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22 Apr 18:08

China recruits Brazilians as it aims to become footballing superpower

by Tom Phillips in Urumqi
Timmy the Tooth

China is winning, it's true. They are winning and we need someone to stand up to them, folks.

A growing number of Brazilian players are signing for clubs in China, whose national side ranks 81st in the world

Six days after touching down in China’s far west, Rudnei da Rosa – or Lu Dini as he is now known – is still trying to find his feet.

“I don’t know if it’s because of my skin colour or what,” says the 6ft 2in black Brazilian footballer. “But when I’m walking down the street, people stare so much they nearly trip over. It’s like they can’t quite believe their eyes.”

Continue reading...
22 Apr 04:28

Trump Doesn’t Have A Monopoly On Intolerant Supporters

by Andrew R. Lewis
Timmy the Tooth

BREAKING NEWS: MOST REPUBLICANS ARE RACISTS

Many of Donald Trump’s supporters are intolerant — racist, sexist and xenophobic. Indeed, some high-profile work has highlighted Trump’s populism and his appeal to less-educated authoritarians — a potent witch’s brew challenging democratic norms. And other analyses have focused on the specific targets of Trump supporters’ anti-democratic attitudes – especially, but not solely, Muslims, immigrants and black Americans.

Attention to the treatment of these minority groups is certainly warranted and important, but focusing only on Trump overlooks a crucial point: These are not the only groups that many people dislike, and intolerance is not concentrated among Trump supporters.

In the wake of the terrorist attacks in France, Trump called for a (temporary) ban on Muslims’ entering the United States. Republican exit polls asked about this proposal and found that support for Trump’s position was widespread (over 60 percent) among participants in Republican nomination contests so far.

SHARE OF SUPPORTERS WHO AGREE
STATE TRUMP CRUZ RUBIO KASICH OVERALL AGREEMENT
South Carolina 41% 23% 20% 3% 74%
Texas 43 42 8 2 66
Ohio 48 16 2 33 65
New Hampshire 45 14 9 11 65
Florida 59 18 17 3 64
Virginia 45 17 25 4 63
Foreign Muslims should be temporarily banned from entering the U.S.

Source: EXIT POLLS/eDISON RESEARCH

Notably, those favoring a ban disproportionately supported Trump, with the exception of voters in Texas, where a plurality supported Ted Cruz. In Ohio, for instance, of those who wanted to temporarily ban all Muslims from entering the U.S., 48 percent threw their support behind Trump.

The same pattern holds when you look at GOP support for Trump’s statements and position on immigrants, especially those from south of the U.S. border. A majority of Republican primary voters don’t support his call to deport all of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S., but of those who do support that position, most favor Trump.

SHARE OF DEPORTATION SUPPORTERS WHO SUPPORT …
STATE TRUMP CRUZ RUBIO KASICH STATEWIDE DEPORTATION SUPPORT
Texas 39% 44% 7% 3% 44%
South Carolina 47 24 15 2 44
New Hampshire 51 19 8 6 41
Ohio 55 18 2 24 39
New York 72 13 14 38
Florida 63 18 15 2 37
Virginia 50 26 15 2 36
Wisconsin 48 46 4 34
Candidate support among GOP voters who favor deporting most illegal immigrants working in the U.S.

Source: exit polls/EDISON RESEARCH

A few other data points along the same lines:

  • Pew Research Center found that 17 percent of Trump supporters said diversity makes America worse, a higher share than among either Cruz or John Kasich’s backers. Pew also found that 69 percent of Trump voters agreed that immigrants are a burden on the country.
  • An ABC News/Washington Post survey showed that among respondents who said that white Americans are losing out because of preferential treatment for Latinos and blacks, 43 percent backed Trump — higher than the 34 percent of Republican respondents who supported Trump overall.
  • Trump also performs well among those who dislike African-Americans and evaluate whites at higher levels than minorities.

As professor of political science Lynn Vavreck put it so well, “Mr. Trump has reinvigorated explicit appeals to ethnocentrism, and some voters are responding.”

To date, however, most of this analysis has focused on the Trump campaign. But Trump’s supporters are markedly different in who they dislike, not in how they would treat the rights of people they dislike.

Putting up with groups we dislike is referred to in political science as “political tolerance.” The empirical study of political tolerance was born in the 1940s as the U.S. reacted to the second “Red Scare,” stripping the rights of “nonconformists” and suspected “communist sympathizers.” In public opinion research, modern treatments (since 1979) let people pick a group they “like the least” and ask them whether that group should be allowed to give a public speech, teach in public schools, and otherwise have access to the public square as any other citizen. Using data from a national (online) sample of nearly 1,000 adults gathered March 8-15, we asked these questions of each candidate’s supporters.

As the chart below shows, the “least liked groups” of each candidate’s supporters differ in expected ways, though perhaps not as dramatically as media reports may lead us to believe. (Recall that we asked everyone to select a single group.) Given his statements about immigrants, it is no surprise that Trump supporters (20 percent of our sample) are more likely to pick “illegal immigrants” (18 percent versus 3 percent overall); they pick Islamic fundamentalists at about the same rate (33 percent) as other Republican candidates’ supporters (29 percent) except Cruz supporters (23 percent). Consistent with the evidence about racism discussed above, Trump supporters are less likely to pick the KKK as their least-liked group (20 percent) compared to others (52 percent). Backers of the Democratic candidates overwhelmingly pick the KKK as their least-liked group (and do not differ by their choice of Sanders or Clinton).

