Mop Alert: N’ Korea dishes out menu of 28 okay hairstyles!
BY Agencies5 March 2013 6:51 AM IST
Agencies5 March 2013 6:51 AM IST
North Koreans are now allowed to choose only from a state-approved list of 28 hairstyles to ‘ward off the corrupting effects of capitalism’.
The hermit state has recommended a range of 28 hairstyles for its citizens, claiming that they are ‘the most comfortable’ styles and capable of warding off the corrupting effects of capitalism, according to ifeng.com, a news website run by Hong Kong’s Phoenix TV network.
Women can choose from 18 feathery looks, while men must make do with only 10, wantchinatimes.com reported.
However, the ‘grunge’ hairstyle sported by the country’s supreme leader Kim Jong UN is not on the list.
Spiky hair is forbidden, as are quiffs. Married women are instructed to keep their tresses short, while the single ladies are allowed to let loose with longer, curlier locks.
The hair of the country’s young men should be less than 5 cm long and they should have a haircut once every 15 days as longer hair apparently takes away nutrition from their brains.
Older men, whose brains are presumably in decline anyway, are allowed to rock out with hair as long as 7 cm.
The news anchor for the country’s Korean Central Television, Ri Chun-hee, who is known for being patriotic to the point of hysteria, changed her hairstyle twice within two weeks in 2011.
The hairstyle changes have been interpreted as suggesting that Pyongyang is trying to improve its image since the state broadcaster is considered the front gate of the country.
Others speculate that the changes were made because the country’s young leader Kim disliked the previous styles.
It appears from the list that North Korean men are not allowed to emulate the preferred hairdo of the country’s new leader.
Breaking the new rules could leave people facing a brush with the law.
Kim himself has most recently been seen sporting longer hair on top with a center parting and his head completely shaved at the sides, a style popular in the West.
N’ KOREA BUILDS MYSTERIOUS ‘PANORAMA MUSEUM’ IN SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA
North Korea’s first ‘tangible’ monument in Cambodia, one of the reclusive state's closest allies in Asia, is set to open soon in Siem Reap near the ancient Angkor Wat temple complex.
But the purpose of the nearly complete ‘panorama museum’, 70 meters in diameter and 48 meters high, remains mysterious.
No one is quite sure if it is to earn foreign currency, to enhance North Korea’s political stature or simply to showcase North Korean technology.
It is to open, ostensibly as one of the world’s biggest artistic draws, before more than 1,200 representatives from the 190 member countries of the World Heritage Committee meet in Siem Reap in June 2013.
The museum features 3-D simulations of ancient monuments and Cambodian culture, via North Korean technology.
The hermit state has recommended a range of 28 hairstyles for its citizens, claiming that they are ‘the most comfortable’ styles and capable of warding off the corrupting effects of capitalism, according to ifeng.com, a news website run by Hong Kong’s Phoenix TV network.
Women can choose from 18 feathery looks, while men must make do with only 10, wantchinatimes.com reported.
However, the ‘grunge’ hairstyle sported by the country’s supreme leader Kim Jong UN is not on the list.
Spiky hair is forbidden, as are quiffs. Married women are instructed to keep their tresses short, while the single ladies are allowed to let loose with longer, curlier locks.
The hair of the country’s young men should be less than 5 cm long and they should have a haircut once every 15 days as longer hair apparently takes away nutrition from their brains.
Older men, whose brains are presumably in decline anyway, are allowed to rock out with hair as long as 7 cm.
The news anchor for the country’s Korean Central Television, Ri Chun-hee, who is known for being patriotic to the point of hysteria, changed her hairstyle twice within two weeks in 2011.
The hairstyle changes have been interpreted as suggesting that Pyongyang is trying to improve its image since the state broadcaster is considered the front gate of the country.
Others speculate that the changes were made because the country’s young leader Kim disliked the previous styles.
It appears from the list that North Korean men are not allowed to emulate the preferred hairdo of the country’s new leader.
Breaking the new rules could leave people facing a brush with the law.
Kim himself has most recently been seen sporting longer hair on top with a center parting and his head completely shaved at the sides, a style popular in the West.
N’ KOREA BUILDS MYSTERIOUS ‘PANORAMA MUSEUM’ IN SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA
North Korea’s first ‘tangible’ monument in Cambodia, one of the reclusive state's closest allies in Asia, is set to open soon in Siem Reap near the ancient Angkor Wat temple complex.
But the purpose of the nearly complete ‘panorama museum’, 70 meters in diameter and 48 meters high, remains mysterious.
No one is quite sure if it is to earn foreign currency, to enhance North Korea’s political stature or simply to showcase North Korean technology.
It is to open, ostensibly as one of the world’s biggest artistic draws, before more than 1,200 representatives from the 190 member countries of the World Heritage Committee meet in Siem Reap in June 2013.
The museum features 3-D simulations of ancient monuments and Cambodian culture, via North Korean technology.
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