Pop superstar Taylor Swift lit up MTV's annual Video Music Awards on Monday, taking home the award for Video of the Year and nodding to her winning song's celebration of LGTBQ rights in accepting her prize.
Swift was among the top award-getters at this year's edition of the awards show held in Newark, New Jersey and considered television's wildest night for its eminently meme-able viral moments.
Swift nabbed the coveted award for her track You Need to Calm Down on the heels of releasing her new album Lover, which became the year's top US seller after just two days.
"In this video several points were made," Swift, wearing an oversized rainbow-colored suit jacket, said to applause.
That it won the fan-chosen award shows that "you want a world where we are all treated equally under the law," the 29-year-old said, noting the video ended with a petition in support of the Equality Act, which would prevent discrimination based on gender and sexual orientation.
Swift, one of the night's top nominees, also won an award for the top Video for Good, thanks to her clip's anti-homophobic message -- though when it was released, just in time for Pride Month, the star was accused by some critics of using LGBTQ imagery as a marketing technique.
Hip hop iconoclast Missy Elliott meanwhile ignited the crowd with a performance befitting her status as 2019's Video Vanguard Award recipient, the night's top prize.
After Elliott electrified the audience with a medley of her greatest hits including the classic Get Ur Freak On, rap queen Cardi B dubbed the 48-year-old rapper a "living legend" in presenting her with the iconic moon man statuette.
"I promised I wouldn't cry; I cry every award," Elliott, wearing a black leather hoodie tracksuit with gold trim and a visor, said before nodding to her storied career: "I've worked diligently for over two decades."


