Close Menu
NewsFile GH
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Showbiz
  • Odd News
  • Opinion
What's Hot

Stakeholders reassesses Ghana’s fight against child marriage, aiming for zero tolerance by 2030

PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding

GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Stakeholders reassesses Ghana’s fight against child marriage, aiming for zero tolerance by 2030
  • PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding
  • GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive
  • Solidarity visit: Ghana’s foreign minister meets Jamaican leaders, honours troops rebuilding after hurricane
  • Bawumia acknowledges indispensable role of party members; vows to tackle exclusion & neglect
  • Bank of Ghana backs cocoa sector with IFC, boosting LBCs and rural livelihoods
  • Legal advice: One signature can ruin your creative career, always get a lawyer first!
  • Legal expert urges artists to read contracts carefully, your rights, your work, your career depend on it!
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
NewsFile GH
Demo
  • Home
  • Local News

    GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive

    January 25, 2026

    GPHA Board tours key facilities, pledges stronger operations and improved maritime services

    January 25, 2026

    Ghana positions itself as Africa’s AI education hub through strategic Google partnership

    January 25, 2026

    Police bust alleged illegal mining operation, arresting 22 Togolese nationals in Savannah

    January 25, 2026

    Accra begins major clean-up as AMA demolishes illegal structures on public lands

    January 23, 2026
  • Politics

    Bawumia acknowledges indispensable role of party members; vows to tackle exclusion & neglect

    January 25, 2026

    Integrity row rocks NPP as Kpebu warns delegates against tainted presidential candidates

    January 25, 2026

    Bawumia’s policies still rescuing Ghana, even under NDC rule, Dr Zaato

    January 25, 2026

    Accountability demands patience, legality and sobriety – not political theatre, Dr Bomfeh says

    January 25, 2026

    Hassan Tampuli warns politicisation of Ken Ofori-Atta’s case undermines legal process

    January 25, 2026
  • Business

    PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding

    January 26, 2026

    Bank of Ghana backs cocoa sector with IFC, boosting LBCs and rural livelihoods

    January 25, 2026

    Karpowership Ghana marks Int’l Day of Education with Powership Tour for TTU Engineering Students

    January 24, 2026

    A vision good for the country, killed by politics – Kow Essuman justifies botched Agyapa deal

    January 24, 2026

    Government reviews PHDC performance, sets bold priorities to accelerate Ghana’s energy transformation

    January 23, 2026
  • Sports

    Black Stars to face Austria in March friendly

    January 22, 2026

    Ghana remain 72nd in FIFA rankings

    January 19, 2026

    CAF to sanction culprits as AFCON final footage reviewed

    January 19, 2026

    Asamoah Gyan reveals penalty heartbreak, redemption, and the moment that nearly ended his career

    January 17, 2026

    Ghana get Cameroon, Mali & Cape Verde in WAFCON 2026 draw

    January 15, 2026
  • Showbiz

    Legal advice: One signature can ruin your creative career, always get a lawyer first!

    January 25, 2026

    Legal expert urges artists to read contracts carefully, your rights, your work, your career depend on it!

    January 25, 2026

    Abibigromma Theatre Festival launches, celebrating theatre, culture, and Ghana’s thriving creative arts!

    January 25, 2026

    Ground Up lawyer details Kwesi Arthur contract, profit splits, image rights dispute

    January 22, 2026

    From reckless living to redemption: Vybz Kartel credits prison for spiritual awakening

    January 22, 2026
  • Odd News

    Nsawam Female Prison inmates showcase talents, proving rehabilitation thrives through discipline, culture and self-expression

    January 6, 2026

    Drunk raccoon found passed out on liquor store floor after breaking in

    December 3, 2025

    Search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 missing in 2014 to resume

    December 3, 2025

    School bans singing of KPop Demon Hunters songs

    November 17, 2025

    Why brushing teeth twice a day is not always best

    November 3, 2025
  • Opinion

    FACT CHECK: Ken Agyapong’s claim that Bawumia skipped Adenta NPP campaigns false

    January 13, 2026

    The Plate is a Right: Why access to food is not a privilege

    January 12, 2026

    From Bournemouth to the Etihad: Semenyo’s £65m leap rewrites Ghanaian football history

    January 9, 2026

    From prophecy to prosecution, Ebo Noah’s fate now rests with courts and psychiatric evaluation

    January 8, 2026

    Value for money questioned as Ghana funds multiple anti-corruption watchdogs, says Tuffour Boateng.

