Taylor Swift fans cringe as Jack Antonoff’s wife Margaret Qualley asked awkward question

The Life of a Showgirl was announced by Taylor Swift earlier this week but she’s revealed that frequent collaborator Jack Antonoff isn’t one of the producers for this album

An “awkward” moment in which Margaret Qualley was asked about Taylor Swift’s new album has attracted attention this week. It comes following the news that her husband Jack Antonoff isn’t among the producers on the record.

Earlier this week, Taylor, 35, announced her next album, the Life of a Showgirl, ahead of its release in October. She’s revealed that she reunited with producers Max Martin, 54, and Karl Schuster, 40, known as Shellback, for the album.

It’s understood to be Taylor’s first studio album in more than a decade to not feature Jack, 41, as a producer. He’s co-produced her last seven albums, and her four re-recorded albums, and has also worked with her as a songwriter.

Margaret, 30, who has been married to Jack since 2023, was asked about the upcoming album whilst promoting her new film Honey Don’t (2025) yesterday. The interview with the actor has since prompted attention. It comes after Taylor sparked engagement rumours when fans saw Travis Kelce’s lock screen.

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Margaret Qualley, pictured, was asked about Taylor Swift’s new album in an interview this week following the news that her husband Jack Antonoff hasn’t produced it(Image: TODAY)

Margaret’s husband was brought up whilst she was on the Today show. After he was briefly mentioned earlier in the interview, host Craig Melvin, 46, later asked: “You mentioned your husband Jack of course has produced for … with Taylor for years. Perhaps you heard that she’s got a new album that’s coming out. Can you tell us anything about it?”

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Addressing the question, Margaret answered: “I don’t know anything. But … we’ll all be excited to listen to the music.” She was then seen laughing as the presenter responded: “Okay.” Amid her giggling, Margaret added: “Okay.”

The interaction has been described as “awkward” by some viewers, including on social media. One person wrote on X: “This is so awkward lmao.” Sharing their thoughts, someone reacted to the scene: “Jesus this is so embarrassing.”

Many fans came to Margaret’s defence, with several saying that it had been a “weird question” to ask her. One person wrote in their response: “Why put her on the spot on something that is not her business? This is a weird question.”

Another said: “Unnecessary question created an awkward moment, she doesn’t care, omg they don’t get it.” Someone else wrote on the platform after the interview: “Even if she knew anything.. why would she say something about it?”

Jack Antonoff and Taylor Swift sat at a table together at the Grammys in 2023.
Jack (left) and Taylor (right) have been long-time collaborators, with him having co-produced a number of her previous albums(Image: Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Jack and Taylor have been long time collaborators. He’s credited with being a co-producer on her albums 1989, Reputation, Lover, Folklore, Evermore, Midnights and last year’s the Tortured Poets Department. He also co-wrote songs like Look What You Made Me Do, Anti-Hero and Cruel Summer.

Max and Shellback, who have worked with Taylor on her latest album, are credited with previously co-producing Red, 1989, Reputation. They co-wrote Shake It Off, …Ready For It? and We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together, among other songs.

Taylor revealed that she had reunited with Max and Shellback for the Life of a Showgirl whilst speaking about the album on the New Heights podcast. She said they hadn’t worked together for around eight years prior to the project.

On an episode of the podcast released earlier this week, Taylor shared: “It’s a record I made with my mentor, Max Martin, and Shellback. The three of us have made some of my favourite songs that I’ve ever done before.”

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She added: “We’ve never actually made an album before where it’s just the three of us. There’s no other collaborators. It’s just the three of us making a focused album where … I mean it felt like catching lightning in a bottle, honestly.”

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‘Going to be good for 90 years’: Trump defends record on Social Security

United States President Donald Trump has marked the 90th anniversary of Social Security with a defence of his administration’s policies toward the programme — and attacks on his Democratic rivals.

On Thursday, Trump signed a presidential proclamation in the Oval Office, wherein he acknowledged the “monumental” importance of the social safety-net programme.

“I recommit to always defending Social Security,” the proclamation reads.

“To this day, Social Security is rooted in a simple promise: those who gave their careers to building our Nation will always have the support, stability, and relief they deserve.”

But Trump’s second term as president has been dogged by accusations that he has undermined programmes like Social Security in the pursuit of other agenda items, including his restructuring of the federal government.

What is Social Security?

Social Security in the US draws on payroll taxes to fund monthly payments to the elderly, the spouses of deceased workers, and the disabled. For many recipients, the payouts are a primary source of income during retirement.

