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Taylor Swift looks at the crowd at a concert in East Rutherford, New Jersey, in May 2023.
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Swift performs during the "Folklore" set in Chicago in June 2023.
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Fans sing along in Las Vegas in March 2023.
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Swift performs "Lover" with her band, backup singers and dancers in Nashville, Tennessee, in May 2023.
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Swift performs in Glendale, Arizona, during the opening weekend of The Eras Tour in March 2023. Glendale was temporarily re-named Swift City in honor of the concert.
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Swift performs her last show in Los Angeles in August 2023. She was announcing the upcoming release of the album "1989 (Taylor's Version)."
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Glow bracelets light up Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh in June 2023.
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Swift performs "22" in Glendale in March 2023.
Jutharat Pinyodoonyachet/The New York Times/Redux
Fans in East Rutherford trade friendship bracelets in the parking lot of MetLife Stadium in May 2023.
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Swift sings "Down Bad" in Paris in May 2024. It was her first time performing "The Tortured Poets Department" section of the show.
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Florence Welch of Florence and The Machine joins Swift on stage to perform "Florida!!!" in London in August 2024.
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Fans wait in line to buy tour merchandise outside Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, in April 2023.
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Swift gives her hat to a fan in Mexico City in August 2023. Each night of the tour, Swift selects one lucky fan to receive a signed hat at the end of her song "22."
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Swift performs "Midnight Rain" in Edinburgh, Scotland, in June 2024.
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Thousands of fans gather on a hill outside a Swift concert in Munich, Germany, in July 2024.
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Swift performs during the "Evermore" section of the show in Sydney in February 2024.
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Fans react outside Lincoln Financial Field as Swift begins her set in Philadelphia in May 2023.
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Swift dances during the "Reputation" set in Atlanta in April 2023.
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Swift twirls during the combined "Folklore" and "Evermore" section of a show in Paris in May 2024.
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Fans show the Ticketmaster queue from the parking lot outside Swift's show in Philadelphia in May 2023. Ticketmaster apologized to Swift and her fans after a ticketing debacle in November made it difficult to buy tickets when they went on sale.
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Swift smiles at a crowd in Nashville as it gives her a standing ovation for "Champagne Problems" in May 2023.
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Swift opens a show in Lyon, France, in June 2024.
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Travis Kelce, right, joins Swift on stage for a surprise appearance in London in June 2024. Swift and the three-time Super Bowl champ were first romantically linked in September of last year.
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Swift opens the "Midnights" set with "Lavender Haze" during a show in Glendale in March 2023.
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Swifties hold up hand hearts as they gather in the streets of Vienna, Austria, in August 2024. Organizers canceled Swift's three concerts there after authorities said they foiled a terror attack.
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Swift sings "Look What You Made Me Do" while dancers in Glendale wear outfits from Swift's previous eras in March 2023.
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Swift sings "Who's Afraid of Little Old Me?" in Paris in May 2024.
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Swift performs with the band Haim in Santa Clara, California, in July 2023.
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Swift dances across the stage while singing "August" in Atlanta in April 2023.
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Fans apply jewels on their way to Swift's show in Foxborough, Massachusetts, in May 2023.
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Swift performs during the "Reputation" set in Amsterdam, Netherlands, in July 2024.
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Phoebe Bridgers joins Swift to perform "Nothing New" in Nashville in May 2023. Bridgers was also one of the opening acts.
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Swift performs the "Folklore" set in the rain in Nashville in May 2023. The show was delayed several hours due to storms in the area.
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Swift sings "I Can Do It With a Broken Heart" in Paris in May 2024.
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Swift watches the music video premiere of "I Can See You" in Kansas City, Missouri, in July 2023.
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Fans cheer in East Rutherford in May 2023.
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Sabrina Carpenter joins Swift for the acoustic section of the show in Sydney in February 2024. They performed a mashup of "White Horse" and "Coney Island."
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Swift makes a heart with her hands while performing "Fearless" in Glendale in March 2023.
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Swift and dancers perform during the "Speak Now" set in Sydney in February 2024.
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Fans pose for photos before a show in Melbourne in February 2024.
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Swift performs "The 1" in Chicago in June 2023.
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Swift performs in the rain in Lyon, France, in June 2024.
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Swift and her backup dancers watch the premiere of the "Karma" music video while in East Rutherford in May 2023.
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Swift opens a show in Las Vegas in March 2023.
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Swift wraps her arms around her backup singers, known as The Starlights, during the "Fearless" set in Las Vegas in March 2023.
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Swift announces the release of "Speak Now (Taylor's Version)," a rerecording of her 2010 album, during her show in Nashville in May 2023.
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Swift performs in Houston in April 2023.
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"Swifties" arrive at a metro station temporarily renamed "Speak Now/Taylor's Station" in Inglewood, California, in August 2023.
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Swift performs the 10-minute version of "All Too Well" in Nashville in May 2023.
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Swift leaves the stage after the "Speak Now" set in Nashville in May 2023.
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Backup dancers join Swift during the "Reputation" set in Cincinnati in June 2023.
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Confetti falls as Swift closes a Nashville show with "Karma" in May 2023.
CNN  — 

It had been nearly nine months since November 15 – the day I managed to secure three face-value tickets amid Ticketmaster’s infamous meltdown to Taylor Swift’s “Eras” tour concert in Los Angeles – when I finally got to see the show this week.

