Forever Pizza: Pizza Preserved

Pizza is the best food ever. If only we had a way to preserve it and make it last forever, so that we can admire it, maybe even decorate with it and hang it on the wall, use it as a coaster. Well, now we do. Now you can admire the perfect slice of pizza in all of it’s glory in perpetuity, thanks to Forever Pizza.

forever_pizza_1zoom in

Brooklyn-based designer and pizza lover Steph Mantis, has preserved delicious slices of pepperoni pizza in clear lucite. It is a thing of delicious beauty, as if the pizza has been cryogenically put to sleep for all time. Seriously, these are real slices of pizza, forever sealed in resin.

forever_pizza_2zoom in

I would put a few slices on my wall to celebrate this awesome food. Wouldn’t you?

forever_pizza_3zoom in

[via Laughing Squid via Geyser of Awesome]

Stranger Things Season 2 confirmed for 2017 debut

stranger things season 2In what is likely to be the day’s least surprisingly news, Netflix has officially confirmed that Stranger Things will return for a second season next year. That Stranger Things would return for a second season was pretty much a given, considering the amount of chatter the first season generated across the internet. Netflix hasn’t announced any additional details, but we … Continue reading

'Stranger Things' Cutie Gaten Matarazzo Belts Out The National Anthem Like A Boss

Gaten Matarazzo, otherwise known as the precocious Dustin Henderson on “Stranger Things,” might be all fun and games on the show, but in real life he has some talents beyond Dungeons & Dragons. 

Before becoming a Netflix star, Matarazzo showed off his vocal skills while singing the national anthem at a New York Mets game at Citi Field stadium back in 2015. He belted out the song alongside his sister, Sabrina.

The two landed the gig after auditioning for Pink’s “F**kin’ Perfect,” according to the New York Post. 

And he did it solo at a Sixers vs. Heat game in 2014. 

Singing, acting, rescuing lost friends captured by alien creatures in another dimension, what can’t this kid do? 

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

NVIDIA's 'Vault 1080' is a gloomy 'Fallout 4' mod

NVIDI and LightSpeed Studio have teamed up to create Vault 1080, a special add-on level mod for Fallout 4.

Black Lives Matter – In Cancer Care As Well: Tips For Prevention And Treatment

The Black Lives Matter movement has drawn attention to the unique needs of African Americans. For many years oncologists have been focusing attention on disparities in outcomes among African American patients with cancer.

Recently, the American Cancer Society has reviewed the most up-to-date evidence of cure rates and prevalence of cancer in the black community. These data provide an opportunity to get tips on preventing and treating cancer so that people can improve low cure rates in African Americans. An easily readable summary is also available from the American Cancer Society.

What do these data show us? The risk of cancer is higher in blacks. Between 2008 and 2012, the rate in black individuals was 12% higher than in non-Hispanic Caucasian individuals. This amounts to an expected 190,000 African Americans developing cancer in 2016. Most commonly, these cancers are prostate, lung and colon cancers in men, and breast, lung and colon cancers in women. 1 in every 2 men, and 1 in every 3 women will get cancer during their life. 1 of every 6 black men will get prostate cancer, compared to only 1 of every 8 white men. Digging deeper, certain other cancers are also much more likely to occur in black people, including stomach cancer, multiple myeloma, and Kaposi’s sarcoma.

But here is a strange and encouraging difference. Among men, the African American risk of having a cancer is 12% higher than in Caucasians. But among women, the risk of having a cancer in African Americans is 6% lower! Unfortunately, this encouraging statistic in black women does not translate into lower death rates.

Sadly, the death rate from cancer is 17% higher in African Americans than in Caucasians. 1 in every 4 men and 1 in every 5 women will die from cancer. About 69,000 black individuals will die of cancer in 2016. Between 2008 and 2012, mortality rates were 27% higher in black men compared to white men. And in black women, the mortality rate from cancer is 14% higher compared to white women, despite a 6% lower incidence of cancer in black women. Clearly, there needs to be improvement in the care of African American women by diagnosing cancer earlier and treating cancer better.

