Travis Kelce has become much more than just Taylor Swift’s guy on the Chiefs.
And her new album The Life of a Showgirl, released on October 3, is proof of that. In fact, there are a number of songs on the new 12-track album that appear to be clear homages to Taylor’s fiancé.
First on the list is Travis’ personal favorite song, “Opalite,” a reference to a crystal that is supposed to bring calm and emotional healing. Indeed, the Kansas City Chiefs player’s reveal on New Heights’ Aug. 27 episode that the third track was his no. 1 off the album should have been a hint that lyrics would be an homage to their relationship.
While Taylor sings in the song’s opening verse, “I had a bad habit of missing lovers past / My brother used to call it, ‘Eating out of the trash,’” the chorus reveals how much has changed for her.
“Never met no one like you before,” she gushes, “You had to make your own sunshine / But now the sky is opalite.”
Also, did we mention Travis’ birthstone is opal?
Another song featuring nods to Taylor and Travis’ storybook romance? The Grammy winner pays a literary tribute to her relationship with the NFL tight end in “The Fate of Ophelia,” describing how the relationship saved her from suffering the same demise as Hamlet’s tragic victim.
“You dug me out of my grave and / Saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia,” Taylor sings. “Keep it one hundred on the land, the sea, the sky / Pledge allegiance to your hands, your team, your vibes / Don't care where the hell you've been 'cause now you're mine.”
And it seems as though Travis himself featured an Easter egg to the track back in July, when he captioned a string of photos with Taylor, “Had some adventures this offseason, kept it 100.”
There’s also a much more explicit—and we mean that literally—reference to Travis in “Wood.” In addition to allusions to the NFL player’s, well, anatomy, Taylor also references his and Jason Kelce’s podcast in the chorus.
“Seems to be that you and me, we make our own luck,” she sings. “New Heights of manhood / I ain't gotta knock on wood.”
More songs that allude to her fiancé? “Eldest Daughter” references a romance between, you guessed it, an eldest daughter (Taylor) and a youngest child (Travis) while “Honey” refers to one of Travis’ pet names for the Grammy winner.
And in “Wi$h Li$t,” Taylor sings of her hopes for the future with Travis: “I just want you / Have a couple kids, got the whole block lookin’ like you / I made wishes on all of the stars / Please, God, bring me a best friend / Who I think is hot.”
It’s only natural that Travis plays a big role in Taylor’s 12th studio album. Not only has he gone from a background actor to the starring role in her personal life over the last two years, but Travis was also along for most of the ride that was the Eras Tour—the year-and-a-half-long tour that Taylor said acted as the main inspiration for this new record.
“This album was about what was going on behind the scenes in my inner life during this tour," she said during her Aug. 13 appearance on New Heights, "which was so exuberant and electric and vibrant."
She later added, “It just comes from the most infectiously joyful, wild, dramatic place I was in in my life. So that effervescence has come through on this record.”
Travis, too, spoke to the album as a kind of return to pop for Taylor after her much moodier The Tortured Poets Department—though he assured fans the installment would still feature her usual literary prowess.
“I keep listening to this album,” the athlete gushed during the podcast episode. “I know she mentioned it’s gonna be a lot more pop beats and everything, but it’s still so poetic in her melodies and her references.”
“It’s just so much fun to listen to,” he added. “I’ve been dancing all throughout the house.”
For more on the many Easter eggs across The Life of a Showgirl album’s twelve songs, read on.
1: "The Fate of Ophelia"
The opening song on Taylor Swift's The Life of a Showgirl references the character Ophelia from William Shakespeare's Hamlet, who faces a tragic fate.
According to the song's lyrics, Taylor "might've drowned in the melancholy" if she hadn't been saved by her true love.
"I heard you calling / On the megaphone," Taylor sings. "You wanna see me all alone."
The lyrics appear to be a nod to Travis Kelce calling Taylor out on his New Heights podcast for not meeting him at her Eras Tour, which is how their romance began.
"I swore loyalty to me, myself and I," the lyrics continue. "Right before you lit my sky up."
Before meeting Travis, Taylor was fresh off a breakup from Matty Healy, having declared herself one of the "independent girlies" in July 2023.
But after Travis went to her concert in Kansas City that same month, sparks began to fly.
Now, Taylor's fiancé is even in on her Easter egg game, teasing "The Fate of Ophelia" lyrics on Instagram back in July. (Had some adventures this offseason," he captioned pics with Taylor, adding, "Kept it [100].")
