Podcasts about sudafed

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Best podcasts about sudafed

Latest podcast episodes about sudafed

Close Reads
Piranesi: Chapters 4 and 5

Close Reads

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 63:37


Wikipedia rabbit holes. Peacefulness or lack thereof in the world of Piranesi. The source of human goodness and morality. Sudafed fever dreams. These and many other topics are discussed on this week's discussion of Susannah Clarke's novel. Happy listening! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit closereads.substack.com/subscribe

Zone Podcasts
3HL - 2-12-25 - Hour 3 - Sudafed Slay Joins the Show

Zone Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 39:27


3HL - 2-12-25 - Hour 3 - Sudafed Slay Joins the ShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3HL
3HL - 2-12-25 - Hour 3 - Sudafed Slay Joins the Show

3HL

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 39:27


3HL - 2-12-25 - Hour 3 - Sudafed Slay Joins the ShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive
Rebecca Jancauskas: JGA Saddler director on the lawsuit launched against ‘ineffective' cold and flu medications

Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 3:50 Transcription Available


A class action lawsuit launched in Auckland today questioning Johnson and Johnson cold and flu products follows similar suits worldwide. JGA Saddler has filed a suit in the High Court, claiming the producer knowingly sold an ineffective product. The US Food and Drug Administration has ruled a key ingredient in Codral, Sudafed, and Benadryl cold and flu products is ineffective when taken orally. JGA Saddler director, Rebecca Jancauskas says it's sparked a wave of legal action. "Our firm filed a claim in Australia, in December. A Canadian firm filed a class-action about 12 months ago, and there's also quite a number of claims on foot in America." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Two Vague Podcast
Episode 125 - Punk

The Two Vague Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 71:33


Although it would be more thematically appropriate of us to NOT tell you about this week's episode, we are going to be rebellious and do it anyway—sans mohawk and safety pins.  Andrew joins Ben this week to ruminate over the work punk.  After discussing what they have been up to, debating the importance of a thesis statement (or lack thereof), and sharing their experiences with the game they have both (YES BOTH) been playing, Dungeon Clawler by Stray Fawn Studio, they embark upon a sensory adventure together… in STEREO!  Following the traditional definition festivities, they explore their thoughts and feelings associated with the word.  Finally, Ben talks about Suda51—recognized by many as one of the most “punk rock” game developers out there in addition to being author responsible for a favorite gaming narrative of his.         *** 00:00:00 - Andrew's Crowdfundr ADHD pin promo and the obligatory 2VP theme song Please contribute to Andrew's latest Crowdfundr campaign and buy a swanky “Advanced Dungeons Have Dragons” ADHD enamel pin! https://crowdfundr.com/dragonpin?ref=ab_5eGT0FGiaC55eGT0FGiaC5 00:02:03 - Book progress, a 25 percent different demon, veggies, and many presidents ago 00:04:37 - Ben breaks kayfabe, the Piper Cafe, the Safehouse, price tags, and trading cards 00:06:37 - Verified on Bluesky, Andrew's 2025 call, allies for decades, and Bash the alarm clock 00:09:25 - Thoughts on the thesis, eating children, Substack review handling, and epic poems 00:14:24 - The Hunt for Red October, embargo date debate, and Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop 00:17:23 - Looking at manuals, divergent vs. diverse, symptoms of life, and rewiring the brain 00:21:01 - Autistic trends, a mom's introduction to Rick and Morty, and a claw machine thesis 00:24:22 - Christopher Nolan, Dungeon Clawler impressions, and Andrew describes the game 00:27:45 - Ben wants more stuff, Count Clawcula, thumbs up, and speaking of potato snacks 00:29:35 - In stereo, lining them up in post, the bouquet, the mouth feel, and a mystery flavor 00:31:53 - Aged in wooden tubes, the proof with vinegar, maltodextrin, and the aging problem 00:34:44 - Ben's bourbon belch, she smelled like soup, the comma, and ten points in Scrabble 00:37:40 - The derogatory definition, Ben's Allen Funt impression, and the skipped definition 00:40:01 - Punk sticks, anarchy, being adjacent, punk credit, and getting out what you put in 00:43:03 - The Bumblebee Tuna theme in Ska, the energy, and questionable stuff in Tucson 00:45:00 - Going to the Meet Rack, the condom machine, lubricated regulars, and river rafting 00:47:24 - Not inherently political, Andrew's Portland punk experiences, and The Young Ones  00:50:00 - The Seattle WTO Protests, moving into retail, against the grain, and hybrid formats 00:53:44 - Not Punky Brewster, punk as a suffix, Daft Punk origin, and Max Headroom shows 00:57:02 - The Video Toaster, actor Matt Frewer, platinums, and Ben sells 100 million albums 00:58:40 - Shadows of the Damned: Hella Remastered, not Sudafed, and the games of Suda51 01:01:23 - Punk Rock sub-genres, Franz Kafka game gets canceled, and Garcia is a Mexi-CAN 01:04:37 - Something that happens, expired donuts, mistook it for a Cybertruck, and food love 01:07:30 - So romantic, Michigan, final thoughts, Joe saved the podcast, and formica dragons  *** Follow Andrew / Partly Robot Industries on… His website: https://partlyrobot.com/ On Instagram: https://instagram.com/partlyrobot On TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@partlyrobot On Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/partlyrobot.com On Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/partlyrobot And his TREE o' LINKS: http://linktr.ee/partlyrobot Follow Two Vague on… Our website: https://www.twovaguepodcast.com On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/two_vague_podcast On YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@twovaguepodcast On Substack: https://substack.com/@twovaguepodcast On Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/twovaguepodcast.com For show appearance and other inquiries, contact us at: twovaguepodcast@gmail.com -AND-  …for all of your PRI and 2VP merch check out the Partly Robot Industries store at TEEPUBLIC! https://www.teepublic.com/user/partly-robot-industries *** References, Links, and Tags For more information about Stray Fawn Studio's game Dungeon Clawler… https://strayfawnstudio.com/ https://dungeonclawler.com/ For more information about Uncle Chops Rocket Shop, developer Beard Envy Games, and publisher Kasedo Games… https://www.unclechops.com/ https://www.beardenvy.co.uk/ https://www.kasedogames.com/ Check out Ben's review of SlavicPunk: Oldtimer on the Two Vague Podcast Substack… https://substack.com/home/post/p-154373300 Check out Red Square Games and SlavicPunk: Oldtimer on Steam… https://store.steampowered.com/curator/44288282-Red-Square-Games/  https://store.steampowered.com/app/1820140/SlavicPunk_Oldtimer/ Check out SUDA51 / Grasshopper Manufacture's games https://www.grasshopper.co.jp/en/ https://www.shadows-of-the-damned-hellaremastered.com/ #Podbean #DIYPodcast #ApplePodcast #VideoGames #Trivia #Comedy #Talkshow #2VP #TwoVaguePodcast #PodernFamily #InterviewShow #GamersofThreads #Gamer #PartlyRobot #PartlyRobotIndustries #TeePublic #StrayFawnStudio #DungeonClawler #BeardEnvyGames #UncleChopsRocketShop #KasedoGames #GrasshopperManufacture #ShadowsoftheDamnedHellaRemastered #Suda51

Off-Nominal
177 - Sudafed and Rockstars (with Matt Gialich)

Off-Nominal

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 60:21


Jake and Anthony are joined by Matt Gialich, Founder and CEO of AstroForge, to talk about asteroid mining. Yep, we're doing the asteroid mining show.TopicsOff-Nominal - YouTubeEpisode 177 - Sudafed and Rockstars (with Matt Gialich) - YouTubeAstroForgeAgainst all odds, an asteroid mining company appears to be making headway - Ars TechnicaWhy is AstroForge mining asteroids? - YouTubeFollow MattMatthew Gialich (@MattGialich) / XMatthew Gialich | LinkedInFollow Off-NominalSubscribe to the show! - Off-NominalSupport the show, join the DiscordOff-Nominal (@offnom) / TwitterOff-Nominal (@offnom@spacey.space) - Spacey SpaceFollow JakeWeMartians Podcast - Follow Humanity's Journey to MarsWeMartians Podcast (@We_Martians) | TwitterJake Robins (@JakeOnOrbit) | TwitterJake Robins (@JakeOnOrbit@spacey.space) - Spacey SpaceFollow AnthonyMain Engine Cut OffMain Engine Cut Off (@WeHaveMECO) | TwitterMain Engine Cut Off (@meco@spacey.space) - Spacey SpaceAnthony Colangelo (@acolangelo) | TwitterAnthony Colangelo (@acolangelo@jawns.club) - jawns.club

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting
N.F.C. - High On Sudafed & Coffee

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 51:13


In this episode, Dan Johnson reflects on the holiday season, discussing the challenges of family gatherings and the importance of hunting experiences. He shares insights on gift ideas for hunters and kids, emphasizing practical gifts over noisy toys. The conversation shifts to parenting challenges during wrestling season, highlighting the need for discipline in children. Finally, Dan discusses deer movement strategies for the late season, encouraging listeners to focus on food sources and enjoy the outdoors. Takeaways: Every hunter has their own unique experience. It's important to appreciate all levels of hunting participation. Gift ideas for hunters should be practical and useful. Avoid noisy toys when gifting to children. Discipline is crucial for raising resilient kids. Wrestling season brings its own set of parenting challenges. Deer movement is heavily influenced by food availability. Late season hunting requires strategic planning. Family experiences can be more valuable than material gifts. Take time to enjoy nature and hunting with friends. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nine Finger Chronicles - Sportsmen's Nation

In this episode, Dan Johnson reflects on the holiday season, discussing the challenges of family gatherings and the importance of hunting experiences. He shares insights on gift ideas for hunters and kids, emphasizing practical gifts over noisy toys. The conversation shifts to parenting challenges during wrestling season, highlighting the need for discipline in children. Finally, Dan discusses deer movement strategies for the late season, encouraging listeners to focus on food sources and enjoy the outdoors. Takeaways: Every hunter has their own unique experience. It's important to appreciate all levels of hunting participation. Gift ideas for hunters should be practical and useful. Avoid noisy toys when gifting to children. Discipline is crucial for raising resilient kids. Wrestling season brings its own set of parenting challenges. Deer movement is heavily influenced by food availability. Late season hunting requires strategic planning. Family experiences can be more valuable than material gifts. Take time to enjoy nature and hunting with friends. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

WTAW - Infomaniacs
The Infomaniacs: November 8, 2024 (7:00am)

WTAW - Infomaniacs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 40:00


Nature being nature. Weekend plans. Check-in chicken. Sesame Street turns 55 years old. You've got mail. Spring vs fall weather. Educating the men. Haggling hack. FDA is removing Sudafed from the shelves. Wood in space. Good news for Barnes & Noble.

The Glamour and Grit
Brought to you by Sudafed

The Glamour and Grit

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 57:09


Brought to you by Sutafed and Claritin, Sainty & Eric wouldn't want you to miss a Friday with us! We are bringing you all the gossip and laughs. Trust us, this is a good one. LIVE every Friday at 10am CST & Celebrity Interviews every Monday! Sit back, let us blow our nose & enjoy Episode 7 of The Glamour & Grit!

Opie Radio
Ep 941: Sudafed D | Comedy Quick Hits with Opie

Opie Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 23:04


Quick funny clips from Theo Von, Carl Ruiz, Jim Florentine, Vic Henley, Sherrod Small, Dr Steve and Buzzy Clips taken from the "Opie Radio" podcast.  ALL episodes now available on my https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoRwry_hfdo4WiGCtB0fD72CPU0M_xGmD It's time for you to join the Private Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/203909694525714 comedyclips #funny #clips #comedian opie and anthony #opieandanthony #TheoVon See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Top Of Wrestling's Podcast
Episode 605 - To Save Or Not to Save

The Top Of Wrestling's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 44:11


Oops he did it again.  Bird flu and failure to click save won't stop this train.  This week's episode brought to you by Sudafed (not a sponsor), it's like napalm for your nostrils.  Also this week:   - Stuff, I have no idea what made it in

All That To Say
Ep. 94 - Breastmilk Tea

All That To Say

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 38:00


Get your Sudafed meds ready, PodcATTS! It's Spring Break Tuesday! After a PSA about drugs (“Let's stop doing Meth”), it's onto lighter topics like Miranda's goldfish brain and her urgent PSA for the Chick-fil-a team. We can't wait to hear y'all's thoughts on too-sweet tea! Kristin remains sober-curious while debating the pros and cons of alcohol + menopause. Is this what 40 looks like?! Should we dabble in shrooms?! (Although that might disqualify us from The Amazing Race… Unclear.) Thank you to our newest podcast sponsor - OrthoCarolina! Download the Hurt app for free today! Learn more about the All That To Say Podcast by visiting www.podcatts.com.  Want even more from Miranda and Kristin? Subscribe to our Patreon for just $6/month. Enjoy bonus episodes and exclusive ATTS content you won't find anywhere else! Looking for something we mentioned? Shop our recommendations on our Amazon page! CALL US on the Honesty Hotline (HoHo!) anytime! 877-914-6464. We want to hear from you. Leave an anonymous message to be featured on an upcoming episode! Maybe you need to get something off your chest or need our honest opinion on something? We want to hear it! Follow us on Instagram at @allthattosay_podcast. We love meeting new people, so leave a comment or better yet...share the love with your friends! You can also find our weekly podcast videos on our YouTube channel! If you love our content, be sure to like, subscribe, download, rate, and review! We hope to continue bringing this unhinged FIRE CONTENT every week. xoxo

Foundations of Amateur Radio
Technology at its finest ...

