
All The Best Deals From Amazon Prime Day
Amazon Echo Dot (4th Gen) $19.99; (original price: $49.99)
FoodSaver Vacuum Sealer $82 (originally $147)
Vitamix 5200 Blender $405 (originally $299)
How To Spot A Pyramid Scheme Recruiter

Did a friend, family member, classmate, co-worker, acquaintance, nice guy from the gym, customer or total stranger ask you out to coffee in order to discuss a *unique business opportunity*? Is it a time sensitive offer? Is the opportunity only open to a select number of investors? It’s probably a pyramid scheme.
Picture of the Day

Known as the “Giggling Granny” for her eerily cheerful demeanor, Nannie Doss was secretly a serial killer who had brutally murdered four husbands, two children, two sisters, her mother, two grandsons, and her mother-in-law between the 1920s and 1950s
Nannie Doss was an American serial killer responsible for the deaths of 11 people between some time in the 1920s and 1954. Doss was also referred to as the Giggling Granny, the Lonely Hearts Killer, the Black Widow, and Lady Blue Beard.
Linkage
Images From the James Webb Space Telescope – NY Times
Whatever Happened To Daphne Zuniga? – Ned Hardy
An odor eliminator spray that eradicates stink on pretty much anything that’s dealt with lots of dried sweat: shoes, sports equipment, mattresses, gym clothes, and more – Amazon
One Day in Boquete, Panama – A Complete 1-Day Itinerary, What to See, Eat And Do – Van Life Wanderer
How a Shipwrecked Crew Survived 10 Days Lost at Sea – Outside
How to Be Mediocre and Be Happy With Yourself – BBC
Here’s how much money it takes to be considered ‘financially comfortable’ in 12 major U.S. cities – CNBC
Air Force F-16 pilot explains how he dodged 6 missiles during insane Gulf War mission – Task and Purpose
The Beta Men Who Gleefully Do Women’s Homework for Free – Mel Magazine
Bad girls bend at the waist (36 Photos) – The Chive
Drugmaker seeks FDA approval for over-the-counter birth control – PBS
Scientists Create First Hummus Platter That Comes With Enough Pita Bread – The Hard Times
Liquidators for crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital say they can’t find founders – The Verge
A silicone plate designed to stay in place, keep your kid’s food neat and separated, and reduce messes from tipped bowls – Amazon
9 Best Ways To Be A Better Husband And Father – Knowledge For Men
How I Healed from Childhood Trauma and Stopped Sabotaging My Happiness – Tiny Buddha
10 Most Successful Infomercials Ever – Listverse
7 Reasons to Stop Proving Yourself to Everyone Else – Marc and Angel
Notorious Trophy Hunter Who Killed Endangered Animals Shot Dead ‘Execution Style’ In South Africa – All That’s Interesting
YouTube shuts down LoFi Hip-Hop Girl stream over “false” copyright claim – Dexetero
The Dumping Grounds
This Twitter Bot Tracks The Current State Of The NFT Art Market
Poll of the Day

[democracy id=”252″]
Assume the following:
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It will be completely anonymous. No one aside from those involved will ever know
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The one paying will take care of all the tax details. You literally will get 1 million dollars flat in your bank account or cash. No legal problems at all
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Yes you have to finish, no “3 seconds and I’m out” shenanigans
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it’s completely up to you to explain how you got the money to your friends and family
Is There a Difference Between The Head Trauma Experienced by Boxers and Football Players?

The real difference is the intensity of the impact.
In boxing you are hit by a single padded hand. The boxers muscles are mostly to accelerate your hand and glove up to speed and to follow through, but little is applied during the actual punch due to rebound.
Picture of the Day

Wong Tat-ming, 63, sits in his “coffin home” which is next to a set of grimy toilets in Hong Kong as he pays HK$2,400 ($310) a month for a compartment measuring three feet by six feet.
It is crammed with all his meager possessions, including a sleeping bag, small color TV and electric fan.
There is a “dark side to the property boom in wealthy Hong Kong, where hundreds of thousands of people priced out of the market must live in partitioned apartments, ‘coffin homes’ and other inadequate housing.”
These residents are among an estimated 200,000 people in Hong Kong living in such tiny subdivided units, some so small that a person cannot even fully stretch out their legs.



