Twenty years ago, 16-year-old Taylor Swift released her debut single, Tim McGraw. To understand everything that has come since – the confessional genius, the brand strategy, the carefully constructed persona – this three-minute-and-fifty-two-second country ballad is a good place to start. As we argue in our edited collection Taylor Swift: Culture, Capital & Critique, Swift is a cultural phenomenon worthy of critical attention – a lens through which we can examine culture and power in contemporary life.The making of a country superstarIn 2004, 14-year-old Swift and her family relocated from Pennsylvania to Nashville, Tennessee, so she could pursue her dream of country stardom. During her recent induction as the youngest woman into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, Swift said: it couldn’t have been easy to just pick up and move our entire family … But after it became obvious that this was not even remotely a temporary phase their tween daughter was going through, they uprooted their entire lives to move me to music city.Swift became the first artist signed to Big Machine Records, an independent label founded by Scott Borchetta, who signed Swift after seeing her perform at Nashville’s Bluebird Cafe.Shortly after, her stockbroker father invested about US$500,000 into the label in 2006, becoming a shareholder.Swift went to work on her first album, Taylor Swift (2006), with Tim McGraw as the lead single. Confessional songwritingSwift has said that when she wrote Tim McGraw, she was dating a boy who was leaving for college. So instead of a breakup song, she wrote a pre-breakup song about her desire to be remembered by her future ex-lover. The song’s emotional logic is anticipatory grief. This is remarkably mature lyrical instinct; she was already aware of the long shadow cast by first love. She was also taking control of the narrative of her own life through lyrics. What makes the song even more significant is the form. Swift writes from a confessional “I” that collapses the line between songwriter and subject. As one of our book chapters (by Faichney) explains, confessional songwriting conveys raw emotion and authenticity through its association with the autobiographical. This has become emblematic of Swift’s oeuvre; the most intimate parts of her life have been immortalised in song. Tim McGraw exemplifies much of Swift’s early work: songs that nostalgically capture the experience of being young and in love. It was no accident that this connection felt so immediate and personal. Swift was cultivating it directly through MySpace blogs and personal fan responses. This laid the groundwork for what became one of the most sophisticated parasocial relationships in pop music history. Borrowed capital: the original brand strategyIt may seem an audacious move for an unknown teenager to borrow the name of country’s number one star, Tim McGraw, as her song title. It was also a clever strategy. Using the name of an artist with crossover mainstream success on a debut release immediately communicated country music legibility. This gambit of adopted cultural credibility worked. Swift went on to open for McGraw and Faith Hill on tour. Her single peaked at number 6 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, and reached number 40 on the Hot 100 – foreshadowing her future success.This was the first iteration of a repeated pattern in Swift’s career, in which she leverages association as a form of cultural and ideological capital. As one of us (Whatman) argues in our collection, this approach is also visible in Swift’s relationship with feminism and whiteness. Her celebrity “girl squad” of the 1989 era – including publicly “feminist” figures such as Mariska Hargitay and Lena Dunham – was borrowed capital of a different kind: a strategically timed visual embodiment of Swift’s public declaration of feminism. In the Bad Blood music video and on tour, female solidarity is performed as a spectacle. The girl gang didn’t simply express “feminist” politics; it constructed them, producing a palatable, marketable, and overwhelmingly white feminism. The limits of this strategy became visible in 2023, when Swift collaborated with rapper Ice Spice – the first Black woman to feature on one of her tracks – after she was publicly criticised for her silence on then-boyfriend Matty Healy’s racist comments about the rapper. The template of the ‘all-American girl’Tim McGraw also introduced the persona Swift would maintain: that of the relatable “all-American girl”, with her boots, guitar, and wholesome girl-next-door energy. Her beauty and talent might be intimidating, were it not for her approachable awkwardness and down-to-earth sincerity. Swift had only been in Nashville for two years, yet recorded a song soaked in the iconography of a rural American girlhood she was still, in real terms, auditioning for. The song conjures the image of a country sweetheart, referencing Chevy trucks, sun-soaked fields and eyes like the “Georgia stars”. While she has long since shed the Southern twang and cowboy boots, this persona has proven durable. It has been updated to something more urban and self-aware: the billionaire auteur who is somehow still the girl next door.Importantly, this persona has never been neutral; it encodes whiteness and class privilege as an unmarked default. It is a form of girlhood capacious enough to be country or pop, apolitical or activist, and bestie or billionaire, precisely because whiteness and class privilege operate as its invisible foundation. Swift’s extraordinary success speaks not only to her talent and work ethic, but to the structural conditions that determine whose version of American femininity gets to count.Twenty years onTim McGraw hit the airwaves like a comet. It launched a pop ingenue who would become the most “relatable billionaire in the world” – a blueprint that every debut pop artist has since tried to follow. Although she once borrowed his name and cultural capital, these days when people think of Tim McGraw, they almost certainly think of Taylor Swift.The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.