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  • Is Being Hot a Hereditary Thing and Other Crap Science Headlines

    clearly it doesn't always come from dadI've noticed that when we write about research studies, some of y'all express a certain amount of skepticism about the results. I can't say that I blame you, and lord knows I don't take the time to dissect each and every study to verify that the reporting meets the most rigorous standards. But I worry, cuz I'd hate for us to throw science out the window just because the way some studies get reported doesn't always fly. So here, let's look at a crap conclusion and see what the worst examples can be. The headline? "Is hotness an inherited trait? Sexiness is hereditary in the insect world — and maybe ours, too."

    Okay, "Like father, like son — sexy fathers can give rise to sexy sons in the insect world. Researchers suggest these findings might also apply to humans." Meaning...

    Read More...


  • Research Shows A Little Rough Play Can Be Good for Kids

    Researcher James Herzog's new study found that roughousing, or "crazy time!" as it's known in my house, can actually be good for kids, particularly when the rough play is between parent and child.

    Though the write-up focuses mostly on father and son play - because only boys like to wrestle, right?  Jeez... -  the research shows that kids who regularly engage in physical play with a parent learn self-control,  how to deal with a wide range of emotions,  and how to adapt to a constantly changing situation.  Herzog and other researchers found that "a father's playful and vigorous interactions force a boy to closely observe his father's facial expressions and body language to figure out his father's moods. A dad's play can help his son learn how to become a good manager of emotions. When, in a loving environment, a father coaxes his son to cope with interactions that will test his limits and stretch him emotionally, the boy will develop confidence to handle similar tests in challenging environments."

    It irks me that this article completely overlooks the fact that girls like rough-and-tumble play just as much as boys do.  When Dad comes home, my girls clamor to get to him for a hefty dose of physicality - spinning, jumping, flipping, climbing, wrestling, the works.  Are the girls not reading the same physical cues that the boys are?  Is there less value in this kind of play between a father and a daughter?  What about a mother and a son?  Or mother and daughter? 

     


  • Keith Richards Mixes Cocaine with Ashes and "Snorts His Father"

    keith richardsSince we're talking rock...

    Keith Richards, the Rolling Stones' legendary guitarist, said today that "the strangest thing he's ever tried to snort" is his dead father.*

    His father Bert died and was cremated in 2002. Richards, 63, says he "couldn't resist" mixing his ashes with a little Columbian bambam and snorting a few rails of "Dad." Richards says the powdery concoction went down easy.

    You know what? (Kids, listen up...) To all you wannabe rock stars out there that think you know something, you don't know shite. (Yeah, I'm talking to you Snow Patrol, The Fray, Maroon 5, and Daughtry.) You're so not hardcore unless you can snort a dead family member up your nose.

    Richard's quote was published in British music mag NME.  All I can say is, "Rock and roll, Keith. Rock. And. Roll."
     

    *Now Keith is saying this is a joke. I don't know about you, but I'm kinda bummed about that.

    [AP photo] 


  • Father Flings Boy's Wrestling Opponent; Oh Memories ...

    My freshman year of high school, I weighed all of five pounds. I also had a strong desire to wrestle for reasons that still baffle me. Thankfully, I wasn't the lightest person on the team -- no, I just wrestled with her. While my teammates practiced takedowns and pins, I spent two hours each afternoon desperately hoping my practice uniform would conceal my raging freshman hormones.

    So I looked upon this story with a different eye. It seems a father leapt into the middle of a wrestling match to fling an 11-year-old competitor of his boy, who was seconds away from being pinned. "I mean, there is a lot of different ways to stop a match," said the flinged boy's father, "Not to pick up my son and launch him 5 feet, 10 feet in the air."

    The flinging father, coach Ray Hoffman, says he learned his lesson and would likely never coach again. Parents all over the country thought "how disturbing!" after watching this video. But somehow I'm left with the vision of a scrawny freshman and his long-haired, Jasmine-scented practice partner, who on more than one occasion probably wished Ray Hoffman coached at our school.


  • Father (and I Use That Term Loosely) Arrested for Using 100,000 Volt Stun Gun on Toddler

    rian whittmanRian Whitmann, a 23-year-old "father" from Albany, Ore. was arrested last weekend for using a stun gun on his 18-month-old son. Police said Whitmann used it multiple times over the course of three weeks, multiple meaning "ten." The stun gun used was an older type that must make contact with the skin in order to be effective.

    Whitmann was turned in by his 21-year-old wife and the child was treated and taken into protective custody.

    Effin' tweakers, man.

     



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