Ed Kelce Has the Best Response to New Rumor About Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift's Relationship

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BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JANUARY 28: Travis Kelce #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs celebrates with Taylor Swift after a 17-10 victory against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship Game at M&T Bank Stadium on January 28, 2024 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

Ed Kelce had the best response to the latest unhinged claims surrounding his son Travis Kelce's relationship with Taylor Swift.

According to a graphic uploaded to Instagram by the account ifintersectionalfeminism, the latest outrageous rumor is linked to "a televangelist from Arkansas," though the preacher in question remains unnamed. The post alleges that Satan is somehow behind the singer and NFL star's relationship, engineering the two to parent the "antichrist" to "launch the apocalyptic thousand-year war."

The ifintersectionalfeminism account is clearly not operated by whoever allegedly made the claim, as they went on to cheekily question, "Must she do everything? And during a world tour?" but there are currently no clues as to where the creator first saw the speculation.

Commenters found humor in the absurd new conspiracy theory, including Papa Kelce, who entered the chat to respond with a brief statement: "That’s my boy!"

Someone else quoted the "Anti-Hero" lyric, "SHES LAUGHING UP AT US FROM HELL 😱 😈," while another complained, "WOMEN HAVE TO DO EVERYTHING!!"

It's not the first time the "Look What You Made Me Do" songstress has been accused of witchcraft or other evil doings—claims that have obviously become somewhat of a joke amongst her fans, and which she's perfectly well aware of.

During one of her Eras Tour concerts in Brazil, the singer joked that she was "never beating the sorcery allegations ✨🛬✨" after a plane descended alongside the stadium in time to her singing the "Labyrinth" lyrics, “I thought the plane was going down, how’d you turn it right around?”

The comment references a number of accusations levied against the superstar accusing her of witchcraft and "satanic imagery" in the past, most recently regarding her performance of "Willow" on tour.

Shane Lynch, a member of the defunct Irish boy band Boyzone, also claimed she was advocating for Satanism because "she has two or three different demonic rituals to do with the pentagrams on the ground, to do with all sorts of stuff on her stage."

Next: Internet Commends Ed and Donna Kelce for Raising Their Sons With 'Emotional Intelligence'