I hope it's gonna make you notice.
Enjoy!
Saturday, February 28, 2009
TAYLOR SWIFT PHILLY DATE SOLD OUT
Taylor's date with Keith Urban on August 1, 2009 is offically SOLD OUT! OMIGOSH!
SOURCE
Wow.
lovelovelove
Frankie
SOURCE
Wow.
lovelovelove
Frankie
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Music City Star
Straight from the source: TSST USA
If our experience is the norm, reporters who talk to Taylor Swift get two interviews in the bargain. You get a professional entertainer, poised and practiced, who's already been the music guest on SNL and a featured performer on the Grammys before her 20th birthday. And sometimes, even in the same breath, you get a guest appearance by the not-atypical Tennessee teen you probably passed on Second Avenue without a second look.
Take the oft-raised question of whether she is really country or pop. "I don't sit down, start writing a song and freak out, and say, 'not country enough,' or 'not pop enough,' or, 'I'm going for this demographic or that demographic,' " Swift says, now rehearsing for her imminent summer tour. "I just write music. And I try not to overcomplicate things with how people might perceive it."
That's Taylor Swift the multiplatinum hit machine, who just last night was singing her anthem "Fifteen" before the music world's glitterati and a global audience. Then Taylor Swift the teenager adds an emoticon: "Y'know, it's all good."
If anyone's been able to master life as a dual citizen—teenager/celebrity, country girl/pop star, and of course singer/songwriter—it's Swift, perhaps country music's brightest hope. When her second album, Fearless, was released in November 2008, the Hendersonville 19-year-old found herself in two places at once: No. 1 on the country chart and No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200.
What got her there, says her frequent writing partner Liz Rose, is an ability to talk to her peers in their own voice without faking it. Even in writing sessions. "For about two minutes she's just...high school," says Rose, who co-wrote four songs on Fearless, including the single "You Belong With Me." "She'll be like, 'Give me some chocolate!' Then we'll close the door, and she'll say, 'OK, here's my idea.' "
Those ideas tend to be good—like the time she told Rose she wanted to write a song about Tim McGraw. The result, her first single "Tim McGraw," reached No. 6 on the country chart. Thus far, Swift has managed to flesh out her ideas without play-acting or patronizing. When she sings, "She wears short skirts / I wear T-shirts / She's cheer captain and / I'm in the bleachers" (in "You Belong With Me"), she's easy to imagine in either role. Asked the same question about Swift's genre identity, country or pop, Rose says it's immaterial.
"Taylor's heart is country," Rose says. "The fact that we ran off our younger demographic a long time ago—people should be thanking Taylor. She's brought back a lot of fans we lost that went to pop and Disney." As for Swift's crossover appeal, she says simply, "Taylor didn't ask for pop. Pop asked for Taylor."
And pop keeps asking. Swift sold more than 4 million albums in 2008. If success has given her what Koreans call kongju-byeong ("princess syndrome"), she's hiding it in a way every overnight country-pop-whatever superstar should study.
"When I'm home, I like to get to know my brother," Swift says. "Other than that, Abigail and I"—you may remember Abigail as her friend in "Fifteen" who "gave everything she had to a boy who changed his mind"—"we'll go to, like, the Old Spaghetti Factory. We literally do that. Just go to Broadway and do touristy stuff, because it's fun."
As for success, she says, "Every day feels like a bonus day for me, because I never thought I was gonna get to do this.... I've always approached it like, 'You probably won't get this, but if you're lucky, you might.' And that goes for everything."
Maybe "lucky" isn't quite the right word. Like many teenagers, Swift is big into social networking—she just happens to have, quite literally, a million friends on MySpace. She owes at least some of her success to utilizing online networks better than anyone else in country music, because it came naturally. "I love my MySpace," she says. "I'm on there all the time."
Last year, Swift spent eight weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200—the first female country artist ever to do so—and became the first artist in SoundScan history to land two albums in the year-end Top 10. What can she possibly do for an encore? Her first headlining tour, of course.
"You have to come out and see it!" she exclaims. If anything, she sounds like she might consider stapling flyers on Elliston Place the week before the show. "Putting together a tour," she says, "I think to myself, y'know, 'What if nobody shows up?' " That won't be a problem. The first show that went on sale for the Fearless Tour—at L.A.'s Staples Center—sold out in two minutes. "[That] really blew my mind," she says.
