USA Today is now hiring a Beyonc茅 reporter after posting a Taylor Swift job

FIRST it was Taylor Swift. Now it鈥檚 Beyonc茅.
Fresh off a job ad for a reporter to cover Swift and her Eras tour, Gannett Co. has posted a second role to 鈥渃hronicle the music, fashion, cultural and economic influence of Beyonc茅鈥 for USA Today and The Tennessean.
In addition to inspiring delirious levels of delight in Swifties and the BeyHive 鈥 as the artists鈥 die-hard fans are known 鈥 the two superstar musicians are also exerting an outsize force over the American economy.
That鈥檚 because the typical Swiftie spends $1,500 to attend a concert, including costs for tickets, hotels, flights, and food. Members of the BeyHive are estimated to spend even more during the ongoing Renaissance tour: about $1,800 for the total experience. In all, their spree is seen having boosted third-quarter American gross domestic product by $5.4 billion.
Policy makers, economists at major banks and financial-markets commentators are all taking notice.
The two new jobs offer similar pay and benefits: They are remote, and the reporters will earn between $21.63 and $50.87 an hour. That鈥檚 about $100,000 annually at the higher end of the range, based on a 40-hour work week.
Perhaps the biggest perk: The reporters will need to travel internationally as they follow the stars.
鈥淥ur role is to cover the newsmakers who Run the World, influence our society, impact lives and create positive change,鈥 Gannett Media Chief Content Officer Kristin Roberts said in a statement.
Prospective candidates will need to make a choice though: Swift or Beyonc茅. The two jobs aren鈥檛 meant to be done by a lone reporter.
鈥淲e have two positions open. One for each artist,鈥 a Gannett spokesperson said. 鈥 Bloomberg


