The devil
owns Amazon: big tech has infiltrated the fashion world - will we see a revolt?
Anna
Wintour has welcomed the Bezoses – and their patronage – with open arms. But
after a controversial Met Gala, industry insiders are less enthusiastic
Hannah
Marriott
Sun 24
May 2026 14.00 CEST
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2026/may/24/met-gala-jeff-bezos-anna-wintour
The press
conference for the Met Costume Institute’s spring exhibition is always a
stately affair, but this year it was giving “feudal lady addresses her serfs”
or perhaps “Marie Antoinette during the last days of Versailles”. Here, among
the spectacular marble sculptures of the art museum’s American wing, was a
beaming Lauren Sánchez Bezos, who Anna Wintour introduced as a “force for joy”,
before adding that “she and her husband, Jeff, have shown with this event that
they genuinely, genuinely care about giving back”. Meanwhile, in the outside
world, protests against the Bezoses’ involvement had been raging for days. The
discrepancy between the word on the street and the deference within the
glass-ceilinged room was head-spinning.
The Met
Gala has recently become a magnet for anti-excess protests, but this was its
most controversial yet, owing to the $10m patronage of its honorary co-chairs,
centibillionaires Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos. It was not the first
time Jeff Bezos bankrolled the gala – Amazon was its lead sponsor in 2012. But
this year’s event came at a moment of soaring inequality, as Bezos’s personal
wealth has mushroomed and his Donald Trump-appeasing decisions have made him
less popular than ever with New York City’s left-leaning fashion and arts
crowd.
In
protest of the gala, the group Everyone Hates Elon projected interviews with
disgruntled Amazon workers on to the side of Bezos’s Manhattan penthouse and
circulated 300 containers of fake urine within the museum, to highlight Amazon
drivers’ reports of having to work so relentlessly they must pee in bottles.
Some of the pushback came from fashion insiders themselves: former US Vogue
editor Gabriella Karefa-Johnson co-hosted a rival Ball Without Billionaires,
putting Amazon workers on the catwalk, and turned down work with a dream client
to boycott the event. “Fashion has always had a talent for laundering. In these
moments, it wraps the most sinister individuals in silk, under the warm glow of
flashing lights, and manages to convince us it’s culture. This is not new. But
I have my limits,” Karefa-Johnson wrote on her Substack.
A further
strand of criticism came from a very unlikely source: The Devil Wears Prada 2,
a movie whose iconic editrix, Miranda Priestly, was inspired by Wintour
herself. Released a few days before the gala, its spookily on-the-nose plot
centred on tech baron Benji Barnes’s attempts to buy the depleted Runway
magazine for his girlfriend, Emily. While Barnes is a fictional character, he
has certain Bezos-like qualities, including his post-divorce makeover (in the
movie it is fueled by Sculptra, Ozempic and testosterone shots), and the
storyline echoes unsubstantiated rumors that Bezos wants to buy Vogue for his
wife. Barnes delivers a chilling monologue about AI, anticipating a world where
the magazine will publish without human involvement. “The future just comes
rushing at us like the lava of Pompeii,” he says, with a shrug, while Priestly
– the villain of the first movie – heroically pushes back. She slams Emily’s
efforts to muscle her way into Runway using her partner’s cash with the very
Priestly burn: “You’re not a visionary, you’re a vendor.”
According
to screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna, the plot’s similarity to real-world
rumours is a coincidence – but casting a rapacious Silicon Valley oligarch as
tyrant to the fashion class in one of the year’s biggest popcorn movies is also
a reflection of the zeitgeist. The cultural backlash has been such that you
have to wonder whether fashion’s burgeoning relationship with the barons of
tech will rupture.
The Met
Gala plays a unique role in fashion culture, as the only major annual red
carpet that enables designers to pursue their wildest, most creative instincts
– which is why the frocks are so much riskier, and at times hilarious, than
those at the Oscars. The gala also funds the Met’s Costume Institute, one of
the world’s biggest and most comprehensive collections of historical clothing,
and its exhibitions, the most recent of which, Costume Art, saw Sánchez Bezos
(and her cash) playing a particularly prominent role. This year, the gala
raised $42m. Tickets were a chilling $100,000, up from $35,000 in 2022, an
inflation coinciding with an increasingly tech-oriented guestlist, which
included Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Mark Zuckerberg and staff from OpenAI.
Any suggestion that Bezos, Brin and Zuckerberg, who have buddied up to Trump as
his administration has defunded the arts, attended the Met Gala because they
care about the preservation of archival garments feels slightly ridiculous.
What the
tech barons do want from fashion, seemingly, is cultural cachet. For the
Bezoses, the event is just the latest in an ongoing campaign to win fashion
kudos, much of it facilitated by US Vogue. The magazine ran a glowing Sánchez
Bezos profile in 2023, then doubled down on that endorsement with a digital
wedding cover in 2025. In the past six months, the couple has sat front row at
Paris fashion week shows, and announced donations of tens of millions of
dollars in grants and scholarships devoted to sustainable fabrics. Wintour, who
stepped down from her role as editor of US Vogue in 2025 to take on a bigger
role at publisher Condé Nast, continues to oversee the Met Gala. She has a
history of bringing people she deems culturally and commercially potent into
the fashion fold – Kim Kardashian, for example – even when the peanut gallery
argues they have not earned the prestige. The industry usually sees things
Wintour’s way. Indeed, many top designers have worked with Sánchez Bezos,
including “image architect” Law Roach and Schiaparelli, who dressed her for the
Met Gala in her preferred cleavage-centric, hourglass aesthetic (though,
tellingly, on Instagram, neither appears to have put an image of their work on
the grid).
