The Met Gala Meets the Age of Billionaire Backlash
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos arrive as honorary chairs, turning fashion’s biggest night into a flashpoint over wealth, influence and cultural power.
The Met Gala, fashion’s most visible and carefully curated spectacle, has become the latest arena for a broader public backlash against concentrated wealth and influence.
This year’s event, scheduled for May 4, places Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos at its center as honorary chairs—an appointment that has triggered protests across New York in the days leading up to the red carpet.
What is confirmed is that campaign-style posters calling for a boycott have appeared in the city, criticizing Bezos’s business record and framing the gala as a celebration of extreme wealth at a time of political and social tension.
The specific allegations referenced in the protests—ranging from labor practices to government contracts—remain politically contested, but the reaction itself is visible and organized.
The controversy lands on an institution already built on exclusivity.
The Met Gala functions as a major fundraiser for the Costume Institute, with ticket prices reaching tens of thousands of dollars and access tightly controlled.
Corporate sponsorships and billionaire patronage are not new; they are foundational to the event’s economics.
What feels different now is the level of scrutiny.
Lauren Sánchez Bezos has emerged as a focal point in that shift.
Her recent high-profile appearances in couture shows, magazine features and elite social events mark a rapid transition into the upper tier of global fashion culture.
For supporters, she represents energy and modern visibility.
For critics, she symbolizes the merging of wealth and cultural authority.
Anna Wintour’s decision to elevate the couple reflects a longstanding logic within the fashion world: align with power, secure funding, and sustain relevance.
But the reaction suggests that this formula is encountering new limits.
In a more politically charged environment, the distance between cultural celebration and economic inequality is no longer easy to ignore.
The Met Gala will proceed, as it always does, with global attention fixed on its choreography of style and status.
Yet this year, the spectacle carries an added layer—one where the audience is not just watching the fashion, but questioning the system that elevates it.