VANCOUVER — A pair of British Columbia sisters who lit candles and chanted affirmations in a bid to "manifest" tickets to see their idol Taylor Swift in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»are going to get their wish.
Thirteen-year-old Chloe and 16-year-old Cadence Harding of Langley, B.C., were featured in a story by The Canadian Press last November about their efforts that failed to produce the precious codes needed to buy tickets to Swift's December concerts in B.C.
But now the teens are celebrating after representatives of the Royal Bank of Canada's rewards program heard about their plight and provided tickets to the family.
Their mother, Shae Harding, said the family was on a camping trip last week when her husband got an email from the bank offering the tickets.
She said they initially thought it was a scam, but the offer of three tickets was real.
"We were freaking out at the campsite, and the girls were all happy. We were jumping up and down," said Harding.
She said her daughters were crying and saying "it worked, it worked."
Harding said her daughters are now trying to manifest a meeting with Swift at the concert.
"Manifesting" has been a worldwide phenomenon among Swift fans as they attempt to conjure up the codes required to buy tickets for her Eras tour shows.
Harding said that for her daughters, that involved huddling around candles, crystals and Swift friendship bracelets, and chanting "We will get a Taylor Swift pre-sale code. We will get Taylor Swift tickets."
She said the family had about 40 friends and relatives who also registered to buy Swift tickets on their behalf, but none of them received the codes.
Harding said Swift is a “wonderful role model."
“She stands up for women's rights. She has a good moral compass. I know she gets a lot of flak for the boys that she's dated, and you know what? She is young, she can do whatever she wants," she said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 23, 2024.
Nono Shen, The Canadian Press