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Daily Archives: April 7, 2017
Why the Grand National is the holy grail and sporting immortality the prize – Telegraph.co.uk
Posted: April 7, 2017 at 8:58 pm
The jockeys riding in Saturdays Randox Health Grand National at Aintree may face slightly different challenges to those faced by my generation in the 1990s - just as we faced very different challenges from those riders who tackled the upright gorse obstacles of the 1950s in cork helmets.
But even while the course continues to evolve, the Grand National remains a race like no other. Reg Green, the Grand National historian, even called one of his books A Race Apart'.
It still holds a place close to the countrys heart and though it may not be quite the family occasion when we drew the curtains and all gathered round a television set in the sitting room to watch it undisturbed, a good percentage of the nation will nevertheless see it one way or another - as will some 600 million around the world.
Form goes out of the window. The safest bet is that every Arthur in the country will have a small wager on One For Arthur, that Katie Walsh on Wonderful Charm will be this years housewives choice and, in China where red is a lucky colour, Definitly Red and Vieux Lion Rouge will be popular.
Click here for your guide to the best odds, free bets and offers >>
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Why the Grand National is the holy grail and sporting immortality the prize - Telegraph.co.uk
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Black Mirror’s San Junipero: Technological Immortality – The Georgetown Voice
Posted: at 8:58 pm
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G"e/n=IeH~=.p68b0fHn#n7nwG ;,p#M' $ Read this article: Black Mirror's San Junipero: Technological Immortality - The Georgetown Voice
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Brains on ice: The Aussie man planning to live forever – Mackay Daily Mercury
Posted: at 8:58 pm
When Philip Rhoades' parents died he put their brains on ice. Journalist SHERELE MOODY finds out what he plans to do with his own body after death.
IN an ideal world, Philip Rhoades will die peacefully and pain-free, his body will be put on ice and he will be brought back to life in a time when illness does not exist and people live forever.
And when he does come back, the cryonics expert will have his deceased mum and dad for company.
After Gerald and Dorothy Rhoades died in May of 2016, Philip placed their brains in a commercial cryogenic facility - the kind that stores animal semen for artificial insemination and human eggs for IVF.
Philip froze his parents' brains because it only costs about $35,000 to keep each organ for perpetuity compared to $200,000 each to have their bodies frozen, transported and stored in cryonics facilities overseas.
"The key thing is being able to download the information in the brain," Philip said of keeping his mum and dad's neurological remains on ice.
"In the case of a neural archive, we're not concerned about reviving the body's cells, we're concerned with the neural architecture that has the information in it.
"It's likely that we will be able to in the next 10 or 20 years be able to extract that information with high-resolution brain scans.
"We'd then dump the information into a super computer."
When a cryonics candidate dies, a team of medical experts prepares them for transport to a storage facility by stabilising their body, packing it with ice, lacing the blood with an anti-coagulant and feeding oxygen to the brain.
When the body arrives at its final destination the blood is drained and the water in the cells is replaced by a liquid "anti-freeze" that ensures the organs and tissues do not shatter when ice crystals form during the freezing process.
The body is then cooled by dry ice to minus 130 degrees before being placed in a protective body bag and lowered, head first, into a metal tank filled with liquid nitrogen that is kept at minus 196 degrees.
Bodies are stored upside down to ensure the brains are the last thing to thaw if the tank leaks.
While Philip could only afford to freeze his parents' brains, he hopes to have his entire body put on ice for re-animation "as soon as possible" but he acknowledged he could be waiting around for quite a while.
"Trying to revive a whole human being is a difficult operation," he said of the process that some scientists say won't work because of the damage extreme temperatures cause to human cells.
"If you're getting a cryonic suspension then the intention is that modern scientific technology will allow the body to be thawed out, completely revived and rejuvenated so you look like you're 25 and you feel like you're 25 again.
"Life is too short - it shouldn't be three score and 10 years, it should be thousands of years."
Philip hopes he does not get Alzheimer's disease like his father had in the years before he died.
If he does end up with the same illness, Philip is considering what he calls "pre-mortal suspension" before the dementia renders him unable to make his own decisions.
His plan is to end his own life while connected to machinery that will prepare his body for the cryonics process.
Philip is currently working on a way to remove the need for human intervention when he dies and the process of initiating the cryonic state because of the potential legal implications for anyone seen to be assisting in his death.
"It will involve technology that will drain my blood, undertake the automatic perfusion and all of that," Philip said.