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But leave aside how you feel about each of these groups and focus on the constitutional guarantee that everyone, no matter their views, has certain rights. We find that commitment to equal rights is disregarded by more than just Trump supporters. Using a tolerance index24 that combines the responses to all the questions, Trump supporters would grant about 40 percent of the rights asked about to the groups they dislike. That is not high. The chart below compares the tolerance levels of supporters of the other candidates to Trump’s supporters. The marker shows the average tolerance level and the horizontal lines are 90 percent confidence intervals — if the confidence interval overlaps with the vertical line representing Trump’s supporters, then we cannot say they are statistically distinguishable.

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The nearly unequivocal story is that Trump supporters are no different from others, including Clinton and Sanders supporters.25 The one clear exception is supporters of John Kasich (~7 percent of the sample), who are demonstrably more tolerant than Trump’s. Kasich’s supporters are distinctive because 30 percent of them in this poll are self-identified Democrats, but also because the majority of them (54 percent) will not vote for Trump if he is the nominee – just over a quarter will peel off and vote for Clinton and the other quarter claim they will not vote. Kasich support appears effectively to be a protest against Trump by people who wish a restoration of good democratic order.

An enduring lesson of American politics is its pluralist nature – everyone dislikes someone else. James Madison recognized this feature early on and designed a political system to harness pluralist intolerance so that a majority of minorities would rise up against experiments on our liberties. Of course, this design is not fail-safe, and Madison’s predictions have proved wrong on many occasions to the shame of the nation. The greatest fear is that events, such as terrorist attacks, and demagoguery will conspire to overwhelm Madison’s delicate mechanism. That may yet prove to be the case here, and that is the particular danger that Trump represents. But it is important to recognize that the fundamentals of an intolerant act lie within most of us and no candidate’s support is immune from such scrutiny. If essentially all candidates’ supporters have a similar penchant for intolerance, what is most concerning is when those antidemocratic sentiments are inflamed and mobilized against particular groups.

19 Apr 14:55

38 Great Indian Recipes From Denise D'silva Sankhé

by The Serious Eats Team
Timmy the Tooth

The pork vindaloo looks pretty good.


Indian food has a reputation for being difficult and time-consuming, with hard-to-find ingredients and new techniques. I get it. It's intimidating. But our longtime contributor and author of the Beyond Curry column, Denise D'silva Sankhé, breaks Indian cooking down into simple techniques that any home cook can master to produce amazingly flavorful dishes with minimal effort. Here are 38 of our favorites from her. Read More
19 Apr 14:49

David Squires on … Jamie Vardy and diving in football

by David Squires

This week, David Squires takes a look at Leicester’s Jamie Vardy and dishonesty that is, er, reprehensible to upstanding English footballers. And you can find David’s archive of cartoons here

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18 Apr 17:58

How to Make Easy English Muffins, Nooks and Crannies Guaranteed

by Stella Parks

When it comes to English muffins, you don't need any fancy equipment at all. No muffin rings, no rolling pin, nor even a mixer. Just a good night's sleep and a griddle to cook up this light and spongy dough. Read More
18 Apr 17:56

Annals of beverage marketing: Coke, Pepsi, and Diabetes

by Marion

A reader, Eddie Pugsley, sends this photo taken at the Walgreens on Nepperhan Avenue, Yonkers, NY.  His comment: “I guess, if you buy the Coke & Pepsi specials you’ll be happy about their diabetic supply savings..?”

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16 Apr 14:11

Morning in America: Locals Pick the Best Breakfasts, Coast to Coast

by Serious Eats Team
Timmy the Tooth

Have you had the staff meal, Chicagoans?


We asked some of our favorite food writers across the country, as well as some members of the Serious Eats staff, to tell us about their favorite go-to breakfasts—those early-morning meals they crave each and every day; the ones they’ll drive across town for; the ones they treat out-of-towners to whenever they come to visit. From build-your-own biscuits in the Big Easy to a great Turkish breakfast in Beantown, here are nine dishes that fill their plates and awaken their palates. Read More
15 Apr 17:35

Time Travel in China: Photos Reveal A Century of Dramatic Growth

by Steph
[ By Steph in Culture & History & Travel. ]

time travel china 1

Few nations have experienced quite the explosive rate of growth over the last century as China, and a new photo series shows us just how dramatic those changes actually look on the ground. Photographer, computer scientist and MIT alum Dheera Venkatraman pored through books and archives to find images taken in the 20th century and then went out and re-took them, shot by shot, attempting to frame them exactly as they were originally photographed. All of the new imagery has been converted to black and white to highlight what’s different and what has managed to survive after decades of frantic industrialization.

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The result is a series called Time Travel in China, creating pairs of images that Venkatraman likens to a ‘spot-the-difference’ game. Agricultural fields become towns, skyscrapers shoot up into the air, bridges stretch across waterways, dirt roads are paved, infrastructure becomes more complex.

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Yet not only do the contours of the land and the silhouettes of the mountains remain the same, a surprising number of buildings do, too, especially temples and historical structures. In some cases, the only notable shifts in a forty- or even eighty-year period are the vehicles, some lights and a handful of modern towers.

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“When most people travel, they think of traveling in space,” she says. “Whether it’s hiking through a national park or learning about a distant culture, it’s usually about the destination. This time, I decided to travel in time.”

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“It wasn’t always easy to get that perfect angle match,” she continues in a post on PetaPixel. “In some places, the vantage point ended up being in a private location, and in some cases there was a large obstruction or building preventing me from getting the same view. But nonetheless, I managed to capture several shocking contrasts over the past century of Chinese history.”


