Posted on 08/01/2005 10:06:01 AM PDT by pissant
The Smith family, pictured, shortly before a lighting bolt struck inside the studio, tragically killing the entire family.
LOL. Nope. Lawn Guyland girls all sprouted hair similar to the man in post #3.
LOL!
And a bad one at that!
OOOPS!
You parents must have swelled with pride! LOL
Yes I is!
I don't know what you call it, but for a while, young guys were wearing their hair in numerous little wet-looking points on top of their heads, each with a blond tip. That was pretty darned ugly, too!
He's probably a wealthy meth dealer by now!
That's even worse!
Still see that. It's still butt-ugly!
Corn rows are trashy looking. Much worse than the Mohawk.
Re: the "ironed" look..what everyone forgets is that before girls ironed their long straight hair, they would wash it in beer..
I agree!
A man moves into a nudist colony. He receives a letter from his grandmother asking him to send her a current photo of himself in his new location. Too embarrassed to let her know that he lives in a nudist colony, he cuts a photo in half but accidentally sends the bottom half of the photo. He is really worried when he realizes that he sent the wrong half, but then remembers how bad his grandmother's eyesight is, and hopes she won't notice.
A few weeks later he receives a letter from his grandmother. It says, "Thank you for the picture. Change your hairstyle... it makes your nose look too short."
Nope..obviously you never date that caliber and class of girls I did..Hippiee chicks in the 60's..nosirree..nothing better...ever..
Oy! LOL
I had a Mohawk for about 2 weeks in 1985. I visited my parents on a weekend home from college, and my mom began a crying jag that ended with me voluntarily cutting it off the next day to stop it. My dad liked it, and I always thought that HE was the stuffed shirt in the household.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.