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Met Gala 2026: Everything to know about fashion’s biggest night - from the theme to the galleries to the couture
Lifestyle

Met Gala 2026: Everything to know about fashion’s biggest night – from the theme to the galleries to the couture

by jummy84 November 19, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’ve ever wandered through The Metropolitan Museum of Art and thought, “Why does every statue look like it could land a magazine cover?”, congratulations you’re already aligned with the 2026 Met Gala theme. Next year, fashion’s biggest night is getting even bigger, bolder, and, according to curator Andrew Bolton, a little “uncorseted.”

Met Gala 2026: Sculptures can be an inspo for Costume Art(Pexels)

Met Gala 2026 theme

Yes. Famous Vogue editor Anna Wintour said, “Who needs extra words?” and the fashion world collectively bowed.

The Exhibition: “Costume Art”- Where every gallery has a dress code

The Met’s 2026 Costume Institute exhibition is titled Costume Art, and it’s about to make one thing crystal clear: Fashion is the main narrative

According to Andrew Bolton, the genius behind the exhibition, the inspiration came from one major realisation: “The dressed body is the common thread connecting the entire museum.”

From 5,000-year-old sculptures to Renaissance paintings to contemporary portraits, clothing has always been the visual narrator, signaling power, class, mythology, belief systems, gender, identity, desire… everything.

The exhibition will span:

  • Paintings
  • Sculptures
  • Ancient artifacts
  • Historical garments
  • Contemporary couture

All of these will be shown side by side in a stunning new 12,000-square-foot permanent fashion wing. This is fashion getting its rightful place at the front of the museum, not the basement, not the annex, not “just for the summer.” Permanent. Celebrated. Central.

Why this Met Gala 2026 theme breaks tradition

This is the first Costume Institute exhibition ever with no subtitle. Initially, there was one, but Bolton removed it. And in the most on-brand fashion metaphor ever, he said: “We took it out and it was like taking off a corset.”

He described the final title as bold, intentional, and free of hierarchy: Not art vs fashion. Not fashion as art. But fashion and art as equals. “Costume Art” isn’t trying to justify itself. It’s simply stating: we’ve always belonged here.

Date: First Monday in May – May 4, 2026

As always, the most dramatic night in fashion falls on the first Monday of May.

Mark your calendars, notify your group chats, cancel all other plans.

Dress code: Wear your story, literally

Because 2026 is all about the dressed body as the protagonist, expect celebrities to interpret this theme through:

  • Draped silhouettes echoing ancient sculpture
  • Renaissance-inspired embroidery
  • Painterly prints
  • Textures mimicking tapestries and frescoes
  • Sculptural gowns and exaggerated proportions
  • Gold-leaf detailing
  • Garments referencing mythology, allegories, and classical body language

Hosts: The names are to be decided, but expect maximum star power

Expect the usual formula:

  • One mega musician
  • One blockbuster actor
  • One head-turning designer
  • And the eternal constant: Anna Wintour, the Met’s North Star in sunglasses

What to expect on the Red Carpet:

If you think the Met Gala has peaked, think again. 2026 will be:

  • The year someone arrives as a literal Greek statue
  • The year someone channels a Baroque portrait
  • The year designers push sculptural couture to the extreme
  • The year the Met steps become a runway of living art
  • The year every celebrity has to truly understand the theme

Why “Costume Art” is bigger than fashion:

This exhibition is a statement. Fashion has always been part of the way humans tell stories about ourselves and each other.

Every gallery, every era, every civilization used clothing to communicate something. And now, the Costume Institute is showcasing that truth on the grandest scale ever. Instead of ranking sculptures above garments, or paintings above robes, 2026 is about equivalency. The body, dressed and expressed, is the museum’s universal language.

The 2026 Met Gala will show us how clothing and art have been intertwined for thousands of years. From myth to modernity, the dressed body has always been center stage, and this year, it gets the spotlight it deserves. Get ready for a red carpet that fuses fashion with fine art, couture with culture, and history with high glamour.

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November 19, 2025 0 comments
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The Biggest Moments From Day 1
TV & Streaming

The Biggest Moments From Day 1

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Lines wrapped around Las Vegas’ Caesars Forum as thousands waited for the doors of BravoCon 2025 to open on Friday. The crowd was dripping in fan-made jackets, T-shirts and bags with their favorite cast one-liners and photos, Bravo-leb endorsed merch and more than a dozen nods to Bronwyn Newport’s viral red fur heart jacket. The excitement only grew as the day progressed, with news dropping across the Bravo-verse and on the three stages, featuring an all-day lineup of content that spilled over into the evening.

