oddlibrarian
OddLibrarian
oddlibrarian

Allow me to clarify, Julie Chen has "The Talk". Julie Chen is married to Les Moonves, President and CEO of CBS. As far as I can see, that's the only reason the show exists.

It's okay - they also weren't even ever considering Asians, Blacks, or Hispanics. Equal-Opportunity Bigotry.

People don't like Griffin for various reasons, but she is a hardass when it comes to advocating for women in her line of work. I'm glad she's a righteous loudmouth bc I have no doubts for even a second that these nameless faceless execs truly believe people won't watch a late night show not hosted by a white dude with

"You realize that's illegal to say in a business meeting?" was Griffin's comeback.

No, I think it's trollish to write an article that relies on a litany of assumptions, speaking about an event that has yet to actually occur.

"The thot that counts" is an awesome name!

But... but... he controls the universe!

Why would you Fur Shame your Kitty??

Sorry, if I could delete my comment I would. I know I was being snarky, and tbh was guilty of being behind a computer screen. I'd never say what I said in real life. Please forgive me.

You know what doesn't make people lose weight? The word piehole. I see that and I can think is "mmmmmm...pie....".

Think additive instead of subtractive. Talk about more vegetables, more exercise, not less body.

I'd like to start a thread here if, you'll all indulge me, for tips on how a medical professional can discuss weight loss with their obese patients. I've always struggled with it, especially because I'm dealing with kids. Weight interventions don't have a great success rate, and the last thing I want to do is

I love reading Miss Manners on the subject. "Should I tell my friend she's fat?" "Why? Do you think she hasn't noticed?" If you see something wrong with someone's appearance, the rule is that you can mention it only if the person can immediately fix the problem. Since no one is going to step into another room and

We tried using a shock collar so my dog would stay within an "invisible fence" and not leave the yard. (when she's outside, she has to be tied up or she'll dig under the fence and run around) All it did was upset her badly, we're never using it again.

Dog trainer here. Shock collars are the last resort on a behavior, as there are many, MANY things that can fix a behavior before that level — including positive reinforcement, leash work, having the dog work with another dog who understands (social learning), other collars, etc. In this exercise, the trainers used

I design slot machines .. which I think is the ultimate in operant conditioning. No where on a slot machine will you find any negative stimuli or punishment. And believe me, if negative conditioning worked, there would be electrodes in every slot machine seat.

My dog was a tool. She was chained to a wall and several times a day the two dogs that were about to fight would attack her to get their dander up before a fight. She was tied down and her teeth were filed down so she could not fight back. When she no longer served her purpose, she was tossed in the street. So you'll

I think the people using shock collars aren't looking for their dogs to love them. They want obedience, and usually for the dog to perform a certain task. Dogs are tools for these people. Some of those tools require a battery.

Not only no, but fuck no. Pain should never be used as a training method. You think an animal will ever really love and obey someone that causes it pain?