Aside from the tour, which stretches from March to October, Swift is "always writing" for an eventual third album. With one boot atop the country world and a stiletto at the top of the pops, Swift now seems as indomitable as she is unclassifiable. But she's not getting ahead of herself.
"You have to realize that you know nothing compared to what you're going to know two weeks from now," she says. "And that's just how I live my life."
xXx
Frankie
If our experience is the norm, reporters who talk to Taylor Swift get two interviews in the bargain. You get a professional entertainer, poised and practiced, who's already been the music guest on SNL and a featured performer on the Grammys before her 20th birthday. And sometimes, even in the same breath, you get a guest appearance by the not-atypical Tennessee teen you probably passed on Second Avenue without a second look.
Take the oft-raised question of whether she is really country or pop. "I don't sit down, start writing a song and freak out, and say, 'not country enough,' or 'not pop enough,' or, 'I'm going for this demographic or that demographic,' " Swift says, now rehearsing for her imminent summer tour. "I just write music. And I try not to overcomplicate things with how people might perceive it."
That's Taylor Swift the multiplatinum hit machine, who just last night was singing her anthem "Fifteen" before the music world's glitterati and a global audience. Then Taylor Swift the teenager adds an emoticon: "Y'know, it's all good."
If anyone's been able to master life as a dual citizen—teenager/celebrity, country girl/pop star, and of course singer/songwriter—it's Swift, perhaps country music's brightest hope. When her second album, Fearless, was released in November 2008, the Hendersonville 19-year-old found herself in two places at once: No. 1 on the country chart and No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200.
What got her there, says her frequent writing partner Liz Rose, is an ability to talk to her peers in their own voice without faking it. Even in writing sessions. "For about two minutes she's just...high school," says Rose, who co-wrote four songs on Fearless, including the single "You Belong With Me." "She'll be like, 'Give me some chocolate!' Then we'll close the door, and she'll say, 'OK, here's my idea.' "
Those ideas tend to be good—like the time she told Rose she wanted to write a song about Tim McGraw. The result, her first single "Tim McGraw," reached No. 6 on the country chart. Thus far, Swift has managed to flesh out her ideas without play-acting or patronizing. When she sings, "She wears short skirts / I wear T-shirts / She's cheer captain and / I'm in the bleachers" (in "You Belong With Me"), she's easy to imagine in either role. Asked the same question about Swift's genre identity, country or pop, Rose says it's immaterial.
"Taylor's heart is country," Rose says. "The fact that we ran off our younger demographic a long time ago—people should be thanking Taylor. She's brought back a lot of fans we lost that went to pop and Disney." As for Swift's crossover appeal, she says simply, "Taylor didn't ask for pop. Pop asked for Taylor."
And pop keeps asking. Swift sold more than 4 million albums in 2008. If success has given her what Koreans call kongju-byeong ("princess syndrome"), she's hiding it in a way every overnight country-pop-whatever superstar should study.
"When I'm home, I like to get to know my brother," Swift says. "Other than that, Abigail and I"—you may remember Abigail as her friend in "Fifteen" who "gave everything she had to a boy who changed his mind"—"we'll go to, like, the Old Spaghetti Factory. We literally do that. Just go to Broadway and do touristy stuff, because it's fun."
As for success, she says, "Every day feels like a bonus day for me, because I never thought I was gonna get to do this.... I've always approached it like, 'You probably won't get this, but if you're lucky, you might.' And that goes for everything."
Maybe "lucky" isn't quite the right word. Like many teenagers, Swift is big into social networking—she just happens to have, quite literally, a million friends on MySpace. She owes at least some of her success to utilizing online networks better than anyone else in country music, because it came naturally. "I love my MySpace," she says. "I'm on there all the time."
Last year, Swift spent eight weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200—the first female country artist ever to do so—and became the first artist in SoundScan history to land two albums in the year-end Top 10. What can she possibly do for an encore? Her first headlining tour, of course.
"You have to come out and see it!" she exclaims. If anything, she sounds like she might consider stapling flyers on Elliston Place the week before the show. "Putting together a tour," she says, "I think to myself, y'know, 'What if nobody shows up?' " That won't be a problem. The first show that went on sale for the Fearless Tour—at L.A.'s Staples Center—sold out in two minutes. "[That] really blew my mind," she says.
