Please enjoy this photo of a seal with an eel stuck up its nose

A monk seal in Hawaii was photographed with an eel stuck up its nose — and it is your new spirit animal.

The photo of the adorable and mildly uncomfortable-looking seal with an eel dangling from its nostril was shared by the Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program, which works with the NOAA Fisheries to conserve and protect the Hawaiian Monk seal population, according to Newsweek.

<img class="" data-credit-name="NOAA FISHERIES/BRITTANY DOLAN” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!2c9b” data-image=”https://ift.tt/2PkyfQs; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/8nF2tCDk0fqjNukydyHaQQ6SxGc=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F894648%2Fc8ed7a2a-af4b-436a-9a2b-9a0458e2ecc0.jpg”&gt;

Image: NOAA FISHERIES/BRITTANY DOLAN

SEE ALSO: Watch Bei Bei the panda roll around in this season’s first snowfall

Apparently, eels getting stuck in seals noses happens occasionally, but no one is certain as to why.

“We have reported on this phenomenon before which was first noted a few years back. We have now found juvenile seals with eels stuck in their noses on multiple occasions,” the Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program wrote in a Facebook post on Monday. “In all cases the eel was successfully removed and the seals were fine. The eels, however, did not make it.” 

It’s sad to hear that the eels didn’t survive after being removed from the seal’s nose, but considering they chose to enter the seal’s nose without permission, they’re really the architects of their own demise here.

“Hawaiian monk seals forage by shoving their mouth and nose into the crevasses of coral reefs, under rocks, or into the sand. They are looking for prey that likes to hide, like eels,” NOAA Fisheries wrote in a blog post on its website. “This may be a case of an eel that was cornered trying to defend itself or escape. Alternatively, the seal could have swallowed the eel and regurgitated it so that the eel came out the wrong way. We might not ever know.”

Regardless, we’re happy to hear this sweet, vaguely irritated monk seal has been returned to its normal, eel-less state. 

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China is the lead suspect in the Marriott hack, report says

Marriott International announced a security breach affecting 500 million customers on November 30.
Marriott International announced a security breach affecting 500 million customers on November 30.

Image: Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket via Getty Images

2017%2f09%2f19%2ffa%2frakheadshot.f59fbBy Rachel Kraus

What’s worse: a massive financial crime, or a years-long international espionage operation?

China is emerging as the lead suspect in the Marriott security breach that affected 500 million customers, according to a new report from Reuters. Security investigators reportedly said that the techniques and tools present in the attack mirror previous Chinese hacks.

SEE ALSO: Marriott data breach affected 500 million customers over four years

On November 30, Marriott International disclosed that it had discovered a security breach affecting its Starwood guest database. The hack was expansive: it affected the personal information of 500 million customers, and had gone undetected for four years.

The longevity of the attack is another reason experts think the hack may have been part of international espionage efforts, and not financial crime. 

“One clue pointing to a government attacker is the amount of time the intruders were working quietly inside the network,” Michael Sussman, a former DOJ official, told Reuters. “Patience is a virtue for spies, but not for criminals trying to steal credit card numbers.”

A hack of this nature might have been used to gather intelligence on the travel and whereabouts of Marriott customers. With more than 6,700 properties worldwide, if the hack was about intelligence, it could have provided something like a daybook for the meetings and movements of high profile people all over the world.

But the probe is ongoing. Investigators think that multiple attackers could have been inside the Starwood system at the same time, meaning that China may not be the only culprit.

The tools also may not be exclusive to China. Some of the techniques that connect the breach to the nation state have also been posted online. So it’s possible that hackers unaffiliated with Chinese espionage efforts may have used them, too.

China reportedly denies the allegations, and Marriott had no further comment.

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Alex Smith Reportedly Battling Infection After Surgery on Broken Leg

Washington Redskins quarterback Alex Smith (11) passes the ball during the first half of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans, Sunday, Nov. 18, 2018 in Landover, Md. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Alex Brandon/Associated Press

Washington quarterback Alex Smith is reportedly dealing with an infection following surgery on the broken fibula and tibia he suffered during a Nov. 18 loss to the Houston Texans.

Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reported the news, noting “it’s premature to say what this means for his playing future. But it is being handled with care and dealt with seriously by doctors.”