How does that connect to Taylor's song? Well, as the lyrics go, "You dug me out of my grave and saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia / Keep it one hundred."
2: "Elizabeth Taylor"
Taylor gives a nod to another famous showgirl, the late Elizabeth Taylor, in the second song on the album, even naming Elizabeth's favorite places, Paris' Plaza Athénée as well as Los Angeles' Musso & Frank's.
In the lyrics, Taylor also draws parallels between her and the Cleopatra actress. Like Taylor today, Elizabeth often made headlines for everything from her love life to her dazzling outfits.
But, as Taylor notes in her song, "Oftentimes it doesn't feel so glamorous to be me."
3: "Opalite"
In upbeat "Opalite," which Travis previously revealed as his favorite Showgirl song, Taylor references their love story.
After weathering her fair share of lightning strikes in relationships, now Taylor's sky is calm, it's opalite, with Travis.
"I had written down the word opalite because I learned that it's actually a manmade opal," she revealed on Capital radio. "Travis' birthstone is opal, so that I've always fixed on that, I've always loved that stone."
As for the meaning behind the synthetic glass gemstone? "I thought it was a cool metaphor that it's a manmade opal and happiness can also be manmade, too."
However, it's not without some bite, as Swifties think Taylor shaded Travis' ex Kayla Nicole in the lyrics by hinting the NFL player felt kind of like a prop in her social media pics.
"You couldn't understand it / Why you felt alone," she sings, seemingly to him. "You were in it for real / She was in her phone."
The song goes on, "You were just a pose / And don't we try to love love / And give it all we got / You finally left the table / And what a simple thought / You're starving 'til you're not."
4: "Father Figure"
While Taylor, Max Martin and Shellback are credited as Showgirl writers, the late George Michael receives a posthumous credit on "Father Figure" because the song includes an interpolation of George's 1987 track of the same name.
George's team even gave their stamp of approval, writing on Instagram Oct. 2, "Thank you @taylorswift for including George in such a special moment."
Fans speculate that the first half of the song is written from the perspective of Big Machine Records' Scott Borchetta, who sold Taylor's masters to Scooter Braun, before switching to Taylor's perspective on her reclaiming them.
Taylor herself admitted that the song was "written in character."
"That was a fun one to write," she said on BBC 1 Radio. "It's a very different way of using the idea of a father figure to king of talk about power, power structures, and the flipping of the power dynamics."
Plus, she's "pretty proud" of a specific NSFW line about making deals with the devil because "my d--k's bigger."
5: "Eldest Daughter"
We've reached track five on Showgirl, known to be the spot on an album that Taylor reserves for her most heartbreaking songs.
In "Eldest Daughter," Taylor, who Andrea Swift and Scott Swift welcomed before also becoming parents to Austin Swift, sings about navigating all of life's highs and lows, but always sticking with the ones she loves.
"Cause I'm not a bad bitch / And this isn't savage / And I'm never gonna let you down,” the lyrics note. “I'm never gonna leave you out / So many traitors / Smooth operators / But I'm never gonna break that vow."
6: "Ruin the Friendship"
Track six on Showgirl tells a story of regret over a romance that didn't quite get off the ground. The lyrics are filled with nostalgia, "Have fun, it's prom / Wilted corsage dangles from my wrist / Over his shoulder I catch a glimpse / And see...You looking at me / And it was not an invitation / But as the 50 Cent song played / Should've kissed you anyway."
Taylor's longtime best friend Abigail Anderson (of "Fifteen" fame) gets a nod in these heartbreaking lyrics of loss: "When I left school, I lost track of you / Abigail called me with the bad news / Goodbye, and we'll never know why."
Fans think the tragic song was written about her late school friend Jeff Lang, who died in 2010 and is believed to have inspired her prior song "Forever Winter."
"I didn't know / You were breakin' down / I'd fall to pieces on the floor / If you weren't around," she sings on the Red era song released from the vault in 2021. "Too young to know it gets better / I'll be summer sun for you forever / Forever winter if you go."
7: "Actually Romantic"
"Actually Romantic" is not actually about a romance, per se. Rather, it's a response to an unnamed person who, according to the lyrics, has spent a lot of time talking about Taylor.
