The fashion world has spent decades Photoshopping reality. Shows are sterile, models are robots, and everything is perfectly lit. Then comes , a real person having a real (if chemically assisted) experience on a runway. The "extra quality" of the video proves it wasn't staged.
Vicky, known to her friends as the self-appointed "mydrunkenstar," had spent the last hour convincing the table that her vintage faux-fur coat and mismatched heels weren't a fashion faux pas—they were "avant-garde." Fuelled by a few too many signature martinis, she declared it was time for the world to see her vision. The Grand Entrance mydrunkenstar vicky drunk fashion show extra quality
Below is a conceptual paper outline and abstract that treats this topic as a study of modern digital performance and the "drunk aesthetic" in online fashion spaces. Paper Title: The fashion world has spent decades Photoshopping reality
drop didn't just come with new threads; it came with a side of chaos and a full bottle of "extra." The Aesthetic: Chaotic Couture The "extra quality" of the video proves it wasn't staged
Soon, other cities—London, Tokyo, New York—began to replicate the formula, each adding local flavor. The events became a hybrid of performance art, club culture, and runway, creating a space where designers could experiment with exaggerated silhouettes, unorthodox fabrics, and, crucially, the notion that “drunk” could be an aesthetic rather than a state of inebriation.