As part of the international leg of her record-breaking Eras Tour, girlfriend Taylor Swift is doing a run of sold-out performances in Australia. NFL star Travis Kelce arrived there on Thursday.
Swift will play her first of four gigs in Sydney on Friday.
Channel Seven Australia shared NBC News with aerial footage of the Kansas City Chiefs player getting off of a Bombardier private plane and getting into a van in Sydney.
Along with Kelce, his colleague Ross Travis posted a picture of the Australian coastline from inside the aircraft on Instagram. (The Australian media originally had trouble differentiating the two players when they arrived.)
In order to support each other's booming careers, Swift and Kelce, both 34, have been travelling back and forth over the globe by plane.
Swift took off for Las Vegas the following day to attend the Super Bowl, which the Chiefs won for the third time in the previous five years, following the final of her four concerts in Tokyo on February 10.
Swift subsequently made her way back to the Asia-Pacific region for three gigs in Melbourne, Australia, from February 16–18. There, she played in front of 96,000 spectators in what she called her biggest-ever concert.
Kelce went to Argentina in November to see the pop sensation perform live in Buenos Aires.
As the events bring fans from near and far, The Eras Tour the first music tour to break the $1 billion mark has been credited with helping local economies. Swift's Australian tour last month fell in line with an academic conference called "Swiftposium" in Melbourne, where academics were gathering to talk about the ramifications of her fame on the economy and other subjects.
In addition to being the highest-grossing domestic concert film ever within a few days of its premiere in the US and Canada, An Eras Tour was a concert film that was released in theatres globally in October.
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Swift's final performances in Asia are scheduled for March 2–9 in Singapore. This week, government representatives announced that they had given Swift a grant to assist her six shows in the city-state, which is the only location in south-east Asia.
Citing commercial secrecy as their excuse, they withheld the sum but acknowledged the "significant benefits to the Singapore economy" that her concerts would probably bring.