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

Popularity: 1% [?]

Bush Contradicts Claims By Cheney, Rove, and Fox News That Torture Was Useful

Over the past couple of days, Karl Rove and Fox News have offered a new argument in defense of the Bush administration’s torture policies. Now, they say, waterboarding Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM) yielded intelligence that led to the disruption of an al Qaeda plot to attack the tallest building in Los Angeles, the Library Tower (which both Bush and Rove called the Liberty Tower, for some reason). There’s just one problem with Rove’s new story: it couldn’t possibly be true. As Timothy Noah pointed out in Slate, the Los Angeles attack was foiled in February of 2002. KSM was not captured until March of 2003, however — more than a year later. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that timeline is impossible. Perhaps appropriately, then, here’s a video of George W. Bush — in his own words — proving that Karl Rove and Fox News are lying about torture:
LINK

Popularity: 1% [?]

Daily Digest for February 26th

googlereader Daily Digest for February 26th 8:50pm Shared a link on Google Reader.
googlereader Daily Digest for February 26th 8:29am Shared a link on Google Reader.
twitter Daily Digest for February 26th 1:52pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.
Please RT: Sign the petition to tell George Voinovich to join Twitter! http://is.gd/efeo #tweetcongress #OH-S1 [#]
googlereader Daily Digest for February 26th 3:02pm Shared a link on Google Reader.
googlereader Daily Digest for February 26th 3:40pm Shared a link on Google Reader.
generic Daily Digest for February 26th 5:11pm Posted an item
twitter Daily Digest for February 26th 5:11pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.
Woot : They Love A Man In (Ukrainian) Uniform http://shortna.me/b75a9 [#]

Popularity: unranked [?]

13 Things Your Waiter Won't Tell You

From Reader's Digest

Waiters share insider secrets about restaurant -- from what days to avoid dining out to how much to tip.

1. Avoid eating out on holidays and Saturday nights. The sheer volume of customers guarantees that most kitchens will be pushed beyond their ability to produce a high-quality dish. 2. There are almost never any sick days in the restaurant business. A busboy with a kid to support isn't going to stay home and miss out on $100 because he's got strep throat. And these are the people handling your food. 3. When customers' dissatisfaction devolves into personal attacks, adulterating food or drink is a convenient way for servers to exact covert vengeance. Waiters can and do spit in people's food. 4. Never say "I'm friends with the owner." Restaurant owners don't have friends. This marks you as a clueless poseur the moment you walk in the door. 5. Treat others as you want to be treated. (Yes, people need to be reminded of this.) 6. Don't snap your fingers to get our attention. Remember, we have shears that cut through bone in the kitchen. 7. Don't order meals that aren't on the menu. You're forcing the chef to cook something he doesn't make on a regular basis. If he makes the same entrée 10,000 times a month, the odds are good that the dish will be a home run every time. 8. Splitting entrées is okay, but don't ask for water, lemon, and sugar so you can make your own lemonade. What's next, grapes so you can press your own wine? 9. If you find a waiter you like, always ask to be seated in his or her section. Tell all your friends so they'll start asking for that server as well. You've just made that waiter look indispensable to the owner. The server will be grateful and take good care of you. 10. If you can't afford to leave a tip, you can't afford to eat in the restaurant. Servers could be giving 20 to 40 percent to the busboys, bartenders, maître d', or hostess. 11. Always examine the check. Sometimes large parties are unaware that a gratuity has been added to the bill, so they tip on top of it. Waiters "facilitate" this error. It's dishonest, it's wrong-and I did it all the time. 12. If you want to hang out, that's fine. But increase the tip to make up for money the server would have made if he or she had had another seating at that table. 13. Never, ever come in 15 minutes before closing time. The cooks are tired and will cook your dinner right away. So while you're chitchatting over salads, your entrées will be languishing under the heat lamp while the dishwasher is spraying industrial-strength, carcinogenic cleaning solvents in their immediate vicinity. LINK

Popularity: 1% [?]

Refugee Camps Around the World

Google Earth's new mapping program takes you on a virtual reality tour with the UN refugee agency of some of the world's major displacement crises and the humanitarian efforts aimed at helping the victims. The first use of this geospatial tool focuses on refugees and displaced people located in remote areas of Chad, Iraq, Colombia and Sudan's volatile Darfur region. Sit in front of your computer and, with a few clicks, see, hear and develop an emotional understanding of what it is like to be a refugee. Highlighted are not only the physical area of the camp and surrounding country, but key parts of daily life such as education and health in photo, text and video format. Within seconds, Google Earth brings the daily life of a refugee camp into your home thousands of kilometres away.
LINK

Popularity: 2% [?]