Swiftologist
Swiftologist
Swiftologist
Swiftologist is the official audio feed of pop culture commentator Zachary Hourihane. Known for incisive analysis of Taylor Swift, pop music, celebrity branding, and internet discourse, Swiftologist offers smart, funny, and unfiltered commentary on the artists and stories shaping contemporary culture. From album reviews and career retrospectives to media criticism and pop industry analysis, this is where fandom meets critical thinking.
22: Journalist Reacts to Olivia Rodrigo's NYTimes Interview
Olivia Rodrigo finally sat down for her first real podcast interview — and she had a lot to say. In this emergency reaction, I break down her NYTimes PopCast conversation about new album You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love, the Taylor Swift feud that won't die, and the moment she bristled at being called the villain. Olivia gets candid about songwriting credits, the "frost" with Taylor, why she's stopped caring about internet conspiracies, and the baby doll dress controversy that had Gen Z in a chokehold. I bring my journalist lens to the parts the hosts missed — and the parts Olivia clearly didn't want to touch.
Jun 9
51 min
21: My Brutal Advice for Pop Stars
Justin Bieber. Taylor Swift. Ed Sheeran. Dua Lipa. Katy Perry. I sat down and gave them all my most brutal, unsolicited career advice... and none of them asked for it! In this episode, I break down exactly what 12 of the biggest pop stars in the world need to hear right now: whether they should retire, rebrand, or get completely weird. Some of these verdicts are kind. Some of them aren't. This is MY pop star career audit :) 
Jun 2
39 min
20: One Song That Can Destroy an Entire Pop Era
The lead single is the highest-stakes move in pop music. One song decides if you get to level up  or if the entire era dies on arrival.I ranked every level of lead single from Career Killers to Origin Myths — and some of these placements will start a fight.From Katy Perry's "Woman's World" (the textbook Career Killer) to Olivia Rodrigo's "drivers license" (the cultural Rorschach test that hard-coded an entire archetype) — this is a complete breakdown of what a lead single actually does to an artist's career. Not chart performance. Not quality. The chessboard moves.Featuring: Taylor Swift, Sabrina Carpenter, Charli XCX, Dua Lipa, Adele, Miley Cyrus, Lady Gaga, Beyoncé, Lorde, Lana Del Rey, Ariana Grande, Britney Spears & more.
May 25
38 min
19: I Ranked Every Olivia Rodrigo Song From WORST to BEST 😬
THEEEEE rodrigologist is BACK! Before you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love drops, I ranked every single Olivia Rodrigo song from drivers license to drop dead.. and it got brutal, pun intended!! From SOUR to GUTS, every era, every deep cut, every skip. this is the definitive Olivia Rodrigo worst to best ranking before the new album changes everything.
May 18
36 min
18: Anthony Fantano Admits He Was Wrong About Everything
GET TICKETS TO MY TOUR: https://www.evolutionofasnake.com I sat down with Anthony Fantano (The Needle Drop) for one of the most honest conversations about what it actually means to be an internet music critic in 2026…the perks, the pressure, and the parts nobody talks about.We get into everything: how algorithms have reshaped the way critics make decisions, whether paid promotions have poisoned music journalism, and what happens when artists push back. Hard.Plus: the Vince Staples story. The Charlie Puth DMs. Anthony’s revised Addison Rae opinions. Sombr mess. What Charli XCX’s rock album might sound like. Why Taylor Swift’s next move is important, and  whether anyone can still be a true gatekeeper in the age of TikTok.If you've ever wondered whether your favorite music reviewer is actually being honest with you,  this is the conversation.
May 11
1 hr 22 min
17: Journalist Analyzes Taylor Swift's Greatest Songwriter Interview
The New York Times just named Taylor Swift one of the 30 Greatest Living Songwriters. I watched the full Taylor Swift interview and I have some professional thoughts on her process, her claims, and the reality of her current work. In this episode, I’m breaking down the most revealing moments from the Taylor Swift New York Times piece. We look at her early influences, her approach to storytelling, and the big question: Is the "genius" label still earned? We also dive into Taylor Swift Life of a Showgirl and why that specific era feels like a shift from songwriting to branding. Is she still the writer we fell in love with, or has the scale of her fame changed the music? Let’s look at the evidence…
May 7
50 min
16: Manon Proved Katseye Doesn't Have Members. It Has Replaceable Girls.
Manon didn't just leave Katseye. She exposed the system every girl group runs on and it's been running since Destiny's Child. Every girl group has one. The member who doesn't quite fit the mould. The one the label didn't bet on. The one who gets quietly moved to the edge until leaving feels like her idea. In this episode, I'm breaking down the five archetypes that every girl group needs to function — and why one of them is always built to be sacrificed. We're going from Destiny's Child and TLC to Little Mix, Fifth Harmony, and Katseye — and what every single one of these groups has in common is the same story playing out in different costumes. The "sisterhood" you're sold at the press junket is a marketing tool. The reality is a cast, not a family. Manon Bannerman's departure from Katseye isn't a drama. It's a pattern. And once you see it, you can't unsee it.
Apr 27
41 min
15:  Drop Dead Proves Olivia Rodrigo Has No Competition
Olivia Rodrigo's "drop dead"  is the best thing I've heard in 2026 — and I'm not being hyperbolic. I'm breaking down everything: the full song reaction, a deep dive into the lyrics, the music video analysis, and why this single proves Olivia Rodrigo has no real competition in pop music right now. We talk about how "Drop Dead" signals a completely new sonic era — less Alanis Morissette, more Robert Smith and The Cure.  How Dan Nigro might be the Jack Antonoff of his generation. Why Olivia disappearing to London was the smartest career move she's made. And why her refusal to chase algorithms or TikTok trends is exactly what makes her dangerous. This is not a fluke...it's a PATTERN! SHE'S A STAR! 
Apr 21
29 min
14: Ryan Murphy's JFK Jr. Show Is Moral Rot In Designer Clothing
Carolyn Bessette Kennedy did not die in a tragedy. She died in a crash that was preventable, predictable, and the direct result of her husband's decisions. Ryan Murphy's Love Story on FX doesn't reckon with that. It romanticizes it. This is an episode about what that choice costs and what it says about who we still protect.
Apr 12
43 min
13: The Problem With Chappell Roan Has Nothing To Do With Chappell Roan
The Chappell Roan discourse is loud, exhausting, and almost entirely beside the point. There are two versions of this story circulating right now. One casts her as a brave boundary-setting folk hero. The other casts her as a thin-skinned upstart who can't handle what she signed up for. I think both of those readings are lazy, and the reason they keep winning says more about us than it does about her.In this episode, I break down Chappell's full arc: the meteoric 2024 rise, the boundary-setting era, and the three flashpoints — the VMAs, Paris Fashion Week, and the Brazil affair — that flipped public opinion. I look at why Charli XCX, Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, and Lorde publicly backed her. I compare her treatment to Chris Brown, Morgan Wallen, and Justin Bieber. And I bring in Susan Faludi's Backlash and the Dixie Chicks because this script has been running for decades.Chappell is clumsy, sometimes strategically terrible, and occasionally sets herself on fire to make a point that didn't require self-immolation. But there's a meaningful difference between critique and the kind of moral prosecution that seems to activate specifically when a woman stops performing pleasantries on command. If the sight of a woman being imperfect in public activates an impulse to morally grandstand in you, my beloved, it's time for you to look inside.
Apr 7
28 min
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