Foundations of Amateur Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2024 7:25


Foundations of Amateur Radio So, the 19th of February 2024 came and went. As it was, my day started with the highest minimum that month, 27.5 degrees Celsius, that's the minimum overnight temperature. The maximum that day here in Perth, Western Australia was 42.3 degrees. The day before was the highest maximum for the month, 42.9. If you're not sure, that's over 109 in Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit's scale. That same day the Australian regulator, the ACMA, launched a new era in Amateur Radio. Moving from personal amateur licenses we legally became part of a class license regime. We have the option to hand our license back and get a refund, but the cautious side of me prevailed and I've not yet handed back my license, since it's currently the only proof that my callsign is valid, the one issued to me in December 2010. I contacted the ACMA to ask about this and was told that they were having display issues with their system and was sent an image showing both my callsigns and email address. I'm not saying that I don't trust the person sending this to me, but I'm fairly sure that "but your honour, it was in an email" isn't going to cut it if push comes to shove. Curiously my name appears to be missing, showing the word "Blank" instead. Their IT team has been working on displaying F-calls for weeks now. I mean, seriously, these were first issued in 2005. Do we really need to spell this out? The ACMA continues to actively encourage amateurs to hand in their license and points out that any delay in doing so will reduce the amount that may be due. It also points at Schedule 4, Part 2 subclause (7)(1)(d) of the Radiocommunications (Amateur Stations) Class Licence 2023, to assure me that my callsign is mine and mine alone, irrespective of what's in the register. It goes on to say that the letter they sent back in January, the one they had to resend, since they got my callsign details wrong, explained that I could hand back my license and that my ability to operate hinged on my qualification, not my callsign. Here's the rub. Let's say that I'm qualified and that the letter I have proves it. I am required to identify myself on-air, the regulations say so. This means that in order for me to claim that I am who I say I am, there needs to be a register with that callsign. Apparently I'm in the register, but nobody other than the regulator can prove that. One thing that appears to be missing is a solid understanding that the register of callsigns is used by the amateur community to determine if a callsign heard on-air is assigned or not. I mean, I could call myself VK6EEN and without the register who's to say that it's mine? It's not confidence inspiring to say the least. Then there's the register itself. There's an online component, which you can use to search for a callsign. As I said, mine isn't visible, neither is any other four letter F-call. As a test, I've been scrolling, one page at a time, for the past hour, to get to VK6F, starting at VK6A, to see if it shows up, but I'm not holding my breath. For some reason the developers who built this appear incapable of rendering a simple table in anything less than 36 seconds per page, so much so that Chrome thinks that the page has crashed and offers to kill it, every time. Funnily enough, if you extract the URL from within the page and copy it, you can download all 176 pages for VK6 callsigns in less time than it took me to write this sentence. Unsurprisingly, F-calls are not there. Did I mention that this software, released a month ago, is already using depreciated features in my current web browser, which came out a week before the new register went live? It gets better. If you actually want to manage your callsign, you need to create an account on the regulator's portal, called ACMA Assist. When you load the ACMA Assist URL and click the "Sign up or log in" button, 134 different URLs from all over the Internet are hit, across 34 different domains, including Facebook, Google, Microsoft, LinkedIn, Markmonitor, Monsido, several content, font, icon and javascript libraries, and plenty more. This is a Government website, requiring that I authenticate to it, and to do that, I'm required to provide more identity documents than the tax department needs and wait for it, authentication is outsourced to some random domain, so you're entering your details into a third-party service. You have the choice of using the Government identity provider, one that requires a mobile phone and an app, or use a Government owned company that prefers a mobile and a different app, but offers access via a website on yet another domain. Now it gets funky. If you pick "driver's license", you'll discover that everything that's on your license is information that the form wants. So anyone with a photo of your license can sign up and identify as you, like the chemist who required a photocopy of it so you could buy Sudafed for your debilitating hay fever, because instead, you might use it to create methamphetamine, or the nightclub that required it so you could enter the venue because of course they do, or the telecommunications company that provided access to your details during a recent hack. Just so we're clear here. I'm now required to validate my identity to access a callsign that is already in the database, already has my email address linked to it and is for an amateur license that I already have been in possession of and paid for since 2010. Never mind that I used to email the regulator to have them issue an invoice that I paid for via credit card, no authentication at all, and that was for a personal license, issued specifically to me. We'll also ignore that if you signed up with ACMA Assist a year ago, you don't need to validate, not then, not now. Speaking of email. The ACMA has just sent me one telling me that I can request and fill in a form and email or fax it to them to update my records instead. That's interesting, but what about the privacy implications of tracking by the worlds mega corporations on a Government site or even the security theatre for something that according to the regulator isn't even my permission to operate? I'm all for giving the regulator the benefit of doubt, but if this is the future of Amateur Radio Licensing in Australia, I'm beginning to wonder just which Wild West Orwellian landscape I stepped into and I'm asking myself is this the best that our limited tax payer dollars can achieve? If you want to see this for yourself, open up your browser, press F12 and have a look at the network connection tab while you visit the ACMA Assist portal. Finally, I have one question. Why are our so-called representative bodies, the WIA and RASA, not jumping up and down about this? Apparently, I'm Onno VK6FLAB

The Milk Minute Podcast- Breastfeeding/Chestfeeding/Lactating/Pumping
Encore: New Mastitis Protocol: Part 2

The Milk Minute Podcast- Breastfeeding/Chestfeeding/Lactating/Pumping

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2023 61:28 Transcription Available


Did you hear about all the major changes with mastitis? We have made some serious progress in our understanding of why and how clogged ducts and milk blebs happen and we now have much better methods to treat them. Tune into the Milk Minute and let your favorite cohosts give you the low down on the updates.This information is crucial to both self care and healthcare provider management of these conditions, so don't miss it!We're still on a break over here at the Milk Minute, so please enjoy one of our most impactful episodes, especially this time of year. If you want more new content please head over to our spin-off show: Beyond the Boob. Please consider supporting us by subscribing on Apple Podcasts or on our Patreon at Milk Minute Podcast | Patreon. Work With Us!Book a Lactation Consult with Heather! Click HERE for the deets.Book a Lactation Consult with Maureen! Click HERE to get started.Listener Question: Would it be bad to dry up my supply with Sudafed?THANK YOU TO THIS EPISODE'S SPONSORSGet your breastfeeding journey BACK ON TRACK with a Lactation Consult with Heather! Telehealth available and some insurance accepted. Click HERE for the deets. If you have Blue Cross Blue Shield, Anthem, Cigna PPO or Provider Network of America– you can fill out a short form to get pre-approval to get your visits with Heather 100% approved! Click HERE to access the form.Ceres Chill - Click HERE and enter promo code MILKMINUTE15 for 15% off!Click HERE to get HappiTummi and enter code MILKMINUTE10 for 10% off your order!Dairy Fairy - Click HERE and use Promo Code MILKMINUTE for free domestic shipping on any of our itemsMentioned in this episode:Ep. 43 - Cold and Flu Medications while BreastfeedingEp. 84- Let's Talk Nipple Shields!The bathroom bird episode: Getting Baby Back to the Breast: Nursing strikes and breast refusalPrefer to read the transcript? Click HereSupport the showCheck out Milk Minute Podcast's website here!Become a VIP Click here to get exclusive access and more!Send us an e-mail! MilkMinutePodcast@gmail.comFacebook | Instagram | TikTok

Smart Talk
What cold symptom remedies work?

Smart Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 21:10


There still is no cure for the common cold. Last September – just before the cold and flu season typically starts -- the Food and Drug Administration announced that oral phenylephrine, which is the active ingredient in several name-brand over the counter cold symptom remedies, isn't effective. It came as a surprise to many who use some Sudafed, Mucinex and Dayquil products when they experience coughs, stuffed or runny noses or sore throats. On The Spark Monday, Danielle Brigham, an Ambulatory Care Pharmacist, at UPMC Pinnacle Health Medical Group said the FDA announcement wasn't a surprise to pharmacists, but pointed out it is one form of phenylephrine that was judged to be ineffective but the nasal form is effective,"We specifically are discussing the oral formulation not being effective. And so while patients may have been surprised, redirecting them to some other remedies that we do know to be effective, some of which are not even a medication, things like increasing fluids and things like that (to fight a cold). Dr. Carrie Delone, Medical Director of Internal Medicine at UPMC, indicated multi-sympton cold remedies are popular because of the marketing,"When you look at multi-system symptom cold medications, they're shotgunning every symptom they can think of -- fever, chills, pain, body aches, cough, congestion, mucus, not being able to sleep. These are all of the things that bother you when you have a cold. The most effective part about them is their marketing, because the way they're developed is that they put small doses of many ingredients into their cold medicines. They don't have the same half life. So a half life is how much of that medication is cleared from your body. For how long does it take for half of the medication to be cleared from your body? So all of the the ingredients have different half lives. But they want you to take them every 12 hours. And they tend to put really low doses in there because that's the safety profile they're going for. So you you end up with very expensive, not very helpful cold medicines. And I've always counseled my patients, please don't. Don't go to CVS and pick the pretty box that says it's going to get rid of every symptom because it can't do that. Figure out what it is that's bothering you the most. Is it congestion? Is it a cough? Is it fever? Is it pain? Is it that you can't sleep and then really understand what you're buying? If you can't flip that box over and look at every single ingredient and understand what you're getting, you shouldn't even buy it." Dr. DeLone was asked the best way to fight a cold,"Rest and fluids. You can use a neti pot, you can use nasal sprays, hot tea and honey. Honey has been found to significantly help with coughs. One of my best friends when I have a cough is a water bottle. Just having sips of water when you're coughing is really helpful. It's something that, you know is uncomfortable. And a lot of times we don't want to have a lot of congestion because nasal congestion can lead to sinus infections, ear infections. So there are reasons why you really don't want to just say, well, just, suck it up and and put up with the pain because we really do want to keep your sinuses draining your tubes open because that can really cause significant issues if we if we don't do that. So we do want something effective and there are medications, But again, there are many groups of people that can't take them. So children under the age of six shouldn't be taking over-the-counter medications -- under four is the recommendation that you'll see on the bottles that many pediatricians don't want children under the age of six taking cold medications or if you're pregnant, if you're breastfeeding. And then there are a vast number of conditions. Heart disease and high blood pressure are all issues that you have to be careful when you have those conditions and you're taking medication."Support WITF: https://www.witf.org/support/give-now/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Ray Appleton
Obamacare Replacement. The FDA Pulls Key Medications. Tom Del Becarro Joins Ray

Ray Appleton

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 37:51


The former president ignited a firestorm in Washington with a weekend social media post that called for seeking "alternatives" to the Affordable Care Act, which was passed in 2010 and is more commonly known as Obamacare. fter decades on the market, the FDA declared that the active ingredient in popular cold medicines like Dayquil, Mucinex, Sudafed, and Theraflu is ineffective. CVS and other pharmacies are pulling the products from store shelves. Tom and Ray discuss tonight's Newsom and DeSantis debate.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tiny Matters
The rise and fall of a fake decongestant: What phenylephrine tells us about the history of the FDA

Tiny Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 28:39


The FDA drug approval process is known to be a lengthy and rigorous one. But the FDA-approved ingredient phenylephrine — found in common cold medicines like Sudafed, Mucinex, and NyQuil — was recently found to be no better than a placebo. Phenylephrine has been on store shelves for nearly 90 years. How could that happen?In this episode of Tiny Matters, Sam and Deboki are joined by none other than Deboki's dad, Deb Chakravarti. Deb is a professor with years of industry experience and the current director of the York College FDA Partnership. He helps dissect the FDA's recent findings and how its history and ever-evolving role in the pharmaceutical industry contributed to phenylephrine being used in oral cold medicines for so long.Deb, Deboki and Sam also unpack pharmaceutical ethics cases, like thalidomide in the 1950s and 60s, and the case of Vioxx in the early 2000s, which led to tens of thousands of deaths. Sam and Deboki cap off the episode with tiny show and tells about how the nose is really 2 noses (!) and the story of a new, ingestible, vitamin-sized capsule that could protect people from dying of an opioid overdose, sleep apnea, or other conditions that depress breathing.Check out PNAS Science Sessions here and wherever you listen to podcasts.  Links to the Tiny Show & Tell stories are here and here. Pick up a Tiny Matters mug here! All Tiny Matters transcripts are available here.

