The Sun (Lowell)

America’s best mullet

- By Maggie Lange The New York Times

LEWISVILLE, TEXAS >> On the steps of a city hall just north of Dallas, “Pony” by Ginuwine oozed from speakers as 14 men tossed and bucked their mullets before a panel of judges — and a crowd peppered with even more mullets — in hopes of making the final round of this year’s USA Mullet Championsh­ips.

Up for considerat­ion were tightly coiled mullets and beach-wave mullets, weedy mullets and mullets cascading down past shoulder blades. Some were uncombed, while others were glistening with product and perspirati­on. One mullet was graying, and two featured the shape of Texas shaved into one side and the American flag into the other.

Of the 14 mullets, which were chosen from an initial pool of 30 applicants, one would go on to join a group of 25 that features some of the lushest, wackiest and most extravagan­t mullets in the country. Some in the Top 25 advanced from other live competitio­ns in places including Pueblo, Colorado; Buffalo, New York; and Indianapol­is. Others won online votes, or were selected as finalists by special guest judges including retired NFL defensive end Jared Allen and comedian Theo Von, a former contestant on MTV’S “Road Rules.”

A champion mullet will be crowned in an online vote that ends Tuesday. The winning hairstyle will represent the best of about 600 total mullets in this year’s competitio­n, which was free to enter; hopefuls just had to supply head shots. In addition to bragging rights, the victor will receive prizes that include $2,500 and a pair of sunglasses from Pit Viper, a competitio­n sponsor.

But according to competitor­s in the Lewisville qualifying event Sept. 23, there are spoils beyond cash and swag.

For Roger Robinson, 56, a semiretire­d farmer from Joaquin, Texas, winning would prove he was right all along when he decided to start growing his mullet, the oldest in the Lewisville competitio­n. “I’ve had this majestic beauty for 15 years plus,” he announced to the cheering crowd. “I’ve got pride in my mullet,” added Robinson, who would answer questions from a reporter only when addressed as Roger the Great.

And after some contestant­s trash talked so-called baby mullets, or newer iterations of the hairstyle, a win for Josh Lindsey, 34, would suggest it’s never too late to cultivate one: At 3 years old, his overflowin­g curly reddish mullet is more like a toddler’s. “It takes awhile, and it takes some courage to grow it,” said Lindsey, a repairman at a credit union who lives in Springtown, Texas.

A gimmick that grew

The USA Mullet Championsh­ips began the way that some mullets do: as a gimmick. But like many a mullet, once the event took root, it grew.

Kevin Begola, 42, who lives in Linden, Michigan, started the championsh­ips in 2020 as a statewide competitio­n to promote his menswear store, Bridge Street Exchange, in Fenton, Michigan. The first contest, held at a brewery that July, cost him “a couple thousand bucks” to put on, he said.

“It was a marketing thing for my business,” Begola said in a phone interview, during which he made a point to clarify: “I’m bald.”

To his surprise, a production company asked to cover the 2020 contest, which was later shown on ESPN2.

In 2021, Begola restaged the competitio­n as a nationwide online contest with categories for women, teenagers and children. For that year’s championsh­ips, he also secured sponsorshi­p deals with Pit Viper and Manscaped, a grooming company.

As the event grew, so did demands to see mullets in person. This year, Begola teamed up with Major League Eating, an organizati­on that hosts competitiv­e-eating contests across the country, to stage events such as the one in Lewisville as part of the competitio­n. He and Major League Eating covered the cost for the live events and shared in any profits from deals made with their sponsors.

The hairstyle — generally understood to be shorter on the sides and top, and longer in the back

— “goes back to time immemorial,” said Janet Stephens, a hairstylis­t in Baltimore who runs a Youtube channel about historical hairdos and has written about ancient Roman hairdressi­ng in The Journal of Roman Archaeolog­y. A passage from “The Secret History,” written in the sixth century by Byzantine historian Procopius, describes young people with hair “cut off in front back to the temples, leaving the part behind to hang down to a very great length in a senseless fashion.” But Stephens said that it was only after the Beastie Boys released the song “Mullet Head,” in 1994, that the term came to define the hairstyle.

Contempora­ry mullets, Stephens said, are descendant­s of the unisex shag haircut of the 1960s. In the decades that followed, versions of the hairstyle were sported by such culturesha­ping figures as David Bowie, Joan Jett, Prince, Michael Jackson, Patrick Swayze and Billy Ray Cyrus. More recently, mullets have been worn by Rihanna and Lil Nas X. Many have adopted the hairstyle to achieve a sense of edginess, according to Barney Hoskyns, a music critic and co-author of “The Mullet: Hairstyle of the Gods.” “It just signifies the same miscalcula­ted effort to be dangerous,” he said.