Here are the biggest moments from Day 1:

The “Below Deck Captains & Crew Oughta Know” panel brought together those at the helm of various Below Deck franchises to unpack their tensions on land and sea. It also showed a special sneak peek of the Below Deck Down Under premiere, featuring The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City crossover charter. Bravo is doubling down on its Below Deck empire, with season 13 taking place in Thailand (airing next year) and Below Deck Mediterranean with Capt. Sandy Yawn and Chief Stew Aesha Scott setting sail for season 11. Below Deck Down Under premieres on Feb. 2; one of the most celebrated returns of BravoCon, Chef Ben Robinson delighted every crowd he encountered, except crewmate Daisy Kelliher, who said that he “challenged me in every way possible.”

Andy Cohen and Jeff Lewis revealed during their morning panel that Lewis will return to Bravo with Still Flipping Out, seven years after Flipping Out went off air. The new show will follow Lewis as he navigates his Radio Andy show Jeff Lewis Live, his design work and his volatile personality.

Andy Cohen and Jeff Lewis

Trae Patton/Bravo via Getty Images

The Valley will be spun off into The Valley: Persian Style with  Bravo alums Reza Farahan, Golnesa Gharachedaghi and Mercedeh Javid, as the friends move from Beverly Hills to “the valley.” It was also revealed that Lala Kent and Tom Schwartz will join the third season of The Valley proper, which returns without Jax Taylor.

The cast of Real Housewives of Beverly Hills gathered for a sneak peek of season 15, which featured fashion maven Racel Zoe visiting the home of Kathy Hilton for a styling session and Kyle Richards and her four daughters planning a ​​”romantic midnight garden”-themed wedding for Alexia Umansky. Dorit Kemsley also unpacked about her decision to file for divorce from PK. After the screening, Zoe received a thunderous applause from the audience to mark her return to Bravo and Kathy Hilton drove everyone into hysterics by telling the audience to close their eyes while she did her “Labubu voice.” Hilton caused a near-riot at the Bravo Bazaar with an appearance at her trinket boutique collaboration.

Some of the day’s loudest screams came from the Bravo Bazaar, showcasing more than 30 talent-led partnerships. Lexus revealed its Glam LX, a modified LX SUV outfitted with a full mobile makeup salon. This was the first time a car has ever come to the event with Bravoleb interactions, courtesy of Meredith Marks, Tamra Judge and Heather Dubrow. State Farm’s setup, though, drew the biggest crowd as Craig Conover from Southern Charm and “Jake from State Farm” visited the Sew What sewing shop for limited-edition embroidered Charleston-inspired swag. 

Kiki Monique, Teddi Mellecamp, Tamra Judge, Teresa Giudice, Alexia Nepola, Cynthia Bailey and Sutton Stracke

Gabe Ginsberg/Bravo via Getty Images

During the evening’s Bravo awards show, where all 160-plus talent were in attendance at PH Live Theater, Andy Cohen presented original Real Housewives of Orange County castmember Vicki Gunvalson with an orange and asked her to return to the show for season 20. She accepted. 

After more than a decade, the castmembers and families of The Real Housewives of New Jersey, Teresa Giudice, Melissa and Joe Gorga, publicly reconciled. Giudice teased the reconciliation during the “Yep, We Are Besties Panel.” Later, the group, along with Giudice’s husband, Luis Ruelas, posted photos from their Bravos meetup on social media, and Cohen popped up in the audience of Giudice’s panel to ask her if she really meant to push him out of the way back in the season two reunion show.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Anthony Geary and Genie Francis of
TV & Streaming

7 Biggest Soap Controversies Ever — From Luke & Laura’s Start on ‘GH’ to Bad Days for ‘Days’

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84


Soap opera fans are accustomed to outlandish plot twists, but some storylines are beyond the pale.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Eddie Murphy Documentary's Biggest Revelations
Music

Eddie Murphy Documentary’s Biggest Revelations

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The documentary Being Eddie isn’t a totally exhaustive portrait of Eddie Murphy, but for the generations who have been entertained by him since he exploded into stardom, it offers a lot of fascinating insight into who he is as a person. Says Murphy, at one point, “My biggest blessing is not my comedic talent — my biggest blessing is that I love myself and I knew what I wanted to do really, really early. That’s why I didn’t fall into any traps or anything. Because at the root of it all, I loved myself.”