"High-fived my ex and then you said you're glad he ghosted me," Taylor sings. "Wrote me a song saying it makes you sick to see my face / Some people might be offended / But it's actually sweet."
While Taylor rarely reveals who a song is written about, many fans on social media believe it was inspired by Charli XCX, who opened for Taylor on her Reputation Tour and is friends with Taylor's ex Matty and his fiancée Gabbriette Bechtel.
When Charli—who is married to Matty’s The 1975 bandmate George Daniel—released brat in June 2024, there was speculation that her song "Sympathy is a Knife" threw shade at Taylor. However, two months later, Taylor seemed to put rumors to rest by sharing her praise for Charli.
“I’ve been blown away by Charli’s melodic sensibilities since I first heard ‘Stay Away’ in 2011,” Taylor told New York magazine in an article published Aug. 26. “Her writing is surreal and inventive, always. She just takes a song to places you wouldn’t expect it to go, and she’s been doing it consistently for over a decade. I love to see hard work like that pay off."
Another easter egg it could be about Charli? The Spotify cover image shows Taylor holding an apple, the title of Charli's 2024 viral song.
E! News has reached out to reps for comment on the speculation and has not heard back.
8: "Wish List"
On the very top of Taylor's wish list? A forever with Travis. That includes starting a family.
"I just want you," she sings. "Have a couple kids / Got the whole block looking like you."
The artist even admitted it's one of her favorite tracks on the album.
"That was the one that made me know we were done with the record," she told Magic radio. "It's really emotional. It's a very accurate stance on where I'm at in life. So, it was a feeling of, 'We're done now.'"
9: "Wood"
According to Taylor, wishing on a star "never did me any good" when it came to love. But now, with Travis, she doesn't even need to knock on wood.
"Girls, I don't need to catch the bouquet," she notes in the lyrics, "to know a hard rock is on the way."
And she was right. Taylor and Travis announced their engagement in August 2025 after two years of dating.
The song—which contains many sexual innuendos—also includes a nod to New Heights, which Taylor credits for the start of their relationship.
10: "Cancelled!"
In track 10, Taylor is taking someone under her wing after they've been canceled, something she too has experienced.
"Come with me, when they see us they'll run," she advises. "Something wicked this way comes / Good thing I like my friends cancelled / I like 'em cloaked in Gucci and in scandal."
Fans have speculated the track may nod to her controversial friendships with Brittany Mahomes or Blake Lively.
For the singer, she shared it's rooted in her empathy after experiencing her own public downfall, likely referring to the Kim Kardashian and Kanye West feud of 2016.
"Having had my own experiences with mass judgment and being at the center of many dramatic, scandalous moments in my career, where people were all weighing in at once or at least it felt like that," she told Amazon Music, "having had those experiences, it makes me move through the world a little bit differently."
Taylor continued, "And when other people go through it, you find yourself thinking about how they're probably gonna get smarter because of this. If they can get through it, if they can be tough enough, they can actually learn some things through this process."
"Cancelled!" is ultimately about "how I don't just naturally cast people aside just because other people decide they don't like them. I make my own decisions about people based on how they treat me within my life and their actions."
11: "Honey"
"Honey" is as sweet as it sounds. In the 11th track, Taylor sings about how Travis has been able to redefine her vocabulary. Instead of having bad memories tied to words like "honey" and "sweetheart," Taylor now thinks of Travis.
"Redefine all of those blues / When you say 'honey,'" Taylor croons. "Summertime spritz, pink skies / You can call me 'honey' if you want / Because I'm the one you want."
In fact, Travis did call Taylor "sweetie" during her debut appearance on New Heights in August.
12: "The Life of a Showgirl" (Featuring Sabrina Carpenter)
For her final act, Taylor teamed up with friend Sabrina Carpenter.
The lyrics tie together with "Elizabeth Taylor," giving a glimpse behind-the-scenes of a showgirl. While it may seem glamorous, there's always a price to pay, and the seasoned showgirl has to let the budding star know.
And the lyrics paint a picture, "She said, 'I'd sell my soul to have a taste of a magnificent life, that's all mine' / But that's not what showgirls get / They leave us for dead."
In the end, after learning about the life of a showgirl, they join together for a final bow, "That's our show / We love you so much, goodnight!"
"It's a song about meeting one of your idols and instead of being what you thought they would be, they warn you against following in their footsteps, because they just want to be honest with you about how hard this industry is," she told Magic radio. "And you do it anyway."