Tag Archives: thin

Jackie Goldschneider demands Sharon Osbourne ‘stop taking’ Ozempic as weight loss continues: ‘Addicted to being thin’ – Page Six

  1. Jackie Goldschneider demands Sharon Osbourne ‘stop taking’ Ozempic as weight loss continues: ‘Addicted to being thin’ Page Six
  2. Sharon Osbourne Says She’s Under 100 Lbs After Using Ozempic Access Hollywood
  3. Sharon Osbourne reveals she weighs less than 100 lbs. after Ozempic. Why dropping too much weight is a legitimate concern. Yahoo Life
  4. Sharon Osbourne Thinks She’s “Too Gaunt” After Ozempic Use | E! News E! News
  5. TV star says she’s ‘gaunt’ months after giving up controversial medication to help shed lbs, more news Wonderwall
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Golf Analyst Suggests Medical Leave Could Be Start of ‘Graceful Exit’ for PGA Tour Commish : ‘He Was Already on Thin Ice With the Top Guys’ – Mediaite

  1. Golf Analyst Suggests Medical Leave Could Be Start of ‘Graceful Exit’ for PGA Tour Commish : ‘He Was Already on Thin Ice With the Top Guys’ Mediaite
  2. Tyler Dennis: Jay Monahan news is ‘certainly a jolt’ | Live From the U.S. Open | Golf Channel Golf Channel
  3. PGA Tour’s Jay Monahan Enters Spin Zone After LIV Golf Deal Attracts Congressional Scrutiny BroBible
  4. PGA Tour players may look to hire own bankers to advise on LIV Golf deal: Faber CNBC Television
  5. PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan recovering from medical issue – ESPN ESPN
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Your DNA Can Now Be Pulled From Thin Air. Privacy Experts Are Worried. – The New York Times

  1. Your DNA Can Now Be Pulled From Thin Air. Privacy Experts Are Worried. The New York Times
  2. Human DNA can now be pulled from thin air or a footprint on the beach. Here’s what that could mean CNN
  3. Burglars beware! Scientists can collect human DNA from almost anywhere Daily Mail
  4. You shed DNA everywhere you go – trace samples in the water, sand and air are enough to identify who you are, raising ethical questions about privacy The Conversation
  5. Privacy concerns sparked by human DNA accidentally collected in studies of other species Science
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Jennifer Garner Carries Apple TV+’s Thin but Engrossing ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’: TV Review – Variety

  1. Jennifer Garner Carries Apple TV+’s Thin but Engrossing ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’: TV Review Variety
  2. Jennifer Garner on why ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’ is really ‘a love story between 2 women’ Entertainment Weekly News
  3. Jennifer Garner on Reuniting with “Alias” Co-Star Victor Garber in Her New AppleTV+ Thriller The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
  4. Strong Jennifer Garner lifts weak thriller ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’ New York Post
  5. The Last Thing He Told Me review: Jennifer Garner salvages an unassuming thriller Yahoo Entertainment
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Chelsea under Graham Potter just scream mediocrity – patience is wearing thin – The Athletic

  1. Chelsea under Graham Potter just scream mediocrity – patience is wearing thin The Athletic
  2. Chelsea v. Aston Villa | PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS | 4/1/2023 | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. “I don’t say anything anymore” – Thiago Silva’s wife Belle Silva reacts to Chelsea’s disappointing loss to Aston Villa Sportskeeda
  4. Chelsea’s line-up vs Aston Villa puts question mark over 23-year-old – opinion The Chelsea Chronicle – Chelsea FC News
  5. Graham Potter told the Chelsea transfer that can save his job amid Todd Boehly sack stance Football.London
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House GOP pushes Hunter Biden probe despite thin majority

WASHINGTON (AP) — Even with their threadbare House majority, Republicans doubled down this week on using their new power next year to investigate the Biden administration and, in particular, the president’s son.

