Travis Kelce nervously reacted to fiancée Taylor Swift's 'generous' song about his 'appendage' following the release of The Life of a Showgirl. The 35-year-old pop singer made several x-rated references to her Kansas City Chiefs partner's 'magic wand' and 'wood' in the new album.
In Wood, the raciest song on the album, she sings: "Forgive me, it sounds cocky / He [d**k-matized] me and opened my еyes / Redwood tree, it ain't hard to see / His love was thе key that opened my thighs," amongst other references to sex and their bedroom antics.
Travis was quizzed by his brother, Jason Kelce, on the explicit lyrics about "his love" during a segment on their New Heights podcast.
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"How do you feel about 'Wood?'" Jason asked, to which Travis laughed: "It's a great song." Jason added: "Do you feel, do you feel – not confident – do you feel cocky about the song 'Wood?'"
Travis said 'no', and explained: "Any song, you know, that she references me in is very," before his brother interrupted to point out the song is specifically about Travis' 'manhood'.
Taylor's fiancé avoided answering the question and insisted: ""I love that girl, what do you mean? Any song that she would reference me in any way…"
Jason was determined to get an answer and said: "It's not just you. It's an appendage. It's a very specific thing." Travis played dumb and asked: "What? I think you're not understanding the song."
Reciting Taylor's lyrics, Jason went on: "Travis, come on. Redwood tree ain't hard to see... I thought redwood, that's a little bit, that's a generous word, I think. I think if somebody wrote a song about me, it'd be like, 'Japanese maple sometimes can see.'"
He soon gave up on trying to get a reaction and said in defeat: "That song's great, though. The freaking beat to that song is fantastic, and that's right up my alley, so well done. I think it's a great song. I think inserting wood innuendos is always childish enough for me that I can get on board with that."
During her appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Taylor insisted Wood started out as an innocent song about 'superstitions'.
"It really started out in a very innocent place," she said. "I don't know what happened, man." It wasn't long before the song became more x-rated after she "started vibing".
"I don't know how we got here, but I love the song so much," she said and joked about how the 'spice level' on her album is 'high'.
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