Good morning. It's Monday. The Met Gala, where money and power intersect, is tonight. We'll look at why the event is important.
New York City's biggest fashion event — the Met Gala, officially the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute benefit — is tonight. You would know if you're going. It's an invitation-only extravaganza, and the guest list is a closely guarded secret.
The gala is an annual event, but this year, there may be more than the usual crowd of photographers and celebrity-watchers outside. Condé Union, which represents workers at Vogue — the fashion magazine run by Anna Wintour, who has been the mastermind of the Gala for 25 years — and other Condé Nast publications threatened to appear. "Condé Nast management: Meet us at the table, or we'll meet you at the Met," a post from the union said on X.
I asked Vanessa Friedman, The New York Times's fashion director and chief fashion critic, to explain why a showcase for power from Hollywood, fashion and beyond matters to New York — and what to expect as the night unfolds.
Why is the Met Gala so important in New York?
I think it's more than that. It's global. You see that with designers flying in, celebrities flying in, powers-that-be flying in.
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