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1[[quoteright:350:[[UsefulNotes/FormulaOne https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/friendly-enemies-s_4684.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[[FriendlyEnemy Jackie Stewart and Emerson Fittipaldi]], both demonstrating the prevalent style of the era.]]
3
4->''"You got the part! Don't cut your hair!"''
5-->-- '''Creator/JuddApatow''' to the male cast of ''Series/FreaksAndGeeks''
6
7As we all know, the [[TropeCodifier Hair Codifiers]] for TheEighties were [[EightiesHair the ladies]]. Well, the Hair Codifiers for TheSeventies were [[SpearCounterpart the gentlemen]].
8
9Is it the sideburns? Is it the general shape, in which we, in hindsight, can recognize what would later become the mullet? In any case, the audience recognizes the era as soon as a manly mane of this sort is shown.
10
11Yeah, it's the sideburns. They were undoubtedly the defining feature of Seventies male hair, in addition to hair that was worn naturally thick--straight at first, and "hippie-ish" just like SixtiesHair during the first half of the decade (since the early seventies was really TheSixties Part II) but increasingly frizzy during the second half (a preview of EightiesHair) as the decade wore on, perhaps thanks to the influence of glitter rock, or possibly the Black Power movement. The other "very 70s" hairstyle is the Afro, immensely popular in the 70s (though it started in the late [[TheSixties Sixties]]) for most African Americans, but [[PrettyFlyForAWhiteGuy even white guys with curly hair tried to have one]]. Afros in fiction often tend to be [[FunnyAfro exaggerated for comic effect]]. Other "very 70s" hairstyles are [[UsefulNotes/{{Punk}} mohawks and spiked hair]].
12
13The fashion for rugged hirsuteness didn't stay on the top of the head, either; this is also the decade of the PornStache and the CarpetOfVirility. Also, women in the era were often known to [[HairyGirl not shave the pubic areas too]].
14
15Women's hair was also "hippie-ish" (long and straight) for the first half of the decade and puffy and combed-over during the second half (also a preview of EightiesHair). Outside of this wiki, when referring to "70s hair", people usually mean that sexy feathered hairstyle associated with Creator/FarrahFawcett, Kristy [=McNichol=], and Music/StevieNicks. Usually when referring to what's called '70s hair on this wiki, terms like "{{Disco}} hair" or the "mod haircut" are used.
16
17Compare HotBloodedSideburns.
18
19----
20!!Examples:
21[[foldercontrol]]
22
23[[folder:Advertising]]
24* Vitals: TheSeventies was both [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbdKg8RYi24 the wild and the "let it be" looks.]]
25* While staying in the classic Bela Lugosi-esque outfit, the early ''Advertising/MonsterCereals'' boxes and commercials, first released in 1971, gave Count Chocula huge and noticeable sideburns. More modern variants would tone these down.
26[[/folder]]
27
28[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
29* The ''Manga/{{Area 88}}'' manga, which launched in 1979, has multiple examples of seventies hair.
30* Seventies' style HotbloodedSideburns were very frequent in SuperRobotGenre anime back in that decade (and omnipresent in Creator/GoNagai manga). Examples include:
31* ''Manga/DearBrother'' has [[AlphaBitch Aya Misaki]], with a perm as pompous as her ego.
32* ''Mazinger'' saga:
33** ''Anime/MazingerZ'': Other than Kouji's HotbloodedSideburns, you also have Dr. Hell's sideburns and BeardOfEvil.
34** ''Anime/GreatMazinger'': Tetsuya tsurugi sported a fine pair.
35** ''Anime/UFORoboGrendizer'': As Duke Fleed added. Bonus for having long, uncombed hair.
36* ''Manga/GetterRobo'': Be careful to not get too close to Ryoma's sideburns. You might poke your eye out.
37* ''Anime/KotetsuJeeg'': Hiroshi Shiba sported a fine pair of sideburns. Even in the 2006 sequel, his successor Kenji Kusanagi still sport sideburns.