In extended interviews with Murphy as well as collaborators including Jerry Seinfeld, Dave Chappelle, Arsenio Hall, Pete Davidson, and more, director Angus Wall explores a lot of fascinating topics with the multi-hyphenate, including the wild stories he has after spending 40 years in the spotlight. There’s also, appropriately enough given the title, a lot of musing on how he sees himself as a performer: “I’m not a stand-up comedian. I’m funny, but I don’t go, ‘I’m a comedian,’ like I don’t go ‘I’m an actor’ or ‘I’m a musician.’ I’m an artist that can express himself a bunch of different ways. Sensitivity is the gauge, not how much talent you have. The most sensitive one will be the artist that’s most in tune.”

He then laughs. “I don’t want to get too artsy. I could get really artsy if you let me.”

Below, find 15 of the biggest revelations to come from Being Eddie about Murphy’s career and life, from his earliest days to his current outlook on family, death, and cats. There’s also a wild Yul Brynner story, and some shockingly highbrow context for his love of MTV’s Ridiculousness.


Eddie Murphy’s First “Showbiz Thing” Was a Ventriloquist’s Dummy

Being Eddie (Netflix)

Related Video

The Willie Talk dummy he says he received at a young age was a relatively basic puppet: “Willie Talk’s eyes didn’t move. His mouth just moved.” However, Murphy points out, it reveals that even at a young age, he was very interested in exploring the possibilities of playing multiple characters at once.

Later in the documentary, he reveals an idea for a stand-up bit where he’d have Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor marionettes having a conversation, with him sitting between them. “I’d get at least 10 good minutes of jokes out of it,” he adds, and at the end of the movie we actually do get to see that in action: Murphy playing with his Cosby and Pryor puppets, having a laugh.

Eddie Murphy’s Birth Father Was Murdered When He Was Young

Murphy doesn’t share a lot of happy recollections about the time when his parents were together, sharing that “my very first memory is my mother and father fighting — she threw the Virgin Mary at him.” His father died when he was eight years old, and while Murphy doesn’t know all the details, he believes his father was killed by another woman in a “lover’s quarrel.”

Despite the early loss of his father, Murphy does speak fondly about his stepfather Vernon Lynch, “a solid father figure for the rest of my life.”

Eddie Murphy Has a Photo of Himself Punching Muhammad Ali in the Face

Early into the documentary, Murphy’s going through some memorabilia, which leads him to share the memory of punching the iconic boxer in the face one night. “Ali could talk some shit, and every now and then, Ali be talking too much shit,” is what he shares about that incident.

He does go on to call Ali “my hero,” noting that there was “nobody like Muhammad Ali in American history. He looked like he was plugged into the wall — he had this light. He stood up to the government, stood up for what he felt was right.”

The Co-Founder of Quibi Is Responsible for Eddie Murphy’s Movie Stardom

Yes, it was famed producer and studio exec Jeffrey Katzenberg who, while president of production at Paramount, took a chance on Murphy as the star of 48 Hours, his first major role. “The first two weeks of 48 Hours, they wanted to fire me because they were like ‘this isn’t working,’” Murphy says. “And [Katzenberg] came to them like ‘No, don’t fire him, there’s something there’ and they didn’t fire me. and we’ve just been cool since.”

At that point, Murphy says, he “wasn’t thinking I was going to be a movie star.” His belief is that “my stuff took off the way it took off because they’d never seen a young Black person go take charge in the white world.”

Katzenberg made a multi-picture deal with Murphy when he was just 19, and one unexpected benefit of becoming a huge star at that time: Murphy found himself meeting a slew of major Hollywood legends, who were curious enough about him to ask him to lunch. “I met Brando and Charlton Heston, Sinatra — I met all those guys through them calling my agent,” Murphy says.

