In my simple and basic experience with fashion trends, I’ve noticed a cyclical pattern.
Goatee’s got popular (again) during the flannel shirt and torn jean days of the early nineties, and faded out of style just as quickly as they came in.
Could be that the guys you’ve seen are like me and wear their facial hair as they see fit, regardless of what is “in”.
Hey, with that attitude, we’re trendy once about every ten years.
Still waiting for the ripped jeans and leather jacket look to come back though. Not to long ago I was the epitome of cool. Recently I was offered food at a bus terminal as I was mistakenly taken for a homeless man.
Ripped jeans, leather jackets, flannel and goatees AINT IN??? No wonder I get made fun of. I personally dont do the ripped jeans thing, I wear shorts. In Omaha. All winter long.
Dead0man
Well, I think the Goldberg/Steve Austin look with the shaved heads and goatee (or van dyke) has been picking up steam the last couple of years. It seems like if you start losing the hair on top of your head, you need to compensate with hair on your face.
I have pictorial evidence of several guys, including my brother, supporting the early '80’s as a start date for the trend, at least in the L.A. area. I think it took a few years to get all around. Certainly by 1990 nearly every other guy under the age of 40 seemed to be sporting them.
In my experience, the goatee has always been popular among many high school guys, who really can’t grow much else but still want to sport some kind of facial hair. I know I had one in high school for partially this reason, but mostly because it was a tradition among us track members (of course, the tradition probably started for the reason stated above.)
But being in college now I still see a lot of them. Some are just the pure hair on the chin, and others go for the ‘surrond the mouth with hair’ look (referred to as the George Micheal look in previous posts, I believe.) Not a full beard, but including the mustache hair.
It seems to me that in about 1986 or 87 there was a minor revival of beatnik style. The early to mid eighties had seen a revival of sixties styles which were played out by 86. At that time, those who wanted to be hip but hadn’t the imagination to develop their own styles began to look toward the roots of the hippie movement. In addition, I think a lot of the old beatniks were doing college speaking/poetry/art tours then.
Thus the goatee as part of the stereotypical beatnik ensemble - with bongos, turtlenecks, and berets.
I think, as usual when this comes up in apparently any form, there’s some amount of confusion as to what the beard styles are called.
A goatee, to be strict about it, is the lower-lip tuft, the Shaggy of Scooby-Doo, the Harley of Boy Meets Boy, the beatnik/hipster type of thing.
A Van Dyke (named for the painter, not the actor), is the “hair-surrounding-the-mouth” thing, though it’s usually called that only when it’s got the pointed tip at the chin.
I do wear a van dyke, without the pointy end. But only because it’s the facial hair style that requires the least maintenance, as well as the only one that doesn’t make me look completely dorky. And I do need a beard…there’s too much facial real estate not to have some landscaping.
Besides, I think if I shaved completely, I’d have to hand in my Official Gay Bear Membership Card and try to lead a sad, lonely life as a fat twink. shudder
What about mutton-chop sideburns? I see a few in my school with them. I see people with worse facial hair than I have going around with Elvis-style burns. I find them about as attractive as those tufts of hair on the sides of an orangutan’s face. I saw an old comic comparing the two styles, and almost spit out my drink as I laughed my guts out…
I once saw an old man walking around with his long beard in a braid. He reminded me of something out of a Tolkien novel. It looked weird.
Van Dyke facial hair reminds me of the Spanish Inquisition (bet you didn’t expect that!!!).
I think the goatee is now a regional thing. When I left Denver early this year, goatees were extremely common, especially among “outdoorsy” males in their 20s and 30s. Nothing says “Denver guy” like a goatee, chocolate Lab, ten year old SUV, flannel shirt, and cloth baseball cap.
Here in Orlando, goatees are quite rare. Mullets, on the other hand …