The Deep Dive with Jessica St. Clair and June Diane Raphael

This week, the girls are singing the praises of a Sudafed deep sleep. Jess unleashes her sexual beast after watching June's latest Deep Dive Academy lesson on posing and June gets comfortable with uncomfortable conversations. Remember Deep Divers, let go of the idea that everything should come naturally. Try new things and see what happens! In other words, no apologies, manifest, and be seen.   Stay up to date with us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram at @LemonadaMedia.    Joining Lemonada Premium is a great way to support our show and get bonus content. Subscribe today at bit.ly/lemonadapremium. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth
2201: What to Do If You Have No Energy to Work Out, Why Most Body Fat Tests are Wrong, When to Stop a Cut & More

Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 107:01


In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Email live@mindpumpmedia.com if you want to be considered to ask your question on the show. Mind Pump Fit Tip: If you want bones that don't break, keep lifting weights! (2:48) There is a hierarchy of Sudafed. (16:21) Tombstone is a classic. (22:15) Growing up Gotti. (25:28) Retracing your family tree and heritage. (29:39) Fun Facts with Justin: Anti-Pope. (32:35) Mind Pump's jet lag protocol. (36:22) Seated vs. Standing exercises. (44:10) Add sodium to your diet if you drink reverse osmosis water. (51:22) The first completely wireless television! (54:42) Crazy news with Sal: Nail salon robbery. (58:25) Shout out to a couple of previous Mind Pump guests! (1:00:20) #ListenerLive question #1 - Is it normal to lose muscle mass as well as body fat? (1:01:40) #ListenerLive question #2 - What's the ideal length for a cut for a female? (1:13:48) #ListenerLive question #3 - Any advice on feeling burnt out due to my physical labor job? (1:22:00) #ListenerLive question #4 - What is the appropriate level and intensity of workouts for young athletes? (1:29:25) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! For a limited time only, Mind Pump listeners get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump November Promotion: MAPS Resistance | MAPS Prime Pro 50% off! **Code NOVEMBER50 at checkout** Association of Grip Strength With Risk of All-Cause Mortality, Cardiovascular Diseases, and Cancer in Community-Dwelling Populations: A Meta-analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies Mind Pump #1547: The Hidden Benefits Of Lifting Weights Watch Get Gotti | Netflix Official Site Growing Up Gotti (TV Series 2004-2005) - IMDb Antipope John XXIII Visit State & Liberty for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code PUMP10 at checkout for 10% off** Z Press to take Your Shoulder Development to the Next Level The ONLY Way You Should Be Doing Dumbbell Bicep Curls! Displace TV Man tries to rob Atlanta nail salon but gets ignored, video shows Building a Non-Anxious Life – Book by Dr. John Delony Forever Strong: A New, Science-Based Strategy for Aging Well – Book by Dr. Gabrielle Lyon Visit biOptimizers for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP10 at checkout** Strength training is more effective than aerobic exercise for improving glycaemic control and body composition in people with normal-weight type 2 diabetes: a randomised controlled trial – PubMed Mind Pump #2157: Using Cardio As A Weight Loss Tool Mind Pump #2102: Maximizing Athletic & Cognitive Performance With Dr. Stephen Cabral Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Squat University (@squat_university) Instagram Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Dr. John Delony (@johndelony) Instagram Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram  

Science Friday
A Common Cold Medicine Ingredient Doesn't Work. What Now?

Science Friday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 12:38


Twenty years ago, scientists found that phenylephrine, listed as a decongestant in many cold medicines, didn't work. What can you use instead? In September, an advisory committee for the Food and Drug Administration unanimously confirmed that phenylephrine—a common ingredient in cold medicines, including some types of Mucinex and Robitussin—doesn't work.For many physicians, pharmacists, and cold-sufferers, this came as no surprise. Phenylephrine's ineffectiveness had been an open secret in the healthcare community for decades.In 2005, Dr. Randy Hatton, clinical professor at the Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy Department at the University of Florida, managed the University of Florida Drug Information and Pharmacy Resource Center hotline. He often received calls from pharmacists reporting that phenylephrine-based drugs had no effect on improving colds.He came across research from Dr. Leslie Hendeles, professor emeritus of the College of Pharmacy, also at the University of Florida, from a decade prior. Dr. Hendeles had also found that the substance was ineffective. They partnered up and petitioned the FDA to publicly confirm their finding. Their collaboration was the first step toward the FDA's recent announcement.But despite the announcement, the removal of these drugs from shelves is not guaranteed. Pharmaceutical companies are appealing the FDA's decision, and are trying to stall an official declaration that prohibits their sale.Guest host Flora Lichtman talks with Dr. Hatton and Dr. Hendeles about the long road to the FDA's announcement.They discuss how their research proved phenylephrine's ineffectiveness, and which drugs people can turn to instead as cold season approaches.To stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters. Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.

Is This Good?
MattyO & JD | Big Neck, Small Pillow [Patreon Preview]

Is This Good?

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 1:54


The Kevin Jackson Show
Ep. 23-426 - Astonishing Polling

The Kevin Jackson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 38:41


In this episode, Trump polling is astonishing in a staggering and nearly unprecedented lead. Gavin Newsom seeking new danger, as the quintessential adrenalin junky.

The Anna & Raven Show
The Truth About Sudafed

The Anna & Raven Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 3:50


A very popular decongestion is being pulled from shelves because it doesn't work! Dr. Wider lets you know why in the podcast.

ACSH Science Dispatch
Good News About Flu Shots; The Sudafed PE Debacle

ACSH Science Dispatch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 42:10


Flu shots perform inconsistently because it's hard to anticipate which strains of the virus will be circulating in a given year. So far in 2023, it appears that the latest round of vaccines are working well. The FDA has determined that Sudafed PE doesn't work. Questions and accusations are flying as a result: why were we sold a useless decongestant in the first place? And more importantly, who's to blame for this public health blunder?

Science Friday
Placebo Effect, Technoableism, Florida Citrus, Neuroscience Music. Sept 29, 2023, Part 2

Science Friday

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 47:43


The Science Behind The Placebo EffectEarlier this month, a Food and Drug Administration panel concluded that a common decongestant ingredient used in drugs like Sudafed and NyQuil doesn't work. The panel agreed that while the ingredient, called phenylephrine, isn't dangerous, it doesn't work any better than a placebo.That made us wonder: How well do placebos work? And why do they work even when people know they're getting a placebo?Ted J. Kaptchuk, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the Program in Placebo Studies and Therapeutic Encounter at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, joins guest host and musician Dessa to talk about what's new in placebo research. They discuss the benefits placebos can offer for chronic illness management, and when doctors might start using them in treatments. Where Technology Meets AbleismWith all the bad news on our feeds, a feel-good story can be a welcome reprieve. But what happens when that story comes in the form of coverage of disability technology?You might've seen the videos online of a person with a physical disability being fitted with an exoskeleton, essentially “wearing” a robot, to help them walk. Onlookers cheer in the background, dramatic music swells, and we get the sense we're watching something inspirational and empowering—a victory of the human spirit.This might seem like a triumph of scientific innovation, but our guest asks us to look again at what's actually going on in narratives like this one.Dr. Ashley Shew, associate professor at Virginia Tech, studies the intersection of disability and technology and how our collective fixation on these fancy, supposedly transformative gadgets could be doing more harm than good. In her new book, she coins the term “technoableism” to get to the heart of the matter.Guest host and musician Dessa talks with Dr. Shew about her book Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement, about what disability technology is, what the future should look like, and even how disability intersects with space travel and climate change. Sour Times For Florida's CitrusFlorida is known for citrus, particularly its fresh-squeezed orange juice. But citrus trees in the state are struggling. For the last two decades, crops have been struck with a devastating disease called “citrus greening.” And Florida orange production has dropped some 94% over that period.                                              Citrus greening is caused by an invasive insect, the Asian citrus psyllid, which is threatening to wipe out the citrus industry in the state. One of the effects of the disease is a bitter, acidic fruit. Scientists are hard at work devising possible solutions to save Florida's crop.Guest host and musician Dessa talks with Dr. Yu Wang, associate professor of food science at the University of Florida's Citrus Education and Research Center, about her recent advances in making infected orange plants sweeter. Making Neuroscience Into MusicWhen composer Sarah Hennies learned about a neurological theory called “motor tapes” from Oliver Sacks' book Musicophilia, the concept stuck with her for years. The theory comes from neuroscientist Rodolfo Llinás, who posited that many of our thoughts, memories, and physical movements operate via a series of “looping tapes,” with the goal of reducing the amount of energy the brain uses while doing common, repetitive tasks.The concept resonated with Hennies, who is also a visiting assistant professor of music at Bard College. Most of her compositions use heavy amounts of repetition, and Llinás' theory fit with how she experienced her own memories and the evolution of her identity. Her piece “Motor Tapes” premiered in early August, performed by Ensemble Dedalus.Hennies joins guest host and musician Dessa to talk about repetition in music, how to translate neuroscience into art, and what that pairing can reveal about our bodies and the world around us. To stay updated on all-things-science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.

Satellite Sisters
Bitter Business Bureau, Boys' and Girls' Education, The Chocolate Room at MOMA

Satellite Sisters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 62:41


The Satellite Sisters have a Bitter Business Bureau installment (Jann Wenner and Sudafed), a discussion about Boys' and Girls' High School Education, and a peak into The Chocolate Room at the Ed Ruscha Now Then Exhibit at MOMA NYC. Boys' and girls' educational development https://news.fullerton.edu/2023/06/child-development-expert-why-boys-are-falling-behind-in-education/ Artificial intelligence cannot do this. An education story from rural California. https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-09-14/rural-california-high-school-students-disadvantaged-aces Never Enough by Jennifer Breheny Wallace https://people.com/let-go-of-toxic-achievement-culture-jennifer-breheny-wallace-argues-in-never-enough-7734872?utm_source=emailshare&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=shareurlbuttons Thank you to our sponsors and to listeners for using these special urls and promo codes. Jenni Kayne https://jennikayne.com Promo code sisters OSEA https://oseamalibu.com Promo code satsisters Prose https://prose.com/sisters  Bitter Business Bureau:  Srsly Jann Wenner? Jann Wenner booted from Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Board. https://www.cbsnews.com/video/jann-wenner-faces-backlash-over-comments-on-black-and-female-musicians/ Srsly Sudafed? As a family of sneezers, we are bitter that Sudafed does not actually work.   https://apnews.com/article/sudafed-decongestants-phenylephrine-pseudoephedrine-fda-0f140bafae9a500c5fba05fe764ecb66 Tuesday Trends includes Wancing, Jamie Fraser's Glasgow and psychedelic mushrooms.  https://www.startribune.com/can-you-wance-dancing-while-walking-has-become-a-regular-sight-in-st-paul/600303897/ https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/12/travel/sam-heughan-glasgow.html https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/psychedelic-psilocybin-legalizing-mushrooms-oregon-763032/ https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12528321/Oregon-legalized-psychedelic-mushroom-service.html Bucket List Vacation for Liz + Operation Sea Turtle.  https://reefci.com/activities/diving-and-marine-conservation-trip-monday-friday-5-days4-nights/ Entertaining Sisters Love at First Sight on Netflix: https://youtu.be/j0kro6SuwxM Lian's Witchy Book List 2023: https://bookshop.org/lists/satellite-sisters-wicked-witches-book-list-for-halloween-2023 A Chocolate Room. Ed Rusha Now Then at MOMA NYC Audio: https://www.moma.org/audio/playlist/334/4458 All new Satellite Sisters Shop is open with all new merch. https://satellite-sisters-shop-5893.myshopify.com/ Go to the Satellite Sisters website here: https://satellitesisters.com Subscribe to the Satellite Sisters YouTube Channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVkl... JOIN OUR COMMUNITY: -  Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/SatelliteSis... Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/satel... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/satsisters/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/SatSisters -  Email: hello@satellitesisters.com Lian Dolan on Instagram @liandolan: https://www.instagram.com/liandolan/ Liz Dolan on Instagram @satellitesisterliz: https://www.instagram.com/satellitesi... Julie Dolan on @Instagram @julieoldesister https://www.instagram.com/julieoldestsister/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Human Events Daily with Jack Posobiec
EPISODE 563: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW - DR. ROBERT MALONE, COVID, SUDAFED & SUPPLEMENTS

Human Events Daily with Jack Posobiec

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2023 49:17


Here's your Daily dose of Human Events with @JackPosobiec Go to https://www.BlackoutCoffee.com/POSO and use promo code POSO20 for 20% OFF your first order.Get $200 off a 3-month supply kit from ‘My Patriot Supply' when you go to https://www.preparewithposo.com. Support the show

New FDA Approvals
Ojjaara for Anemia in Myelofibrosis, Resmetirom for NASH, COVID-19 Vaccine Update, Phenylephrine, Patisiran in ATTR-CM

New FDA Approvals

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2023 7:29


In this week's New FDA Approval's podcast episode, Dr. Emma Hitt Nichols discusses the latest FDA approvals from September 11, 2023 – September 15, 2023.  Please check back every Monday morning so that you can stay up to date.  See more details summaries and links to prescribing information at nascentmc.com/podcast Here are the highlights: • Ojjaara for Anemia in Myelofibrosis: FDA approved Ojjaara (momelotinib) for the treatment of intermediate or high-risk myelofibrosis in adults with anemia. This drug is unique as it serves both newly diagnosed and previously treated patients, addressing anemia, constitutional symptoms, and splenomegaly. Approval was based on the MOMENTUM phase 3 trial results. • Resmetirom for NASH: FDA granted priority review for resmetirom, aiming to treat non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Madrigal, its manufacturer, seeks approval via the FDA's accelerated pathway. Resmetirom is evaluated in four phase 3 trials, including MAESTRO-NASH. The decision is set for March 14, 2024. • Updated COVID-19 Vaccines: FDA approved updated vaccines for the coming season targeting the omicron descendant XBB.1.5. While older vaccines targeted earlier strains, these new shots might provide protection against prevalent related strains. Pfizer, Moderna, and Novavax are manufacturing the vaccines. • Phenylephrine Lack of Efficacy: An FDA panel unanimously found phenylephrine, present in OTC decongestants like Sudafed and Dayquil, ineffective for its intended use. If the FDA agrees, over 250 products containing phenylephrine might be withdrawn from the market. This decision does not affect nasal preparations. • Patisiran for ATTR-CM: The FDA's advisory committee voted that the benefits of patisiran surpass its risks for treating cardiomyopathy induced by transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR-CM). Although the drug showed small effects compared to placebo in the Phase III APOLLO-B study, it met primary and secondary endpoints. The FDA's decision will be made on or before Oct. 8, 2023. Intro and outro music Garden Of Love by Pk jazz Collective    

Everything Yesterday This Morning
Everything Yesterday This Morning 9/13/23

Everything Yesterday This Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 30:52


-PSA AR-15 in ODG - https://alnk.to/3nf4z3v-Dagger Clearance Sale - https://alnk.to/dpqgtzb -Sabre MK12 - https://alnk.to/goZ99sq -New Mexico AG Calls out Tyrant Governor - https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/new-mexico-attorney-general-wont-defend-governors-gun-ban-rcna104771-Susanna Gibson the Gun-Grabbing Hoor - https://nypost.com/2023/09/12/susanna-gibson-blasts-opponents-for-gutter-politics-after-sex-videos-surface/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=nypost-MGM Cyber Attack - https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/11/tech/mgm-resorts-down-security-outage/index.html-Biden Impeachment Inquiry - https://www.kcra.com/article/mccarthy-house-republicans-biden-impeachment-inquiry/45100383# -CIA COVID Whistleblower - https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12509313/CIA-whistleblower-claims-agency-bribed-analysts-say-COVID-did-NOT-come-Wuhan-Bombshell-Republican-report-exposes-wider-virus-origins-cover-up.html-FDA says No to Sudafed - https://apnews.com/article/sudafed-decongestants-phenylephrine-pseudoephedrine-fda-0f140bafae9a500c5fba05fe764ecb66 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Hola, My Name Is
¿Debemos ponernos la nueva vacuna contra el COVID?

