When Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce planned a Madison Square Garden wedding, they probably knew it would be a hot ticket — but they might not have realized it would be this hot.
The few fans who gathered outside the Manhattan venue Friday afternoon as temperatures hit 97 degrees appeared vastly outnumbered by journalists eager for an interview or a celebrity sighting. The celebrities, in turn, could be hard to spot amid the sea of police officers, who closed the streets surrounding the storied arena.
Emma Rasco, a 19-year-old with a summer internship in New York City, told Business Insider she expected to see more of her fellow Swifties. "Not sure where they are yet," she said.
"Even if there's not much energy, I'm here to support my gal through thick or thin, behind closed doors or out in the open," Rasco said.
The wedding celebration between perhaps America's biggest pop star and her Super Bowl champion fiancé started July 2 with a small gathering of about 100 people at a theater inside the venue. A ceremony with some 1,000 guests was to take place inside the arena on July 3, according to the New York Times, which cited an internal police memo. The publication said festivities are set to wrap up around 2 a.m.
Dozens of people hung around on Seventh Avenue outside the venue at around 4:30 pm, mostly waving. One shouted obscenities at black SUVs with tinted windows that crept down the street ahead of the reported 5:30 pm ceremony. The person shouting, who declined to give a name, said they were protesting billionaires.
Many others in the area wore soccer jerseys, appearing to be World Cup fans. Three matches were scheduled to take place across the US on Friday, and while none were in New York, hundreds of bars and other businesses across New York have tried to draw audiences for the games. The world soccer federation FIFA estimated that tourists would spend $7.5 billion across the US, Canada, and Mexico for the games.
Some people just appeared to be trying to get to their destinations amid the crowds and police barricades. Several muttered swear words, and none stopped for an interview.
Photos on social media also showed crowds at Penn Station, the rail hub across the street from the arena. New Jersey Transit said a disabled train on the busy Northeast Corridor would delay trips by up to 90 minutes, and said trains may roll more slowly because of the heat, which can cause power lines to sag and rails to buckle.
One fan, Cecily Hall, said she initially thought Swift and Kelce might get married at a home Swift has in Rhode Island. But at MSG, she said, "you have sports and music combined into one venue," making it a fitting place for a singer and the Kansas City Chiefs' tight end to tie the knot.
The New York Post reported that Stevie Nicks and Tim McGraw are expected to attend and perform. For weeks, anonymously sourced reports of elaborate sets have leaked out from inside the arena, and some trucks being unloaded were labeled "Garden Party."
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Gabby is a Senior Health Reporter, with a focus on nutrition, fitness, longevity, and all things performance.Her coverage spans from the daily routines of top athletes like Michael Phelps and Coco Gauff to the latest cutting-edge science on building muscle to the rise of peptides, supplements, and GLP medications. She loves a deep dive into fitness subcultures, health companies, or the science behind managing and preventing disease, particularly early-onset cancers. Gabby has a background in investigative journalism (previously contributing research for an investigation on correctional healthcare for the New Yorker).In her free time, she likes lifting heavy, running fast, and playing roller derby for Gotham in New York City.Send story ideas and tips to [email protected].Expertise/Interests
- Longevity: how to dial in a daily routine to invest in long-term health, and what makes some of the longest-living people on earth active and vibrant as they age.
- Performance science: training techniques for goals ranging from muscle-building (hypertrophy), general physical preparedness, endurance, and injury prevention, especially for fitness beginners.
- Cancer research: unpacking the science behind why certain cancers are on the rise in younger people, how it's affecting the world around us, and what we can do about it.
- Healthy eating: how to navigate conflicting and contradictory advice across trends like protein-maxxing, intermittent fasting, and the Mediterranean, Nordic, and MIND diets.
- Medical weight loss: how emerging science around treatments like GLP medications are shaping the connections between food, weight, and health.
- Digital wellness: investigating how telehealth is changing access to healthcare, including through peptides, hormones, and direct-to-consumer lab tests.
- Strength sports, including Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting, Hyrox, and CrossFit.
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I am a correspondent on Business Insider's enterprise desk.I focus on money, power, and big names in business, politics and entertainment. I am currently focused on prediction markets, and legal affairs and the legal industry have been a longtime interest of mine.My email address is [email protected], and my Reddit username is u/JackNewsham. If you have sensitive information, please get in touch using your personal email address or connect on the secure messaging app Signal, where my username is jnewsham.77. Use a personal phone and a personal data or WiFi connection.I have broken news about people at the Elon Musk-linked Department of Government Efficiency, worked with whistleblowers, investigated how celebrity musicians spent millions of dollars in federal Shuttered Venue Operators Grants they received during the pandemic, delved into claims of racism and sexual misconduct at the $2.4 billion tech startup Rokt, and written about policing and the trial lawyer Alex Spiro.Previously, I wrote about both Big Law firms that represent big businesses and the plaintiffs' firms and litigation funders that oppose them.I am originally from St. Louis, and graduated from Yale with a bachelor's degree in economics.














