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See Everything You Missed at GQ Bowl 2026

See Everything You Missed at GQ Bowl 2026

Released on 02/10/2026

Transcript

[dramatic classical music]

We are here at GQ Bowl in San Francisco.

It s the second edition of GQ Bowl.

I m Sam Hine. And I m Will Welch.

Will, tell me about this fantastic suit you re wearing

and this fantastic suit that I m wearing.

What do we got going on tonight?

Well, tonight at the GQ Bowl,

we re presenting the Fall 2026 Thom Browne collection.

There s gonna be a full on runway show.

And where are we right now?

This view is fantastic.

The Golden Gate Bridge is right over there.

The Bay Bridge is right over there,

and we ve got this sort of palace behind us.

What s going on?

This is the Legion of Honor,

a museum at the top of Lincoln Park.

I hear there s a bunch of Rodins in there.

Is that true?

There are. There s also gonna be a gray carpet.

A cocktail party.

A cocktail party.

We re doing some interviews with some key people

that we conducted back at the Thom Browne atelier.

I hear there s some special names

hitting the catwalk tonight, so stay tuned for that.

And plus we re gonna give you a mini doc on Thom Browne

and the history of his Brook brand.

Sounds like a great night to me.

All right, let s go in there and have some fun.

I think we ve done our job here.

Let s do it. All right, cool.

[tense music]

[Sam] You never know quite what is gonna happen

at a Thom Browne runway show.

Over the course of his career,

the American designer has established himself

as the king of the big top men s fashion spectacle.

Presenting his shrunken suiting

on ice rinks and tennis courts,

in Renaissance palaces,

and make-believe haunted forests.

Browne shows you windows into his wild imagination,

which is probably why they often invoke outer space.

Sometimes, Browne breaks the catwalk format entirely,

presenting his work through novel performance art pieces

that make waves far beyond the Fashion Week crowd.

Here are five of Browne s most significant fashion shows

from the past 25 years.

[melodic music]

[upbeat music]

Fall 2006.

[upbeat music]

You could call this one Thom Browne on Ice.

In one of his first ever runway shows,

Browne unleashed a bunch of models

on the New York City ice rink.

And his reputation as a rule breaker began to catch on.

[upbeat music]

[upbeat electronic music]

Fall 2009.

[upbeat electronic music]

One of Browne s most influential statements

came at Pitti Uomo in Florence.

Rather than unveil a new collection,

Browne dressed 40 models in identical gray suits

for a performance that reintroduced

the Thom Browne uniform to the world.

[upbeat electronic music]

Fall of 2012.

[upbeat music]

Thom Browne s famously twisted vision came to life

with an unforgettable runway showdown

between punks and jocks,

a touchstone of Browne s exaggerated tailoring

and rich sense of humor.

[upbeat music]

[energetic music]

Spring 2018.

[energetic music]

In one of his most transgressive collections,

Thom Browne put men in heels,

skirts,

and dresses.

Most provocatively, it looked great,

ushering in a reconsideration

of the men s wear women s wear binary.

[energetic music]

[upbeat music]

Fall 2023 Couture.

[upbeat music]

Thom Browne s Paris Haute Couture debut

in the Garnier Opera House

was a triumph of American tailoring and craft

on the biggest stage yet courtesy of a designer

and showman at the height of his craft.

[upbeat music]

What will Thom Browne do next?

Stay tuned for your front row seat to GQ Bowl

live from San Francisco.

The show will be starting shortly.

[melodic piano music]

[guests chattering]

[Guest] Okay.

[Guest] Yeah. Oh, that s fine.

Yes, it s this way.

[Guest] Got it, so you know it s gonna go through.

[Guest] Yeah, they have no idea where.

[Guest] Lauren, I m on ISO,

I m out here if you need me.

[melodic piano music]

Just tell me.

[melodic piano music]

[dramatic music]

[guests chattering]

[dramatic music]

[Photographer] Yeah, a tiny bit to your right.

Oh, sorry. To my right, sorry.

Thank you. That s why.

[Photographer] Thank you.

And are you wearing a watch?

[Attendee] From, here we go.

Oh no, I m not wearing a watch.

[Photographer] Okay. All good then.

I forgot.

[Photographer] Stay at the same spot, same spot.