But the midterm results have emboldened a White House that has long prepared for this moment. Republicans secured much smaller margins than anticipated, and aides to President Joe Biden and other Democrats believe voters punished the GOP for its reliance on conspiracy theories and Donald Trump-fueled lies over the 2020 election.

They see it as validation for the administration’s playbook for the midterms and going forward to focus on legislative achievements and continue them, in contrast to Trump-aligned candidates whose complaints about the president’s son played to their most loyal supporters and were too far in the weeds for the average American. The Democrats retained control of the Senate and the GOP’s margin in the House is expected to the slimmest majority in two decades.

“If you look back, we picked up seats in New York, New Jersey, California,” said Mike DuHaime, a Republican strategist and public affairs executive. “These were not voters coming to the polls because they wanted Hunter Biden investigated — far from it. They were coming to the polls because they were upset about inflation. They’re upset about gas prices. They’re upset about what’s going on with the war in Ukraine.”

But House Republicans used their first news conference after clinching the majority to discuss presidential son Hunter Biden and the Justice Department, renewing long-held grievances about what they claim is a politicized law enforcement agency and a bombshell corruption case overlooked by Democrats and the media.

“From their first press conference, these congressional Republicans made clear that they’re going to do one thing in this new Congress, which is investigations, and they’re doing this for political payback for Biden’s efforts on an agenda that helps working people,” said Kyle Herrig, the founder of the Congressional Integrity Project, a newly relaunched, multimillion-dollar effort by Democratic strategists to counter the onslaught of House GOP probes.

Inside the White House, the counsel’s office added staff months ago and beefed up its communication efforts, and staff has been deep into researching and preparing for the attacks. They’ve worked to try to identify their own vulnerabilities and plan effective responses.

Rep. James Comer, incoming chairman of the House Oversight Committee, said there are “troubling questions” of the utmost importance about Hunter Biden’s business dealings and one of the president’s brothers, James Biden, that require deeper investigation.

“Rooting out waste, fraud and abuse in the federal government is the primary mission of the Oversight Committee,” said Comer, R-Ky. “As such, this investigation is a top priority.”

Republican legislators promised a trove of new information this past week, but what they have presented so far has been a condensed rehash of a few years’ worth of complaints about Hunter Biden’s business dealings, going back to conspiracy theories raised by Trump.

Hunter Biden joined the board of the Ukrainian gas company Burisma in 2014, around the time his father, then vice president, was helping conduct the Obama administration’s foreign policy with Ukraine. Senate Republicans have said that the appointment may have posed a conflict of interest, but they did not present evidence that the hiring influenced U.S. policies, and they did not implicate Joe Biden in any wrongdoing.

Republican lawmakers and their staff for the past year have been analyzing messages and financial transactions found on a laptop that belonged to Hunter Biden. They long have discussed issuing congressional subpoenas to foreign entities that did business with him, and they recently brought on James Mandolfo, a former federal prosecutor, to assist with the investigation as general counsel for the Oversight Committee.

The difference now is that Republicans will have subpoena power to follow through, however small their majority may be.

“The Republicans are going to go ahead,” said Tom Davis, a Republican lawyer who specializes in congressional investigations and legislative strategy. “I think their members are enthusiastic about going after this stuff. Look, the 40-year trend is parties under-investigate their own and over-investigate the other party. It didn’t start here.”

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre dismissed the GOP focus on investigations as “on-brand” thinking.

“They said they were going to fight inflation, they said they were going to make that a priority, then they get the majority and their top priority is actually not focusing on the American family, but focusing on the president’s family,” she said.

Even some newly elected Republicans are pushing back against the idea.

“The top priority is to deal with inflation and the cost of living. … What I don’t want to see is what we saw in the Trump administration, where Democrats went after the president and the administration incessantly,” Rep.-elect Mike Lawler of New York said on CNN.

