Under the blinding chandeliers and flashing cameras of the Met Gala, Tyla stood beneath crystal lights, cameras flashing like lightning, her heartbeat louder than the music. There she is, she thought. Rihanna. The woman whose voice once filled her bedroom before it ever echoed through stadiums.
“I look crazy,” Tyla laughed later. “I had literally just woken up.”
But in that moment last year, none of that mattered.
Just say hi, she told herself. It’s Rihanna. Everyone knows you love Rihanna.
She stepped forward.
“Hey…” Tyla said, hopeful. Careful.
Video of Tyla getting snubbed by Rihanna 😭🤣
Can never be Ayra starr 😜😜😜😜 https://t.co/m5BQ7gILcO pic.twitter.com/QtlVcYo9hV— Vampz (@Hybrid_Ola) May 7, 2026
Rihanna turned. A quick smile. Effortless. Untouchable.
“Hey,” Ri answered.
Tyla’s eyes lit up—this is it.
Then Rihanna glanced at her phone.
“Oh—my baby daddy is calling me.”
Silence.
No follow‑up. No opening. No “how are you?”
And just like that, the moment ended before it even began.
“She was cool,” Tyla said. “But she was occupied.”
Left standing there, Tyla smiled, fighting the awkwardness that crept up her spine.
What do you do next? Do you wait? Do you say more?
She turned to the audience—almost pleading:
“What would you have done?”
“Would you have said something?”
“Or would you have just walked away?”
“I felt awkward,” Tyla admitted. “Because I don’t know how to say hi when someone feels busy.”
Fast‑forward to this year’s Met Gala.
Same grandeur. Same fantasy. Same idol—standing just a few feet away again.
Tyla waited for her car, hands folded, posture still. Rihanna was right there. A viral clip later showed Tyla lingering in the background, unmoving.
People online asked: Why didn’t she go up? Why didn’t Rihanna notice her? Was she ignored?
But Tyla had already replayed this scene in her head.
“She was right there,” she said. “And I thought—not again.”
In her mind, the questions stacked up:
Do I interrupt? Do I risk another awkward moment? What would that look like on camera?
Then she asked you—
“If your idol was right in front of you…
and the last time felt awkward…
would you try again?”
Silence answered for her.
“I didn’t want to force it,” Tyla explained quietly. “The last time, she was busy.”
“Is it better to chase the moment…
or wait for the right one?”
Sometimes the loudest drama lives in the pauses. In the words you don’t say. And in the courage it takes to wait for a moment that feels right.