But among these grim statistics is a favorable finding: the rate of cancer occurrence, and the death rate has been decreasing in all Americans since 1995 by about 2 to 2.5% per year, and the decrease is slightly higher in black people compared to white people. The gap of higher incidence and mortality rates in African Americans versus Caucasians is narrowing. This probably represents greater health awareness in everyone, improved health habits, better access to health care (thanks to the Affordable Care Act), and greater attention to early diagnosis and compliance with standard proven treatments in all people, but especially in African Americans.

Although getting better, the cancer picture for African Americans reveals some explanations for the higher risks. More African Americans are obese, lack exercise, and have not had PSA testing in men for prostate cancer (despite their higher risk). Even though the rates in black and white individuals are about equal, still the rate of completed HPV vaccination (to prevent cancers of the cervix, penis, and mouth) is only 39% in girls and 20% in boys; breast mammogram rates are only 66%; colon cancer screening was performed in only 59% of people; and smoking rates were still 22% in men and 14% in women. Worrisome is the 8.5 fold higher risk of HIV in black people (which also predisposes to sarcoma, lymphoma, liver, anal, mouth, lung, colon, and skin cancer risks), and a higher risk of H. pylori stomach infections (which causes stomach cancer).

So here are my tips for protecting you (especially if you are African American, because of your higher risk, but also appropriate if you are not black).
• Always have health insurance. It is only through your healthcare team (you, your primary doctor and specialists, and your healthcare facilities for testing) that you can get up-to-date prevention and early detection.
• Be sure you have chosen a primary care physician who is really interested in you and can give you the time you need to answer all of your questions. If your doctor uses a nurse practitioner (NP) to see patients most of the time, be sure that the NP can give you enough time for your visit to be able to talk with you about all your problems and not just rush you out the door. If you are not getting attention or can’t understand what the doctor is saying (some don’t say much, or use techno-speak, or just have too thick an accent), try another medical practice.
• Don’t just use your doctor for treating minor illnesses. Talk to your doctor and emphasize that you want to reduce your risk of cancer and detect cancer early when it is more curable. If your doctor does not pay enough attention to this, it’s time for a second opinion or specialist consultation! For more advice on how to discuss prevention issues, see my website or book Surviving American Medicine.
• Pay attention to making your life safer through better health habits. Make sure you and your family, friends and physicians focus on smoking cessation, make sure you achieve a normal weight, and check that you are getting enough exercise (these all reduce heart disease risk as well) and having safe sex. Avoid excessive alcohol use (more than 1 drink daily for women or 2 drinks daily for men). Be sure your vaccinations are complete for hepatitis B (it causes liver cancer) and HPV (if you are under 25; also be sure you vaccinate your children as well). Treat hepatitis C if you are positive and treat H. pylori if you have evidence of infection.
• Take steps with your physician to get all the health screenings steps to diagnose cancer early, when it is more curable. This includes mammograms in women over the age of 40 to 45 (discuss a starting time with your doctor), pap testing with HPV testing in women, PSA testing starting at age 40 or 50 after discussion with your physician about benefits and risks, low dose CAT scan of the chest if you have been a smoker, colonoscopy or stool blood checks to detect polyps (removal can prevent a colon cancer) or early stage cancer, discussion of vaginal ultrasound (with a blood test for CA125) in women to detect early ovarian and uterine cancers, skin check for suspicious moles (they could be melanoma or Kaposi’s sarcoma), blood tests for hepatitis B and C and HIV, mouth examination (for oral cancers), and a urine check for blood (to detect early kidney or bladder cancers). If your doctor has not ordered these tests or discussed them with you, get a second opinion or a consultation with a specialist.
• Know the history of cancer in your family. Make certain you and your doctor discuss if your family history shows a higher risk of certain cancers, and if you need a saliva or blood check to see if you have inherited a genetic risk of cancer. If your doctor is uncertain about your risk, get a second opinion from an oncologist or genetics counselor to be sure. Your life and your family’s lives could depend on this.
• If you are at risk for breast cancer, discuss with your doctor whether prevention with the oral medications tamoxifen, raloxifene or aromatase inhibitors can reduce your chance of having breast cancer. If you are at risk of colon cancer, discuss prevention with aspirin. And if you are at risk of prostate cancer, discuss prevention with finasteride or dutasteride. Sometimes these discussions require a consultation with an oncologist to individualize the medications you need.
• If you have developed cancer, make sure you are getting the most comprehensive care. The higher risk of death in black cancer patients emphasizes how important this can be. To be certain your care complies with all the recent recommendations, always ask your cancer doctors is your care is according to national guidelines (like the NCCN published guidelines, which you yourself can access, or the National Cancer Institute website). After asking for your physician’s advice, if you have any questions be sure to get a second opinion from another physician.