Hunter Biden’s taxes and foreign business work are already under federal investigation, with a grand jury in Delaware hearing testimony in recent months.

While he never held a position on the presidential campaign or in the White House, his membership on the board of a Ukrainian energy company and his efforts to strike deals in China have long raised questions about whether he traded on his father’s public service, including reported references in his emails to the “big guy.”

Joe Biden has said he’s never spoken to his son about his foreign business, and nothing the Republicans have put forth suggests otherwise. And there are no indications that the federal investigation involves the president.

Trump and his supporters, meanwhile, have advanced a widely discredited theory that Biden pushed for the firing of Ukraine’s top prosecutor to protect his son and Burisma from investigation. Biden did indeed press for the prosecutor’s firing, but that was a reflection of the official position of not only the Obama administration but many Western countries and because the prosecutor was perceived as soft on corruption.

House Republicans also have signaled upcoming investigations into immigration, government spending and parents’ rights. White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Chris Wray have been put on notice as potential witnesses.

Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, incoming Judiciary chairman, has long complained of what he says is a politicized Justice Department and the ongoing probes into Trump.

On Friday, Garland appointed a special counsel to oversee the Justice Department’s investigation into the presence of classified documents at Trump’s Florida estate as well as key aspects of a separate probe involving the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and efforts to undo the 2020 election.

Trump, in a speech Friday night at his Mar-a-Lago estate, slammed the development as “the latest in a long series of witch hunts.”

Of Joe and Hunter Biden, he asked, “Where’s their special prosecutor?”

Matt Mackowiak, a Republican political strategist, said it’s one thing if the investigations into Hunter Biden stick to corruption questions, but if it veers into the kind of mean-spirited messaging that has been floating around in far-right circles, “I don’t know that the public will have much patience for that.”

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Daily Mail Quietly Scrubs Article About Trump’s ‘Uncharacteristically Thin Crowd’

The Daily Mail quietly scrubbed its own dispatch from former President Donald Trump’s Saturday rally in Ohio, removing all references to the “uncharacteristically thin crowd” at the event.

The right-leaning tabloid wholesale excised several paragraphs from the story without any editor’s note or update and the reporter’s name was removed and replaced with a generic “DailyMail.com Staff Reporter” byline. The headline was also completely changed to a more neutral framing of Trump’s event.

The Daily Mail did not respond to a request for comment.

The piece as originally published featured Daily Mail politics reporter Elizabeth Elkind’s in-person coverage of the Trump rally in Youngstown, where he stumped for GOP Senate hopeful J.D. Vance and several other candidates.

In the article, published Saturday evening and titled “Uncharacteristically thin crowd in Ohio an hour before Trump takes the stage for rally in support of Senate candidate JD Vance – just after saying most GOP candidates would LOSE without his endorsement,” Elkind noted that Trump had bragged hours before the event that it was “sold out” and he expected a “massive crowd”—only for the arena to be visibly less-than-full. The Daily Beast found the original text by searching cached versions in the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.

“While the crowd does not fill the entire 7,000-seat Covelli Centre, the Trump supporters who made it to Youngstown on Saturday were wildly excited,” Elkind originally wrote. “The former president boasted about the ‘massive crowd,’ but the stadium was uncharacteristically thin right up until the time when Trump took the stage,” she added.

Elkind, who traveled to Youngstown for the Mail to cover the rally, pointed out that the less-than-capacity crowd may have been the result of a “major college football game between Ohio State University and the University of Toledo” taking place at the same time. The reporter included several photos she took showing large swaths of empty seats throughout the venue, including one taken less than an hour before Trump took the stage revealing the arena was two-thirds full.

Trump, who is notoriously sensitive about his crowd size and television ratings, eventually took to his social-media platform Truth Social to blast the Daily Mail and Elkind for its rally coverage.

