Yee-Haw! GQ’s 2024 Men of the Year Livestream and Party Brought the Rodeo to Hollywood
StyleThe theme? American Rodeo. The dress code? Hollywood Western. The location? Sunset Boulevard. The result? A spectacularly stylish GQ hoedown.By Samuel HinePhotography by Krista SchlueterNovember 15, 2024Save this storySaveSave this storySaveOn Thursday night, Shaboozey sidled up to a long wooden bar in West Hollywood and ordered a round of tequilas. Dripping with spangly fringe and rocking a belt buckle the size of a bread plate, ’Boozey looked like the regal outlaw country star he is. Usually, he remarked, he’s the “weird guy wearing western shit.” The odd man out, the sheriff who bursts into a saloon full of people dressed LA-chic. But tonight? That was a different story. At GQ’s Men of the Year 2024 party, Bar Marmont was heaving with cowboys and cowgirls gunning for the “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” baladeer’s crown as king of western-wear. And he couldn’t have been more gassed. “It’s beautiful,” he said, taking in a sea of ten-gallon hats bobbing on the dance floor. He pulled out his phone. “I need to take a video, this is history right now.”It was certainly GQ history: In the last three decades, our annual MOTY blowout has become menswear’s biggest night. But this time we upped the ante. In a nod to the new frontiers in style and culture opened in 2024, GQ reimagined the party celebrating the magazine’s 29th annual Men of the Year issue as an “American Rodeo.” GQ global editorial director Will Welch and his co-hosts, Men of the Year cover stars Dwayne Johnson, John Mulaney, and Pharrell Williams, sent out the invites with a hoedown-ready dress code: Hollywood Western. Guests were asked to go for it with a heady brew of cowboy core and Tinseltown glamor. This year, the evening was sponsored by PATRÓN Tequila, Mountain Dew, and Courvoisier.If there is now a shortage of bolo ties on the West Coast: We’re sorry. It’s become a tradition in recent MOTYs to give out a Big Fit Of The Night award, which honors the best-dressed guest in a room where some of the best-dressed do some of their best-dressing. As the sun went down and the red carpet lights came up, it quickly became clear that this year’s competition was going to be especially fierce. “Look at Will right here,” quipped Mulaney, pointing at Welch and his custom getup by legendary Nashville honkytonk tailor Manuel Cuevas. “He genuinely looks fucking good in a Stetson, and he didn’t even know that. That’s the magic of this party.”Some guests didn’t need much encouragement. “I didn’t realize there was a dress code until today,” said Diplo over a pregame cocktail at the Chateau Marmont cottages, as Pharrell and Katt Williams embraced, with Olympic gold medalists and fellow MOTY honorees Tara Davis-Woodhall and Hunter Woodhall looking on. Diplo was wearing a shearling corduroy suit, exotic red boots, a silvery bolo tie, and a white pelt-like sash around his shoulders. He laughed and clinked glasses with fellow western-style touchstone Orville Peck. “I dress like this to go to Erewhon, so I was gonna wear this anyway!”With all due respect to Diplo, the American Rodeo theme spiritually kicked off with Pharrell’s epic cowboy-western Louis Vuitton runway show in January. “Which is crazy,” the hitmaker and LV creative director quipped. “I’m honored to be a part of the story,” a story that continued throughout 2024 with Beyoncé’s country pivot and the wider cowboycore trend that lassoed fashion. Then Pharrell turned and sauntered through the saloon doors to appear as a guest on the first ever Men of the Year livestream. Beginning at 7:00 p.m. PST, anyone could tune in to watch the MOTY magic unfold in real time, with a program hosted by Chris Black and Jason Stewart of How Long Gone, with megastar streamer Fanum holding down interviews on the red carpet. What’s better than a big ol’ Hollywood red carpet? It turns out: a big ol’ Hollywood red carpet where you can hit the bar and watch a variety show, concert, and podcast rolled into one, where Dwayne Johnson namechecks his outlaw country playlist—Merle Haggard, Hank Junior, Johnny Paycheck—and then starts singing “Misery and Gin.” But there was only one drinking song that could close out the program: a rollicking Shaboozey performance of 2024 smash hit “Tipsy.”Despite the jam-packed action on the livestream, you had to be off camera to see the only-at-MOTY encounters happening up and down Bar Marmont. Before hitting the carpet, Katt Williams introduced himself to the Woodhalls. The comedian has a famous bit about a paralympian sprinter; Hunter won the gold medal in the 400 meter sprint at this summer’s Paralympic Games in Paris. “I was so stoked right when we saw his name on the list,” Hunter said of Williams. “When I was a kid, there wasn’t a lot of awareness for people with disabilities, and Katt Williams talking about it taught me that I can joke about my disability with people and it makes me more comfortable with who I am.” The three of them posed for a photo.“Man, it’s gonna be hard to beat that,” said a beami