- ARM NEWSDESK
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Brains on ice: The Aussie man planning to live forever - Mackay Daily Mercury
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Push to promote alternative med – Sun.Star
Posted: at 8:57 pm
Push to promote alternative med Sun.Star ASIDE from modern medical services, there is also a growing interest in alternative medicine and wellness treatments among foreign medical tourists. Clarissa Jane Pe, vice chair for the dental sector of Cebu Health and Wellness Council (CHWC), said ... |
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Are Supplements Safe? – Men’s Health
Posted: at 8:57 pm
Men's Health | Are Supplements Safe? Men's Health Oversight of the supplement industry falls to the FDA, which regulates the products more like food than drugs. So even though supplements sit next to allergy meds and ibuprofen at your drugstore, they don't have to comply with the same testing ... |
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Edamame burger? Kale and quinoa soup? The healthy fast-food trend is hitting the Midwest – REjournals.com
Posted: at 8:56 pm
Crazy Bowls & Wraps
For Keith Kitsis, the decision was a simple one: People often need to eat fast. But eating fast shouldnt have to mean eating unhealthy, too.
Thats why 23 years ago, Kitsis founded Crazy Bowls & Wraps in St. Louis, a fast-food restaurant offering everything from kale long before it was cool to quinoa with its wraps, salads and bowls.
Today, Crazy Bowls & Wraps has 15 locations in the Missouri, Ohio and Illinois, with the majority of these restaurants in the St. Louis market. The chain was a bit of a pioneer more than two decades ago. But today, Crazy Bowls & Wraps has some company: Healthier fast-food restaurants are opening across the country, including in the Midwest.
Kitsis said that this isnt just a fad, either.
This whole movement of healthier fast food has evolved over the years, Kitsis said. You have Chipotle talking about its better ingredients. You have the explosion in gourmet grocers like Whole Foods. This is not just a trend. People really want to eat this way. They want to know where their food is coming from. Healthy doesnt mean low-calorie. it means knowing where your ingredients are sourced and the quality of those ingredients.
Nics Organic Fast Food
A growing movement
Restaurants are one subset of retail that is doing well today. And fast-casual restaurants are doing especially well, while big, traditional fast-food chains such as McDonalds, Burger King and Wendys are seeing sluggish, if any, growth.
The growth of healthier fast-food restaurants is an example of this.
Trends expert Daniel Levine, director of New York City-based trends consultancy The Avant-Guide Institute, said that healthier fast-food choices is in no way a fad. Instead, it is a long-term trend, one that will only grow in the coming years.
We draw a line between trend and fad, Levine said. The biggest difference is longevity. Fads are quick flashes. Trends last longer. This movement is definitely a trend.
For proof, Levine points to the new struggles faced by high-end grocers such as Whole Foods and Trader Joes. These stores used to face little competition from traditional supermarkets. Today, though, even standard supermarkets such as Jewel-Osco and Safeway are stocking much of the same healthier fare in which organic and gourmet grocers specialize.
To Levine, this is evidence of a long-term trend in the country.
Then theres LYFE Kitchen, a fast-food chain with Midwest locations in the Chicago and Memphis markets. This chain, which offers such healthier fare as hummus, un-fried chicken strips, flatbread pizzas, salads and soups, was started by Mike Roberts and Mike Donahue, two former high-ranking executives with McDonalds.
What is so fascinating to me, from a trends perspective, is that guys from McDonalds, who knows what the eating zeitgeist is in America, thinks that this kind of healthier fast-food restaurant is the next big thing. Just looking at the direction toward healthy eating that these guys took, shows me that this movement is 100 percent a trend and not just a fad.
A menu item at LYFE Kitchen
Organic fast food in Chicago
A good example of this trend is Nics Organic Fast Food, which opened its first location earlier this year in the Chicago suburb of Rolling Meadows.
As the name suggests, Nics serves traditional fast food everything from hamburgers and fries to breakfast sandwiches that is certified organic. The food isnt low-calorie, but the restaurants founders husband-and-wife team Benjamin and Nicolette Brittsan say that it is healthier.
The Brittsans are parents, and say they struggled to find organic fast-food options in the Chicago area for their two children.
Their organic restaurant fills that void, the Brittsans say.
Tom & Eddies is another good example. This chain, with locations in the Chicago suburbs of Vernon Hills, Lombard and Naperville, also serves what looks like traditional fast-food mainstays such as hamburgers, chicken strips and chicken sandwiches. But this small chain also makes its food from scratch with all-natural ingredients.
