Styling is shaping a visual identity. It’s knowing what to exaggerate and what to hold back. The right piece at the right moment can change everything.
Fashion Director
Genesis Webb
Webb’s work as a stylist is defined by her close creative partnership with Chappell Roan, where she shapes the artist’s visual identity through concept development, styling, and fashion direction. She blends her own punk‑leaning background with Roan’s glam‑drag sensibility, pushing both of them toward bolder, more avant‑garde expressions as Roan’s career grows.

The Resonator Awards—A Ceremony Rewriting Whose Voices Get Heard in Music
Hosted by Fred Armisen at Chaplin Studios, the evening brought together a mix of legacy artists, rising voices, and backstage power players. Olivia Rodrigo, Joni Mitchell, Laufey, and Addison Rae served as presenters throughout the night, while Chappell Roan, Chaka Khan, and St. Vincent were among the honorees recognized for their cultural impact. Other notable guests included Niecy Nash, John Mayer, Bon Iver, Maggie Rogers, and Dave Grohl, who joined a crowd deeply invested in the work being celebrated.
After being introduced by Nancy Wilson, Chappell Roan walked onstage to accept the Harmonizer Award — honoring a creator who uses music to leverage social change — as her band played the crushing riff to Rage Against the Machine’s “Bulls on Parade,” which made the singer burst into peals of laughter.“I told them to pick a walk-on song to surprise me that would make me laugh,” she said, “and it did! That was awesome.”


She grew more serious as she continued. “It’s late and I cut my own speech to a fourth of the length, so… thank you Nancy Wilson, thank you We Are Moving the Needle for having me here tonight and recognizing me with the Harmonizer award.”
She put down her notes. “I feel very uncomfortable being told that I’m a good person — this isn’t in the teleprompter, whoever’s working that, just give up! — I think because of some type of Christian guilt or something. But it’s cool when people you really look up to think you’re a good person or think you’re doing good things. But I only know what to do because I see other people in my life doing good things, like listening to trans people who need representation, and money for health care and rent, and I think it’s an artist’s and anyone who has money’s duty to give it away.”
Referring back to the award’s name and the current climate in the country, she concluded, “I don’t really know what else there is to harmony other than giving, so thank you for recognizing me. I don’t really know what’s going to happen to women or gay people or people of color, or really anyone. But I think the only thing that matters is community and kindness and giving away what you have.”

