Law Roach says Zendaya's real wedding dress beats AI look
Stylist Law Roach says Zendaya's real wedding dress is far better than the viral AI-generated gown fans saw online. On Good Morning America June 29, 2026, Roach bluntly dismissed the fake look, insisting the fabricated design was "not good enough" compared to what she actually wore.
Law Roach, Zendaya's longtime stylist, is the latest insider to push back against AI wedding photos that fooled millions. His comments land as the couple balances confirmed marriage rumors with strict privacy around their actual ceremony.
Key Takeaways
- Law Roach told Good Morning America on June 29 that Zendaya's real dress beats any AI version.
- Viral fake images showed a Lake Como wedding after Roach hinted they had already married.
- Tom Holland confirmed the marriage in a June Esquire interview, saying relatives attended the real wedding.
- Zendaya told Jimmy Kimmel that many people in her life thought the fake photos were real.
- The couple has said they will not share wedding photos publicly.
What did Law Roach say about Zendaya's AI wedding photos?
Appearing on Good Morning America Monday, June 29, to promote his return as a judge on Project Runway, Roach reacted to fabricated images of Zendaya in a wedding gown. "That dress was not good enough," the 47-year-old stylist said. "Trust me, the dress is better than that."
When host Lara Spencer asked whether it was fair to say the real dress did not look like the AI version, Roach laughed and answered, "Absolutely not." The moment followed months of online speculation sparked partly by Roach's own comments at the 2026 Actor Awards on March 1, when he claimed Zendaya and Tom Holland had secretly tied the knot.
How did fake Zendaya and Tom Holland wedding images spread online?
Shortly after Roach's awards-show remark, fans began generating AI wedding photos depicting Zendaya, 29, and Holland, 30, exchanging vows against a Lake Como, Italy backdrop. The images circulated widely on social media, with some posts reaching millions of likes, though not all clearly labeled the pictures as artificial recreations.
Zendaya addressed the confusion on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, saying "many people have been fooled by them" and that friends and family were upset they had not received invitations. Holland later confirmed the marriage in a June Esquire interview, telling the magazine relatives were not confused because "they were all there" at the real wedding, as People reported.
For more stories where viral internet moments collide with celebrity news, see our Bizarre News & Florida Man coverage.
Why won't fans see Zendaya's actual wedding dress?
Privacy has been central to the couple's approach. In a prior "Please Explain" interview, Roach said there would not be a Vogue spread or public wedding pictures, and guests would respect their boundaries, according to Yahoo Entertainment. That secrecy left a vacuum AI quickly filled, and Roach's GMA comments suggest the fabricated gown missed the mark entirely.
Roach's verdict adds stylist credibility to what Holland and Zendaya already told fans: the viral wedding album is fiction, even if the marriage itself is not. Until the couple chooses otherwise, the only confirmed detail about the dress is Roach's word that reality outclassed the algorithm.