The programme is considered widely popular: In 2024, the Pew Research Center found that 79 percent of Americans believe Social Security should not be cut in any way.

Additionally, four out of 10 people surveyed sided with the view that Social Security should be expanded to include more people and more benefits.

But the programme faces significant hurdles to its long-term feasibility.

Last year, the Social Security Administration (SSA) published a report that found the costs for old-age, disability and survivors’ insurance outstripped the programmes’ income.

It noted that the trust funds fuelling those programmes “are projected to become depleted during 2033” if measures are not taken to reverse the trend.

At Thursday’s Oval Office appearance, Trump sought to soothe those concerns, while taking a swipe at the Democratic Party.

“ You keep hearing stories that in six years, seven years, Social Security will be gone,” Trump said.

“And it will be if the Democrats ever get involved because they don’t know what they’re doing. But it’s going to be around a long time with us.”

He added that Social Security was “going to be destroyed” under his Democratic predecessor, former President Joe Biden, a frequent target for his attacks.

Criticism of Trump’s track record

But Trump himself has faced criticism for weakening Social Security since returning to the White House for a second term in January.

Early on, Trump and his then-adviser Elon Musk laid out plans to slash the federal workforce and reduce spending, including by targeting the Social Security Administration (SSA).

In February, the Social Security Administration said it would “reduce the size of its bloated workforce and organizational structure”, echoing Trump and Musk’s rhetoric.

The projected layoffs and incentives for early retirement were designed to cut Social Security’s staff from 57,000 to 50,000, a 12.3-percent decrease.

Under Trump, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has also announced plans to pare back Social Security’s phone services, though it has since backtracked in the face of public outcry.

In addition, Musk and Trump have attacked Social Security’s reputation, with the former adviser telling podcast host Joe Rogan, “Social Security is the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.”

The two men even claimed Social Security is paying benefits to millions of long-dead individuals, though critics point out that those claims do not appear to be true.

The COBOL programming system used by the Social Security Administration marks incomplete entries with birthdates set 150 years back, according to the news magazine Wired. Those entries, however, generally do not receive benefits.

The Office of the Inspector General overseeing the Social Security Administration has repeatedly looked into these older entries. It confirmed that these entries are not active.

“We acknowledge that almost none of the numberholders discussed in the report currently receive SSA payments,” a report from 2023 said.

It also indicated that the Social Security Administration would have to pay between $5.5m and $9.7m to update its programming, though the changes would yield “limited benefits” in the fight against fraud.

Still, Trump doubled down on the claim that dead people were receiving benefits on Thursday.

“We had 12.4 million names where they were over 120 years old,” Trump said. “There were nearly 135,000 people listed who were over 160 years old and, in some cases, getting payments. So somebody’s getting those payments.”

Questions after ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’

Critics have also questioned whether Trump’s push to cut taxes will have long-term effects that erode Social Security.

In July, Trump’s signature piece of legislation, the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), cemented his 2017 tax cuts. It also increased the tax deductions for earners who rely on tips or Social Security benefits.

But groups like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a bipartisan think tank, estimate that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will shorten the timeline for Social Security’s insolvency.

“The law dictates that when the trust funds deplete their reserves, payments are limited to incoming revenues,” the committee said in late July.

“For the Social Security retirement program, we estimate that means a 24 percent benefit cut in late 2032, after the enactment of OBBBA.”

Still, Trump has repeatedly promised to defend Social Security from any benefit cuts. He reiterated that pledge in Thursday’s appearance.

“American seniors, every single day, we’re going to fight for them. We’re going to make them richer, better, stronger in so many different ways,” Trump said.

“But Social Security is pretty much the one that we think about, and we love it, and we love what’s happening with it, and it’s going to be good for 90 years and beyond.”

Smith sets up comfortable Spirit win over Rockets

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The Hundred men’s competition, Lord’s

London Spirit 162-5 (100 balls): Smith 52 (34); Stoinis 2-27

Trent Rockets 141-6 (100 balls): Banton 46 (31); Worrall 2-32

Spirit won by 21 runs

England batter Jamie Smith’s half-century set up a comfortable 21-run win for London Spirit at Lord’s, inflicting a first defeat on Trent Rockets in The Hundred.

Smith was promoted to open, a role he fulfils for England’s white-ball sides, and struck 52 from 34 balls as Spirit posted a challenging 162-5.

The visitors made a bright start in reply as Tom Banton and Joe Root added 73 for the first wicket, but they fell away after the former’s departure and crawled to 141-6.

Rockets were ultimately punished for a sloppy fielding effort. Smith was put down on 23 and 26, while Kane Williamson was also dropped twice in making 45 as the pair added 73 for the second wicket.