“Check out the pictures (on TRUTH SOCIAL) of the packed arena crowd in Youngstown, Ohio, not to mention the thousands of people outside the arena who couldn’t get in. Other reporters (and me) saw them all, loud and clear,” the twice-impeached ex-president blared just after midnight early Monday. “The place was ELECTRIC (more so than electric cars, which don’t have the same “stamina” as these incredible people)! Despite the obvious FACTS (TRUTH!), the Daily Mail’s obnoxious reporter said the crowd was ‘uncharacteristically thin,’ WRONG!!! How do you fight this Fake News?”

By Monday morning, the Daily Mail had completely altered the article and eventually removed Elkind’s name.

The headline of the piece now reads: “Donald Trump says most Republicans ‘would lose’ races without his backing as he visits Ohio rally to support US Senate candidate JD Vance.” All references to the crowd size being anything less than “massive”—including a number of Elkind’s photos—were deleted from the piece.

“The former president posted on Truth Social he had delivered ‘massive crowds’ for JD Vance and Dr Oz in Ohio and Pennsylvania after they asked him to,” the article now states at the outset.

Later on Monday, Trump continued to take issue with the Mail’s reporting that Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, whom the ex-president recently (and grudgingly) endorsed, was “notably absent” from the rally. Elkind noted that DeWine chalked up his absence to a conflicting sporting event involving his granddaughters. This portion of the article remained unchanged since publication, however.

“The Governor of Ohio, Mike DeWine, met me at the airport as I arrived for the big and very successful Youngstown Rally,” Trump grumbled on his social-media site on Monday night. “He had to fly in to do so. I suggested he go home and spend some time with his family, he has a very busy political life. The Daily Mail, Unfunded New York Times, and certain others, said that I was dissed by the Governor, no time in his schedule to meet (see picture!). They knew that wasn’t true, but wrote the story anyway. Just more Fake News – When will it end???”

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Study indicates that thin influencers do not motivate healthy food choices among tweens

Can tweens’ eating habits be affected by messaging from influencers? A study published in Frontiers in Psychology suggests that a thin influencer does not affect food choice in kids between 11 and 13, while an overweight influencer may be able to.

Tweens, teens, and young adults are subject to a lot of promotion from influencers and brands. In this technology-driven age, influencer marketing is a huge industry, with influencers advertising clothes, food, makeup, and more. This can have a profound effect on people, especially individuals who are young and impressionable. With nutrition being such an important part of a developing child’s health, this study seeks to understand how influencers can affect food choice for tweens.

For their study, Steffi De Jans and colleagues utilized 146 participants with an even gender split. Participants were randomly selected from 3 different schools in Belgium. Researchers created 2 Instagram profiles for fake influencers, one who was presented as thin-ideal and one who was presented as overweight. Influencers were shown holding either carrots (healthy snack) or cookies (unhealthy snack). Participants completed measures on influencer credibility, influencer admiration, trans-parasocial interactions, and food choice.

Results showed that when exposed to the thin-ideal influencer, their choice of snack was not affected; the group shown the healthy snack and the group shown the unhealthy snack chose the unhealthy snack at similar rates. When exposed to the overweight influencer, participants were more likely to choose the healthy snack after seeing the post with the unhealthy product in it. The results showed an effect of weight on perceived credibility, with overweight influencers being perceived as less credible, and on influencer admiration, with thin-ideal influencers being more admired.

This study took steps into better understanding influencers effects on food choice for tweens, but it also has some limitations to note. One such limitation is that this study utilized a fictitious influencer, which likely would not have the sway or influence on kids that someone they know of might. Additionally, participants were told they would be given their chosen snack as a thank you, which may have influenced them to pick whichever snack they would prefer at the time. Future research could give more snack options.

“This study shows that exposure to a thin-ideal influencer did not affect tweens’ choice for healthy vs. unhealthy foods. Hence, we suggest that using thin-ideal social media influencers does not stimulate a healthy diet among tweens,” the researchers said.

