Tag Archives: Water

Slow Food Takes on "The Inedible Egg" (Video)

Image credit: Slow Food USA Organic eggs may have dodged the recent salmonella recall , and our readers may now be equipped with information on what salmonella is and how they can avoid getting sick . Nevertheless, we’re not out of the woods yet. In fact, with our food systems remaining just as centralized, intensive, and reliant on antibiotics as they ever where, it … Read the full story on TreeHugger

More here:
Slow Food Takes on "The Inedible Egg" (Video)

Who Cares About The Environment, Give Me Clean Dishes!

Eutrophication of lake, caused by phosphates. Source : Rutgers Two years ago, when Washington State banned phosphates in dishwasher detergent (the last detergent or soap that still had it), our post was deluged with comments complaining how the new stuff didn’t work as well as the old. Nobody seemed to much care about lakes and algae and eutrophication, they just wanted everything to be like it was. Now, with 17 states banning phosphates, the manufacturers have taken phos… Read the full story on TreeHugger

See the article here:
Who Cares About The Environment, Give Me Clean Dishes!

Donnis To Join Matt & Kim On Tour

‘They’re like the king and queen of hipster music,’ upstart Atlanta MC says of hitting the road with dance/punk duo for a few October dates. By Jayson Rodriguez Donnis Photo: MTV News Donnis is a busy man these days, he recently put out two mixtapes: The Invitation, hosted by DJ Holiday and Infamous, and Fashionably Late helmed by Clinton Sparks, DJ Ill Will and Rockstar. Now the Atlanta rapper has just put the finishing touches on his first EP, also titled Fashionably Late and due September 28. Donnis shot a video with BBGun (the Roots, J.Cole) for “Tonight,” the first offering from the EP, in Tokyo. The location is significant because Donnis was once stationed in the region while serving in the military. And now the upstart is gearing up to head out on tour with dance/punk duo Matt & Kim. “We’re about to do the East Coast and the whole southern region,” Donnis told MTV News. “It’s something a little different for me. A lot of people are like, ‘Why are Matt & Kim and Donnis going on tour?’ But I’m a huge fan of theirs and they’re a huge fan of mine. At first I was like, ‘I don’t know.’ But we have a great relationship and I’m a huge fan of their music. I think a lot of people are a huge fan of their music . A lot of people talk about hipster music, and they’re like the king and queen of hipster music, so it’s awesome to be rolling with them. I’m excited.” The tour is a promo run for the release of Matt & Kim’s Sidewalks album and it kicked off this week landing in Columbus Ohio on Friday (September 17). Donnis will join the bill on October 14 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and stay on through the October 31 date in New York. Tour dates, according to Matt & Kim’s label:

