Superstar songstress Taylor Swift’s new documentary, Taylor Swift: Miss Americana, has officially landed on Netflix.
The doco – which is directed by Emmy winner Lana Wilson – takes an intimate look at her life, family and fame.
WATCH: Taylor spills all of the tea…
Swift took to Twitter to announce the flick had dropped and encouraged fans to watch.
“#MissAmericana is on @NetflixFilm! I’m excited for you to see it. I want to thank Lana Wilson for her curiosity & for wanting to make this film. It’s wild to be sharing so much of my life because it’s scary to be vulnerable! (understatement of the century) https://taylorswift.lnk.to/MissAmericana”
But perhaps the biggest headline to come out of the doco is speculation Swift is engaged to boyfriend Joe Alwyn after she was spotted sporting a huge diamond sparkler.
Wilson was quizzed on whether Taylor is engaged, but refused to comment.
Fans were quick to call out the sparkler on social media, adamant the popstar is about to say ‘I do’.
“The question of the day, are [Taylor] and Joe engaged?! Look closely at her left hand in the political scene of #MissAmericana,” wrote one fan.
Another wrote: “I don’t believe Taylor Swift is engaged I think she would let her fans know if she was plus it’s my birthday.”
Swift also opened up about battling an eating disorder due to comments about her appearance.
“It’s not good for me to see pictures of myself every day,” she shared.
“It’s only happened a few times, and I’m not in any way proud of it, [but I’ll see] a picture of me where I feel like I looked like my tummy was too big, or… someone said that I looked pregnant… and that’ll just trigger me to just starve a little bit – [to] just stop eating.”
Taylor said she would often feel like she might to pass out during performances, would make a list of everything she put in her mouth each day and exercised constantly.
“I would have defended it to anybody who said ‘I’m concerned about you,'” the You Need To Calm Down singer continued.
Miss Americana is available to stream on Netflix now.
This article was originally published on WHO