Hola, My Name Is

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 8:27 Transcription Available


Además el doctor Issa habló sobre el componente de Sudafed y otras medicinas contra la gripe y las alergias, no sirven como se pensaba.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Tiny Meat Gang Podcast

Bonus Episodes & Ad Free Episodes: https://tmgstudios.tv  Cody and Noel review Conor McGregor's sack shot, share why they stopped jacking off and discuss Trump's recent mugshot. Plus, Noel's recent Sudafed bender, Cody's meeting with the YouTube CEO, what cum smells like and their new ploy to collect an army of slot machines.  For a limited time, you'll get 50% off up to $10 on your next order of $15+ when you sign up for DashPass Student plan and enter code GANGBTC. Buy Our Merch: http://shoptmgstudios.com  Highlights Channel:https://www.youtube.com/@TMGPodcastHighlightsMain?sub_confirmation=1 TMG Socials: https://www.reddit.com/r/SmallDeliMeats/ https://twitter.com/tinymeatgang/likes https://www.instagram.com/tmgforreal/ https://www.tiktok.com/@tinymeatgang?lang=en  CODY http://youtube.com/codyko http://twitter.com/codyko http://instagram.com/codykohttps://www.tiktok.com/@codyko?lang=en NOEL http://youtube.com/thenoelmiller http://twitter.com/thenoelmiller http://instagram.com/thenoelmillerhttps://www.tiktok.com/@notnoelmiller?lang=en If you listen on Apple Podcasts, go to: https://apple.co/tmgstudios Hosted by Cody Ko & Noel Miller, Created by TMG Studios, Cody Ko & Noel Miller, and Produced by TMG Studios, Cody Ko & Noel Miller.  Chapters: 0:00 Cody's Commute from Hell 5:16 Intro 6:22 We're Pregnant w/ Bovid 10:05 Beyonce in Vegas 11:00 Doordash 12:35 Noel's Weekend Bender 14:31 Collecting Slot Machines 16:38 Verstappen: The GOAT 20:11 Meeting The YouTube CEO 22:14 Life Advice from a 34 Year Old 27:21 Conor McGregor Shows Sack 31:44 Trump Shot 33:45 Training Our Diets 36:01 Sweaty Kart Sesh 39:39 CEO Fires Unpaid Intern 46:10 Seeking Instant Relief 49:38 Shameless OnlyFans Promo 52:54 Does Cum Smell? 55:44 No Fapping in The Shower 1:00:07 Why We Stopped Jerkin' 1:06:55 Bonus Time

DRAMA. with Connor & Dylan MacDowell
"Nerd Nirvana" with Dana Steingold

DRAMA. with Connor & Dylan MacDowell

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 60:24


Dylan and Connor are joined by Dana Steingold (The Cottage, Beetlejuice). The twins and Dana CLICKED during this free-wheeling, footloose, and fancy-free chat. Listen in for tales of Stagedoor Manor, Felicity's impact on Dana's NYU (and haircut?) journey, and how friend of the pod Max Jenkins factors into it all. It's a theatre lovers delight as they dive into originating in Beetlejuice on Broadway and tracking the show's wild resurrection. But that's not all. We touch on Avenue Q, the Godspell Broadway production that never was, timing being everything, The Peanut Butter Players, Sudafed on Glee, Frozen on Tour, and female duets in the theatre canon. We also discuss Scott Foley in a robe. Are you so ready? See Dana star in The Cottage now through October 29!Follow Dana on Twitter & InstagramFollow DRAMA. on Twitter & Instagram & TiktokFollow Connor MacDowell on Twitter & InstagramFollow Dylan MacDowell on Twitter & InstagramEdited by ConnorSupport the podcast by subscribing to DRAMA+, which also includes bonus episodes, Instagram Close Friends content, and more!

Don't Worry About It
14: Don't Worry About Dr. Mollen…

Don't Worry About It

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 45:50


Kottie's dreams of marrying a Dr. are finally coming true, although he might be on Sudafed. Which diet hill would you die on? And how to navigate conflicting health trends….Open sandwich or open relationship? Should you change your name to Mollen? We got you!! Riveting Health stats ensue as Samantha's dad flexes more than his muscles.

Travis and Sliwa
HR 3: ‘Fun With The Hybl's'

Travis and Sliwa

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 69:38


More Ohtani talk! The Dodgers and Red Sox are working on a Kike Hernandez trade? Will he return to the Dodgers? Also, the guys talk about how it's easier to obtain a joint nowadays than a bottle of Sudafed. Then they spiral into a conversation about food as they discuss munchies post-visit to The Green Cross in Torrance. Television's Clinton Yates drops in! Plus, soem of us will go to Danny K's in Fullerton the have billiards and foosball. Sli says foosball is underrated. ‘Fun With The Hybl's' is a show that should exist and needs to happen. And it's time for THE DUMP that quickly turns into SUPER CROSS TALK with Mason and Ireland! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Amanda Seales Show
Your Vote Matters Because You Live Here | EPISODE 151

The Amanda Seales Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 72:18


The FDA has approved an over-the-counter Birth Control Pill.  Is this a good thing? At least 30% full-time College Students are struggling with food insecurity. Big Up to Diddy for launching Empower Global! And was Sexxy Red's appearance at a high school appropriate for the students?  Amanda also gives us on these stories and more.  It's time to Listen, Learn & Laugh on The Amanda Seales Show. FOLLOW ALONG AS WE COVER: 5:07 – 9:53 Blackurate News – The FDA Approves an over the counter birth control pill. 9:54 –14:55 Rapper Sexxy Redd – Getting backlash for visiting a high school 14:56 – 18:55 We take calls on Sexxy Red – What do the people think? 18:57 – 21:34 60 Second Headlines – Jesse Jackson Steps down from Rainbow Push Coalition… 21:36 HAPPY BIRTHDAY! TO THE LATE NELSON MANDELA 24:16 – 29:44 Blackurate News STORY 1:There's A Federal Probe Of Violent Deputy Encounters Underway. STORY 2: Many Full Time College Students Around The Country Are Struggling With Serious Food Insecurity… Estimates Show That At Least 30% Of College Students Are Food Insecure   34:33 BIG UP -  DIDDY LAUNCHES, EMPOWER GLOBAL… a digital marketplace for consumers to discover, explore, and shop from Black-owned businesses. LET DOWN - THE SYSTEM… Why are we not allowed to buy two boxes of Sudafed, (because they are afraid that I may be cooking meth). HOWEVER, an 18 year old can go in and buy two AR15's and 365 rounds of ammunition and no one bats an eye?! 38:37 We go to the phone lines to talk to a Floridian about Conceal and Carry 41:55 On This Day In History, Leonard C. Bailey, A Black Man Was Granted The Patent For The Folding Bed. It Was Used For Easy Storage And Portability.  The Bed Was Adopted By The US. Army.     JEREMIAH WHAT DO WE HAVE COMING UP THIS HOUR…. BLACKURATE NEWS:  What Restaurant Has Is Enforcing A No Quit Policy In Some Of Their Locations?  GOP House Member Eli Crane Referred To Black Americans Serving In The Military As Colored Live On Tv… How Do You Feel About The Word Colored? 44:21 STORY 1: GOP House Member Eli Craine Referred To Black Americans Serving In The Millitary As “Colored People” Live On C-Span. STORY 2: McDonald's Is Under Fire For Implementing A No Quit Policy In Some Of Their Locations. STORY 2: McDonald's Is Under Fire For Implementing A No Quit Policy In Some Of Their Locations.  1:01 How Black do you feel today? It's Time To Listen, Learn And Laugh… With The Word Of The Day… The Word Of The Day Is: Homily. Merriam Webster Definition: A SHORT TALK ON A MORAL TOPIC.  MAY ALSO REFER TO AN INSPIRATIONAL CATCHPHRASE  1:06 4/2/17 - POLITICIANS SAY THE DARNDEST THINGS  58 years - GOP Rep. #TimBurchett last week introduced an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would require transgender men to register for the draft… This is what he said: THANK YOU FOR JOINING US ON THIS TUESDAY! Follow The Show On All Socials: @Sealessaidit @Amandaseales @Jeremiahlikethebible If You Have A Comment Leave Amanda A Message At 1 855-Amanda-8 That's 1-855-262-6328See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Valentine In The Morning Podcast
Jill Speaks Valentine!

Valentine In The Morning Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 85:09


Today on Valentine in the Morning: Valentine takes prescription Sudafed, Jill's stomach comes with a warning label, and Val's wife makes fun of his snake boots!_Listen live every weekday from 5-10am pacific: https://www.iheart.com/live/1043-myfm-173/ Website: 1043myfm.com/valentine Instagram: @ValentineInTheMorningFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/valentineinthemorning TikTok: @ValentineInTheMorning

Wealth Formula by Buck Joffrey
362: Multifamily Real Estate is STILL the Place to Be

Wealth Formula by Buck Joffrey

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2023 29:16


I am going to keep this brief because I have a cold and I don't want to subject you to Sudafed altered commentary. This week's Wealth Formula Podcast features an interview with Jay Parsons who is Chief Economist at RealPage. He is an authority on topics affecting multifamily apartments which, of course, is of significant […] The post 362: Multifamily Real Estate is STILL the Place to Be appeared first on Wealth Formula.

Pessimistic at Best
Drunk on Spring and Sudafed

Pessimistic at Best

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 39:52


I sold my car and bought a Pitchfork ticket — spring has sprung and love is in the air! Spring is an incredibly intoxicating season, isn't it? Especially when you live in a winter hellscape like we do here in the midwest, but as they say, you have to experience the lows to appreciate the highs, am I right ladies? Join us for a conversation about attempting to sell your car online, cleaning out your childhood home, finding love in a hopeless place (the catholic church), and more!Get silly with us on social:FOLLOW THE PODCASTInstagram: @pessimisticatbestFacebook: @pessimisticatbestWebsite: pessimisticatbest.comFOLLOW SAMANTHAInstagram: @samgeorgsonTikTok: @samgeorgsonTwitter: @samgeorgsonYouTube: @samgeorgsonWebsite: samanthageorgson.comFOLLOW JAMESInstagram: @daycatcher_TikTok: @daycatcherTwitter: @daycatcher_YouTube: @daycatcherWebsite: thedaycatcher.comSupport the show

Brew with the Bennetts
Episode #62 - Cold analysis, When a kid lies, Scott exaggerates, Biscuitgate, Empaths and much more!

Brew with the Bennetts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2023 68:34


On this weeks pod!Sponsored by Sudafed!Cold analysisWhen a kid liesScott exaggeratesBiscuitgateEmpathsDate nightKids inner monologueDrop us a line, we want to know your "It's not about the biscuits" moments!bwtbpod@gmail.com Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Chronic Wellness
Episode 363: COVID Diary Part 2

Chronic Wellness

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 12:21


I'm continuing to talk about my experience with COVID. I have something like 6 autoimmune disease from Sjogren's to Polymyositis. The most threatening with COVID is having Pulmonary Fibrosis (related to antisynthetase syndrome). This lung disease means that my lungs are progressively turning themselves into scar tissue. Contracting COVID was scary. Therefore, it is miraculous that I came through it. On about the 2nd day, having been in contact with my doctors, I got on antivirals. However, because of some of the pain meds I take, and because of my blood thinners, I could not take Paxlovid. I got put on Molnupiravir. Less effective than Paxlovid, Monupiravir is still saving lives. When I am at my most sick, I prioritize my medications. Monupiavir was 4 capsules 2x/day. I take 33 pills per day and when feeling nauseated, or feeling my crappiest, I prioritize my highest value meds and take out some of the things I can live without for a couple of days and swallow a fewer pills for a couple of days. At this point my dry cough had given away to wet cough and found that Sudafed was helpful. My oxygen saturation was dropping and the danger zone is when you get below 88%. Thankfully, I have an oxygen concentrator and liquid oxygen available at home. After the first few days the vomiting stopped but the nausea and intestinal symptoms continued. The pain in my body felt a lot like a fibromyalgia flare. What's dangerous about having a serious illness (an accident, times of great stress) is that our autoimmune conditions are likely to start relapsing. So COVID becomes dangerous on these other fronts. Also, ALL of my chronic illnesses began with an EBV infection so I know that I'm prone to post-viral infections. I always assumed that I'd be a candidate for long COVID. I'll talk more about my experiences in coming days and weeks about my COVID experiences. How about you -- have you had COVID? Avoided it? Had it more than once? How has it interacted with/impacted your other illnesses? Please comment! I'm Annette Leonard, speaker, coach, and sick person who believes that my illnesses do not define me. If health is the absence of disease and wellness is the presence of wholeness, then no matter what your disease status, we can work toward your wellness, your wholeness. Whether or not you are ever "healthy" on paper, you can be well. Join me and others on the path back to wholeness at AnnetteLeonard.com. Whether you are a person experiencing chronic illness or are someone who loves or serves people with chronic illness I have great resources here on this channel or on my website for you.

