Taylor Swift's Complete VMAs History: The Biggest Performances, Shadiest Speeches and Kanye Drama!

Swift has come a long way from country ingénue to one of the biggest pop stars in the world.

Taylor Swift has come a long way from country ingénue to one of the biggest pop stars in the world, and the MTV Video Music Awards has set the stage for many touchstone moments in that prolific career.

The Lover songstress has won seven awards from 20 total nominations, with three additional nods this year. At that number, she is not the most-decorated musician by any measure (Beyoncé holds that distinction and, with 26 Moon Persons, puts us all to shame); still, it's impossible to talk about the past decade of VMAs without crediting Swift as one of the primary players.

As the Swifties ready themselves for this year's show (airing on Monday, Aug. 26), let's take a moment to reflect on all the awards, performances, stolen mics, bad blood and shade throughout Swift's VMA tenure.

Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage

2008: This may not be Swift's most infamous trip to the Video Music Awards, but it was her very first. The "Teardrops on My Guitar" singer, then 18, was nominated for Best New Artist, and here's a real blast from the past: Two of her fellow nominees were newcomers Katy Perry and Miley Cyrus. And they all lost the award to Tokio Hotel.


Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

2009: Swift returned the following fateful year as a contender for Best Female Video for "You Belong With Me" -- which she won. The fact that she won the award over Beyoncé's "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" video, though, did not sit well with one Kanye West, who stormed the stage in protest.

"Yo, Taylor, I'm really happy for you, I'mma let you finish, but Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time! One of the best videos of all time!" Yeezy called out in what remains one of the most iconic VMA moments of all time.

Beyoncé later won Video of the Year and brought Taylor back onstage to finish her speech. ("Maybe we can try this again," Swift joked, before thanking her Twitter and MySpace fans.) Afterward, Swift told reporters backstage of West: "I don't know him, and I don't want to start anything."

As we now know, something did start -- despite an apology that West wrote on his blog ("She is very talented! I like the lyric about being a cheerleader and she's in the bleachers!"), the "I'mma let you finish..." moment began a years-long narrative that Swift could and would not be excluded from.


Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images

2010: Swift was seemingly still reeling from the West incident a year later, and for her performance of "Innocent," she began by replaying footage of the stage-crashing. "I guess you really did it this time/ Left yourself in your war path," Swift sang while strumming on her guitar. "Lost your balance on a tightrope/ Lost your mind trying to get it back."

(West, meanwhile, closed the 2010 VMAs with a performance "Runaway," which has a few choice lyrics of its own: "Let's have a toast for the douchebags / Let's have a toast for the a**holes.")

Swift was also once again nominated for Best Female Video, for "Fifteen," though we never had the chance to hear West's opinion of that video, as Swift ultimately lost to Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance."


2011: Swift skipped the VMAs this year, even though the rise-above-the-bullies themed music video for "Mean," which is widely thought to have been written about a music critic, received a Best Video With a Message nomination. The award ultimately went to Lady Gaga’s "Born This Way."


Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

2012: While her album, 1989, may be the official beginning of Swift's post-country era, Red was certainly the preamble, and she took the VMA stage with a vengeance, performing her breakup anthem, "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together," to a screaming audience who already knew all the words to the breakup mega-anthem.

Red’s album cycle made it eligible for the following year’s awards show, but the singer didn’t take home any Moonmen. However, it did kick off a several-year period of Swift being a fixture at the VMAs.


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2013: And her appearance at the 2013 VMAs will arguably go down as the shadiest. While accepting the Best Female Video for "I Knew You Were Trouble," Swift directed some not-so-subtle shade at her ex-boyfriend, Harry Styles, when she thanked "the person who inspired this song, who knows exactly who he is."

Later during the broadcast, as the members of One Direction were presenting onstage, Swift was seen in the audience muttering what really appeared to be the words, "Shut the f**k up."


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2014: Where better to officially rebrand yourself as a pop star than the VMAs? Step one: Hit the red carpet without pants. Pop stars hate pants. (Instead, Swift opted for a shorty-short, hot pants unitard.) Step two: Perform your new pop ditty, which in this case was the live debut of 1989's lead single, "Shake It Off."

