Taylor Swift has one boring day at work but ends in the best way possible in the video for the country songbird's latest single, "Ours," and it's a thoroughly adorable clip that fits perfectly among Swift's other crushingly cute videos. The 2011 Billboard Woman of the Year honoree survives the day only because she's looking forward to coming home and welcoming back her "distant love," who happened to be away serving in the military.
The tune serves as the sixth offering from her multiplatinum-selling album "Speak Now," "Ours" was solely written by Swift as a love letter and as being in love and knowing that they can make it through the rough times. The song finds Swift in a relationship of which others do not approve. She reassures her beau that despite the criticism they are getting, she loves him. It's a pretty, slower tempo song that showcases Swift's strengths, which are her inviting, open journal lyrics and that sweet voice. Swift saved the best for last.
Directed by Declan Whitebloom, the video features the soon-to-be 22-year-old out of princess mode, plays herself as a bored corporate drone sleepwalking through an average day: awkwardly riding the elevator, and dealing with the average frustrations like an out-of-order copy machine and cliquey girls in the break room, until she's reminded that there's always a special someone she can count on. Admittedly, she looks more flawless and glowing than any office worker we've ever seen, but we'll cut her a break.
Everything that can go wrong does. It's not her day, nor is it her life. Throughout the clip, the only thing keeping Swift sane is dreaming about her absent boyfriend, who makes a return by the song's end. "I had a very definitive idea of what I wanted this video to be," Swift told E! News. The overarching theme of the "Ours" video is that deep down, we're all looking to connect with people, be it on the surface, in a fleeting moment or something deeper. It makes you think about engaging in conversation with that guy you ignore in the elevator every morning or making eye contact with that person on the bus and sharing a smile. It's a really lovely, little video that captures the nice nature of the song. It’s those quiet ones you have to watch.
The tune serves as the sixth offering from her multiplatinum-selling album "Speak Now," "Ours" was solely written by Swift as a love letter and as being in love and knowing that they can make it through the rough times. The song finds Swift in a relationship of which others do not approve. She reassures her beau that despite the criticism they are getting, she loves him. It's a pretty, slower tempo song that showcases Swift's strengths, which are her inviting, open journal lyrics and that sweet voice. Swift saved the best for last.
Directed by Declan Whitebloom, the video features the soon-to-be 22-year-old out of princess mode, plays herself as a bored corporate drone sleepwalking through an average day: awkwardly riding the elevator, and dealing with the average frustrations like an out-of-order copy machine and cliquey girls in the break room, until she's reminded that there's always a special someone she can count on. Admittedly, she looks more flawless and glowing than any office worker we've ever seen, but we'll cut her a break.
Everything that can go wrong does. It's not her day, nor is it her life. Throughout the clip, the only thing keeping Swift sane is dreaming about her absent boyfriend, who makes a return by the song's end. "I had a very definitive idea of what I wanted this video to be," Swift told E! News. The overarching theme of the "Ours" video is that deep down, we're all looking to connect with people, be it on the surface, in a fleeting moment or something deeper. It makes you think about engaging in conversation with that guy you ignore in the elevator every morning or making eye contact with that person on the bus and sharing a smile. It's a really lovely, little video that captures the nice nature of the song. It’s those quiet ones you have to watch.
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