Shortly after making his debut in episode three of Grotesquerie, Travis Kelce sped off with Niecy Nash-Betts in a getaway car. Naturally, Swifties were immediately on alert.
In the scene, which aired on Oct. 2, Kelce’s character Ed Lachlan helped Nash-Betts’ Lois Tryon break out of the hospital after she crashed her car while drunk driving. The pair left the hospital hand-in-hand in a dream-like sequence before hopping into a red convertible and driving off.
Ryan Murphy, who created the series and created the role specifically for Kelce, told The Hollywood Reporter that the scene is “a little Taylor Swift nod” given that the characters hop “into the red getaway car.”
The reference is, of course, to a song from Swift’s 2017 album Reputation, titled “Getaway Car.”
After the episode premiered earlier this month, fans were quick to point out the reference that was seemingly made to the Swift song on social media.
A fan page for the 35-year-old Kansas City Chiefs tight end posted a clip of the scene on X (formerly Twitter), and several of the replies pointed out that Kelce was having his very own onscreen getaway car moment.
Another fan pointed out the possible connection on TikTok, writing over a clip from the episode, “Does this look familiar Swifties?! 😍😍.”
“This can’t be a coincidence!” the fan wrote in the post’s caption.
Since Kelce made his debut as Ed Lachlan on the FX series, the show’s world has come apart. On the Oct. 16 episode, it was revealed that Lois (Nash-Betts) has actually been in a coma the whole time — and the vicious murderer she’s been hunting was all a vision inside her head.
The reveal adds some context to the getaway car scene, too, as Murphy told THR that originally, Kelce and Nash-Betts “drive off to this black limbic space, which makes absolutely no sense. But it does make sense now, because you know [Lois] is in a coma.”
Another layer of that reveal is that all the characters fans have come to know from Lois’ dream-like state are not who they were believed to be.
Her husband, Marshall (Courtney B. Vance) is alive and well; her daughter Merritt (Raven Goodwin) is a doctor working to find a cure for cancer who is married to a downtrodden and disheveled Ed (Kelce). Father Charlie (Nicholas Alexander Chavez) and Sister Megan (Micaela Diamond) are also not who they seem to be.
Charlie is actually Lois’ doctor in the hospital, while Megan is a detective who works with Lois in the police force.
Grotesquerie airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. ET on FX and streams the next day on Hulu.