Ryan Gosling is no longer “Just Ken.” He’s also a big Swiftie.
The Barbie star revealed in a recent interview with Fandango that he thinks he’s a bigger Swiftie than his Fall Guy co-star Emily Blunt.
“Oh, Ryan Gosling,” the actor confidently responded in the first-person when asked which of the two loved the GRAMMY-winner more.
In their new film, Gosling plays Colt, a stuntman who falls in love with the director of the film he is working on, played by Blunt. During a comedic scene in the new film, she finds him crying to Swift’s “All Too Well” alone in his car, as many Swifties would.
Blunt went on to say that she is also a fan of the “Lover” singer ahead of her new album, The Tortured Poets Department.
“Oh, my God, yeah,” the Oppenheimer actress added, commenting on Swift’s current global domination amid her Eras Tour. “Who isn’t?”
Once they were tasked with naming their favorite song from the “Bejeweled” singer, Gosling revealed he shares the same preference as his Fall Guy character, stating that “‘All Too Well’ right now has a real soft spot in [his] heart.”
Blunt took over, “I’d say ‘Cruel Summer’ is pretty up there for me.” The answer is bound to be popular among Swift fans, as they just sent it to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 over four years after its release.
As his identity as a Swiftie is revealed, Gosling may have a few more questions for her “I Bet You Think About Me” collaborator Chris Stapleton when they both appear on Saturday Night Live this weekend. Gosling will host the April 13 episode, with the “Tennessee Whiskey” singer serving as musical guest.
In a new promo for the episode, the La La Land star jokes about how he will introduce himself to the singer, nervously rehearsing his questions. Different attempts at a first interaction include “Mr. Stapleton, big fan, love your music”; “Master Stapleton, ’tis I, Sir Gosling. That’s cool”; and “Yo Chris! One for the ‘gram?”
Once he finally works up the courage to step into the “Devil Always Made Me Think Twice” star’s dressing room, he only finds a cowboy hat gloriously sitting on a mannequin head. He carefully places the cowboy hat on his own head, as Stapleton’s “White Horse” begins to play.
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