New General Counsel Expands Management Team at PAC Worldwide prnewswire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prnewswire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Choosing a hot sandwich instead of a cold one may be better for your waistline, according to a study by a Rutgers University‒Camden scholar.
The research suggests that people consuming the same food or beverage cold find their meal to be less satisfying, so they purchase additional items, such as potato chips and cookies, to compensate for their appetites.
“It’s not exactly clear where these expectations come from,” says Maureen Morrin, the Henry Rutgers Professor of Marketing at Rutgers‒Camden. “But it is likely that people’s expectations about how full certain foods will make them feel develop over time, after repeated consumption episodes.”
Ryan Haight s animated pixel art features familiar Washington locations. #k5evening Author: Ellen Meny (KING 5), KING 5 Evening (KING 5) Published: 5:48 PM PST March 1, 2021 Updated: 7:43 PM PST March 1, 2021
SEATTLE Western Washington University grad Ryan Haight is a pixel artist. He creates immersive, beautiful art that mirrors the style of classic 8-bit or 16-bit video games. Literally moving images, made up of time, effort and tiny little pixels. It takes ten to fifteen hours on each piece, depending on what the resolution is, or how many animated pieces it has, says Haight.
He shows off his art on his Instagram page, My Art Bytes. Almost every image moves - swaying grass, a flickering light - that makes the art come to life.
One Year After Closing, US-Canada Border Remains Closed saltlakecitysun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from saltlakecitysun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Jasmine J. Mahmoud Talks to the Author of
Mediocre
March 1, 2021
In 2015, Black Canadian writer Sarah Hagi tweeted: “Lord, give me the confidence of a mediocre white man.” The sentence “launched a thousand memes, T-shirts, and coffee mugs,” author Ijeoma Oluo writes in her newest book,
Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America. She continues, “[t]he sentence struck a chord with so many of us because while we seemed to have to be better than everyone else to just get by, white men seemed to be encouraged in and rewarded for their mediocrity.”
Five years after that tweet and within the debut year of