Taylor Swift Shouts At Security Guard In Defence Of Fan At US Tour Date

The singer interrupted Bad Blood to try to defuse a situation in the crowd.

Taylor Swift wasn’t letting her show get in the way of fans’ safety during her Philadelphia concert on Saturday night.

The pop star was captured trying to defuse a situation between a security guard while in the middle of her song Bad Blood.

A TikTok video of the situation showed Taylor just starting to sing the chorus when she began to wave at the guard.

After trying to get their attention without interrupting her track, the singer sternly told the guard: “She’s fine.”

@brilayfield

hey @Taylor Swift THANK YOU from all of us on the floor for yelling at that security guard. he was a pain in the ass the entire night and the fact that this happened during #badblood made it even better 😆 PS show was PHENOMENAL 🫶🏻 Philly night 2 #taylorswift #theerastour #tswift #youneedtocalmdown #fyp #badbloodtaylorsversion

♬ original sound - Briana Layfield

“She wasn’t doing anything!” Swift shouted, before pleading, “Hey, stop!” several more times.

The fan who shared the concert video had a message for the Grammy winner, writing, “Hey @Taylor Swift THANK YOU from all of us on the floor for yelling at that security guard.”

“He was a pain in the ass the entire night and the fact that this happened during #badblood made it even better,” they went on, adding, “PS show was PHENOMENAL. Philly night 2.”

Taylor’s sold-out Eras tour has had its fair share of chaos since kicking off in Arizona in March.

Taylor Swift onstage during her Philadelphia concert on Friday.
Taylor Swift onstage during her Philadelphia concert on Friday.
Lisa Lake/TAS23 via Getty Images

The Karma singer’s split from Joe Alwyn made news in early April, completely reframing the tone of her tour.

Later that month, the star slipped backstage at her Houston concert, leaving her with a nasty gash on her hand. She deftly handled technical difficulties in Atlanta days later, and rainstorms almost stopped Swifties from crowding Nashville’s Nissan Stadium earlier this month.

Even scoring tickets turned out to be an ordeal for fans, who had to overcome a glitchy virtual queue, record-high demand and soaring prices when they first dropped last November.

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