38* ''Anime/{{Raideen}}'': Akira Hibiki's hair was long and spiky, and his sideburns were large.
39* ''Anime/RobotRomanceTrilogy'':
40** ''Anime/CombattlerV'': Hyoma is a good example, but Juzo had the sideburns and a long mullet! Chizuru's hair also was long and straight.
41** ''Anime/VoltesV'': Kenichi Go's fine pair. Ippei does not have the burns but otherwise has long hair.
42** ''Anime/{{Daimos}}'': Kazuya Ryuuzaki had long sideburns and a hair he only combed when he was going to meet a girl (according the HomeBase RobotBuddy). Erika had long sideburns AND long, straight black hair.
43* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'': Kai Shiden is the most blatant for the Federation side with his moptop, as well as Sleggar Law's sideburns. On the Zeon side, Char has a mild late 70s hairdo, as well as Garma Zabi. Dozle Zabi has a fine pair of sideburns.
44* ''Anime/MobileFighterGGundam'': despite being produced in ''1994'', Kyoji Kasshu's hair, with mullet and sideburns to boot, are at home with the protagonists of seventies Super Robot anime.
45* While ''Manga/Pretear'' came out in 2000, the heroine Himeno has a very feathered Fawcett-like bob haircut, giving her the disparaged nickname “tulip head.”
46* ''Anime/ScienceNinjaTeamGatchaman'': Ken and Joe are good male examples. Jun, with her long, green hair falling over her shoulders is a good female example.
47* ''Anime/NeoHumanCasshern'': Tetsuya Azuma has long, thick hair and long sideburns under his helmet.
48* The DistantEpilogue to ''Manga/KidsOnTheSlope'' takes place in the 70s, marked by the now adult Kaoru having long hair.
49* ''Anime/Daitarn3'': Main character Banjo has very long sideburns, and thick, unruly hair. His female companions have long, puffy hair.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Comic Books]]
53* In ''[[Comicbook/{{Supergirl 1972}} Supergirl Vol 1]]'', set in the decade, the men have huge sideburns and long wavy hair, and the women's hair is puffy. One of Comicbook/{{Supergirl}}'s friends sports an afro.
54* The ''ComicBook/XMen'' comics just before and during the Creator/ChrisClaremont era are pretty rife with this with big sideburns for Cyclops, Banshee and Wolverine (which he has permanently kept) and Jean often had [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQGPvnpi3kZk-PXqG92cXuvbMxppL7PoB4KOQ&usqp=CAU Farrah hair]] and Storm had a long [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT2U_K76vuryLw_8Zg0byPpQfMBO4wmijriBA&usqp=CAU half-up beehive.]]
55* A lot of Franchise/MarvelUniverse heroes who had short hair in the 60s such ComicBook/SpiderMan, ComicBook/IronMan and even ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk suddenly got longer hair with noticeable sideburns. The women generally got feathered hair or in the case of ComicBook/GwenStacy long straight locks with a fringe (which has become her iconic look). The undisputed king and queen of SeventiesHair however is of course ComicBook/LukeCage with his [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSQLp4_w9zrNaX2DiC5UqpfhmJdHWY6dIIA3A&usqp=CAU 70s perm]] (that he sadly shaved off decades ago) and [[ComicBook/DaughtersOfTheDragon Misty Knight]] with her permanent [[AfroAsskicker Afro]].
56* ComicBook/BeastBoy's signature haircut throughout ''The New ComicBook/TeenTitans'' was a mop-top. He eventually traded that in for a mullet in the 1990s before switching to his modern spiky hair in the 2000s.
57* Valerie from ''ComicBook/JosieAndThePussycats'' had a short afro in the '70s.
