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American basketball player Gary Thompson sporting a flattop haircut, c. 1958. A flattop is a classic hairstyle characterized by short hair on the sides and back of the head, with the top hair cut short and styled to stand upright in a flat, level plane.
Women generally emulated the hair styles and hair colors of popular film personalities and fashion magazines; top models played a pivotal role in propagating the styles. [2] Alexandre of Paris had developed the beehive and artichoke styles seen on Grace Kelly , Jackie Kennedy , the Duchess of Windsor , Elizabeth Taylor , and Tippi Hedren . [ 15 ]
In an episode of the early TV series starring Ralph Byrd, John Cliff portrayed Flattop in a half-hour episode based fairly closely on the comic strip story. Rather than giving the actor a flat head, or a haircut that made his head look flat, Cliff wore a large beret that suggested a flat top.
Don Markstein describes ProJunior this way: . ProJunior was conceived as an avatar of Dohler himself, and aspired to become a professional in the comic book field. . . . [He] could always be identified by two characteristics — his Dagwood-style haircut; and the fact that the "whites" of his eyes were black, and the irises white.
Hi-top fade: The hair is cut short on the sides and is grown long on the top. This style was popular among African-American youth and men in the late 1980s and early 1990s. High and tight: A military variant of the crew cut. Induction cut: A haircut given to recruits being inducted into military service. It is similar to a buzz cut. Ivy League
To absolutely everyone's surprise, the drama about a con man with a photographic memory (Patrick J. Adams) posing as a Harvard-educated lawyer at a top New York City firm smashed streaming records ...
Brand new top of the line gaming computer, desk, chair, mouse, keyboard, gigantic monitor. He's got a bunch of new brand name clothing, a new Playstation, a new TV, etc. He's showing me all this ...
He was able to vaporize people with his heat vision and thought that he came from another planet. He tells amusing stories of his misadventures as Billy Bryson, including his first days in school when he figured out that when the entire class was running drills to protect themselves from a bomb, he would simply read comic books instead.