The Connection Between Status and Diet
The New York Times ran an article on the correlation between food/diet and social status. In turns out that the lower your status the more junk food you are prone to eat / include in your diet.
Read more ›The New York Times ran an article on the correlation between food/diet and social status. In turns out that the lower your status the more junk food you are prone to eat / include in your diet.
Read more ›It doesn’t feel as though Spring has officially arrived here on the East Coast, but you can welcome Spring by preparing the perfect Spring lunch (well at least in the opinion of this humble cook): The Wine: Start with a bottle of Sauvignon Blanc, preferablly from Australia and, moreover, from the Marlborough region. Chill the bottle nicely and don’t pay […]
Read more ›A while back Vanguard published Dilbert’s guide (Scott Adams) to Personal Finance: Make a will. Pay off your credit cards. Get term life insurance if you have a family to support. Fund your 401(k) to the maximum. Fund your IRA to the maximum. Buy a house if you want to live in a house and you can afford it. Put six […]
Read more ›There is a moving article in the New York Times this morning about a couple (Wang Zhijun and Li Wanzhi) that survived last Monday’s earthquake in China. The article reminded me of the book, The Long Walk the story of a group of Siberian prisoners who escaped and trekked 4,000 miles to their freedom in India.
Read more ›Showtime launched a new series last year called, The Tudors starring Jonathan Rhys as a young King Henry The VIII. At first, I didn’t pay much attention to the show (partly because I am not a Showtime subscriber), but when season one become available on DVD at my local library I became an immediate fan. Rhys is pretty convincing as the […]
Read more ›The Wii Fit is receiving a ton of media attention as of late and was featured on the Today Show this morning and in the Fashion and Style section of the NY Times on Thursday (why not the Sports section?). I’m not convinced the attention is warranted but if the video game system can get American’s just a few inches off […]
Read more ›Okay, it’s my tenth post and I should tell you a little more about my last name and the domain name of this site, Scordo.com. Both my parents hail from the extreme southern province of Calabria, Italy – think of the tip of the boot (they were born there and could see Sicily from the Mediterranean coast near their 200 […]
Read more ›Well, the search is over! Heather Armstrong runs a blog called, Dooce.com which has recently been all over the media. Armstrong also just published a collection of essays entitled, “Things I Learned About My Dad” I read Heather’s blog pretty regularly and I’m not quite sure why, but I think it has something to do with how engrossing and ever changing the […]
Read more ›There’s lots of talk about how traditional classroom learning is dead, see: However, and I don’t know about you, but I really enjoy the small lecture type experience (ask questions, get a response back kind of thing). And I think deep learning is not about text messages, Facebook, or web enabled distance learning (they’re not bad instructional tools), but a liberal […]
Read more ›I’ve always told friends, colleagues, and family that the New Yorker is essential reading. After all, where else can you, as an amateur intellectual, get the best in short stories, profiles, feature stories, book and movie reviews? The New Yorker is not only essential reading, but critical to continuing one’s life-long education. The latest book review from The New Yorker […]
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