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Film — Live Action]]
61* [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] in ''Film/{{Alien}}'' although filmed in 1979 most of cast (unlike ''Star Wars'' below) have sensible hairstyles that aren’t really dated and can easily fool the viewer into thinking they’re watching a film from a later decade. The two characters who give the game away though, are [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTdDinLrA-L278jYBAEYpqSrTBVeDFVMXhgOQ&usqp=CAU Ripley]] with her big curly mane of hair that she lacks in later films and [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQn8u9PBrUCWwmtu7KAmiEotZQDeW6xQti9rA&usqp=CAU Dallas]] who looks a member of ''Music/TheBeeGees''.
62* ''Film/AlmostFamous''. Lester and the members of Stillwater have this. William's an interesting case; he's too young to grow sideburns and his ear-covering mop was firmly tied to the period when the movie was made in 2000 but has come back in style since.
63* Most of the cast of ''Film/AnchormanTheLegendOfRonBurgundy'', sometimes adding the PornStache for good measure.
64* The [[Film/{{Carrie 1976}} 1976 adaptation]] of ''Literature/{{Carrie}}'' is somewhat infamous for William Katt's enormous head of curly blond hair as Tommy. Creator/JohnTravolta also sports a comparatively toned-down version as Billy. For the women, Creator/SissySpacek's title character has the hippie-ish long and straight hairdo that's used to highlight her ShrinkingViolet nature; her makeover for the prom sees her add some curls to it, but [[DeadlyPrank the blood spilled on her]] flattens it back out. Creator/NancyAllen's blonde curls are also a dead ringer for Creator/FarrahFawcett's.
65* Most of the teenagers and young adults in ''Film/AClockworkOrange'' have this, despite this work being set [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture in the near-future]]. Justified, as the book version actually states that this is the current DelinquentHair fashion.
66%%* Almost everyone in ''Film/EnterTheDragon''.
67* ''Film/{{Hair}}'', obviously, especially the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dyl0j3WU6Y#t=0m38s title song]] (even though it came out in TheSixties).
68* Film/JamesBond: While Bond himself largely averted this, the films from this decade still showed marked cases of 70s hair.
69** ''Film/LiveAndLetDie'': Taking inspiration from blaxploitation, many Black characters are seen wearing afros, with several Black male characters also wearing thick sideburns and other facial hair.
70** ''Film/TheManWithTheGoldenGun'': Several background male characters are seen wearing mustaches or thick sideburns.
71** ''Film/{{Moonraker}}'': Some of Drax's henchwomen are seen wearing the androgynous bowl cut or wavy Farrah Fawcett-style hair.
72* In ''Film/KnifeForTheLadies'', Jeff Cooper's shoulder length surfer boy perm is especially distracting in a movie supposedly set in the 1880s.
73* Shows up in ''Film/TheLastPictureShow'', which is supposed to be set in 1950s Texas. While some men did have sideburns in 1951, they probably weren't ''that'' common.
74* ''Film/LogansRun'' filmed in 1976 could easily be the TropeCodifier for this with 70s hair galore. Logan 5 and Francis 7 played by Creator/MichaelYork and Richard Jordan have long puffy hair with with serious sideburns, Jessica 6 played by Creator/JennyAgutter has a gorgeous feathered bob and Creator/FarrahFawcett herself appears as Holly 13.
75* PsychoForHire Anton Chigurh in ''Film/NoCountryForOldMen'' wears a Seventies hairstyle, which only adds to his creepiness. Creator/JavierBardem even joked he was “not going to get laid for two months” with that hairstyle.
76* Completely averted in the movie ''Film/{{Rudy}}''; though set in the early '70s, none of the male actors have long hair or big sideburns, even though the title character in RealLife definitely sported [[http://profile.ak.fbcdn.net/hprofile-ak-snc4/50500_89612024283_1360367_n.jpg seventies hair]] when he played in the big game depicted at the end of the movie. Possibly this was done to give the film a more timeless feel. (Also, some college football coaches at the time banned sideburns, so it's not too far-fetched.)
77* Take an actor known for Seventies Hair, like Takuya Kimura, and cast him in a seventies throwback LiveActionAdaptation, in this case the ''Film/SpaceBattleshipYamato'' movie. How could it not work?
