Chantel Jeffries wore a red halter jumpsuit, fur coat, and black boots to the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco on February 7.
You don’t wear a fire-red jumpsuit to blend in. And Chantel Jeffries did not come to play subtle. She showed up at the Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco on February 7, 2026 , in what can only be described as a scene-stealing entrance: one part baddie, one part glam Rockette.
The base of the look? A bold red halter jumpsuit with a plunging neckline and deep front cutout, held together at the center with a circular link. It hugged tight from bust to ankle, giving major “main character walks in late” energy. Over it, she threw on a full-length black faux fur coat , kept open, obviously — because why drape yourself in red if you’re gonna hide it?
She kept it consistent with slick knee-high black boots with a pointed toe — high-gloss leather, straight shaft. Clean. Her structured mini quilted bag tucked neatly into one hand. Every detail felt dialed.
Hair? Glossy. Center-parted. Full Kardashian-core. Makeup leaned into bronzed glow, sculpted cheeks, and a nude lip with enough shine to catch the camera flash.
This kind of street style meets event appearance energy works because nothing’s clashing. It’s all working the same lane — even when it’s loud. Especially when it’s loud.
Cardi B wore a yellow and black paneled bodysuit and black open-toe heels at the Fanatics Super Bowl Party 2026.
If you ask me, Cardi B doesn’t step into a room — she slices through it. And this look? It’s not subtle, it’s strategic. For the Fanatics Super Bowl Party 2026 in San Francisco , Cardi B pulled up in something that wasn’t just sporty—it was practically aerodynamic.
She wore a form-hugging yellow and black bodysuit with wetsuit vibes that somehow still screamed glam. The piece features curved paneling , a high mock neck , and branded emblems on the chest and sleeve. Yes, one of them clearly reads “Chrome Rocks Club”—so we’re guessing there’s either a brand play here or a cheeky thematic nod. Paired with black open-toe platform heels with a clear vamp , it’s all giving superhero meets pit crew — in the best way. And the contrast? Sharp. The black inserts on her thighs break up the yellow just enough to stop it from leaning into costume territory.
Her hair deserves its own moment — jet black, pin-straight, cascading down her chest with thick, flawless blunt bangs . The whole thing elongates her face while keeping the focus squarely on the outfit’s bold structure. No loud jewelry, no heavy accessories. She let the suit do the talking.
This kind of event appearance isn’t about understatement — it’s about owning the attention people are already going to give you. I’ll say it: the choice to pair such a body-conscious profile with heels that structured? Risky. But it works because she commits.
To sum it up: she didn’t just dress for the party — she made everyone else look like the warmup act.
Carmen Electra wore a fitted sheer lace dress with feather trim to the Janie’s Fund charity event in Los Angeles on February 1, 2026.
There’s bold, and then there’s Carmen Electra in full goth-siren mode. She arrived at the Janie’s Fund event in Hollywood on February 1, 2026 , working a dress that felt like a late-night thunderstorm — dramatic, textured, and tailored so tightly it might’ve been poured on.
It was a strapless black gown , completely sheer in sections, with a mix of velvet flocking and floral lace panels running down the sides. From the thighs down, the gown exploded — a mess of black feathers , oversized and wild, giving the hemline movement and absolute chaos in the best way.
Her platform heels barely peeked out from the plumage, but we’re guessing they were at least five inches tall. She held a structural metallic clutch shaped like a shard of silver, the kind of accessory that belongs only on nights when the outfit demands backup.
Hair? Retro waves. Makeup? Built for dim lighting and camera flash. A smoky eye that could smudge and survive, plus a generous gloss on perfectly outlined lips. It’s not subtle. It’s not trying to be.
And honestly, that’s the point. This kind of event appearance doesn’t blend into the night. It lights it up.