The Met
Gala’s Embrace of Jeff Bezos Causes a Backlash
Protesters
have found a perfect foil in Amazon’s founder, the gala’s lead sponsor this
year.
Jesse
McKinleyAlisha Haridasani Gupta
By Jesse
McKinley and Alisha Haridasani Gupta
May 4,
2026
Updated
12:20 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/style/met-gala-jeff-bezos-backlash.html
It is
perhaps the world’s most exclusive party, a spectacle of fashion and
extravagance that draws a secretive roster of famous people, charges $100,000 a
ticket and drapes a carpet down the steps of one of Manhattan’s oldest cultural
institutions.
But this
year, the Met Gala is facing stiff headwinds, most notably for the decision to
name Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder and one of the world’s wealthiest men, and
his wife, Lauren Sánchez Bezos, as honorary chairs.
Opposition
to the Bezoses started almost immediately after they were announced as
financial sponsors in February, and comes amid a surging anti-rich sentiment
nationwide and in New York City, the event’s liberal home. The outrage
seemingly gained momentum after the city’s newly elected mayor, Zohran Mamdani,
a democratic socialist, declared in mid-April that he would skip the gala,
breaking with many of his predecessors, saying that his focus is on
“affordability.”
And in
the weeks leading up to the event on Monday, an avid anti-Bezos campaign has
erupted on New York’s streets, in subways and online, where social media users
have described the event as the “Amazon Prime Gala” or “Bezos Ball.” Reports of
skittish stars and upset fashionistas have peppered tabloid pages, including
rumors of some past guests steering clear.
A
guerrilla activist group called Everyone Hates Elon — a reference to another
controversial billionaire, Elon Musk — has been calling for a boycott of the
event, with a steady drumbeat of eye-catching campaigns around the city,
including plastering posters on subway cars and bus stops. On Friday, in a nod
to complaints by Amazon workers of having to skip bathroom breaks and urinate
in bottles instead, the group placed close to 300 bottles of fake urine inside
the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Then, on
Sunday, the eve of the gala, the anti-billionaire group projected video
interviews with Amazon workers onto the Empire State Building, the Chrysler
Building and the Bezoses’ penthouse near Madison Square Park.
“If You
Can Buy the Met Gala, You Can Pay More Taxes,” read one of the projections
beamed from the back of a van, along with a picture of a laughing Bezos.
Some
people stopped and snapped photos, while others simply chuckled.
“What
does Jeff Bezos,” asked one passer-by, Mayan Rajendran, “have to do with
fashion?”
He wasn’t
the only one asking that question. Other critics have included past boosters
like Blakely Thornton, an influencer who interviewed celebrities on the red
carpet last year. This year, Thornton skewered the gala on Instagram,
criticizing the decision to align with Bezos, adding in a text message that he
would rather be dragged through broken glass “than participate in this oligarch
orchestrated clown show.”
The gala,
which dates to 1948, acts as a fund-raiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s
Costume Institute and ushers in its major spring exhibition, which this year
focuses on the dressed body. The fashion house Saint Laurent is sponsoring the
exhibition catalog. Designers are known to spend months preparing outfits for
the famed guests, who are often in surreal and spectacular fashion.
Fern
Mallis, the creator of New York Fashion Week, called the Met Gala “the biggest
ball of the year,” whose influence has far outgrown its roots as an event for
well-heeled philanthropists and patrons “who lived nearby and loved the museum”
and were often escorted by the designers they wore.
Now, she
said, “it’s really about the celebrities and the musicians and the athletes and
all these cultural icons of the day.” But, she thought that much of the starry
guest list had little connection with the museum itself. “I’ll bet many of them
have never even been there,” she said.
In recent
years, too, protests have become as commonplace as the carnivalesque swirl
surrounding the event, with demonstrations focused on issues like the war in
Gaza or climate change. In 2024, the gala drew rebukes from lawmakers for
naming TikTok as a sponsor at a time when the social media giant was facing a
potential ban in the United States amid allegations of its political
entanglements with China.
In Bezos,
however, progressive protesters have seemingly found a perfect foil: a singular
figurehead whose rightward political drift, $250 billion bankroll and
anti-union efforts have made him an object of scorn on the left.
“He’s
obviously one of the great avatars for, you know, just endless, rapacious
accumulation of wealth and exploitation of workers at the expense of the rest
of us,” said Micah Uetricht, the editor of Jacobin, a socialist magazine.
“So kudos
to them,” he said of the Met Gala organizers. “If they were looking to make the
worst choice possible, it seems like they’ve succeeded.”
The
Bezoses’ unapologetic embrace of the luxe life, including a $50 million wedding
last summer in Venice, with a $500 million yacht bobbing nearby, have not
helped their image in some quarters, either.
“It’s not
like a situation of the quiet rich,” Jon Reinish, a veteran Democratic
political strategist, said. “This is the loud rich. And in a populist moment,
that creates tension.”
Both the
Metropolitan and representatives for the Bezoses declined to comment.
