Music Edmund Sylvers was the first Black American artist to have the Jheri curl on an album cover, which appears on his 1980
Casablanca release
Have You Heard. performing, 1988 The Jheri curl was worn by
Michael Jackson on the cover of his hit album
Thriller, which was released in 1982. Jackson also grew out his Jheri curl in 1986, which is shown on the cover of his 1987 album
Bad. Other notable wearers of the style in the 1980s and early 1990s include rappers
MC Eiht,
DJ Quik,
Eazy-E,
Ice Cube,
Hi-C,
Arabian Prince and
B.G. Knocc Out. Singer and songwriter
India Arie referenced Jheri curls in her song "
I Am Not My Hair", released in 2005.
R&B singer
Jorja Smith mentioned Jheri curls in her feature on the song "Peng Black Girls", by
Enny, released in 2020.
Film Keenen Ivory Wayans played a character entitled "Jeri Curl" in the 1987
Robert Townsend film
Hollywood Shuffle. The 1988 comedy
Coming to America features
Eriq La Salle as Darryl Jenks, heir to the dynasty of a fictional product named "SoulGlo", which gave the wearer a style reminiscent of a Jheri curl while leaving the infamous greasy residue on
soft furnishings. In
Samuel L. Jackson's opening monologue in the 1989 film
Do the Right Thing, his character (DJ) explains that there is a "Jheri Curl alert" in effect for the day: "If you have a Jheri Curl, stay in the house or you'll end up with a permanent plastic helmet on your head forever." One of Wayans' recurring characters on
In Living Color, Frenchy, also sported a Jheri curl. When attending an
Alcoholics Anonymous meeting and hearing others testify to how much they used to drink, Frenchy claimed he was previously "up to three and a half bottles of TCB Lite a day; I switched over to Afro Sheen, and I'm never dry!"
In Living Color also featured a clip called Great Moments in Black History with a spoof of how the Jheri curl was invented. It showed an auto repair shop in July 1979 where a black mechanic with afro named Jerome Johnson was working under a car on a lift. Oil leaked out of the car onto his hair which created Jheri curls, making him famous for inventing it by accident. It then showed a lineup of black men with afros waiting to go under the car to have oil poured on their hair so they could get Jheri curls too. The character Jules Winnfield (played by Samuel L. Jackson) wears a Jheri curl in the 1994 drama
Pulp Fiction. Film critic
Owen Gleiberman took it as a "tacit comic statement about the ghettoization of [Black people] in movies".
Sport Los Angeles Lakers basketball player
Billy Ray Bates was reported to be unpopular with other players "because he had a really moist Jheri curl, and the ball would get all slippery." ==See also==