“However, exposure to an overweight influencer promoting unhealthy snacks can positively affect children’s choice of healthy food. These results could be explained by contrast effects, as the overweight influencer is also perceived as less credible and is admired less by the tweens. Based on this main result, it is difficult to draw a concrete recommendation for marketers or public policies when it comes to promoting healthy food to children and adolescents, as our results would suggest that the best way to promote a healthy diet is by using an overweight influencer promoting an unhealthy food product.”

“Thus, we believe that it is not advisable to promote healthy food to children through the endorsement of unhealthy food by an overweight influencer, as this may perpetuate the stereotypes regarding overweight people in that people who do not have a thin ideal are unhealthy and eat unhealthy food,” the researchers concluded.

The study, “Impact of Thin-Ideals in Influencer Posts Promoting Healthy vs. Unhealthy Foods on Tweens’ Healthy Food Choice Behaviors“, was authored by Steffi De Jans, Liselot Hudders, Brigitte Naderer, and Valentina De Pauw.

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How to Tell If Your Child Has Binge Eating Disorder (and What to Do About It)

Photo: PattyPhoto (Shutterstock)

The pandemic has not been kind to anyone’s mental health and, unfortunately, children’s mental health crises have been on the rise, including eating disorders. While anorexia, or a fear of gaining weight that usually presents as a restriction of food, is the eating disorder most talked about, binge eating disorder can also negatively impact your child’s life, causing life-long health problems. Here’s what to look for—and what to do—if you suspect your child may have binge eating disorder.

What are the signs of binge eating disorder?

The National Eating Disorder Association, which has a helpline and provides resources for those who need support for all types of eating disorders, defines binge eating disorder (BED), as “recurrent episodes of eating large quantities of food (often very quickly and to the point of discomfort); a feeling of a loss of control during the binge; experiencing shame, distress or guilt afterwards; and not regularly using unhealthy compensatory measures (e.g., purging) to counter the binge eating.” They say it’s the most common eating disorder in the U.S. and it is recognized in the DSM, which is used to categorize mental illness (and get your insurance to pay for treatment).

Some things to look for in your child include:

  • Fear about weight gain
  • Weight fluctuation
  • Gastrointestinal complaints (cramps, acid reflux, etc)
  • Body checking (looking at the mirror or in windows at themselves frequently)
  • Fear of or seeming uncomfortable eating around others
  • Missing food around the house or large amounts of wrappers/containers
  • Hoarding or hiding large quantities of preferred food
  • Attempts to conceal excessive food consumption
  • Dieting or new food habits or fads (i.e., veganism, cutting out carbs, etc)
  • Signals that the child is unable to stop the excessive food consumption
  • Food rituals (eating only at certain times or certain foods)
  • Disruption of normal eating habits (eating throughout the day instead of at mealtimes, eating alone)
  • Withdrawal from friends or activities

Please keep in mind that your child, especially a teenager, might gain a significant amount of weight around puberty and it is not necessarily a sign that they are binging, sometimes children grow taller before they grow wider or vice versa. Be careful not to impose your own possible disordered eating behaviors on your child and check in with your own body image bias.

What to do if you think your child has BED

Dr. Bill Hudenko, Global Head of Mental Health at K Health, says if you are concerned about your child having disordered eating behavior, “It is important to reach out to a pediatrician, nutritionist, or a mental health provider to determine if your child might meet criteria for binge eating disorder. In addition to the negative impacts that this disorder may have on your child’s body, early intervention will likely result in better treatment before the behaviors become too entrenched.”

The long-term effects of eating disorders include mental health implications, such as anxiety and depression, and life-long physical consequences such as metabolic health issues and cardiovascular health problems. Early treatment is vital.

After diagnosis

If your child is diagnosed with BED, Hudenko says, “It is difficult to treat eating disorders because we all need food to survive. This of course means that you can’t eliminate eating all together, but rather you must work to alter the child’s eating habits to result in a healthier pattern.”

