More than 26,000 mullets have been grown across the country in recent years - and it's for reasons beyond resembling some of Australia's most colourful sporting athletes.
Source:Love it or hate it, it's hard to escape the trending hairstyle of the moment: the mullet.
"Rugby players, whatever they have, over time, really become very predominant and what people ask for and I really think them having hair cuts like that, and that expression makes a lot of people want to give it a go as well," she said.From rugby league's Ryan Papenhuyzen and Josh Papali'i to Aussie Rules stars Bailey Smith and Jack Sinclair, football players have claimed the mullet.
While many tend to embody the mullet as a hairstyle embedded in the Australian culture, the mullet's roots can be traced back to the song 'Mullet Head', released by US hip hop band the Beastie Boys in 1994, according to the Oxford Dictionary. "Mullets for Mental Health is a fun and engaging way to start important mental health conversations and the perfect way to show your mates that you’re all ears for mental health," he said.
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