It’s a "hot mess" in the best possible way. Unlike the polished, high-budget productions of traditional fashion capitals like Paris or Milan
Armed with a bottle of cheap wine and a wardrobe of questionable 90s relics, Vicky declared her living room the official venue for the "Mydrunkenstar Fall Collection." She didn't just walk; she stumbled with purpose.
: This type of content thrives on platforms like TikTok and Instagram, where specific "best" clips are curated by fans. These clips often highlight the most chaotic or confident moments, turning a solo performance into a shared digital joke. Contextualizing "Best" Moments
The MyDrunkenStar phenomenon represents a shift in what we consider entertainment. It is "Trash TV" evolved for the digital age, but it possesses a strange heart. Vicky isn't mocking fashion; she genuinely loves the clothes, the styling, and the presentation. She is just battling her own inhibitions (and motor skills) to get there.
Emerging from a series of now-fabled house parties and underground social media clips, Vicky earned her moniker honestly. The premise of a "drunk fashion show" is simple: Participants consume a significant amount of alcohol (usually shots of hard liquor or several glasses of wine) and then attempt to walk a makeshift runway, wearing whatever outrageous outfit they can piece together from a communal "costume bin" or their own ill-advised wardrobe.
To understand the appeal of the "drunk fashion show," one must look to Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of the carnivalesque. The fashion runway is traditionally a space of discipline, rigidity, and unattainable perfection. It is the ultimate "high culture" space. In contrast, the drunk fashion show inverts this hierarchy. It introduces the chaotic, the bodily, and the uncontrolled into a space defined by control.