The INSIDER Summary:
- The New York City Department of Health isn't happy with the celebrities who were smoking at this year's Met Gala.
- Celebs like Bella Hadid and Dakota Johnson were pictured puffing away in the bathrooms during the event.
- Not only did they violate New York City's smoking laws, but also glamorized a dangerous addiction.
The New York City Department of Health is fired up over the many celebrities who lit up at the Met Gala earlier this month, which violated the city’s Smoke-Free Air Act.
Bella Hadid, Dakota Johnson, Stella McCartney, Rami Malek and Marc Jacobs were all pictured on social media puffing cigarettes in beige-tiled bathrooms within the Metropolitan Museum on May 1.
“This spectacular event awes us all,” said Department of Health Commissioner Dr. Mary T. Bassett in a letter to the museum’s senior vice president. “We were dismayed to read reports that some celebrities chose smoking as their fashion accessory and flagrantly violated New York City’s smoking laws.”
Smoking in the girls room #metgala@chardefrancesco@Courtney@alka_seltzer666pic.twitter.com/hkNtBtDYzb
— Marc Jacobs (@themarcjacobs) May 2, 2017
Bassett, a former smoker herself, went on to indirectly scold the infracting stars. “You admire and emulate the designers, models, actors and other celebrities who attend the Met Gala,” she wrote. “We thus are concerned about how images of these celebrities smoking — which were widely shared around the world via social media — will affect youth smoking rates.”
That bathroom #MetGala life 💣💣#AdwoaAboah#Slickwoodspic.twitter.com/lbIWlnyYX5
— The Lions NY (@TheLionsNY) May 2, 2017
Aesthetic: Stella McCartney smoking in the toilets at the #MetGalapic.twitter.com/V5dhdI5Tsb
— Ella 🏝 (@Rahraaah) May 2, 2017
This photo is like taken at a college party except for the fancy dresses #metgalapic.twitter.com/wwiRCjre6x
— elif (@victuuris95) May 2, 2017
While neither the Met nor its famous guests will be penalized this year, the Department of Health offered “inspectors” or “other assistance to improve compliance” for next year’s gala. The museum responded to the letter with a statement Friday acknowledging the violation “by a small number of guests,” and said it will “take steps to ensure this does not happen again.”
Following celebrations at the Met museum, much of the well-heeled crowd relocated to an after party hosted by Rihanna at 1Oak, which was also not a smoke-free environment.
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