‘Devil’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics praise M. Night Shyamalan-produced flick as ‘a terrific little horror thriller.’ By Eric Ditzian Bojana Novakovic in “Devil” Photo: Universal Pictures Don’t you dare say elevators are dull. You might fall asleep standing up while riding to your appointed destination, but Hollywood has something of a love affair with that utilitarian contraption . Christopher Nolan blew our minds this summer with his elevator scene in “Inception.” Stanley Kubrick unleashed a terrifying river of blood from behind those sliding doors in “The Shining.” And James Cameron has worked elevator action into “Aliens,” “Terminator 2” and “True Lies.” The latest to join these rather elevated cinematic ranks is M. Night Shyamalan. He’s the brains behind “Devil,” a new horror flick with a simple premise: What if you were unlucky enough to ride along with Satan? Shyamalan recruited Brian Nelson (“30 Days of Night”) to pen the script and John Erick Dowdle (“Quarantine”) to direct. The movie arrived in theaters Friday (September 17). Here’s what the critics are saying: The Story “While the mostly unknown actors have their shaky moments, there’s a silver lining; unlike in many horror movies these days, it’s unlikely you’ll guess the order in which characters die. Five people are stuck in a malfunctioning elevator. All of them are suspicious types with shady histories. And thanks to some largely unnecessary voice-over, we’ve been given the heads-up that the Devil occasionally likes to round up a few sinners into a place of no escape, and torment them to death as the world watches and becomes more cynical as a result. In effect, this means that every few minutes, the lights in the elevator go out, scary noises are heard, and when they come back up, something horrible has happened and the surviving captives go even more nuts. Meanwhile, the cops outside try to figure out possible motives for whatever it is that’s going on, while trying to break in and free the lift-bound. ” — Luke Y. Thompson, E! Online The Lowdown on M. Night “Perhaps if M. Night Shyamalan is planning to work as a producer (and not a writer/director) for a few more years, I’d say that ‘Devil’ is most definitely a welcome step in the right direction. He’s the one who hatched the simple-yet-nifty concept, he’s the one who hired Nelson and Dowdle, and he’s the one who keeps making my beloved Philadelphia look so damn pretty on film — so clearly the man still has some skills for scary storytelling. Frankly I think M. Night still has too much talent to stay ‘disappointing’ forever, and if slight-yet-entertaining matinee-style horror flicks like ‘Devil’ are what he’s focused on, I think that’s good news for everyone.” — Scott Weinberg, FEARnet The Dissenters “Cinematically, ‘Devil’ has no particular style other than to tell the story in the most direct way possible. Even the sequences where the lights flicker and evil has its way with the elevator people (as seen in the trailers) are unoriginal, flat in tone and far from shocking. So what does ‘Devil’ have to offer the horror community at large? Not a whole hell of a lot. The bloodshed is light, the deaths mundane and the supernatural aspects kept to an extreme minimum. Maybe the title Lil’ Devil would have been more accurate since that’s the amount you are going to get.” — Nomad, Dread Central The Reveal “If you’ve watched enough films like this, you may also guess which one the ‘Devil’ is 2 minutes in, and though the film made a great effort to throw the audience, I was a little disappointed to find out I had been right. However, the climax is frightening, almost living up to the promise of all that’s happened before, and the way the ending is handled feels rewarding and satisfying. After the immaculately wrung tension of the last 80 minutes, I felt like I’d seen an excellent film. Yes there were moments that could’ve been scarier or more tensely handled, but that’s nitpicking. In its own right it’s a terrific little horror thriller. Surprisingly gore-light, it chooses to scare you with atmosphere and tension instead, and it does a tremendous job at it.” — Ben Greene, MovieWeb The Final Word “For all its preaching about guilt, redemption, punishment and salvation, ‘Devil’ delivers its chills in a compact, efficient package of extreme close-ups, decently-timed surprises and the terror of dread-anticipation. It’s not great, but it’s not bad, and the fellow who foisted ‘The Happening,’ ‘Lady in the Water’ and ‘The Last Airbender’ on the faithful would take that praise any day. No doubt the mind of M. Night is troubled that he didn’t get a directing credit (John Erick Dowdle of the taut and tense ‘Quarantine’ did) for a movie that at least doesn’t further devalue his brand.” — Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel Check out everything we’ve got on “Devil.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

Continued here:
‘Devil’: The Reviews Are In!

Arctic sea ice shrinks to third lowest area on record

Arctic sea ice melted over the summer to cover the third smallest area on record, US researchers said Wednesday, warning global warming could leave the region ice free in the month of September 2030. Last week, at the end of the spring and summer “melt season” in the Arctic, sea ice covered 4.76 million square kilometers (1.84 million square miles), the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center said in an annual report. “This is only the third time in the satellite record that ice extent has fallen below five million square kilometers (1.93 million square miles), and all those occurrences have been within the past four years,” the report said. A separate report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) found that in August, too, Arctic sea ice coverage was down sharply, covering an average of six million square kilometers (2.3 million square miles), or 22 percent below the average extent from 1979 to 2000. The August coverage was the second lowest for Arctic sea ice since records began in 1979. Only 2007 saw a smaller area of the northern sea covered in ice in August, NOAA said. The record low for Arctic sea ice cover at the end of the spring and summer “melt season” in September, was also in 2007, when ice covered just 4.13 million square kilometers (1.595 million square miles). Mark Serreze, director of the NSIDC, said climate-change skeptics might seize the fact that Arctic sea ice did not hit a record-low extent this year, but said they would be barking up the wrong tree if they claimed the shrinkage had been stopped. “Only the third lowest? It didn't set a new record? Well, right. It didn't set a new record but we're still headed down. We're not looking at any kind of recovery here,” he told AFP. In fact, Serreze said, Arctic sea ice cover is shrinking year-round, with more ice melting in the spring and summer months and less ice forming in the fall and winter. “The Arctic, like the globe as a whole, is warming up and warming up quickly, and we're starting to see the sea ice respond to that. Really, in all months, the sea ice cover is shrinking — there's an overall downward trend,” Serreze told AFP. “The extent of Arctic ice is dropping at something like 11 percent per decade — very quickly, in other words. “Our thinking is that by 2030 or so, if you went out to the Arctic on the first of September, you probably won't see any ice at all. It will look like a blue ocean, we're losing it that quickly,” he said. Losing sea ice cover in the Arctic would affect everything from the obvious, such as people who live in the far north and polar bears, to global weather patterns, said Serreze. “The Arctic acts as a sort of refrigerator of the northern hemisphere. As we lose the ice cover, we start to change the nature of that refrigerator, and what happens up there affects what happens down here in the middle latitudes,” he said. “We might have less cold outbreaks, which you might say is a good thing, but it's not such a good thing in regions that depend on snowfall for their water supply.” NOAA noted in its report that the first eight months of 2010 were in equal first place with the same period in 1998 for the warmest combined land and ocean surface temperatures on record worldwide, and the summer months were the second warmest on record globally, after 1998. added by: JanforGore

