Joseph Kahn is shutting down the validity of photos that claim to be from Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding.
The director — who worked with Swift on some of her most popular music videos including “Bad Blood, “Blank Space,” and “Look What You Made Me Do” — attended the star-studded wedding at Madison Square Garden in New York City Friday, and called out “fake” photos from the ceremony circulating the internet.
Kahn posted on X, “Every picture I’ve seen of the wedding is fake. Trust me, AI would break if you tried to prompt it.”
Kahn himself posted a pic from the wedding with his wife, Lotte, on Instagram. The snapshot showed off part of the venue’s pink decor.
“Had a wonderful time at Taylor Swift/Travis Kelce’s wedding last night,” he wrote. “I got to meet Steven Spielberg and the lovely Kate Capshaw and talk filmmaking with the GOAT (lifelong dream achieved).”
“What I will say about the wedding was it was so much funnier and emotional than expected, and as big as it was, it also felt very intimate,” he continued. “And yes, literally everyone was there. I told Lotte many times it was like living in the internet, and AI would crack if it tried to render it.”
Here’s latest on Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding at MSG:
Swift and Kelce’s star-studded wedding included guests Brad Pitt, Tom Brady, Jennifer Lopez, Selena Gomez, Gigi Hadid and boyfriend Bradley Cooper, and more.
Leaked video from inside their Madison Square Garden wedding showed the walls lined with never-before-seen photos of the couple, per Daily Mail.
A peach and white hallway featured a giant T&T monogram insignia — the same one featured on handkerchief keepsakes for guests — on the wall with images of Swift and Kelce together throughout their relationship.
Swift — who wore a Christian Dior wedding dress — and Kelce have yet to drop photos from their wedding. But that hasn’t stopped some guest from spilling the details.
AMC Theaters CEO Adam Aron posted a play-by-play of the wedding on X, though later deleted it.
“Large blown up pictures of Taylor and Travis at each age, year by year from 1 year old to late teenager-hood, were on display,” he revealed.
“Real flowers and I think artificial trees welcomed 15 rows of maybe 75 or so chairs,” he also spilled. “They say there were around one thousand attendees, but surprisingly, it all felt intimate and small. Everything was close.”
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