Tag: Hair Styles

The White Afro- Where Hath Thou Gone?

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The man featured in the accompanying photo is none other than NFL badass running back John Riggins. A man who had some famously choice words for one Sandra Day O’Connor. If he could rock it, then where’s the shame?

When was the last time you saw a really killer white afro? Yeah, I know, I can’t remember either. So maybe we, me and you, should be that guy. Chicks love weirdoes, look at Phil Spector, Anthony Weiner and Scott Peterson.

Maybe you just don’t know the steps to grooming one, perhaps. If that’s the case, this dude seems to have a decent idea.

White People And Dreadlocks Are Out

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In a sense, white people with dreadlocks are an offense to nature, like the “Double Down” sandwich from Burger King. While the “Double Down” literally gives Mother Nature the middle finger (combining parts from pig, chicken and cow, then frying it), white people with dreads do much the same thing because they are forced and do not occur naturally.

Was that style ever really “in”, anyway? We all knew “Phish Kid” who had them and thought it was a phase, just like the copious drug use. Unless you’re Jon Favreau in the cult hit PCU, and you happen to be white, don’t do it. We all know you’re just mad at your dad.

What was that? You want to know how to style your hair into dreadlocks, and you’re a white person? Well, step one is to stop showering, which is no way to start a new hair style or anything else really.

15 hairstyles men made mainstream over the years

Emile Hirsch.We don’t hear about men’s hairstyles nearly as much as we hear about women’s, but men have struggled to find a style to fit their lives since we became self-aware. Over the past several decades, men have made all manner of hairstyles popular, for good or ill. Lucky Tiger has fifteen examples, but these are just a few of our favorites.

The Pompadour (1950s)

A trademark of the rockabilly subculture that embraced rock and roll and fast cars in the 1950s, the Pompadour hairstyle for men continues to reign supreme among models, A-List celebrities and advocates of modern fashion. The most notable Pompadour-wearers of all time include Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Frank Sinatra, although contemporary actor Emile Hirsch sports the style with elegance.

The Afro (1960s-70s)

Made popular in the 1960s and 1970s by celebrities Cicely Tyson and Jimi Hendrix, the Afro is perhaps the most imitated trendy hairstyle in pop culture history. The Afro needs no explanation, for everyone knows what it is, but the best Afros require the same length of tightly curled, coarse and thick hair all around the head.

The Mullet (1970s-80s)

Football players, pop stars and TV stars everywhere supported the Mullet in the early 1980s, a style that was short in the front and sides, and long in the back. Many considered the Mullet a good thing to have when applying for a job in the 80s, but today, the brutally outdated hairstyle is more or less an open invitation towards public ridicule. Despite enduring public outcries against the Mullet, however, Duane “Dog” Chapman from A&E’s Dog The Bounty Hunter still finds the style attractive.

For the full list, check out the article at Lucky Tiger, complete with picture examples of the fifteen hairstyles men have made popular over the years.

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