    January 8, 2026
NewsFile GH
Home»Showbiz»Taylor Swift blasts ‘toxic male privilege’ in music
Showbiz

Taylor Swift blasts ‘toxic male privilege’ in music

By newsfileghDecember 13, 20197 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Telegram Copy Link
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link Email

Taylor Swift was named Billboard’s woman of the decade on Thursday night – but her speech contained none of the usual award show platitudes.

Instead, the star criticised “toxic male privilege” in the music industry, championed fellow female artists and escalated her feud with Scooter Braun.

“Women in music are not allowed to coast,” she observed. “We are held at a higher, sometimes impossible-feeling, standard.”

“I’ve seen a lot,” she added.

Swift, who turned 30 on Thursday, opened her 15-minute speech by reflecting on the last decade of her career, and the struggles she had faced.

She said that in her early days, critics had speculated that “a male producer or co-writer” was the real reason for her success; or that a “savvy record label” was responsible for making her a star.

“It wasn’t,” she said pointedly. “People want to explain away a woman’s success in this industry”.

“In the last 10 years, I have watched as women in this industry are criticised and measured up to each other and picked at for their bodies, their romantic lives, their fashion,” she continued.

“Have you ever heard someone say about a male artist, ‘I really like his songs, but I don’t know what it is – there’s just something about him I don’t like?’

“No – that criticism is reserved for us.”

But Swift noted that female artists were thriving anyway, listing contemporaries like Lana Del Rey, Billie Eilish and Lizzo as examples of women who “have taken this challenge, and they have accepted it”.

“It seems like the pressure that could’ve crushed us made us into diamonds instead.”

Swift also continued her war of words with music mogul Scooter Braun, who snapped up the rights to her first six albums in June, through a private equity deal.

The star said Braun’s defenders, many of whom were in the room, were guilty of propping up “toxic male privilege” in the music industry as she vowed to fight for control of her music, saying: “I’m obviously not going willingly”.

Here are the highlights of her speech.

On Scooter Braun and losing the rights to her music

“Lately, there’s been a new shift that has affected me personally, and that I feel is a potentially harmful force in our industry. And as your resident loud person, I feel the need to bring it up: And that is the unregulated world of private equity coming in, and buying up our music, as if it is real estate, as if it’s an app, or a shoe line.

“This just happened to me without my approval, consultation, or consent. After I was denied the chance to purchase my music outright, my entire catalogue was sold to Scooter Braun’s Ithaca Holdings in a deal that I’m told was funded by the Soros family, 23 Capital and the Carlyle Group.

“Yet, to this day, none of these investors have ever bothered to contact me or my team directly, to perform their due diligence on their investment, on their investment in me, to ask how I might feel about the new owner of my art – the music I wrote, the videos I created, photos of me, my handwriting, my album designs. And of course Scooter never contacted me or my team to discuss it prior to the sale, or even when it was announced.

“I’m fairly certain he knew how I would feel about it, though, and let me just say that the definition of the toxic male privilege in our industry is people saying, ‘But he’s always been nice to me!’ when I’m raising valid concerns about artists and their right to own their music.

“Of course he’s nice to you. If you’re in this room, you have something he needs.

“The fact is that private equity is what enabled this man to think, according to his own social media post, that he could ‘buy me,’ but I’m obviously not going willingly.”

Being caught up in the ‘Swift backlash’

“When Fearless [won] album of the year at the Grammys… with that win, came criticism and backlash in 2010 that I’d never experienced before as a young, new artist.

“All of a sudden, people had doubts about my singing voice. Was it strong enough? Was I a little bit pitchy? All of a sudden, they weren’t sure if I was the one writing the songs because sometimes in the past I had had co-writers in the room.

“At that time, I couldn’t understand why this wave of harsh criticism had hit me so hard. I believe a popular headline back then was ‘A Swift Backlash,’ which is clever – you gotta give it to them.

“And now I realise that this is just what happens to a woman in music if she achieves success or power beyond people’s comfort level. I now have come to expect that with good news comes some sort of pushback, but I didn’t know that then.”

On appeasing her critics

“[After the backlash] I decided that I would be the only songwriter on my third album, Speak Now, and that I would tour constantly, work on my vocals every day, and perfect my stamina in a live show.

“I decided I would be what they said I couldn’t be.

