How did blonde jokes get started?!


Question: How did blonde jokes get started!?
Answers:
They got started by one man named Mr!. Blondeety and one day when he was young (he was 11 years old in 1432) someone bullied him!. This person made jokes about his last name!. Then when all the other kids heard the jokes, they thought it was about hair color!. Actully the whole "blonde joke" thing was all a misunderstanding!. That is how blonde jokes started!!!Www@Enter-QA@Com

They got started by one man named Mr!. Blondeety and one day when he was young (he was 11 years old in 1432) someone bullied him!. This person made jokes about his last name!. Then when all the other kids heard the jokes, they thought it was about hair color!. Actully the whole "blonde joke" thing was all a misunderstanding!. That is how blonde jokes started!!Www@Enter-QA@Com

Brainz is a cOPYCAT!!!Www@Enter-QA@Com

id say the first 2 above me got the right answer actually the same answer
copycats!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
lolWww@Enter-QA@Com

Dont listen to the first two the first one is dumb and the second one is a copycat!. Here is the origin of why people think Blondes are dumb according to wikipedia

Origins of The idea that Blondes are dumb
Like many popular-culture stereotypes, the origins of this concept are murky!. The 1925 Anita Loos novel Gentlemen Prefer Blondes: The Illuminating Diary of a Professional Lady (later used as source for a film by the same name made by Howard Hawks and starring Marilyn Monroe) featured the character Lorelei Lee, a beautiful but empty-headed singer!. While some look to this as the source for the concept, in fact, it might be far older!.

Some have suggested that, because Caucasian babies are often born with at least a touch of blonde hair, an association has arisen tying those having fair hair with childhood and youth (and the accompanying proclivities toward na?vité and/or innocence)!. also, as blonde hair is often associated with physical attractiveness and youth, some argue that those around blondes may have a tendency to admire or fawn over them, encouraging some to behave in a child-like manner (consciously or not) in order to gain attention and affection!. Another theory is that girls who have bleached their hair blond (but not natural blondes) are considered particularly silly, ditzy, and unintelligent!.

On the other hand, some have postulated that the association is older still, having its roots in ancient times!. The ancient Greeks and Romans were fascinated by the fair hair of the Celts and the Nordic peoples and wished to emulate their red and flaxen tresses!.[citation needed] People in the Mediterranean area often bleached their hair or bought wigs made from the hair of enslaved Germanic and Celtic peoples, and most notably the highest-ranking courtesans!.[citation needed] Due to this association of red and fair hair with harlots, light hair earned a degree of contempt from the high-ranking ladies of society!.[citation needed] In Medieval Europe, the upper classes tended to be darker haired than the peasantry, likely due to the period tendency to marry within one's own class and the fact that lower class people were far more exposed to sunlight!.[citation needed] Blonde hair was, at this time, often associated with commoners, who were ostensibly deemed less intelligent!. Puritans, associating makeup and dyeing of hair with prostitution, forbade the dyeing or bleaching of hair, creating an imprint on dyeing hair that lasted until the 1920s!. The "dumb" side could have been a way for wives of adulterous men to reassure themselves about the infidelity of their husbands; to think that their husband's blonde mistress was sleazy, worthless, ditzy, and not very intelligent[1]!. Or, the idea might stem from the idea amongst Romans and Greeks that Northern Europeans were barbarians and thus less advanced than Southern Europeans and europeans of South plagious the civilizations of Old Northern Middle East and North India(old aryans-bramahns)!.

An interesting notion is that the Scandinavian blonde is often connected to romantic nationalism, and the stereotype of the blond farm girl or dairy maid!. In the actual romantic movement, this type crystallized in literature, mainly Synn?ve Solbakken by Bj?rnstjerne Bj?rnson and the character of Solveig from Henrik Ibsen`s Peer Gynt!. Although both characters are positive and even intelligent, tradition often gives them the "dumb blonde" trademark, more or less requited!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

He started in 1432!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

from a blonde i suppose!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.Www@Enter-QA@Com



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