There's 'No F**king Way' Gordon Ramsay Will Eat Airplane Food

Airplane food isn’t typically considered savory, and neither is Gordon Ramsay. Put the two together and you’ve got a recipe for Ramsay’s signature sass

“There’s no fucking way I eat on planes,” Ramsay recently told Refinery29. “I worked for airlines for 10 years, so I know where this food’s been and where it goes, and how long it took before it got on board.”

Ouch. 

Fact check: Ramsay did indeed work with Singapore Airlinesdeveloping inflight menus. And it does take a relatively long time for airplane food to make it onboard, if you’re comparing it to high-end restaurant fare rather than, say, a previously frozen patty on a burger from McDonald’s. 

Most ― but not all ― inflight meals are prepared in catering facilities near the airport, and frozen before they’ve finished cooking. They’re then transported to the tarmac, loaded onto planes and heated in inflight convection ovens before serving. Hot meals may not be prepared more than 72 hours before a flight’s departure, according to guidelines from the International Flight Services Association. That’s about how long it takes for Emirates’ inflight meals to reach passengers, the carrier’s vice president of flight catering told CNN earlier this month.

Food safety is a priority, Fritz Gross, director of culinary excellence at LSG Sky Chefs, told CNN. And statistically, food poisoning from airline food isn’t especially common. But that doesn’t mean there haven’t been mishaps in the past, like the time contaminated shrimp sickened a plane full of Aerolineas passengers in 1992 or when inspectors found a whole host of health violations at Los Angeles airport catering facilities in 2015. And don’t even get us started on that memorable “20/20” investigation about health violations at food prep facilities. 

If, like Ramsay, it all makes you nervous, just bring your own meal instead.

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Dance Lessons Could Keep You Two Steps Ahead of Memory Loss, Study Suggests

Kicking up your heels in a dance class may actually be good for your brain’s memory function, according to a newly published study.

Dance lessons, in particular — perhaps because they incorporate exercise, social interaction and learning — have a positive effect on a brain region called the fornix, said the study’s author, Aga Burzynska, an assistant professor in Colorado State University’s human development and family studies department.

The fornix connects the hippocampus to other areas of the brain and seems to play an important role in memory: Changes in the fornix have been linked to progression from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease.

To study the effects of different forms of exercise on the brain, Burzynska and team followed a group of 174 healthy adults ages 60 to 79 over four years. They met three times a week for the first six months in a gym at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The rest of the study involved follow-up screenings.

The participants were assigned to one of four groups: One group did aerobic walking, a second group did the same aerobic walking and took a daily nutritional supplement, a third group attended stretching and balance classes (as an active control group) and the fourth group took the dance classes.

The dance classes involved choreographed and social group dances that challenged participants’ cognitive and motor-learning abilities. Each participant also underwent MRI screenings at the beginning and end of six months that measured white matter microstructure.

White matter is akin to the brain’s wiring. As people age, the quality of that wiring deteriorates, causing disruptions in the transmission of electrical messages in the brain. And since those electrical signals are how our brain cells communicate, this deterioration becomes a critical impediment for brain function. It’s been unclear whether this age-related decline in white matter is unalterable or could instead be slowed or even reversed.

Burzynska’s team found that integrity of the fornix increased in the dance group. And the test subjects who took dance classes during that time saw improved white matter integrity in an area of the brain related to memory and processing speed ― while the subjects who did other forms of exercise in the study did not.

This led to two important conclusions: One, the decline in the brain’s white matter can actually be detected over a period of only six months in healthy aging adults, much faster than previous studies have shown. And two, while the white matter declines were noted on the MRI, they were not apparent in cognitive performance, which was measured through standardized tests that included vocabulary and visual comparisons. Almost everyone performed better after six months of exercising in any form than they did at the study’s start. 

These results indicate that there could be a time lag between when the brain changes structurally and when we start having trouble thinking and remembering, Burzynska said.

Far more encouraging was that the results showed that engaging in “any activities involving moving and socializing,” as each of these group programs did, can improve mental abilities in aging brains.

“The message is that we should try not to be sedentary,” she said. “The people who came into our study already exercising showed the least decline” in white matter health, she pointed out, and those who took up dancing showed white matter gains.

Studies have long connected physical exercise to improving brain health. In one study done at the University of British Columbia of 86 women ages 70 to 80 with probable mild cognitive impairment showed that aerobic exercise increased their hippocampal volume, which is an important predictor of memory function.

This research comes at a critical time. Researchers say one new case of dementia is detected every four seconds globally. They estimate that by 2050, more than 115 million people will have dementia worldwide.

The finding was published March 16 in the journal Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience.