The concert, which was the singer’s penultimate show on the first US leg of her tour, was the most impressive three hours and fifteen minutes of live music I’ve ever seen, purely based on her epic delivery of a fully loaded 44-song setlist. And it happened in an atmosphere that celebrated positivity, respect for others and an openness to connect with new friends.

It must be said that I fully knew what to expect at this concert. I have been writing about the “Eras” tour pretty regularly as both an outlet for my Swiftie-ness and just to bide my time until my show, so avoiding concert spoilers was impossible.

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Taylor Swift performing the 'Eras Tour' in Los Angeles in August.

But it didn’t matter. Watching clips of the “Eras” tour opening sequence on social media – as I’d repeatedly done for months – could never compare to the feeling of being in the audience when the two-minute countdown clock started ticking as the crowd roared in anticipation for our “Anti-Hero” to appear.

I’d been planning logistics for my “Eras” show for months, as it became an “Alli’s Version” bachelorette party of sorts, which two of my best girlfriends and soon-to-be bridesmaids attended with me.

Clad in my “Reputation” era look, and flanked by my friends in their “Lover” and “Midnights” era outfits, we were on our way to the venue about four hours before Swift was set to go on to allow for ample time to get merch and catch her openers, Gracie Abrams and Haim.

03:41 - Source: CNN
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The scene outside of SoFi Stadium was vibrant and palpable. Moms and daughters in matching costumes were seen posing for photos and we weaved through groups of sparkly concertgoers representing every era of Swift’s musical oeuvre until we finally found our entrance.

It was in line for merch when our group was first approached by another fellow Swiftie to trade friendship bracelets, and the moment is a core memory that will stick with me. My friend, who so selflessly volunteered to stay in line during the start of the show, later managed to nab one of those concert-exclusive viral blue crew necks.

At our seats, in the 200’s section in the center, we rejoiced about our perfect view, and when that two-minute countdown clock began, cheers from the audience rang through my head crescendoing louder and louder with each passing second until the lights went down and Swift finally appeared on stage.

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Taylor Swift performing the 'Eras Tour' in Los Angeles in August.

Standing in that stadium alongside over 70,000 Swifties collectively scream-singing the bridge to “Cruel Summer” with Swift on stage wearing her iconic bejeweled “Lover” corset was truly something to behold.

The entire show is a complete spectacle. Total stimulation. Flashing lights highlighting her massive stage, elaborate sets and flashy costumes complementing her perfect vocals as she sang all of her greatest hits from the past 17 years, era by era.

The epic journey took us through the “Fearless” and “Red” eras, with bangers like “Love Story (Taylor’s Version)” and “I Knew You Were Trouble (Taylor’s Version)” bringing forth a nostalgic vibe and audience members audibly singing every single lyric.

The energy of the “Reputation” era set – my personal favorite, with songs such as “Are You Ready For It,” “Delicate,” “Don’t Blame Me” and “Look What You Made Me Do” – was electric as Swift snaked around her stage belting her iconic tracks.

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Taylor Swift performing the 'Eras Tour' in Los Angeles in August.

Her uber-appreciative crowd gave a minutes-long standing ovation following “Champagne Problems” in the “Evermore” era, one of the longest standing-O’s she’s received to date. The cheering was so loud that even ear plugs wouldn’t have masked the shrill.

Other points in the show, particularly the “Folklore” era, felt super personal both as a listener and as what felt like a bystander bearing witness to Swift’s deepest emotions, something she’s talked about so many times before with respect to her own connection to that 2020 album.

Swift released no less than four new albums, including “Folklore,” since she last toured in 2018. Finally seeing her perform these songs in concert after connecting with that album so deeply during the darkest days of the pandemic was almost too much. The feeling really materialized during “My Tears Ricochet,” arguably one of her saddest songs, and to me, one of her most beautiful. This is precisely when I let out a sob, and my friends laughed at me – all in good fun, of course.

Of course we speculated for months about which surprise songs we’d get, and when she sang “King of My Heart” from her 2017 “Reputation” album as her second surprise song, the crowd went insane, myself included. “I Know Places” from her megahit 2014 album “1989” was the first surprise song.

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Taylor Swift performing the 'Eras Tour' in Los Angeles in August.

At the end of the night, we were in complete awe. I could barely walk by that point, yet Swift was perfectly executing her choreography while hitting those high notes in “Karma” at the end of her three-hour set. During her fifth show in six days. A masterclass in stamina.

Sad that it was over, but grateful for the experience, we left the venue feeling very much a part of a community of (mostly) women who valued respect, friendship and empowerment of one another. “Eras” was more than a concert – it was a bedazzling display of femininity for all ages, and a celebration of individuality with one common denominator: the joy of music.

On our way to find my wonderful fiancé whom we had enlisted as our driver for the night, we walked out of the stadium seeing the faces of elated Swifties with what appeared to be permanent smiles on their faces. Mine is still there.