roxybisquaint: (sarah kidding me)
[personal profile] roxybisquaint
I saw a guy with a comb in his back pocket and a mullet.

I don't just mean a regular comb. Remember those combs with the long handles that people used to carry in their pocket as a fashion accessory? When was that, like 1980 or there about? Well he had one of those and it was sticking a good 4" out of the back pocket of his jean shorts, complimented by long socks and a muscle shirt (sans muscles).

And when I say he had a mullet, I don't mean an ordinary mullet. I'm talking full-on Billy Ray Cyrus Achy Breaky Heart mullet, the length of which was pulled neatly back in a ponytail that hung to the middle of his yellow muscle shirt (which matched his yellow muscle car, by the way). Here's the odd thing: he was using a girl's scrunchie to hold his ponytail.

How does a guy end up like that? I think there's a story there.

on 2008-08-10 02:19 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] the-narration.livejournal.com
Likewise, although a slightly different flavor of one, I think. Less Mustangs and mullets, more F-series pick-ups and mustaches. In Oregon. Population: less than two thousand (at the time). The high school had sheep living on the grounds and an average graduating class of about 65 kids.

on 2008-08-10 09:38 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] roxybisquaint.livejournal.com
DING DING DING DING DING. We have a winner for having grown up in the hickest town! (That would be you).

We had a population of about 5000 and no sheep on the school grounds, though there was a small farm adjacent to the high school (also one across the street from the elementary school). Our closest shopping mall was a 45-minute drive (movie theater too). One of my best friends lived on a tobacco farm (where I once helped hang tobacco to dry), the other lived in a trailer park. When a McDonald's opened, the town held a parade. And yes there were lots of muscle cars and mullets.

on 2008-08-10 11:44 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] the-narration.livejournal.com
Luckily we were only 13 miles of highway from the second largest city in Oregon, so if you had a car you could get to civilization on short notice. But I took calculus and physics at the high school quite literally the only year they actually had them, and computer, art and business classes got cut for lack of money while the Agriculture program remained a force to be reckoned with.

on 2008-08-11 02:38 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] roxybisquaint.livejournal.com
OMG seriously? Okay that's pretty darn hick when they don't have common classes like calculus and geometry every year. I imagine the Future Farmers of America had as strong of a presence in your high school as in mine then.

on 2008-08-11 04:26 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] the-narration.livejournal.com
They had geometry. Although at the time it was actually a combined geometry/algebra thing called Integrated Math. But the only year physics and AP calculus were options was when they had a teacher from the community college teaching there part time. Luckily, that was my senior year.

FFA? Oh, totally. I avoided it and the Ag classes like the plague, but people I know were quite heavily involved.

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