Xandra Pohl wore a satin bomber mini dress and black stiletto boots to the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party in Los Angeles.
For some looks, the outfit wears the person. But not this time. Xandra Pohl came through for the Fanatics Super Bowl Party in Los Angeles with the kind of fashion confidence that doesn’t shout — it paces slowly, in stilettos.
Her whole look plays with restraint. No shimmer. No bright colors. Just a slick black satin jacket-skirt hybrid , cinched at the waist, with statement white piping tracing along the oversized balloon sleeves and tiered hemline. It moves like a windbreaker but gives off a club-ready glint depending on the light. The bottom flares just enough to pass for a mini skirt while still reading athletic. The styling trick here? There’s nothing underneath competing for attention.
Then there’s the footwear — jet black pointed-toe stiletto boots , knee-high, dangerously close to “how’s-she-walking-in-those” territory. But they anchor the whole thing. Clean. Sharp. The kind that elongate without effort. She finishes it off with chunky rings, sleek oval sunglasses , and her hair left long and undone — soft waves that almost drag the whole outfit into casual territory. Almost.
It’s not an overtly loud celebrity event look , but that’s what makes it effective. She’s not trying too hard. The structure of the outfit carries itself — the shape, the coherence, the monochrome discipline. Not a single clashing element.
The best part? It feels like something you could spot in an airport or at a dive bar and still stop to look.
Keke Palmer wore a printed pink jumpsuit, fluffy coat, and satin ballet heels at the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco.
Only Keke could show up to a Super Bowl event dressed like a luxurious ’80s aerobics instructor and somehow make it feel chic. At the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party at Pier 48 in San Francisco , Keke Palmer leaned all the way into playful, archival-inspired glam — and didn’t flinch once.
She wore a soft pink and white monogram-print jumpsuit , fully sleeveless, v-necked, with fitted ribbed cuffs scrunched at the ankle like legwarmers. It’s giving vintage Dior-on-the-couch energy with a side of lunchtime workout tape. Tossed across her shoulders? A massive white faux-fur coat — slung, not worn, which is important here. Overdoing it would collapse the outfit. This way, it just whispers bougie.
Her choices below the hem sealed the tone — blush-pink satin ballet pumps , complete with the kind of round toe you last saw in a dance studio, not a press tent. She added a crisp structured mini shoulder bag in ivory, and finished with polished earrings , a thin “K” pendant necklace , and studio-perfect makeup in mauve tones. Hair sculpted tightly back — no flyaways anywhere.
It’s not your average celebrity event look , and that’s the point. She’s not trying to dazzle. She’s delivering a character. It walks a line between ironic and luxe, and if you ask me — it completely commits. And that’s why it works.
She didn’t just wear the look. She walked in, gave it context, and made everyone else feel underdressed.
Becky G wore a Palm Angels top, trench coat, and knee-high heels to the Fanatics Super Bowl Party at Pier 48 in 2026.
This is how you do sporty with a side of chaos—intentional chaos, the kind you can only pull off if you fully commit. And from the first step into the crowd, Becky G acted like she never thought twice about it. At the 2026 Fanatics Super Bowl Party at Pier 48 in San Francisco , her outfit was part fashion stance, part gridiron fever dream.
The core of it? A black and yellow Palm Angels top that reads almost like a football jersey, paired with green athletic-style shorts that feel very track team—impossible not to notice. She layers both underneath a dramatic oversized tan trench coat , sleeves ruched up near the wrist in a studied kind of messy. It’s loud, but not obnoxious. Casual at first glance…then you catch the pointed black leather stiletto boots swallowing her calves and realize, oh, this is a real outfit. And she was smiling the whole time—clearly in on the whole thing.
There’s also a structured white handbag —small, sculptural, not the least bit athletic—which kind of anchors the whole thing in high-low styling. Same goes for the tiny narrow sunglasses , which never seem to leave her face these days. The look may be full of competing ideas, but it somehow just…works.
If you’re calling it a celebrity event look , it’s one of the more street-rooted we’ve seen this week. Nothing reads costumey. Everything feels lived in.
To put it bluntly: this outfit shouldn’t work. It does.