While you may have to try a few different treatments to find the one that works best for your child and family, Hudenko says, the “ideal treatment for binge eating disorder would involve consultation with a well-trained mental health provider who can help the family to evaluate their food culture. Interventions would likely include restricting access to some foods that are typically used to binge, development of alternate coping mechanisms if food is used to manage stress, and learning to slow the pace of eating while reading body signals of satiety.”

Many parents nowadays came from the age of low-fat and fad diets. We hope to spare our children the pain and heartache of our years of hating our bodies and wishing to be something else. By checking in on our kids and making sure to stay on top of potential eating disorders, we are giving them the gift of body acceptance and love that they can carry with them into adulthood.

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Hot new Samsung Galaxy S22 renders show off the base model’s impossibly thin chin

You may not have noticed this if you weren’t paying particularly close attention to such “small” details, but most recent visual leaks of the Galaxy S22 family have largely been focused on the biggest and undoubtedly most impressive member of Samsung’s next ultra-high-end handset trio.

Of course, not everyone will be able to afford the S22 Ultra 5G beast, and of those that could theoretically afford to splash the cash on the S Pen-wielding giant, we’re fairly certain some folks will favor the more compact body of the “regular” S22 or S22+ for extra maneuverability and portability.

What a (flat) beaut!

Yes, ladies and gents, as it turns out, you don’t need aggressive curves and a display extending around the frame of a phone to make said device essentially borderless. Besides, we already know a tiny bit of bezel is good for, well, actually operating a smartphone, and it certainly looks like that’s exactly what Samsung is planning to offer with the non-Plus and non-Ultra S22 5G.
The “chin” on this bad boy is basically reduced to a minimum, looking set to improve on an already extremely sleek Galaxy S21 5G design without presumably adding much to the production costs.
While these are by no means the first-ever renders showcasing the expected front panel of the 6.1-inch or so Galaxy S22, their novelty aspect is the detail and quality of the top, bottom, and side bezels. 
All in all, the newly executed images seem to perfectly line up with the factory CAD-based renders leaked by Steve Hemmerstoffer all the way back in September, but although Ice Universe is generally considered a well-connected Samsung insider, you probably shouldn’t treat this as anything more than a (very convincing) concept relying on the latest whispers through the grapevine.
If Steve H., aka @OnLeaks, will prove accurate (once again), the Galaxy S22 5G shall measure 146 x 70.5 x 7.6mm, further reducing the compact size of its 6.2-inch predecessor to give Apple’s 6.1-inch iPhone 13 a healthy run for its money.

Three improved rear cameras, eight colors, one reasonable price

Moving away from the focus on bezels and “chins” for a few moments, it’s important to remember the base Samsung Galaxy S22 5G variant is widely expected to adopt a familiar-looking triple rear-facing camera module composed of an entirely new 50MP primary shooter, somewhat modest-sounding 10MP telephoto lens, and virtually unchanged 12MP ultra-wide-angle sensor.

At the end of the day, we’re pretty sure the S22 will be able to take significantly better photographs than its forerunner, which might make an upgrade feel like a wise move for many S21 users eligible for a decent trade-in discount.

There aren’t a lot of other meaningful upgrades expected for the time being, but for what it’s worth, Samsung’s “next big thing” could see daylight (at least in select markets around the world) in as many as eight different paint jobs, including decidedly eye-catching purple, green, and pink gold shades.
On the not so bright side of things, the generous 4,000mAh battery under the S21’s hood could actually be downgraded to accommodate a smaller and thinner chassis, although the energy efficiency improvements of Qualcomm’s state-of-the-art Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor may ultimately help the S22 deliver stellar running times between (not-so-fast) charges. 
In a nutshell, this kinda, sorta sounds like a bit of a mixed bag from a number of key standpoints, but that design definitely looks like a winner, especially if the recent glass back rumor happens to pan out.

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