NEW YORK CITY — Former NFL quarterback and professional protester Colin Kaepernick has declared a “permanent and uncompromising” boycott of the Met Gala after being forcibly removed from the 2025 event for what insiders are calling a “highly distracting display of radical fashion and vibes.”
In an emotionally charged Instagram Live from the backseat of a Prius, Kaepernick claimed he was “escorted out by fashion police and vibe control agents” before even reaching the red carpet. He later confirmed he would “never attend another Met Gala again,” even if personally invited by Anna Wintour in a hand-sewn jersey made of social justice petitions.
“They don’t respect me,” said Kaepernick, adjusting a black beret while holding what appeared to be a compostable water bottle. “They smiled when I walked in, but deep down, I could feel the elitist silence. I was profiled… for my integrity.”
This year’s Met Gala theme was “Neo-Victorian Dreamscapes,” but Kaepernick showed up wearing a hand-stitched poncho made from repurposed Super Bowl protest signs, a pair of cleats dipped in gold leaf, and what one guest described as “a cape that screamed ‘Occupy Wall Street’ but in a fashion-forward way.”
“He didn’t follow the theme — he became a theme,” said one stylist who asked to remain anonymous. “His outfit was less couture and more constitutional crisis.”
Another attendee noted that Kaepernick stopped every ten feet on the entrance carpet to kneel dramatically “for reasons unknown,” then gave a 20-minute spoken word performance titled ‘Threads of Injustice.’
According to multiple sources inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour was less than amused by Kaepernick’s performance art.
“She whispered something to security, sipped her espresso martini without blinking, and pointed her fan at him like it was a wand,” said one eyewitness. “Two minutes later, he was gone.”
Security reportedly tried to escort Kaepernick out quietly, but the former quarterback took a knee mid-exit and gave a passionate speech to the coat check staff about “liberating closets from capitalist overbranding.”
“They told me to leave, and I told them I already left the establishment back in 2016,” Kaepernick later said. “But I still demand respect on the way out.”
The Internet, of course, had a field day. Within hours, “#MetGalaKaepernick” was trending, with memes flooding the timeline.
One user wrote: “Colin showed up looking like Robin Hood at a sociology conference and thought they’d let him stay?”
Another posted a photo of his gold-dipped cleats with the caption: “When you kneel and stunt.”
But some fans rallied behind him, praising his dedication to activism over aesthetics.
“Colin Kaepernick walked into a room of $30,000 gowns wearing protest fabric and walked out with his soul intact,” said one supporter. “That’s fashion and freedom.”
Following the incident, Kaepernick released an official statement via his publicist, typed entirely in lowercase and printed on recycled paper made from shredded playbooks.
“I can no longer support an institution that glamorizes excess while silencing meaningful expression. Until the Met Gala acknowledges the struggles of people wearing last season’s ethical hoodies, I will not return.”
He also proposed launching a competing event, tentatively titled “The People’s Gala,” which would feature “a sliding-scale dress code, spoken word activism, and sustainable charcuterie.”
The event, he said, would be held in a community garden in Brooklyn and livestreamed through a decentralized blockchain-powered network “not owned by billionaires.”
While many at the Met Gala refused to comment, citing NDAs and fear of Wintour’s wrath, a few celebrities weighed in.
Billie Eilish reportedly whispered, “I liked his cape,” before vanishing into a fog machine.
Meanwhile, Jared Leto, dressed as a haunted oil painting, defended Kaepernick. “Honestly, he was one of the few people who understood that the Met Gala is a performance. Just… not one you kneel during.”
Kaepernick has hinted at future collaborations, including a documentary titled “The Night the Met Kicked Me Out” and a possible fashion line featuring protest-wear “suitable for both the runway and the revolution.”
He also confirmed he’s in talks to co-host a new streaming show with AOC and Harry Styles called “Defund the Runway,” which promises “unfiltered conversations about fashion, justice, and who really wore it better.”
As the smoke clears from yet another celebrity-Gala showdown, Kaepernick remains unfazed.
“They can keep their pearls and flashbulbs,” he said. “I’ll be over here, styling a movement.”
And while he may be banned from fashion’s biggest night, if history has taught us anything, it’s that Kaepernick doesn’t wait for an invitation. He makes an entrance — even if he’s not allowed to stay.
NOTE: This is SATIRE, It’s Not True.