logo
The Outlines on Lisa's Met Gala Look Were Real People, Just Not Rosa Parks

The Outlines on Lisa's Met Gala Look Were Real People, Just Not Rosa Parks

Yahoo09-05-2025
When Pharrell Williams joined Louis Vuitton as the men's creative director, he teamed up with multidisciplinary artist Henry Taylor for his debut collection. Taylor had a pre-existing relationship with the fashion house, which printed his 2017 portrait 'A Young Master' on their Capucines bag in 2020. But working with Williams brought Taylor's art to the 2025 Met Gala — then it inadvertently placed him at the center of controversy with posts spread across social media asking why an outline of Rosa Parks was printed on the singer Lisa's undergarments.
The short answer is that it wasn't. 'The faces seen on this look, as well as on previous LV garments featuring Taylor's artwork, are all drawn from his personal life — family members, friends, and neighbors,' a representative for Taylor told Vulture. 'These figures come directly from Henry's existing artworks, which he provided to LVMH for Pharrell's debut collection with Louis Vuitton in 2023. None of the individuals depicted in any of the garments are Rosa Parks or other well-known figures from Black cultural history. They are all people from Henry's own life.'
More from Rolling Stone
Doechii Shrugs Off Met Gala Controversy: 'God Forbid a Girl Needs More Umbrellas'
André 3000 Wears a Grand Piano to Met Gala, Drops Surprise Album
Rihanna Reveals She's Pregnant With Third Child at Met Gala
On Monday, when the Blackpink singer walked the Met Gala carpet, social media users were already in critique-mode as they are every year. This year's theme was 'Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,' inspired by the 2009 book Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identity by Monica Miller, who curated the accompanying Costume Institute exhibit. Williams served as co-chair alongside Colman Domingo, A$AP Rocky, and Lewis Hamilton.
In recent years, misinformation has complicated the consumption of Met Gala content. AI images of celebrities often spread before they've even hit the carpet, if they end up attending at all. The mystique of the event lends itself to this, in some ways. No one knows for sure who's going to show up or what they're going to wear until it happens. But while users were concerned about attendees misinterpreting the theme, or playing it safe by wearing something utterly boring, many took what came across their timeline and ran with it.
'So you get exposed for saying nigga, don't acknowledge it and then pop up to a black people themed event with rosa parks on your moose knuckle?' one viral X post with 28,000 likes reads. The user here seemingly references recently resurfaced videos from Blackpink's trainee days that showed Lisa, Jennie, and Rosé singing and rapping the n-word during song covers. None of the group's members have addressed the controversy, but Lisa recently told Variety they reunited 'in the studio a few days ago.'
Lisa wasn't the only target of criticism over her outfit, which paired an intricately detailed blazer with tights printed with the Louis Vuitton logo and a bodysuit embroidered with portraits. 'I still can't believe anyone thought it was appropriate to weave Rosa Parks face into a pair of panties. I never thought I would say that lmao,' another post read, while another with 81,000 likes read: 'Pharrell a weirdo too cause he the one who put rosa parks on the panties!!!!!'
On Instagram, Lisa shared images from the event with the caption: 'I was so honored to attend my first MET with @louisvuitton celebrating the incredible art by Henry Taylor and @pharrell. Thank you to the entire team who made my custom tailored look a reality. And special thank you to Anna Wintour @voguemagazine.' In a behind-the-scenes video, Pharrell told her: 'You're wearing art.'
Best of Rolling Stone
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sterling K. Brown's Scottish ‘twin' has his wife seeing double: ‘Send help and a kilt'
Sterling K. Brown's Scottish ‘twin' has his wife seeing double: ‘Send help and a kilt'

CNN

time3 hours ago

  • CNN

Sterling K. Brown's Scottish ‘twin' has his wife seeing double: ‘Send help and a kilt'