78* ''Film/SupermanTheMovie'' of course being filmed in 1978 unavoidably has this with the main cast and all side characters. Supes’s hair while iconic is longer than most depictions, Lois has fringed bangs and best of all Lex Luthor’s ridiculous perm (which was Creator/GeneHackman’s real hair). ''Film/SupermanII'', although it was released in the 1980 still has hair filmed from the previous era such as Ursa with her short hair with bangs and Zod and Non having widow’s peaks and hippie beards, which Zod initially lacked in the comics but soon gained permanently thanks to the movie version.
79* In ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'', Uhura wears a short afro in contrast to [[SixtiesHair the bouffant]] she had on ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' a decade earlier.
80* A lot of the Imperial officers in [[Film/ANewHope the first]] ''Franchise/StarWars'' movie have long Seventies sideburns, due to its release in 1977. Even Grand Moff Tarkin has them, although to a much less exaggerated degree, and that's not getting into the giant moustaches on a few characters. Less obvious is Luke's big puffy hair, Han's slightly smaller puffy hair, and Red Leader's subtle perm.
81** Amusingly enough, the frequent {{Prequel}}s and side stories set in and around the Old Trilogy era mean that even new works in the galaxy far far away keep putting characters in such hairstyles [[ZeerustCanon just to fit in]]. [[FallenHero Anakin]] spends all of ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' with a long rocker-mullet, while Obi-Wan previously sported a shorter, more Music/KennyLoggins-style [=80s=] mullet in ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'', and then there's [[WesternAnimation/StarWarsRebels Agent Kallus' epic sideburns]]...
82** ''Film/RogueOne'' of course being being a direct prequel to ''Film/ANewHope'' has [[ShownTheirWork 70s touches]] to the hairstyles of the main characters and background characters. Besides the [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQDAT2MAqgNYy1fVCk_80WevgWogsjdCpzFZQ&usqp=CAU long hair and moustaches]] of the Rebel pilots, Jyn has a relatively similar hairdo to Leia with a bun at the back and long at the sides to cover her ears and Cassian has 70s tousled hair and a moustache.
83* ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'': Most of the movie takes place in 1973.
84** The younger Professor X still has a full head of hair, and sports a longer, hippie-style mane.
85** Mystique rocks some hairstyles of the time in her human form and in one scene, masquerades as a black woman with an enormous afro.
86** Quicksilver's glam mop upset many fans in promotional materials, but it fits in with the era perfectly. Note the length and the silver sideburns.
87** Trask's hair helmet is very appropriate for the time period.
88** Wolverine still wears his muttonchops even in the future scenes.
89* ''Film/{{Zulu}}''. Well...the '''18'''70s anyway. The long sideburns on the men wouldn't look out of place a century later.
90* In ''Film/TheKingOfMarvinGardens'', the goon Rosko has a rather impressive afro with sideburns.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
94* GameShows: Virtually any show from the 1970s you'll see this, mainly with contestants and many times celebrities as well. But some prime examples among hosts (most of who -- aside from fashionably thick -- otherwise maintained conservative hairstyles):
95** ''Series/TheDatingGame'': A blatant example, where Lange grew his hair thick and had sideburns during the last few years of the original ABC daytime run. His hair grew even longer, to just below the collar line, for the 1973-1974 syndicated season, and permed it in true 1970s style for the 1978-1980 syndicated revival. Lange was in his late 30s and early-to-mid 40s through this period.
96** ''Series/NameThatTune'': NBC Vice President of Daytime Programming Lin Bolen commissioned a revival of this name-the-song game show staple of the 1950s and hired Dennis James as emcee. In "The Game Show Book" by the USA Today's Jefferson Graham, James -- who was 57 when he took the job -- was asked to grow his hair and sideburns to appear 15 years younger, which he did very reluctantly. He carried over this look to the first half of the 1974-1975 syndicated season of ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'', which he simultaneously hosted, but once ''Tune'''s daytime version was cancelled in January 1975, he cut his hair and trimmed his sideburns to his more familiar style.
