What I needed was a haircut. The hair on the back of my head had reached that critical point where it was too long to be straight, and too short to curl completely. I hated walking past mirrors and seeing this flippy thing going on with the back of my head. It was totally adding 20lbs to my life. And seriously, how attractive is it when you add 20lbs to your head. Exactly.
I'd been putting off getting a haircut for a while, cuz I'd been trying to line up my schedule with Corn so we could hit THE HAIRCUT. THE HAIRCUT is this place in L-Town that runs ads here and there touting itself as some sort of men's only haircuttery. Their logo is a woman wrapped around a barber's pole as if it were a stripper's pole. Tasteful, yes?
Corn and I kept thinking that visiting this place would be a really interesting study in the construction of masculinity. But, I realized at some point this weekend that by the time Corn and I managed to find 30mins where we both weren't doing anything my hair was going to be back to frosh year at Carleton levels of insanity. And for anyone who remembers that haircut, I think you'll agree with me when I say it's best that I not go back to that.
I wandered on into THE HAIRCUT yesterday and looked around. Yeah, I was sorely disappointed. I walked out 30mins later with a decent haircut, but nothing to write home about and a severe case of aesthetic shock. Wow, where to begin. . .
It's as if the owner of the place saw Barbershop and thought, "Damn, I want to own a place like that." Here's the thing they failed to understand about the mythical barbershop in that film. Actually, there are three things.
1) That place is in Chicago. The South Side of Chicago. Not the New Westside of Lawrence.
2) Cedric the Entertainer, Ice Cube and Eve work at that barbershop
3) What made that place so cool was the sense of community engendered by the barbers and the customers. It's not in the decor, it's in the people.
It's really this third charge that is the most glaring at this place. It's really, really sterile. I looked around and I was the only person in there that didn't work there and the three women that were working there looked really, really bored with each other. Now that I think about it some more, I don't think it was aesthetic shock I was in so much as gasping for breath due to the lack of atmosphere in the place.
OK, what was this place like. The plae has big, airy windows that let in a lot of light, which is good because the walls are all a really nice shade of grey/blue. The floors are hardwood or a decent facsimile thereof. There are no counters anywhere in the place, in their place are large, black Craftsman toolchests. Yknow, the big ones on wheels. These are the cabiniets in which all the haircutting utensils are kept. There are also these big 6'x4' mirrors at each station, the stations strewn about the floor of the place in some pattern that is designed to look random. It isn't until you notice that you can see yourself in any number of the mirrors that the actual patterning of the stations makes sense.
They have a pool table, black with grey felt and the walls have nice B&W pictures of the greatest KU Basketball players of all time with nice white mats and zinc plated frames. Cuz really, that's what L-Town needs, more places with a KU-inspired theme. Then, we got to the shampoo bay. Across from the basins, so in a place where that's what you're staring at as you get shampooed, are pastel drawings of old Betty Paige pinups matted and framed in the same manner as the KU pictures. Yup, they're really trying to hard. This is even without checking out the magazine subscriptions. Maxim, Stuff, Sports Illustrated, ESPN and yes, they do have Playboy but not every issue, just the big anniversary/special editions. Yeah, trying way too hard.
Did I mention the Samsung version VEGA TVs? Yeah, in a bay of four ala sportsbar all tuned to ESPN. Which kinda blew, because I could see the TVs from just about anywhere in the place, but I can't remember being able to hear them. And they never quite give you permission to zone out and watch TV while you get a haircut. It was just a really, really bizarre scene.
Honestly, if they'd had the same stuff in a place twice as big, they'd be getting somewhere with their concept, but it was just all too much stuff in too little space to be effective. They were just trying too hard, yknow? I can understand their construction of masculinity, and I totally see who their target demo is, I just don't think that demo is going to pay $20 to get a haircut, yknow? No matter how "cool" the place looks.
Yeah, those are really jumbled thoughts, but I'm reading a lot of other stuff right now and my head is still trying to remember how to switch gears really quickly. This term is Brown v. The Board of Ed/Theory/Jazz and Culture. Yeah, three topics that kinda go together, but not quite. It's causing some interesting dissonance.
The weather's been weird and I need to do laundry. It's a fun life.
OH, and now, that map dealie that all the kids are talking about.

create your own visited states map
or check out these Google Hacks.