Unlike the other guys, Phil never neglected leg day. |
Fred talks about writing, food, dogs, and whatever else deserves the treatment.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Sunday, February 27, 2022
No brainer!
The undisputed champ of holiday creation is Adrienne Sioux Koopersmith, a Chicago woman who bills herself as "America's Premier Eventologist."Koopersmith started creating holidays -- or "holidates," as she likes to call them -- about 30 years ago, almost as a form of therapy after she got mugged in the lobby of her apartment building by a robber who smashed her in the face with brass knuckles, she said."This was an event in and of itself that would change the entire course of my life," she told CNN.In order to deal with the trauma of the attack, she started writing and creating cartoons, which she merged with her love of holidays.She thumbed through a book that listed holidays and thought a lot of them were dull and stupid."Why not do events that are fun and whimsical?" asked Koopersmith, determined to complement traditional holidays with days a little more fanciful.
- I want a glass of water
- Glass or plastic cup?
- Glass: breakable, dangerous
- Cup: Possible phthalates; poisoning?
- Large container or small or medium?
- Regular or "company reserved"?
- Water: Tap or bottle?
- Tap: Contaminates in water supply
- Bottle: Ecological garbage
- Cold or warm?
- Cold: Refreshing but requires electricity in summer
- Warm: Not as refreshing
- Add-ins? Kool-Aid? Tea? Tang? Lemon? Ice? Twist? Carbonation? Booze?
- Coaster available?
Saturday, February 26, 2022
Seasonal song.
Friday, February 25, 2022
The training is incredible.
"He's going into the back room and -- Oh, crap! Dude! Sheila's in there and now she's got a gun on him! It's a double-cross!" |
Thursday, February 24, 2022
Have some dirt!
Rise in Dirt-Eating Means Booming Business For Soil-Selling Stands in Zimbabwe
For as little as a few cents per packet, Ndlovu saves the women the trouble of collecting the soil themselves. And his stand boasts an enviable assortment. Some options are brown, some are reddish. There is rough and smooth, sour-tasting or rich. The white, creamy soil comes from anthills in Harare, the capital city and the namesake for that variety. Cheaper options are the colored soils that include the Bellevue flavor, which is named after one of the Bulawayo neighborhoods where it’s found. Just 10 cents buys a packet.
Dig in! |
Dirt consumption is associated with a condition known as pica, doctors say, which causes people, to crave nonfood items. Often, the condition is associated with a nutritional deficiency.
Some people who are anemic also eat dirt, as do some pregnant women worldwide. In fact, many pregnant women often crave dirt, possibly because of the potential protection dirt can provide against some toxins and parasites, according to research.
Many pregnant women crave dirt or clay. Experts haven’t yet discovered a clear reason why this happens.One theory links pica cravings to iron deficiencies. Another theory suggests these cravings develop as an adaptive response to the way the immune system changes during pregnancy.Changes in immune system function could slightly increase your risk of being affected by toxins and foodborne illness, such as listeria. But multiple animal studies have suggested clay consumption offers protection against a range of toxins.Whatever the cause for dirt cravings during pregnancy, eating dirt can create health risks not only for you, but also the developing fetus.Even if the dirt you eat is free of toxins and has been baked or prepared safely, it can still bind in your stomach to the nutrients you get from other sources, preventing your body from absorbing them properly. This can put your health at risk.
“By the end of the week, I can make as much as $200, which is more than someone seated jobless at home would make,” Ndlovu says. “It’s definitely better than stealing.”
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Shaggy dogs story.
Do I own the hairiest dogs in town?
Yes.
Here's one of those lint-removing roller brushes, shown before and after running it over my sweatshirt.
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Inappropriate children's books.
Now, this here, Dad Is Drunk Again, is a major fail, and I think it's obvious why. Not only is Dad Berenstain Bear loaded for a bear, but in his barely (ha!) conscious state he is letting the cubs run amok. Is it okay to give the wee ones such a brutal lesson in substance abuse? Look at that drunken slob! For shame!
Monday, February 21, 2022
Lies, damned lies, and TV shows.
Arthur B. Reeve, who began in an earlier era – as, indeed, did most of the lady waltzers – entered the 20s with his once immense popularity fading away. Nevertheless his tales of Craig Kennedy had been read by hundreds of thousands, praised by Theodore Roosevelt, and turned into early film serials which held us petrified.Craig Kennedy was Professor Kennedy of, presumably, Columbia University. Like Dr. Thorndyke, he was the scientific detective. His laboratory flashed with stranger sparks, and bubbled with more weird beakers and test tubes, than the laboratory of the late Dr. Frankenstein. For each occasion he had some new gadget, guaranteed sensational, to clap on somebody’s wrist or wire underneath the chair. Square-jawed Kennedy in his high collar, whom we remember so well from the illustrations in the Harper editions, has marched into limbo with all his gadgets loaded on him. Much of his scientific knowledge, I believe, has been discredited. Nobody reads about him now. And yet…He was first in the field of fiction with the lie detector, with murder by electrolysis, with radium poisoning, with death from liquid air. He taught writers the use of the Maxim silencer, and neither tears nor prayers nor curses can induce them to give it up. As a final achievement among many, in a story called “The Dream Detective” and later in a novel called The Soul Scar, it was he who introduced the profession to psychoanalysis.