Aside from the tour, which stretches from March to October, Swift is "always writing" for an eventual third album. With one boot atop the country world and a stiletto at the top of the pops, Swift now seems as indomitable as she is unclassifiable. But she's not getting ahead of herself.
"You have to realize that you know nothing compared to what you're going to know two weeks from now," she says. "And that's just how I live my life."
xXx
Frankie
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
ROLLING STONE COVER
Taylor will be on the next cover of Rolling Stone. Here's a piece of the interview ♥!
Taylor Swift: The Story Behind Rolling Stone’s Cover Story
2/17/09, 7:00 pm EST
Photo: Cohen/WireImage
When Rolling Stone’s Vanessa Grigoriadis hung out with Taylor Swift for our new cover story (on newsstands tomorrow), she found in some ways the 19-year-old superstar is the emotional teen Swift sings about in her songs — giddy over her RS cover, passionate about junk food — and in others a savvy music-biz insider wise beyond her years. “She has a say in everything,” Grigoriadis says of the country crossover’s attention to details like where the pit should be located on her upcoming headlining tour — and who should be in it.
Grigoriadis followed Swift from the set of CSI to Faith Hill’s Los Angeles mansion to press junkets in New York and finally to Swift’s Nashville home for the story. “It’s always best to interview people on their home turf. You get to really see who they are and all aspects of their personality,” Grigordiadis says. Still, at first she found it “insanely hard” to interview Swift, as the country singer was guarded and conscious of her responses, reluctant to indulge too much about former flames, especially her ex, Joe Jonas.
But before long Swift opened up, revealing that behind her glamorous exterior lays a low-key teen. “She really is like a tomboy,” Grigoriadis says. “I asked her if she likes to get manicures and she was like ‘No, I don’t do that.’ She doesn’t go get massages, she eats crappy food,” Grigoriadis adds. “She was like, ‘Yeah, I totally am a tomboy. If I had been better at sports, I would have just been a tomboy. But I wasn’t, so I got into singing.’ ”
While pop queens like Britney Spears hid behind facades of innocence while powering up the charts, Grigoriadis believes Swift really is the “good girl” she appears to be. “For whatever reason she’s never felt a need to rebel from those values and that’s cool. I think she’s really focused on making her music and being, and she’s so involved in the songwriting and the technical aspects of it and just accessing her feelings like that,” Grigoriadis says. “She really is that girl in the tiny little bedroom at home writing songs about the things she hopes and dreams and feels.”
And though Swift is currently the queen of country pop, Grigoriadis predicts her music may change as Taylor has more life experiences and musical interactions. “Her brother introduced her to Jack White,” she points out. “I think because she’s not a manufactured product she could potentially show a broodier side on her next album,” Grigoriadis said. “You never know, I think she’s a true artist. I think you can count on her doing something different.”
So how does Swift feel about being on the cover of Rolling Stone? “She’s so excited. She said she cried. She talked about how she never went in saying that she’ll be on the cover of Rolling Stone,” Grigoriadis says. “Taylor said, ‘I would always have a dream that’s attainable and then as I’ve achieved more I would set different goals, I’m totally freaking out because all these things are happening like being on SNL and being on the cover of Rolling Stone.’ Just like all these things in her mind she’d considered the ultimate thing to happen is happening. So she said she was ‘totally freaking out.’ ”
Rolling Stone will have much more from our Taylor Swift feature over the coming days, from photos to video and more, so stay tuned to Rock Daily.
SOURCE: TSST PA
Taylor Swift: The Story Behind Rolling Stone’s Cover Story
2/17/09, 7:00 pm EST
Photo: Cohen/WireImage
When Rolling Stone’s Vanessa Grigoriadis hung out with Taylor Swift for our new cover story (on newsstands tomorrow), she found in some ways the 19-year-old superstar is the emotional teen Swift sings about in her songs — giddy over her RS cover, passionate about junk food — and in others a savvy music-biz insider wise beyond her years. “She has a say in everything,” Grigoriadis says of the country crossover’s attention to details like where the pit should be located on her upcoming headlining tour — and who should be in it.
Grigoriadis followed Swift from the set of CSI to Faith Hill’s Los Angeles mansion to press junkets in New York and finally to Swift’s Nashville home for the story. “It’s always best to interview people on their home turf. You get to really see who they are and all aspects of their personality,” Grigordiadis says. Still, at first she found it “insanely hard” to interview Swift, as the country singer was guarded and conscious of her responses, reluctant to indulge too much about former flames, especially her ex, Joe Jonas.
