Today’s celebrities are globally recognized icons, not to mention trendsetters, but where do the most glamorous guys and gals get their unique style from. In many cases, those present in the public eye, in turn, fix their gaze on the past for inspiration Flock of Seagulls, The British synthpop sensations from the 1980′s , led by frontman Mike Score, were as well known for the MTV-famed “I Ran” music video as they were for the animal perched atop Score’s head. With the front bangs combed tightly down to swoop across the forehead and over the eye, accented by ascending wings curled up from the ears inward towards the top of the head, to a squinting onlooker the hair itself could quite possibly pass for a seagull. Though no modern day celebrity has been so imaginative with their locks, teenster-idol Justin Bieber bears the very same ironed-to-forehead front-do. Were you to comb down the seagull wings down pat over the ears, the 80′s band might be perplexed by a “One Less Lonely Girl” request on their reunion tour. Bee Hive Originally coming into popularity in the 60′s and lasting through the 70′s, bee hive hair, also known as the B-52, was patroned by several famous females in history, including the lady members of the band The B-52′s who quite literally adopted the look as part of their identity. Since its heyday, the bee hive has popped up with some regularity, though mostly in movies and TV set in earlier years. Singer Amy Winehouse sports perhaps the last remaining authentic hive, though according to toxicology estimates, may in fact have no idea what decade it is. Rarely, has the bee hive or derivative hairstyles made their way back towards mainstream popularity, until recently. From 2007 to 2009, miniature “alien poofs” sprouted up atop the heads of women in their late teens to early 20s, not high rising enough to qualify as a full-on bee hive, rather rising at the back of the head like a caricatured extraterrestrial. With advent of Jersey Shore, however, Snooki quickly killed the look, as many young girls reverted to human form to avoid association or accusations of emulation. Read more on this Article!