Current:Home > ScamsRecreate Taylor Swift's Time cover with your dog to win doggie day care -Keystone Capital Education
Recreate Taylor Swift's Time cover with your dog to win doggie day care
View
Date:2025-04-17 10:06:46
If Taylor Swift is Time’s Person of the Year, is her rag doll blue-eyed beauty, Benjamin Button, Cat of the Year?
Their magazine cover photo has inspired pet owners to heave their animals onto their shoulders and post their best “blue steel” photo to social media.
“I focus on making pop moments relatable,” said Ryan Sichelstiel, 31, a content creator and comedian. “A lot of my content ideas come to me in the shower or on the treadmill or in the car. I have a list of ideas on my phone.”
Sichelstiel heard the Today Show was going to break the 2023 Time Person of the Year so he prepared to get a spoof of the cover out. He watched the announcement live with his computer open, Photoshop application on standby and camera light plugged in.
“I may or may not have canceled a meeting to get it posted,” he laughed. When he saw Swift’s cover with her cat, he grabbed his 1-year-old pup, Burke (named after Sichelstiel’s celebrity crush John Krasinski’s middle name).
“He is such a teddy bear,” he said. “I was like ‘OK buddy, bear with me,’ and I lifted him up. We took three photos, and they all turned out pretty good. I thought, OK this is actually way easier than I thought.”
More:Revelations from Taylor Swift's Time interview, including Kim Kardashian, Ye feud
One company, Dogtopia, is capitalizing on the trend by holding an “In My Dog Era” photo contest.
“Taylor should have a dog around her neck and not a cat,” Neil Gill, the CEO of Dogtopia, joked. “It launched the concept, let’s do a contest out of this.”
Dog owners can submit a photo to the company's website from Dec. 8-21, and the winner gets unlimited doggie day care at one of its 250 locations.
“You look at Taylor’s photograph and there’s so much attitude in there and she does a great job of representing who she is in the images,” Gill said. He suggested anyone entering the contest to be creative and clever.
Enter the contest here.
Follow Bryan West, the USA TODAY Network's Taylor Swift reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @BryanWestTV.
veryGood! (41)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Fugitive suspect in Jan. 6 attack on Capitol surrenders to police in New Jersey
- Palestinian soccer team prepares for World Cup qualifying games against a backdrop of war
- Palestinian soccer team prepares for World Cup qualifying games against a backdrop of war
- Sam Taylor
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Nov. 3 - Nov. 9, 2023
- EU plan aimed at fighting climate change to go to final votes, even if watered down
- Shohei Ohtani is donating 60,000 baseball gloves to Japanese schoolchildren
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Flush with new funding, the IRS zeroes in on the taxes of uber-wealthy Americans
Ranking
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- 'Women Tell All' brings 'Golden Bachelor' confessions: But first, who did Gerry send home?
- Two days after an indictment, North Carolina’s state auditor says she’ll resign
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Nov. 3 - Nov. 9, 2023
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Home and Away Actor Johnny Ruffo Dead at 35
- Mother tells killer of Black transgender woman that her daughter’s legacy will live on
- Former Arizona senator reports being molested while running in Iowa
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Police investigate report of doll found decapitated at Ohio home flying Palestinian flag
Keke Palmer Files for Custody of Her and Darius Jackson's Baby Boy
Ransomware attack on China’s biggest bank disrupts Treasury market trades, reports say
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Sasha Skochilenko, Russian artist who protested war in Ukraine, faces possible 8-year prison sentence
Media watchdog says it was just ‘raising questions’ with insinuations about photographers and Hamas
Protesters stage sit-in at New York Times headquarters to call for cease-fire in Gaza