But before long Swift opened up, revealing that behind her glamorous exterior lays a low-key teen. “She really is like a tomboy,” Grigoriadis says. “I asked her if she likes to get manicures and she was like ‘No, I don’t do that.’ She doesn’t go get massages, she eats crappy food,” Grigoriadis adds. “She was like, ‘Yeah, I totally am a tomboy. If I had been better at sports, I would have just been a tomboy. But I wasn’t, so I got into singing.’ ”
While pop queens like Britney Spears hid behind facades of innocence while powering up the charts, Grigoriadis believes Swift really is the “good girl” she appears to be. “For whatever reason she’s never felt a need to rebel from those values and that’s cool. I think she’s really focused on making her music and being, and she’s so involved in the songwriting and the technical aspects of it and just accessing her feelings like that,” Grigoriadis says. “She really is that girl in the tiny little bedroom at home writing songs about the things she hopes and dreams and feels.”
And though Swift is currently the queen of country pop, Grigoriadis predicts her music may change as Taylor has more life experiences and musical interactions. “Her brother introduced her to Jack White,” she points out. “I think because she’s not a manufactured product she could potentially show a broodier side on her next album,” Grigoriadis said. “You never know, I think she’s a true artist. I think you can count on her doing something different.”
So how does Swift feel about being on the cover of Rolling Stone? “She’s so excited. She said she cried. She talked about how she never went in saying that she’ll be on the cover of Rolling Stone,” Grigoriadis says. “Taylor said, ‘I would always have a dream that’s attainable and then as I’ve achieved more I would set different goals, I’m totally freaking out because all these things are happening like being on SNL and being on the cover of Rolling Stone.’ Just like all these things in her mind she’d considered the ultimate thing to happen is happening. So she said she was ‘totally freaking out.’ ”
Rolling Stone will have much more from our Taylor Swift feature over the coming days, from photos to video and more, so stay tuned to Rock Daily.
SOURCE: TSST PA
On Top? Can It Get Any better?
Feb. 17, 2009 — Just when you think Taylor Swift’s done everything a new artist can do in her first three years, she proves you wrong. Now she’s reached new territory by hitting No. 1 on the USA Today Mediabase Top 40 singles chart — not the country singles, but the pop singles, where "Love Story" is now receiving more airplay than the current hits by Beyonce, Britney Spears and the All-American Rejects.
That does not signal a change in her status as one of country’s top stars. In fact, when she performed last week at San Antonio’s AT&T Center, Country Music Hall of Famer George Strait dropped by to see her.
Despite her upper-echelon status, Taylor remains down to earth as she considers her romantic future. The woman who dated a Jonas Brother and sang with Miley Cyrus on the Grammy Awards doesn’t have to have a celebrity boyfriend.
"I just want to date a nice person," she told the United Kingdom’s News Of The World. "Even if he’s a waiter in London."
Nevertheless, Taylor’s label, Big Machine Records, continues to push for more honors. The Academy of Country Music sent out electronic ballots to its members on Monday for revised voting in the Album of the Year category, and within five hours, Big Machine sent out e-mails to ACM voters offering a free download of Taylor’s Fearless album.
If Fearless ends up on the ballot — and it’s a good possibility, given that it spent eight weeks at the top of the all-genre Billboard 200 album chart — it would give Taylor three nominations total. Fearless is one of 20 albums vying for the five final-round slots, and each of the ACM’s Top 5 current nominees — Brad Paisley, Heidi Newfield, Jamey Johnson, Kenny Chesney and George Strait — have a CD in consideration for Album of the Year.
SOURCE: TSST PA and GACTV
That does not signal a change in her status as one of country’s top stars. In fact, when she performed last week at San Antonio’s AT&T Center, Country Music Hall of Famer George Strait dropped by to see her.
Despite her upper-echelon status, Taylor remains down to earth as she considers her romantic future. The woman who dated a Jonas Brother and sang with Miley Cyrus on the Grammy Awards doesn’t have to have a celebrity boyfriend.
"I just want to date a nice person," she told the United Kingdom’s News Of The World. "Even if he’s a waiter in London."
Nevertheless, Taylor’s label, Big Machine Records, continues to push for more honors. The Academy of Country Music sent out electronic ballots to its members on Monday for revised voting in the Album of the Year category, and within five hours, Big Machine sent out e-mails to ACM voters offering a free download of Taylor’s Fearless album.