The restaurants also offer healthier choices, such as the Yin & Yang burger, a burger made from ground edamame beans, and the Islander, a sandwich made from sushi-grade tuna. Tom & Eddies also offers a ground-turkey burger with crumbled Feta cheese.
Tom & Eddies, too, was born out of McDonalds. The chain was founded by Ed Rensi, president and chief executive officer of McDonalds USA, and Tom Dentice, executive vice president of McDonalds Corp. in charge of operations and franchising.
Buona fast-food restaurants, with 19 locations in Chicago, are known for their Italian beef sandwiches. That doesnt sound particularly healthy.
But the chain doest serve food made from scratch. It uses all-natural ingredients. And it also offers its Skip-the-Gym menu, which it launched in 2015. Items on this menu come in at under 500 calories.
Customers can choose a 5-inch skinny Italian beef sandwich which comes on multigrain bread and enjoy a sandwich that comes with just 266 calories. The chains signature pepper-and-egg sandwich a Chicago tradition will cost diners just 408 calories.
Whats interesting about such restaurants is that they arent necessarily serving low-calorie food. Eating at a Tom & Eddies or Nics Organic Fast Food wont help your waistline.
Instead, these restaurants are focusing on organics, food that doesnt include artificial ingredients and locally-sourced items.
Jessica Levings, registered dietitian, real estate developer and owner of the Balanced Pantry, a company that helps food clients create the Nutrition Facts labels on their food, says that she isnt surprised at this trend. Consumers have simply gotten savvier when it comes to their food, she said.
Healthy, real food is the number-one thing consumers want to see more of on restaurant menus, Levings said. Consumers perception of healthy food has evolved, and now includes not just calories and nutrients, but also food free from artificial ingredients and traceable to the source.
Levine says that the bigger, well-established fast-food chains have taken notice of this. An example? Earlier this year, McDonalds announced that it will make its Quarter Pounder sandwiches out of fresh, not frozen, beef.
Levine says that those fast-food chains that dont adapt their menus to include at least some healthier or organic items will struggle to maintain a steady stream of customers.
Those that dont recognize this trend? They will die, Levine said.
Tags | Buona, Chicago, Crazy Bowls & Wraps, fast food, Illinois, Jessica Levings, Keith Kitsis, Lombard, McDonalds, Missouri, Nic's Organic Fast Food, Retail, Rolling Meadows, St. Louis, Tom & Eddies
2017 Real Estate Communications Group. Duplication or reproduction of this article not permitted without authorization from the Real Estate Publishing Group. For information on reprint or electronic pdf of this article contact Mark Menzies at 312-644-4610 or menzies@rejournals.com
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Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn’t Just A Buzzword – Forbes
Posted: at 8:56 pm
Forbes | Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn't Just A Buzzword Forbes The ad drew criticism almost immediately for being disingenuous and trivializing the Black Lives Matter movement. ... When done well, celebrity endorsements can catapult a brand into the zeitgeist and create infinite consumer loyalty, notes Rieckhoff. |
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Pepsi Just Showed Us Why Authenticity Isn't Just A Buzzword - Forbes
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Famous fish the focus of ‘steelhead ecology’ hike – Tillamook Headlight-Herald
Posted: at 8:56 pm
The following is a press release from Tillamook Bay Watershed Council and Tillamook Estuaries Partnership:
Have you ever wondered what makes a rainbow trout become a "steelhead? Have you ever caught a glimpse of steelhead swimming and spawning in the wild? These incredible ocean-going trout are among the most revered game fish in the world, and they attract thousands of anglers to Tillamook Countys rivers every year. Steelhead are also one of the most beautiful and interesting inhabitants of our rainforest environment. This coming weekend offers a rare chance to learn about these fascinating fish on a special steelhead ecology hike along Tillamook's spectacular Kilchis River. Join naturalists from the Tillamook Bay Watershed Council (TBWC) and Tillamook Estuaries Partnership (TEP) as they lead hikers along sections of the Kilchis, looking for spawning pairs of steelhead, and discussing aspects of steelhead biology and behavior. Registration is free and required for this event, and will be limited to 20 people.
"Explore Nature" is a series of hikes, walks, paddles and outdoor adventures hosted throughout Tillamook County by a coalition of conservation organizations. These meaningful, nature-based experiences highlight the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve and conserve the areas natural resources and natural resource-based economy. Explore Nature is partially funded by the Economic Development Council of Tillamook County and Visit Tillamook Coast.