Everyone Has Been Misinterpreting This One Moment in Beverly Hills Cop for Decades

In an interview, film critic Elvis Mitchell talks about the moment from the 1984 movie where Murphy’s character, Axel Foley, walks by two men wearing leather outfits very similar to his infamous Raw jumpsuit. As Axel passes, he’s seen laughing at them, something Mitchell calls out as a “complex moment in pop culture” — Murphy laughing at himself.

Murphy, meanwhile, would like to re-contextualize that scene now: “Eddie Murphy’s laughing at Eddie Murphy? No, one of those guys… as he walked past, he made a weird face. I was laughing at the face he made.” The way the shot is set up, you can’t see the faces of the men walking away, so we only have Murphy’s word to go on here, but he seems reliable enough.

Eddie Murphy Is Straight-Edge

Murphy reveals that as hard as he might have partied in his youth — “nobody had as much fun as we had in the ’80s” — none of that fun was substance-based. “I’ve never even tried cocaine or touched cocaine or shit like that. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke cigarettes. I was 30 years old when I first smoked a joint.”

And of course he had opportunities to indulge. One story he shares involves him going to a blues bar at the age of 19 with John Belushi and Robin Williams. “They put some blow on a table, and I’m standing there with, you know, two heroes. And I wasn’t even curious. I was just not with it.”

Says Jamie Foxx in an interview, “He’s very introverted. [At a party], he’ll sit in the back of the room with a Coca-Cola.”

Eddie Murphy Has Yul Brynner-Related Regrets

Murphy held his 21st birthday party at the famous New York club Studio 54, and Yul Brynner, star of movies including The King and I, The Magnificent Seven, and Westworld, was also at the club that night with his wife. Brynner, at one point in the evening, asked Murphy, “How would you like to go back to my apartment with my wife and I and party?”

Only later did Murphy realize… “Did he want me to go fuck his wife? Now, I wish I would have went. The story would end better if, you know, ‘Yeah, I went back to Yul Brynner’s spot and fucked his wife and he was watching me fucking, going “et cetera et cetera”…’” The documentary punctuates that moment with a clip of Brynner from The King and I, repeating that famous line.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Sarah Snook and Jake Lacy in
TV & Streaming

TV’s Biggest (Fictional) Jerk, ‘Abbott’ Off Campus, ‘Boston Blue’ & More

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Welcome to the Q&A with TV critic — also known to some TV fans as their “TV therapist” — Matt Roush, who’ll try to address whatever you love, loathe, are confused or frustrated or thrilled by in today’s vast TV landscape. (We know background music is too loud, it’s the most frequent complaint, but there’s always closed-captioning. Check out this story for more tips.)

One caution: This is a spoiler-free zone, so we won’t be addressing upcoming storylines here unless it’s already common knowledge. Please send your questions and comments to [email protected]. Look for Ask Matt columns on most Tuesdays.

The Guy You Love to Hate

Comment: I haven’t finished watching Peacock‘s All Her Fault yet. I’m five episodes in, but I feel compelled to say how much I love watching Jake Lacy. He seems born to play total jackasses, and no one does it better. I kind of feel sorry for him, that so many viewers might assume he is detestable like all his characters. Maybe he is, I have no way of knowing. For myself, usually I just feel cringe when someone is always being like that, but somehow, I keep wanting more Jake Lacy. — D.P.

Matt Roush: Boy, that White Lotus stink still clings to Jake Lacy, doesn’t it? It’s an interesting, and in this case amusing, topic, because typecasting can be a trap for some actors, and I imagine when casting directors see a description of someone as “handsome yet kind of slimy,” they may think of Lacy first because of his standout roles on The White Lotus, A Friend of the Family (as a creepy serial abductor) and Apples Never Fall (as a venture capitalist, which is almost always shorthand for dubious character). I urge you to check him out in a more heroic role — say, as the defendant in the most recent film version of The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial. But essentially, I agree. He’s great at playing jerks, and I knew a major shoe would eventually drop regarding his All Her Fault character of the husband with a hero complex and a major Achilles heel. (I didn’t get past the fifth episode’s reveal yet myself. I had other things to watch and find it harder to devote eight hours to these overlong streaming series about deeply unpleasant people. A few more are on the horizon later this week.)

I’ll end this discussion by suggesting that Jake Lacy can’t possibly be as awful as the characters he plays. Given how in demand he appears to be, he must be fun to work with, or he wouldn’t keep getting the kind of juicy roles many actors would kill to play.