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14 Apr 19:58

Fifa faces ‘tough decision’ over Qatar World Cup if human rights abuses continue

by Owen Gibson
Timmy the Tooth

IT SHOULD HAPPEN NOW

• Author of Fifa-commissioned report into human rights says UN verdict key
• Report urges Fifa to up its game and start matching words with action

Fifa will have to consider the future of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar if its record on the treatment of migrant workers does not improve within 12 months, according to the Harvard professor who has authored an independent report commissioned by world football’s governing body into its human rights responsibilities.

Related: Balfour Beatty and Interserve accused of migrant worker labour abuses in Qatar

Continue reading...
01 Apr 13:21

Classic Poems Modified for Climate Change by Dan Young and David Henne

Timmy the Tooth

Uh girl you’re so pretty and I like you;
Poem over.

“Approach of Winter”
by William Carlos Williams

The half-stripped trees
struck by a wind together,
bending all,
snapping before the power of…
thundersnow?
Oh shit, do you see that?
Thundersnow!

- -

“Patience Taught By Nature”
by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Meek leaves drop yearly from the forest-trees
Teeth chattering
To show, above, the unwasted stars that pass
Disgusting snorting
O thou God of Nature, were you not 66 yesterday,
You are like unto a witch’s teat, at 25 degrees
Loudly you threaten a friggin’ polar vortex
Most thoroughly do you fuck my weekend plans.

- -

“April Rain Song”
by Langston Hughes

Let the rain kiss you
Let the rain beat upon your head with silver solid rocks.
Let the small trickle of blood run down your forehead from the caress of,
Oh shit that’s hail.

That’s hail, get in the house!
Close the windows! Where’s Susan? Is Susan inside?

Has anybody seen Susan?

- -

“The Net-Menders”
by Sylvia Plath

Halfway up from the little harbor of barren boats,
Halfway down from groves where the thin, bitter almond pips
Fatten in green-pocked pods, the three net-menders sit out,
Weeping in black, mourning the decrease of oysters and shrimp.
They speak of ocean acidification and the radically,
Altering aquatic ecosystems.

Still, I’m pretty sure there’s plenty of fish around.
I mean look at how affordable the bottomless shrimp is at
Tomas Ortunio’s Fisherman Wharf.

- -

“Evening Star”
by Edgar Allen Poe

And stars, in their orbits,
Shone pale, thro’ the light
Of the brighter, full moon,
And in high-tide the waves;
Crashing waves encroaching.

Their eager caress,
Reaching for the first time a home,
That had always been dry near the shore.

Hang on, water’s way too
Close to my chamber door;
Good Lord those waves
Are 20-feet high.

Shit. Aw shit, all my stuff!
Uh girl you’re so pretty and I like you;
Poem over.

- -

“The Waste Land”
by T.S. Eliot

April is the cruelest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, but
July is super cruel also, scorching
Orange orchards so juice costs
Like $12, and avocados…
You can just forget about avocados.

- -

“The Wild Swans at Coole”
by William Butler Yeats

The trees are in their autumn beauty,
The woodland paths are dry,
The woodland paths are way too dry.
It hasn’t rained in like two months;
There should be a lake here with
Brimming water and swans among the stones…

My God they’re all dead.
Nine and fifty dehydrated, dead swans.
Poetry, what have you done?

31 Mar 23:13

Why Does The Sun Hurt My Eyes?

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
Timmy the Tooth

I'll be damned.

The questions kids ask about science aren’t always easy to answer. Sometimes, their little brains can lead to big places adults forget to explore. With that in mind, we’ve started a new series called Science Question From a Toddler, which will use kids’ curiosity as a jumping-off point to investigate the scientific wonders that adults don’t even think to ask about. I want the toddlers in your life to be a part of it! Send me their science questions and they may serve as the inspiration for a column. And now, our toddler …

Q: Why does the sun hurt my eyes? — Gabby B., age 3-and-a-half

Have you ever had a muscle cramp, Gabby? Maybe you ran and ran and then your side hurt. Or you stretched your leg and got a charley horse. The pain you feel in your eyes when you look at the sun is similar — you’re doing more work with a muscle than that muscle is used to performing, and doing it faster. All of a sudden, there’s a lot more light trying to shove its way into your eye at once, and, in an effort at crowd control, your pupil contracts. The sun is “such an unusually powerful stimulus that the iris muscle is trying to get so small so quickly that it hurts,” Dr. Jeffrey Goldberg, chair of Stanford University’s department of ophthalmology, wrote to me in an email.

That might happen to you every day of the week, especially in summer when the sunlight is more intense. But there are other, rarer ways the sun can hurt your eyes. Like giving your eyes a sunburn. There’s a condition called photokeratitis (aka “snow blindness”) that really is similar to the burning, blistery rash that the sun can cause on skin. Just as in sunburn, ultraviolet radiation from the sun damages the top layer of cells — in this case, those of the cornea, the transparent barrier that covers the front of the eye. You’re most likely to get it when you’re looking at bright sunlight reflected off a surface like snow or water, but people also get photokeratitis in tanning beds or while welding. There’s even been a reported case of people getting photokeratitis from stage lights while partying in a nightclub. (Gabby, if you’re engaging in any of these activities, let’s talk.)

