The famous singer Lana Del Rey, associated with coquette, Americana, feminine rage, and Lolita, has been accused of promoting and practicing witchcraft in her concerts and music videos. There have been allegations both recent and from a few years ago that have come to light, stating that Lana has been practicing witchcraft. This has found large media attention on social media such as Tiktok.
Lana Del Rey is no stranger when it comes to doing questionable things on stage during her concerts, the most famous, or infamous ones are her smoking and vaping on stage. Recently this October, after a concert, a viral Christian influencer, Traci Coston posted an Instagram and Tiktok video “exposing” the singer of witchcraft.
“These demons will destroy your life. How do I know? Because people come to me for deliverance to get rid of the demons that they get through stuff like this,” Traci Coston told Lana fans on Tiktok, calling her concert and fans not normal.
Traci videos gathered a lot of attention, not necessarily good attention though. Many people online thought it was satire or a joke, especially Lana fans. Traci claims that demons affect people by concerts such as Lana’s, stating that she’d dealt with things like this before.
“***** I know the Bible verse for verse better than you do. PS you’re giving off super gremlin energy. Not in a good way,” Lana Del Rey said on social media.
Lana Del Rey quickly bounced back from these allegations, fans supporting and finding the situation hilarious. Many fans showed support on apps such as X, or formerly known as Twitter and Tiktok, saying that Lana completely destroyed Traci.
Again, this isn’t the first time Lana has been accused of witchcraft. Back in 2017, where there were a lot of political debates at the time, somehow, Lana got mixed in the crossfire. She, however, said the allegations were true, saying she wanted, at the time, President Donald Trump out of office so she practiced witchcraft. Surprisingly, the internet chose not to remember that.
“Her music gives off a feeling of relatability and desire like no other artist really finding the best ways to just make you wanna sit down and think,” junior Cole Lopez said.