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Famous fish the focus of 'steelhead ecology' hike - Tillamook Headlight-Herald
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‘Explore Nature’ sets Cape Lookout hike – Tillamook Headlight-Herald
Posted: at 8:56 pm
The following is a press release from Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS:
Lush forest, distant waterfalls and outstanding vistas are all part of this trek to the end of Cape Lookout. This free hike is hosted by the Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS and is part of the Explore Nature series of hikes, walks, paddles and outdoor adventures. Explore Nature partners include volunteer community and non-profit organizations, offering meaningful nature-based experiences highlight the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve and conserve the areas natural resources and natural resource-based economy.
This moderate to difficult five-mile journey takes you to the Cape Lookout headland, which extends more than a mile out into the ocean. Towering over 800 feet above sea level, the cape offers sweeping views of Sandlake watershed, seasonal glimpses of migrating whales, and confirms the amazing beauty of Tillamook County.
Although this hike has a stunning backdrop, the trail itself can be muddy and slick. Also, expect to navigate over stair stepping tree roots. Portions of the trail parallel the cliffs edge and do not have guardrails.
Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS is a non-profit organization dedicated to sustaining the Netarts Bay area through education and stewardship. Find out more at http://www.netartsbaytoday.org.
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'Explore Nature' sets Cape Lookout hike - Tillamook Headlight-Herald
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Week in Film: Endless LOLs, an Acid Western, and Great Advice … – Bedford + Bowery
Posted: at 8:56 pm
i hate myself Friday April 7 through Thursday April 13 at Anthology Film Archives: $11
Joanna ArnowsBad at Dancinghighly personal, and highly awkward documentaryappropriately titled i hate myself :)makesWelcome to the Dollhouselook like a film about a well-adjusted family. Arnow sums up her motivation in the form of a question at the films outset: Is James a good person to be dating? Prepare to laugh your sphincter right out of your butt when the BF climaxes following a reluctant hump and tells Arnow sweetly: Feels good, babe. Thanks for just lying there. What a hero.
Anthology has dubbed the film one of the most unflinchingly, sometimes shockingly candid personal documentaries to emerge in recent years now you know why theyve devoted an entire week of screenings to it. Arnow will be on hand too, so dont miss it. The Term() Thursday April 6, Tuesday April 18, Monday April 24, and Sunday April 30 at Spectacle: $5
Throughout the month of April, Spectacle is hostingRule #1: Believe the Autocrat, aseries spotlighting films from Marxfilm. As an ex-Russianist (admittedly not a very accomplished one lets just say Im a lot like that dude inDon DeLillos White Noise,the professor and Nazi historian who cant speak German), this series comes highly recommended for my fellow Russophile dorks out there.
And hey, given that our current president seems to model himself after Vladimir Putin, its probably a pretty good idea for us all to take a good, hard look at whats happened in Russia since thecollapse of the CCCP, when a fledgling democracy was quietly/not-so-quietly overthrown by a former KGB officer with an autocratic streak. Theres been stagnation, brain drain, cultural flattening, censorship, a volatile resource-based economy heavily dependent on oil, and a violent war on the press (just to name a few).
In fact, the series title was inspired by Masha Gessens post-election op-ed for the Times, which advises Americans to pay careful attention to the authoritarian tendencies of our own new regime, and take lessons from the Russians, who are in so deep that it will likely take another revolution to get them out. And hey, given that were just a few short months from the Russian Revolutions Centennial theres no time like October.
The Termis a good place to start, since its focus is the short-lived protest movement following Vladimir Putins 2012 reelection, which was led by people who Russians like to say live inside the garden ring aka the tiny less-than-1-percent class of uber-rich people and their educated liberal children, who the vast majority of Russians have next to nothing in common with. Therein lies the problem well, one of them.
South of Heaven: Supernatural Westerns Now through Saturday April 29 at Spectacle: $5 per screening
If any of you are familiar with so-called Acid Westerns (think: Holy Mountainand JarmuschsDead Man), then youre sure to love this Spectacle series focused on Supernatural Westerns. The four films cover everything from witches to werewolves, from the devil to Dracula, but all are throwbacks on horseback from down Mexico way. Which, if youre anything like me, is great becausesome of us round these parts have seen nearly every American-made Western worth watching, and its high noon-time we soak up some desert tales from south of the border. And, hey, youll learn cool stuff like this a film called Ghost Townup here translates to El Pueblo Fantasma(which is just a much better sounding title, to be perfectly honest).
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Week in Film: Endless LOLs, an Acid Western, and Great Advice ... - Bedford + Bowery
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