The Met Gala is upon us again. That glittering, slightly absurd, deeply exclusive pageant where fashion meets art meets “how much did that cost and why am I suddenly sweating?”
Let’s begin with the numbers, because nothing says couture like a mild financial panic.
This year, a ticket hovers somewhere in the neighborhood of please don’t ask, but historically we’re talking about $75,000 a seat and a breezy $350,000 for a table. And in 2026, whispers suggest it may have floated even higher because apparently inflation also wears sequins.
Seventy-five thousand dollars.
For one seat.
At a dinner where, let’s be honest, you’re mostly trying not to spill something on yourself while sitting next to someone who once dated someone who was someone.
Now, technically, it’s invite-only. Which means that even if I were to sell a kidney (lightly used, still optimistic), I still wouldn’t get in. Because the real currency here is not dollars. It’s relevance. And cheekbones.
Most celebrities, of course, are “sponsored,” which is a polite way of saying someone else pays so they can walk the red carpet dressed like a sentient chandelier. A philanthropic chandelier, but still.
And oh, that red carpet. The dream. The fantasy. The moment.
Because if I did somehow get in, I too would glide up those iconic steps, pausing just long enough to pretend I understand the theme, this year, something like “Fashion is Art,” which feels both profound and like something you say when you forgot to do your homework.
I would pose. I would pivot. I would give “enigmatic but approachable.” And then immediately trip. I promise you.
But this year something feels slightly off.
There are whispers (and by whispers, I mean aggressively confident posts from people who also once reported that Gossip Girl was a documentary) that tickets aren’t quite as hot. That the vibe is wobbling.
We have NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani politely declining his invitation. He said “bored now”. We’ll, he didn’t. I just imagined it.
We have Jeff Bezos as a lead sponsor, which has prompted some to clutch their vintage pearls and wonder if billionaire chic is still chic or just very, very on brand.
And there are murmurs that are unverified yet delicious that ticket demand may not be quite the frenzy it once was.
Which is fascinating.
Because the Met Gala has always been less about fashion and more about mythology. The mythology of exclusivity. Of who gets in, who doesn’t, and who wore something that required its own zip code.
But what happens when the velvet rope loosen even slightly?
Is it still the most coveted night in fashion? Or just the most expensive group dinner in Manhattan?
And here’s the thing no one says out loud. Even if the tickets dropped to, say, a reasonable $10,000 (sarcasm here), most of us still wouldn’t go.
Because the real barrier isn’t the price.
It’s the performance.
It’s knowing what to wear, how to stand, how to exist in a room where everyone is both deeply curated and mildly terrified. It’s being seen and judged and photographed from angles you didn’t know existed.
It’s social anxiety in couture.
So perhaps I’ll stay home.
In my own theme of “Elastic Waistband Realness: A Study in Survival.” Sponsored by takeout.
Co-chaired by my dog, who will absolutely not be invited next year due to his lack of restraint around hors d’oeuvres.
And honestly?
I’ll still be judging the outfits.
Categories: Celebrity, Culture, current events, Fashion, identity, new york, Pop Culture, Psychology, society





Judging the outfits from the comfort of our own homes is the best bit.
LikeLiked by 1 person