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Here’s the ‘getaway car’ Travis Kelce chose to whisk Taylor Swift away after Chiefs game
Car enthusiast and collector Travis Kelce could have squired one of the most famous women in the world around Kansas City in any vehicle of his choosing.
He went old-school, whisking her away from GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday in an iconic muscle car he loves because “it looks so sweet.”
Now photos and videos of the Chiefs star with Taylor Swift riding shotgun have fired up fresh interest in their ride — a 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle, one of the most well-known muscle cars to ever hit the market.
Swifties loved the images of the pop star laughing and smiling in the convertible’s front seat, one fan gushing on TikTok that it was “so dreamy” it could be the singer’s next album cover. The photo of them in the Chevelle is already on T-shirts.
Car buffs are loving the attention.
“Even people who don’t love classic cars are asking about this 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS,” automotive journalist Mary Conway wrote for Torque News after the couple’s ride.
The automotive website this week dubbed the car “the most famous car in America.”
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Toast Taylor Swift's birthday with Eras movie and cuddly cat campout at Houston Humane
Horror comedies tend to be a good entry point for non-hardcore fans of the genre, as they provide for a good amount of levity amongst the carnage shown on screen. Examples like the original Scream, Shaun of the Dead, and Get Out keep the spirit of horror alive while still giving the audience plenty of laughs.
Writer/director Osgood Perkins, who wowed some genre fans with Longlegs in 2024, is back with a much different type of film in The Monkey. Based on a Stephen King short story, the film features a villain who is not a person, but rather an organ grinder monkey toy that inexplicably causes the death of someone nearby when activated.
The toy changes hands a few times in the film, but always seems to come back into the lives of twin brothers Hal and Bill (Christian Convery as a child, Theo James as an adult). No matter what they do, they cannot rid themselves of the monkey, and few in their orbit are safe from its unexplained wrath.
The high points of the short, 95-minute film are unquestionably its many kills, which are heightened to a degree that laughter is pretty much the only response if you’re willing to go along with it. The deaths seem to increa
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