One Taylor Swift email a day. Only real news. No tabs.

Following anyone famous online is a trap by design: the feed is bottomless, 90% of it is the same rumor relaunched, and the algorithm is optimized to keep you there, not to inform you. You don't actually want the scroll — you want to know if something real happened. Those are different products.

So: every morning, scan for genuinely new Taylor Swift news from the last 24 hours — releases, business, official statements, verified posts — skip tabloid speculation and recycled stories, and email me a tight digest with primary-source links. That sentence is the entire build.

A filter is the feature

The hard part of celebrity news isn't finding it — it's everything you have to throw away. This agent's job is mostly subtraction: kill the rumor, kill the "resurfaced" repost, kill the speculation, and only surface what has a real source behind it. What lands in your inbox is short, true, and linked. And on a slow day it says so in two lines instead of manufacturing drama to fill space — the anti-doomscroll move.

See it

Below is a real send: Taylor Swift's 1989 entering the Library of Congress, with the official newsroom link and NYT coverage — not a tabloid in sight. Swap the subject for whoever you can't stop checking on; same discipline, your inbox, once a day.

What it actually sent

Swift's '1989' enters Library of Congress

The Library of Congress added Taylor Swift's "1989" album to the National Recording Registry for permanent preservation.

  • Library of Congress made it official May 14 — first Taylor Swift recording in the registry, selected for its cultural and historical significance alongside 24 other 2026 inductees including Beyoncé's "Single Ladies"
  • Full list spans 70 years from Spike Jones (1944) to Swift's 2014 pop transformation album
  • Registry preserves recordings that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" — NYT coverage

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