Glen Jeffery, professor of neuroscience at University College London, has had firsthand experience with photokeratitis from the time he spent studying animals that live in extreme visual environments, like the Arctic. There, creatures of all kinds have to adjust to long, bright days in summer and long, dark nights in winter. And that was where Jeffery noticed something odd. When he was out on the snow in bright sunlight, his eyes hurt. But “you’ll look down, and the husky next to you will be perfectly happy,” he told me. Humans who live in the Arctic, like the Inuit people, have developed special goggles carved from bone and wood that have a tiny slit or slits that let in only a small amount of light — enough to see, not enough to get burned. But the sun doesn’t seem to affect animals such as reindeer, polar bears and dogs the same way.

What gives? The secret is in the type of light and what our eyes do with it.

All light is actually electromagnetic radiation. It is tiny particles oscillating up and down in waves. We see those waves as colors. Different wavelengths show up for us as green, yellow, blue — all the colors of the rainbow. There are also wavelengths we can’t see, because our eyes block them. Infrared radiation has wavelengths that are too long to be visible to us. Ultraviolet radiation has wavelengths that are too short. They hit the lens of our eye, but they aren’t let through.

But when the lens blocks UV radiation, that energy has to go somewhere. Just like when a running back slams into a linebacker, both players aren’t able to stay still. Instead of passing through the cells that make up the lens of the eye, the oscillating particles crash into them, damaging the cells, and causing the pain of photokeratitis, Jeffery told me. Animals that can see UV light, on the other hand, whose lenses let the UV light pass, don’t have the same kind of problems. So, to him, the fact that reindeer and huskies didn’t seem to be getting photokeratitis was a sign that maybe they could see UV.

That was a pretty crazy idea. Scientists have long thought that mammals, as a whole, can’t see this stuff. It’s only in the last 15 years or so that anyone has questioned that truism. The re-evaluation started with rodents, which turned out to have light-sensing cells in their eyes that could see light with a wavelength of 365 nanometers — UV light is defined as light with a wavelength between about 400 nanometers and 10 nanometers. Light is visible to humans when the wavelengths are 400 to 700 nanometers.

Other mammals didn’t have those cells, though, so Jeffery tried another tack. He contacted a bunch of zoos and asked them to let him know anytime they had a mammal that died. When they did, he requested that the zoo extract an eyeball, freeze it and send it to him. (Scientists get very interesting mail.) He ended up with eyeballs from 38 species. “We put them into a machine that fired light through the lens and cornea. It started at 800 nanometers and worked down to 300, and we could see the point when it was blocked,” he told me. Primates never got past 395 nanometers, he said. But other mammals — including seals, bears and reindeer — could see much shorter wavelengths. Dogs could see down to 335 nanometers. Jeffery now thinks humans, and other primates, are the odd ones out.

“So to some extent, we need to turn your question right around,” Jeffery said. I told you the physical reasons why the sun hurts human eyes, but I can’t tell you why it hurts our eyes when it doesn’t seem to hurt a lot of other mammals. Jeffery speculated that primates ended up different because we have sharper vision than those other mammals. “All the primates, they pick stuff up, hold it in front of their face and have very high acuity. They see in incredible detail,” he said. Shorter wavelengths of light get in the way of that because they have more of a tendency to scatter, like light shimmering off a prism. Jeffery thinks our eyes evolved to block UV light because it got in the way of our detail vision. If he’s right, and nobody knows whether he is, it would mean that the sun hurts your eyes because you can see an ant on the end of a stick.


Gabby, there’s one last thing that I stumbled across that was too amazing not to share: The sun can also hurt your eyes even when you don’t feel any pain. There’s a disorder called solar retinopathy that kills cells in the retina (the light-sensitive tissue on the inside of the back of your eyeball) if you look directly at the sun for too long. It often doesn’t hurt, because the retina doesn’t have many pain receptors.

One of the ways we know: In 1993, researchers found an old man who had cancer in his right eye. He was going to lose that eye anyway, so he agreed to look at the sun for 10 straight minutes. Six days later, after his eyeball was removed during cancer surgery, the researchers dissected it and got a close-up look at the havoc. His eye cells were in serious trouble, beyond the damage from cancer. His mitochondria — structures within the cell that help generate energy and keep the cell alive — were swollen and bloated. The nuclei — the parts of the cells that store all-important DNA information — were shrinking, on the verge of breaking apart. Light from the sun had triggered chemical reactions that were killing the old man’s eye cells. If people look at the sun for only short periods, these effects can be reversible, but not always. And it can take a long time to heal. In the meantime, victims have to deal with blind spots, light sensitivity, color distortions and other vision problems (provided they plan on keeping their eyeballs).

So, my final advice for you, Gabby: Don’t stare directly at the sun, and read the fine print on any scientific study you volunteer for.


Read more science questions from a toddler: Why Am I Right-Handed?

Have your own science question from a toddler that you want answered? Send it in!

30 Mar 23:08

Sleep with Sharks: 10 of the World’s Most Extreme AirBNBs

by Steph
Timmy the Tooth

WHOA... CATACOMBS. FUCK THAT

Have any of you Chigaoans visited the van Gogh room?

[ By Steph in Boutique & Art Hotels & Travel. ]

airbnb shark suite

After a long day of traveling and sightseeing, how does a relaxing evening sleeping in a shark tank, a subterranean vault filled with human skeletons or the trunk of a Tesla sound? Some of the weirdest and most unique listings to ever be offered on AirBNB.com include actual museums, stunning ruins, a three-dimensional recreation of a Van Gogh painting, a hippie paradise and a hotel where giraffes stick their necks through the windows to steal your breakfast.

