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Internet Still Uncomfortable With Doechii’s Face ‘branding’ During Met Gala

Folks are questioning the meaning behind Doechii's bold style choice at the Met Gala.

Doechii canโ€™t catch a break as conversations continue about her 2025 Met Gala appearance. Following her umbrella debacle, people have been whispering about the Louis Vuitton brand logo on her upper cheek...and some folks arenโ€™t happy about it.

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The shock factor of her well-assembled look was the prosthetic LV logo scarred on her cheek, making it seem like Louis Vuitton had branded her. Some applaud her avant-garde appearance, while for many, the face logo didnโ€™t land, with some claiming itโ€™s a display of white ownership.

https://twitter.com/fetishsouvenir/status/1919548935422533930?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Fashion Editor and stylist Gabriella Karefa-Johnson posted on Threads, โ€œI canโ€™t stop thinking about Doechiiโ€™s scarification โ€˜glamโ€™ at the Met Galaโ€ฆhow the semiotics of the logo interferes or interacts with the sacrality of the tribal tradition,โ€ she shared. โ€œI wonder if she is communicating ownership or belonging.โ€

Another Threads user posted โ€œLOVE me so Doechii..Iโ€™m absolutely not into this European logo โ€œbrandedโ€ on her skin for a night celebrating the labor and ingenuity of Black culture and Black men. Not reading as subversive from here.โ€

Another user weighed in: โ€œSheโ€™s displaying the way we wear/worship designer labels now in relation to how slaves were branded to show ownership of the plantation they lived on. LV is the new massuh.โ€

https://twitter.com/RagsRiches6/status/1919567889989849332?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

So, what may have inspired this look? According to Doechii, thereโ€™s a deeper narrative that ties directly to the brandโ€™s symbolism. During her red carpet interview, the โ€œPersuasiveโ€ rapper shared how Monica L. Millerโ€™s 2009 book, Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and Styling of Black Diasporic Identity, inspired this yearโ€™s gala theme.

โ€œWe studied a little bit on this character Julius Soubise, who really stood out to me,โ€ she shared. โ€œIโ€™m a little nervous, but it feels really good. This is one of the biggest nights in fashion, and for it to be so Black, Iโ€™m present. Iโ€™m here.โ€

YouTuber Alex Beightol said the look nods to three fashion inspirations: Andre Leon Talley, Dapper Dan, and 18th century dandy. โ€œBrandings are typically understood to be political and social markers of a physical state of captivity or ownership,โ€ she explained. โ€œBrandings are seldom connected to autonomy, they are not like tattoos. They have a very visceral reaction when we look at them.โ€

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3nS5ctp_-4

Doechiiโ€™s entire look represented a story rooted in slavery and ownership. She reclaimed it by making a bold statement through fashion and cultural pride, so letโ€™s put this to rest.

Straight From The Root

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