"Ballistics proved that's the gun that killed him, Your Honor!" |
2. The Colt’s .45 automatic pistol has no chambers. The cartridges are put in a magazine.
3. A silencer may be attached to a revolver, but the effect will be altogether negligible. I have never seen a silencer used on an automatic pistol, but am told it would still make quite a bit of noise. “Silencer” is a rather optimistic name for this device which has generally fallen into disuse.
4. When a bullet from a Colt’s .45, or any firearm of approximately the same size and power, hits you, even if not in a fatal spot, it usually knocks you over. It is quite upsetting at any reasonable range.
5. A shot or stab wound is simply felt as a blow or push at first. It is some little time before any burning or other painful sensation begins.
10. It is impossible to see anything by the flash of an ordinary gun, though it is easy to imagine you have seen things.
22.When an automatic pistol is fired the empty cartridge shell flies out the right-hand side. The empty cartridge case remains in a revolver until ejected by hand.
Sunday, February 20, 2022
Great pullets in history.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
How windy was it?
You're hearing it right now, aren't you? |
Of course you know that meant dog insanity. Large economy size dog Tralfaz is scared of the wind, especially at night. But he doesn't cower under the bed, no no (not that he could fit); he must go out multiple times to confront his enemy. And pee. Baby dog Izzy isn't scared of the wind, but whenever Fazzy goes out, he must follow. It's the way of his people.
Friday, February 18, 2022
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Bob bob bob bob bob bob bob bob bob bob bob & bob.
mono |
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
The coffee cup menace.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Out on the carpet.
Which leads me to one of my favorite conundrums: Is it worse to be accused of something falsely or accurately? The first is frustrating, because it's unfair but it's hard to prove innocence; the second is embarrassing, and shame is painful. My first thought is that it's better to be accused falsely, because there's always the option of punching someone in the snoot. But really, for the sake of truth, it's better to be upbraided honestly. Wounded pride stings like hell, but the only way to get better is to be caught in the act of being worse. If I have to lose this client, those are just the breaks.
Monday, February 14, 2022
Sunday, February 13, 2022
All my heart.
Saturday, February 12, 2022
The best part of waking up.
Arabica coffee prices are seeing support from expectations of lower global supplies due to unfavorable weather and supply chain disruptions. Drought and recent frost events have devastated Brazil's coffee crop this year and have curbed the growth potential for the country's coffee crop for the next two years.
Friday, February 11, 2022
Country roads.
I was walking around a country road in Pennsylvania with large economy size dog Tralfaz when I noticed something that made me curious.
hooray |
The speed limit is set at a leisurely 35, as is typical for American town and rural roads that are not main thoroughfares.
Yeah, that could have something to do with it.
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Illegal snacking.
I was getting to the bottom of a bag of healthy snacks. You can tell they're healthy because they feature the words "good" and "health" and "veggie" right on the front.
These potato-based snacks also claim to have 30% less fat than regular potato chips, and yet they are still tasty. But are they actually healthy? I wonder. Well, they're tasty.Here's the thing that shocked me most, seen on the back of the back as I crumpled it up:
"Not for Sale in California"? What the hell?
The Good Health brand is owned by Utz, purveyors of fine snacks, and the fine slogan "Make Utz Yours." Utz potato chips are my wife's fallback to Lay's; they also own Bachman pretzels and a number of other solid brands. Nothing wrong with them. Why the hate from California?
California has some weird rules and wants to dictate policy to the rest of the country by virtue of its size. If CA says no toluene in nail polish, the cosmetics companies must go along or lose access to the 39.5 million men and women in the state. And I do mean men, because there are probably more men in California wearing nail polish than there are women in Ohio. Other states may look to the federal government for that kind of action, but Cali likes to throw its weight around.
But why would CA make Veggie Stix illegal?
It turns out that California is having a little hissy fit over acrylamide. "Consuming this product can expose you to chemicals including acrylamide, which are known to the state of California to cause cancer. Acrylamide is a chemical that can form in some foods during high-temperature cooking processes, such as frying, roasting, and baking," according to the warning of its Proposition 65. Either the state is preventing the sale of Veggie Stix, or the Utz people don't want to have to put the word CANCER on its food (which would be on bags sold nationwide), or Utz is just sick of hearing lots of YAK YAK YAK from California. And since the whole state is run by Karens, who would? But as JD Supra noted last year, regarding a suit by the state's Chamber of Commerce:
Although acrylamide has been shown to cause cancer in mice and rats, there is debate on whether studies actually show that greater consumption of acrylamide in food increases the risk of cancer in humans. The Chamber’s lawsuit therefore argues that compelling businesses to provide a warning that acrylamide is “known” to the State of California to cause cancer violates their First Amendment rights, because consuming food with acrylamide is not “known” to cause cancer in people.