At the
same time, the gala is grappling with other uncertainties, including a
transition of professional roles for the longtime editor of Vogue, Anna
Wintour, whose control over the event — from the seating charts to the finger
food — is famously ironclad.
In the
last year, the 76-year-old Wintour stepped aside from her role as editor in
chief of American Vogue, and named as her successor Chloe Malle. Wintour
remains in a top position at Condé Nast, Vogue’s parent company, as chief
content officer, and global editorial director of Vogue.
As the
world’s most famous magazine editor, Wintour has been credited with
transforming the gala from a clubby New York society event into a global
phenomenon, attracting a star-studded A-list and generating a healthy revenue
stream for Condé Nast, said Amy Odell, a fashion journalist who wrote a
biography of Wintour, “Anna: The Biography.” In fact, the gala, which is
streamed exclusively by Vogue, brings the media company so many advertising
dollars, Odell said, that “they can’t not have it.”
The Met’s
Costume Institute is financially dependent on the gala. Last May, it raised a
record $31 million, dwarfing similar benefit events at other institutions. This
year’s take is expected to surpass that.
The
gala’s place in the New York City and global social calendar — traditionally
the first Monday in May — is also unparalleled, with immense power to cement
the importance of up-and-coming stars, both in fashion and the world of
celebrity. Wintour has also argued that the gala — by, for example, drawing
guests who stay at hotels and hiring multiple behind-the-scene vendors — is
ultimately a shot in the arm for the city’s economy.
Ms.
Mallis echoed this. “At the end of the day, it’s an enormous fund-raiser,”
Mallis said, adding, “and that is a very positive thing.”
Wintour’s
eventual departure from the scene, combined with the news last week that the
gala might soon have raised enough money for the Costume Institute to not rely
on the gala for annual funding, has also raised questions about the event’s
future.
Cultural
institutions have long courted wealthy benefactors, even as they have
“leveraged public displays of philanthropy to augment their image and grow
their social standing,” said Rachel Feinberg, a consultant who has worked on
galas in New York City.
But, she
added, that dynamic has become even more difficult when “the majority of
individual gifts are coming from a smaller and smaller group of exceedingly
wealthy people.”
The
Bezoses have been increasingly active in fashion in recent years, including
sitting in the front row of fashion shows and donating tens of millions of
dollars in grants and scholarships devoted to sustainable fabrics and other
initiatives.
The Met
has dealt with criticism over donors in the past, including members of the Koch
family — conservative political backers who also donate heavily to cultural
institutions — and the Sacklers, whose now-disbanded company, Purdue Pharma,
produced the painkiller OxyContin, a culprit in the opioid crisis. (The Sackler
name was removed from several Met galleries in 2021; despite protests, the
plaza in front of the Met is still named for David H. Koch, who funded its
redesign and died in 2019.)
The split
screen of the gala’s opulence juxtaposed with the economic struggle for many
living in New York City, where an estimated 1 in 4 residents live in poverty,
has long been evident. And while Bezos seems emblematic of those living at the
top of the spectrum, even his critics say the problem is larger than this one
billionaire.
“It’s
easy to make him the villain when in reality the villain is the system,” said
Molly Gaebe, co-founder of the annual Debt Gala, a four-year-old fund-raiser,
inspired by the Met Gala, to help alleviate medical debt. “We’re in favor of
building a system where working people can actually afford to live in the
cities that they’re running.”
By the
same token, Mayor Mamdani has actively campaigned for tax hikes on the wealthy,
a policy that, polls show, a majority of New Yorkers seem to support. The
mayor’s early and successful embrace of affordability helped it become a potent
issue for Democrats, who hope it will help fuel victories in this fall’s
midterm elections.
Critics
of Bezos’ involvement with the gala cite a long list of concerns, including
major layoffs and editorial decisions at The Washington Post, which he owns;
Amazon’s donations to the president’s inauguration fund; and Amazon’s backing
of a $40 million documentary about the first lady, Melania Trump.
“The Met
Gala is now giving Bezos exactly the kind of reputation laundering and cultural
rocket fuel he needs to keep destroying America,” said Cynthia Nixon, the
“Gilded Age” actress and progressive activist who ran for New York governor in
2018. “My hat is off to the mayor for not attending.”
Mamdani
is not the only mayor to have qualms about the event. Former Mayor Bill de
Blasio, a two-term Democrat, long avoided the gala before attending in 2021 as
a sign of solidarity, he said, with a city and institution recovering from
Covid.
In an
interview, de Blasio said the gala had always been “an elitist event,” noting
that “the sense that elites are living a life so far away from the rest of us,
the sense that the system is rigged,” is not limited to liberals like himself.
“There’s a lot of MAGA supporters who could look at something like the Met Gala
with discomfort,” he said.
For all
of that, the show will go on, and is likely to command the attention of all
manner of commentators, on the red carpet and online. Indeed, Michael Gross,
the journalist and author who has long chronicled the ways of the rich, said
that even if the Bezoses were to draw protesters, the gala will still probably
come out on top.
“Every
eye in the world is going to be on that,” Gross said. “Even the haters can’t
help but be fascinated.”



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