Glass Shark Suite, Paris
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It’s probably best if you don’t have a shark phobia prior to renting this AirBNB room at the Paris Aquarium, since the marine predators are virtually all you’ll be able to see all night. Just large enough for a circular bed for two guests, this glass room suspended inside the tank provides 360 degree views of 35 live sharks. Guests will get an intimate education on the lives of the animals from fervid and underwater photographer Fred Boyle, and can even enjoy their meals from another vantage point outside the aquarium. It’s open for just three nights in April and will then serve as an observation area for biologists.

Paris Catacombs
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You’d have to be fairly free of superstitions to get a decent night’s sleep right beside a wall of human remains, but for those brave enough, a night in the bowels of Paris is surely an unforgettable experience. On Halloween night, some lucky AirBNB contest winners got to take a tour of the city’s famous catacombs, enjoy a gourmet meal and a private concert “in some of the most incredible acoustics under the earth,” listen to a storyteller’s frightening tales about this subterranean hall of the dead, and then become the only living people to wake up there.

Van Gogh’s Bedroom, Chicago
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Step inside a Van Gogh painting, lay down in his slightly irregular bed and gaze at the walls and floors faithfully recreated in his own iconic brush strokes with this AirBNB offering from the Art Institute of Chicago. Recreating the Dutch artist’s famous ‘Bedroom,’ the exhibit rents for just $10 per night and aims to drum up interest in the original painting, which has long been an icon of the museum’s permanent collection. The nightly rate includes tickets to the museum.

Mirrored House, Pittsburgh
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You kind of have to enjoy gazing at your own reflection to enjoy staying in this curious mirrored funhouse of a rental listing in the Pittsburgh suburb of Fox Chapel. Created by an artist, the house is like a giant habitable disco ball, with mirrors adhered to both the exterior and interior surfaces. The dining room is the crown jewel of the space, with a central aquarium reflected in all of the wall-mounted mirrors and chandeliers. The rental appears to no longer be available.

House of Collections, Brooklyn
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Like one big cabinet of curiosities, Brooklyn’s House of Collections features artfully arranged and carefully chosen objects on every imaginable surface, from patterns of rusted farm tools on the living room wall to cow bones hung beside historic local treasures. There are at least seventy house plants, exotic textiles, books, musical instruments, antique furniture and almost any kind of tchotchke you can imagine. Though it may look like an antique store, it’s a private residence, rented out occasionally to lucky AirBNB guests.

Next Page - Click Below to Read More:
Sleep With Sharks 10 Of The Worlds Craziest Airbnbs


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28 Mar 17:04

The Food Lab: The Secrets to the Best Easy Homemade Falafel

by J. Kenji López-Alt

Falafel often has good flavor, but a pasty, heavy texture. What I'm after is falafel that's shatteringly crisp on the outside and light, fluffy, almost crumbly on the inside, while still remaining very moist. I like my falafel to taste of chickpeas, but also to be packed with herb and spice flavor. Falafel that needs only simple condiments—tahini and hot sauce—to taste great. Read More
28 Mar 17:02

The blind leading the blind

by Tim
She took my hand and with a devilish look on her face said, “Dad, I’m going to close my eyes, you lead me home. Tell me how to get there. Tell me what to do.” “Ok.” I...

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25 Mar 18:25

What is a Cruyff Turn?

by Finbarr Sheehy and Scott Murray
Timmy the Tooth

FYI, he wasn't an ambi-turner.

The legendary Dutch footballer Johan Cruyff has died at home in Barcelona, aged 68. He was famous for leading Holland to the 1974 World Cup final, as a player for Ajax and as a manager at Barcelona, but most of all for the Cruyff Turn, a deceptive about-face which left many defenders bewildered. Find out how he performed his signature manoeuvre, and share your own Cruyff Turn tributes here

Continue reading...
25 Mar 17:22

The Food Lab: Use Chickpeas to Make the Easiest Egg-Free Mayonnaise

by J. Kenji López-Alt
Timmy the Tooth

Whoa... neat if for no other reason than the fact that you can use it as a science experiment.


For the past year or so, I've been hearing a lot about aquafaba, the protein-rich liquid found inside a can of chickpeas. It's pretty amazing stuff—you can whip it into stiff peaks like a meringue, use it to leaven pancakes and waffles, or make light sponge cakes, all without any eggs at all. You can also use it to make mayonnaise. Or so they say. Read More
24 Mar 18:58

Better Than Falafel? Israel's Sabich Sandwich Has My Vote

by Daniel Gritzer
Timmy the Tooth

It's all I could want, minus the eggplant.


Falafel may get all the attention, but the sabich, another popular Tel Aviv snack food, has won my heart. Filled with moist slices of fried eggplant, hard-boiled egg, a generous layer of creamy hummus, crunchy Israeli pickles, and Israeli salad, and drizzled with tahini sauce and amba, a pickled-mango sauce, it's all you could want in any sandwich, and more. Read More
24 Mar 17:45

Cantone: Color-Labeled Beers Let You See What’s in the Can

by Urbanist
Timmy the Tooth

Please make this happen

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

color coded beer cans

Connoisseurs may look to artisanal naming conventions when selecting their brew, but some of us (like books via covers) judge beers at least partly by their colors.

beertone colored can design

A Spanish design agency named Txaber has matched brew types with Pantone hues to create a collection of color-coded labels, providing sneak peaks to potential drinkers.

beer colored cans aluminum

Thanks to the recent comeback of the can (versus historical preferences for bottles), these might just make it on the shelves. In turn, can designs give designers a broader canvass to work on, wrapping 360-degree cylinders. As a display strategy, these are striking alone as well as side-by-side as well.

beertone

beertones

Similar project, dubbed “Beertone” by designers Alexander Michelbach and Daniel Eugster, provides RGB, CMYK and HTML code color values for a variety of extant Swiss beers, aided by the breweries.

beertone ad

There is something accessible and yet artsy about this all, distilling a brew to its color and letting those of us who are more into lights and ambers (pilsner’s in particular, if you aim to by this author a six-pack) avoid mistakenly winding up with a brown or black.