Right there in front of the whole.

[guests chattering]

[melodic orchestral music]

Justin Jefferson, welcome to GQ Bowl.

Appreciate you having me.

Thanks for being here.

Looking sharp. Of course, of course.

Thank you. So is you.

Okay, I gotta ask about the non-Thom Browne

thing you re wearing, the ice,

the jewelry. Oh, of course.

Of course. Which you wear-

Playing. On the field

when you re playing every game.

And every time I see you on TV, I wonder,

are you nervous that someone s gonna rip it off?

[chuckles] No, not at all.

I feel like I m known for having the ice,

known for having the jewelry out there.

You know, of course the teeth, you know, wearing the chains.

It s all part of the look, especially being here

with Thom Browne walking in the show,

I had to, you know, add on my own little,

you know, swagger to it.

So, you ve walked in one runway show before.

Yeah, correct. Vogue World.

What was your preparation like for that

and what did you learn that you re gonna bring

to the Thom Browne GQ Bowl show tomorrow?

Yeah, first of all, the Vogue World was crazy.

You know, obviously so many different peoples,

hectic of everybody running around with chaos.

But it was honestly interesting.

It was very cool to be in that world for,

you know, once in my life.

And now I m kinda understand how it goes

and, you know, how everything looks.

So it s just more calm, cool, and collected nowadays

and I definitely love what I m wearing.

So it s just all about walking with confidence

and just, you know, being the spotlight in the room.

Oh yeah.

Appreciate you man.

You too. Of course.

Doing great.

[whimsical instrumental music]

[spirited instrumental music]

[Staff Member] Meanwhile.

[spirited instrumental music]

[Photographer] And can I get one

where you re holding back in front?

Yeah.

[Photographer] Perfect.

[Photographer] Look at me right here please.

[camera shutter clicking]

[Photographer] Let s get you right over here.

[melodic orchestral music]

We got Vinnie Hacker in San Francisco at GQ Bowl.

How you doing?

I m fantastic. How are you doing?

I m good. Good.

So you have a very special role in GQ Bowl this year.

Without giving too much away,

can you tease what you re gonna be doing?

You know, we did some walking around the city

kinda to just show how beautiful this whole area is

and went to great spots, you know, by the Golden Gate Bridge

and the beach and all that stuff, the Twin Peaks.

I don t want to get too much away,

but it kinda leads into what we re doing at the GQ Bowl,

so it ll be really exciting.

So this will also be your first runway show appearance.

How are you feeling about that?

Are you feeling nervous?

Have you been practicing?

I m feeling good about it.

Obviously, you know, there s a little bit of nerves there,

but try not to make eye contact with anybody sitting down.

I think that s what I gotta focus on, you know?

Try to stay in the moment.

Right, you gotta keep your sort of

the blue steel face on. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

It s also a big weekend for you

because you re from Seattle. Yeah.

How are you feeling about the big game?

It s kinda crazy having like a bunch of people come up to me

and being like supporting the Seahawks.

It s kinda scary because it s like puts a lot of pressure.

I mean, obviously, I feel the pressure.

I m not even on the team,

so I can t even imagine what those guys feel.

[Sam] And you actually played football in high school?

[Vinnie] Yeah.

Do you think you could cover Justin Jefferson one-on-one

in your prime and if he had a broken leg?

Oh, if he had a broken leg,

maybe. Maybe.

I think it s like a 50-50 shot then, yeah.

So, I m gonna stay back on this one.

Yeah. Fair enough.

Thanks, man.

That was good. That was pretty good.

That was good.

[whimsical instrumental music]

[melodic instrumental music]

[guests chattering] [melodic instrumental music]

[guest laughs]

[melodic instrumental music]

I m here with the great DeAndre Hopkins.

DeAndre, good to see you.

Man, blessings.

You were really a pioneer of this NFL fashion thing.

In the pages of GQ, you declared yourself

the most stylish player in football.

[DeAndre] I did.

True then, true now. Where are we at?

I would say true then and true now.

You know, I feel like I m an artist in all aspects.

Building worlds.

Come on, man. Just like yourself.

And so I feel like the clothes is, you know,

what people see publicly, so.

Yeah. For me, you know,

I ve never had anyone help me with my fashion.