If Fearless ends up on the ballot — and it’s a good possibility, given that it spent eight weeks at the top of the all-genre Billboard 200 album chart — it would give Taylor three nominations total. Fearless is one of 20 albums vying for the five final-round slots, and each of the ACM’s Top 5 current nominees — Brad Paisley, Heidi Newfield, Jamey Johnson, Kenny Chesney and George Strait — have a CD in consideration for Album of the Year.
SOURCE: TSST PA and GACTV
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Taylor Nominated!
TAYLOR nominated!
ACM nominations came out today, and Taylor is on the list! :D
TOP FEMALE VOCALIST
• Miranda Lambert
• Heidi Newfield
• Taylor Swift
• Carrie Underwood
• Lee Ann Womack
VIDEO OF THE YEAR [Award to Producer(s)/Director(s)/Artist(s)]
• 'Johnny & June' - Heidi Newfield
Producer: Karen Martin
Director: Eric Welch
• ' Just A Dream' - Carrie Underwood
Producer: Randy Brewer
Director: Roman White
• 'Love Story' - Taylor Swift
Producer: Trent Hardville
Director: Trey Fanjoy
• 'Troubadour' - George Strait
Producer: Dominic Cancilla
Director: Trey Fanjoy
• 'Waitin' On A Woman' - Brad Paisley
Producer: Mark Kalbfeld, Jim Shea
Director: Jim Shea, Peter Tilden
SOUCE: TSST PA MYSPACE
LOVE
Frankie
ACM nominations came out today, and Taylor is on the list! :D
TOP FEMALE VOCALIST
• Miranda Lambert
• Heidi Newfield
• Taylor Swift
• Carrie Underwood
• Lee Ann Womack
VIDEO OF THE YEAR [Award to Producer(s)/Director(s)/Artist(s)]
• 'Johnny & June' - Heidi Newfield
Producer: Karen Martin
Director: Eric Welch
• ' Just A Dream' - Carrie Underwood
Producer: Randy Brewer
Director: Roman White
• 'Love Story' - Taylor Swift
Producer: Trent Hardville
Director: Trey Fanjoy
• 'Troubadour' - George Strait
Producer: Dominic Cancilla
Director: Trey Fanjoy
• 'Waitin' On A Woman' - Brad Paisley
Producer: Mark Kalbfeld, Jim Shea
Director: Jim Shea, Peter Tilden
SOUCE: TSST PA MYSPACE
LOVE
Frankie
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
ACM Noms...
ACM nominations TOMORROW!
JULIANNE HOUGH, KELLIE PICKLER, LEANN RIMES, & JESSICA SIMPSON
TO ANNOUNCE NOMINEES FOR THE
44TH ANNUAL ACADEMY OF COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS
COUNTRY MUSIC’S PARTY OF THE YEAR™
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11TH, 2009
* * * * *
WHAT: A press conference announcing the nominees for the 44th ANNUAL ACADEMY OF
COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS, Country Music’s Party of the Year™, a three-hour special
produced by dick clark productions and broadcast LIVE from MGM Grand Garden Arena in
Las Vegas Sunday, April 5, 2009 at 8:00 PM live ET/delayed PT on the CBS Television
Network.
WHO: Superstars of country music JULIANNE HOUGH, KELLIE PICKLER,
LEANN RIMES, & JESSICA SIMPSON will read the nominations.
WHEN: Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
6:45 a.m. CT – Press Check-In
7:30 a.m. CT – Press Conference
WHERE: Country Music Hall of Fame ® and Museum
222 Fifth Avenue South
Nashville, TN 37208
MORE: The 44th ACADEMY OF COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS is dedicated to honoring and
showcasing the biggest names and emerging talent in the country music industry. The show
is produced for television by dick clark productions and will be broadcast LIVE from the
MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas Sunday, April 5, 2009 at 8:00 PM live ET/delayed
PT on the CBS Television Network.
SOURCE: TSST PA
Thanks Courtney!
