Over the weekend, Taylor Swift played the last US dates of her Eras Tour in Indianapolis, Indiana.
And now, it seems like everyone who follows her is saying the same thing.
One fan said, “I’m not ready for The Eras tour to end,” joining a chorus of Swifties who share this sentiment and are devastated by the idea of the tour’s eventual conclusion in America.
“She is leaving the tour and returning to her life, which is both sad and exciting for her, I’m sure!”
As they added heartbreak emoticons, several claimed to be “crying.”
An X (formerly Twitter) user captioned a video that has received over 500K views, saying, “JUST SOBBING NOW THAT THE FINAL US SHOW OF THE ERAS TOUR IS OVER.”
At the Indianapolis concert, the last bow was incredibly moving! “What a moment,” someone another said, while someone else added, “I’m not crying.” You’re crying.
The news that there will be no more shows angered other fans in a similar way.
“I had a mini breakdown because I am feeling so guilty about not being able to get tickets to my sister’s era tour,” one fan continued.
At Lucas Oil Stadium, the 34-year-old Shake It Off singer played three straight sold-out gigs to 69,000 people each night. On Saturday night, she handled a technical issue like a pro.
Since its March 2023 launch in Glendale, Arizona, the Eras Tour has performed at more than 150 events on five continents and is the highest-grossing tour in history.
Regarding the massive crowds at her concerts in Indianapolis, the Anti-Hero singer made a statement.
“This is the last time the Eras Tour will ever perform in the United States,” Swift remarked.
We added so many dates because of the way you guys have made this tour what it is.
That explains the length of this excursion. We intended to return via America for that reason. We had not finished yet.
We hadn’t yet performed in Indianapolis. Swift addressed the crowd, saying, “You’ve already shown us such grace tonight.”
Death by a Thousand Cuts and The Great War on piano and mashups of Cornelia Street and The Bolter on guitar were the unexpected tunes on the last night in Indianapolis.
In Death by a Thousand Cuts, the Karma hitmaker rewrote the lyrics from “My heart, my hips, my body, my love” to “My body, my love, my choice.”
The lyric alteration appears to be a reference to reproductive freedom, which is a major issue when Americans cast their ballots for the next president of the United States.