Would you alter your coiffure? As Brits say they’d somewhat streak bare on the street
Haircuts were found to be one of the things Brits are least likely to change along with their home, friends and football team they support – and some would rather take off all their clothes in street than change
Half of Brits have had the same hair do for as long as they can remember.
A quarter stick with the same look out of fear of a hair disaster or suffering a “bad hair day”, researchers found.
A lazy 16% cannot be bothered changing their cut and men are more set in their ways than women with 55% of fellas remaining unchanged in the bonce area.
The survey of 1,000 adults was carried out by restaurant chain Taco Bell, who challenged folk to get out of their style comfort zone.
It teamed up with Traitors star and barber Tyler Smith in north London to offer up to a year’s supply of chicken nachos – if people agreed to have their hair shaved into a daring new chicken nacho shape.
The more hair they lost to Tyler’s “nacho chop”, the more free nachos they nabbed.
Student Mark Christy, 29, from Northampton, got the cut and said: “My girlfriend’s gonna kill me.
“But hey, I love chicken nachos, so it’s totally worth it.”
And 15 per cent of men say they would rather streak naked down the street than change the look of their locks.
Just eight per cent of men say they have changed their haircut in the past year compared to 21 per cent of women.
Haircuts were found to be one of the things Brits are least likely to change along with their home, friends and football team they support.
But exactly a quarter of Brits have been bold enough to change their haircut on impulse.One in ten – nine per cent – have switched their style after a break-up and the same number have done so for a special occasion like a wedding.Three quarters of Brits – 74 per cent – claim to be ‘adventurous’ but 43 per cent admit that they stick to the same daily routine.A quarter – 26 per cent – avoid changing the style of clothes they wear while 18 per cent refuse to try new food.
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