yardie a day ago

In the early 2000s when I was interning the office had black men of a certain age who still wore the jheri curl. Even though we made jheri curl jokes in middle/high school, after it had become unfashionable, you weren't going to make the same jokes in front of these guys. The typical profile at the time: late 30s/40s, veteran, logistics or CDL holder, motorcyclist (typically Harley or Goldwing), and devoutly religious. Sometimes people find the style, trend, or community they like and just go all in on it.

  • hollywood_court a day ago

    > you weren't going to make the same jokes in front of these guys.

    Never fight a man with a perm.

  • jghn a day ago

    > Sometimes people find the style, trend, or community they like and just go all in on it.

    People tend to imprint on the in style of their 20s & early 30s and anchor on it for the rest of their life. For example, it's why all of a sudden Gen X men seem to be wearing oddly fashionably cut jeans.

    • mc32 a day ago

      Does that mean in a few decades we'll see old men in tight "skinny" fitting jeans that we used to normally see worn by college girls --albeit girls would wear the ankle high versions with the slits.

      Pair that with dad bodies/pot bellies —Holy Moley!

      One exception to this is I don’t see older women wearing “backpack” purses.

cs702 a day ago

The Jheri curl is the inspiration for "Soul Glo" in the movie "Coming to America:"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CGrasobHcKA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=961x0NmyHKE

According to https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-features/com..., "Soul glo" is the more common term now:

> “The term should be ‘Jheri curl,’” Coming to America scholar Questlove tells Rolling Stone. “But everyone says ‘Soul Glo.’”

  • thebeardisred a day ago

    As soon as I read the title I could hear the "Soul Glo" song in my head and could see the scene with the back of the couch.

  • jajko a day ago

    > Coming to America scholar Questlove

    That's one mighty education focus. I mean I know the guy from his bits and music in SNL and other shows, and I saw the movie couple of times. But never expected those words joined together in such meaning, here on HN.

NoProfession a day ago

What really struck me is how the Jheri curl was so much more than just a hairstyle. It was about giving people a look they’d dreamed of and making it feel accessible.

The way it spread through local salons and word of mouth says a lot too. It wasn’t some huge ad campaign pushing it, it was people telling each other, trying it out, showing up proud.

exiguus a day ago

I have to admit, i googled what is inside the Kit. It brought up memories, how I assisted my grandmother doing her hair.

fcpguru a day ago

"My API’s got body, bounce, and shine — thanks to jheri-curl -L"

  • racl101 a day ago

    More bounce ... to the ounce.

    Much more baaaaiaiounce!

  • ilovecurl a day ago

    jheri-curl -v for even more bounce and shine!

    • fcpguru a day ago

      oh man don't even get me started on -vvv shine

mc32 a day ago

And got Lionel Ritchie to sport it…

OneFriend2575 a day ago

[flagged]

  • RamblingCTO a day ago

    1. he's a he 2. is this AI?

    • sceadu a day ago

      Comment history says yes to your second point

      • RamblingCTO a day ago

        looks like it. I really don't get it. warming the account up for spam? or does some dweeb really think this is something beneficial for anyone?

    • mc32 a day ago

      Also, the entrepreneurs were male and regarding salons, men, like Lionel Ritchie, Jamie Foxx, Michael Jackson, Neon Dion, Kenny G, and others wore it.. so it was also a big trend in men's hairstyles.