logo
Patrick Mahomes Reveals What Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Did Right After Podcast Filming

Patrick Mahomes Reveals What Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Did Right After Podcast Filming

Yahoo7 hours ago
The Gist
Patrick Mahomes spilled some surprising behind-the-scenes details about Taylor Swift's album announcement, in addition to revealing how he found out, on August 13.
While speaking during a Kansas City Chiefs interview, the quarterback also shared the surprising thing that Swift and Kelce did right after they finished filming the New Heights podcast.
Swift will share more details about her twelfth album, The Life of a Showgirl, on New Heights on Wednesday night.
The Swiftdom has been in an uproar since Taylor Swift announced her long-awaited twelfth album, aka TS12, on none other than her boyfriend Travis Kelce's New Heights podcast. As Swifties comb through every teaser video for The Life of a Showgirl Easter eggs, Patrick Mahomes spilled behind-the-scenes details about the announcement while revealing how he first found out about Swift's album reveal.
During a Kansas City Chiefs media Q&A on August 13, Mahomes shared the surprising first thing that Swift and Kelce did once they finished filming their New Heights podcast episode. 'I knew before y'all did, just because they called me after the podcast," the 'surprised' Kansas City Chiefs quarterback revealed, clarifying that it was actually his wife Brittany Mahomes that the couple reached out to first. "They didn't call me, they called Brittany, and I was like, in the back of the FaceTime.'
Mahomes's comment might surprise fans, as the once-inseparable Taylor and Brittany haven't been spotted together since the Super Bowl. However, the athlete's latest comment seems to suggest the pair are still as close as ever—and Mahomes confirmed that he and Brittany will be turning in on Wednesday night to watch the podcast.
'I'm obviously super excited," Patrick said, adding, "Just knowing Taylor and seeing the process from just a little bit closer of how she makes the albums, it's going to be amazing because of how much work she puts into it.' He also shared his approval for Swift choosing to debut her album news on the New Heights podcast alongside Travis and his brother Jason Kelce, explaining,"I feel like she can be herself and showcase who she is.'
"I haven't seen it yet, I've seen a little bit of clips like everybody else, but I'll be tuned in tonight so I'll have something to watch on this night off I have," Mahomes added.
Read the original article on InStyle
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Back to School: How Teachers Can Use AI to Create Assignments Students Actually Want to Do
Back to School: How Teachers Can Use AI to Create Assignments Students Actually Want to Do

CNET

time29 minutes ago

  • CNET

Back to School: How Teachers Can Use AI to Create Assignments Students Actually Want to Do

As a college professor, I know that getting students excited about the work I have to grade later can be one of the more frustrating things about teaching. But when an assignment hits the right chord, it has the potential to inspire students and affect your classroom, the whole school and beyond. Reconciling the curriculum and assignments with standards and learning objectives sometimes established out of a teacher's control can sap the creative side of your brain. Here's how artificial intelligence can help broaden your horizons when trying to create assignments that make a lasting impression and keep your classroom excited about learning. (And for more AI tips for the back-to-school season, check out CNET's guides on how students can use AI to manage their time, how to use AI to write an email to your teacher and more on how I use AI as a college professor.) Since there will need to be a fair bit of refinement to create an assignment that is both fun to complete for students and fun to review and grade for educators, I've used ChatGPT, the AI chatbot that uses machine learning and large language models to generate conversational style answers to search queries, so that I could go back and forth brainstorming ideas. (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET's parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.) Maintaining student and teacher sanity My area of study is media and communications, so for this example I'm putting together an assignment on media literacy, or the ability to think and interact critically with everything from TikTok content to front-page news. The goal is to create an assignment that's fun, collaborative and impactful for college students who interact heavily with digital media but might not be questioning what they're consuming. The secondary goal was to create an assignment I won't hate myself for creating when it comes time to grade it. On my first attempt, ChatGPT gave me a fully built-out assignment according to specific learning objectives around media literacy for college-level students, but it was about as fun as you'd think writing a 500-word essay on media literacy might be -- not fun at all. Refine for fun, focus and collaboration Since this assignment is in part about getting students to actually interact with media online in a way that's more impactful than just lurking or liking from the digital shadows, I refined the prompt to include using the student body in the assignment somehow and requested less emphasis on written analysis that will ultimately only be seen and evaluated by the teacher. Here's what it came back with: I was actually impressed -- not only did ChatGPT have students interacting with and analyzing media, but it also created a multi-layered assignment that gave students the opportunity to see firsthand the impact media literacy can make on a community as well as an individual. This assignment would also be a darn sight more enjoyable to grade than 30 to 50 500-word analytical essays about whether the source of a Brat summer post on TikTok can be trusted. Finally, ChatGPT offered submission requirements (like linking to the social media content used in completing the assignment and screenshots of the online interactions) and grading criteria for the assignment and even some examples of how the assignment might be executed. Its example in particular about analyzing the role of political memes was timely and felt like a fresh take on an evolving reality of campaign media. I personally would love to see videos from students collaborating on a discussion with their peers about their perception of the presence of President Donald Trump across social media. And who knows -- maybe the students might actually enjoy it too.

Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece
Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece

CNN

time30 minutes ago

  • CNN

Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece

Getting an autograph from just one of sports' 'GOATs' is a challenge. Now imagine securing signatures from Babe Ruth, Michael Jordan, Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky and Lionel Messi – and to make it more impressive, getting them all to sign the same item. Then imagine doing it in just one year. That's exactly what super collector Patrick Ryan pulled off, creating a one-of-a-kind piece that spans a century of sports greatness. On June 29, 2024, Ryan claimed a nearly 100-year-old autograph album at auction, its prize possession a page signed by Ruth. That single purchase would spark an extraordinary quest – one that would produce one of the most remarkable pieces of sports memorabilia ever assembled. 'When I bought the Babe Ruth signed album page … it just looked kind of empty and it looked lonely,' Ryan told CNN Sports. That's when he realized he had an upcoming opportunity. Brady was scheduled to attend a Sotheby's and Fanatics sports card auction the following week. 'I said, you know what, maybe there's some ways to spruce up this Babe Ruth autograph,' Ryan said. A post shared by PSA (@psacard) Brady was the first modern legend to join Ruth's signature. Ryan brought the album page – and a gift – to the auction. 'It was a ticket to the 1981 NFC Championship game, which he famously attended to watch the Dwight Clark catch,' Ryan said. When Brady got up to leave, Ryan presented the ticket before asking for the favor. 'His eyes definitely lit up when he saw what I was having him sign.' From there, Ryan began plotting the rest. Gretzky's signature came next through mutual friends during the NHL Winter Classic in Chicago. A few months later, Messi signed during a private session with Icons, an autograph company. The final piece was Jordan. Ryan kept details private but said, 'Michael has a lot of respect for … the other guys that are on this piece of paper, and I think that's what motivated him to want to make sure it got done.' Remarkably, Ryan secured all five autographs within a year. When it came time to share the finished 'GOAT' page with the world, Ryan knew he wanted Brady to be the one to reveal it. Brady had been the first living legend to sign the page after Ruth, and his connection to the memorabilia world through his investment in trading card stores made him the perfect choice. The reveal took place at the National Sports Collectors Convention in Chicago. Standing face-to-face with the seven-time Super Bowl champion, Ryan handed him the slabbed album page without explanation. Brady turned it over, took in the sight of all five autographs, and his eyes widened. A smile broke across his face as he leaned in to study it more closely. A post shared by CardVault By Tom Brady (@cardvaultbytombrady) 'To me, the fact that Tom didn't know what I was showing him really was the icing on the cake because we got a really genuine reaction from him,' Ryan said. 'For him to react the way he did was definitely special.' The moment, captured on video, quickly approached a million views online. Now authenticated by sports memorabilia experts PSA and Beckett, the page features five autographs in distinct shades of blue ink: Jordan, Ruth, Brady, Gretzky and Messi. Ryan says the item is not for sale. 'Most of the autographs were gifted to me, so that would be inappropriate to sell it,' he said. Instead, he plans to eventually place it in a museum. 'I think it will live on in a museum whenever my time here passes … so I'll be able to enjoy it for a long, long time.' In the meantime, he's open to displaying it at events or locations meaningful to the athletes. 'A few museums have reached out. … I'm more than willing to have it on display where these athletes would want it,' Ryan said. Ryan has been a collector since age 7, when he sold baseball cards by the roadside. For him, this piece is more than just ink on paper. 'The fact that I've had so many people reach out … that's been really fun,' he said. 'The whole process has been very rewarding, but I'm always looking for what's next in my journey as a collector.' Still, having five of the greatest team-sport athletes in history on one page – and seeing Brady's stunned reaction to the completed piece – gave Ryan perspective. 'It's such a unique piece. … I'm becoming very focused on making sure other pieces in my collection are directionally in that way,' Ryan said.

Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece
Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece

CNN

time30 minutes ago

  • CNN

Five legends, one page: How Patrick Ryan secured a sports memorabilia masterpiece

Tom Brady People in sports Lionel Messi Michael JordanFacebookTweetLink Follow Getting an autograph from just one of sports' 'GOATs' is a challenge. Now imagine securing signatures from Babe Ruth, Michael Jordan, Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky and Lionel Messi – and to make it more impressive, getting them all to sign the same item. Then imagine doing it in just one year. That's exactly what super collector Patrick Ryan pulled off, creating a one-of-a-kind piece that spans a century of sports greatness. On June 29, 2024, Ryan claimed a nearly 100-year-old autograph album at auction, its prize possession a page signed by Ruth. That single purchase would spark an extraordinary quest – one that would produce one of the most remarkable pieces of sports memorabilia ever assembled. 'When I bought the Babe Ruth signed album page … it just looked kind of empty and it looked lonely,' Ryan told CNN Sports. That's when he realized he had an upcoming opportunity. Brady was scheduled to attend a Sotheby's and Fanatics sports card auction the following week. 'I said, you know what, maybe there's some ways to spruce up this Babe Ruth autograph,' Ryan said. A post shared by PSA (@psacard) Brady was the first modern legend to join Ruth's signature. Ryan brought the album page – and a gift – to the auction. 'It was a ticket to the 1981 NFC Championship game, which he famously attended to watch the Dwight Clark catch,' Ryan said. When Brady got up to leave, Ryan presented the ticket before asking for the favor. 'His eyes definitely lit up when he saw what I was having him sign.' From there, Ryan began plotting the rest. Gretzky's signature came next through mutual friends during the NHL Winter Classic in Chicago. A few months later, Messi signed during a private session with Icons, an autograph company. The final piece was Jordan. Ryan kept details private but said, 'Michael has a lot of respect for … the other guys that are on this piece of paper, and I think that's what motivated him to want to make sure it got done.' Remarkably, Ryan secured all five autographs within a year. When it came time to share the finished 'GOAT' page with the world, Ryan knew he wanted Brady to be the one to reveal it. Brady had been the first living legend to sign the page after Ruth, and his connection to the memorabilia world through his investment in trading card stores made him the perfect choice. The reveal took place at the National Sports Collectors Convention in Chicago. Standing face-to-face with the seven-time Super Bowl champion, Ryan handed him the slabbed album page without explanation. Brady turned it over, took in the sight of all five autographs, and his eyes widened. A smile broke across his face as he leaned in to study it more closely. A post shared by CardVault By Tom Brady (@cardvaultbytombrady) 'To me, the fact that Tom didn't know what I was showing him really was the icing on the cake because we got a really genuine reaction from him,' Ryan said. 'For him to react the way he did was definitely special.' The moment, captured on video, quickly approached a million views online. Now authenticated by sports memorabilia experts PSA and Beckett, the page features five autographs in distinct shades of blue ink: Jordan, Ruth, Brady, Gretzky and Messi. Ryan says the item is not for sale. 'Most of the autographs were gifted to me, so that would be inappropriate to sell it,' he said. Instead, he plans to eventually place it in a museum. 'I think it will live on in a museum whenever my time here passes … so I'll be able to enjoy it for a long, long time.' In the meantime, he's open to displaying it at events or locations meaningful to the athletes. 'A few museums have reached out. … I'm more than willing to have it on display where these athletes would want it,' Ryan said. Ryan has been a collector since age 7, when he sold baseball cards by the roadside. For him, this piece is more than just ink on paper. 'The fact that I've had so many people reach out … that's been really fun,' he said. 'The whole process has been very rewarding, but I'm always looking for what's next in my journey as a collector.' Still, having five of the greatest team-sport athletes in history on one page – and seeing Brady's stunned reaction to the completed piece – gave Ryan perspective. 'It's such a unique piece. … I'm becoming very focused on making sure other pieces in my collection are directionally in that way,' Ryan said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store