Despite missing nine first-choice players because of IPL, New Zealand played brilliantly against Pakistan to share the honours in the T20 series
George Clooney is just like us, maybe. The star said he does his own haircuts with a device famously touted in infomercials.
In an interview on CBS Sunday Morning, the Oscar-winning actor and filmmaker said he's been cutting his own hair for more than two decades.
“My hair is really like straw,” Clooney said of his thick, salt-and-pepper thatch. “So it's easy to cut, can't really make too many mistakes. So years ago, I bought a thing called a Flowbee."
“You did not,” said skeptical interviewer Tracy Smith.
“The thing with the vacuum cleaner and clippers, yeah. I still have it," Clooney replied. “My haircuts take, literally, two minutes. ”
Flowbee sales surged when the coronavirus pandemic limited access to salon and barber shops in some areas, Fortune magazine reported in late March. But as Clooney told CBS News correspondent Smith, he's been cutting his hair “for 25 years” and relies on the Flowbee.
The product's Texas-based maker didn’t immediately respond Sunday to a request for comment.
The device, first marketed in the late 1980s, has become entrenched in popular culture: It was spoofed in the movie Wayne's World and served as a punchline in TV's Glee and The Nanny.
Stan Rosenfield, Clooney's longtime publicist, said Sunday he didn't know if Clooney tends his own hair. Although the actor is famed for pranking his co-stars, Rosenfield said it seemed unlikely this was one of his practical jokes.
Despite missing nine first-choice players because of IPL, New Zealand played brilliantly against Pakistan to share the honours in the T20 series
RPM reported net profit of Dh49.39 million during 2023
Emerging economies’ bloc ditches greenback in $260b worth trade
National security spokesperson to continue pressing for a temporary ceasefire that Washington wants to last for at least six weeks
It was RCB's third win — and second in a row — in 10 matches so far this season, keeping their slim hopes of reaching the playoffs alive
Offshoring business operations to captive centres has proven to be a cost-effective and efficient strategy
Tourism minister Ahmed Al Khateeb says all the kingdom's projects are far away from the conflict
A wave of exceptionally hot weather has blasted the region over the past week, sending the mercury as high as 45 degrees Celsius