The American Cancer Society deserves our admiration for continuing to emphasize risks of cancer in all Americans, but especially now in African Americans. Identifying the higher risks of cancer diagnosis and mortality in black people have will certainly improve the choices all people can make to reduce risks. These data will also re-emphasize to physicians how attentive they must be to black patients to protect their lives. Black lives matter, especially in cancer prevention and care.

The opinions expressed are those of Dr. Cary Presant and do not represent opinions of City of Hope or other organizations.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Stranger Things Season 2 Confirmed By Netflix

netflix logo

There’s news today that’s going to make quite a lot of Netflix subscribers happy. The online video streaming giant has confirmed that it has renewed Stranger Things for a second season. This Netflix original was released not so long ago and it became an instant hit so it only makes sense for Netflix to keep it around.

Stranger Things was a surprise summer hit on Netflix. It just became one of those things that organically gain traction. This gives Netflix all the more reason to create more episodes, after all, it’s something that subscribers want and are willing to pay for.

Netflix today confirmed via its official Twitter account that the Stranger Things adventure continues and that all new episodes will be released with the second season of this show in 2017. Expect the episodes to be released around the same time the first season of Stranger Things was released this year.

The second season will be released in true Netflix fashion. The streaming company releases all episodes of its original shows on the very same day so that subscribers can watch at their own pace.

A report by Entertainment Weekly reveals that Stranger Things season 2 will feature four new characters which will join the core cast. New locations and new film influences are expected to figure in the second season as well.

Stranger Things Season 2 Confirmed By Netflix , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

States Are Leading Winds Of Change In U.S. Renewable Energy Revolution

by Chris Brown, President, Vestas Americas and Chairman, American Wind Energy Association

Some are calling recent clean-energy actions by New York, Massachusetts and Iowa “game-changers.” That might very well prove true in the medium-term. But we can say with confidence that they are immediate game-advancers.

Why? Energy markets are affected by policy, but they are driven by price. The underlying business reality is that the real cost of wind power has dropped below that of new fossil-fuel generation. And it’s making wind and renewables a no-brainer choice for major corporations, utilities and power producers of almost every stripe.

Today, states are at the epicenter of America’s renewable energy revolution. And, because we have 50 state energy markets, big positive advances in state policy can accelerate the pace of this historic shift.

Consider that New York, the 3rd-largest U.S. state economy, has now committed to meeting 50 percent of its power needs from clean, reliable, low-cost energy sources such as wind by 2030. That makes it the 5th state to commit to a 50 percent or more target for clean power, joining Oregon, Hawaii, California and Vermont. Other states such as Kansas, whose wind energy production has nearly tripled in the past five years, have voluntary aims to achieve up to 50% of their electricity needs through wind energy.

In Massachusetts, the legislature approved and governor signed an energy bill committing to purchase 1,600 MW from the nascent U.S. offshore wind industry, an action that promises to extend large-scale U.S. wind energy development from the land to the sea and power dozens of East and West coast urban centers.

