logo
Here's How Wildly Different 31 Celebrities Dressed At The Met Gala Afterparties

Here's How Wildly Different 31 Celebrities Dressed At The Met Gala Afterparties

Buzz Feed06-05-2025
1. Zendaya at the Met Gala:
Zendaya at the Met Gala afterparties:
2. Janelle Monáe at the Met Gala:
Janelle Monáe at the Met Gala afterparties:
3. Kendall Jenner at the Met Gala:
Kendall Jenner at the Met Gala afterparties:
4. Hunter Schafer at the Met Gala:
Hunter Schafer at the Met Gala afterparties:
5. Anne Hathaway at the Met Gala:
Anne Hathaway at the Met Gala afterparties:
6. Kim Kardashian at the Met Gala:
Kim Kardashian at the Met Gala afterparties:
7. Megan Thee Stallion at the Met Gala:
Megan Thee Stallion at the Met Gala afterparties:
8. Hailey Bieber at the Met Gala:
Hailey Bieber at the Met Gala afterparties:
MAPE / BlayzenPhotos / BACKGRID
9. Sabrina Carpenter at the Met Gala:
Gilbert Flores / Variety via Getty Images
Sabrina Carpenter at the Met Gala afterparties:
Ilya S. Savenok / Getty Images for AWGE
10. Jenna Ortega at the Met Gala:
Taylor Hill / Getty Images
Jenna Ortega at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
11. Simone Biles at the Met Gala:
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
Simone Biles at the Met Gala afterparties:
Stephanie Augello / WWD via Getty Images
12. Chance The Rapper at the Met Gala:
John Shearer / WireImage / Getty Images
Chance The Rapper at the Met Gala afterparties:
Gilbert Flores / WWD via Getty Images
13. Doja Cat at the Met Gala:
Theo Wargo / FilmMagic / Getty Images
Doja Cat at the Met Gala afterparties:
Stephanie Augello / WWD via Getty Images
14. Leon Bridges at the Met Gala:
Michael Buckner / Penske Media via Getty Images
Leon Bridges at the Met Gala afterparties:
Gilbert Flores / WWD via Getty Images
15. Heidi Klum at the Met Gala:
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
Heidi Klum at the Met Gala afterparties:
Stephanie Augello / WWD via Getty Images
16. Ashley Graham at the Met Gala:
John Shearer / WireImage / Getty Images
Ashley Graham at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
17. Bebe Rexha at the Met Gala:
ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images
Bebe Rexha at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
18. Andra Day at the Met Gala:
Michael Buckner / Penske Media via Getty Images
Andra Day at the Met Gala afterparties:
Gilbert Flores / WWD via Getty Images
19. Kaytranada at the Met Gala:
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
Kaytranada at the Met Gala afterparties:
Gilbert Flores / WWD via Getty Images
20. Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman at the Met Gala:
John Shearer / WireImage / Getty Images
Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman at the Met Gala afterparties:
NEDA, LELE, NINO, MIHA / Alessandra G / BACKGRID
21. Keke Palmer at the Met Gala:
Adrian Edwards / GC Images / Getty Images
Keke Palmer at the Met Gala afterparties:
NEDA, NINO, LELE, MIHA / Alessandra G / BACKGRID
22. Questlove at the Met Gala
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
Questlove at the Met Gala afterparties:
Gilbert Flores / WWD via Getty Images
23. Maluma at the Met Gala:
Cindy Ord/MG25 / Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue
Maluma at the Met Gala afterparties:
NEDA, NINO, LELE, MIHA / Alessandra G / BACKGRID
24. Lauryn Hill at the Met Gala:
Matt Crossick - PA Images / PA Images via Getty Images
Lauryn Hill at the Met Gala afterparties:
NEDA, MIHA, LELE, NINO / Alessandra G / BACKGRID
25. Charli XCX at the Met Gala:
TheStewartofNY / Getty Images
Charli XCX at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
26. Law Roach at the Met Gala:
Savion Washington / Getty Images
Law Roach at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
27. Rosé at the Met Gala:
Taylor Hill / Getty Images
Rosé at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
28. Alex Consani at the Met Gala:
Gilbert Flores / Variety via Getty Images
Alex Consani at the Met Gala afterparties:
BFAA / BFA.com / BACKGRID
29. Cardi B at the Met Gala:
TheStewartofNY / Getty Images
Cardi B at the Met Gala afterparties:
LIKE / North Woods / BACKGRID
30. Natasha Lyonne at the Met Gala:
Matt Crossick - PA Images / PA Images via Getty Images
Natasha Lyonne at the Met Gala afterparties:
JWNY / JosiahW / BACKGRID
31. And lastly, Tracee Ellis Ross at the Met Gala:
John Shearer / WireImage / Getty Images
Tracee Ellis Ross at the Met Gala afterparties:
JWNY / JosiahW / BACKGRID
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ichiro hilariously needles lone writer who left him off Hall of Fame ballot
Ichiro hilariously needles lone writer who left him off Hall of Fame ballot