“I didn’t know then that, soon enough, people would decide on something else I wasn’t quite doing right, and then the circle would keep going on and on, and rolling along, and I would keep accommodating, over-correcting, in an effort to appease my critics.

“They’re saying I’m dating too much in my 20s? OK, I’ll stop. I’ll just be single… for years.

“Now they’re saying my album Red is filled with too many break-up songs? OK, I’ll make one about moving to New York, and deciding that really my life is more fun with just my friends.

“Oh, they’re saying my music is changing too much for me to stay in country music? Alright, OK, here’s an entire genre shift, and a entire pop album called 1989. Oh, you heard it? Sick!”

How Lana Del Rey is ‘the most influential artist in pop’

“I’ve learned that the difference between those who can continue to create in that climate usually comes down to this: Who lets that scrutiny break them, and who just keeps making art.

“I’ve watched as one of my favourite artists of this decade, Lana Del Rey, was ruthlessly criticised in her early career, and then slowly but surely, she turned into, in my opinion, the most influential artist in pop. Her vocal stylings, her lyrics, her aesthetics. They’ve been echoed and repurposed in every corner of music, and this year, her incredible album is nominated for Album of the Year at the Grammys because she just kept making art.

“And that example should inspire all of us, that the only way forward is forward motion. That we shouldn’t let obstacles like criticism slow down the creative forces that drive us.”

Why female artists are thriving

“I see [a] fire in the newer faces in our music industry, whose work I absolutely love. I see it in Lizzo, Rosalía, Tayla Parx, Hayley Kiyoko, King Princess, Camila Cabello, Halsey, Megan Thee Stallion, Princess Nokia, Nina Nesbitt, Sigrid, Normani, H.E.R., Maggie Rogers, Becky G, Dua Lipa, Ella Mai, Billie Eilish, and so many other amazing women who are making music right now.

“Female artists in music have dominated this decade in growth, streaming, record and ticket sales, and critical acclaim. So why are we doing so well? Because we have to grow fast, we have to work this hard, we have to prove that we deserve this, and we have to top our last achievements.

“Women in music, onstage, or behind the scenes, are not allowed to coast. We are held at a higher, sometimes impossible-feeling standard. And it seems that my fellow female artists have taken this challenge, and they have accepted it. It seems like the pressure that could’ve crushed us made us into diamonds instead.”

On the future

“Lately I’ve been focusing less on doing what they say I can’t do and more on doing whatever the hell I want. Thank you for a magnificent, happy, free, confused, sometimes lonely, but mostly golden decade. I’m honoured to be here tonight, I feel very lucky to be with you, thank you so much.”

Source: BBC

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link WhatsApp

Related Posts

There’s an agenda from gospel fraternity not to push my EP – Kwabena Kwabena

June 10, 2025By newsfilegh2 Mins Read

Taylor Swift public ticket sale cancelled amid high demand

November 18, 2022By newsfilegh5 Mins Read

Queen eShun defends ‘Handcuff’ as standing for change not divorce

September 1, 2020By newsfilegh2 Mins Read
Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Recent Posts
  • Stakeholders reassesses Ghana’s fight against child marriage, aiming for zero tolerance by 2030
  • PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding
  • GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive
  • Solidarity visit: Ghana’s foreign minister meets Jamaican leaders, honours troops rebuilding after hurricane
  • Bawumia acknowledges indispensable role of party members; vows to tackle exclusion & neglect
  • Bank of Ghana backs cocoa sector with IFC, boosting LBCs and rural livelihoods
Top Posts

Stakeholders reassesses Ghana’s fight against child marriage, aiming for zero tolerance by 2030

PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding

GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive

Solidarity visit: Ghana’s foreign minister meets Jamaican leaders, honours troops rebuilding after hurricane

About Us
About Us

NewsFile Gh is a comprehensive news portal that delivers up-to-date information on a wide range of topics, including politics, business, sports, entertainment etc. It provides users with real-time news updates accessible anytime and anywhere...

Email Us: news@newsfilegh.com

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube RSS
Recent

Stakeholders reassesses Ghana’s fight against child marriage, aiming for zero tolerance by 2030

PRINPAG urged to break down inflation, FX and rates for everyday understanding

GAF dismisses report 60% applicants tested HIV positive

Most Popular

IS leader in Afghanistan ‘killed’

July 11, 2015

‘Oldest’ Koran found at UK university

July 22, 2015

Gunman in Mahama’s church for court today

July 28, 2015
© 2026 NewsFile GH. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • Politics

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.