And just last week in Iowa, currently the only state to generate more than 30 percent of its energy from wind, the Iowa Utilities Board approved plans by MidAmerican Energy, a subsidiary of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Energy, to invest $3.6 billion for up to 2,000 MW of wind capacity. Once completed, the new 1,000-wind-turbine project promises to be the largest yet in MidAmerican’s history.

These states aren’t alone. Others also stand out for their leadership this year on renewable energy, including Maryland, D.C. and Oregon.

In fact, fully 29 states now have renewable energy portfolio standards designed to spur clean power development, diversify our electricity supply, generate local economic growth and jobs, conserve scarce fresh water and also reduce pollution.

Despite the drama playing out in the courts over implementation of the federal Clean Power Plan, most states are continuing to move forward with their plans to provide more domestic renewable energy to their constituents and ratepayers.

States are doing so because they have listened to the markets, and the marketplace has spoken. The smart money is backing low-cost renewable energy, especially wind. That includes major companies such as Amazon, Apple, Google, IKEA, Microsoft and Walmart.

Wind is winning in the marketplace because its real costs are down more than 66 percent since 2009. Wind is already the lowest-cost clean energy by a large margin. Indeed, across a large swath of central U.S., in states such as Texas, Oklahoma and Iowa, wind is now the cheapest source of newly installed power from any energy source — clean or fossil fuel.

In 2015, the low cost and long-term pricing certainty offered by wind energy made it the number one source of new U.S. electric capacity, supplying 41 percent of the nation’s generating capacity additions, ahead of natural gas, solar and all other energy sources.

States get it. They get the fact that renewable power, wind in particular, is the lowest-cost energy choice.

States also get that the American public is demanding it. Who wouldn’t want a clean-energy source that can save ratepayers dollars on their utility bills? Indeed, the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Wind Vision report projects that Americans will save almost $150 billion on their electric bills by 2050 in the switch to low-cost wind power.

Not surprisingly, polls show that wide majorities of voters — Republican, Democrat and Independent — strongly support continuing these successful clean-energy policies.

A growing number of utilities, including MidAmerican Energy, Xcel and Alliant, also get it. AWEA’s U.S. Wind Industry 2nd Quarter 2016 Market Report confirms utilities are moving forward with 2,600 MW of new wind investment. Last year more than 4,300 utility-scale wind turbines were installed in 20 states, says DOE’s 2015 Wind Technologies Market Report, helping drive America’s world leadership in wind electricity generated.

As more and more states see their neighbors passing legislation and taking other steps to encourage more wind and other renewable energy — they don’t want to risk being left behind. A dozen states already meet more than 10 percent of their energy needs with wind power. The switch is on.

Recalling the words of the recent Broadway hit ‘Hamilton’, America’s clean energy revolution is being led by states whose leaders are “young, scrappy and hungry.”

Like the American revolution that Alexander Hamilton and others led more than two centuries earlier, the switch to low-cost renewables to power America’s energy future is undeniable. And it just makes sense.

Chris Brown is Chairman of the Board of the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), and President of Vestas-American Wind Technology, Vestas’ North American business unit.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

An Underground Collective Of Black Women Artists Are Fighting Racism In Healthcare

There’s this expectation of black women to be behind or come last,” artist Simone Leigh said in an interview with Artsy. This includes, but is not limited to, the realms of health and wellness. Racism in hospitals, doctors’ offices and health clinics poses a physical danger to black patients, whose pain is repeatedly minimized, overlooked and ignored. As Jenna Wortham wrote in the New York Times, “Ultimately, black patients were conditioned to underestimate their own pain.”

In July, over 100 black women artists converged to fight this ongoing injustice, forming the underground collective Black Women Artists for Black Lives Matter (BWA for BLM). On Sept. 1, the artists will converge at New York’s New Museum for a single evening and public event, uniting against the institutionalized violence that continues to plague black communities, both on city streets and in hospital waiting rooms.