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24 Mar 17:37

List: Points of Conflict in Batman v Superman by Melissa Albert and Molly Schoemann

Timmy the Tooth

I'm 8-5 Batman.

SUPERMAN: “Tupperware goes on the TOP RACK ONLY.”
BATMAN: “Tupperware can go wherever you want it to go!”

- -

SUPERMAN: “Always tip at least 20% at a restaurant.”
BATMAN: “Tips are not an entitlement, they are service-based!”

- -

SUPERMAN: “Green Day is one of the most overrated bands in existence.”
BATMAN: “You just don’t GET Green Day.”

- -

BATMAN: “Roll down the top of the cereal bag or the cereal will go stale.”
SUPERMAN: “We finish cereal so quickly it’s not going to get the CHANCE to go stale!”

- -

BATMAN: “Taking a bath is relaxing after a long day.”
SUPERMAN: “Sitting in your own filthy bathwater is disgusting.”

- -

SUPERMAN: “You should always rinse bagged salad before eating it.”
BATMAN: “Does the term ‘triple-washed’ mean nothing to you?”

- -

SUPERMAN: “SuperPacs are destroying the American justice system!”
BATMAN: “You don’t know what you are talking about.”

- -

SUPERMAN: “Jennifer Garner is a terrible actress.”
BATMAN: “She just needs better roles!”

- -

BATMAN: “I really think I could pull off a bolo tie.”
SUPERMAN: “Nope.”

- -

BATMAN: “It’s a dry heat.”
SUPERMAN: “Tell that to my spit curl.”

- -

SUPERMAN: “No gadgets at the dinner table.”
BATMAN: “I’m Batman. Literally my entire outfit is gadgets.”

- -

BATMAN: “How can The Bachelor be sexist if they also do The Bachelorette?”
SUPERMAN: “Are we even watching the same show?”

- -

SUPERMAN: “Just… okay… just massage the kale.”
BATMAN: [Kicks Superman in the face.]

23 Mar 17:47

Shrimp & Grits

by Michael Ruhlman
Timmy the Tooth

Butter poached shrimp...

Pair with slow cooker grits that you start before work for an easy and delicious dinner.

Reposting this method because, well, just the name of the dish is inspiring: butter-poached shrimp. Butter-poached shrimp and grits. Mmmm. Butter-poached lobster, not uncommon in French haute cuisine, was popularized in America by Thomas Keller in The French Laundry Cookbook and at that restaurant. “Lobster loves gentle heat,” he told me then. It’s not much of a leap for the thrifty-minded cook to reason that shrimp, too, love gentle heat. That’s why, in the butter chapter of my book Ruhlman’s Twenty, I showed how to use butter as a cooking medium (one of the many amazing ways butter can be used as a tool). This dish is absolutely killer. The shrimp stay very tender, rich and tasty with the butter; the grits are then enriched with the shrimp butter. Leftover butter can be used to saute shrimp Read On »
10 Mar 16:46

Anxious Anticipation: Photos Made to Pump Up Your Adrenaline

by Urbanist
Timmy the Tooth

love it

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Photography & Video. ]

brick dominos wine glass

Comprised of hair-raising scenes designed to keep you on the edge of your seat, this series of photos leads your mind to jump forward in time, picturing the catastrophes about to unfold.

eggs onto marble

Photographer Aaron Tilley worked with art director Kyle Bean to create the sequence for Kinfolk Magazine’s “adrenaline” issue. Their collaboration, titled In Anxious Anticipation, evokes a sense of expectant dread, all through still shots that simply lead the brain to fill in the blanks.

black ink white shirt

anxious anticipation rock matches

In one, an ink pen is poised to drip on a clean white shirt below. In another, a rock looks ready to light a fire, prepped to swing across a set of strike-anywhere matches.

bowling ball bubble wrap

Each picture cues to viewer to complete the sequence, imagining the sight and sound, for instance, of a bowling ball running along and popping an unrolled sheet of plastic bubble wrapping.

balloon hover over nails

From the magazine: “The connection between what the mind perceives and how the body reacts is a curious relationship. Adrenaline flows into our autonomic nervous system when it anticipates that something bad is about to happen—not because something bad is already happening. This hormonal offensive was an essential survival tool for our earliest ancestors that came with our fight-or-flight response, which defends us against immediate threats.”


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08 Mar 18:25

Homemade Sports Drink – Because Greaterade > Gatorade

by foodwishes@yahoo.com (Chef John)
Timmy the Tooth

Double the salt for a pedialyte drink. It works. Trust me.

Michele was listening to sports radio a while back, and heard a story about how the Golden State Warriors, also known as the greatest basketball team in history, had banned Gatorade, and other similar drinks from their gym. 

Knowing that the latest science shows drinking large quantities of sugar water is a terrible idea for your body and brain, they started making their own “sports drink,” featuring Himalayan pink salt.

My first thought was, “That’s soooo Northern California,” but the more I thought about it, the more I realized what a great idea that was, and it inspired this video for what we’re calling, “Greaterade.” All the ingredients in this are easy to find, and the whole procedure only takes minutes. Really, the only “work” involved is coming up with the perfect formula for your own personal tastes.