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Ichiro hilariously needles lone writer who left him off Hall of Fame ballot

Ichiro has a Hall of Fame mind and on off the field. The long-time Seattle Mariner didn't hold back during his Hall of Fame acceptance speech on Sunday, calling out the lone Baseball Writers' Association voter who failed to include him on his or her ballot, despite his historic career achievements. 'Three‑thousand hits or 262 hits in one season are achievements recognized by the writers. Well, all but one of you. And by the way, the offer for that writer to have dinner at my home has now expired,' Ichiro said to a roaring Cooperstown crowd. Ichiro Suzuki speaks during the Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Clark Sports Center on July 27, 2025 in Cooperstown, New York. Getty Images Ichiro headlined the 2025 class, sharing the Cooperstown stage with CC Sabathia and elite reliever Billy Wagner, while legendary players Dick Allen and Dave Parker were inducted posthumously. Ichiro was selected on his first ballot with a sweeping 99.7 percent of the vote share, collecting 393 of 394 votes. The achievement also makes Ichiro the first Asian-born Hall of Fame inductee. Over 19 MLB seasons, Ichiro racked up 3,089 major league hits with a career batting average of a blistering .311, as well as 509 stolen bases, 10 Gold Gloves, three Silver Slugger awards, and two batting titles. Ichiro's single-season record of 262 hits in 2004 still stands to this day. Inductees, from left, Billy Wagner, Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia, Willa Allen, representing her late husband late Dick Allen and David Parker II, representing his late father Dave Parker pose for a photograph after the Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Clark Sports Center on July 27, 2025 in Cooperstown, New York. Getty Images Ichiro's 242 hits as a rookie in 2001 are also 10th all-time and second after 1930 — that season he won both MVP and Rookie of the Year in the American League. He also reached 10 consecutive All-Star games to begin his career, an MLB record. As of Ichiro's speech, the writer who left him off the ballot, keeping him from becoming the second unanimous first ballot Hall of Famer, has remained anonymous. Mariano Rivera received a perfect 425 of 425 votes for his initial Hall of Fame bid in 2019. Ichiro's 99.7 percent ties Derek Jeter for second place.

Artificial Authenticity And The Humblebrag Industrial Complex
Artificial Authenticity And The Humblebrag Industrial Complex