Washington released a statement Thursday in which the team expressed appreciation for those concerned with Smith and asked for the quarterback’s privacy:

Washington Redskins @Redskins

Statement by the Washington Redskins: https://t.co/SROL4sPVFM

Rapoport’s update comes after Burgundy Blog cited a source who said Smith is still in the hospital and may need “partial reconstruction” surgery. Eric Bickel of 106.7 The Fan also reported the Utah product had multiple surgeries due to the infection, putting the chances of him returning to the field “in real jeopardy.”

Washington is dealing with multiple injuries on the quarterback front, as ESPN’s Lisa Salters reported during the Monday night broadcast of the team’s loss to the Philadelphia Eagles that Colt McCoy suffered a season-ending fractured right fibula.

The NFC East franchise turned to Mark Sanchez after McCoy’s injury, and John Keim of ESPN reported it signed Josh Jackson to add depth.

Smith’s injury came on a gruesome play that saw his leg turn the wrong way when he was sacked by Houston’s Kareem Jackson and J.J. Watt. 

“When you have an injury like that, it’s more heartbreaking than it is physical,” Washington head coach Jay Gruden told reporters after the setback. “Just breaks your heart because this is what he loves to do. He loves to lead this team, he loves to be with his guys and now the season is over, and he has a long way back.”

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Teddy Geiger, More Confident Than Ever, Told Us Who She Was In 2018



Rich Polk/Getty Images for BMI

A little over a year ago, Teddy Geiger revealed something important on Instagram, something that would shape the rest of her life. “I’m transitioning,” she wrote to answer a fan’s question about her changing appearance. “Love it or hate it this is who I have been for a looooong time.”

The declaration kicked off a new era for Geiger, the songwriter and singer who had spent years behind the scenes penning music for One Direction, 5 Seconds of Summer, and Shawn Mendes. In fact, three songs Geiger and Mendes wrote together — “Stitches,” “Treat You Better,” and “There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back” — hit the top 10 and quickly became Mendes’s signature tracks. But that’s all part of Geiger’s career.

Her personal news precipitated a string of revealing, illuminating interviews that focused on her: her own music, her identity, and her years-long path from teenage pop-rock wunderkind to celebrated songwriting maestro. In 2006, Geiger hit as a talented solo artist with “For You I Will (Confidence),” released a debut album called Underage Thinking, and ventured briefly into film and TV roles all before age 21.

As she recapped to The New York Times earlier this year, though, she found the music-industry machine exhausting. “Having a hit is fine, but doing the work is what I want,” she said. “I get more excited the day of creation than once it’s big.”

In 2018, after years of quiet retreat and private writing, Geiger was once again eager to share her creation. Teddy became teddy<3, a fun moniker used to package her own new solo recordings, which culminated in a personal, wildly technicolor new album called LillyAnna. She made some public appearances at awards shows and industry parties. And notably, she teamed back up with Mendes for the most ambitious album of his career. Here’s what happened during the highest-profile, most creatively enterprising year of Geiger’s life.

There’s Nothing Holdin’ Them Back

Before Mendes dropped his self-titled album in May, he gave us a taste of his newfound maturation on the advance singles “In My Blood” and “Lost in Japan” — two Geiger co-writes that thrusted Mendes’s star forward both musically and thematically. The former mines the 20-year-old’s struggles with anxiety while the latter playfully saunters into the arena of sex.

Geiger co-produced those as she did for 11 of the album’s 14 tracks, giving Shawn Mendes a unified, holistic aura of confidence. It’s a representation of Mendes fully coming into his own as a performer, writer, and all-around talent, one his recent Rolling Stone cover story folds into a larger examination of his fame. It’s also hard not to equate that sonic self-assurance to Geiger’s own clear path forward, which began after letting the world know who she is.

One of Mendes’s idols is John Mayer, a pop figure who likewise was hardly ever seen without a guitar in his early years. Geiger’s “For You I Will” sounded like it fit that Mayer mold, too, with its hushed vocals and strummed acoustic chords, so there’s a bit of undeniable synergy in their creative partnership. The best part now, of course, is how Geiger’s sound has matured well beyond that, adding splashes of psychedelia and a coat of early 2000s New York grit. You don’t necessarily hear it on Shawn Mendes — though the roomy, pumped-up claps on “Queen” are steps forward — but it’s all over LillyAnna, her lush reintroduction as teddy<3.

