Monday, February 23, 2009

Douchebag Of The Week: Jim Bunning


Jim Bunning, former Phillies pitcher and current Republican Senator from Kentucky, used his vast-wealth of intellectual knowledge to play Doctor the past weekend. From Yahoo.com:

Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), already in political trouble for 2010, didn’t help matters any over the weekend.

At a Lincoln Day Dinner speech over the weekend, Bunning predicted that Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg would likely be dead from pancreatic cancer in nine months, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal.

The paper reports that Bunning reiterated his support of conservative judges, saying “that’s going to be in place very shortly because Ruth Bader Ginsburg…has cancer.”

“Bad cancer. The kind you don’t get better from,” Bunning went on. “Even though she was operated on, usually nine months is the longest that anybody would live after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.”

News of his comments comes as Bunning continues to take fire from the very Senate campaign committee tasked to help his re-election. PolitickerKY, a Kentucky-based political website, reported that state Senate President David Williams met with officials at the National Republican Senatorial Committee to explore a primary campaign against Bunning.

The report suggested that operatives of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell were working to assist Williams in a potential primary campaign -- and that McConnell's pollster is commissioning a survey to assess Williams’ viability against Bunning.


Thanks for your positive thoughts and support, Jim. I sincerely hope that as your Dementia worsens, those around you speak of you and treat you in a kinder manner than you speak of Justice Ginsburg. You were a dick when you played baseball and you're an even bigger dick now...You reap what you sow.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Monday, February 9, 2009

The Science Of Kissing...

Who ever know that making out could be so complicated? I mean, for a guy all it usually takes is a decent meal or a bouquet of flowers. Women are so complicated...
















Couples who share a passionate kiss this Valentine's Day will enjoy sensations of relaxation and excitement because of a complex series of chemical processes, as well as their love for their partners.





The study showed that women need more than just a kiss to experience the same chemical high as men - with additional features such as a romantic atmosphere of dimmed lights and mood music also required.





Wendy Hill, professor of psychology at Lafayette College, Pennsylvania began the research to find out why the mundane physical activity of rubbing lips can elicit such a gratifying emotional response.






Her team tested the levels of two hormones, cortisol and oxytocin, in 15 couples before and after holding hands and kissing.





They found that kissing reduced the levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, in both sexes. But levels of oxytocin, a hormone linked to social bonding that they expected to be boosted by kissing, only rose among the men.





The scientists have since replicated the tests in more intimate settings, to see if the less-than-alluring environment of the university health centres where the original research was carried out hampered women's hormonal surge.





The final results will be presented at the annual conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Chicago this week.





"This study shows kissing is much more complex and causes hormonal changes and things we never thought occurred," said Prof Hill.





"We tend to think more about who we are kissing and how it feels, yet there are a lot of other things happening."





It is not clear how kissing provokes such hormonal reactions, but some scientists believe they are triggered by the exchange of pheromones – chemicals our bodies release to attract sexual partners – in the saliva.





This interaction may also have health benefits. Helen Fisher of Rutgers University, New Jersey, said: "If you share your germs with somebody, you're boosting your internal defence system."
This is not the first research to analyse the physical effects of kissing. In 2007 British scientists measured the brain and heart activity sparked by passionate kissing, but found it was less intense that the stimulation produced by eating chocolate.





Romantic love has also been shown to have a close link to neurological activity, with scans showing that it has similar effect to cocaine on our brains.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Change?




100 tons of garbage left behind by Obama supporters the day of the Presidential inauguration. So much for personal responsibility...

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Douchebag Of The Week


Could you imagine leaving your house dressed like this? And then proudly posing for a photograph to top it off? Doing his best to appear like pimp-king Huggy Bear's brother-from-another-mother, WJIM-AMs own Michael "Star Jones" Shiels and his wife, tooth-whitening-specialist Dr. Christine Tenaglia recently hosted a fund-raiser for Potter Park Zoo. I thought the idea of a fund raiser for a zoo is to raise money to provide a safe haven for rare and endangered animals, not to wear their hides for an evening. What the hell is that thing on Mikey's head? Cow? Gotta wonder about a couple that purchases their clothing from the Marlin Perkins African Safariwear catalog. Winner of the inaugural Douchebag of the Week award--Michael Shiels.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

This Modern World





Thanks To The Recession, Bush Is Back... No, Not That One...The Other One


From Salon.com:



Recently someone forwarded me an invitation to a cheeky Inauguration Day event called "Shave the Date." As organizer Kristen Chase explains on her Web site, "Show your love for your country, and as you watch our new president take his oath and feel your satin undies against your smooth nether region, you can take pride in knowing you've rid your world of bush once and for all."