If you have found your way to the Black Scottish side of TikTok, you are not alone. People on the social media platform have been equal parts fascinated and tickled with the discovery that, yes, there are Black people in Scotland. Not as in Black people who have moved to the country, which is a part of the United Kingdom, but those who were born and raised there. One influencer, who goes by 'starboysobersfitness,' has been credited with raising awareness about this community with hashtag 'BlackScottishTikTok.' He has been thrilling people with both his accent (known as Scottish brogue) and his resemblance to the actor Sterling K. Brown. Yes, this accent comes in melanin too, welcome to black Scottish Tik Tok. @ABI💫 @Court @BashTheEntertainer #scottishtiktok #blackscottishtiktok #relatable #wecomeinmelanintoo #US According to Brown's wife, actress Ryan Michelle Bathe, the 'Paradise' star is aware that the internet believes he has a twin in Scotland. 'My husband has been speaking with a Scottish brogue all day,' she posted on Threads. 'Send help and a kilt please.' The influencer sounds like he wouldn't mind getting into the acting game himself. 'If you're looking for audiobooks, I will read any story, for the right price,' he said on TikTok. 'Drop your price in the comments.'

Is skinny back — and will banning ads really help?
Is skinny back — and will banning ads really help?

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Is skinny back — and will banning ads really help?

Are models getting skinnier? According to data from the Advertising Standards Authority they seem to be — but fashion insiders are squabbling about what this means and what the industry should do next. In July, the regulator banned an M&S advert featuring a model who appeared to be 'unhealthily thin' — on the grounds that her pose and 'large painted shoes' intensified 'the slenderness of her legs'. It followed a ban a few months earlier on a Next jeans advert because the pose and camera angle gave the impression of extreme skinniness. Then, last week, two Zara adverts were banned on similar grounds, with the regulator branding them 'irresponsible'. The ASA says it has seen a 'definite uptick' in complaints about the size of models in recent weeks. It received more than 20 in the fortnight following the M&S ban, compared with about five or six a week earlier in the year. One-off bans don't change anything. Until real financial penalties hit, nothing's going to shift The regulator says its decisions are not based on the models themselves, but on how they are presented, for example through lighting, camera angles or poses. But for some industry experts, ad bans are missing the point. The anonymous insider Instagram account @boringnotcom, known for its scathing fashion commentary, called the move to ban the Zara advert 'performative', telling the Standard: 'One-off bans don't change anything. Until laws are in place and real financial penalties hit designers, agencies and casting directors, nothing's going to shift. Aesthetics won't change until it becomes more expensive to uphold harmful ones.' Not everyone agrees, with some in the industry taking issue with what they perceive as double standards about slender bodies. Antonina Kosior, a model based in London, says she has the same measurements as the woman in the Zara advert, and claims she has 'been pushed out of the UK industry' in the past three years because of her petite figure. She says, in her experience, 'the size eights are now being labelled as unhealthily thin, when that is actually not the case'. She adds: 'It's now socially acceptable to skinny shame. I feel like we've gone from shaming one group to shaming another.' Fashion's love affair with tall and slim bodies is decades-old, but the past 30 years have been turbulent. The 1990s and 2000s were characterised by the hyper-skinny heroin-chic aesthetic, but in the years that followed, the body positivity movement brought more plus-sized models to catwalks and campaigns. By the end of the 2010s, small waists and big bums (à la Kim Kardashian) provided a new, if not equally unattainable, body ideal. But in recent years, as weight-loss jabs such as Ozempic skyrocketed in popularity, everyone — including Kardashian — seems to be getting skinnier. It's now socially acceptable to skinny shame. I feel like we've gone from shaming one group to shaming another When she showed up at the 2022 Met Gala in a dress that once belonged to Marilyn Monroe, reportedly having lost 16 pounds in three weeks, something shifted in pop culture. The curvy hourglass figure that briefly disrupted our obsession with skinniness began to fade into the background. It left many wondering whether brands had merely jumped on the inclusivity band wagon — then dropped plus-sized models when they were no longer in vogue. That certainly seemed to be the case during fashion weeks this year. According to the size inclusivity report from Vogue Business for the spring/summer 2025 season, during fashion weeks there was a rise in 'straight-size models (US zero to four, or UK four to eight) at the extremely thin end of the scale' — some of whom attracted adoring attention on TikTok. One video, featuring a Balmain model in a red skirt suit and captioned 'the skinniest model ever' received comments such as 'body goals' and 'high fashion is back'. Inclusivity efforts stagnated in shows across New York, London, Milan and Paris, the report found. It said plus-sized representation was so poor in Milan that they couldn't create a top 10 for plus-sized casting, because only nine shows included at least one mid-size (UK 10 to 16) or plus-size (UK 18+) model. Defenders of fashion's penchant for tall, thin models have long argued a slim frame is useful for standardising sampling and showcasing designs. And yet retailers such as Imogen Beschi, founder of underwear subscription brand The Cheek, argue this is 'a lazy excuse, especially for bigger brands which are working with much larger quantities'. Shoppers should be able to see garments on a body that truly reflects them, rather than an unattainable vision of beauty 'You should be sampling on all different body types and making sure that it fits for them before you go to production,' she says. For Leanne Elliott Young, co-founder of the Institute of Digital Fashion, the way forward is investing in technology that allows shoppers to see garments on a range of bodies, using digital try-ons and size-adaptive imagery. 'Representation shapes aspiration,' she says. 'Shoppers should be able to see garments on a body that truly reflects them, rather than an unattainable, singular vision of beauty.' As the use of weight-loss jabs in the UK soars, it's likely that celebrities, influencers and models will continue shrinking. And while there's no hard and fast answer — and no consensus among insiders about the right approach to casting — industry leaders have a responsibility to at least consider their work as part of a cultural ecosystem that both reflects and refracts body ideals. For Emma Matell, a casting director at MA+ Group, advert bans alone will never be enough to fix fashion's fetishisation of thinness. 'Inclusivity means every size,' she says. 'The problem isn't in people's BMI or in people's weight or in how they look. The problem is: are they fit to model?' She looks to countries such as Denmark, where mental and physical health screenings are mandatory for modelling. It makes her wonder: 'Why don't we have measures in place to make sure that people who are not fit to model are not there in the first place?'

