Matt Healy, Tortured Poet, Speaks Out About Taylor Swift’s Latest Album

Taylor Swift’s Ex Matty Healy Reacts to ‘Tortured Poets Department’ Songs

Last Friday, after The Tortured Poets Department dropped, Matt Healy’s ears had to be BURNING.

It’s become a forgone conclusion amongst Taylor Swift’s fans that the lion share of the songs off of the Anthology were inspired by her brief affair with the 1975 rocker.

Yet, while many songs are written about Taylor’s exes, few times have one of these gentlemen been cornered and asked how they feel about the tracks they’ve inspired.

But that’s this? Oh, it looks like Matt Healy, being put right on the spot!

A week after Taylor’s new album broke records and made Swifties cry while being productive, her ex was approached by paparazzi and asked his thoughts on the album.

ET shared the video of Matt, trying to keep low key in a blue hoodie while walking down the street in LA, looking like he’s down bad after cryin’ at the gym. A photog quickly asks him to rank his “diss track”, though doesn’t specify which one he means. Matt’s response?

“I haven’t really listened to that much of it,” he said, “but I’m sure it’s good.”

Sure, Matthew. SURE!

‘Tortured Poets Department’ Songs about Matt Healy

If you’re wondering which songs are about Matt on the album, honestly you can take your pick. There is the obvious choice, the title track of the album.

“You left your typewriter at my apartment / Straight from the tortured poets department / I think some things I never say / Like, ‘Who uses a typewriter anyway?’” she sings in the song. Matt is known for loving his analog, old school typewriter.

But there are plenty others: “Fresh Out the Slammer,” “Guilty As Sin?,” “I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can)” and “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived” are all believed to be about Healy.

Taylor Swift’s Ex Matty Healy Responds to Songs Written About Him

Matthew Healy, lead singer of the band The 1975, recently found himself caught in the spotlight after Taylor Swift’s latest album, The Tortured Poets Department, was released. The album, which has been speculated to be inspired by Swift’s brief relationship with Healy, features several songs that fans believe are about him.

In a video shared by ET, Healy was approached by paparazzi while walking in Los Angeles. When asked about the album and if he had listened to the songs supposedly written about him, Healy responded that he hadn’t listened to much of it but believes it’s good.

The track “Tortured Poets Department” has garnered attention for its lyrics referencing a typewriter that was left at an apartment, a nod to Healy’s fondness for using typewriters. Other tracks on the album, such as “Fresh Out the Slammer,” “Guilty As Sin?,” “I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can),” and “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived,” are also believed to be inspired by Healy.

Fans of both Taylor Swift and The 1975 have been dissecting the lyrics of the songs to find clues about the relationship between Swift and Healy and how it may have influenced the music on The Tortured Poets Department.

Healy’s reaction to the songs has sparked further speculation and discussion among fans, with many eagerly awaiting any potential response from Swift herself on the inspiration behind the tracks. As the mystery of the songs’ meanings continues to unfold, it’s clear that the connection between Swift and Healy has left a lasting impact on both artists and their music.
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