The Asian Age

In Belgium, a mullet is not just a haircut

For some it’s a throwback to a simpler time, for others an anti-fashion statement or simply a bit of a laugh — for folklore specialist­s it celebrates ‘dewanne’, tomfoolery in the Borinage dialect

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Boussu, Belgium: Belgium is all business at the front, in the very serious EU capital Brussels, but it’s all party at the back, in the little western town of Boussu. Here, outside an artisanal brewery, hundreds of nostalgics and merry-makers gathered on Saturday to celebrate the mullet, the iconic 1980s hairdo.

For some it’s a throwback to a simpler time, for others an anti-fashion statement or simply a bit of a laugh — for folklore specialist­s it celebrates “dewanne”, tomfoolery in the Borinage dialect.

“This cut is a state of mind, a declaratio­n of independen­ce. It carries symbolic Participan­ts pose during the mullet haircut festival

weight as an affirmatio­n of self,” organiser Damien Hubert told AFP, explaining how the festival evolved from a music video film shoot.

“To be honest, sure that many I’m not people ever found the cut very attractive. We’re not kidding ourselves about that,” he admitted. Laid back outback Australia has hosted mullet festivals in the past, but organisers think that Boussu’s — which they hoped would attract around 1,500 people — is a first in Europe.

Many of those who turned out on Saturday for a beer and a bold trim were thirty and fortysomet­hings nostalgic for the age of rocker Rod Stewart, footballer Chris Waddle or the US adventure series MacGyver, in which the lead character sports a mullet.

“When I was little, I was in love with MacGyver, this is like a return to my childhood,” said 31-yearold Marie Vandeville as she went under the razor. “I’ll only leave it a few days, afterwards we’ll even it up.”

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