You Are What You Shave With

Vikram Bath

Vikram Bath is the pseudonym of a former business school professor living in the United States with his wife, daughter, and dog. (Dog pictured.) His current interests include amateur philosophy of science, business, and economics. Tweet at him at @vikrambath1.

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21 Responses

  1. Burt Likko says:

    Do you still use the single-blade safety razor, Vikram? I’m still on my folding “straight razor” with the same double-sided single-blade razor inserted as a removable blade.

    Although if I’m in a hurry I keep a pack of those commodified plastic single-blade disposable razors (‘regular razors’ to most folks) on hand to scrape my face in the shower. The straight razor cuts closer and cleaner, but these are faster.Report

    • Reformed Republican in reply to Burt Likko says:

      I switched to a single-blade safety razor a few years back, and it was a great decision. So cheap. I think I got 100 blades for about $20. It shaves as close as anything.

      Now I have grown out my beard, so it’s a little less useful, except for trimming the neck line.Report

      • Oscar Gordon in reply to Reformed Republican says:

        Same, way cheaper, does just as good a job as a name brand, and no politics in my shaving.

        Add in some unscented shave soap and a badger bristle brush, and it’s easy as can be.

        I keep a decent electric for when I travel.Report

  2. Saul Degraw says:

    I use a Gillette Fusion razor and buy the blades in bulk at CostCo. One package lasts a while. I don’t trust myself with a straight razor but I do like getting old-timey shaves every now and then. Those are really nice. For shaving cream, I do get fancy ones. I like shaving creams with sandalwood in them.Report

  3. Greg In Ak says:

    You know electric razors exist and are a miracle of modern tech. Haven’t used a sharpened piece of metal on my delicate face and cranium in decades. It’s a Braun fwiw.

    I’m sure some RW health and beauty aid company will make an electric razor that runs on diesel and has an exhaust.Report

    • Brandon Berg in reply to Greg In Ak says:

      I used to use an electric razor, and I got these weird Voltron whiskers where several whiskers would fuse together into a single super-whisker as thick as a wire.

      I’ve never been sure whether that was the cause, but they haven’t come back since I switched to a straight razor.Report

    • Murali in reply to Greg In Ak says:

      I use Philips. I started off shaving with Braun (and my father still uses Braun), but found that I had to replace the foil quite often. This tended to become a problem as it became harder and harder to find foils and blades for old model.Report

    • I’ve been using a Norelco since college. In face, I replaced my roughly ten year old one just last week.Report

    • Pinky in reply to Greg In Ak says:

      I use an electric. No idea what brand. When it dies, I’d buy a new one from Jeremy’s if they make them and sell them at a reasonable price and I still remember this story, but frankly I probably won’t.Report

    • JS in reply to Greg In Ak says:

      I use a Braun. I replace the foils every two years or so and the razor maybe every 10 to 15 years.

      It’s a solid shave. Good mix of fast, comfortable, and close. Razors will get you a bit smoother, but not much.

      Of course, I’m about to laser most of it off. A decision I wish I’d made a decade ago when I had less white hair. (laser doesn’t do squat to that). Then again, the white hairs aren’t as bristly and I can deal with those in a different manner, later.Report

  4. Jaybird says:

    The last time I shaved my face was 2007.

    My head? Well, God gets the top. He leaves the sides for me to shave, however.

    The so-called “Good News” disposable left my head feeling peeled and a half dozen toilet paper spots covering the nicks. And, goodness gracious, they needed to be cleaned after every swipe. Make two swipes, you’ve gotta have a small needle nearby to clean out the gunk. The stream from the faucet was not sufficient.

    The Gillette Mach 3 was pretty good. It cleaned well under the faucet. However, about once a year, I cut myself shaving. And it wasn’t a toilet paper cut either. It was a bandaid cut and it left a scab for about a week. But it was only once a year. A small price to pay.

    The Fusion was a revelation. It cleaned easily. So easily, you could shave in the *SHOWER*. AND IT DIDN’T CUT ME OPEN. Like, in the 15 or so years that I’ve been using the Fusion, I have cut myself maybe once. It is the best dang razor I’ve ever had. Like, even if I say “Dang, that’s pretty expensive!” when I buy some new blades, I then have to say “Well, it’s your head, man. Nothing wrong with saving a few bucks but save them elsewhere.”

    So when Gillette came out with the ad campaign back in 2019 saying that their razors stood for shaving and NOT toxic masculinity, I was irritated but it never occurred to me to change blades.

    I’m not going to go back to cutting my head.

    The main that I’m going to wonder about Jeremy’s Razors is whether they’re going to actually ship product.

    Remember David Hogg’s pillow company that he was going to use to take down Mike Lindell (of My Pillow fame)? “Good Pillow”?

    Well, I just checked, and they haven’t shipped product yet. Their announcement was met with much fanfare and they talked about having unionized out-of-work theater people working on making the pillows and they were going to be cheaper than Lindell’s and *BETTER* and, in February 2021, David Hogg announced that they were hoping to release their product in six months (they wanted sooner, but they had strict sustainability guidelines).