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Forbes

Artificial Authenticity And The Humblebrag Industrial Complex

Andy Warhol poses with his beloved dachshund Archie in November 1973. (Photo by Jack Mitchell/Getty ... More Images) Getty Images A now-viral screenshot (below) of a satirical LinkedIn post from four years ago has been shared thousands of times—mocking the platform's ecosystem of manufactured inspiration, where every mundane encounter becomes a profound lesson in leadership. Yet scroll through your feed today, and you'll find posts nearly indistinguishable from the parody. We've reached peak professional performance theater, where the line between genuine insight and algorithmic optimization has dissolved entirely. And what's notable is that more and more people are now using AI to draft their LinkedIn posts, outsourcing their inner monologue to machines that have never had an inner anything. Posts today are more than twice as long as they used to be, and a 2024 study by Originality found that over half of these long-form English language posts on the platform were AI generated. LinkedIn hasn't just digitized networking—it has industrialized authenticity, outsourcing even emotional labor to algorithms and turning professional identity into a content genre. This goes beyond LinkedIn's occasional awkwardness or self-indulgence. It's about how professional identity itself is evolving in an AI-saturated world, and the economic stakes are higher than we realize. Screenshot of LinkedIn post by Lumko Solwandle Nathan Pettijohn Before LinkedIn digitized professional networking in 2003, career advancement relied on physical proximity and institutional gatekeepers. Professional relationships were built through alumni networks, industry conferences, golf courses, and corner office introductions—spaces that inherently favored those with existing social and economic capital. LinkedIn democratized access to professional networks while simultaneously industrializing the performance itself, making visible what was once private and measurable what was once intuitive. Today, LinkedIn has over 1 billion global members, with only 1% posting content weekly, yet generating 9 billion impressions weekly. This platform has industrialized what sociologist Arlie Hochschild calls "emotional labor"—the management of feelings to create a publicly observable facial and bodily display. Except now, we're outsourcing even that labor to artificial intelligence. The platform's ecosystem of " broetry "—those distinctive LinkedIn posts formatted with short, dramatic line breaks for maximum impact—represents something deeper than mere narcissism. The typography itself performs sincerity, mimicking the cadence of spoken vulnerability. When someone writes: "I made a mistake. And it changed everything. Here's what I learned..." They're not just sharing a professional insight. They're using visual formatting to simulate the pauses and emphasis of authentic emotional revelation, turning genuine human moments into content optimized for algorithmic consumption. LinkedIn's algorithm can identify robotic responses but remains surprisingly vulnerable to AI-generated thought leadership. When machines can successfully impersonate human professional insight, what does that say about the original insight? We've reached a point where artificial authenticity reflects back on itself so thoroughly that it's difficult to recall what unmediated professional wisdom even sounded like. The Humblebrag Industrial Complex LinkedIn has transformed what was once a social faux pas into a legitimate digital marketing strategy. The platform rewards what sociologists might recognize as ritualized vulnerability—a scripted performance of authenticity that has crystallized into genre: "I'm humbled to announce..." (success disguised as modesty, the linguistic equivalent of covering a Ferrari with a tarp) "A stranger did something kind and restored my faith in humanity..." (virtue signaling through anecdote, usually involving coffee shops or airport encounters) "I was rejected from my dream job, and it was the best thing that ever happened to me..." (destiny disguised as disappointment, the professional equivalent of "everything happens for a reason") These posts function as modern parables, teaching us how to navigate professional success while maintaining the illusion of humility. But the economic implications are worth noting. Research by Edelman found that thought leadership influences decision-makers' purchasing behaviors, with their B2B Thought Leadership Impact Study showing that strong thought leadership content not only strengthens a company's reputation but also positively impacts RFP invitations and pricing. LinkedIn's audience has twice the buying power of the average online user, and four out of five people on the platform drive business decisions. This creates what amounts to the Instagramification of the cubicle, where every career move becomes content, every professional insight becomes engagement bait, every human moment becomes a potential case study in leadership. The performance actually matters—posts with 50 comments from engaged users prove far more impactful than those with 1,000 likes and no conversations, suggesting that authentic dialogue (however performed) still carries economic weight. Unlike other social media platforms where influence might translate to brand deals or Patreon subscriptions, LinkedIn performance has direct B2B economic consequences. Consider the case of Justin Welsh, who reports building "$10.3M+ in business revenue at ~86% profit margins" largely through LinkedIn content. His posts about entrepreneurship routinely generate hundreds of thousands of impressions and directly drive sales for his courses and consulting services. Welsh's success illustrates how LinkedIn has flattened traditional professional hierarchies—you don't need a corner office or MBA to influence industry conversations. The Shadow Audience Effect Erving Goffman once described everyday life as a kind of stage, where individuals perform identity for an audience. LinkedIn crystallizes this theory in digital form. What makes LinkedIn's artificial authenticity particularly powerful is what we might call the "shadow audience effect." For every person who reads and engages with your post, there are dozens more who scroll past, absorbing your message without leaving any digital trace. You're influencing people you'll never know you influenced, creating ripple effects of professional persona that extend far beyond the platform's ability to track. This invisible influence explains why LinkedIn content often feels like performance art masquerading as professional insight. The poster knows they're being watched by potential clients, employers, and industry peers, even if those watchers never engage. The result is calculated transparency—being selectively vulnerable through frosted glass. For younger professionals or those without traditional credentials, this can create a pressure to perform vulnerability as a career strategy, not as a path to connection. What LinkedIn has accomplished is the digitization of what Pierre Bourdieu called ' cultural capital '—the knowledge, skills, and tastes that signal social status. Professional networking was always about displaying and accumulating this capital, but LinkedIn made the process explicit, quantified, and globally accessible. Your post engagement isn't just social validation; it's the real-time measurement of your professional cultural capital in the marketplace. This is why so many users report career opportunities or new clients from posts that received little visible engagement—because the real influence lies in who's watching, not who's commenting. When Machines Learn Professional Authenticity The integration of AI into LinkedIn content creation represents an evolution in professional identity performance. AI writing tools now offer LinkedIn-specific templates—some trained on large datasets of high-performing posts—designed to replicate the cadence of professional inspiration. The AI learns the cadence of professional inspiration, the rhythm of humble bragging, the precise vulnerability-to-insight ratio that drives engagement. MIT sociologist Sherry Turkle observes : "Technology doesn't just do things for us. It does things to us, changing not just what we do but who we are." This shift is particularly evident in professional contexts, where AI-assisted content creation is reshaping how we construct and perform our professional identities. This shift in how we perform professional identity online doesn't exist in a vacuum. It's emerging in parallel with broader workplace transformations—remote work, pandemic-era burnout, the so-called ' Great Resignation ,' and the rise of solo entrepreneurship. As traditional career ladders collapse or morph into lattices, platforms like LinkedIn have become a kind of stage where we rehearse relevance. In a world where your job title might be in flux and your office is your kitchen table, broadcasting a coherent professional persona isn't just branding—it's survival. The implications extend beyond LinkedIn. As AI becomes more sophisticated at mimicking human professional communication, the premium on genuinely human insights—the kind that can't be replicated by algorithms—may actually increase. We might be witnessing the last gasps of performed authenticity before authenticity becomes the only viable differentiator. The Algorithm Made Me Do It Andy Warhol famously predicted everyone would be famous for fifteen minutes. LinkedIn offers something more unsettling: the chance to remain professionally relevant indefinitely—as long as we never stop performing. The platform has created a new form of professional purgatory where authenticity becomes a competitive advantage precisely because it's so rare. In a feed flooded with AI-generated inspiration and algorithmic optimization, the genuinely human voice doesn't just stand out—it becomes economically valuable. We've reached the point where being authentically yourself is the ultimate professional hack. But here's the deeper paradox: LinkedIn didn't create performed professionalism—it simply made it visible, measurable, and unavoidable. The platform exposed what was always true about professional identity: it has always been performative, from the firm handshake to the power lunch to the carefully curated resume. LinkedIn merely provided the stage and sold tickets to the show. The real question isn't whether artificial authenticity is corrupting professional discourse—it's whether we'll develop the literacy to distinguish between human insight and algorithmic mimicry. As AI becomes more sophisticated at replicating professional wisdom, the ability to offer genuinely original thinking may become the ultimate career differentiator. The humblebrag industrial complex will endure, but so will our fundamentally human need for genuine connection and meaningful work. The challenge is learning to sound like ourselves—even while writing on a platform (and perhaps with tools) designed to make us all sound the same. Just perhaps, the most human thing we can do is think thoughts worth writing ourselves.