School’s Out a Lot on Abbott Elementary

Question: Is it fair to say that there has been less of Abbott Elementary on Abbott Elementary this season so far?  I don’t mean this to sound like a complaint because the show is still consistently funny, engaging, and making great use of its talented ensemble. But it seems like we’ve seen very little of the teachers at the school. The premiere was a development day with no students. The third episode was the ballgame. The fourth episode primarily focused on the BMV and Gregory’s game night. And then the teachers took students out of school on a camping trip. None of these episodes have been subpar. But it does seem bizarre to have so many episodes in a row that really aren’t focusing much on the day-to-day at Abbott itself. The only episode to do that early on was when Melissa’s students cheated and Tariq sought special attention for his “son” in Janine’s class. I do like that they have expanded the world of the show and that we can see the characters more outside the classroom. But the show is still called Abbott Elementary, so it feels unusual to go for a long stretch without actually experiencing a school day. What do you think? — Jake

Matt Roush: Since receiving this commentary, Abbott aired one of its best episodes of the season last week, involving a “No Phones” day at the school where the staff flipped out much more over being deprived of their devices than the students. This is a fair comment, but it got me thinking that when Abbott strays too far and for too long outside the school’s walls, it magnifies and calls too much attention to the high concept of the mockumentary approach. In those moments, I can’t help but wonder why the camera crew (which apparently never sleeps) would follow these teachers at home for a game night or on a camping trip (which became especially noticeable when one of the camera operators got spooked and ran off, leaving Jacob alone for a change). I tend to prefer the workplace storylines on these and other shows using the same format, but it’s only natural as a show goes on for multiple seasons that they’ll want to shake up the formula from time to time.

A Death in the Family

Question: I’ve been enjoying Boston Blue, and I’ve noticed that when they mention Ben Silver (the family’s deceased husband/dad), they don’t mention his killer. Just that he was murdered. Will this be a mystery for the show? Finding out who killed him? Or am I just overthinking the show? — Caroline

Matt Roush: I’ll use this as an opportunity to remind readers that this isn’t a spoiler column, and I won’t speculate or comment on storylines that haven’t happened yet unless it’s already widespread knowledge. But my reading of Boston Blue in its current early stages is that this tragedy in the Silver family took place publicly on the courthouse steps, so maybe it isn’t a whodunit, although the implications of why Judge Silver was targeted could become a story thread as the show continues. I’m mostly impressed at how the family continues to honor his memory a year later and how it affects their ongoing faith journey.

The High Cost of Streaming

Question: I’ve watched Married at First Sight since the beginning of the series. I accidentally discovered it’s now on Peacock. So I subscribed to Peacock. But paying for a streaming service isn’t enough. You have to get the premium version! What’s going on? How has this affected their viewership? Companies are greedy! I’m so mad. — Gerri L.

Matt Roush: I wasn’t aware that Peacock still made that basic tier available for subscribers, but upon checking it out, they make it pretty clear what is and isn’t included. The basic tier seems to be intended for cord-cutters who primarily want access to NBC and the company’s related cable programming and their libraries. Anything exclusive and original to streaming, including movies, is only available on the Premium tier, which is less expensive with ads. And Peacock is now bundling with Apple TV (my favorite streamer), another sign that the streaming industry is adjusting and adapting to consumer frustrations. But the bottom line is the bottom line, and these are businesses, and when they invest in acquiring a show like Married, the intent is to drive subscriptions even at the cost of reducing the show’s availability and reach.

What’s in a Name?

Question: Since the beginning of the series, Elsbeth has had Captain Wagner as a core character. Then, this season, High Potential adds a new captain character and also names him Captain Wagner. Has Hollywood run out of names??? I find it quite odd — especially since Elsbeth is a highly rated show and many viewers would be watching both series. — Dawn J.

Matt Roush: High Potential is also a hit, and this is just one of those aggravating coincidences that remind us that most TV creators are too busy in their own world to notice what their neighbors are doing. There’s no doubt Elsbeth got there first, but these shows are on different networks and come from different studios, so it’s pretty clear that no one was paying attention or, possibly, caring.

