mullet
Hockey-hair, bi-level, mud-flap, sho-lo - This eclectic haircut
went by many names, but the essence remains the same: short top,
long back.
An outcropping of the earlier shag, the mullet meshed two
extremes and furthered the outrageous androgynous trend started by
the glam rockers of the early seventies.
The unisex pendulum had swung the other way: men gave up the
effeminate frills of glam, and women wanted a harder, more masculine
edge. Leather-clad rockers adopted the mullet for its fierceness: Joan
Jett's jet-black mullet propelled her to hard chick status in an
era when soft, feathered wings were the norm.
By the end of the seventies and into the early eighties, the
mullet became an integral part of teenage fashion along with a tight
jeans, mirrored sunglasses and a single dangling earring (in the
appropriate ear of course).
While the mullet has mercifully faded from mainstream fashion
glory, it is still very much alive and well on the heads of everyone
from musicians to NASCAR drivers.
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