The Fellowship of the Geeks Podcast
That's The Sudafed Talking - Week of 11/2/22

The Fellowship of the Geeks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2022 80:37


The Fellowship is pleased to present our discussion of the 1988 film Scarecrows, wrapping up our Horror Month festivities. This is definitely a different kind of movie than the others (for better or worse), and opinions are strong yet again. Plus our usual random talk, geek news, and tangents

A Woman Called Mother
The Lilting Man - An Old Conversation With My Mother

A Woman Called Mother

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 3:27


My mother gives me a pep talk when I felt depressed after taking Sudafed.New Episodes Every Week.If you'd like to read the piece instead, please visit the episode website at www.jessicalaurelkane.com, https://bit.ly/3seQ0GTAll pieces written, recorded and produced by Jessica Laurel Kane.If you'd like to hear my other podcast for kids and parents, visit www.onceuponanupset.com.

The Faster Than Normal Podcast: ADD | ADHD | Health
Please Mind Your Meds w/ Scientist Miss America Camille Schrier, H.R.S.

The Faster Than Normal Podcast: ADD | ADHD | Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 20:09


Hey guys! Peter Shankman the host of Faster Than Normal here. I wanna invite you to something! I am hosting a Mastermind with 12 amazing speakers who are gonna be talking about everything from ADHD to mental health, from entrepreneurship, to just living your life better. It's gonna be on November 10th, It's gonna be virtual from anywhere in the world. Incredible, incredible speakers. The leading fitness trainer in Canada for all things. Me! A whole bunch of speakers- Scott Carney, who wrote the book which is to all about how he goes and takes ice showers every day. It's gonna be 12 amazing speakers, the CBS Early Shows' Jennifer Hartstein, really, really great people. And I'd like you to join us. Check out the link below in the show notes at ShankMinds 2022 and we will see you there. And a matter of fact, look for the discount code in the show notes as well, that'll take a hundred bucks off the cost. We'll see you soon! https://shankman.lpages.co/shankminds-virtual-2022/ DISCOUNT CODE: SMFriends22 Currently pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy degree at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Camille completed dual Bachelor of Science degrees in Biochemistry and Systems Biology with honors at Virginia Tech in 2018. Breaking from tradition, Camille blew up the onstage talent competition with a highly engaging and entertaining version of the “catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide,” winning Miss Virginia in June of 2019 and then Miss America in December 2019 live on NBC. While competing for the job, Camille Schrier wanted it known that “Miss America can be a scientist and a scientist can be Miss America.” Through her time as Miss America and beyond, Camille has focused on advocating for her social initiative “Mind Your Meds: Drug Safety and Abuse Prevention from Pediatrics to Geriatrics” with a major focus on the opioid epidemic, as well as for exciting youth in the areas of STEM. In 2021 Camille launched her own science educational brand, “Her Royal Scientist,” which furthers her goal to inspire and educate youth and normalize females in science roles. She also works to raise awareness around Ehlers Danlos Syndrome, a genetic condition that impacts her life each day. Today's episode is important to literally anyone who has ever been given a prescription. Enjoy! In this episode Peter and Camille discuss:   01:26 - Thank you so much for listening and for subscribing! 02:14 - Intro and welcome Camille Schrier! 03:30 - Ref: Margaret Hamilton's Apollo code 03:54 - Women in STEM [Science Technology Engineering Math/Medicine] 04:56 - On Imposter Syndrome and growing up in public education without many neurodiverse role models 05:47 - On a non “A+B+C= ‘this or that'” approach to goal-setting and systemic education 06:40 - There is no one ‘right way' for everyone to do something. We are unique. 07:00 - How did you wind-up winning Miss America, was it a goal? A note on risk taking 09:17 - How did your initiative “Mind Your Meds” come about and get started? 11:00 - Eyes open about medication use in the collegiate community Ref:  Safe-RX 13:53 - So much about prescription drugs has become perception, not actual awareness of what they may, and may not do!  15:40 - Adderall and co-morbidities 16:00 - Talk to your peers and kids, not everyone reacts the same! 18:00 - In the neurodiverse community we are even more at risk of addiction, if not misuse. 19:04 - How can people find more about you? Web: www.CamilleSchrier.com Socials:  @CamilleSchrier everywhere.  Twitter  INSTA  FB  YouTube  LinkedIN 19:20 - Guys, as always thanks so much for subscribing! Do you have a cool friend with a great story? We'd love to hear. I'm www.petershankman.com and you can reach out anytime via email at peter@shankman.com or @petershankman on all of the socials. You can also find us at @FasterNormal on all of the socials. It really helps when you drop us a review on iTunes and of course, subscribe to the podcast if you haven't already! As you know, the more reviews we get, the more people we can reach. Help us to show the world that ADHD is a gift, not a curse!  19:40 - Faster Than Normal Podcast info & credits — TRANSCRIPT via Descript and then corrected.. somewhat:  Hey guys. Peter Shankman the host of Faster Than Normal here. I wanna invite you to something! I am hosting a Mastermind with 12 amazing speakers who are gonna be talking about everything from ADHD to mental health, from entrepreneurship, to just living your life better. It's gonna be on November 10th, It's gonna be virtual from anywhere in the world. Incredible, incredible speakers. The leading fitness trainer in Canada for all things. Me! A whole bunch of speakers- Scott Carney, who wrote the book which is to all about how he goes and takes ice showers every day. It's gonna be 12 amazing speakers, the CBS Early Shows' Jennifer Hartstein, really, really great people. And I'd like you to join us. Check out the link below in the show notes at ShankMinds 2022 and we will see you there. And a matter of fact, look for the discount code in the show notes as well, that'll take a hundred bucks off the cost. We'll see you soon! https://shankman.lpages.co/shankminds-virtual-2022/ — [00:01:26] Peter: Hey guys. Peter Shankman here. Welcome to another episode of Faster Than Normal, it is a thrill to have you as always. It is another Monday when I do all my FTN interviews for the month. We are talking to Camille Schrier today, and I will tell you a little bit about her in a second. Uh, as you heard from the ad, there is a conference coming up on November 11th. I would love to see you there. Um, there should be a discount code in the uh, show notes, use it. You'll get a hundred bucks off and hear from 12 amazing speakers and me, so if you haven't had enough, there's even me. So that'll be fun. November 11th, virtually wherever you are in the world. All right, cool.  It is Monday. It is gray and yucky outside, but that's cool cause we're talking to a ray of, of sunshine and light today. Camille Schrier is currently pursuing a doctor of pharmacy degree at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. She completed a dual Bachelor of Science degrees in Biochemistry and Systems biology with Honors of Virginia Tech in 2018. Oh, and she was Miss America in December, 2019. Uh, so yeah, there's that. She won Miss Virginia and June, 2019. Miss America, in December of 2019. You've probably seen her on YouTube where her, on stage talent competition was an entertaining version of the catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide. Very, very cool stuff. I actually had seen that on YouTube before she came to my attention. Uh, it is wonderful to have you here, Camille. Thanks for so much for taking the time today.  [00:02:52] Camille: Oh my gosh. Thank you so much for having me and making me sound way cooler than I really am in real life.  [00:02:58] Peter: So, you know, you sort of broke the mold in that regard. You, you, you came up and, and you said, Okay, I'm gonna show the world that girls can be scientists, right? That, that women can do these things and it doesn't, You can mix and match. It doesn't have to be one or the other. I always look back at. Amazing photo from NASA where I was, when I was serving on the NASA Civilian Advisory Council. They sent me this, they showed me this photo. They have framed, it's the woman who wrote the majority of the code for, uh, the Apollo 11 landing. And, um, she's standing on a, uh, next to a stack of code that's literally like taller than her, right? And, and it was just, You know, you never Yeah. A woman did that. And, and I love as a, as a father of a nine year old daughter, I love that, you know, I'm talking to you and I'm gonna have my daughter, Jessa listen to this podcast because you're showing girls, um, my daughter's age and beyond that there is so much they can do. There's nothing they can't do, and, and you're doing it a lot better than me, as her dad ever could. .  [00:03:54] Camille: Well, thank you. And I think even more than that, I mean, we know that women can be scientists. There's probably more women than ever Yeah. In STEM careers. But I think one of the things that I have realized as I've progressed through my own career is that it's not always normal to see a very feminine woman, exactly. In the sciences, and maybe women feel like they have to conform to kind of be like their male counterparts or maybe are afraid to express their femininity in a lot of those fields. And so bringing the science into something that is traditionally a feminine role like Miss America was a really interesting way to break that mold open even more, and show people that you can do whatever you want. And I think that's something that even defies gender is just embracing who you are and doing it on purpose and being fearless in every single thing that you do. And so hopefully it inspired, um, young girls, young men and beyond.  [00:04:54] Peter: Well, it's interesting you bring that up because one of the things about ADHD is imposter syndrome and, and this concept that, You know, you are consistently broken and no matter what you've done, it's all been luck and you don't really have the skill to do anything. And I grew up with that, um, uh, through no fault of anyone but my own. I mean, you know, my parents were, were constantly supportive. But, you know, I grew up in an environment, in a school system, uh, public school system, which was, you know, you're different. And so you're being, you're being, uh, uh, uh, you're disobeying and, and you're, you're breaking the rules and you gotta be like everyone else. And it took me probably till. You know, late thirties, uh, to, to sort of get over that. And I think that, that, um, the more role models we have who can show that there is no one way to do anything right, I think is, is better for the world as a whole. And I see that, I see that, uh, you know, with, with what you've done. I see that more and more today, which gives me a little bit of hope.  [00:05:47] Camille: I think we do need that because we're, we're taught to follow directions. Yeah. Right. And that's what we're seeing at, That's how we are shown success is, is you do these certain things and you get success. If you go through a certain amount of education, if you do these leadership activities and get extracurriculars and get a certain gpa, then you get X, Y, or z. And I think that often as young people working on this formula, that's not necessarily allowing us to embrace what makes us unique. Sometimes we can do that in that situation, but it's often really hard. And I've struggled because I want to do things the right way, but there is no right way to do things. I've always been really focused on doing things, um, at the most, at the highest level of achievement and success and getting to a certain level. Um, but I've forgotten a lot about what I want in that, and I think imposter syndrome is so real in what I have experienced. My becoming Miss America wasn't a longtime goal. I literally signed up for a competition that was two weeks away that went to Miss Virginia. And I was like, This will be fun. Let's do it. . And I won. And then eight weeks later I won Miss Virginia and six months later I won Miss America. And I was like, how did I end up here? Right? And did I deserve this? How? How did I. How did I successfully make my way through this in doing something that was totally different than anyone else had done before, but actually winning Miss America by doing something vastly different than anyone else had done was the best reward in taking a risk and doing something different than I had ever had in my life. Yeah, because I was always afraid to take a risk because what if it goes wrong? Right. But ultimately, if it went wrong, I would just come home as not Miss America. Exactly. So, The odds were pretty good to have a good experience, and it rewarded my creativity and my ability to try something new that then set me on a path to wanna do that more in my professional life. [00:07:48] Peter: Well, that's one of the things that I try to explain to, uh, people, you know, especially the kids. And, and you know, when they, when they read my book and then, and they, they reach out is, you know, the concept that, that, that being the, the, the worst, the biggest risk it said is not taking one. Right. And, and the concept. you can do something and fail or you cannot do it, and you'll be in the same place if you failed. Yeah. So the only option you have that breaks you out of that is to try it, you know? And I, I love, I love that. Cause I think that that, you know, again, I didn't have that mentality. It was funny. I didn't have the mentality as a kid yet. I was always different. So it was like I was, I was fighting, I was swimming upstream, I was fighting against that. And once I embraced it, You know, the whole world opened up and so I sort of think you're doing that as well. Um, so Miss America can be a scientist and a scientist can be Miss America. I love that. Tell me about, um, mind your meds. So, you know, when I was growing up and we talked about the offline, when I was growing up, the, uh, the concept of medication for ADHD or anything like that, really. Kids didn't really take meds. Um, they took medication if they were sick, I get, get penicillin, right? Whatever, you know, or Sudafed and I, but it wasn't, I, I grew up, I guess in an earlier time in the eighties we didn't have that. We had cigarettes and um, you know, I once I, and they were healthy back then, so it's fine. But, um, you know, I look at, I look at. Today I have, I have, I have friends who have kids in college and, and they're like, Yeah, the, the kids, the kids pass around, uh, Adderall, like it's candy. And, you know, that's not necessarily a good thing. Um, so talk about Mind Your Meds. Where did it come from, the concept? Uh, how, how'd you get to where it is?  [00:09:16] Camille: Sure there's such a huge problem related to pharmaceuticals and medications in the country. And as a doctor of pharmacy student, I wanted to choose a cause that I would represent as Miss Virginia and Miss America that was something I was passionate about, but also something that I felt like would affect every person that I came across, that would be relevant to every individual in some way. And I feel. All of us have either taken a medication or have known someone who's taken a medication in their lives. We all have kind of lived that or taken even just a over the counter medication at some point. And when I went through my pharmacy education, I started to realize how easy it is to make mistakes, to take things improperly, the dangers of medications that are even over the counter. Let alone things that are prescription or controlled substances, the risks that can come along with those things, and how we can really do things that are very easy to prevent, um, harm and misuse and things that damage our communities essentially. So I wanted to focus on medication safety as one big piece of what I do. But then on the other side, there's also an issue with substance use disorders in this country. With stimulants, with opioids and many other substances, um, both prescription and illicit. And I saw more and more of that as time went on. Now I spend a lot of time talking about the opioid epidemic, which is one that has just drastically increased over the past 20 years for a lot of different reasons, but is really running rampant, uh, in our communities and is, is killing people at a level that I've, I never would've anticipated, but is really sad. So, Looking back at kind of all of the things that I have gotten to do. You mentioned stimulants and when I was growing up, I can't really even remember a lot of my peers taking stimulants for, for diagnoses like adhd. Now I went to school, like elementary school, middle school, in the early two thousands. So a little bit after, but still not that long ago I do feel like as time has gone on, it's become more popular. Right? Um, and. I will say when I got into college was the first time where I really saw medications being misused in my, with my own eyes. And it was always stimulant medications. And I think as someone who's looking at ways, uh, That people can be proactive with medication safety. I feel like if you have a prescription medication, especially controlled substance like a stimulant, you have to be a responsible steward of that sub of that substance. It is your responsibility to take control of that and prevent others from potentially being harmed by that. And so I've actually teamed up with a company called Safe- RX who produces locking pill viles. Mm. And that's just like an easy tool that I can recommend to families to kind of secure these medications, either at home or or students taking them to college. I talk a lot about children accidentally taking medications because they don't know what they are. They think that they're candy, making sure that you are locking up medications, keeping them up and away from children, being a safe steward of medications. These are all things that can not only keep people safe, but prevent misuse, prevent substance use disorders from coming up in our communities. It's all a cycle, and I think that it needs to be talked about more. It's not really an educational topic that I heard a lot about when I was in school and that I still don't really hear a lot about. And so I think, you know, as a pharmacy student, pharmacists have such a unique perspective and role in being a medication safety expert, and that's why I'm excited to be a pharmacist as well. [00:13:06] Peter: That's a wonderful answer. I remember in the eighties, uh, you'd come home from school at like 3:00 PM and you'd watch like cartoons or whatever, and there was always a really, really bad. Like cringy commercial called pills aren't candy. And I don't know if you, I don't know if you had that in the 2000's by the way. I, I, I died a little bit when you said, you know, I, Yeah, I went to school in the two early two thousands. I just, I'm sorry. Died a little bit . Um, I had, I had someone I was watching, uh, TikTocs with my daughter and, uh, There was one where a woman goes, uh, you know, the, the older generation on TikTok, you know, the ones like born in the late nineties. I'm like, You, we, you're,  [00:13:39] Camille: I've seen that it even made me cringe  [00:13:41] Peter: everyone's app, right? Yeah. I'm deleting off everyone's phone right now, . But um, but yeah, no, I remember the we are not candy thing and, and it's, and it's true. I mean, as a, you know, I had the conversation with my daughter years ago, you know, this is anything in a bottle that looks like this or whatever. You don't, you don't take anything you don't know. You don't take anything. I haven't. Yeah. And, and, um, the interesting, interesting thing about the lock. You know, I wonder if it's, if it's also a peer pressure thing in the respect that, oh, you know, dude, can I, can I score that off you, can I tell, you know, score real, And it's a, kids that I've talked to don't necessarily look at it as medication. They look at it as a, as finals help. You know, there's a difference in, in, in how you look at it.  [00:14:20] Camille: I think that you're absolutely right and that's how I saw it used in students that were trying to stay up all night Yes. And study, and that it was really a commodity instead of a prescription medication that genuinely helps people Yeah. That have disorders like ADHD and is extremely effective in that. Um, I do feel like what you're saying is very true and, and potentially even putting something in a container like a locking pill vile could mentally even make that seem like less of a commodity and something that should be protected. Um, and obviously I don't think there's studies along what that impact might be for students, but I think just looking anecdotally, that would be something that I'm sure that my peers probably would think differently about when I was in college. Uh, instead of just this, Oh, can I get one of these off of you? Which really surprised me, even though I'm a little bit straight edge to begin with. But seeing students talking about in group messages of like, Oh, does anyone have an Adderall? I have an exam tomorrow. Um, Really bothered me to my core because I just felt like it was so wrong. Um, and so risky from a medical perspective as well, because patients and students that have comorbidities who maybe they don't even know that they have yeah, an issue, maybe they have an undiagnosed cardiovascular problem that they don't know about, and taking a medication could, could really be detrimental for them. There's so many things that go into making sure that a medication is right for a patient. But if that, that's why these medications are prescription, because there's a prescriber that's evaluating all these different things. And I really wanna stress if there's parents listening, to have those candid conversations with your students about what the, what the ultimate risks of this medication could be for them and for other people around them and the importance of keeping that to yourself. And the also the importance of not taking anyone else's medications. Especially I have to, to emphasize in the time of fentanyl. Yeah. When we are not sure what is in any pill that we take, we aren't sure that a pill that someone gives us is actually from whatever they say that it's from. It could be a pill that was produced, uh, not in a pharmaceutical manufacturing facility that could be cut with fentanyl and could lead to an overdose. There are so many risks taking any type of medication or any substance from anyone I believe. Playing Russian roulette right now. And so that's a continued conversation outside of just protecting your own prescription, but emphasizing to everyone, students, children, adults, and beyond that we have a huge problem in this country with opioids and with fentanyl that is now coming into other pieces of, of the, um, kind of drug scene maybe in the stimulant sector with, um, methamphetamines and beyond, which is a deadly, a deadly consequence that could happen. And I, I hate to be dramatic and I know that sometimes I sound like a broken record in that, but it's a one decision that you could potentially make that you cannot correct. Right. And that is something that I really emphasize to everyone that I meet because it's, it really. It goes beyond just, Oh, I made a mistake and I'm gonna apologize. And it's unfortunate. So, uh, I do think that it's so important for us to not only be safe stewards, but have those conversations, have candid conversations with people, um, because these medications are also really difficult to get, specifically when we're talking about stimulants, right? And part of those reasons that they're difficult to get is because people misuse them. And so, uh, not contributing to that and making it more difficult for people that need those medications to access them, um, that's not gonna help us.  [00:18:05] Peter: Well, what's interesting about that is, you know, especially, um, when you are neurodiverse, when you're a d d, when you're adhd, studies have shown you have much higher, uh, addiction prevalence, right? And, and so putting yourself deliberately, putting yourself into harm's way in that regard is something kids don't think about in their, you know, late teens, early twenties, and, You know, look down the road 10, 20, 30 years, where do you wanna be? So, there's no question about it. It's really, really cool. Camille, I, I gotta, we gotta cut it off for time, but I would love to have you back at some point. This is wonderful.  [00:18:36] Camille: Oh my gosh. I would love to come back and talk about this. Thank you so much for having, uh, a great conversation about, uh, these issues. And they're so, they're so prevalent and I, it really upsets me that we, we see this growing rather than getting better. But I think having conversations like these are the way that we end. [00:18:52] Peter: How can we, uh, how can people find you?  [00:18:54] Camille: So you can find me on any social media platform at Camille Schrier my first and last name. Uh, you can also find mr at www.camilleschrier.com.  [ www.CamilleSchrier.com @CamilleSchrier everywhere: Twitter  INSTA  FB  YouTube  LinkedIN] [00:19:04] Peter: Awesome. Camille Schrier, thank you so very much for taking the time. [00:19:07] Camille: Thank you! [00:19:08] Peter: Guys as always. We'll back next week with another amazing interview. Our thanks to our guest, Camille Schrier our thanks to Steven Byrom who produces this end every episode, and is just an awesome all around human being and I hope you have a wonderful week. We will see you guys soon. Take care. Credits: You've been listening to the Faster Than Normal podcast. We're available on iTunes, Stitcher and Google play and of course at www.FasterThanNormal.com I'm your host, Peter Shankman and you can find me at shankman.com and @petershankman on all of the socials. If you like what you've heard, why not head over to your favorite podcast platform of choice and leave us a review, come more people who leave positive reviews, the more the podcast has shown, and the more people we can help understand that ADHD is a gift, not a curse. Opening and closing themes were composed and produced by Steven Byrom who also produces this podcast, and the opening introduction was recorded by Bernie Wagenblast. Thank you so much for listening. We'll see you next week!

