With a trash-grabbing claw and plastic bag in hand, Justin Gignac dressed up in his wedding tuxedo and waded through the Swifties, some of whom had spent hours standing outside Madison Square Garden.
He was hoping to find beads from broken friendship bracelets — something symbolic among fans of Taylor Swift. No such luck.
Instead, he picked up a single AirPod, a ring pop, an ovulation test kit strip and a rainbow fan, among others. Then he packaged them all into 1-inch boxes and sold them online — 50 pieces of trash purchased by Swift fans as far away as Australia, Germany and the United Kingdom.
“People were like, ‘Is there any more? Is there any more?’” he said.
Over the past week, fans have scoured Manhattan's streets and the internet for crumbs — sometimes literal — from what's been called "the United States' royal wedding." But Swift managed to keep the thousand-person mega event almost entirely private.
The story she hasn't told
For nearly two decades, Taylor Swift has remembered everything. The rooms. The weather. The clothes left behind. The exact words people said before they walked away.
Her career was built on transforming private moments into public memory — songs that made millions feel as though they were reading pages from a diary (sometimes they were). But one of the most anticipated chapters of her life has been defined by something different: the story she has chosen not to tell.
A week after her star-studded wedding to Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, not one verified photo had been released of the interior, the ceremony or Swift's gown. Guests and crew members signed strict NDAs and surrendered cell phones. The couple used street closures and walls of tents around the arena to keep the celebration out of view.
Some New Yorkers chafed at the security restrictions around a key transit hub on a holiday weekend, all during a heat wave. The secrecy also showed how, when you're as famous as Taylor Swift, staying truly private requires a level of wealth and influence few people have.
Still, fans in Swift T-shirts crowded the barricades, watching lines of black SUVs disappear inside the arena.
In the early morning hours, a bakery van stopped outside. A catering employee offered a box of apple honey pastries, which a police officer handed out to waiting fans. One fan could be heard yelling: “Oh my God, you guys, we’re having Taylor Swift’s dessert!”
Sifting through the pieces
Gignac, who has been turning New York City trash into art for 25 years, creates limited-edition collections from major New York moments, including the Knicks parade, where the discarded objects themselves told the story — the colors, the celebration, the evidence of thousands of people gathered in one place.
Swift’s wedding was different.
“I was like, OK, let me see how close I can get,” Gignac said. “Everything going on on the block outside of Madison Square Garden was a part of the festivities as well — it’s just a very different part.”
The area outside the Garden was “fairly clean,” he said, but he collected enough. He tied discarded straws into knots to “reinforce the wedding theme.”
Fans who saw the boxes later told him the project reminded them of Swift’s “New Year’s Day,” a song about staying after a party is over and holding on to what remains.
“You’ve never had a song change your life, and the artist be the soundtrack of your life?” Gignac said. “That’s such a massive role in your day to day — it’s nice to have something from that.”
When the photos never came
The lack of images created a void that was quickly filled with artificial intelligence: fake photos of Swift and Kelce in wedding attire, Swift in a gown and fabricated glimpses of the “secret garden” celebration that guests had described inside Madison Square Garden, where the arena was transformed with greenery, trees and flowers.
Some were obvious jokes: users inserting themselves into the wedding or pretending they had been hired to photograph it. Others were designed to be convincing — blurry, pixelated images that looked as though they had been secretly captured inside.
Swift fans are known for decoding “Easter eggs” and clues in Swift’s lyrics and public posts. Longtime Swift fan Alexa Volland said those same habits helped many quickly debunk AI-generated images by spotting warped facial features, impossible dress straps and hidden watermarks from detection tools like Google DeepMind’s SynthID.
“They built a habit of close observation,” Volland said.
Volland, a video producer for the News Literacy Project, said she was surprised no images had emerged, but happy Swift kept control.
“As a Swiftie, I would prefer to have those first looks come directly from her,” she said. “I know that we will eventually get a song that is probably the most revealing, way more revealing than any AI-generated image ever made."
‘The rose garden over Madison Square’
Margaret Willison, a Swiftie in Boston, was still waiting for one wedding detail.
“I need to know what her first song was,” she said. “It’s been haunting me.”
Willison has taught workshops on Swift's music and fandom, and says this kind of tension has defined her career. Swift has the ability to turn moments that may seem insignificant "into a cathedral we all get to be part of,” Willison said, filling them with meaning.
Willison said many fans trust Swift will eventually share the pieces she wants them to know.
“We don’t want something that’s been stolen from her,” she said.
More than a decade ago, Swift sang about leaving the spotlight and choosing “the rose garden over Madison Square.” In the end, Willison said, they weren't mutually exclusive.
“In all of her previous relationships, there was this tension between how much she was able to shine and still be understood by a partner,” she said. “Isn’t it incredible that she found that she didn’t have to choose?”
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