    Anyway, that’s what I was thinking about when I saw that The Daily Wire, an ostensible news website, was getting into making razors. “WE’RE GOING TO UPEND RAZOR MAKING!”

    Dude. You’re a website. Making things is hard.Report

    • Marchmaine in reply to Jaybird says:

      The Jeremy commercial reminded me of Colbert… it was a satire of a satire.

      The product itself looks kinda chintzy to be honest; I think the Harry’s story was they bought an actual razor factory and changed the business model – which is interesting because Razor Blades *is* the original subscription model, it’s the go-to reference in every tech company. What I think they pioneered was going direct to consumer; for Gillette and others, their *real* customer is Walmart and the distribution chains. So bypassing Walmart is the quality/cost nexus that makes the model work. At least originally.

      So back to Jeremy… I’m guessing they are just going to buy wholesale parts and slap them together which will make their product probably less profitable and likely lower quality. But, might still make Jeremy boat loads of money.

      I don’t think I care who ‘wins’ in a fight between Daily Wire and Harry’s … but if I can buy Aviation Gin because Ryan Reynolds made fun of Peloton in an ad, I can potentially buy a razor for making fun of Harry’s in an ad.

      I definitely abandoned Penzey’s (even before he went nutzo over Trump) because of his rants… now I buy from his sister (!) – who probably has the same or similar views (?) but keeps me blissfully ignorant of them. I think of it as a de-escalation strategy.Report

  5. Chip Daniels says:

    Team X:”*Virtue signaling*
    Team Y:”Vice signaling*

    This will be used by future historians not yet born, to explain the politics of the early 21st century.Report

  6. Kazzy says:

    I use a buzzer/trimmer. The girlfriend prefers a little stubble and I prefer a lighter touch. Works for me.

    I checked and Jeremy’s starter kit is $59 which includes a carry case, the handle, 8 blades, shave balm, and shave gel. Best I can tell from the pre-order pricing, 8 blades costs $18… so… $2.25 a blade. Harry’s range from $2.25-$1.88 per depending on how large an order. So… comparable but not cheaper. Not now at least. Can’t quite make heads or tails of shipping costs.

    Shipment won’t start until June… but I would have to pay now and would be agreeing to a renewable subscription.

    Anyone wanna bet shipments never go out and refund requests become a cluster?Report

    • Pinky in reply to Kazzy says:

      I’d take that bet. Boreing seems like a good businessman.Report

      • Kazzy in reply to Pinky says:

        I’d like to be wrong just because I never like a grift. I’m generally skeptical of any “Pay now, get later at an indeterminate time.”

        If Boreing is a good businessman, power to him on this venture. It seems silly but so much of marketing seems silly. To his credit, he’s saying the quiet parts loud. Rather than try to indirectly appeal to a demographic, he’s straight up beckoning to them.Report

  7. Slade the Leveller says:

    I’ve been a Dollar Shave Club buyer for years. I was kinda bummed when they sold out to Unilever, but I know I sure wouldn’t turn down a billion dollars. Really what I miss is the cool newsletter that would come with the blades. The blades aren’t the best but, as the British say, they do what it says on the tin.

    I wonder what percentage of the Daily Wire’s ad revenue came from Harry’s that their making such a stink about it. They don’t seem to have any ads on their site, and I’m sure as sh*t not going to listen to one of their podcasts to find out.Report

  8. Zane says:

    I have a beard and moustache, but I still shave my neck and square off the edges. I switched from Gillette to Harry’s for a couple of months a few years ago. I thought it’d be a good way to save a few bucks. Once I could no longer take the pain and bleeding, back to Gillette I went. I even felt a bit guilty about switching back–Harry’s said they used good German engineering, so maybe I had been doing something wrong?

    I just couldn’t take the regular damage to my face anymore.Report

  9. Michael Cain says:

    I have a heavy beard, thick hairs and lots of ’em, and have shaved at least five days a week since I turned 16. I got a note from the photo finisher along with my high school senior portraits saying she was sorry, but had been unable to do anything about the blue shadow. I worked my way through every sort of blade there was, none entirely satisfactory.

    I had to switch to an electric in my 30s because my skin just wouldn’t take shaving five days in a row. Some of that may also have been moving to Denver, where the air is much drier. Wound up with a high-end Philips after trying several.

    By my late 50s I had to go back to a blade. White whiskers are a different thing and the electric missed too many of them. For me, a Gillette Mach 3 seems to be the best combination of closeness and longevity. More than three blades clogs too easily with my whiskers. Gillette pays a premium for their steel for corrosion resistance — blades don’t get dull because the edge is worn, they get dull because the edge is corroded.

    These days I’m wearing a beard and just trimming around the top of my cheeks and neck . Length and two-tone shading along the lines of Sean Connery in Hunt for Red October.Report

  10. I enjoyed this! Thanks for writing, I always love your pieces!Report

  11. Mason Pelt says:

    Meta commentary.

    Many if not most of the biggest sponsors for independent media are so easy to duplicate that I’m shocked every YouTuber doesn’t have a shave club, supplement line, and underware subscription.Report