Rihanna's Pregnancy Era Has Entered Its Softest Phase Yet — Thanks to a Very Hands-On A$AP Rocky
Rihanna's Pregnancy Era Has Entered Its Softest Phase Yet — Thanks to a Very Hands-On A$AP Rocky

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rihanna's Pregnancy Era Has Entered Its Softest Phase Yet — Thanks to a Very Hands-On A$AP Rocky

Rihanna is glowing — and no, it's not just the baby bump. As she prepares to welcome her third child with A$AP Rocky, the Fenty founder and Smurfs star is getting a whole lot of love, support, and late-night snack deliveries from her partner of five years. According to People, the couple is 'thrilled' to be growing their family again, and sources close to the pair say this pregnancy feels different — softer, slower, and somehow even more full of love. 'He's completely tuned into her needs,' the insider shared of Rocky, who's been 'incredibly attentive and nurturing' as Rihanna rests and gets ready for baby no. 3. More from SheKnows Rihanna's Baby Bump Is on Full Display at the Met Gala After Revealing Her 3rd Pregnancy While some dads might think diaper duty earns them a gold star, Rocky's in full-service mode. He's reportedly handling bedtime routines, entertaining sons RZA, 3, and Riot Rose, almost 2, and running baths for Rihanna at the end of the day. Yes, baths. With foot rubs. And snacks. 'He always makes her laugh,' the source added. 'He keeps things light and full of love.' The couple revealed the pregnancy just ahead of the 2025 Met Gala — in true Rihanna fashion, by casually stepping out of The Carlyle in a powder-blue two-piece with her bump on full display. It marked her third major pregnancy reveal in as many years, following her viral 2023 Super Bowl moment and her first pregnancy announcement in 2022, when she wore a $29K outfit in a paparazzi photo, per Us Weekly. Still, this time seems more intimate. Back in December, Rihanna joked that the only thing she hadn't achieved yet was having a daughter. 'I'm batting at 75 percent for a boy next time,' she told E! News. 'So, we'll just keep our fingers crossed.' And in April, she doubled down: 'I would try for my girl,' she told Interview. 'But of course, if it's another boy, it's another boy.' Either way, Rocky's right there next to her. Even if he doesn't help dress the kids — 'That's their mother by herself,' he admitted last year — he still plays muse. 'Sometimes she dresses them like me… kilts and all of that,' he said. Now, with a third baby on the way and a nightly foot rub seemingly locked in, it's safe to say this might be Rihanna's coziest pregnancy of SheKnows AP Scores Just Came Out — Here's What to Do If Your Teen's Upset About Theirs Celebrate Freedom With These Perfectly-Patriotic Americana Baby Names July 4th Printable Coloring Pages to Keep Kids Busy All Day Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store