97** ''Series/WheelOfFortune'': Chuck Woolery's hair was to between the collar and neckline for the first three-plus years of the original NBC run; Woolery was just 33 when ''Wheel'' debuted.
98* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': Mike ("Meathead") and a lot of his hippie friends.
99* ''Series/TheBradyBunch'': From ultra-conservative hairstyles during the second half of the first season (which fell in 1970), the hair eventually grew longer and far more fashionable for the era starting with the season. First, Robert Reed's hair was fashionably thick starting in the 1971-1972 season, and Barry Williams began perming his hair; Florence Henderson's hair also grew more fashionable. By Season 4 (1972-1973), Maureen [=McCormick=]'s hair was longer and very chic for the times, and Reed began wearing perms and Williams alternated between straight (with 1970s thickness) and perms. The final season (1973-1974) saw Chris Knight also perm his hair and Eve Plumb wear her hair long, although there were a handful of episodes where both [=McCormick=] and Plumb wore their hair in buns. But even in the early years that fell within the 1970s, guest stars and other bit characters were seen wearing fashionable hairstyles, so indeed the Bradys lived in the real world, becoming far more obvious as the years wore on.
100** By the time 1977 ''Series/TheBradyBunchHour'' came into being, Mike Lookinland, who played youngest son Bobby (he was 16 by this time) also had permed hair (much like his TV father and older brothers), and youngest girl Susan Olsen (now 15) wore her hair in a later-1970s style. Florence Henderson's hairstyle was very much in the later 1970s "short" style.
101** Throughout all this time, the only one whose hairstyle was consistent was [[FiftiesHair Ann B. Davis]].
102* Referenced on ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' when Buffy looks at Joyce's high school yearbook:
103-->'''Buffy''': Mom, I've accepted that you've had sex. I am not ready to know that you had Farrah hair.\
104'''Joyce''': This is [[SixtiesHair Gidget hair]]. Don't they teach you anything in history?
105* ''Series/CharliesAngels'' had the feathery female variant and is often credited with starting the hairstyle trend in women seen from the mid-'70s through the early '80s.
106* ''Series/TheCrowdedRoom'': Many characters on the show, since it is set c. 1979. Danny has a shaggy mop, black characters sport dreadlocks, afros and other distinctive hairstyles common then etc.
107* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
108** The Third Doctor's hairstyle gets longer, fluffier and bigger as the year the season was made, and the fashions, progress from 1970 to 1974. In 1970 he has a short, tidy grey crop with very close-cropped sideburns. In 1971, it starts to get wavier and blonder. By 1974 he has a full, waved, feathered white bouffant with large sideburns.
109** Jo Grant has a very 1971 feathered shag cut in her first season.
110** The Fourth Doctor's dense, feathered, [[QuirkyCurls preposterously curly]] 1970s [[AfroAsskicker 'fro]], which Creator/TomBaker even had to have permed at one point, worn with big, orange sideburns. Like the Third Doctor above, the sideburns get progressively bigger over the course of the 70s. Lampshaded in the Time Trips novella ''The Death Pit'', set in 1978, in which another male character expresses jealousy over the Doctor's fashionable curly hair.
111** Harry Sullivan also had prominent sideburns, particularly notable since he was supposed to be in the Royal Navy, which had just relaxed its regulations to permit sideburns to the bottom of the ear, but no further.
112* ''Series/{{Emergency}}'' was a veritable time capsule: Sideburns ([=DeSoto=] and Dr. Brackett), feathered mullet (Johnny Gage), PornStache (Chet, Marco), CarpetOfVirility (Chet, Marco, Captain Stanley), and Afro (Dr. Morton). Plus variations on the various victims of the week.