"I don't care if it's the VMAs, I am not jumping off there. There's all kinds of people getting bit by snakes. It's dangerous!" Taylor joked in the middle of her performance, referencing Nicki Minaj's dancer, who was bitten by a boa constrictor during rehearsals. (The two artists' paths would cross again the following year.)

And step three: Dance in your seat during every single performance, whether it be Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake, whoever! This may not be so much a pop star thing, though, as a Taylor Swift thing. Either way, it continued the trend of Swift dancing at awards shows, proving some things will never change.


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2015: Some VMAs spark feuds; others are used to end them. 2015 was a year of mending fences for Swift, who first used a performance of "Bad Blood" to settle any beef she had with Nicki Minaj onstage. Prior to the telecast, Minaj had called out MTV for snubbing "Anaconda" in the Video of the Year category because she was not a "different 'kind' of artist." (Different, in this case, meant skinny and white.) Swift took offense and tweeted that it was "unlike" Minaj to "put women against each other." Swift eventually apologized and Minaj invited the singer to join her during the actual show to poke fun at the brief feud.

The conciliatory night continued when Swift introduced West for the Video Vanguard Award. Six years after the mic-grabbing moment to end all VMA moments, Swift came full circle, saying, “To all the other winners tonight, I’m really happy for you, and I'ma let you finish, but Kanye West has had one of the greatest careers of all time. And right now, I am honored to present the 2015 Video Vanguard Award to my friend, Kanye West.”

Remember that time? And the cute, since-deleted Instagram she posted with all the white roses West sent her? Before a little song called "Famous" premiered at Madison Square Garden? Before Kim Kardashian West posted a recorded phone call to Snapchat?

That was a nice time.


2016: Taylor stayed home this year, which is just as well, 'cause this night was all about Beyoncé. Queen Bey won eight awards for her Lemonade visual album, besting Madonna for the show's most decorated artist of all time. Not to mention, she delivered the greatest VMA performance of all time!


2017: Another year sans Swift, which maybe should have been expected, considering Katy Perry served as host. Taylor made sure her presence was felt, though: She debuted her first Reputation music video, the snake-filled visual for "Look What You Made Me Do," during the live telecast. (When Perry would later summarize the highlights of the night as, "Kendrick Lamar: on fire. Ed Sheeran's friends: dead," fans called shade, even if Taylor was, in fact, a zombie in the video.)

Taylor may have gotten the last laugh, beating Perry and ex Calvin Harris for Best Collaboration, for her Zayn Malik duet, "I Don't Wanna Live Forever." (The former 1Der was also a no-show, so the song's co-writers Jack Antonoff and Sam Drew accepted the Moonman on their behalf.)


2018: Last year's VMAs marked the third consecutive year of Swift skipping the show... which may have been for the best, actually. "Look What You Made Me Do" was not nominated for any of the night's major categories -- mostly notably, Video of the Year -- prompting her fans to throw the #VMAsAreOverParty. (About the apparent snub, the show's executive producers told ET: "The dice roll and you never know.")


The categories that "Look What You Made Me Do" were nominated in -- Best Art Direction, Visual Effects and Editing -- ultimately went to The Carters ("APESH*T"), Kendrick Lamar and SZA ("All the Stars") and N.E.R.D and Rihanna ("Lemon"), respectively.


2019: This year is primed to be the MTV Taylor Swift Music Awards, as Swift racked up 10 nominations in total, including Video and Song of the Year for "You Need to Calm Down" and Best Collaboration for "ME!" (She's tied with Ariana Grande as 2019's most-nominated artist.)

Even better, Swift will 100 percent be in attendance since she's also set to take the VMAs stage for her first performance since "Bad Blood" in 2015 -- and first following the release of her new album, Lover. But when it comes to the Video Music Awards, it's always a toss-up whether you'll end up with love or bad blood. We'll have to tune in to find out...

Hosted by comedian Sebastian Maniscalco, the 2019 MTV VMAs will air live from the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, on Monday, Aug. 26 at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

[This story was originally published on August 14, 2018.]

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