The Milk Minute Podcast- Breastfeeding/Chestfeeding/Lactating/Pumping
NEW Mastitis Protocol (Part 2): For Parents

The Milk Minute Podcast- Breastfeeding/Chestfeeding/Lactating/Pumping

Play Episode Play 28 sec Highlight Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 56:07 Transcription Available


Did you hear about all the major changes with mastitis?This year the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine updated their protocols for the treatment of Mastitis, clogged ducts, and milk blebs! We have made some serious progress in our understanding of why and how these things happen and we now have much better methods to treat them. Tune into the Milk Minute and let your favorite cohosts give you the low down on the updates. Heather and Maureen want you to have the best information available to manage your own health!This information is crucial to both self care  and healthcare provider management of these conditions, so don't miss it!Work With Us!Book a Lactation Consult with Heather! Click HERE for the deets.Book a Lactation Consult with Maureen! Click HERE to get started.Listener Question: Would it be bad to dry up my supply with Sudafed?THANK YOU, PATRONS!Amanda from Waterville, Ohio, Nancy B & Mandy, G from Morgantown, West VirginiaTHANK YOU TO THIS EPISODE'S SPONSORSGet your breastfeeding journey BACK ON TRACK with a Lactation Consult with Heather! Telehealth available and some insurance accepted. Click HERE for the deets. If you have Blue Cross Blue Shield, Anthem, Cigna PPO or Provider Network of America– you can fill out a short form to get pre-approval to get your visits with Heather 100% approved! Click HERE to access the form.Ceres Chill - Click HERE and enter promo code MILKMINUTE15 for 15% off!Click HERE to get HappiTummi and enter code MILKMINUTE10 for 10% off your order!Dairy Fairy - Click HERE and use Promo Code MILKMINUTE for free domestic shipping on any of our itemsMentioned in this episode:Ep. 43 - Cold and Flu Medications while BreastfeedingEp. 84- Let's Talk Nipple Shields!The bathroom bird episode: Getting Baby Back to the Breast: Nursing strikes and breast refusalPrefer to read the transcript? Click Here to read the edited version of this episode! All of the resources cited in this episode are available on our professional transcript.Support the showCheck out Milk Minute Podcast's website here!Become a VIP Click here to get exclusive access and more!Send us an e-mail! MilkMinutePodcast@gmail.comFacebook | Instagram | TikTok...

Eyes Forward; March!
Episode 60: Sudafed Duke and Empty Fields

Eyes Forward; March!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 36:43


Platoon Daddy Bacon never disappoints. If you can't tell, he is a little under the weather when recording this episode. Utilizing his mastery editing skills and a little Sudafed Duke you can barley tell. C'Gar and Bacon had a hell of a time trying to find a title for this majestic milestone but ultimately decide to press the easy button. Episode 60 is more about burnout and the frustration of being the one that everyone depends on whether they realize it or not. At some point, all you can do is walk your vast field where you grow your prized crop, F*cks. When you discover that your field is now barren your quickly realize you have none to give.

The Hate Napkin
EPISODE 50: THE HATEYS “AND THE HATEY AWARD GOES TO…”

The Hate Napkin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 37:55


Achtung, Husky Ladies of Austria! Pay heed, to our Anonymous Superfans in Titusville, Florida, and Topeka, Kansas! It's a special day of loathing and detestation ! Flips of the bird all around! Join us as we celebrate Episode 50 of The Hate Napkin with our special awards ceremony: The First Annual Hateys! Today, one member of the beloved—I mean, despised—THN Gang will walk away with a coveted Bronze Fleur-de-Lis Napkin Holder! Each member of the show nominates two of their favorite items on The Hate Napkin from the first 49 episodes. Then the THN Gang votes—or muddle wrestles, whatever it takes—to decide The Ultimate Hate Champion. Special guest Carla from Burnt Korn, Alabama, leads off the nominations with co-host Arik's WWW Rant from Episode 7: “Although you declared your hatred for the WWW part of URLs, throughout that episode and ever since, you haven't been able to stop saying WWW. So I officially nominate the Orld Ide Eb.” Carla also nominates Pauly from Bali for The Dreaded Webinar from Episode 8. Folks, this nomination clearly leads the pack early on. There are few things the THN Gang has abhorred over time more than Webinars—except perhaps Cancer Babies. “Webinars are hell—the absolute worst that humanity has to offer.” Sound engineer Pauly from Bali presents the phrase “At the End of the Day” for nomination. This was part of Carla's “Filler Word” Rant back in Episode 13. But wait, there's more! Pauly also brings forward Weak Handshakes, another Carla gem, from Episode 33. In a Will-Smith-crack-to-the-face moment of tension, Pauly openly declares his refusal to nominate Arik for a Hatey. Pauly's mad that Arik has saddled him with the title of Sound Engineer: “We have the worst sound of any podcast in the world. Why do you keep telling people that's my responsibility?!” Arik just can't pass on Carla's Disquisition of the Tube Top in Episode 14. Carla accepts his nomination with abject humility: “The thing is, tube tops have a time and a place. But men wearing tube tops in Walmart is never the time nor ever the place.” For Arik's second nomination, he really wanted to honor Pauly's annoying “Tokay! Tokay!” call from Episode 21: “It was one of the most gut-bubbling funny things of all time. I actually peed myself on air a little.” Then there was Eric Clapton's dead baby. At the end of the day, he puts forward Pauly's Raw Vegan Rant from Episode 36. The THN Gang then contemplates just what might be in the shopping cart of a Walmart Tube Topper. Moon Pies? K-Y Jelly? Glitter hair gel? SUDAFED®? The product possibilities are endless! Drum roll, please! Ladies and Gentlemen, Muffin Tubers of all genders! The First Annual Hatey Award goes to…! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thehatenapkin/support