Smith clubbed four sixes and two fours while Williamson showed his sublime touch and class in a 32-ball knock that followed Australian David Warner’s departure for six.

Warner’s compatriot Ashton Turner provided a late cameo of 30 from16 balls, while Ollie Pope made 17 from nine, to complete a much-improved batting effort after Spirit’s previous performance on home turf saw them bowled out for just 80.

Banton led the charge in his opening stand with Root but the course of the game changed when he played on to his stumps off Jamie Overton, who struggled through his 20 balls with an injury that could be a cause for concern for Spirit.

Banton’s departure sparked a collapse of four wickets for 17 runs, including Root for 27 and Rehan Ahmed for a duck, and their task became even more difficult when Tom Alsop was struck by an Overton bouncer that burst through his helmet and he had to retire hurt.

Smith steps up as Spirit find winning formula

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Smith’s promotion meant Spirit were using their third different opening combination in four games but they seem to have finally found the right fit.

The wicketkeeper was aggressive from the outset, whacking two sixes in his first five balls off Rockets skipper David Willey and found the perfect companion in Williamson, who seemed much more comfortable at number three after Warner was caught at cover off Lockie Ferguson.

Williamson had opened twice previously and made unconvincing scores of 14 and 19 but was back to his best, delighting the Lord’s crowd with his trademark deft touches behind the keeper and exquisite cover drives.

Rockets’ bowlers were guilty of offering too much width for him to play those shots but they were also let down in the field. Adam Hose spilled Smith on 23, Ferguson misjudged a chance at long-on when he had 26 before he almost got redemption, only for Alsop to put one down behind the stumps with Williamson on 22.

Hose’s nightmare evening continued as he could not hold on to another at deep cover with Williamson on 38.

The pair ensured they punished Rockets to set a solid platform, and Turner and Pope added a rapid 46 in just 20 balls to take the game beyond the visitors.

What is happening on Friday?

Northern Superchargers’ women will be looking to keep the pressure on the top two as they take on Birmingham Phoenix at 15:00 BST.

The men’s game follows at 18:30 BST with Phoenix hoping to gather momentum after they beat leaders Oval Invincibles in their most recent game on Tuesday.

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NLC Alleges Mismanagement In NSITF, Issues Seven-Day Ultimatum

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has raised the alarm over alleged mismanagement in the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), accusing the Federal Government of diverting 40 per cent of workers’ contributions to the national coffers as “revenue,” in flagrant violation of the statutes establishing the agency.

The NLC said the NSITF must account for and return all diverted funds within seven working days from Thursday, August 14, 2025, failure of which the union would no longer guarantee industrial peace in the sector.

The government had yet to react to the allegation as of the time of filing the report.

In a communiqué at the end of a meeting by its Central Working Committee (CWC), the labour union described the situation as an ongoing assault on workers’ social protection rights.

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It affirmed that the NSITF belonged to the Nigerian working class, adding that it would mobilise all legitimate means to ensure workers’ interests were protected.

“The NSITF must account for and return all diverted funds within seven (7) working days from today.

“If at the end of these seven working days, nothing is done, NLC will no longer guarantee Industrial peace in the sector.

“The CWC expressed outrage at the ongoing assault on workers’ social protection rights through the Federal Government’s diversion of 40 per cent of workers’ contributions to the national coffers as ‘revenue,’ in flagrant violation of the statutes establishing the NSITF.

“Equally condemnable is the new administration’s false claim of ownership of the NLC National Headquarters, a property owned by Nigerian workers, resort to cyber and media-bullying of the trade unions and leadership, coupled with covert moves to amend the NSITF Act in a manner that would disenfranchise workers and give the government full control over the funds,” the communiqué signed by its President, Joe Ajaero, read in part.

“The NSITF must account for and return all diverted funds within seven (7) working days from today. b)

“It also called for the constitution of the Pension Commission (PENCOM) board within seven days in full compliance with the law, and the submission to the NLC of the full status report of the funds within the same period.

“The CWC noted with grave concern the non-constitution of the governing board of the National Pension Commission, in contravention of the PENCOM Act and other statutes. This unlawful vacuum has allowed the government to solely superintend over the pension funds contributed by workers and employers, stripping away the statutory tripartite oversight and increasing the risk of mismanagement and political interference.

“The CWC reiterates that pension funds are deferred wages, not state revenue, and demands the immediate constitution of the board in full compliance with the law,” the union stated in the communiqué.

The NLC also ratified the dissolution of its state administrative council in Edo State and the setting up of a caretaker committee.