Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour Book is shaping up to be the must-have gift of the holiday season — and now a few lucky chosen ones have received their copies with a handwritten note from the singer.
Kansas City Chiefs heiress and college cheerleader Ava Hunt — whose dad Clark Hunt is owner, chairman and CEO of the team — excitedly unboxed her VIP gift via her Instagram Stories on Sunday, December 1, and her sister Gracie Hunt also shared that she’d received a copy from Swift, writing via Instagram, “the most beautiful woman and most amazing tour.”
The handwritten note from Swift, which Ava, 19, and Gracie, 25, both shared reads: “Oh hi! As we conclude the wildest, most extraordinary adventure of my life, The Eras Tour, I wanted to share with a few friends my memories from it.
The whole Hunt family — Clark, his wife Tavia, plus Ava, Gracie and their brother Knobel, 22 — have been getting to know Swift, 34, ever since she started dating Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, 35. Ava, 19, attended an Eras show at Arrowhead Stadium last year and has previously shared a picture with Swift at a game, writing, “Enchanted to meet you, Taylor Swift.”
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The Eras Tour Book documents Swift’s epic 20-month odyssey and has been published just days before the tour finally wraps up next week: Swift’s last show is set to be in Vancouver on December 8.
“At the start of this, I never could have imagined that you would cheer so loudly it registered as an earthquake on seismic charts (this happened multiple times) or that you would lift economies of whatever city we went to,” she writes in the book.
She adds: “Your excitement was truly contagious. The Eras Tour had no typical demographic of stereotypical attendee. It was for everyone, because you made everyone feel included. For that, I will never be able to thank you enough. My hope is that you won’t let that behavior end with the end of the Eras tour. It doesn’t have to be the end of an era of joy and acceptance. My hope is that you find ways to create these spaces around you in your daily life, your school, your job. That would be a real legacy to leave.”
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