Taylor Swift Just Won't Let That National Snake Day Drama Die

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Let me take you back exactly two years ago: Kanye West had just released a new song, "Famous," in which he rapped about how he's responsible for Taylor Swift's fame. He specifically said, "I made that bitch famous," a line Swift claimed she didn't know about or approve of. Fast-forward to July 17, 2016: West's wife, Kim Kardashian, uploaded a series of Snapchat videos that showed Swift having a conversation with West about "Famous." Swift said she hadn't approved of the phrase "that bitch," which the Snapchat clips corroborate, but the damage was done. Twitter users took the videos as "proof" she lied about her knowledge of "Famous," and they branded her a "snake." It was all very petty and dumb and ridiculous.

So what did Swift do? She made snakes the focal point of her Reputation album era. Ever since she dropped "Look What You Made Me Do" in August 2017, Swift's been all about the snakes: snake outfits, snake social media posts, snake images in her music videos—the works. She did this all in an attempt to reclaim her narrative, which she has. We get it! Snakes are cool now! The feud is over!

Well, not for Swift's fans, at least. They took to social media yesterday—the two-year anniversary of #SnakeGate—demanding Kardashian "apologize" to Swift for what happened. The "Delicate" singer seemingly nodded to the anniversary herself too, wearing a snakeskin-patterned bag around New York City. Of course, that could've just been a coincidence.

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But what she said during her concert last night definitely wasn't. "Happy National Snake Day: my favorite day of the year," Swift exclaimed Tuesday night while performing "LWYMMD" on her Cleveland Reputation Stadium Tour stop.

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She also opened up about #SnakeGate in May when she kicked off her tour, saying, "A couple of years ago, someone called me a snake on social media and it caught on. And then a lot of people called me a lot of names on social media. And I went through some really low times for a while because of it."

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So now we have definitive proof that, yes, Swift is still very much thinking about this hoopla. That bag might've actually been intentional, after all. Drama, drama, drama!

Here's the thing: National Snake Day is pretty much what created Swift's Reputation album, which is an absolute bop parade, so I can't be 100 percent mad at it. That being said, Swift and Kardashian should probably just let dead dogs snakes lie at this point. They both are too paid and too iconic to worry about something that happened on Snapchat years ago. Their million-dollar empires and kids and British boyfriends who low-key look like Ken dolls are far more interesting talking points, TBH. After two years it's high time for them—and their fandoms—to just shake it off.

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