I ve always studied fashion.

I feel like I could, you know, help others

in that aspect as well.

DIY. We love it.

I mean, I m the only one was wearing a tunnel in 2018

with people- That s true.

[DeAndre] A skirt.

In what state?

I also wore 2018 in Texas.

That s the great state of Texas.

The skirt that like takes a different level

of chutzpah, let s say.

Yeah, it was tough, man.

It was tough. It was tough.

I still get crap about that to this day.

Speaking of the skirt,

Thom Browne known for his pleated skirts on men.

We were talking about this earlier.

You ve never been scared of pushing

that very specific boundary.

Tell me a little bit about that.

I have a sense of style that not every guy has

and you know, just the way I look at things.

And so, I wanted that to be portrayed through my fashion.

I mean, I just never, you know,

cared what anyone had to say, man.

We can tell and that it works for you.

And stay tuned for the show when it comes to all this.

Hey.

Hop, you re the best.

Bless you. Thank you, great to see you.

Thank you, sir.

[whimsical instrumental music]

[Photographer] Can you look to your left here.

[camera shutter clicking]

Thank you.

[photographers chattering]

[guests chattering]

[dramatic orchestral music]

Marcus Allen. Welcome to GQ Ball.

Appreciate you, brother.

We used to watch you on the grid iron.

Mm-hmm.

Now we see you on the catwalk.

Yes.

I gotta ask, what s the more demanding career,

football player or fashion model?

Honestly, football.

You can t put the number one in.

Like the physicality that comes with football,

preparing for it, like lifting.

It definitely comes with a lot more.

The shorts, I just wanna talk about your outfit for a sec.

The shorts were tailored perfectly

to show off your good vibes tattoo.

Yes. What s the story

behind that? Good vibes, good energy.

That s all I ve been pushing my whole life.

Cause whatever you put into this world,

you re gonna receive tenfold.

So why did you want to make that pivot

from football to fashion?

It s not like the most obvious sort of career move

in retirement, you know, not many guys do that.

Why did you wanna, you know,

start becoming a runway model?

I mean, to be honest, I had a passion

for fashion my whole life.

As growing up, I wanted to get into modeling

because my sister was doing catwalks at high school

and I was in middle school.

So, going to Wise High School and seeing her actually runway

and do have the full look and everybody eyes on you,

I knew what my lane was gonna be after football.

The intensity with which you sort of approached

being a football player really helped you

kind of make that transition to being a model

because you- Yeah.

Had to sort of similarly embrace this like-

Yeah. Hardcore lifestyle.

Overly.

I feel as though if you wanna be elite in something,

you gotta be around the elites

and see how they played a part in it.

Just kinda like try to use

what I ve gotten from football

and just bring it in to the fashion lane.

All right. Yes.

You heard it here first.

[whimsical instrumental music]

[guests chattering] [melodic instrumental music]

[Photographer] And stop [indistinct]

Yeah, let s actually just an inch this way please,

this way center on the runway.

I can bring you both.

Sorry, just a little bit.

Yeah. Thank you so much.

Let s be.

[melodic instrumental music]

Beautiful.

[melodic instrumental music]

So we re in the Thom Browne GQ Bowl atelier

with Yahya Abdul-Mateen II.

Yahya. What s up, man?

You have a special role in this show

and without giving too much away,

can you just like tease it a little bit?

I do a little bit of voice work,

little bit of physical acting,

whole lot of storytelling.

How old were you when you first got told

that you have a sexy voice?

Ah. [chuckles]

It s just a...

It s a question.

I don t know, I might have been-

You said I do a little bit of voice work.

A little bit of voice work. [Will chuckles]

[Will] We were sleuthing for a football connection.

Okay. And we found

that you ran track in high school against Marshawn Lynch.

Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. Is that true?

Yeah. That s good work, basketball too.

[Will] Do you have any good beast mode stories?

He is one of the reasons why I decided to pursue acting.

I saw him on a billboard and then I saw him on TV.

It just broke up the idea

that the people in the box were different.

You know what I mean?

I was like, oh shoot, if he could, you know, get in the box,

I could be one of the people in the box.

You know what I mean? Maybe I could too.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah.

Now I m on the screen, so. Yeah, yeah.

