She made $57 million last year and has become one of the best-selling female recording artists in music history, all while gaining sweet revenge. The 23-year-old music mega-star has dated some of the entertainment world’s most visible bachelors, only to write chart-topping songs about how they allegedly broke her heart-or she theirs. The joke wouldn’t have worked without the audience being aware of Swift’s highly scrutinized romantic life, the stuff of tabloid obsession. “You know what, Taylor Swift,” said Fey, shaking a finger.The piece opens with Nancy Jo recapping the moment at the Golden Globes when Tina Fey and Amy Poehler made a mild joke about Taylor's reputation for dating celebrities and writing songs about their breakups: This profile managed to be fair by discussing the sexism of the media, yet skewered Taylor's image by gently stating the facts of her pr tactics. She was milking the persona of the wide-eyed good girl who happened to be a victim of heartbreak by bad boys and mean girls. Taylor's image was much different than it is now. The profiler was none other than Nancy Jo Sales - yes, the Nancy Jo who wrote about Alexis Neiers's Louboutins instead of her $29 little brown Bebe shoes. With the recent release of Red (Taylor's Version), I thought it might be time to revisit one of Taylor Swift's most infamous interviews: her interview with Vanity Fair in 2013, when she was promoting her fourth album, Red.