And Finally …

Question: I enjoy revisiting favorite series on Start TV, such as The Closer, Major Crimes, In Plain Sight, Cold Case, Saving Grace, Rizzoli and Isles, Crossing Jordan, and Strong Medicine, the latter of which recently returned to the lineup, but not only are some episodes never shown, but some are shown out of order. Is this by choice? Are some episodes not rerun due to ethical, moral, or topical issues in today’s world that weren’t as prevalent when the series was new? Or is it a monetary business conflict, as in the delay of China Beach being released on DVD due to issues with the soundtrack? Missing episodes can cause confusion in the recurring characters’ storylines.  I still enjoy revisiting these series, but am disappointed when some episodes aren’t shown. I’m hoping your vast knowledge of the industry may provide an answer. — Adrienne, Vernon, N.J.

Matt Roush: I’m afraid my “vast knowledge” runs out when a show enters the chaotic world of cable syndication. As I often say, it’s challenging enough keeping up with first-run TV anymore. There are many possible reasons for these omissions, including copyright or other issues for an episode to be removed from the licensing package, or even carelessness on the part of the channel’s programmers, although the episode order is hardly a mystery. You might want to reach out and call this to their attention if it continues.

That’s all for now. We can’t do this without your participation, so please keep sending questions and comments about TV to [email protected]. (Please include a first name with your question.)

 

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Was the Baby2Baby Gala the Biggest (and Glitziest) Fundraising Event of the Year?
Fashion

Was the Baby2Baby Gala the Biggest (and Glitziest) Fundraising Event of the Year?

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Also in attendance were Alicia Keys, Anna Kendrick, Tyexpler Perry, Paris Hilton, and Ayesha Curry, as well as a pregnant and glowing Sofia Richie Grainge. “Being a mother has really opened my eyes, not only to the support that babies around the world need, but also the support that mothers need. So I love to be involved,” she told Vogue. “I had a really hard postpartum experience, and I have access to everything, so that just made me think about those that don’t. Baby2Baby is something that I wholeheartedly support and want to be there for in any way that I can.”

The evening continued with a video montage showcasing Baby2Baby’s efforts to support families affected by the devastating Los Angeles fires—a moment that left many teary-eyed at their tables. This year, Serena Williams was also being honored with the Giving Tree Award during the program. “When I had my daughter, Olivia, and faced life threatening complications, I had access, and I had privilege, but I wasn’t listened to,” Williams said. “I wasn’t believed, and I came painfully close to losing everything. Mothers face these dangers every single day, often in silence and unfortunately, often unseen. Too many are ignored when they voice their fears. Too many are left without care, dignity, or the support that they deserve. That’s why Baby2Baby’s maternal health efforts, in addition to what they do for babies, are so particularly personal to me.”

Rounding out a memorable celebration for the nonprofit, Baby2Baby’s co-CEOs Kelly Sawyer Patricof and Norah Weinstein enlisted Ludacris for an after party performance to keep the energy going late into the night. At the front of the crowd, Lizzo and Missy Elliot ensured the energy was high, as others took a dance floor break and recharged with Jon & Vinny’s pizza slices.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Zoë Kravitz Wore the Biggest Pant Trend of Winter 2025
Fashion

Zoë Kravitz Wore the Biggest Pant Trend of Winter 2025

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

You may have noticed that we spend a lot of time and energy covering what Zoë Kravitz wears here on Who What Wear, and that’s unlikely to change. Her effortless outfits and subtle ways of embracing the latest trends (and setting them) is worth writing about over and over. An example of the low-key way in which she incorporates trends into her wardrobe came while she was spotted walking around NYC recently. In this case, the trend was a winter one, and I predict we’re about to see it all over New York and on every other chic person that inhabits a city that gets cold this time of year: chocolate brown corduroy pants.

Chocolate brown continues to be the color everyone wants to wear all the time, and corduroy pants are cozy and classic (and even a bit preppy), all of which makes them a great wintertime swap for jeans. Kravitz styled her corduroy pants with a hoodie, scarf tied around her head, and Vans slip-on sneakers. But like jeans, they’re a style you could just as easily dress up if you wanted to.

Keep scrolling to see Kravitz’s outfit, and shop my picks for the best chocolate brown corduroy pants of the season.

(Image credit: The Image Direct)

On Zoë Kravitz: The Row sunglasses; Naghedi St. Barths Medium Tote ($325); Vans Classic Slip-On Shoes ($55)

Shop Brown Corduroy Pants

Wide-Leg Trouser in Stretch Corduroy

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