Under The Blue And Brand New

In fact, LillyAnna‘s atypical arrangements are precisely what make it so endearing. She still strums chords — you can hear as much on the glam title track and the panoramic “Under the Blue” — but the songs they serve frequently sound sideways. Geiger’s voice is rarely present without a layer of distortion or reverb and often even partially obscured in the mix. A lot of the effects-heavy tracks, like moody instrumental “8” and frenetic indie pop bop “Wishing (And Hoping),” sound lifted right from a hidden SoundCloud page. In a way, they were; Geiger spent a portion of 2018 tweeting out demo versions of dozens of tracks she’d assembled over the years.

But LillyAnna, named for a persona she’d once used online, isn’t just a collection of ideas. The songs date from 2011 or 2012 up until right before she transitioned, as she revealed to Zane Lowe in September. Despite that, it’s easy to hear LillyAnna — with its burying of solid pop foundations under whirling keyboard textures, layers of post-punk bass lines, and even a brief funk detour (!) — as a reemergence of the new teddy<3. And it sounds exciting.

So, too, does a recent acoustic “Under Pressure” cover where she plays the David Bowie to Mendes’s Freddie Mercury, and a reportedly forthcoming track for singer Olivia O’Brien that Geiger cooked up while using a beer can as an instrument at a party. “I just feel more open,” she said in that New York Times interview. For Geiger, it’s a resurfacing. But for teddy<3, it's just the beginning.

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People really loved bean burritos in 2018, according to Grubhub

Looks like a lot of you snubbed carnitas in 2018. According to year-end data from Grubhub, the food that experienced the biggest surge on the delivery platform this year was the bean burrito.

Notably, the 2018 list featured zero red meat, although chicken made a strong showing. Of the top 10 items, which Grubhub defines as the items that surged the most, five were chicken: chicken slider (#3), chicken burrito (#5), chicken sandwich (#6), chicken and waffle slider (#8), and parmesan chicken (#9). 

SEE ALSO: Soup bully won’t stop sending anonymous food deliveries to confused neighbor

There were also two cauliflower entries — cauliflower rice bowl (#7) and buffalo cauliflower (ew, #10) — as well as one pork entry (baby back pork rib at #4) and one seafood entry (the ever-popular poke bowl at #2). We have long been skeptical of the delivery poke bowl — why not just go eat a fresh one? — but it looks like our fellow orderers do not agree.

GrubHub also released breakfast and late night lists, which feel a little more “wow, very unnerving that this company keeps data on the gyro I ate at 4am.” They’re pretty unsurprising, although we do appreciate the gastric bravery of people eating stuffed jalapeños (#1 on the late-night list) and spicy miso ramen (#2) right before going to sleep.

And congrats to French toast for appearing on both the late night and breakfast lists. French toast, we always knew you could do it.

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MoviePass reinvents itself again for 2019

Image: Darron Cummings/AP/REX/Shutterstock

2017%2f04%2f25%2f1f%2fpkheadshotsmallcopy.7f1bcBy Proma Khosla

MoviePass has had quite a year, but looks to be trying to return to its previous glory with new 2019 plans. Starting in the new year, MoviePass subscribers will have access to all showtimes of all movies for either a monthly rate (pricing based on location) or prepaid 12-month subscription.

SEE ALSO: Whelp, MoviePass is being investigated by the NY Attorney General

Currently, MoviePass lets subscribers see one movie per calendar day, limited to three per month, but with a limited selection of movies. These are usually independent or lesser-known films; major blockbusters don’t appear on the app until several weeks after they release, if at all.

The new monthly plan offers three options: Select, All Access, and Red Carpet. They all have the same three-movie cap, but increasing prices indicate increasing access. The Select plan is basically the current plan; limited movie selection for the lowest available price. All Access broadens the movie slate, and Red Carpet includes a premium screening (IMAX/3-D, etc).

Prices also increase depending on location (e.g. subscribers in big cities pay more because movie tickets are more expensive in their area).

The 12-month subscription, available for a limited time only, follows the same model, though you can only purchase it for All Access or Red Carpet and the pricing isn’t zoned based on geography.

The plan itself makes sense and is essentially a move back towards MoviePass’ old model. Before MoviePass struck its unlimited plan down to $9.95/month in 2017, it offered a $30/month plan with a three-movie limit (at $10/movie, this was still a steal in cities like New York, where adult movie tickets are roughly $15 each).

