The Met Gala Ball. Every year I'd follow it, just down the road from my apartment in New York City.
Fifteen minutes at a brisk jaywalk along Fifth Ave, across the invisible line dividing the bowels of Spanish Harlem from Manhattan's Upper East Side. So close/so far, etc. In five years I never quite managed an invite nor the $40,000 price of a personal ticket.
Please! I don't mean to generalise, but if I can tend any advice to my fellow beer-guzzling-and-rugby-loving-steel-capped-$10-buzzcut-no-appointment-necessary-I'll-have-the-steak-cooked-rare-cos-I-love-blood-fashionless contemporaries, take 15 minutes and check those Gala photos.
Even, if like me, you are a tasteless heathen and you have no friggin' idea which Kardashian daughter that is, you will be astonished by the physics and engineering, audacity and child-like creative expression of some outfits.
Unlike the Oscars, where everyone tries to look good, New York's big annual celebrity bash mixes glamorous people with a big old slug of madness. It's what I imagine a good hallucination might feel like.