I heard it claimed that there is, in some sense, only one random metric on $\mathbb{S}^2$. I would appreciate any pointer to literature that explicates this intriguing claim. So far my own searches have not struck a suitable source. I don't know enough about the topic to even define what constitutes a random metric in the context of this claim, so I cannot ask a sharper question. I seek references to learn more. Thanks!
Addendum. Reading the literature kindly suggested by jc, I believe that the source is the work of Jean-Francois Le Gall, and in particular, his paper "The topological structure of scaling limits of large planar maps" Invent. Math. 169 (2007), no. 3, 621--670 arXiv:math/0607567v2 math.PR. He shows that a random quadrangulation converges in the Gromov-Hausdorff metric to a limiting metric space. Here is a quote from Le Gall's lectures at Clay Inst. on the topic:
This limiting random metric space, which is called the Brownian map, can be viewed as a "Brownian surface" in the same sense as Brownian motion is the limit of rescaled discrete paths. The Brownian map is almost surely homeomorphic to the two-dimensional sphere, although it has Hausdorff dimension 4.