This was a reliable plan (I write from experience), but MoviePass has been through a lot since then. It’s competing with AMC Stubs A-List, which offers major perks at its namesake theater chain, and given AMC’s rocky relationship with MoviePass, the company will likely revoke MoviePass’ access to its theaters at the first available opportunity.

A yearlong commitment is a lot to ask MoviePass subscribers given the emotional turmoil they’ve sustained, often week-to-week. The monthly plans are more costly in the long run, but may assuage concerned customers who don’t want to commit to a whole year up front. We’ve been through a lot and just want stability. Could this be it?

Mashable has reached out to MoviePass for further comment.

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Eagles LB Kamu Grugier-Hill on Cowboys: ‘They Always Choke’

PHILADELPHIA, PA - AUGUST 09: Kamu Grugier-Hill #54 of the Philadelphia Eagles reacts during the preseason game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Lincoln Financial Field on August 9, 2018 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill added some fuel to the already heated rivalry between the Eagles and Dallas Cowboys on Thursday.

According to NBC Philadelphia (h/t ESPN.com’s Tim McManus), Grugier-Hill took a shot at the Cowboys ahead of Sunday’s huge divisional clash: “I mean, you look at Dallas’ history, they always choke, so we’ll go down there and make them choke.”

The 7-5 Cowboys hold a one-game lead over the 6-6 Eagles for the NFC East lead, and they will host Philly at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, this weekend.

Dallas has won just four division titles since 1999, and it hasn’t won the Super Bowl since the end of the 1995 campaign.

Meanwhile, the Eagles won the Super Bowl last season, and they have won the NFC East eight times since 2001.

Philadelphia lost 27-20 to the Cowboys at home on Nov. 11, so another loss Sunday would put the Eagles in a huge hole.

The Eagles would trail the Cowboys by two games with three left to play, and they would essentially need to win out with the Cowboys losing out in order to win the division since Dallas would own the head-to-head tiebreaker.

Regardless of what happens Sunday, the wild card would still be in play for the Eagles as well since the Minnesota Vikings currently hold the NFC’s final wild-card spot at 6-5-1.

Grugier-Hill is in the midst of his third season with the Eagles after the New England Patriots selected him in the sixth round of the 2016 NFL draft out of Eastern Illinois.

He was primarily a special teams player in his first two seasons, but Grugier-Hill has started seven games on defense this season and has recorded 29 tackles and one interception.

Grugier-Hill will have a tough assignment on his hands Sunday, as he and the Philadelphia defense will be tasked with slowing down quarterback Dak Prescott, running back Ezekiel Elliott and wide receiver Amari Cooper.

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From posting bail to legal aid: NGOs go into overdrive at border

San Diego, California – Victor* first came to the United States in 2006. He left his village in the mountains of Peru during the country’s civil war in the 1990s after his family’s cow was stolen at gunpoint.

As a farmer, his family’s entire livelihood was in that cow and the lost of it forced Victor to flee. First to the capital Lima, and later to Mexico.

He eventually crossed the border into the US, where he worked his way up to being a restaurant manager, and then got a job for a construction company.

But in January, Victor’s mother became gravely ill and he left the US to take care of her in Peru. When she recovered, Victor made his way back to the US border, but things had changed significantly since he last crossed more than five years earlier.

The border was better fortified and Border Patrol agents seemed more abundant.

When he arrived at the border with the smugglers he paid to take him across, border agents could be seen in the distance.

“It was a tense situation,” Victor recalled. The smugglers told him to go anyway. Moments later, he was apprehended and detained.

A judge set a bail at $7,000 – money his family did not have.

But he got help from an organisation, specifically designed to help low-income individuals pay their bail. 

The organisation, dubbed the Bail Project, is one of many ways groups and individuals are supporting migrants and refugees at the border. The projects have gone into overdrive in the last two years, seeking to combat President Donald Trump’s “zero-tolerance” policy and anti-immigrant rhetoric.

The Bail Project

The Bail Project grew out of The Bronx Freedom Fund, which was started about a decade ago to “combat racial disparities and mass incarceration”. Last year, it started to expand to other high-need sites, such as San Diego.

