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When your CRT TV becomes 21 years old in April.
I know! They have an "Oldies" station here and it plays "70s, 80s and 90s"... Are you kidding me??!! Now I remember when we had like two stations that played "oldies" that were 50's and 60's. Then we also had a couple of stations on AM radio that played "oldies" on Sunday. But c-mon!A radio station today playing '80s music is equivalent to a radio station playing '40s music in the 70s, except the latter was much, much better. As long as they didn't play any of that postwar slop.
A few rabbits tattooed on the thinning patch will look like hares from a distance.I'm starting to lose a little off of my top... Grrr!
Well, unless I go the "treatment" route. What is that company, "Bosley" or something? But I'm wondering if that stuff might actually mess with or stain the inside of my lids. If so, I'll just stick with different hats. My daughter actually said the other day that I change hats like performers change wigs. Well, I'm not savvy to anyone swapping wigs, but like my ex complained, "He has all of these hats and he changes them three times a day!". Oh well... I guess if something like that makes me villainous, I don't know what to say.A few rabbits tattooed on the thinning patch will look like hares from a distance.
I've been s-l-o-w-l-y losing my hair for a couple of decades or so now. The typical "bald spot" area is thinnest, but the woman who cuts my hair insists on doing what she can to hide it so most noticeable is probably my receding hair line...when I'm not wearing a hat, that is.How about HAIR LOSS! AAAAAGH! I remember when could pomp or slick my hair with no problem. And though I can still slick the sides and have my nice subtle sideburns, I'm starting to lose a little off of my top...I don't know if it's from wearing hats, all the junk I used to put in my hair, or maybe pulling my hair out from raising four kids. Oh well. I guess every dog has its day. Too bad it doesn't always last. Grrr!
The aforementioned woman who cuts my hair explained to me once how they do that. They take healthy hair from various other places on your head where it's growing in nicely, and transplant it where your hair is thinning. So they're basically putting hair back where it was, but because of the way they harvest it your hair will be at least a little thinner over your entire head.Well, unless I go the "treatment" route. What is that company, "Bosley" or something?...
Of all the celebrities that wore some type of hairpiece or other, (can't call it a rug these days,) only Bruce Reynolds managed the look. What Reynolds did was to have the wig made to match his beard, so as his beard changed in colour through the aging process, so did his "hair."Well, unless I go the "treatment" route. What is that company, "Bosley" or something? But I'm wondering if that stuff might actually mess with or stain the inside of my lids. If so, I'll just stick with different hats. My daughter actually said the other day that I change hats like performers change wigs.
I think you're referring to Burt Reynolds, the actor, rather than Bruce Reynolds who masterminded the so-called "1963 Great Train Robbery" and, to my knowledge, didn't wear a beard. Although I agree they were nicely color matched to his facial hair, Burt's hairpieces were never convincing for me and I always thought they looked like exactly what they were; he should have gone to William Shatner's guy--now those wigs are convincing.Of all the celebrities that wore some type of hairpiece or other, (can't call it a rug these days,) only Bruce Reynolds managed the look. What Reynolds did was to have the wig made to match his beard, so as his beard changed in colour through the aging process, so did his "hair."...
The trouble here is that Ringo is a false positive because he dyes his hair and beard. He doesn't have a lot of grey, and even between dye jobs he looks more blonde than grey. Regardless, at his current age of 80 years old he always seems to be having the time of his life, and his personal motto "peace and love" seems to be working well for him. "I'd like to be..."...Older, hirsute fellows, make me smile when, at the age of 50, 60, and older, you don't see a single grey hair.
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When your CRT TV becomes 21 years old in April.
When you can remember the small pox and rubella shot they gave you in elementary school.
I have to point out when telling the story.
It was one machine they used it on everyone.
We all lined up and got the inoculation sharing the same dispensing device.
Of course it was Burt Reynolds, Bruce Reynolds probably went white overnight when the judge handed down 25 years incarceration.I think you're referring to Burt Reynolds, the actor, rather than Bruce Reynolds who masterminded the so-called "1963 Great Train Robbery" and, to my knowledge, didn't wear a beard. Although I agree they were nicely color matched to his facial hair, Burt's hairpieces were never convincing for me and I always thought they looked like exactly what they were; he should have gone to William Shatner's guy--now those wigs are convincing.
The trouble here is that Ringo is a false positive because he dyes his hair and beard. He doesn't have a lot of grey, and even between dye jobs he looks more blonde than grey. Regardless, at his current age of 80 years old he always seems to be having the time of his life, and his personal motto "peace and love" seems to be working well for him. "I'd like to be..."
I think you're referring to Burt Reynolds, the actor, rather than Bruce Reynolds who masterminded the so-called "1963 Great Train Robbery" and, to my knowledge, didn't wear a beard. Although I agree they were nicely color matched to his facial hair, Burt's hairpieces were never convincing for me and I always thought they looked like exactly what they were; he should have gone to William Shatner's guy--now those wigs are convincing.
The trouble here is that Ringo is a false positive because he dyes his hair and beard. He doesn't have a lot of grey, and even between dye jobs he looks more blonde than grey. Regardless, at his current age of 80 years old he always seems to be having the time of his life, and his personal motto "peace and love" seems to be working well for him. "I'd like to be..."
Shatner I knew about, did you know that he played the part of Mark Anthony in Shakespeare's: Julius Ceasar?
And as for hairpieces, I thought that Charley Sheen's was believable, almost.
I remember standing in line at my elementary school (Orange Grove; go Tigers!) waiting for my turn with the matronly nurse holding what looked like one of those "guns" they use to pierce ears at the kiosks in the local shopping malls. The process wasn't much different either--she loaded the "gun" as I stepped up, she swabbed my arm with a bit of gauze soaked in alcohol, held the "gun" against my arm, pulled the trigger, slapped on a bandage that didn't stick because of the alcohol, and yelled "Next!" as she pushed me out of the way to make room for the next kid. The injection site was sore and itched a little for a day or two, but that was it.We got lined up at the Town Office the month before we started kindergarten and the municipal doctor came down the line jabbing us with this thing that looked like a pickle fork. No jab, no school, no exceptions.