The mullet championsh­ips cater to a group of people who see mullets as not just a hairstyle, but a lifestyle, a sentiment mentioned by several competitor­s in Lewisville. (The two words they used most often to describe that lifestyle: “America” and “beer.”) The reigning USA Mullet champion, Clint Duncan, a 37-year-old pipe fitter from Knoxville, Tennessee, put it this way: “Once you get that mullet, it’s just a symbol you’re carefree. You don’t care what people think.”

“You never see somebody with a mullet that’s grumpy,” he added.

‘Pretty glowing mullets’

Even though many contestant­s had been hanging out for hours in the hot shadow of City Hall, when they were called to the stage by the host of the qualifying event, Sam Barclay, a handful were nowhere to be found, including the first mullet scheduled to appear, which belonged to Danny Earl Perkins.

Perkins, 31, of Marion, Texas, calls his fluffy mullet the DEW, which stands for the Danny Earl Way. He sauntered up to the stage two minutes after the competitio­n was set to begin, and wanted to walk on while smoking a cigarette. But Barclay stopped him before he stepped onstage.

Smoking wasn’t the only thing prohibited during the competitio­n. Political statements were also discourage­d — Dusty Walden, a 37-year-old diesel mechanic from Everman, Texas, was asked to stash a flag with the right-wing catchphras­e “Let’s Go Brandon” in his child’s stroller before taking the stage — and organizers warned competitor­s against gesturing at their crotches and other lewd behavior.

“They gave us pretty good instructio­ns,” said Lindsey, the contestant with the overflowin­g 3-year-old mullet, who on one ankle has a tattoo that reads “Don’t Tread on Me.” “I probably failed all of them,” he added, flashing a smile.

As each competitor took the stage, they gave a short speech about what their mullet means to them. “My mullet has gotten me about as close to the life of a hot chick as I could possibly get,” Chris Kisling of Poway, California, told the crowd. Kisling, 44, a superinten­dent for a general contractor, also bragged that his mullet — a heap of thick, long kinks that fell past his shoulders — had gotten him backstage at a concert by country musician Joe Nichols.

After the contestant­s had finished their speeches, the group flung and twirled their hair to “Pony” as a way to demonstrat­e their mullets’ flow for the judges and the audience of a few hundred people, which included some actual baby mullets, or young children with the hairstyle. The final portion of the competitio­n was a group mullet shake.

Less than an hour after the competitio­n began, the judges were ready to announce their decision. By then, the sun had started to set and Robinson, or Roger the Great, was throwing glow sticks into the crowd.

Despite his attempt at political showboatin­g, Walden took third place.

Second place went to Robinson and his 15-yearold mullet.

And in first place: Lindsey, who had not expected his younger mullet to outperform its more seasoned competitor­s. Arriving at the event, he said he had thought, “Well, I definitely don’t stand a chance because all those guys had pretty glowing mullets.” To beat them, he added, “I had to kind of go more crazy onstage.”

But as his win sank in, Lindsey began to recognize the majesty that the judges saw in his mullet. “I’ve got that ginger hair going on,” he said, “and I guess maybe I take care of mine a little bit better.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Danny Earl Perkins, who calls his fluffy mullet “The D.E.W.,” which stands for the Danny Earl Way, during the USA Mullet Championsh­ips in Lewisville, Texas on Sept. 23, 2022. At a qualifying event in Texas for the finals of this year’s USA Mullet Championsh­ips, 14hopefuls competed to be the face of what many say is not just a hairstyle, but a lifestyle.
ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES Danny Earl Perkins, who calls his fluffy mullet “The D.E.W.,” which stands for the Danny Earl Way, during the USA Mullet Championsh­ips in Lewisville, Texas on Sept. 23, 2022. At a qualifying event in Texas for the finals of this year’s USA Mullet Championsh­ips, 14hopefuls competed to be the face of what many say is not just a hairstyle, but a lifestyle.
 ?? ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Joseph Bauer whips his mullet while competing to be a finalist in the USA Mullet Championsh­ips in Lewisville, Texas on Sept. 23, 2022. At a qualifying event in Texas for the finals of this year’s USA Mullet Championsh­ips, 14hopefuls competed to be the face of what many say is not just a hairstyle, but a lifestyle.
ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES Joseph Bauer whips his mullet while competing to be a finalist in the USA Mullet Championsh­ips in Lewisville, Texas on Sept. 23, 2022. At a qualifying event in Texas for the finals of this year’s USA Mullet Championsh­ips, 14hopefuls competed to be the face of what many say is not just a hairstyle, but a lifestyle.

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