Pakistani Celebs Did AI Met Gala and It’s a Whole Moment
FilmiTalk Take
Pakistani celebrities using AI to gate-crash the Met Gala conversation is a fun cultural flex, but it also highlights how the industry is navigating the messy, exciting, and sometimes awkward world of AI-generated content. Whether it's art or algorithm-chasing, it's impossible to ignore.
The Met Gala has always been fashion’s biggest night out, but apparently nobody told Pakistani celebrities they weren’t on the guest list — so they made their own. Using AI-generated imagery, a wave of Pakistani stars have been dropping fantasy versions of themselves on the Met Gala red carpet, and honestly, the internet has thoughts.
This trend has been bubbling across social media globally, with celebrities and regular users alike using AI tools to imagine themselves in the kind of elaborate, theatrical looks that define the real Met Gala. But when Pakistani celebrities joined in, it added a fascinating cultural layer. The Met Gala is famously exclusive, rooted in Western high fashion and American celebrity culture, so seeing Lollywood and Pakistani TV stars reimagined in that space hits differently — it’s part aspiration, part commentary, and part pure fun.
For diaspora audiences in Australia, the UK, Canada, and the US, there’s something genuinely interesting about watching Pakistani entertainment figures insert themselves into a cultural institution that has historically had very little space for South Asian aesthetics. The real Met Gala has slowly started to include more South Asian designers and references, but it remains a largely Western affair. These AI images, whether intentional or not, are asking a quiet but pointed question: why not us?
Of course, the reactions have been wildly mixed. Some fans are living for the fantasy, flooding comment sections with fire emojis and tagging their favourite celebrities. Others are more sceptical, pointing out the uncanny valley problem that AI-generated faces tend to create — where something looks almost right but just slightly off in a way that feels unsettling. A few critics have raised the broader conversation about AI and creative authenticity, questioning whether this kind of content adds anything meaningful or just feeds the algorithm.
What makes this particularly interesting from a Lollywood perspective is how it reflects the industry’s increasingly confident relationship with global pop culture. Pakistani entertainment has been on a genuine upswing — dramas are gaining international audiences, musicians are crossing over, and celebrities are building real followings outside South Asia. Playing in the same digital spaces as Hollywood and Bollywood names feels less like imitation and more like staking a claim.
There is also something worth noting about the AI angle specifically. Pakistani celebrities engaging with AI image tools puts them right at the centre of a conversation the entire global entertainment industry is navigating. It’s messy, it’s imperfect, and yes, sometimes the results look a little alarming. But it’s also a sign of a creative community experimenting, playing, and refusing to sit on the sidelines of a cultural moment.
Whether this trend ages well or becomes a cautionary tale about AI content is genuinely hard to say right now. What is clear is that it got people talking, which in the attention economy of 2025 is half the battle. So here’s the question for you — did you love the AI Met Gala looks from your favourite Pakistani celebrities, or did they give you more unsettling nightmare fuel than fashion fantasy?