On Thursday night, Shaboozey sidled up to a long wooden bar in West Hollywood and ordered a round of tequilas. Dripping with spangly fringe and rocking a belt buckle the size of a bread plate, ’Boozey looked like the regal outlaw country star he is. Usually, he remarked, he’s the “weird guy wearing western shit.” The odd man out, the sheriff who bursts into a saloon full of people dressed LA-chic. But tonight? That was a different story. At GQ’s Men of the Year 2024 party, Bar Marmont was heaving with cowboys and cowgirls gunning for the “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” baladeer’s crown as king of western-wear. And he couldn’t have been more gassed. “It’s beautiful,” he said, taking in a sea of ten-gallon hats bobbing on the dance floor. He pulled out his phone. “I need to take a video, this is history right now.”
It was certainly GQ history: In the last three decades, our annual MOTY blowout has become menswear’s biggest night. But this time we upped the ante. In a nod to the new frontiers in style and culture opened in 2024, GQ reimagined the party celebrating the magazine’s 29th annual Men of the Year issue as an “American Rodeo.” GQ global editorial director Will Welch and his co-hosts, Men of the Year cover stars Dwayne Johnson, John Mulaney, and Pharrell Williams, sent out the invites with a hoedown-ready dress code: Hollywood Western. Guests were asked to go for it with a heady brew of cowboy core and Tinseltown glamor. This year, the evening was sponsored by PATRÓN Tequila, Mountain Dew, and Courvoisier.
If there is now a shortage of bolo ties on the West Coast: We’re sorry. It’s become a tradition in recent MOTYs to give out a Big Fit Of The Night award, which honors the best-dressed guest in a room where some of the best-dressed do some of their best-dressing. As the sun went down and the red carpet lights came up, it quickly became clear that this year’s competition was going to be especially fierce. “Look at Will right here,” quipped Mulaney, pointing at Welch and his custom getup by legendary Nashville honkytonk tailor Manuel Cuevas. “He genuinely looks fucking good in a Stetson, and he didn’t even know that. That’s the magic of this party.”
Some guests didn’t need much encouragement. “I didn’t realize there was a dress code until today,” said Diplo over a pregame cocktail at the Chateau Marmont cottages, as Pharrell and Katt Williams embraced, with Olympic gold medalists and fellow MOTY honorees Tara Davis-Woodhall and Hunter Woodhall looking on. Diplo was wearing a shearling corduroy suit, exotic red boots, a silvery bolo tie, and a white pelt-like sash around his shoulders. He laughed and clinked glasses with fellow western-style touchstone Orville Peck. “I dress like this to go to Erewhon, so I was gonna wear this anyway!”
With all due respect to Diplo, the American Rodeo theme spiritually kicked off with Pharrell’s epic cowboy-western Louis Vuitton runway show in January. “Which is crazy,” the hitmaker and LV creative director quipped. “I’m honored to be a part of the story,” a story that continued throughout 2024 with Beyoncé’s country pivot and the wider cowboycore trend that lassoed fashion. Then Pharrell turned and sauntered through the saloon doors to appear as a guest on the first ever Men of the Year livestream. Beginning at 7:00 p.m. PST, anyone could tune in to watch the MOTY magic unfold in real time, with a program hosted by Chris Black and Jason Stewart of How Long Gone, with megastar streamer Fanum holding down interviews on the red carpet. What’s better than a big ol’ Hollywood red carpet? It turns out: a big ol’ Hollywood red carpet where you can hit the bar and watch a variety show, concert, and podcast rolled into one, where Dwayne Johnson namechecks his outlaw country playlist—Merle Haggard, Hank Junior, Johnny Paycheck—and then starts singing “Misery and Gin.” But there was only one drinking song that could close out the program: a rollicking Shaboozey performance of 2024 smash hit “Tipsy.”
