Alex O’Keefe is an award-winning artist from Gotha, Florida. His projects match working-class authenticity with mass appeal.

O’Keefe has written for The Bear on FX, WWE on Netflix, as well as Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey.

As a strategist, he harnesses storytelling to build movements and win political campaigns. His prolific work across cultural phenomena is re-writing The American Dream.

KidSuper

Writer-Producer | Paris Fashion Week | Fall/Winter 2026

“The idea was like, if you were in a simulation, would you live differently?”

This was Colm Dillane’s elevator pitch for the fourth wall busting fashion show in a movie in a fashion show that he presented on Rue Cambon tonight. It began as the lights came up on four screens that created a large box on the runway in front of us. A Dillane-directed film showed Vincent Cassel wandering the streets of Paris looking as tense and drawn as his printed shearling looked warm. He took shelter in a café, momentarily relaxed over an unbranded coffee. But then a sharply-coiffed woman who’d caught his attention was briefly obscured by a passing waitress before… somehow being wiped altogether from the room. His coffee started to shake in its cup. Cassel, eyes already bulging, lost it. Suddenly the entire room wiped: he was alone in a white void.

The screens flickered out before being winched up into the eaves to reveal a real-life chair and table set up. A model dressed in the same outfit as Cassel strode agitatedly out of it towards the photographers, shouting: “Who are you? Is this real?” Sorry sir, but this was simply a standard Saturday evening at Paris menswear. Adding a meta twist, Cassel himself was sitting in the audience across the runway, smiling broadly.

Dillane’s collection came out on a cast including many older than usual models who, you slowly surmised, were part of a broader direction to echo the vibe of some of cinema’s greatest alternative future flick protagonists. I was especially taken with Richard Biedul’s look 3 portrayal of Clive Owen in Children of Men, complete with coffee cup, haunted eyes, battered trench, and shirt and tie. There was a fair bit of Neo and Morpheus black leather, plus a textured burgundy leather alternative with fireman’s clasp fastenings running up each leg. There were several Tyler Durden looks.

When Cassel’s model avatar returned, the cast sat at the café tables on the runway as the screens lowered around them. The film flashed up again to show Cassel’s return to “normality.” Freed by his knowledge he started to dance.

“KidSuper delivers one of his most impressive shows yet for FW26.”

- COMPLEX

Location

New York City