2026 Met Gala memes were the first thing I saw when I opened my phone this morning, and I instantly knew the theme had done that dangerous thing: promised “art” and delivered “discourse.” You can practically feel the collective whiplash in the tweets. Half the internet is admiring the handful of people who actually committed. The other half is doing forensic analysis on why someone paid a fortune to show up in what looks like a regular prom dress with better lighting.
Also, it’s the Met Gala. The outfits are supposed to be unreasonable. The memes are just the receipts.

The Internet Entered Its Judge Era Immediately
Every year, the Met Gala brings out the inner fashion critic in people who are currently wearing socks that don’t match. This year, the vibe was especially “I’m disappointed in you, but in a chic way.” A lot of the 2026 Met Gala memes weren’t even about one outfit — they were about the collective letdown of “Fashion is Art” meeting “best I can do is a tux.”



And yes, the men got cooked again. The annual tradition continues: someone takes a safe tuxedo to a themed gala and the internet acts like they committed a crime against imagination.

The Looks That Became Instant Templates
Some outfits don’t just go viral. They become a format. That’s when you know the memes are going to outlive the gala itself.
Katy Perry’s “AI error” glove moment was basically engineered for the current timeline, where everyone is exhausted by synthetic perfection and weirdly delighted by any purposeful glitch. It felt like the first outfit this year that was already thinking in memes.

Then there was the Sabrina Carpenter film-strip dress discourse, which immediately split the room into “this is genius” and “this is a Letterboxd notification in clothing form.”


And the “aged-up Bad Bunny” image became its own standalone reaction asset — not even a Met Gala joke so much as a new way to describe turning 25 and feeling your soul exit the 18–24 demographic.


The Heidi Klum Situation Was A Whole Haunted Novel
Heidi Klum showed up looking like a marble statue that escaped a museum and decided to haunt the red carpet. That’s not shade — that’s genuinely the vibe the memes ran with. She became a walking mood: ancient, draped, and vaguely threatening in a way that made people start comparing her to horror villains and ghost lore.



This is the kind of Met Gala look that rewards the internet. It’s high-effort, visually extreme, and easy to summarize in one sentence, which is basically the holy trinity of memeability.
The “Wait, That’s A Textbook” Category Was Strong
One of my favorite subgenres of 2026 Met Gala memes this year was “this outfit looks like a thing I had to buy for class.” The comparisons were so specific they felt like someone had trauma flashbacks in a Barnes & Noble.


There’s something deeply satisfying about fashion getting dragged into the real world. Like yes, this is couture — and also it’s giving “required materials for eighth grade geometry.”
The Timeless Met Gala Tradition: Chaos On The Stairs
No matter what the theme is, the Met Gala always produces at least one meme that’s basically just “the stairs are cursed.” The annual Jason Derulo falling edit is the internet’s comfort blanket at this point. People don’t even wait for new material. They just update the background and keep it moving.

And then you get the wild-card edits where someone or something that doesn’t belong on those steps somehow feels more on-theme than half the guest list. That’s when you know the timeline is in its element.

The True Spirit Of The Night: Everyone Watching From Bed
The funniest layer is always the self-awareness. People critiquing $100,000 outfits while lying in bed in the most unserious pajamas imaginable is the most honest fashion commentary on Earth.

If you want more Thunder Dungeon chaos, enjoy Fashion Fails That Became Folklore, Afroman Trial Memes That Were Better Than The Event, and The Internet’s Oscars Roast.
Alex Thompson writes about internet culture like it’s a competitive sport, but believes the real theme is always “give me something to tweet about.”