Taylor Swift addresses homophobia in the music industry after Hayley Kiyoko comments
Taylor Swift has defended out musicianĀ Hayley Kiyoko, after she spoke out against homophobia in the music industry.
Kiyoko, an out and proud gay singer who often refers to her female love interests in her music, called out music execs for resisting herĀ overtly-gay tracks in an interview earlier this week.
Speaking to Refinery29,Ā the Girls Like Girls singerĀ accused music execs of having a double-standard on the issue because artists like Swift commonly talk about their relationships.
She said: “Iāve had several music industry execs say, āYouāre doing another music video about girls?ā
“I literally looked at them and was like, um, yea …Taylor Swift sings about men in every single song and video, and no one complains that sheās unoriginal.”
Taylor SwiftĀ herself has now weighed in to defend the artist.
Responding to fans who perceived Kiyoko’s comments as a slight, she wrote:Ā “We should applaud artists who are brave enough to tell their honest romantic narrative through their art, and the fact is that Iāve never encountered homophobia and she has.
“Itās her right to call out anyone who has double standards about gay vs straight love interests.”
Swift shared a post that pointed out she had also called out the way the media focuses on her writing about her relationships butĀ “donāt call out people like Ed Sheeran or Bruno Mars for writing about theirs”.
The post added: “She wasnāt calling out Ed or Bruno at the time, yet rather criticising how the media and the public handle the situation. Hayley appears to be doing the same.”
In the Refinery29 interview,Ā Kiyoko had said:Ā “I think no matter who you are or what you look like, you just wanna be a person, right?.
“Sure, Iād love for people to just like me, and my music. But if I donāt allow labels, thereās no way to normalise them.
“Over time, my existence alone will help people see that a lesbian singer is just a singer. So while I might not want to constantly be asked about my sexuality and just be me, a big part of me is my love of women.
“So I guess Iām talking about it until itās no longer seen as something to talk about.”
She added:Ā “Iām not over-sexualizing my music. I make out with women because I love women, not because Iām trying to be sexy. Thatās not to turn heads ā thatās my life.”