
Victoria's Secret model Georgia Fowler suffers wardrobe malfunction in VERY revealing dress as she attends A-list Met Gala after party
Georgia Fowler is no stranger to daring fashion moments after strutting down the Victoria's Secret runway.
And the New Zealand model was dressed to the nines in a very racy frock as she attended one of the hottest Met Gala after parties on the season after the prestigious event in New York on Monday night.
The 32-year-old looked stunning in a risque gown as she attended The After by Richie Akiva & Badius.
The A-list shindig was hosted by Tyla and Doja Cat and held at Domingo in Manhattan.
The model appeared to suffer a wardrobe malfunction as her very high cut gown showed off a little more than she bargained for.
Georgia showcased lots of skin in the dress which had a large cut out along that also flaunted some side boob.
The semi-sheer fabric also left little to the imagination as the leggy stunner posed alongside a friend in the gown, which bared a lot of skin thanks to a cutout at the side
The semi-sheer fabric left little to the imagination as the leggy stunner posed alongside a friend.
Georgia added to the outfit with gold accessories including a chunky cuff and a knotted necklace.
For makeup, she chose a natural look with baby pink elements including a soft, rosy lipstick, while wearing her brunette locks down.
Back in February 2024, Georgia welcomed her second child with husband Nathan Dalah.
She announced the joyous news on Instagram with several black-and-white photos of herself and Nathan cradling their newborn son in hospital.
Revealing the baby's name in the caption, Georgia wrote: 'Zeke Atlas Dalah. 15.2.24. You are so loved already little man.'
Georgia's famous friends were quick to express their excitement, with fellow model Cheyenne Tozzi commenting: 'Congratulations you guys.'
Models Shanina Shaik, Lily Aldrige and Jessica Gomes also shared their congratulations.
The couple tied the knot during a gorgeous countryside ceremony on 27 January 2023.
They exchanged vows at Hopewood House in the township of Bowral, in the NSW Southern Highlands.
Among the attendees were the couple's fashion friends, including model Tahnee Atkinson, fashionista Rey Vakili and designers Sophie Coote and Nikki Campbell.
Also attending was 'Australian tailor to the stars' Patrick Johnson and his wife Tamsin Johnson, an interior designer.
The couple also share daughter Dylan, who they welcomed in September, 2021.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
So nice she wore it twice! Dina Broadhurst risks ANOTHER wardrobe malfunction as she slips into racy gown that shocked crowd at Justin Hemmes' charity gala
Dina Broadhurst risked a major wardrobe malfunction when she stepped out in an extremely risqué gown at the prestigious Silver Party in Sydney. The annual charity, which is hosted by the Sydney Children's Hospital Foundation, was once again held at Justin Hemmes' multimillion-dollar Vaucluse mansion. The 'nude artist', 48, wore a very revealing metallic Michael Lo Sordo gown to the event last month, featuring a deep plunging neckline that draped below her naval. Not content with the event photography, or perhaps the level of commotion the dress garnered, Dina gave it a second showing on Instagram this week. 'Another moment for this dress,' she captioned a carousel of behind-the-scenes selfies and short videos posted on Monday. In one clip, Broadhurst saunters towards a floor length mirror as if in slow motion. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Dina gave the daring ensemble a second showing on Instagram this week, as she encouraged her 364,000 Instagram followers to take a 'moment' to appreciate the look on Monday The satin frock features a halter neckline which leaves little to the imagination. Likely held in place with fashion tape, Dina appeared unconcerned with the fragility of her backless - and nearly frontless - ensemble as she took several sultry photos for her online following. In May, Dina invited the prominent Australian fashion designer to her lavish eastern suburbs abode prior to the event. In one photo, she pursed her lips for her iPhone camera while Lo Sordo made last minute adjustments to the halter neck. The socialite also cuddled up to fashion designer at the event. Dina, who usually shows off her natural complexion, opted for a full face of glamorous makeup at the charity event. The brunette let the shock dress do all the talking as she kept her accessories to a minimum, only popping on a pair of hoop earrings. The gown, which may well have been a custom creation, does not appear to be for sale on Michael Lo Sordo's website 'Another moment for this dress,' she captioned a carousel of behind-the-scenes selfies The Silver Party is one of Sydney's most prestigious charity galas, and was this year attended by some 300 influential figures from business, media, and entertainment. Since its inception in 2001, the Silver Party has raised over $10million in support of the state's most critically ill children. The money raised funds for vital equipment, research, and life-saving treatments across the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network. After spending the evening with some of the city's most prestigious people, Dina went on to enjoy Sunday morning with her son Leo for Mother's Day. She sat down for brunch with the 19-year-old, who she shared with musician ex-husband Nick Broadhurst, as they visited a local café. Dina's romantic life has come into question of late after she went on date with her millionaire fridge heir ex John Winning Jr following a fling with Belgian model Kengi Meert. The high-society beauty has been romantically linked to some of Sydney's richest and most powerful men, but Dina does not like to be tied down these days. Most recently, she was once again spotted cosying up to her ex John Jr., 35, known to his friends as Herman. The pair were spotted on a double date in Coogee with cricketer Michael Clarke and his girlfriend Arabella Sherborne, the exclusive details of which were revealed by Mail+. Their shock outing came after Dina was also romantically tied to her boy toy Kengi - a former Love Island star who is, at 23, less than half her age. The pair secretly linked up in Paris, with Dina doing her best to keep him hidden from the public eye. But after Daily Mail Australia revealed their secret tryst, she began sharing steamy images online from their five-star Parisian love nest. However, upon her return to Australia, Dina sought comfort in the arms of ex-boyfriend John Jr. once again, sparking speculation about whether or not they are back together.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Putting trigger warnings on George Orwell's 1984 is the most stupid, 1984ish thing ever
