Travis Kelce recently played coy when asked how he feels about his fiancée, Taylor Swift, writing a raunchy song about him via Page Six.
“‘Wood.’ Great, great soundtrack,” Jason Kelce told his brother while discussing the singer’s 12th album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” on Wednesday’s episode of “New Heights.”
The question sent Travis into a fit of laughter as he agreed that “it’s a great song.”
Jason couldn’t keep a straight face and asked, “Do you feel — not confident — do you feel cocky about the song ‘Wood?’”
“No,” Travis replied. “Any song, you know, that she references me in is very … I love that girl, what do you mean? Any song that she would reference me in any way…”
He trailed off as Jason and pointed out that the track is not about Travis but more specifically about his “appendage.”
The tight end denied this, insisting, “What? I think you’re not understanding the song. No way!”
The former Philadelphia Eagles center then teased Travis by quoting the lyrics, “Redwood tree / Ain’t hard to see.”
“I thought redwood was a little … it was a generous word. If somebody wrote a song about me, it would be like ‘Japanese maple / sometimes can see,’” Jason continued, which sent everyone in the studio into hysterics.
In her latest album, Swift entered her most cheeky era by releasing a song about her and Travis’ sex life, called “Wood.”
In it, she shockingly sings, “Forgive me, it sounds cocky / He (ah!)matized me / And opened my eyes / Redwood tree / It ain’t hard to see / His love was the key / That opened my thighs.
“Girls, I don’t need to catch the bouquet / To know a hard rock is on the way / […] / The curse on me was broken by your magic wand,” she continues before specifically calling out Travis’ “New Heights of manhood.”
Despite the clear double entendres throughout the song, Swift coyly said on “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl” movie that the song is about superstitions.
She clarified during an interview with Jimmy Fallon that she was initially inspired by “all these superstitions,” like knocking on wood, when writing the song.
“It really started out in a very innocent place,” the musical icon, 35, claimed during Monday’s episode of “The Tonight Show.” “I don’t know what happened, man.”
She stated that once she “got in there” and “started vibing,” the song shifted.
“I don’t know how we got here, but I love the song so much,” the songwriter quipped, later adding that “the spice level on this album is high.”