Men’s Division USA Mullet championship final three

It’s time for the mane event!

America bands together once again, as a new winner will be crowned as the mullet champion Saturday morning on the Today Show.

Earlier this month, votes were cast to select the top three out of 25 participants in the Men’s Open Division for the USA Mullet Champ competition.

With over 20,000 votes cast, three of the hardest hairdos will find out if their luscious locks will be accompanied by a crown and some serious bragging rights.

Dalton Cleghorn, who describes his wicked mullet as all business in the front and “straight waterfall, ramen noodle in the back,” is hoping to take home first place.

Hailing from Toledo, Ohio, Cleghorn shows off in his submission video as to why he warrants to be the mullet champ, as he self-proclaims himself the 2022 winner before shotgunning a beer one-handed.

Brandon Hernandez, “a real American,” representing the Lone Star state, showed off some of his showmanship before showing off his supreme mullet.

Coming out of Buda, Texas, like a persona out of the WWE, Hernandez is all about his patriotism and slick hair.

Draping the Texas state flag over his back while shaking out his prime do, Hernandez radiates the confidence Americans expect from their mullet champion.

Scott Salvadore says, “You gotta have rocks if you wanna grow the locks,” and he’s ready to show off his locks to America, rocks in hand.

From Stillwater, New York, Salvadore describes his mullets as the lord’s drapes.

Like a man of divine faith, he makes it clear that he was chosen to rock his monumental mullet.

The mullet champ will earn the “Mullet Mega Money Pot,” worth $2,500, and, of course, the bragging rights of the slickest men’s mullet in the United States.

Second and third place will receive a Mullet Champs gift set.

This past summer, USA Mullet Championship crowned eight-year-old Emmit Baily from Wisconsin took home first place in the kid’s division championship.

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House barber Joe Quattrone retires after more than half a century

A celebrated barber who cut hair for members of Congress for more than half a century is officially laying down his scissors.

Joe Quattrone, 88, trimmed and shaved on the ground floor of the House Rayburn Building for 51 years for myriad elected officials, including former presidents Gerald R. Ford and George H.W. Bush during their time in Congress. Ford even continued to visit after he became vice president, and his family invited “Joe Q” to his funeral.

House Barber Joe Quattrone had many famous clients, including Sen. Ted Kennedy.
Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Quattrone, originally from Calabria, Italy, is planning to pack it in to spend more time with his family in North Carolina. Quattrone has lately been in ill health and Rita, his wife of 65 years, died last year.

“What can I say? I’m going to miss it,” he told Roll Call wistfully. “But it’s time for me to go after 51-and-a-half years.”

When Quattrone began barbering in 1971, a cut cost 75 cents and the Capitol was reeling after the far left terrorist organization Weather Underground exploded a bomb in the Senate bathroom.

House members from both parties agreed that visiting Quattrone’s shop means entering one of the last bipartisan spaces on Capitol Hill.

“It’s a warm, embracing place where you put the politics aside and you just enjoy some good company with a friend who’s been around for a long time,” GOP Minority Whip Steve Scalise told the paper of Quattrone’s barber’s chair. “You can always run down there and count on Joe to be there with a friendly smile,”

House Barber Joe Quattrone cuts lobbyist Jeff Myers’ hair on January 31, 2012.
Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images
House Barber Joe Quattrone has a wall full of Washington insiders, including former President Bill Clinton.
Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images

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