Kylie Kelce references Jason Kelce's manhood in Instagram bio amid Taylor Swift's new song 'Wood'

Autumn Hawkins

Kylie Kelce references Jason Kelce's manhood in Instagram bio amid Taylor Swift's new song 'Wood' image

© Morgan Tencza

Kylie Kelce has jokes.

The mom of four updated her Instagram bio to reflect a recent conversation her husband, Jason Kelce, had with his brother, Travis Kelce, on their podcast, New Heightsabout Travis' fiancée Taylor Swift's new song "Wood."

"Travis, come on," Jason said on the recent episode. "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.' "

Kylie jumped in on the joke and changed her Instagram bio to: "Big fan of Japanese Maples."

During the episode, Travis tried to maintain his innocence on the suggestive lyrics and praised Swift for her songwriting.

"I love that girl, so what do you mean?" Travis said. "Any song that she would reference me in that way..."

"It's not just you. It's an appendage," Jason cut in. "It's a very specific thing."  

"What?" Travis joked. "I think you're not understanding the song."

What is "Wood" really about?

The lyrics on "Wood" have gone viral amid the release of Swift's 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl. 

"Forgive me, it sounds cocky/He ah-matized me and opened my eyes/Redwood tree, it ain't hard to see/His love was the key that opened my thighs," she sings on the track.

During her appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, earlier this month, Swift shared how the song was originally intended and then how it spiraled to this now-viral hit. 

"I brought this into the studio and I was like I wanna do a throwback, kind of timeless-sounding song, and I had this idea like, 'I ain't gotta knock on wood,' and it would be all these superstitions," Swift told Fallon. "And it really started out in a very innocent place...I don't know what happened, man." 

The Life of a Showgirl was released on Oct. 3 and has since gotten mixed reviews on social media, criticizing Swift's writing and whether the songs match the theme of the album. However, Swift seems to have brushed off the criticism and is open to the different interpretations of her art. 

“The rule of show business is, if it’s the first week of my album release and you are saying either my name or my album title, you’re helping,” she told Zane Lowe. 

“I have a lot of respect for people’s subjective opinions on art. I’m not the art police,” Swift continued. “It’s, like, everybody is allowed to feel exactly how they want. And what our goal is as entertainers is to be a mirror.”

MORE LIFESTYLE NEWS

Taylor Swift's 'Wood' might be the secret to Travis Kelce's return to form

Dwyane Wade gets candid on what he misses amid NBA retirement

Taylor Swift gets candid on mixed reviews of 'The Life of a Showgirl'

The Travis Kelce and Jason clue that Blake Lively and Taylor Swift friendship is on the mend 

Travis Kelce gets honest about being Taylor Swift's muse

 

Autumn Hawkins

Autumn Hawkins is a freelance writer with The Sporting News. A New Jersey native, she got her start in media working in broadcast for WPRI, FOX Entertainment and the CW Providence as an entertainment producer and coordinator. She later held the role of National R&B and Hip-Hop editor for Beasley Media. More of Autumn's work can be found across OK! Magazine, Compulsive Magazine, Lowkey R&B and on-air with Beyond The Record.