Despite the jam-packed action on the livestream, you had to be off camera to see the only-at-MOTY encounters happening up and down Bar Marmont. Before hitting the carpet, Katt Williams introduced himself to the Woodhalls. The comedian has a famous bit about a paralympian sprinter; Hunter won the gold medal in the 400 meter sprint at this summer’s Paralympic Games in Paris. “I was so stoked right when we saw his name on the list,” Hunter said of Williams. “When I was a kid, there wasn’t a lot of awareness for people with disabilities, and Katt Williams talking about it taught me that I can joke about my disability with people and it makes me more comfortable with who I am.” The three of them posed for a photo.
“Man, it’s gonna be hard to beat that,” said a beaming Williams. “That’s the whole thing about the GQ function, is that it makes these things happen that wouldn’t occur naturally. And that’s pretty important in the universe.” As for how Hunter Woodhall and Tara Davis-Woodhall’s lives have changed since taking home their gold hardware? According to Hunter: “More planes, more cameras, more travel, more Katt Williams—all good things.”
Inside Bar Marmont, the honky-tonk hang kicked into a higher register when Diplo jumped behind the decks and started going back-to-back with DJ KITTYSAYWORD. Apparently, not even a room full of famous people are too cool to get way down on the dancefloor to “Man! I Feel Like A Woman!” At a certain point, potential future Shania Twain collaborator Shaboozey draped a “Man Of The Year” sash over his custom Bode blazer. Would he take home the night’s top prize?
It was anyone’s game in a room full of suede, conchos, boots, bandanas, studs, turquoise, denim, leather, feathers, sequins, snakeskin, and at least one rabbit tail—everything but the saddle, basically. You couldn’t swing a bolo without hitting a laced-out celebrity: Tyler, the Creator held court at the raucous main bar with his friends Lionel Boyce and Travis Bennett, while the young Hollywood crew of Rachel Sennott, Jordan Firstman, Benito Skinner, and Danielle Haim posted up on the smoking patio. Sennott and Firstman gasped at Skinner’s allover printed suit designed by Eli Russell Linnetz, who also photographed the Men of the Year issue cover stories. “I need to say hi to Eli!” Skinner crowed. “He kind of made the magazine. Miss girl!”
“I think it should be YG,” argued Willy Chavarria, who dressed the LA rap star in a velvet jacket fit for a Ryman Auditorium headliner. Chavarria, saluted in the issue as the breakout designer of the year, had a good case going for himself, too. “I’m staying in Downtown LA and I went to Santee Alley and bought all this stuff. It’s the most OG Mexican cowboy shit,” he said, pointing to his embroidered bow and western cap. A nearby Chris Black put his thumb on the scale for a chest-baring Walton Goggins, who was snacking on fries in a booth with Johnson and Mulaney: “He kind of went sexy with the sheer shirt, which I’ve never seen a cowboy do, but if anybody can pull it off, he can.”
But there could only be one best-dressed cowpoke at the American rodeo. When Welch grabbed a mic to announce the winner, guests were still lobbying any GQ staffer in their vicinity for their right to the Greg Yuna-designed trophy. But nobody could match, as Welch put it, “The great, beautiful, and extremely fly” Naomi Osaka, who put an elegant spin on Hollywood Western in custom Amiri. The four-time Grand Slam tennis champion took off her black cowboy hat and Welch put the medal around her neck. “I don’t know if you should trust me with a microphone right now,” she said to raucous cheers. “I was surveying everyone’s outfit, and everyone looks amazing. So thank you.” And then, the punchline: “It feels great to win a medal this year!”
At the bar, there were no hard feelings from Shaboozey, who ordered another round and marveled at the fact that, for one night, his wild world of style had taken over Hollywood. “YG over there got a hat and boots on! Quavo’s in chaps—everyone’s doing it!” He flashed a broad smile. “When I was growing up and listening to country music and dressing and styling myself the way I was, I had a dream, and my dream was to see everybody in the world, even if it was for a little bit, put on Americana style. To see that vision come through…” He raised his glass. “Cheers!”