As the
dust settled on the gala, the fashion insiders I spoke to expressed continued
discomfort about the Bezos sponsorship, which they felt was disappointingly
representative of the direction at Condé Nast, which recently closed its most
progressive outlet, Teen Vogue. They were disappointed too, that so many
otherwise politically vocal celebrities attended the gala despite the outcry.
(Those who glided down the red carpet included Anne Hathaway, Bad Bunny,
Rihanna, Margot Robbie, Beyoncé, Nicole Kidman and Venus Williams. Taraji P
Henson and Mark Ruffalo were among the few to post anti-Amazon videos; media
reports of boycotts from Meryl Streep and Zendaya were not confirmed.)
I think
fashion is going to continue to embrace [the Bezoses]. The question is whether
they become normalized
Amy Odell
But then,
the insiders I spoke to themselves did not feel able to speak out. One creative
in the fashion world told me that he had found the event “horrific” and “naff”.
“If it was up to me, it would be the end of the Met Gala,” he said, but he did
not want to slam good friends – designers and stylists – who had worked on red
carpet looks. Another emerging designer, whose work appeared in the Costume
Institute’s spring exhibition, told me she was not aware of the Bezoses’
involvement until long after she had started working on the show. She felt
deeply conflicted about the whole thing, concerned that she was being
tokenized, “because we know that the Jeff Bezoses of this world don’t care what
broke people have to say”. Ultimately, she decided she could not turn down the
exposure. “It’s so hard to try to fight it before you have any power to make
change.”
The
situation in fashion feels bleak, she said. One of the reasons that tech
billionaires are on trend is because so many luxury brands – the customary
sponsors of exhibitions like the Met’s – are struggling. Last year, Burberry
announced plans to cut 1,700 jobs while Kering, which owns Gucci, Saint Laurent
and Balenciaga, closed 133 stores. “It’s hard to watch: people who have been
working for years in the industry that should be protected and have given so
much of their creativity, are getting laid off, losing work,” the designer
said. “And, at the moment, people like the Bezoses are the only ones funding
this stuff.”
For all
the backlash, Amy Odell, fashion journalist and author of the Back Row
newsletter, doesn’t think the tech billionaires are going anywhere. She doesn’t
buy the rumours of Bezos acquiring Vogue, but there are so many other reasons
why he would want to be part of the fashion industry. Amazon has long sought to
get closer to luxury fashion, facing sometimes haughty rebuffs (LVMH chief
financial officer Jean-Jacques Guiony said in 2016 that “the business of Amazon
does not fit with LVMH full stop”).
And there
is the glamour, of course. Maybe the Bezoses are wooing fashion because “it’s
fun for them,” Odell speculated. “He’s having a midlife crisis, he’s getting
some new clothes. His wife wants to be photographed and in the spotlight.” In
an oligarch attention economy, she theorized, “the tech people you can name”
are becoming the Kardashians. “They bring publicity. I think fashion is going
to continue to embrace them. The question is whether they become normalized the
way the Kardashians did.”
There are
even more reasons those at the top of the fashion industry would be keen for
this to happen. For one thing, Sánchez Bezos is what Odell describes as “a
VIC”, or very important client, one of the “2% of luxury buyers who account for
40% of sales – that’s the bread and butter for luxury brands, not aspirational
customers”. Condé Nast, meanwhile, would view Bezos as an ally, whether for Met
Gala-style donations or for deals such as a recent agreement allowing Amazon to
pull content from Conde’s publications for AI-generated podcasts.
Whether
because the gala has become so complex and incendiary, or because Wintour, 76,
will one day retire, the Costume Institute does seem to be considering its next
move. Its lead curator, Andrew Bolton, told the New York Times that by 2028 or
2030 the institute will have saved enough money in a “quasi endowment” that it
will no longer need annual gala support. Bolton said: “The Met Gala is
extraordinary, but sometimes it dwarfs everything,” and added that the
department’s reliance on it felt precarious. “What if there was another global
disaster, and people were like, ‘I can’t come to a party?’” Each year, he said,
the gala has become bigger and more high profile, and “there will be a point
where that’s not sustainable”.
That
said, Odell points to a post-gala podcast interview with Condé Nast’s CEO,
Roger Lynch, in which he said that this year’s controversy was “good … the
intrigue around this event just seems to grow!” Perhaps, Odell said, “they
count on the internet’s memory being short. Perhaps they just don’t care,
because they don’t talk to normal people.”
If it’s
true that those at the top of the industry can’t hear the outcry from the
little people at all, it’s easy to imagine the gala – and the luxury industry
it represents – spinning ever further into oligarchland, with tech barons
playing all of the starring roles.
At which
point, the creatives whose ideas and elan have always driven the fashion
industry forward may not want to cheer them on. They may want to eat them.


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