A Clinical Look At Fast Food

Ever looked at what you eat from a fast-food restaurant?  Ever notice how it doesn't ever match the picture and can sometimes look rather disgusting?  Jon Feinstein decided to do a look at fast food, with no distractions on a black background. Below are a few examples, more at the link at the end.
In the short time since fast food chains have become part of our national (and global) culture, a number of burger shops have begotten some truly iconic–and insalubrious—food items, the mass production and marketing of which is utterly astounding. However, when removed from their brightly colored wrappers and shot against a stark, clinical background, as in the case of Jon Feinstein’s photographic series, “Fast Food,” the archetypal snacks and sandwiches take on a decidedly unsettling quality. “There’s this weird relationship that we as Americans have with fast food,” says Feinstein, who titled each image with the given item’s fat content, in grams. “I made a project where the food mostly looks disgusting, yet some of it is still strangely enticing—probably because the branding is so embedded in our psyches.” He adds, “I may eat it on a lower frequency now.” What follows is a selection from Jon Feinstein’s “Fast Food.”
Picture Show: Visions of Fast Food

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Give Your Desktop a Facelift

If you're like me, you probably get tired of looking at the same background picture everyday.  Find some high-quality, high-resolution images to spruce up your background!  InterfaceLift has a large collection of high-res background images you can easily use on your computer.   Just find an image you like, choose the resolution of your screen, and set it as your new background. 01448 8bitgaming Give Your Desktop a Facelift01447 banffnationalparkcanadianpacificrailway Give Your Desktop a Facelift01392 dreambeach Give Your Desktop a Facelift InterfaceLIFT

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Candidate match game

Polls suggest Americans are concerned primarily with a few key issues in the 2008 presidential election. USA TODAY researched candidate positions on those top issues — Iraq, immigration and health care — as well as a few others that may influence the election. We then came up with 11 multiple-choice questions that would help differentiate the candidates and their stances.

As you answer the questions, you can roll over each color bar below the candidates' heads to find background on their positions. Your answers are matched with the positions of the presidential hopefuls to reveal the candidate (or candidates) closest to your views. The sliders on the right allow you to assign relative weights to match the importance that you place on each issue.

Play the "game" here

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