Since August, the organisation has bailed out about 750 undocumented individuals who were arrested in and around the San Diego area. The organisation hit a new hurdle in October when a judge started to require that individuals have a “third-party custodian” to take responsibility for the defendant while he or she was out on bail.

“You can directly support the #MigrantCaravan and get people out of detention,” the Bail Project tweeted last month. “By servicing as a ‘custodian’ for someone charged under the Trump admin’s ‘zero-tolerance’ policy, you can ensure someone’s release & give them a fighting chance at asylum,” the tweet read.

🚨San Diego!🚨

YOU can directly support the #MigrantCaravan & get people out of detention. By serving as a “custodian” for someone charged under the Trump admin’s “zero-tolerance” policy, you can ensure someone’s release & give them a fighting chance at asylum. Here’s how: /1

— The Bail Project (@bailproject) November 19, 2018

So far, the Bail Project has signed up at least 20 people to act as third-party custodians, according to Patrick Sullivan, the San Diego coordinator for the project.

Victor tends to his papaya plant in his garden [Eline van Nes/Al Jazeera]

Victor was released prior to the third-party custodian requirement. 

He has appeared at all of his hearings, just like 95 percent of the cases in San Diego the Bail Project is involved in, Sullivan said.

“The migrants are coming to the border for help from violence,” Sullivan told Al Jazeera. “Instead of sending out troops, the government should send humanitarian workers.”

‘People can resist’

Elsewhere in San Diego and on the other side of the border in Tijuana, people are showing their support for migrants and refugees hoping to make it to the US. 

Most recently, groups have organised in solidarity with thousands of mainly Central Americans who have arrived in Tijuana in recent weeks as part of a mass exodus, initially dubbed the Central American caravan.

More than 6,000 migrants and refugees have arrived in the Mexican border city, with the majority hoping to apply for asylum. Asylum seekers have been told it may be two months before they are able to enter the US to submit their asylum claims. 

Last month hundreds of people from San Diego rallied at the border in solidarity with the migrants arriving at the border to apply for asylum.

Looking at them separating kids from their families, I couldn’t help but think of the Second World War and fascism. What is happening now is a well known cycle. But the people can resist. We just have to be aware of what is happening.

Katherine Pettus, protester

One of the protesters, 62-year-old Katherine Pettus, who used to teach political science at Columbia university, said she came out in protest of the current government.

“Looking at them separating kids from their families, I couldn’t help but think of the Second World War and fascism,” Pettus told Al Jazeera. “What is happening now is a well known cycle. But the people can resist. We just have to be aware of what is happening.”

Other groups have filed lawsuits on behalf of the asylum seekers. Al Otro Lado, a southern California-based organisation, filed a complaint against high-level government officials, including the Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen.

The lawsuit accuses the government and Homeland Security of actively turning back asylum seekers who are at risk of violence in their home country. US Customs and Border Protection maintains it processes asylum seekers “expeditiously as possible”. 

Several other organisations, such as BorderClick and the Otay Mesa Detention Resistance, have put out calls on social media for donations for the migrants in Tijuana. They have asked for blankets, diapers, general hygienic products and food. 

‘I only need toilet paper’

The Border Angels, a group that has been active since the 1980s, supports asylum seekers with legal advice. They also try to coordinate donations from people in the community and bring it to shelters on the other side of the border.

Hugo Castro, who works with the Border Angels, said the group has been increasing the number of donation runs it makes. Before the Central American exodus arrived in Tijuana, the group would go once or twice a week. Now, it goes twice a day.

“We get a lot of donations now from everywhere,” Castro told Al Jazeera as he loaded his minivan with donations. “People come here and give us stuff, they send it over by FedEx from all over the nation or they just contact us via social media to ask what they can do to help.”

In Tijuana, Castro handed out blankets, diapers and hygienic products to refugees and migrants at the stadium in Tijuana where most of the Central Americans were being housed, prior to its closure earlier this month. 

Castro hands out donations in Tijuana [Eline van Nes/Al Jazeera]

Maria-Elena, a Honduran woman, carrying her young daughter Genesis on her shoulders, told Al Jazeera she was happy so many people donated products they wouldn’t be able to get themselves. She was hoping for deodorant and a blanket.

Somewhere from the crowd, a young child called out, “Toilet paper, toilet paper. I only need toilet paper.”