The amounts given here will get you very close to the commercial stuff, although it will not be as sweet, so feel free to experiment. With apologies to the big drink companies for all those lost sales, I really do hope you give this a try soon. Enjoy!


Ingredients for about 9 cups of Greaterade:
8 cups fresh cold water
3 tablespoons honey, or other sweetener to taste
1/2 teaspoon fine *Himalayan pink salt (mine was coarsely ground, so I used a rounded 1/2 teaspoon), or sea salt (or any pure salt)
3/4 teaspoon calcium magnesium powder (this is the one I used)
pinch cayenne
3/4 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
2 lemons, juiced
2 limes, juiced

* Note: this is NOT the pink salt we used for the ham video
05 Mar 16:29

Here’s What Happened When Some Dude Ate Like The Rock For A Month

by Walt Hickey
Timmy the Tooth

The Rock is ridiculous.

Mark Webster saw the most ludicrous diet plan on the planet and decided to try it out.

As I wrote last year, the movie star Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, in order to maintain his legendary physique, eats more than 5,000 calories a day. The calories, spread over seven meals, include roughly 2.3 pounds of cod, a fish particularly rich in protein. The rest is eggs, steak, chicken, vegetables and potatoes — all told, about 10 pounds of food per day. In one year, The Rock consumes more than one-third of a ton of cod alone.

Unlike Johnson, Webster is not a former pro wrestler, nor is he a staple of the “Fast and Furious” movie franchise. He does not have a show on HBO. He’s just a normal self-employed guy who’s tried to get in shape over the past couple of years. And when he read about Johnson’s daily routine, he did not feel awe or disgust or fear, but instead saw a life he wanted to try for a month. Here’s that routine:

MEAL CALORIES CARBS TOTAL FAT SATURATED FAT PROTEIN MEAL MASS
Meal 1 610 38g 15g 4g 77g 24oz
Meal 2 594 84 3 1 56 25
Meal 3 1069 125 28 7 72 27
Meal 4 909 121 18 6 62 28
Meal 5 769 69 25 9 70 22
Meal 6 816 115 4 1 73 28
Meal 7 398 14 16 6 50 15
Other 225 5 3 0 47 0

Webster did this from Feb. 1 through March 1 — and chronicled his progress online (I kept in touch with him throughout). The main takeaway: Being The Rock is exhausting, expensive and exactly as rad as you would think.

Based on the data Webster sent me — scrupulously compiled over the course of this exercise — he spent a total of $1,262 on food. That’s about $42 per day, including $18 worth of cod.

So it costs a lot of money to eat like The Rock, but it also takes time. Every two or three days, Webster said, he spent an hour and a half on food prep. He got a break partway through the challenge when he realized the seafood store would just steam-cook the cod on the spot for no charge. Still, making 30 pounds of food every three days is probably the worst part of the process, he said. For a while his only succor was a daily sweet potato.17

Two days-worth of meals.

Two days-worth of meals.

Courtesy of Mark Webster

Eating each of his seven daily meals takes about 20 minutes — two hours and 20 minutes a day just shoving meat and vegetables into his mouth. “The biggest thing with the eating is the interruption of your day,” Webster said. “Every few hours, you have to stop and eat again.”

The Rock diet hasn’t affected Webster’s work life, besides the occasional need to sneak out for his protein fix. “I had business meetings at a different office last week,” he told me, “and I had to bring three meals with me, and eat in a conference room while I was having a meeting with other people.”

To offset the calories, he imitates The Rock and does an hour of cardio and an hour and a half on weights six days a week, with one day of rest. “When I read that in the spring, I was so enamored by it,” Webster said. “How does a human being do that six days a week?”

The exercise routine burns about 3,550 calories every day. “It’s sort of modeled on that workout he did for that movie ‘Hercules,’ and he did that for six months. If I did that for six months, I imagine there would be a pretty significant change in my body.”

From Feb.1 to March 1, he worked out for about 60 hours, an average of two hours per day. In total, that’s about five hours a day spent prepping food, eating food and working out. I’ve checked with my sources, and I’ve learned that there are only 24 hours in a day, so this was a massive time commitment.

The upside? Being The Rock is great.

By the end of the project, Webster’s weight had barely moved — already an active person, he started out at 206 pounds and finished 30 days later at 207 — but he had gained a solid amount of muscle mass.

“My arms have gotten a little bigger, the upper parts of my legs have gotten bigger, and I’ve gotten leaner, which is again totally unexpected,” he said. “I feel amazing. I’m 37, I get little aches and pains all the time; I have none of those anymore. I feel better than I did before I was doing this. My resting heart rate has dropped by like four beats per minute over the past month. I feel fantastic.”

While he does many different kinds of lifts, he estimates his strength has gone up 10 to 15 percent across the board. When he started his Rock routine, his incline bench press was 115 pounds; now it’s 150. He was originally doing 80 repetitions of a 180-pound leg press, but now he’s at 240.

Still, it can be laborious.

“It’s a trade-off,” said Webster, presumably between mouthfuls of Atlantic fish. “Apparently The Rock hasn’t eaten candy since 1989.”

The plan is, surprisingly, not for everyone. “You could definitely not go from couch potato to doing this plan,” Webster told me. “You would probably kill yourself. I’ve spent the last couple of years getting into shape.