15 Timbaland beats that shifted the sound of music, Pt. 1
15 Timbaland beats that shifted the sound of music, Pt. 1

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

15 Timbaland beats that shifted the sound of music, Pt. 1

Timbaland changed the sound of music and it's not up for debate. The Virginia-born producer came into the game with beats that didn't sound like anything else coming out the speakers. His drums hit different, his rhythms bent the rules, and his sonic choices moved like organized chaos. From the very beginning, he built a lane that was unpredictable and ahead of its time. The early work with Aaliyah and Missy Elliott created a new rhythm for Hip Hop and R&B — one that didn't exist before he touched the board. Trending Denzel Washington introduced his wife, Pauletta, to Cardi B's music Scarface reveals JAY-Z and DJ Khaled's quiet acts of generosity Juicy J infuses jazz with his signature Hip Hop style on 'Caught Up In This Illusion' In 1996, Aaliyah's One in a Million dropped and shifted the energy in R&B. The title track sounded like it was built in another dimension. Digital crickets, stop-and-start drum patterns, and an airy smoothness made it feel light but calculated. That sound gave her an edge without sacrificing softness. The album became a cultural moment and helped redefine how R&B could move — especially for Black women artists. Missy Elliott brought out a different side of Timbaland's creativity. The way he constructed 'The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)' made it feel more like an experience than a single. 'She's a B**ch' pushed even further, matching Missy's power with raw, futuristic percussion. Timbaland did more than just cook up dope beats — he created entire environments for artists to exist in. His sound cuts across several genres including pop and R&B. Ginuwine's 'So Anxious' carried a slow-burning intensity, with a beat that sat in a perfect pocket between sensual and eerie. That same year, JAY-Z dropped 'N**ga What, N**ga Who (Originator 99)' featuring Jaz-O. The tempo was fast, the bounce was icy, and the energy was undeniably New York. Timbaland had found a way to dominate both genres without watering down the vision. Justin Timberlake's Justified and FutureSex/LoveSounds marked a new era of pop music that still had Timbaland's fingerprints all over it. 'Cry Me a River' was cold, layered, and direct. The Nelly Furtado era came next, and Loose produced some of the biggest records of that decade. 'Promiscuous' and 'Say It Right' were also certified hits built for radio but rooted in experimentation. When his beats drop, you know who's behind it without checking the credits. That's more than a style, that's legacy. Here are 15 of Timbaland's best beats. 1. The Jump Off – Lil' Kim featuring Mr. Cheeks Best bars: I got my eye on the guy in the Woolrich coat / Don't he know Queen Bee got the ill deep throat? / Uh! Let me show you what I'm all about / How I make a Sprite can disappear in my mouth. 