Now, you'll be hard-pressed to find anyone more eager than me to offer Junior a hearty farewell to wherever ex-president frat boys go. And the event is, indeed, a lovely act of unity. But I won't be participating in this brilliant call to action. See, it ignores one thing: W. may be leaving the White House, but when it comes to our most private places, bush is back.



"Absolutely," agrees April Barton, stylist extraordinaire and owner of Suite 303, the salon in New York's notorious Chelsea Hotel. "The new rule of thumb is: When you lift your leg, there shouldn't be any hair below the crease. Keep it clean in the back. And in the front, trim the hair right before its natural curl." She likens the look to a more trimmed, 21st-century version of '70s pubes: the tailored bush.



Or, as my friend Jen put it, "My landing strip has turned into more of a Dorito."



It should probably come as no surprise that the biggest economic crisis since the Great Depression would inspire a little fuzz. Conspicuous spending is out, after all. And maintaining a stripper-worthy wax job ain't cheap.



"It's back to shaving in the shower for me," says Catlin, a brand manager for a Los Angeles fashion label.


"It's a fortune to keep a trim bush," bemoans Meredith, a healthcare marketing executive.



But it isn't just hard times driving this trend. After seeing the shaved beav of nearly every pop tart, after years of porn going mainstream, isn't the thrill of the bare vage getting a little stale? If not, you know, creepy?



That was Bill Maher's take, when he lamented on a Sept. 19 episode of "Real Time With Bill Maher," "Bring back a little pubic hair. Not a lot. I'm not talking about reviving that 1973 look that says I'm liberated ... and I'm smuggling a hedgehog. I just want a friendly, fuzzy calling card that tells me I'm not going to get arrested."



These days, even Playboy -- and it's hard to find better experts on the matter -- acknowledges a departure from a near-decade run of absolute clean living. Gary Cole, the Playboy photography director who has observed the region's changing landscape since 1975, says, "It started [in the '80s] with trimming and a landing strip, in part a reflection of the skimpier swimsuits. Then it went further to tiny patches, then to none at all. Now, the pendulum is swinging a little the other way."



And I, for one, am not going to complain.



I first took a lady Schick to my bikini line sometime during the second term of the Reagan administration. The process guaranteed unpleasantries: razor burn and in-grown hairs, not to mention the constant and necessary repetition. But in time, with increased skill, the invention of the gazillion-blade razor and ladies-only shave gel, I gave the task little thought. Until I moved to New York City, of course, where highlights from a New Jersey mall and a "natural" brow were the sartorial equivalents of hate crime. Eventually, seduced by the city's indulgent carelessness, I let Sonya and her thick imported Brazilian wax have their way with me. My lady garden -- once lush -- now lay nearly bare. And for years, that's how it stayed: a tiny patch of hair, not dissimilar to Hitler's mustache.



But in recent months, I've longed for the fuller landscape of yesteryear. While I've become accustomed to some benefits of the Brazilian -- it does clear a nice path for action -- I'm aching for change. The act itself is invasive. I'm feeling a little rebellious. And, hey, money is tight.


It does seem that George Taylor's famous hemline theory -- that the length of women's skirts rise and fall with economic times -- can be applied to bikini lines as well. In 1922, Sears and Roebuck introduced the first women's razors. Electrolysis emerged in the '60s until social and political rebellion gave way to a renewed celebration of "Hair" (whose upcoming Broadway revival is no mere coincidence). Then, in the '80s, power suits and polished, tight skin reigned, just before Black Monday pushed bikini waxing to the bottom of "to do" lists. As the millennium neared, however, dot-coms let the money and the liquor flow, and women bared all like never before. As "Sex and the City" reminded us (and reminded us again), the Brazilian plowed its way across America's heartland, but these days those crops are growing back -- in Technicolor.



Take, for example, Betty Beauty, a pubic hair dye in a range of colors made popular not by young club-goers but by middle-aged Middle American women. Nancy Jarecki, founder of the product, explains, "The boomers are buying our product. They spend hundreds of dollars getting their hair that beautiful auburn color. They want it to match. And they want to cover gray." Seventy-three percent of Betty Beauty total sales are sold to women over age 36. And by the way, 42 percent of their Middle American clientele prefer pink. (The product isn't just for Kansas anymore, however. According to the Superficial, Betty Beauty is also popular with celebrities like Mariska Hargitay and Christine Taylor, Ben Stiller's wife.)



