Taylor
Swift
had
got
lots
of
accolades
for
her
music
videos
in
the
past
including
her
recent
hit
single,
'Bad
Blood'.
However,
Tay
Tay's
new
song,
'Wildest
Dreams'
which
was
dropped
on
the
day
of
MTV
VMAs
2015
on
Sunday,
is
getting
slammed
on
Twitter.
'Wildest
Dreams'
music
video
shows
white
cast
and
revolves
around
a
passionate,
rocky
relationship
among
two
1950s-era
movie
stars;
played
by
Swift
and
Scott
Eastwood.
The
video
was
filmed
in
Africa
and
features
only
two
black
actors,
who
play
soldiers
(they
appear
in
the
background).
The
mock
film
crew
are
majorly
white
and
this
did
not
go
down
well
with
many
Twitteratis.
'Wildest
Dreams'
has
been
condemned
by
music
fans
for
being
'racist'
and
according
to
them,
it
is
based
on
a
'glamourous
white
colonial
fantasy'
Video
director
Joseph
Kahn
gave
back
the
haters
in
a
statement.
"'Wildest
Dreams'
is
a
song
about
a
relationship
that
was
doomed,
and
the
music
video
concept
was
that
they
were
having
a
love
affair
on
location
away
from
their
normal
lives.
This
is
not
a
video
about
colonialism
but
a
love
story
on
the
set
of
a
period
film
crew
in
Africa,
1950.
There
are
black
Africans
in
the
video
in
a
number
of
shots,
but
I
rarely
cut
to
crew
faces
outside
of
the
director
as
the
vast
majority
of
screentime
is
Taylor
and
Scott.
The
video
is
based
on
classic
Hollywood
romances
like
Elizabeth
Taylor
and
Richard
Burton,
as
well
as
classic
movies
like
The
African
Queen,
Out
of
Africa
and
The
English
Patient,
to
name
a
few.
The
reality
is
not
only
were
there
people
of
color
in
the
video,
but
the
key
creatives
who
worked
on
this
video
are
people
of
color.
I
am
Asian
American,
the
producer
Jil
Hardin
is
an
African
American
woman,
and
the
editor
Chancler
Haynes
is
an
African
American
man.
We
cast
and
edited
this
video.
We
collectively
decided
it
would
have
been
historically
inaccurate
to
load
the
crew
with
more
black
actors
as
the
video
would
have
been
accused
of
rewriting
history.
This
video
is
set
in
the
past
by
a
crew
set
in
the
present
and
we
are
all
proud
of
our
work.
There
is
no
political
agenda
in
the
video.
Our
only
goal
was
to
tell
a
tragic
love
story
in
classic
Hollywood
iconography.
Furthermore,
this
video
has
been
singled
out,
yet
there
have
been
many
music
videos
depicting
Africa.
These
videos
have
traditionally
not
been
lessons
in
African
history.
Let's
not
forget,
Taylor
has
chosen
to
donate
all
of
her
proceeds
from
this
video
to
the
African
Parks
Foundation
to
preserve
the
endangered
animals
of
the
continent
and
support
the
economies
of
local
African
people."