As usual, California has gone it alone, hoping to be a beacon to light the way to the rest of the nation. And indeed, if the rest of the nation wants to have revolving-door DAs, thousands of drug addicts camped on the streets, crumbling roads and bridges, bullet trains no one wants, a dying or fleeing middle class, unrestricted illegal immigration, and a new feudal class, then yes, let's all follow California's example in all things. Meanwhile, Utz can sell its potato chips in California with all that extra fat, but God forbid you should have more than 140 micrograms per day of acrylamide. You'd be spitting cancerous cells if you ate 141 micrograms.
(BTW: 140 micrograms = 0.14 milligram. There are 28,400,000 micrograms in one ounce. Obviously acrylamide is the most toxic substance in the history of chemistry.)
Not to pile on, but California is the same state that's famous for being unable to supply its own electricity and yet is banning the sale of portable gas-powered generators. It really must enjoy the feudal past, because it is planning to condemn its citizens to the Dark Ages. Or at least its poorer citizens; the wealthy will have large non-portable generators on their estates.
I'm glad that California has nothing better to do with its time, but I think it ought to consider taking a long nap and perhaps rethinking its priorities. I don't know, it may be too far gone. Maybe we should just wall it off.
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
Miscellanea.
Tuesday was a nightmare and today is no better, so I am forced to rely on that old favorite of desperate writers: Observations on the Passing Scene. Thomas Sowell used to do that in his column, and he's a lot smarter than I am, so there.
1) Filed under Things I Didn't Want to Know, courtesy of the National Institutes of Health:
The human body contains trillions of microorganisms — outnumbering human cells by 10 to 1. Because of their small size, however, microorganisms make up only about 1 to 3 percent of the body's mass (in a 200-pound adult, that’s 2 to 6 pounds of bacteria), but play a vital role in human health.
We all know that bacteria is crucial to being able to live, but come on--two to six POUNDS? Meaning, you could take an equivalent amount of bacteria that's inside me, nothing but the bacteria, and fill a small bucket with it that would weigh more than the average rump roast? What would it look like? Would it be a big puddle of goo? Man, that seems revolting. Hope you weren't eating.
2) How bad are people in the publishing industry about guy things like sports? Pretty bad. I freelance for one outfit that calls me their go-to sports editor because I am the only copy editor in their stable who watches sports with any kind of knowledge. And that's hardly true for the whole subject. What I know about hockey and basketball, two sports I've barely watched, I got from working on their books. I know a bit about baseball and football, but little compared to my friends who are truly fanatics. And yet I am the Sports Guy. So if you see dumb and incorrect information presented about sports in the media, remember that.
3) The Chinese Death Olympics suck. They can't even do human interest pieces, like sending out NBC goofballs onto the streets of the town, because no one is allowed out. I am informed that most of the play-by-play and color commentary is being done from booths in the United States (not sure if that's true as NBC is not forthcoming about any of this). China's locked down the whole area because of its own horrible virus, possibly because having athletes die from it would be embarrassing and put the spotlight back on the nation's culpability. Meanwhile, the ramp for the big air ski jump appears to have been built next to a nuclear power plant. But no, the Sporting News assures us that it's quite the opposite! Those silos are now "sleek office spaces" and "museums and restaurants"! I'm sure that it's perfectly safe, just like the Wuhan Institute of Virology. This is all so stupid.
4) I'm working on a new novel, a romance adventure book (not the ripped-bodice type of romance, but there is a romance angle) that has required the most meticulous plot of anything I've ever written. There are a lot of characters and a lot of moving parts involved in a story that unfolds in a matter of a few days. It took me months to work out the story. Now that I'm writing it, I'm scared that if I make any changes to what I wrote in the outline -- say, I decide a scene is better with one of the supporting characters not present -- I'll throw everything off down the line. It requires a lot more focus than I normally have on anything. Maybe it will promote brain health. I doubt it. Not with that bucket full of bacteria I have sloshing around inside me.
5) February 9 and I haven't fallen on the ice yet, thank God. Okay, I fell yesterday, walking Izzy in an ice-covered park, but it was facing uphill and it more like leaning forward with extreme prejudice. My pride was the only thing hurt, and I had to dust snow off my pants. May God keep you fall-free, wherever you are.
Tuesday, February 8, 2022
Kooky copper clad cooking.
Ta da! |