But as a woman, I think there is something powerful in deciding that products and waxers and experts don't need to come between you and your private parts. It's OK to be a woman again -- a real woman, hair and all.



And, as April Barton points out, "'Racing stripes' are not safe and secure. And security is what's important right now. It's nice to have a little something to come home to. It's time to get back to basics."



Personally, I've garnered only positive feedback with my new coif.



So while some women shave themselves silly on Jan. 20, I plan to enter this new era with a tailored modern mini-bush and a reclaimed sense of womanhood. Maybe, if the bikini line theory plays out, we'll all go back to the Telly Savalas sooner or later. But the promise of a new America under an Obama administration gives me greater optimism. I envision a country where we can one day have it all -- a booming economy, national security, a healthy respect for sexuality and even a little bush. I say, Yes we can.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Monday With McCain



Defeated US Presidential Candidate John McCain says India will attack Pakistan if it fails to act against those involved in the Mumbai raids.
McCain, who is on a two-day visit to Pakistan, outspokenly told a group of reporters in Pakistan's Lahore that Indian Premier Manmohan Singh was visibly angry about the killings and damage to property in the Mumbai terrorist attacks. “The democratic government of India is under pressure and it will be a matter of days after they have given the evidence to Pakistan to use the option of force if Islamabad fails to act against the terrorists,” Pakistan's Daily Times quoted him, as saying on Sunday.
The Arizona Senator stressed that if Pakistan does not do anything to find and arrest the 'bad guys', India will have no option but to use force. Questioned about what the United States would do in the event that India carries out such a threat, McCain said that Washington would not be able to do much, even as “privately I will try to dissuade India from doing so.” “We were angry after 9/11. This is India's 9/11. We cannot tell India not to act when that is what we did, asking the Taliban to hand over Osama Bin Laden to avoid a war and waging one when they refused to do so.” He noted that such an Indian attack could cause retaliation from Pakistan and that this is precisely the course of actions and reactions that those who attacked Mumbai were hoping for.
McCain said that Pakistan could respond to such an Indian attack, but reiterated that the threat to Islamabad on this score will be very real. The comments come after US and Indian intelligence reports suggested that the Mumbai attacks were carried out by the Pakistan-based Kashmiri militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba.
Meanwhile, Islamabad continues to express doubt over involvement of Pakistani 'elements' in the incident. US and India have vowed to keep pressure on Islamabad over the Mumbai raids. Earlier US State Secretary Condoleezza Rice, during her meetings with Pakistani civilian and military leaders, made it clear that Pakistan needs to act effectively to bring the perpetrators to justice. She warned that the "US will act if Pakistan did not". She urged Islamabad to "follow evidence wherever it leads" and lend 'absolute' and 'transparent' cooperation to New Delhi in the probe into the Mumbai terror strikes. 10 gunmen targeted Mumbai's luxurious hotels and tourist attractions on Nov.26 with automatic weapons and hand grenades in a 60-hour terror assault, killing nearly 200 people and injuring almost 300.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Groping Hillary Clinton


Barack Obama's chief speechwriter, Jon Favreau, cops a feel...She seems pretty happy about it too!!!

"One Toke Over The Line Sweet Jesus"

I remember my parents forcing me to watch the Lawrence Welk show quite often when I was just a snot-nosed punk...But this old LW video just cracks me up...At the end of the video, Welk says--with a straight face no less--"They're you've heard a modern spiritual by Gail and Dale." Spiritual? Maybe he was right?

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Sucked Right In...

A New Jersey woman is suing a Pennsylvania sports bar and restaurant, saying she got stuck inside a toilet bowl for 20 minutes when the seat broke. Kathleen Hewko, of Delran Township, said she was in the bathroom at Starters Pub in an Allentown suburb when the handicapped toilet seat she was sitting on cracked and dumped her into the bowl.
Hewko claims in the lawsuit filed in November in U.S. District Court in Allentown that she had hip surgery prior to the Nov. 19, 2006 incident and was re-injured when the seat broke.
Her Philadelphia attorney, John Cirrinicione, says Hewko is not obese -- she weighs 130 to 140 pounds.


The suit names Starters and Kohler Co., which made the toilet seat.
Representatives from both companies said they couldn't comment.