113* All three main characters in ''Series/TheGoodies'' had hairstyles very much of their time while the series was on the air. Tim Brooke-Taylor wore his hair in increasingly longer styles until, by 1977, it was almost to his shoulders at the back and sides. Graeme Garden had big mutton chop sideburns starting in the first series in 1970; by 1977, they were so bushy that it looked like he had two hamsters clinging to his cheeks. And Bill Oddie started out with a moustache and a shaggy bowl cut, but progressed to a full beard and hair past his shoulders by 1972.
114* ''Series/HappyDays'': Blatantly (along with the fashions) by the late 1970s, despite this being a show who was (by this time) set in the late 1950s and very early 1960s. This evolved into EightiesHair during the early 1980s years, despite the show being set in the early-to-mid 1960s.
115* ''Series/TheHardyBoysNancyDrewMysteries'' had Frank and Joe Hardy with long flowing locks that make discovering the characters' short hair covers and illustrations in the book quite a shock for a '70s kid viewer.
116* ''Series/InterviewWithTheVampire2022'': In "[[Recap/InterviewWithTheVampire2022S1E6LikeAngelsPutInHellByGod Like Angels Put in Hell by God]]", Louis de Pointe du Lac sports an afro in 1973. The male bartender at Polynesian Mary's has long, thick, wavy hair which is parted down at the center, which is typical for the era.
117* Done in a realistic fashion for ''Series/MadMen'' where the show started in the year 1960 with a lot of FiftiesHair and then ended up with the cast mostly having looser versions of their hairstyles from the Sixties; the only exceptions being conservative men like Don Draper and Henry Francis. The men went from structured hair and crew cuts to having long side burns and "the Dry Look" (conservative hairstyles with less product) and the women went from very structured bouffants and BeehiveHairdo styles along with ponytails and pageboys to looser, longer styles that used less hairspray...or in the case of Betty Draper Francis more.
118* Frequently -- and anachronistically -- in ''Series/{{Mash}}''. B.J. Hunnicutt was a notable offender, especially in later seasons.
119* For many who grew up in the '70s, Billy Batson's dark, luxurious mane on the Saturday morning series ''Series/Shazam1974'' was iconic, and being in his early-to-mid teens Billy, played by Michael Gray, is one of the younger examples on the page.
120* ''Series/StrangerThings'': WordOfGod has it that Joyce's hair in Season One was inspired by Meryl Streep's hair in ''Film/{{Silkwood}}'', which focused on the shag do'd whistleblower Karen Silkwood and her 1974 murder. As the series goes on, her hair gets longer and more well-kept.
121* In ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'', Sam's hair is like this. He didn't start out like that, but his hair (and sideburns) grew longer over the seasons, getting more noticeable from season 6 on. This was lampshaded by someone in season 8, who called his sideburns "creepy".
122* ''Series/That70sShow'', naturally. Especially Kelso's feathered 'do and Hyde's frizzy afro.
123* ''Series/ThisIsUs'': Jack Pearson has shaggy chin-length hair and a thick beard in 1979 and 1980, when his kids are born. As the '80s goes on, he does eventually shed the beard for a mustache, but still keeps the '70s shaggy hair.
124* ''Series/ToastOfLondon'': Steven Toast has long hair with fat sideburns and a PornStache, and Ray Purchase has slightly shorter curly hair and big sideburns. This is all part of the RetroUniverse 1970s actor aesthetic it goes for.
125* In ''Series/WandaVision'' episodes 3 and 4, which are set in the '70s, the hairdos are based off ''Series/TheBradyBunch'' and other popular styles of the time. Wanda in particular has some [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR9CV4Fo54VuoTDuF-JilXR6MmHCLhZEkLJnQ&usqp=CAU beautiful long hippie locks]] while Vision has [[https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRxV14v18KPbzZHN8GzVDVooYtroeHdor3PFQ&usqp=CAU longer]] Creator/MichaelYork in ''Film/LogansRun''-esque hair with noticeable sideburns. They are only one upped by [[https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/28YpE6MBzAqHvNeQSZGvLj-1200-80.jpg Monica]] with her gorgeous and sizeable Afro.
