CELEBRITIES
BREAKING: Erika Kirk Reportedly Turns Down Taylor Swift’s $60 Million Offer to Secure a Spot at the All-American Halftime Show…..Full details ⤵️
A viral social-media post claims that Erika Kirk—widow of conservative organisation Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk—was offered $60 million by Taylor Swift to appear in the All-American Halftime Show, a purported “faith-based” counter-programme to the Super Bowl LX halftime event. According to the post:
Taylor Swift approached Erika Kirk with the deal.
Erika turned it down “on principle” and for “cultural” reasons.
The show is positioned as a rival to the NFL’s halftime spectacle, aligning with TPUSA’s political and cultural branding.
What the fact-checkers say
Multiple credible outlets have investigated this claim and found no evidence to support it. Key findings:
The story appears to originate from a Facebook page “Lab Bar” and other low-veracity social-media posts.
Neither Taylor Swift, Erika Kirk, nor Turning Point USA has confirmed such an offer or negotiation.
There are no credible media reports of a $60 million offer between Swift and Kirk, nor of Swift being officially attached to the All-American event.
The All-American Halftime Show is real (announced by TPUSA) but details remain sparse and it has no confirmed list of performers or concrete deals publicly disclosed.
What we do know
Erika Kirk has assumed a more prominent role at TPUSA following her late husband’s passing, including speaking on its “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour.
TPUSA announced the All-American Halftime Show in October as a “faith-driven” alternative to mainstream halftime entertainment.
Taylor Swift remains one of the world’s biggest music artists, but there is no verified public record of her being involved in this specific scheme.
Why the story spread
It touches on cultural and political flashpoints: celebrity involvement, conservative media, “Hollywood vs ideology” narratives.
The high figure ($60 million) and the celebrity names make the claim look sensational and share-worthy.
Users sympathetic to the narrative (“Erika stood up to Hollywood”) amplified it before verification.
Our verdict
False / Unverified. While the story is widely shared and appears plausible in its style, there is no verifiable evidence that the offer or deal occurred. It seems to be internet-driven misinformation rather than established fact.