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Everything posted by samhexum
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You can get down off the ledge now. Rangers 10 Blue Jays 4 Rangers 6 Blue Jays 3 Rangers 10 Blue Jays 0 Rangers 9 Blue Jays 2 Texas Rangers 82-64 Toronto Blue Jays 80-67
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My friend & her hubby retired to North Carolina & he got obsessed with it there a few years ago. It's been gaining popularity all over.
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CityPickle to open first permanent indoor pickleball club in Long Island City on Friday
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I emailed the author of THE AVENGERS Forever coffee table book, who's probably the world's #1 authority on the show, to mention this joke that he, too, had probably missed. He confirmed that he had, in fact, never known that was a joke, either.
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who needs a special day to dress or talk like a pirate?
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An advisory panel of the Food and Drug Administration stated today that virtually all over-the-counter decongestants simply don’t work. The FDA panel found that phenylephrine — the active ingredient in Sudafed, Benadryl, Robitussin and other popular decongestants — is nearly useless at reducing nasal congestion. The advisory panel’s ruling might soon lead to these oral products being pulled off store shelves nationwide. (Nasal sprays containing phenylephrine are unaffected by the ruling.) “This drug and this oral dose should have been removed from the market a long time ago,” Jennifer Schwartzott, a patient advocate from New York, told NBC News. “The patient community requires and deserves medications that treat their symptoms safely and effectively and I don’t believe that this medication does,” Schwartzott added. Phenylephrine first came to prominence in 2006 after another decongestant, pseudoephedrine, was taken off drugstore shelves because it’s an ingredient in the illegal stimulant methamphetamine. After the passage of the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005, pseudoephedrine was available only behind the counter, so drugmakers replaced it with phenylephrine-based products. The FDA panel analyzed the early documents and studies that were used to support phenylephrine’s OTC use. The agency found that study results were inconsistent, did not meet modern standards for study design or had flawed data integrity. In contrast, several recent studies into phenylephrine found that the drug didn’t reduce nasal congestion much more than a placebo, even at doses as high as 40 milligrams. “In conclusion, we do believe that the original studies were methodologically unsound and do not match today’s standard,” said Dr. Peter Starke, an FDA official who led the review of phenylephrine. “By contrast, we believe the new data are credible and do not provide evidence that oral phenylephrine is effective as a nasal decongestant.” The FDA first started investigating oral phenylephrine in 2007, according to MedPage Today, in response to a citizen petition, and an advisory committee meeting was held that same year. In the meantime, there was some industry pushback against regulation of the drug, which remains the case today. The Consumer Healthcare Products Association, an industry representative group, had argued for keeping the drug available, citing the “totality of the scientific evidence” with pre-existing studies to support efficacy. They criticized the more recent clinical studies as having “important limitations” that were “conducted using a study population that is not appropriate to evaluate the efficacy of phenylephrine for OTC use.” The group also shared a survey that found 1 in 2 households in the US used an oral decongestant over the past year. It also found that people prefer oral decongestant tablets over nasal sprays 3 to 1. The market for decongestants is huge: A consumer study of 100,000 US households showed that about half purchased medications with phenylephrine over the course of the year, and most of those did so several times a year. Though the findings of the FDA advisory panel are nonbinding, the FDA usually sides with the panel, which may lead to oral phenylephrine products being removed from store shelves in the near future. Sudafed, Benadryl and most decongestants don't work: FDA advisory... NYPOST.COM "This drug should have been removed from the market a long time ago," said a patient advocate from New York.
