A Chat with Jeremy Lin About His Grand Hair Experiment

After all, here was one of the most visible Asian-Americans we’ve ever seen running through the gamut of ’90s and 2000s Asian-male hair, and doing so fearlessly under the bright lights of stadiums across North America. Announcers have no idea what to make of him. Lin has been largely coy about his intentions. And at least one opposing defender got poked in the eyeball with a well-placed mohawk spike.

Hair is what you fuck with when you’re trying to find yourself. It is also not something you play around with unless you’re feeling good and having fun; lest we forget, Jeremy Lin having fun is what made Linsanity possible in the first place. So I called him up and asked him about his hair.


I don’t know how much your PR folks told you about my pitch to them, but I think this season you’ve worn every hairstyle I had growing up in SoCal—the shaved sides, the dorky bowl cut, the spikes done up with the tub of L.A. Looks bubble gel…
Nice.

Doesn’t that stuff sting when it gets in your eyes when you’re playing? What’s your secret?
Yeah, you just shove the gel, so mine stays up. Once I get it up, it doesn’t bother me at all. It never comes down.

What kind of gel are you using?
I use Spiker from the brand J-O-I-C-O. I don’t know how to pronounce it.

Are they your unofficial sponsor for the season?
Nah, I just use that gel. I don’t have a sponsorship or anything with them. Actually, I’m not even—I think they know I use their gel.

Do you just take a tub with you on the road wherever you go at this point?
They’re in small bottles, so I might take one. One bottle will last me probably, like…seven to ten games.

Last week you had a big game against the Cavs when you wore the side-swept look. When you have a really good game like that, do you feel more inclined to wear your hair like that more? Does superstition factor in at all?
Actually, no, probably the opposite. Regardless of how I play, I just like changing it up all the time. It’s funny because earlier in the year, people would be like, “Oh, you gotta do this style if you played well,” or “you gotta do that style if you played well.” But I’m actually even more inclined to [re-wear] a style that let’s say I didn’t play well on so I can, uh, rectify the situation. [laughs] But no real superstition. I just do whatever.

My favorite one that you had was the mini man bun that you pulled back a little bit. Is there anything you won’t do? Would you rock cornrows? Would you dye your hair blond and go full Super Saiyan?
I’m about to do a little bit of everything. I’m just getting started and have a lot of other things I wanna do, but it’s not long enough right now.

How long are you trying to grow it?
I haven’t decided yet, but it’ll probably be pretty long at some point.

The last few seasons with the Rockets and Lakers have been a little more tumultuous for your career, but you seem to have found this stable role in Charlotte where you’re right at home. I can’t help but notice that now your hair’s all crazy…
[laughs]

…can you indulge me and pretend there’s a deeper meaning here?
I think this just may be a sign of where I’m at. Like, personally, just being able to enjoy everything a little more. I think when I was younger, I probably wouldn’t have been so free or loose with my hair, or whatever it might be. I think at this point I’m just really in a place where I feel like I’m… I’m… [pauses] I’m able to enjoy and appreciate God’s blessing in putting me here in the NBA, versus in years past [when I wasn’t] really able to enjoy that ’cause I was so fixated on what I needed to do or accomplish. So I think the whole hair thing is just an example of that.

Have your parents said anything about it to you?
I’ve definitely had several stern conversations with my parents. Once they realized that it wasn’t having any effect on me, they kind of gave up.

So you didn’t have any of these haircuts growing up?
I had a mushroom cut when I was a little kid growing up. And I pretty much had the standard Asian cut for all of high school and a faux hawk for, like, five years.

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