Cup to Cup | The Comedy Podcast
“Wireless Anal Beads”

Cup to Cup | The Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 107:10


The crew brings the big energy this week (Kev isn't on Sudafed and Covid free!). They open up talking about some of their favorite memories from the good ol days aka high school. Florida Man takes us down to Tampa involving some drug money. The final first round matchups of our Best Chips Bracket between #11 Lay's Cheddar and Sour Cream vs #22 Funyuns and #6 Doritos Cool Ranch vs. #27 Utz Potato Chips.  Get Crazy! Join Premium for only $3 bucks Jose reminds the crew where they messed up last week and gives us some flashbacks to the early days of the podcast. We round out the episode with a Would You Rather that gets the crew heated. Cheers to your loyal listeners Mike and Naomi for their voice nuggets. Grab your favorite drink and enjoy!    Chris's Favorite Moments 6:50-7:12 Getting All 8 Senses  9:30-9:58 Kev Didn't Have a Choice 18:05-18:30 Jason's Weird Dream 27:10-27:34 Make a Move 29:50-30:15 Chess is a Weird Sport 49:35-49:57 Kev and Funyuns  89:30-90:00 Raptor v Direwolf Cuptocuplife.com

Midnight Train Podcast
Unsolved: The Chicago Tylenol Murders

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 102:00


Today on the train we figured we'd go back to the land of unsolved true crime as we like to do, on occasion.  So, as with all these unsolved true crime episodes, we like to bring these crimes back into the limelight and bring the stories back into the conversation. Once these stories stop getting talked about any chance of solving them goes by the wayside. This one is a strange one for sure. We're talking a look at what are called the Chicago Tylenol murders.    The Chicago Tylenol murders were a series of poisoning deaths resulting from drug tampering in the Chicago metropolitan area in 1982. The victims had all taken Tylenol-branded acetaminophen capsules that had been laced with potassium cyanide. To date, no suspect has been charged or convicted of the poisonings.   The incidents led to reforms in the packaging of over-the-counter substances and to federal anti-tampering laws. The actions of Johnson & Johnson to reduce deaths and warn the public of poisoning risks have been widely praised as an exemplary public relations response to such a crisis.   There were 7 victims total from the original incident with even more deaths resulting from copycat incidents after the fact.    Let's first take a look at the victims.   MARY KELLERMAN   September 29, 1982   The first victim was 12-year-old Mary Kellerman, a seventh grader at Addams Junior High School in Schaumburg and living in Chicago's northwest suburbs. She enjoyed horseback riding and earned extra money after school babysitting for neighborhood children. Mary woke up early in the morning hours of September 29, 1982. Feeling ill, she took an Extra Strength Tylenol to help with a runny nose and sore throat. At 7 am, her parents found Mary unconscious on the bathroom floor. Her parents rushed her to the hospital where Mary was pronounced dead by 9:30 am. Her death was first assumed to be a stroke, but the toxicology report and connection to other deaths soon proved it to be a murder.  She left behind her parents Dennis and Jeanna M. Kellerman. Mary Kellerman was laid to rest in the Saint Michael The Archangel Catholic Cemetery.   ADAM, STANLEY AND THERESA JANUS   September 29, 1982   Twenty-seven-year-old Adam Janus was the next person to die after taking Extra Strength Tylenol. He was the father of two young children, and living in Arlington Heights. The day of his death, Adam thought he was coming down with a cold. He stayed home from work that day. On his way home from picking up his children from preschool, he stopped at a Jewel grocery store and purchased a bottle of Extra Strength Tylenol.   "After taking several capsules, he walked into his bedroom, collapsed and fell into a coma. He died in the emergency room at Northwest Community Hospital." — SARA OLKON, The Chicago Tribune   After the death of Adam Janus, his family gathered at his home to mourn and begin making funeral arrangements. Stanley, Adam's brother, and his wife Theresa (Adam's sister-in-law), were visiting with family when they complained of headaches and looked for a nearby remedy. In Adam's bathroom cabinet, they found the same bottle of Extra Strength Tylenol. Moments after taking the disguised cyanide capsules, Stanley and then Theresa collapsed.  Fearing carbon monoxide poisoning, the rest of the Janus family was taken to hospital for observation. They were given their last rites, but did not die.  The Januses were survived by Janus parents Tadeusz "Ted" and Alojza Janus, niece Monica Janus, brother Joseph Janus, Theresa's brother Robert Tarasewicz, her mother Helena Tarasewicz, and a host of other bereaved family members and friends. A joint funeral was held for the three Janus family victims on October 5, 1982, with the Archbishop Joseph Bernardun presiding. Adam Janus was laid to rest at Maryhill Catholic Cemetery & Mausoleum in Niles, Cook County, Illinois. Stanley and Theresa Janus were laid to rest at Saints Peter and Paul Cemetery in Naperville, DuPage County, Illinois.   MARY REINER   September 29, 1982   Mary Reiner was happily married to her husband Ed, and the couple had just welcomed their fourth child into the world. She used Tylenol to relieve symptoms of post-birth discomfort.  Like the other victims, Mary Reiner collapsed shortly after taking the fatally disguised dose of cyanide. Mary's daughter, Michelle Rosen, was just eight years old when she witnessed her mother's poisoning, collapse, and death. Mary's husband arrived at the scene shortly after: "I came home right after she had fallen on the floor. An ambulance came [and rushed her to Central DuPage Hospital in Winfield]. I'm not gonna say a whole lot more than that." — Ed Reiner, as quoted by Chicago Magazine "Mary Magdalene Reiner grew up in Villa Park and was "100 percent Irish." Rosen remembers her being a good cook and preparing corned beef and egg noodles for the family. She also loved playing softball, the drums, and bowling." — James Sotonoff, Daily Herald   Her death left husband Ed Reiner to mourn, and four children, including an infant son to grow up without a mother.   MARY MCFARLAND   September 30, 1982   Thirty-year-old Mary McFarland was working at her job at the Illinois Bell in Lombard, when she felt a bad headache coming on. According to her brother Jack Eliason, Mary took Tylenol in the back room of her workplace, and died shortly after. He told the Associated Press:   "...she went in the back room and took I don't know how many Tylenol — at least one, obviously — and within minutes she was on the floor."    She was a single mother, working and raising two young sons at the time of her death. Her two boys Ryan and Bradley McFarland, now grown, survive Mary McFarland. She was also survived by parents John and Jane Eliason, brother Jack Eliason and sister-in-law Nancy Eliason, and siblings. A granddaughter she never had the chance to meet was named Mary in her honor.    PAULA PRINCE   October 1, 1982   Paula Jean Prince, 35, was a flight attendant who worked for United Airlines. On the day of her death, she flew from Las Vegas to O'Hare International Airport. She purchased Tylenol from a Walgreens on her way home. An ATM surveillance camera captured the purchase.  Exhausted from a long flight, Paula took Tylenol to relieve the symptoms of a cold as she got ready for bed. She was found dead in her apartment, and an open bottle of Tylenol was found on her bathroom counter. While other victims of the Tylenol Scare were from the suburbs of Chicago, Paula was the only victim to live in the city. The deaths of Mary Kellerman, Adam Janus, Stanley Janus, Theresa Janus, Mary Reiner, Mary McFarland and Paula Prince shared many similarities. All turned to Tylenol, a trusted, safe and common over-the-counter drug, to relieve minor ailments, and lost their lives. Their stories are almost universally relatable. Who hasn't taken a Tylenol for quick relief from a headache, cold or other aches and pain? The ordinariness of the circumstances coupled with the heinousness of the crime created a wave of panic in the Chicago metropolitan area. Paula's funeral was held in Omaha at the same time as the Janus family victims, on October 5, 1982. She was laid to rest at Calvary Cemetery in Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska. She was survived by her father Lloyd Prince, mother Margaret Prince, and siblings Carol Lisle, Margaret Conway and Robert Prince.    All of the victim information was taken from an article on beyondthedash.com   Next up let's look at the suspects…what few there actually were!   First up is James William Lewis. Here is what we know about Lewis as it pertains to this case:   Worked as a tax accountant   Also known to be a fraudster   Handwriting was positively matched to that of two letters sent to Johnson & Johnson and the White House, the Johnson & Johnson letter demanding an end to the poisonings, The White House letter threatening to bomb it and continue the Tylenol poisonings   Was at New York City with his wife during the time of the murders, left the Chicago area in the early days of September 1982.   Was able to show the authorities how an offender could, hypothetically, tamper Tylenol pills with Cyanide. Claimed he did it for helping out. This is typical of other offenders, such as Ted Bundy   An unidentified man seen in a CCTV footage of one of the affected drugstores bears a striking resemblance to him. The man appears to have been watching victim Paula Prince, who is also shown in the footage, buying the tainted pills.   Sentenced to 20 years in prison for extortion and letter and credit-card fraud, but served only 13 years of the sentence and was paroled in 1995   In February 2009 his Cambridge, Mass., home was raided by the FBI; agents were seen leaving with boxes of evidence and an Apple computer.   In 2010, Lewis, then 63, and his wife, Leann, appeared at a closed hearing at the Middlesex Superior Court Wednesday to determine whether they have to submit to the grand jury's subpoena, which was a request to submit DNA, according to sources close to the case.   The judge ordered them to comply with the subpoena and both James and Leann Lewis turned over samples, according to investigators.    But Lewis has always maintained his innocence in the actual poisonings of the Tylenol capsules. When asked about the drawings, he has claimed he was only trying to be a "good citizen" by giving authorities detailed sketches depicting how someone might go about injecting cyanide into Tylenol capsules.   "I could tell you how Julius Caesar was killed, but that does not mean I was the killer," Lewis told the Chicago Tribune in a 1992 jailhouse interview.   Pressed as to why he and his wife would have been subpoenaed for DNA if they are innocent, Lewis declined to comment.    According to the Daily Herald in Chicago in in 201⁰0 new scientific technology available to analyze a smudge on one of the original Tylenol bottles could help establish a link between Lewis and the crimes.   The paper, quoting an ex-state official involved in the original investigation whose name was not mentioned because he agreed to speak only with a guarantee of anonymity, said that "advances in DNA and fingerprint technology may make the 'smudge' evidence relevant today."   In receding to whether all of the evidence collected could've bring about a trial:          "The evidence investigators presented to prosecutors so far remains circumstantial, but it could be bolstered by statements from potential witnesses who have declined to sit for interviews, according to sources close to the investigation.   So far, however, no decision has been made on whether to give the grand jury a green light. Sources say both state's attorneys from Cook and DuPage counties have been briefed on the evidence. The investigation, handled by an FBI-led task force of law-enforcement agents, still centers on the same man: James W. Lewis, sources tell the Sun-Times."   In a lengthy chronicle of the case for the Reader, Joy Bergmann paints Lewis as a suspicious character… but not, aside from his extortion, necessarily suspicious as the Tylenol killer:   Lewis maintained he was a "political prisoner," a "scapegoat," and an "all-purpose monster…fathered by the wild-eyed hyperventilated imaginations of two brutal men, Tyrone Fahner and Daniel K. Webb," who simply "blew" the Tylenol investigation thanks to "bureaucratic blundering incompetence."   McGarr had already listened to Dan Webb reiterate Lewis's biography: the violence toward his parents, the mental hospital commitment, the Raymond West murder charge, the Kansas City fraud schemes for which he was convicted in May of 1983 and sentenced to ten years, the fugitive flight, the extortion conviction, the breadboard schematic, the grandiose and quick-to-explode temperament, the innumerable aliases and deceptions.   Years later, some still show skepticism towards Lewis as the killer:   Superintendent Brzeczek It wasn't James Lewis. James Lewis was an asshole, an opportunist. He tried to extort some money from Johnson & Johnson, and he went to jail. He was in the joint a long time. When someone is in the penitentiary, you can go and talk to him, with or without his lawyer present. In all those years, all the work on James Lewis to put it together: nothing.   Attorney General Fahner Do I think James Lewis was involved? I did, and I do. And the head of the FBI office here at the time—I can't speak for him, but I think he felt as I did. But we could never put him in the city, in the places, at the right time.   August Locallo Lieutenant with the Chicago Police Department I was the top man in violent crimes. [Lewis] had lived in Chicago, and that's why they zeroed in on my unit. He was in custody in New York, and I was assigned to go to New York to interview him. Basically, the FBI had him in custody, and by the time we got to New York, he had his attorney and he wouldn't talk to us. That was a futile effort. He's a con man. Strictly a con man. And he'll do anything to get to his goal. I really believed he might have killed somebody, but they couldn't put anything on him.   Interesting to say the least. Why would this guy straight up insert himself in the crime for no reason? Did he really think an extortion letter would work?   Interesting either way!   There were a  couple more suspects besides Lewis.   Roger Arnold:   Roger Arnold was a 48-year-old dock worker. He was overheard saying some “suspicious things” about the Tylenol murders in a bar. While the police were questioning him, they found several connections. He worked at a jewel warehouse with Mary Reiner's father, Adam Janus bought his Tylenol from a Jewel convenience store, Mary Reiner bought her bottle from a store that is right across from the psychiatric ward where Arnold's wife was.   The officers found “How-to” crime books in Arnold's home and there was evidence of “chemistry” as well. The evidence of “chemistry” included beakers and other equipment, along with a bag of powder that turned out to be potassium carbonate.   Arnold refused to take a polygraph and there was never enough evidence to prosecute him.   Arnold went on to have a nervous breakdown from the attention in the media. He blamed everything on a bar owner, Marty Sinclair. In 1983, during the summer, Arnold shot and killed a man named John Stanisha, he thought Stanisha was Sinclair. Roger Arnold received a 30-year sentence for second-degree murder but only served 15 years of it. He died in June of 2008.   Laurie Dann:   Not much evidence to tie her to the murders but an interesting case with this one.   Laurie Dann  shot and killed one boy, Nick Corwin, and wounded two girls and three boys in a Winnetka, Illinois elementary school. She then took a family hostage and shot another man, non-fatally, before killing herself.   Dann was born in Chicago and grew up in Glencoe, a north suburb of Chicago.   