
"Track 9 on The Life of a Showgirl, Wood, is packed with double entendres praising Kelce's manhood. A sampling of some of the lyrics: Forgive me, it sounds cocky He (ah!) matized me and opened my yes Redwood tree, it ain't hard to see His love was th key that opened my thighs Girls, I don't need to catch the bouquet To know a hard rock is on the way"
"And, baby, I'll admit I've been a little superstitious The curse on me was broken by your magic wand Seems to be that you and me, we make our own luck New Heights of manhood, I ain't gotta knock on wood During Swift's Monday night interview on The Tonight Show, she insisted to Jimmy Fallon that the song really started out in a very innocent place, and couldn't help but grin as the audience cracked up."
Track 9, 'Wood,' from The Life of a Showgirl uses explicit double entendres that praise Travis Kelce's manhood through metaphors and sexual imagery. Lyrics include references to a 'magic wand,' 'opened my thighs,' and a 'hard rock' arriving, framing intimacy with playful superstition. Taylor Swift said the song originated from a superstition-themed lyric about not needing to 'knock on wood' and that the recording process shifted it into a more suggestive direction. On the New Heights podcast, Jason Kelce teased Travis about the song while Travis complimented Swift's creativity, and Jason and Kylie Kelce praised another album track, 'Wi$h Li$t.'
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