126* ''Series/AYearAtTheTop'': Greg's long hair, and the feathered hair of the girl who appears in the promo.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Music]]
130* Music/{{Supertramp}}'s Roger Hodgson and Rick Davies still have hair like this.
131* Music/BrianMay still has his hairstyle from TheSeventies, too. It is mostly grey and a bit thinner now.
132* Trevor Bolder of [[Music/DavidBowie The Spiders from Mars]] had some of the most [[http://26.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_l875wn0RSv1qckm0wo1_500.jpg epic sideburns]] known to man.
133* Music/TheBeeGees
134* Music/ElvisPresley had thick sideburns during the 1970s, topped with [[FiftiesHair a slick pompadour]].
135* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yI3JBVrFdK4 George Jones]] in 1974.
136* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvUQcnfwUUM Mungo Jerry]]. Particularly their lead singer Ray Dorset, with his massive and scruffy afro-sideburns combo.
137* All five members of Music/TheMoodyBlues had '70s hair ''par excellence'' by 1972 (as seen in the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_J-hmyAS6c video for "I'm Just a Singer (In a Rock and Roll Band)"]]). Justin Hayward and John Lodge had grown their hair to shoulder length, Ray Thomas' moustache had become a full beard and his hair was almost to his shoulders, Mike Pinder had likewise gone from a moustache to a full beard and hair ''past'' his shoulders, and Graeme Edge had the longest hair and bushiest beard of all five.
138* [[https://f4.bcbits.com/img/0004288197_10.jpg Everyone]] in Music/SoftMachine by 1974.
139* Music/PeterGabriel sported this look during his early solo career, though he also alternated it with close-cropped hair, even shaving his head completely, before it was fashionable.
140* Music/StevieNicks exemplified the sexy feathered style for women in the late '70s, along with Farrah Fawcett.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Pinball]]
144* The women of ''Pinball/{{Centigrade 37}}'' have hair styles liberally borrowed from the likes of Barbara Bain and Creator/FarrahFawcett.
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:News]]
148* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWDt5IE8RPI Geraldo Rivera]]
149* [[http://talkinstuff.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/jimvance3.jpg Jim Vance]]
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Sports]]
153* It was rumored that pro baseball players were actually encouraged and given bonuses to wear their hair long, to attract - or at least not alienate - the younger crowd. To this day, you'll often see players still sporting this look.
154** The Oakland Athletics were this. Although they could possibly be seen as a subversion since many of the players took their inspiration from the styles that ballplayers wore in the 19th century.
155* You'll have some difficulty finding a UsefulNotes/FormulaOne driver of the early 1970s who did ''not'' have his hair like this. One biography relayed how the two in the page image, Ronnie Peterson, and Francois Cevert got into an ''argument'' over who could grow the most uncontrollable hair and densest sideburns.
156[[/folder]]
157
158[[folder:Video Games]]
159* ''VideoGame/MetalGear'':
160** Much as Big Boss's hair in ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater'' is a bit [[EightiesHair 80s]], EVA has a sort of feathered late-70s shag rather than anything more suitable for 1964.
161** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPortableOps'', the young Roy Campbell is rocking a terrific layered 70s mop.
162* In ''VideoGame/DiscoElysium'''s RetroUniverse setting, everyone has 70s-appropriate hairstyles. Almost all the male characters have at least medium-length hair, with a few appropriate exceptions for {{Sociopathic Soldier}}s, shaved-headed racists, old men, little kids, and one character who is a ComicBookFantasyCasting of [[Music/{{Scooter}} H.P. Baxxter]]. Kim, who keeps his hair in a classic WWII-style short-back-and-sides cut as part of his overall vintage fighter pilot aesthetic, seemingly subverts this trend, but 1940s/50s revival styles were a [[PopularityPolynomial notable fashion subculture]] in the decade. Nevertheless, it reinforces him as the [[NobleMaleRoguishMale neat and well-groomed foil]] to your player character, who has a greasy shoulder-length mop and [[GoodHairEvilHair gigantic muttonchops]].
163* ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOpsColdWar'' has Arash Kavidar, one of the main antagonists, has typical 70s hair complete with a PornStache. Given that it was set in 1981, but the actual 80s hairstyles did not caught on yet. Russell Adler and Arash, both more heroic characters, also had typical 70s haircuts.
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166[[folder:Webcomics]]
167* The "Bulldog & Cooch" spoof of [[BuddyCopShow 1970s cop shows]] in ''Webcomic/{{PvP}}''. ([[http://www.pvponline.com/2007/05/10/may-10-2007 Here,]] [[http://www.pvponline.com/2007/03/19/mar-19-2007 here,]] [[http://www.pvponline.com/2007/11/12/nov-12-2007 here]] and [[http://www.pvponline.com/2010/03/08/hard-target here.]])
168** And, of course, [[Series/StarskyAndHutch the spoofee]].
169* ''Webcomic/WhenHeavenSpitsYouOut'': As the story starts in 1971...
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172[[folder:Western Animation]]
173* The characters from ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' started off this way due to initially being released around the 1970's. They carry it on throughout various incarnations, even the ones that put the characters in modern day, such as ''WesternAnimation/WhatsNewScoobyDoo'' and ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooMysteryIncorporated''.
174* Mac's haircut from ''WesternAnimation/FostersHomeForImaginaryFriends'', while still popular with boys to varying degrees, resembles this. It's probably based on Creator/CraigMcCracken's real-life hairstyle.
175* Being a PeriodPiece that takes place in ''UsefulNotes/TheSeventies'', ''WesternAnimation/FIsForFamily'' has a lot of characters who sport these. This includes, but isn't limited to Sue, Bill, Kevin, Vic Reynolds, Cutie Pie, Brandy Dunbarton, Phillip Bonfiglio, Greg Throater, Reid Harrison, [[ThoseTwoGuys Carl & Red, Lex & Bolo,]] Father Pat, and Nuber's gang.
176* ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'': During his high school days in the 1970s, [[HairTodayGoneTomorrow Bill Dauterive had long hair]], which, in "Tankin' It To The Streets", he likened to [[Music/TheWho Roger Daltrey]]'s, which was shorn off when he enlisted in the Army.
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179[[folder:Real Life]]
180* Democratic presidential candidate George [=McGovern=] notoriously sprouted some impressive 'burns for the 1972 election, possibly to appeal to the "countercultural" crowd that was just starting to become a crucial Democratic voting bloc at the time (a ploy that apparently failed miserably, as [=McGovern=] lost one of the most lopsided presidential elections in U.S. history). For the rest of the decade, it seemed, most other politicians followed suit, although thankfully not to such an extreme degree (Nelson Rockefeller's sideburns, for example, so subtle that they were easy to miss).
181* Perhaps the most dramatic subversion of them all was UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan. He ''never'' changed the 1930s hairstyle he first cultivated upon becoming a Hollywood actor, even when speaking at the 1976 Republican National Convention (when this trope was arguably at its peak). Upon meeting him, journalist Joe Klein even remarked that he looked like "[[FiftiesHair a 1950s Midwestern businessman.]]"
182* UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter, Reagan's predecessor, is a straight example in contrast, albeit subdued.
183* During the early part of the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic, many men unwilling to attempt home haircuts while barber shops were temporarily shuttered often just wore their hair like this.
184* In the wake of the October 7 Hamas attacks and mobilization of [[UsefulNotes/IsraelisWithInfraredMissiles Israel Defense Forces]] reserves, and noting the timing of the attacks (exactly 50 years after the Yom Kippur War), it became something of a fad among reservists (who have much looser regulations on shaving and haircuts) to grow out a '70s style 'stache, which then spread to the rest of Israeli men.
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