♥
Frankie
JULIANNE HOUGH, KELLIE PICKLER, LEANN RIMES, & JESSICA SIMPSON
TO ANNOUNCE NOMINEES FOR THE
44TH ANNUAL ACADEMY OF COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS
COUNTRY MUSIC’S PARTY OF THE YEAR™
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11TH, 2009
* * * * *
WHAT: A press conference announcing the nominees for the 44th ANNUAL ACADEMY OF
COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS, Country Music’s Party of the Year™, a three-hour special
produced by dick clark productions and broadcast LIVE from MGM Grand Garden Arena in
Las Vegas Sunday, April 5, 2009 at 8:00 PM live ET/delayed PT on the CBS Television
Network.
WHO: Superstars of country music JULIANNE HOUGH, KELLIE PICKLER,
LEANN RIMES, & JESSICA SIMPSON will read the nominations.
WHEN: Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
6:45 a.m. CT – Press Check-In
7:30 a.m. CT – Press Conference
WHERE: Country Music Hall of Fame ® and Museum
222 Fifth Avenue South
Nashville, TN 37208
MORE: The 44th ACADEMY OF COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS is dedicated to honoring and
showcasing the biggest names and emerging talent in the country music industry. The show
is produced for television by dick clark productions and will be broadcast LIVE from the
MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas Sunday, April 5, 2009 at 8:00 PM live ET/delayed
PT on the CBS Television Network.
SOURCE: TSST PA
Thanks Courtney!
♥
Frankie
CSI Preview, Grammy Interviews and Sirius Radio?
Taylor to get her own station on Sirius?
Some of you might of heard a rumor about having an all Taylor Swift station for Sirius Xm and as of right now there are still talks about it and meetings to attend before the station can be launched. The new station would include interviews with Taylor, notify fans of new things going on with Taylor, Have fans call in and ask Taylor questions when she decides to stop by, reruns of all her music and play all her favorite music as well.
This is not 100% that this could be a go but its in the talks so its a start. I'll keep you posted when new headlines come out.
SOURCE: TSST PA ON MYSPACE
Here are the videos!
Some of you might of heard a rumor about having an all Taylor Swift station for Sirius Xm and as of right now there are still talks about it and meetings to attend before the station can be launched. The new station would include interviews with Taylor, notify fans of new things going on with Taylor, Have fans call in and ask Taylor questions when she decides to stop by, reruns of all her music and play all her favorite music as well.
This is not 100% that this could be a go but its in the talks so its a start. I'll keep you posted when new headlines come out.
SOURCE: TSST PA ON MYSPACE
Here are the videos!
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Grammy Photos from TSST PA
View some photos from the Grammys here! Straight from the source TSST PA!
You must be logged into MySpace to view these!
LOVE
Frankie
You must be logged into MySpace to view these!
LOVE
Frankie
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
White Horse Video Premiere
Straight from the source..TSST PA...
"CMT will host the world premiere of Taylor Swift's new video, "White Horse," immediately following the new episode of Gone Country 3, Saturday, February 7@8PM Eastern, 7PM Central. The video exclusive will be available for streaming on CMT"
YAY!
Feels like we've been waiting forever for this to come out...
lovelovelove
Frankie
"CMT will host the world premiere of Taylor Swift's new video, "White Horse," immediately following the new episode of Gone Country 3, Saturday, February 7@8PM Eastern, 7PM Central. The video exclusive will be available for streaming on CMT"
YAY!
Feels like we've been waiting forever for this to come out...
lovelovelove
Frankie
As I reported yesterday....DUET WITH MILEY
Its official....as of today it was posted on the TSST PA's webpage, I wasn't quite sure yesterday, but she is confirmed to perform the song "Fifteen" with Miley. I quote... "Cyrus told Seacrest that Swift's lyrics "are very inspiring" and hit close to home for the Disney superstar..."
Read the article on the TSST PA's site here!
Direct from the TSST PA blog "And, lest we forget, the Jonas Brothers will also be rocking the stage."
Yay...
lol
Frankie
Read the article on the TSST PA's site here!
Direct from the TSST PA blog "And, lest we forget, the Jonas Brothers will also be rocking the stage."
Yay...
lol
Frankie
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Taylor to perform at the 51st Annual Grammy Awards
Taylor is among the performers set to play at the 51st Annual Grammy Awards! She will also be doing something with Miley Cyrus...or so I've heard....
SOURCE
SOURCE
Check out these nasty comments!
The following were some comments posted by some people at TMZ.com. Read them and comment, let me know what you think of the story,.....
Monday, February 2, 2009
A Video to Keep Us Occupied
Here is a video I found on YouTube after viewing a similar one on the TSST PA MySpace page! Enjoy!
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