She met and married Russell Dann, an executive in an insurance broker firm in September 1982, but the marriage quickly soured as Russell's family noted signs of obsessive-compulsive disorder and strange behavior[2] including leaving trash around the house.[3] She saw a psychiatrist for a short period, who identified her childhood and upbringing as a cause of her problems.[3]   Laurie and Russell Dann separated in October 1985.[2] The divorce negotiations were acrimonious, with Laurie claiming that Russell was abusive. In the following months, the police were called to investigate various incidents, including several harassing phone calls made to Russell and his family.[3] In April 1986, Laurie Dann accused Russell of breaking into and vandalizing her parents' house, where she was then living. Shortly after, she purchased a Smith & Wesson Model 19 .357 Magnum, telling the salesman that she needed it for self-defense. The police were concerned about her gun ownership and unsuccessfully tried to persuade Dann and her family that she should give up the gun.[2]   In August 1986, she contacted her ex-boyfriend, who was by then a resident at a hospital, and claimed to have had his child. When he refused to believe her, Dann called the hospital where he worked and claimed he had raped her in the emergency room.[3][5]   In September 1986, Russell Dann reported he had been stabbed in his sleep with an icepick. He accused Laurie of the crime, although he had not actually seen his attacker. The police decided not to press charges against Laurie based on a medical report which suggested that the injury might have been self-inflicted, as well as Russell's abrasive attitude towards the police and his failed polygraph test.[2][3] Russell and his family continued to receive harassing hang-up phone calls, and Laurie was arrested for calls made to Russell's sister. The charges were dropped due to lack of evidence.[3]   Just before their divorce was finalized in April 1987, Laurie accused Russell of raping her. There were no physical signs supporting Laurie's claim, although she passed two polygraph tests.[3] In May 1987, Laurie accused Russell of placing an incendiary device in her home.[2] No charges were filed against Russell for either alleged event. Laurie's parents believed her claims and supported and defended her throughout. By this time, Laurie Dann was being treated by another psychiatrist for obsessive-compulsive disorder and a "chemical imbalance"; the psychiatrist told police that he did not think Laurie was suicidal or homicidal.   In the summer of 1987, Dann sublet a university apartment in Evanston, Illinois. Once again, her strange behavior was noted, including riding up and down in elevators for hours, wearing rubber gloves to touch metal, and leaving meat to rot in sofa cushions. She took no classes at the university.   In the fall of 1987, Dann claimed she had received threatening letters from Russell and that he had sexually assaulted her in a parking lot, but the police did not believe her. A few weeks later, she purchased a .32-caliber Smith & Wesson Model 30-1 revolver.[2]   With her condition deteriorating, Dann and her family sought specialized help. In November 1987, she moved to Madison, Wisconsin, to live in a student residence while being observed by a psychiatrist who specialized in obsessive-compulsive disorder. She had already begun taking clomipramine, a drug for OCD, and her new psychiatrist increased the dosage, adding lithium carbonate to reduce her mood swings and initiating behavioral therapy to work on her phobias and ritualistic behaviors.[3] Despite the intervention, her strange behavior continued, including riding elevators for long periods, changing television channels repetitively, and an obsession with "good" and "bad" numbers. There were also concerns about whether she was bulimic.   Dann purchased a .22-caliber Beretta 21A Bobcat at the end of December 1987. In March 1988, she stopped attending her appointments with the psychiatrist and behavior therapist.[3] At about the same time, she began to make preparations for the attacks. She stole books from the library on poisons, and she diluted arsenic and other chemicals from a lab. She also shoplifted clothes and wigs to disguise herself and was arrested for theft on one occasion. Both her psychiatrist and her father tried to persuade her to enter the hospital as an inpatient, but she refused.[3]   Dann continued to make numerous hang-up phone calls to her former in-laws and babysitting clients. Eventually, the calls escalated to death threats. An ex-boyfriend and his wife also received dozens of threatening calls. In May 1988, a letter, later confirmed to have been sent by Laurie Dann, was sent to the hospital administration where her ex-boyfriend then worked, again accusing him of sexual assault. Since the phone calls were across state lines, the FBI became involved, and a federal indictment against Dann was prepared. However, the ex-boyfriend, fearful of publicity,[2] and concerned about Dann getting bail and then attempting to fulfill her threats against him, decided to wait until other charges were filed in Illinois.[3][5][6] In May 1988, a janitor found her lying in the fetal position inside a garbage bag in a trash room. This precipitated a search of her room and her departure back to Glencoe.   During the days before May 20, 1988, Laurie Dann prepared rice cereal snacks and juice boxes poisoned with the diluted arsenic she had stolen in Madison. She mailed them to a former acquaintance, ex-babysitting clients, her psychiatrist, Russell Dann, and others. In the early morning of May 20, she personally delivered snacks and juice "samples" to acquaintances, and families for whom she had babysat, some of whom had not seen her for years.[2][3] Other snacks were delivered to Alpha Tau Omega, Psi Upsilon, and Kappa Sigma fraternity houses and Leverone Hall at Northwestern University in Evanston.[2][3] Notes were attached to some of the deliveries.[7][8][9] The drinks were often leaking and the squares unpleasant-tasting, so few were actually consumed. In addition, the arsenic was highly diluted so nobody became seriously ill.[2]   At about 9:00 a.m. on the 20th, Dann arrived at the home of the Rushe family, former babysitting clients in Winnetka, Illinois, to pick up their two youngest children. The family had just told Dann they were moving away.[3] Instead of taking the children on the promised outing, she took them to Ravinia Elementary School in Highland Park, Illinois, where she erroneously believed that both of her former sister-in-law's two sons were enrolled (in fact, one of Dann's intended targets was not even a student at the school). She left the two children in the car while she entered the school and tried to detonate a fire bomb in one of the school's hallways. After Dann's departure, the small fire she set was subsequently discovered by students, and quickly extinguished by a teacher. She drove to a local daycare attended by her ex-sister-in-law's daughter and tried to enter the building with a plastic can of gasoline, but was stopped by staff.   Next Dann drove the children back to their home and offered them some arsenic-poisoned milk, but the boys spat it out because it tasted strange to them. Once at their home, she lured them downstairs and used gasoline to set fire to the house, trapping their mother and the two children in the basement (they managed to escape).[2][3][10] She drove three and a half blocks to the Hubbard Woods Elementary School with three handguns in her possession. She wandered into a second grade classroom for a short while, then left. Finding a boy in the corridor, Dann pushed him into the boys' washroom and shot him with a .22 semi-automatic Beretta pistol. Her Smith & Wesson .357 Magnum revolver jammed when she tried to fire it at two other boys, and she threw it into the trash along with the spare ammunition. The boys ran out of the washroom and raised the alarm.[2] Dann then reentered the second grade classroom where students were working in groups on a bicycle safety test. She ordered all the children into the corner of the room. The teacher refused and attempted to disarm Dann, managing to unload the Beretta in the struggle. Dann drew a .32 Smith & Wesson from the waistband of her shorts and aimed it at several groups of the students. She shot five children, killing eight-year-old Nick Corwin and wounding two girls and two boys before fleeing in her car.[3]   Dann was prevented from leaving the area by car because the roads were closed for a funeral cortege. She decided to drive her car backwards down the nearby street, but the road dead-ended into a private drive. Abandoning her car, she removed her bloodstained shorts and tied a blue garbage bag around her waist. With her two remaining guns she made her way through the woods and came upon the house of the Andrew family. Dann entered the house and met a mother and her twenty-year-old son, who were in the kitchen. She claimed she was raped and had shot the rapist in the struggle.[3][11] The Andrews were sympathetic[11] and tried to convince her that she need not fear the police because she had acted in self-defense. Mrs. Andrew gave Dann a pair of her daughter's pants to wear. While she was putting them on, Philip Andrew was able to pick up and pocket the Beretta. He suggested that she call her family. Dann agreed and called her mother, telling her she had done something terrible and that the police were involved. Philip took the phone and explained Dann's story about the rape and shooting, suggesting that Mrs. Wasserman come to get Dann; Mrs. Wasserman said she could not come because she did not have a car.   Mr. Andrew arrived home, and they continued to argue with Dann, insisting she give up the second gun. Dann called her mother again and this time Mr. Andrew spoke with Mrs. Wasserman, asking her to persuade Dann to give up the gun. While Dann spoke with her mother, Mrs. Andrew left the house and alerted the police. Mr. Andrew told Dann that he would not remain in the house if she did not put down the gun, and also left the house. Dann ordered Philip to stay. Just before noon, seeing the police advancing on the house she shot Philip in the chest, but he managed to escape out the back door before collapsing and being rescued by the police and ambulance personnel.   With the house surrounded, Dann went upstairs to a bedroom. The Wassermans and Russell Dann were brought to the house. At about 7:00 p.m., an assault team entered the house while Mr. Wasserman attempted to get Dann's attention with a bullhorn. The police found her body in the bedroom; she had shot herself in the mouth.   Soooooo yea…there's that…she did try and poison people and she was definitely crazy…   So there's pretty much everything known in this case .. Which is to say… Not a ton. It's an interesting case that remains open to this day. And while it seems Lewis is a strong suspect as they kept after him  as late as 2012…still no one has been charged.   The aftermath literally changed the way medication is sold.    McNeil Consumer Products, a subsidiary of the health care giant, Johnson & Johnson, manufactured Tylenol. To its credit, the company took an active role with the media in issuing mass warning communications and immediately called for a massive recall of the more than 31 million bottles of Tylenol in circulation. Tainted capsules were discovered in early October in a few other grocery stores and drug stores in the Chicago area, but, fortunately, they had not yet been sold or consumed. McNeill and Johnson & Johnson offered replacement capsules to those who turned in pills already purchased and a reward for anyone with information leading to the apprehension of the individual or people involved in these random murders.   The case continued to be confusing to the police, the drug maker and the public at large. For example, Johnson & Johnson quickly established that the cyanide lacing occurred after cases of Tylenol left the factory. Someone, police hypothesized, must have taken bottles off the shelves of local grocers and drug stores inJohnson & Johnson developed new product protection methods and ironclad pledges to do better in protecting their consumers in the future. Working with FDA officials, they introduced a new tamper-proof packaging, which included foil seals and other features that made it obvious to a consumer if foul play had transpired. These packaging protections soon became the industry standard for all over-the-counter medications. The company also introduced price reductions and a new version of their pills — called the “caplet” — a tablet coated with slick, easy-to-swallow gelatin but far harder to tamper with than the older capsules which could be easily opened, laced with a contaminant, and then placed back in the older non-tamper-proof bottle.   Within a year, and after an investment of more than $100 million, Tylenol's sales rebounded to its healthy past and it became, once again, the nation's favorite over-the-counter pain reliever. Critics who had prematurely announced the death of the brand Tylenol were now praising the company's handling of the matter. Indeed, the Johnson & Johnson recall became a classic case study in business schools across the nation. the Chicago area, laced the capsules with poison, and then returned the restored packages to the shelves to be purchased by the unknowing victims.   In 1983, the U.S. Congress passed what was called “the Tylenol bill,” making it a federal offense to tamper with consumer products. In 1989, the FDA established federal guidelines for manufacturers to make all such products tamper-proof.   Copycats:   Hundreds of copycat attacks involving Tylenol, other over-the-counter medications, and other products also took place around the United States immediately following the Chicago deaths.[1][25]   Three more deaths occurred in 1986 from tampered gelatin capsules.[26] A woman died in Yonkers, New York, after ingesting "Extra-Strength Tylenol" capsules laced with cyanide.[27] Excedrin capsules in Washington state were tampered with, resulting in the deaths of Susan Snow and Bruce Nickell from cyanide poisoning and the eventual arrest and conviction of Bruce Nickell's wife, Stella Nickell, for her intentional actions in the crimes connected to both murders.[28] That same year, Procter & Gamble's Encaprin was recalled after a spiking hoax in Chicago and Detroit that resulted in a precipitous sales drop and a withdrawal of the pain reliever from the market.[29] In 1991 in Washington state, Kathleen Daneker and Stanley McWhorter were killed from two cyanide-tainted boxes of Sudafed, and Jennifer Meling went into a coma from a similar poisoning but recovered shortly thereafter. Jennifer's husband, Joseph Meling, was convicted on numerous charges in a federal Seattle court regarding the deaths of Daneker and McWhorter and the attempted murder of his wife, who was abused during the Melings' marriage. Meling was sentenced to life imprisonment and lost an appeal for a retrial.[30][31]   In 1986 a University of Texas student, Kenneth Faries, was found dead in his apartment after succumbing to cyanide poisoning.[32] Tampered Anacin capsules were determined to be the source of the cyanide found in his body. His death was ruled as a homicide on May 30, 1986.[33] On June 19, 1986 the AP reported that the Travis County Medical Examiner ruled his death a likely suicide. The FDA determined he obtained the poison from a lab in which he worked.   There you have it…the Tylenol murders! Crazy shit for sure!   Top ten medical horror movies   https://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/17726/1/top-ten-medical-horror-films

You Took It Too Far
Episode 73: Cutting Grass with Sudafed (feat. Thomas Meek)

You Took It Too Far

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2022 60:18


This week, the guys are observing the only holiday they agree upon. That being said, this show is a roller coaster of content, including a surprise visit from Sleek Meek himself.