other dumb jock in some tongue hockey before the night is over. This she does with a look that suggests more “high school drama club” than “trained stage actress trying to convincingly convey a character’s motives and thoughts.” But hey, it’s not Shakespeare.

Now, I happen to believe that Ms. Swift is a genuine talent whose career (and subject matter) will only flourish with the passing of time and the added maturity that experience can bring. But I wonder if her mental state, at least as conveyed through the narrator of her latest song, might raise some red flags with potential suitors. There’s some hints of obsessive tendencies and possible issues with self-esteem that cause her to be clingy, needy, and Glen Close in “Fatal Attraction” in terms of how she deals with rejection. It’s rumored that she’s dating one of the guys from “Twilight” (no, the other one, also named “Taylor”), and for his sake I hope that she’s not as neurotic as her heroines (a female Woody Allen minus the psychoanalysis, devotion to New York, and questionable dating habits). No doubt that millions of high school seniors will dance to, and dedicate, “You Belong with Me” at their proms over the years, just as kids of a certain age probably danced to “Every Breath You Take” without a second thought. I’m not saying that Ms. Swift is a potential danger to any of her male friends, but I’d be cautious about the signals I send her way. At the very least, I could end up in one of her songs.

At the very worst, I could end up in her basement, all tied up…

[Are you going to let Trevor out of the basement? Or leave him down there. Sound off on his theory in the comments!]

Exit mobile version