Ganja Tea: Natural Remedy to Combat the Common Cold…

Ganja Tea or Sweet Ganja hot chocolate —-> Ingredient's:For Sweet Ganja Hot Cocoa:-Milk-(To Taste,But remember the More Milk The More THC(the milk activates the THC)the higher effect you'll get ;)..=For The Ganja Tea:WATER- – Now for both drinks you'll need 1gram of ground up Ganja((Marijuana))-You can add more if you want a more stronger HIGH.You can also leave/stems in;)and a half table spoon of real butter for tea(so that the butter can activate the THC)—-:Strainer-Bag of favorite tea if making ganja tea or favorite Cocoa mix if making sweet ganja hot cocoa—2 saucepans… Directions on making tea or cocoa:-Pour water or milk into saucepan and heat until simmer—-Then:Put ground up Ganja into saucepan to boil for 5 to 10 mins-then let the mixture sit for 15 mins after boil…—Strain contents of saucepan into second saucepan…—Then pour the water or milk into cup of favorite tea mixture if water or if milk pour with favorite cocoa mixture…—AND ALWAYS REMEMBER TO ENJOY…. recipe taken from article in 420time magazine thank you… added by: Day2Day1nSociety

Huge River of Dead Fish Clogs Mississippi Near the Gulf

Photo via NOLA At first glance, you might not even notice the dead fish in the picture above — there are too many of them. But no, that’s not a gravely parking lot. It’s a section of the Mississippi River that has literally been clogged with thousands of dead fish in the wake of the BP Gulf spill . And while investigation as to the cause of the mass fish kill is still underway, there are fears that new toxins in the water from spilled oil or chemical dispersants have played a role. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

See the original post:
Huge River of Dead Fish Clogs Mississippi Near the Gulf

Essential Killing: Dear Vincent Gallo, Why Do You Torment Me So?

Oh, Vincent Gallo! There’s no escaping you. You follow me from continent to continent, from festival to festival. Last week, in Venice, I saw your strange little picture Promises Written in Water (also playing here in Toronto), and while I wasn’t wowed, I couldn’t quite dismiss it, either. But while in Venice, I missed Polish filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski’s Essential Killing, which netted you the Best Actor award there — in fact, you’ve got pretty much the only role, aside from Emmanuelle Seigner, who appears very late in the picture. So today in Toronto, I decided to check out Essential Killing. I needed to see for myself if you really deserved that award, you scalawag, you.

See the original post here:
Essential Killing: Dear Vincent Gallo, Why Do You Torment Me So?

Ask Pablo: Is Boxed Water Really Better?

Image Source: Boxed Water Is Better Dear Pablo: I recently saw drinking water sold in a milk carton. It doesn’t seem any better to me than bottled water. Is boxed water really better as the company claims? In past articles I have shown that boxed beverages have their advantages and are indeed better from an environmental perspective

Read more:
Ask Pablo: Is Boxed Water Really Better?

Anti-War Protesters Face Up To 10 Years In Prison

A federal grand jury in Tacoma, Washington has indicted five anti-war protesters –most of them senior citizens– on charges of conspiracy, trespass and destruction of government property for entering a secure area at the Kitsap-Bangor Naval Base complex last November. The charges carry penalties of up to 10 years in federal prison. The five are accused of using bolt cutters last November to breach three chain-link fences surrounding the base, which is home to part of the Pacific nuclear submarine fleet. added by: The_Global_Report