“That dude works really really hard,” he said about The Rock. “This is what this guy does; this is his livelihood, the fact that he looks like this and trains like this every day of his life while making his movies, being on set 14 hours — that kind of discipline to me is absolutely amazing. To me this is less about ‘Can I look like him?’ and more about ‘Can I work as hard as this dude?’”

In the end, I felt terrible that our interview took time away from Webster that could otherwise have been spent preparing cod. Dwayne Johnson is incredible, and even the best of us can manage being him for only a month.

04 Mar 22:36

List: Jokes I Tell Myself to Stave Off a Breakdown by Katie Curnow

Q: Why did the chicken cross the road?
A: What else does a chicken with no purpose, no direction, and a ton of debt do?

- -

A rabbi, a priest, and a minister go fishing in a boat. They paddle past me as I flail my arms, pleading for rescue. They all go to the bar afterwards.

- -

- Knock, knock.
- Who’s there?
- I don’t even know anymore.

- -

Q: What’s the difference between a catfish and a lawyer?
A: The catfish doesn’t know how unhappy it is and at least the lawyer went to law school.

- -

A woman in her early 30s finds a lamp. She brushes off the dust and a genie appears. “I will grant you one wish,” he says.

“I thought I got three?” the woman asks.

“You spoiled brat, now you get nothing.” The genie says before disappearing.

“Wait, I just thought it was always three! Please come back!" the woman begs. "I want to wish for something that seems non-threatening but is actually a burden or punishment.”

The genie returns. “You already have that,” he says. Then he goes to a bar afterwards.

04 Mar 19:42

Impress Your Friends With Fancy Homemade Butter and Crème Fraîche

by Claire Lower on Skillet, shared by Andy Orin to Lifehacker

One of the most attractive things a person can do is make something that is usually thought of as “store-bought.” Even though whipped cream is one of the easiest things you can make in the kitchen, I still encounter people who are amazed at the freshly whipped stuff. Whipped cream is great, but if you really want to blow someone’s mind, make something a little fancier, like fresh butter, crème fraîche, or compound butter.

Read more...











29 Feb 18:05

Smart Move: Domino Loft Maximizes Space in Micro Apartments

by Steph
Timmy the Tooth

Is it weird of me that I want to live in a tiny space like this? I mean, just less to clean! LESS TO CLEAN.

[ By Steph in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

domino loft 1

A 500-square-foot condo feels a lot larger when you can manage to fit a bedroom, guest bed, dining area, work space and closet in one tiny room without cluttering every possible surface. To prove that it’s possible, the designers at ICOSA teamed up with Peter Suen to make the most of a very modestly sized residence in San Francisco’s Financial District, creating a clean, contemporary, adaptable solution that translates to other small spaces.

domino loft 2

domino loft 3

The Domino Loft is the result of testing a wide variety of space-saving features within the limited apartment, which has high ceilings, but only one room to work with aside from the kitchen and bathroom. The designers tried drop-down ceilings, movable walls and other more complex ideas, but ultimately settled on the tried-and-true loft concept as the simplest and most effective way to maximize every inch of available space.

domino loft 4

domino loft 5

The room-within-a-room features a partially enclosed space topped with a sleeping loft, which is accessible via sliding library ladder from the closet area. Inside, a thin and light bed comes down from the wall, and its bottoms surface acts as a whiteboard when stowed away. There’s a built-in bench next to a fold-down dining table, a standing desk and lots of storage. The closet fits an impressive number of shoes and offers drawers as well as space for hanging garments.

domino loft 6

domino loft 7

Made of concrete panels, wood slats, metalwork and custom cabinets, the components were fabricated off-site in an Oakland workshop before assembly within the apartment.


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26 Feb 21:38

Gianni Infantino elected Fifa president after Zurich election

by Owen Gibson in Zurich
Timmy the Tooth

Johnny "Two Babies" Infantino made FIFA an offer they couldn't refuse!

• Uefa general secretary takes over from Sepp Blatter at governing body
• Infantino fought off competition from Sheikh Salman and three others

Fifa has elected Gianni Infantino, a European football administrator born just six miles from Sepp Blatter, as its new president in a bid to restore the world governing body’s reputational damage overseen by his disgraced predecessor.

Greg Dyke, the Football Association chairman who had backed Infantino, hailed him as a “straightforward guy” whose victory was a new start for Fifa. Dyke said that England would now consider bidding for the 2030 World Cup.

Continue reading...
24 Feb 20:13

The Right Way to Sauce Pasta

by J. Kenji López-Alt
Timmy the Tooth

This article is fucking cray. I'm starting to worry about Kenji's mental health.


Pasta heated in the skillet with sauce has a vastly different and superior flavor and texture compared with pasta that is simply sauced on the plate. No matter how great a sauce you can make, if you don't sauce your pasta correctly, you're missing out on one of life's greatest pleasures. Conversely, even a so-so jarred marinara sauce can be improved upon by finishing it off right. Here's how to properly sauce your pasta, step by step. Read More
23 Feb 00:08

POV Solo Climb of the World's Tallest Residential Building Is Guaranteed to Get Your Palms Sweating

by Bryan Menegus
Timmy the Tooth

"This is mental"

YES IT IS YOU CRAZY CRAY

The Marina 101 is a residential skyscraper in Dubai which is, as the name suggests, 101 stories tall. James Kingston decided to (illegally) ascend the building and walk out onto a crane which he repeatedly and alarmingly describes as “greasy.” Personally, I’m feeling sick to my stomach just watching the gif above. But Kingston is a thrill seeker so he’s obviously having the time of his life.

Read more...

18 Feb 14:06

Video

Timmy the Tooth

We all needed this.