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I think the cute guy in this ad looks like @BuffaloKyle:
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Siri's going to be unavailable for quite awhile... at least in Tampa: https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/38383310/rays-siri-suffers-hand-fracture-out-indefinitely
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maybe not such a great find... Living in a condominium situated in Brooklyn Bridge Park, you might expect to hear birds chirping, children playing, the wind rustling through the trees — and the sounds of toilets flushing and hands drying. The city is now looking into “acoustic renovations” to help make a public bathroom quieter following a years-long legal battle in which the owners of a condo in the park claim the toilets on the first floor of their building are a noisy nightmare. The cacophony has caused Salim Samaha, his wife Kimberly Su, and their family — including a young child and Su’s elderly mother — to endure nonstop sleepless nights since they bought the nearly $5 million unit in June of 2019, according to a September 2020 lawsuit they filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court. Their complaints began soon after they moved in. The family “did not have notice of the excessive and frequent noise” from the park-operated bathroom, gate, and storage room beneath their five-bedroom apartment, they allege in the suit. Brooklyn Bridge Park Corp. has conducted repeated renovations on the allegedly boisterous bathrooms — which opened in 2017 — but it hasn’t done enough to dim the noise, the family alleges. Now the park’s management is searching for experts to further fix the “bathroom acoustics” of the public restrooms, which are open from around 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. inside the Pierhouse Condominium on Furman Street. The nonprofit organization that runs the public park last week posted in The City Record that it is “seeking an experienced contractor to perform acoustic renovations to the men’s and women’s public restrooms.” Eric Landau, the president of Brooklyn Bridge Park Corp., told THE CITY that the organization issued the request to see how much it would cost to do further noise mitigation on the bathrooms — even though the two sides are still in litigation. “We are trying to find what our options are for rectifying this situation, though do not believe we are violating the New York City noise code or the law,” he said. “We feel very, very strongly that this is a public bathroom, in a public park, and it remaining open and operational is paramount.” Meanwhile, the couple shared their tale of water-closet woe in multiple court documents, writing that they can hear every flush from the bathroom below despite extensive renovation work after they first complained. The flushing creates a “banging” and “water hammer” effect as well as vibrations across their five-bedroom, four-bathroom duplex, they allege. Sounds from the opening and closing of bathroom stalls also comes through their apartment, they said, as well as noise from a clanging gate and workers in a storage room. The couple hired a sound engineering company, whose testing found that flushing toilets beneath the home violated the city’s noise code, the court papers state. The firm, SoundSense, found the bathroom noise changed the ambient noise level in the master bedroom by more than what is legally allowed — 7 dB above ambient at night and 10 dB more during the day. The city’s Department of Environmental Protection, however, countered through its own testing that the noise was not that bad. “There was no excessive or unreasonable noise (water hammering/flushing from the men and womens restroom facilities) noted or detected at the time of inspection,” inspectors found during a December 2020 visit. The couple also complained about noise from a nearby MTA ventilation plant and the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway — “particularly when trucks go over a bump on the highway directly outside the residence,” experts from SoundSense wrote. Samaha told the court in a deposition that it isn’t “unreasonable for the bathroom and storage room to be shut down until the excessive noise conditions are abated,” noting there are four bathrooms within a seven-minute walk from the ones below his apartment. The couple’s lawyer did not respond to a phone call and email seeking comment. The first section of the approximately 85-acre Brooklyn Bridge Park opened in 2010 on a once-industrial stretch of former Port Authority property along the East River. It is operated by the Brooklyn Bridge Park Corp., which maintains the park through an agreement with the city. Private development, including the 108-unit Pierhouse condo, was allowed on the grounds as a way to pay for the park’s maintenance, and the first tenants moved in by 2016. As part of the development deal, the condo and the nearby 1 Hotel had to have public amenities, like bathrooms, for the park’s many visitors. This year, around 5 million people came to the park between Memorial Day and Labor Day, Landau said. The buildings have been controversial from the start, with neighbors outside the park filing an unsuccessful lawsuit, saying they ruined the view from the Brooklyn Heights Promenade. Two Brooklyn Bridge Park board members were among the first to buy condos inside the Pierhouse, a potential conflict of interest which had to be approved by the city’s law department. The current lawsuit is still moving through court, with Samaha’s lawyer alleging the bathroom noise has lowered the value of the family’s apartment. Property records show it was purchased for more than $4.95 million four years ago. According to StreetEasy, the value has gone down 13% since then. Their toilet fight comes as the City Council released a bill last month that would require the city to create a “long-term citywide bathroom strategy” to ultimately have one public toilet per every 2,000 residents by 2035. The bill’s sponsor, Councilmember Sandy Nurse (D-Brooklyn), has said that the issue of public restrooms is about equity. “Because NYC’s lack of public bathrooms disproportionately affects some people more than others!” she posted on social media last month.
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Y'all don't even try to make it hard for me: Blanche: And Daddy, this is Dorothy. Dorothy: I'm sorry. I hope I didn't offend you. Big Daddy: No harm done, darling. Now, I want you to promise me you won't fret none. Dorothy: Well, I would, except I'm not exactly sure what "fret none" is.
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Ashley Crow is an American actress. She is best known for her role of Sandra Bennet on the television show Heroes, and her son has been called up by the Cubs. Lindsay Frost was an actress who had a successful Hollywood career, including roles in various dramas, such as "As the World Turns" and "L.A. Law", and her son's being a part of their rotation has not helped the Chisox, Angels, or Guardians make the postseason.
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Did you ever post anything inhumane about @RadioRob?
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Smuckers is buying Hostess, in what I’d say is a sweets deal.
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The good news... after being no-hit into the 11th inning, the Yankees won a meaningless game today. The bad news... Jasson Dominguez has a torn UCL and is out until the all-star break next season.
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No, but I have seen people toss cookies with their stomachs.
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poor kid because of both. fabulously rich kid because of the father.
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Elon Musk confirms he had third child with Grimes named Techno Mechanicus Vomito Projectilcus
Contact Info:
The Company of Men
C/O RadioRob Enterprises
3296 N Federal Hwy #11104
Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33306
Email: [email protected]
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