Itâs. About. To. Go. Down.
I know this because last night, despite having my dress and accessories planned weeks in advance, I found myself at the Zara store across from The Rootâs office holding a pair of red-black-and-green heels. âWoke-ass heels,â as I now call them. So woke, they felt too good to be a good idea, so I turned to my fellow shopper and co-worker Damon Young (a 2016 honoree) to ask, âAre these too much?â
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His answer? âNever too much.â
We were ostensibly there to find warmer outerwear, as neither of us had adequately prepared for a sudden temperature drop here in New York City. But suddenly we found ourselves debating whether I needed a matching velvet cape. Because, never too much.
Needless to say, I bought the heels (and quickly featured them on the âgram). But I share this anecdote because it parallels the trajectory of one of my favorite annual events, The Root 100 gala, which happens tonight in Manhattan.
Like most things, The Root 100 began modestly: a sparsely attended but super-fun event celebrating the black influencers and leaders whoâd made the previous year great and kept our collective hope alive. Early years attracted a crowd conservatively dressed in after-work attire, happy for the honor of being there to revel in an evening of black excellence.
But like The Root itselfâwhich now reaches over 10 million monthlyâThe Root 100 gala has grown and, with it, the green-carpet fashion statements. Recent years have inspired some serious style moments among our illustrious attendees.
By the time I attended my first gala in 2015, we were really starting to flex our fashion muscle. Just look at Baltimore City Stateâs Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who was a vision in jet black that yearâand I promise, it was even more stunning in person. (I mean ⊠feathered cuffs!)
Last yearâs move to the glamorous Guastavinoâs event space brought out the glamour in all of us, including a Basquiat moment from our former publisher, Donna Byrd; the emergence of sequins on the green carpet; fashion-forward 2016 honoree Darnell Moore; a bevy of beauties from The Root editorial and writing staff; and yours truly, pictured with one of my personal faves (and likely yours), writer Michael Arceneaux. (If only you could see the beaded booties I rocked with that dress. Epic.)
But with this yearâs invitation came exciting news: Not only is tonightâs attire expected to be formal, but for the first time, The Root 100 gala will be taped by the Fusion channel and televised Nov. 19.
Cue the flurry around our office: What to wear? How to wear it? Who to do hair and makeup? Can you drop it low in a ball gown? As one of the resident style experts on staff, Iâve been privy to enough previews of our staffâs selections that Iâve dubbed this yearâs gala âThe Stunt & Show-Out,â because we are not coming to play with yâall.
Tonight weâre going to celebrate another year of all the blackity-black excellence our stage can accommodate, drop it as low as our gowns and tuxes will allow, and flex for the Fusion cameras every time they cruise by. Because weâre constantly elevating the game, and weâre extra like that. So itâs never too much.
Which brings me back to these woke-ass heels: I really should get the matching cape, shouldnât I?
Straight From
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