' Orwell will be turning in his grave,' read one of the online comments posted in response to yesterday's piece about 1984 getting a trigger warning. 'Turning'? I think it's more likely he'll be laughing. What, after all, could be more of a validation, a rubber-stamping, and an 'I told you so' – delivered through a megaphone – than a thoughtcrime conviction for a futuristic cautionary tale… about thoughtcrimes, published 76 years ago? In the introductory essay featured in the new 75th anniversary edition, US novelist Dolen Perkins-Valdez describes the book's protagonist, Winston Smith, as 'problematic'. So much so that it may once have led to her abandoning the book, she admits. Warning modern readers that they may find his views on women 'despicable', she writes: 'For example, we learn of him, 'He disliked nearly all women, and especially the young and pretty ones.'' Whoa, wait a minute, Orwell. There's so much to unpack here. First, that with everything currently going on in the world – you know, the rise of modern totalitarianism, technology spying on us and all that – Winston Smith's view of women should be the main area of focus. Second, that word 'problematic', which almost always precedes something cretinous, but in this context was genuinely baffling. Name one successful novel, TV show or film that doesn't feature a 'problematic' character, and I will show you something I have no interest in reading or watching. Do you know anybody who enjoys reading about nice, blameless people going about their nice, blameless lives? I don't. Also, by all means, find Smith's views of women despicable – when you start reading the book, but not before. If and when you are appalled by his behaviour, let that not be off-putting, but a jumping-off point for meaty discussions; an opening up of your mind to human complexities. Someone who has been eloquent on this subject is the British Museum's brilliant new director, Nicholas Cullinan. Asked recently whether he agreed with the idea of trigger warnings and apologies on museum labels, Cullinan replied: 'Labels should be accurate, not partisan or political or conforming to a contemporary fad.' For me, the most extraordinary aspect of trigger warnings has always been their pomposity: the implicit conviction that in 2025, our view is not only more enlightened than any view that came before, but the final word on the subject. Unlike Orwell's, I suspect that those words will look embarrassingly outdated in just a couple of years.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Blix Not Bombs review – former UN weapons inspector revisits the Iraq war
At the age of 97, entirely lucid, still writing books and physically spry enough to be shown swimming in a Norwegian lake, former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix has given an extended interview to the Czech-born Swedish film-maker Greta Stocklassová about his life and times, about George W Bush Jr, Saddam Hussein and the weapons of mass destruction that were not there. The result is insightful and a vivid time capsule for the grim and mendacious era of the 'war on terror', during which Blix was tasked with discovering the truth about Saddam's supposed weapons. The film is also unexpectedly spiky, with Blix at one stage threatening to walk out, as Stocklassová presses him on his apparent fence-sitting, then as now, insisting on an absence of evidence for WMD but also reluctant to commit himself definitively to this being evidence of absence, and apparently unable to state where the onus of proof lies. But as he himself says … how do you prove a negative? How do you prove that there is not a mouse in this room at this very moment? After 9/11, Blix found himself at the very centre of international pain and American dysfunction, with the US government grimly set on finding someone to lash out against, and Saddam's Iraq, already semi-defeated in the first Gulf war of 1991, being the obvious candidate. America needed the fiction of Iraq's 'weapons of mass destruction' as the pretext – although it was presmably their absolute conviction that there were no WMD that emboldened them to attack. (Osama Bin Laden was actually discovered in Pakistan, a nuclear power on whom regime change could not be imposed.) So Blix – calm, professional, conscientious and diplomatic, showing up at various Iraqi sites with his UN team in the burning heat and finding nothing – was the face of this objective, non-partisan assessment. He didn't realise until it was too late, and perhaps still doesn't realise, that the protracted theatre of his polite frustration was being used by the US government to build up the necessary drumbeat of rage to facilitate the final assault: Blix the dupe, Blix the chump, Blix the internationalist liberal being laughed at by Saddam. Stocklassová suggests that over the 20 years since then, the calamity of the Iraq war led to the rise of Islamic State, to the tidal wave of refugees and to the new mainstream normalisation of the far right. She could be correct. Yet Blix's inspections seem part of a different world; certainly Putin didn't feel the need to go through the motions of a UN inspector who could confirm or fail to disprove his allegations of a Nazified Ukraine aggressor. Blix himself is good-natured and decent; his faith in the primacy of facts still has something heroic about it. Blix Not Bombs is on True Story from 13 June.