“A lot of people in Tijuana were pro-migrant,” Castro told Al Jazeera while driving back to the port of entry. “But now they are scared. You can see it happening. There have also been Mexicans who threatened me through social media, telling me to stop helping the migrants.”

Children and others ask for specific items as Castro hands out donations in Tijuana [Eline van Nes/Al Jazeera] 

A year and a half ago, Castro got into trouble in Tijuana. He was kidnapped and severely beaten up by people he doesn’t know. He suspects it is due to the the years of work the Border Angels have done. 

“After that I became careful and suspicious,” Castro told Al Jazeera.

But like so many of the individuals supporting migrants and asylum seekers, Castro said he must continue to do this kind of work.

“It’s what gives my life meaning. I just have to shut out my emotions and help the people who are in need.”

*The individual’s name has been changed to protect his identity.

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Pelosi, Schumer to meet with Trump next week over wall funding


Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi and Donald Trump

President Donald Trump’s request for $5 billion worth of border wall funding stands at the center of the funding dispute that he’ll discuss with Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. | AP Photo/Evan Vucci

President Donald Trump will meet with Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer at the White House next Tuesday to try to avoid a Christmastime shutdown over border wall funding, two congressional sources confirmed to POLITICO.

The meeting, originally scheduled for this week, was postponed following the death of former President George H.W. Bush. Lawmakers also agreed to kick a government funding deadline set for Friday to Dec. 21 to buy themselves more negotiating time.

Story Continued Below

But now that the ceremonies honoring the 41st president are over, top lawmakers are starting to once again turn their attention to the spending standoff.

Trump’s request for $5 billion worth of border wall funding stands at the center of the funding dispute. Democrats are loath to fund Trump’s southern barrier without other immigrations concessions for their own priorities. But Republicans have not offered any thus far.

Trump has said he’s willing to shut the government down without the money. And lawmakers on the Hill are bracing for a weekend shutdown right before Christmas.

The divide even penetrates the Democratic party. Schumer and Senate Democrats have agreed that $1.6 billion in southern border fencing is the starting point for negotiations. House Democrats are pressuring Pelosi to push back and refuse to back even a penny.

The meeting will occur at 11:30 a.m. in the Oval Office, the sources said.

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Taylor Swift And Hayley Kiyoko Team Up On A Surprise Stripped-Down ‘Delicate’



Taylor Hill/Getty Images

Wednesday night (December 5) in New York City, Taylor Swift made a surprise appearance at the Ally Coalition’s fifth annual Talent Show to sing “Delicate.” This is notable for a number of reasons: 1) Swift was not listed as a scheduled performer at the gig, which also featured Lana Del Rey, Bleachers, Haley Kiyoko, and more; 2) the venue where it happened, Town Hall, has a capacity of roughly 1,500 people, making one of the most intimate Swift performances in some time; and 3) she sang it alongside Kiyoko, someone who’d previously used Swift’s career to contrast with her own struggles within the music industry as a queer artist.

“I’ve had several music industry execs say ‘You’re doing another music video about girls?’” Kiyoko told Refinery29 in March. “I was like, um, yeah… Taylor Swift sings about men in every single song and video, and no one complains.”

Swift responded quickly on Tumblr, saying, “We should applaud artists who are brave enough to tell their honest romantic narrative through their art, and the fact is that I’ve never encountered homophobia and she has. It’s her right to call out anyone who has double standards about gay vs. straight love interests.”

That’s all ancient history though, because the pair’s team-up on an acoustic “Delicate” was accompanied by plenty of smiles and a power that comes from that kind of unexpected collaboration. Kiyoko takes the harmonies and it sounds good. Watch fan-captured video of the performance below.

The event also featured Lana Del Rey performing all new cuts from her upcoming Norman Fucking Rockwell album, including two we’ve previously heard, “Venice Bitch” and “How to Disappear.” The other two, “Hey Blue Baby” and “I Must Be Stupid for Feeling So Happy,” made their live debuts, as per Billboard.

“Me and Jack [Antonoff] wrote a couple of country songs just for fun, so we thought we’d play them,” Lana reportedly told the crowd, referencing her producer for the upcoming LP. Antonoff was there, too, and his sister, Rachel, hosted the event. Check out one of those new cuts below.

Find out more about the Ally Coalition right here.

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