There’s Taylor’s version, and then there’s President Trump’s version.
Around 7:30 p.m. on Friday, a series of billboards wrapping around Madison Square Garden lit up pink, revealing to the world that, after months of speculation, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce traded their “I dos” at the storied New York City venue.
“JUST&T MARRIED!” the electronic pink screens read.
Within the hour, the White House posted a parody of their announcement. The photoshopped image shows the same exact billboards with the same exact color scheme, but thse these said: “TRUMP IS YOUR PRESIDENT.”
“It finally happened!” the caption added.
IT’S HAPPENED!!! pic.twitter.com/Jd7bCMvbOO
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) July 4, 2026
It’s not the first time the White House used imagery seemingly inspired by the 14-time Grammy winner on social media this week.
On Thursday, it shared an image inspired by the poster for the pop star’s wildly successful Eras Tour. It features Trump in the center and surrounded by some of the founding fathers and notable moments from American history each of them against pastel backgrounds.
“The American Eras Tour,” the poster reads.
The caption is also a reference to 36-year-old Swift.
“It’s been a long time coming,” it says, quoting her song, “Miss Americana & the Heartbreak Prince.”

Barry Williams / New York Daily News
“JUST&T MARRIED” is pictured on screens outside Madison Square Garden on Friday in New York. (Barry Williams / New York Daily News)
The White House followed up with another post on X Thursday, this one an AI-generated video of the nation’s founding with images of the White House mixed in.
The 24-second clip was captioned: “America’s greatest hits, one era at a time.”
While Swift celebrates her recent nuptials, Trump on Saturday will be gearing up for a Fourth of July celebration he has dubbed the “TRUMP RALLY.” The event, set to take place on the National Mall on Saturday, is slated to include the “LARGEST FIREWORKS SHOW IN HISTORY” made up of nearly a million fireworks. He also promised to deliver a speech in honor of America’s 250th birthday.