You ve been in the pages of GQ before.

[Yahya] Mm-hmm.

And you also went to the Met Gala with Thom Browne.

Oh yeah. In 2022.

Yeah. What do you remember

about that fitting or that night?

I think that s the best I ever looked.

You star as Wonder Man.

And I was myself wondering,

does Wonder Man inspire wonder in others

or is Wonder Man himself full of wonder?

No, Wonder Man himself is not full of wonder.

But I think through Simon s journey,

other viewers, the audience find the wonder in themselves.

And then Simon gets to feel that a little bit later.

Good sir. Appreciate you.

[guests chattering] [melodic instrumental music]

[Photographer] Smile

Are you wearing a watch?

Oh yeah. Is it possible just to.

[Photographer] Yeah, I just wanna make sure

it s a part of them.

Yeah, there. Yeah.

[melodic instrumental music]

[birds squawking]

[dramatic instrumental music]

[dramatic instrumental music continues]

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[high-pitched music]

[tender instrumental music]

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[melancholic instrumental music]

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[footsteps tapping]

[footsteps continue tapping]

[footsteps tapping]

[rhythmic drum music] [footsteps tapping]

[rhythmic drum music continues]

[footsteps tapping]

[rhythmic drum music continues]

[narrator exhales deeply]

[rhythmic drum music continues]

[narrator exhales deeply]

[Narrator] Midway upon the journey of our life,

I found myself within a forest dark.

For the straightforward pathway had been lost.

Ah, me!

How hard a thing it is to say what was this forest savage,

rough, and stern,

which in the very thought renews the fear.

[melancholic orchestral music]

So bitter it is,

death is little more.

[melancholic orchestral music]

But of the good to treat,

which there I found

speak will I of the other things I saw there.

[melancholic orchestral music]

I cannot well repeat how there I entered,

so full was I of slumber

at the moment in which I had abandoned the true way.

[melancholic orchestral music]

[melancholic orchestral music continues]

But after I had reached a mountain s foot,

at that point where the valley terminated,

which had with consternation pierced my heart.

[dramatic orchestral music]

Upward I looked

and I beheld its shoulders,

vested already with that planet s rays,

which leadeth others right by every road.

[dramatic orchestral music]

And then was the fear,

[shudders] a little quieted.

[dramatic orchestral music]

That in my heart s lake had endured throughout the night,

which I had passed so piteously.

[dramatic orchestral music]

And even as he,

who with distressful breath,

forth issued from the sea upon the shore,

turns to the water perilous and gazes.

[melancholic orchestral music]

So did my soul, that still was fleeing onward,

turn itself back to re-behold the pass

which never yet a living person left.

[melancholic orchestral music]

[melancholic orchestral music continues]

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[melancholic orchestral music continues]

[melancholic orchestral music softens]

Day was departing,

and the embrowned air

released the animals that are on earth from their fatigues.

[tense orchestral music]

And I the only one [chuckles]

made myself ready

to sustain the war,

both of the way

and likewise of the woe,

which memory that errs shall not retrace.

Ah, muses.

[tense orchestral music]

High genius, now assist me.

[tender orchestral music]

Ah memory, that didst write down what I saw,

here thy nobility shall be manifest.

[tender orchestral music]

And I began, Poet, who guidest me,

regard my manhood, if it be sufficient.

Ere to the arduous past thou confide me.

[tender orchestral music]

[tender orchestral music continues]

[sinister orchestral music]

[dramatic orchestral music]

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[vocalist singing in foreign language]

[guests applauding]

[guests continue applauding]

[choir continue singing in foreign language]

[dramatic symphony music]

[choir continue singing in foreign language]

[guests applauding]

[dramatic symphony music]

[choir singing in foreign language]

[guests applauding]

[Narrator] Through me the way is to the city dolent.

Through me the way is to eternal dole.

[dramatic symphony music]

Through me the way among the people lost.

Justice incited my sublime creator,

created me divine omnipotence,

the highest wisdom and the primal love.

Before me there were no created things,

only eterne, and I eternal last

[dramatic symphony music]

Abandon all hope, ye who enter in.

[dramatic symphony music]

[guests applauding]

[majestic orchestral music]

[guests applauding and cheering]

[majestic orchestral music fades]