The evening is part of Simone Leigh’s summer residency “The Waiting Room,” an alternative healthcare space for women of color to prioritize themselves and each other, to share their trauma, and to begin to heal. The project features alternative vehicles of wellness and self-care, framed not as luxury but as radical necessity, including acupuncture, guided meditation, herbalism and massage. 

The Sept. 1 event, which is free for those who RSVP, will feature healing workshops, performances, digital works, participatory exchanges, displays and the distribution of materials, all spread across the New Museum’s grounds. Participating artists include Abigail Deville, Saya Woolfalk, Kenyatta A.C. Hinkle, Alexandria Smith, Rashida Bumbray and many, many more. 

As described in a statement from the museum: “BWA for BLM focuses on the interdependence of care and action, invisibility and visibility, self-defense and self-determination, and desire and possibility in order to highlight and disavow pervasive conditions of racism.”

Follow BWA for BLM on Instagram for updates, and learn more about Simone Leigh’s larger project at the New Museum here. 

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Here's How To Look Like A Lisa Frank Folder This Halloween

Let’s get technicolor.

If you’re like us and want a Halloween costume that’s pure ‘90s, then here’s the idea you’ve been waiting for. The folks at LiveGlam.com have put together a Lisa Frank-inspired makeup tutorial that is so totally awesome.

Take out your Caboodle and start blasting TLC because we’re about to get nostalgic.

To re-create the look on your own:

  1. Start with an eye primer (we recommend Urban Decay’s Eyeshadow Primer, $20), then add some Nyx Milk to your lid and blend out the edges with a white eyeshadow to get a smooth white base.

  2. Using a shadow brush and a rainbow palette, start creating a rainbow eye above your crease and below your lower lash line. Blend all the bold, bright colors together. 

  3. For more glam, add a silver shimmer shadow, false lashes and winged liner. 

  4. Grab any bold lipstick in any color from the rainbow ― we recommend Jeffree Star’s Velour Liquid Lipstick in Breakfast at Tiffany’s ($18).

  5. To complete the look, opt for water-activated face paints (Mehron Paradise AQ is used in the video) and start rainbowing your neck, décolletage, jawline, hair, earlobes. Use a small buffing brush to apply the color in a starburst pattern, then beat it with your beauty blender to smooth the transition.

  6. After you achieve your desired level of rainbow, go back in with some black AQ paints or your liquid liner and add in the cheetah spots. Fill in a few of the spots with more bright colors until you look like the successful crossbreeding of a unicorn cheetah.

Now, go make yourself fierce!

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Tile Releases New Slim Tracker That Can Easily Be Carried In A Wallet

tile-slim
Tile makes great little products that enable us to keep track of our precious items. The trackers it makes can be used to keep an eye on stuff that we can’t stand to lose, it’s very easy to locate the tracker using the companion mobile app. Tile today announced that it has come out with a new Slim tracker that’s so thin that it can easily be carried inside a wallet. This one is certainly for those of us who have a habit of forgetting our wallets.

According to Tile, the new Slim tracker is as thin as two credit cards stacked on top of each other. The actual dimensions come in at 54 x 54 x 2.4 mm while an average credit card comes in around 54mm wide and 0.76mm thick, so it’s more like three credit cards stacked on top of each other.

Aside from the fact that it has shed off quite a lot of weight, the Tile Slim tracker is not that different in functionality from the original Tile tracker. If you misplace an item and know that it has a Tile with it, just mark it as lost in the app and the tracker will ring until you are able to find what you lost.

The Slim offers four different ringer options and reaches a maximum 82dB volume. If you’re interested in purchasing one, go to Tile’s website and buy one for $30 or pay $100 for a pack of four. The new Slim tracker will also be available from Apple, Target, and Best Buy starting this Friday.

Tile Releases New Slim Tracker That Can Easily Be Carried In A Wallet , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.