2. If Your Girl Only Knew – Aaliyah She's crazy to put up with you / But boy, I won't be no fool / Let you like what you see / It ain't easy to get with me. 3. My Love – Justin Timberlake featuring T.I. Best bars: I can see us holding hands / Walking on the beach, our toes in the sand / I can see us on the countryside / Sitting on the grass, laying side by side / You can be my baby / Let me make you my lady, girl, you amaze me. 4. You Owe Me – Nas featuring Ginuwine Best bars: It's real in the field, the last mohican / Who survived in the streets and did something decent / Now I got plans to buy the whole hood / Legit now, I ain't gotta lie to no judge / I make hits now, money I flip now. 5. Sock It 2 Me – Missy Elliott featuring Da Brat : Ooh ahh, sock it to me like you want to, ooh / I can take it like a pro, you know / Do a long throw with the back stroke / My hormones jumping like a disco / I be popping ish like some Crisco / And all you gotta say is, "Missy, go" / And when you say go, I won't move slow. 6. Dirt Off Your Shoulder – JAY-Z Best bars: Your boy back in the building; Brooklyn, we back on the map / Me and my beautiful b**ch in the back of that 'Bach / I'm the realest that run it, I just happen to rap / I ain't gotta clap at 'em — n**gas scared of that black / I drop that Black Album, then I back out it / As the best rapper alive — n**ga, ask about me. 7. Roll Out – Ludacris Best bars: Are you custom made, custom paid, or you just custom fitted / PlayStation 2 up in the ride, is that Lorenzo-kitted/ Is that your wife, your girlfriend or just your main b**ch / You take a pick, while I'm rubbin' the hips, touchin' lips to the top of the d**k and then, Whew. 8. Oops (Oh My) – Tweet featuring Missy Elliott Best bars: Early in the morning rushing for work and / Ma you ain't gon' talk me to death, cause you got free nights and weekends / Ghetto Fab's all over the place / Oops! There goes my kids all over your face, oh my. 9. Promiscuous – Nelly Furtado Best bars: You expect me to just let you hit it / But will you still respect me if you get it / All I can do is try, gimme one chance / What's the problem? I don't see the ring on your hand. 10. Make Me Better – Fabolous featuring Ne-Yo The sag and my swag, pep in my step / Daddy do the Gucci mami in Giuseppes / Guess it's a G thing whenever we swing / I'm a need Coretta Scott if I'm 'gon be King. 11. Pony – Ginuwine Best bars: If we're gonna get nasty, baby / First, we'll show and tell / 'Til I reach your ponytail / Lurk all over and through you, baby / Until we reach the stream / You'll be on my jockey team. 12. The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly) – Missy Elliott Best bars: Beep, beep, who got the keys to the Jeep? Vroom / I'm driving to the beach / Top down, loud sounds, see my peeps / Give them pounds, now look who it be / It be me-me-me and Timothy. 13. One In A Million – Aaliyah Best bars: Turn me inside out, make my heart speak / Need no one else, you're all I need / Personality and everything you do / Makes me love everything about you. 14. Is That Your B**ch – Memphis Bleek featuring Missy Elliott, JAY-Z, & Twista Don't get mad at me / I don't love 'em I f**k 'em / I don't chase 'em I duck 'em /I replace 'em with another one / You had to see she keep calling me BIG / And my name is JAY-Z. 15. Luv 2 Luv Ya – Timbaland & Magoo Best bars: Girl, I love it when you're next to me, and I, yeah / Wanna make sure that you know that / You're the best thing that I've received / And I wanna make sure that you know that I love to love you, love you. You Might Also Like Doechii's 10 hardest bars that display her lyrical genius Big flex: Cardi B's 'Imaginary Playerz' has fans saying she's what Hip Hop is missing 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