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Yes, Jewel Realizes That Ann Coulter Burn Is No Longer Funny

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In September of last year, we witnessed a side of Jewel we’d never seen before

The beloved singer-songwriter took part in Comedy Central’s Rob Lowe Roast and showcased her sense of humor, as she not only scalded the actor but fellow participant and conservative commentator Ann Coulter.

While smiling and strumming her guitar, she made a few cracks at Coulter, but one in particular stood out.

“Jeff Ross is going to party like it’s 1999, Ann Coulter is going to vote like it’s 1899,” she said, looking at Coulter and adding, “Ann, you do look great though. You’re almost as thin as Donald Trump’s chance of winning the election, so that’s cool.” 

Little did she know her joke wouldn’t have a shelf life.

When The Huffington Post asked about the burn during a Build Series interview with Jewel on Thursday, the “Hands” singer said, laughing, “She won, they won. yup. Go them.”

Jewel said she’s always had a dark sense of humor, it’s just that not everyone knows about it. 

“But people have seen me live and know I do a lot of stand-up in my shows. I have a very dark sense of humor. I think to survive the type of life I’ve had, you just have to have a sense of humor,” Jewel, who left home as a teen and lived out of a car for a year before making it into the music industry, said. “So the people who are closest to me know my darkest, darkest skits ― I have a lot of characters and a lot of skits I do that are completely politically un-correct. But maybe they’ll be another future for me and I’ll be able to share some of that.”

Still, don’t think Jewel will “save your soul” with her one-liners. 

“It’s not like my music at all,” she quipped. 

Watch Jewel’s full Build Series interview about her new Hallmark Movies and Mystery project, “Concrete Evidence: A Fixer Upper Mystery,” below. 

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Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Mahershala Ali, Amy Poehler and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live

You can support the ACLU right away. Text POWER to 20222 to give $10 to the ACLU. The ACLU will call you to explain other actions you can take to help. Visit www.hmgf.org/t for terms. #StandForRights2017

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If Spiders Ate Humans, They Could Eat Us All In One Year

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Spiders ― those eight-legged, hairy, creepy-crawling, poison-fanged, silk-spinning arachnids ― are often the stuff that nightmares and horror movies are made of.

Spiders primarily eat insects, with the exception of some larger spider species that have hearty appetites for a good lizard or bird or small mammal. But Washington Post reporter Christopher Ingraham explored a disturbingly intriguing dilemma this week ― if spiders ate human beings, how many would they eat?

The matter came up because earlier this month, European biologists Martin Nyffeler and Klaus Birkhofer published a paper in the journal Science of Nature, estimating the total weight of prey consumed by spiders as a group.

Their assessment: “Spiders evolved around 400 million years ago and are among the most common and abundant predators in terrestrial ecosystems. The annual prey kill of the global spider community is in the range of between 400 and 800 million metric tons.”

 

As the Post points out, the weight of what spiders eat in one year is more than all humans on the planet combined, citing a 2012 study that estimates the total biomass of all adults on Earth as about 287 million tons. 

“Even if you tack on another 70 million-ish tons to account for the weight of kids, it’s still not equal to the total amount of food eaten by spiders in a given year, exceeding the total weight of humanity,” Ingraham writes.

The ominous conclusion (and possible scenario of a future end-of-humankind movie thriller) is that spiders have the potential of eating every one of us and not feeling full after the meal.

And there’s nowhere on Earth you’d be safe from this hypothetical human-eating spider chowdown, either.

There are currently approximately 45,000 species of spiders that “exhibit a very diverse range of lifestyles and foraging behaviors,” the scientists write. “Some spiders can travel distances of up to 30 km in a single day. There is hardly any terrestrial area on this globe where spiders would be missing.”

And while we’re on the topic of spiders eating humans and vice versa ― the long-standing myth that humans eat up to eight spiders a year while we sleep isn’t really true. Bill Shear, former president of the American Arachnological Society, told Scientific American last year that spiders have little interest in humans one way or the other. “We’re so large that we’re really just part of the landscape.”      

And based on these latest calculations, we’re grateful for that.

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Trump The Master Dealmaker Seems Determined To Alienate All His Negotiating Partners

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As the dust settled on last week’s blooper reel-worthy failure to pass the GOP health care bill ― the fruits of seven-years worth of Republican labor to fashion a replacement for the Affordable Care Act ― the inevitable question arose: Where does everyone go from here? House Speaker Paul Ryan’s (R-Wis.) bill, which he pulled Friday afternoon to avoid a more humiliating public-execution-by-vote, had been largely done in by intra-party disagreement driven mainly by the House Freedom Caucus, which had enough leverage to doom the enterprise. Moving forward would obviously require the healing of these divisions.

Nevertheless, by Tuesday, members of both sides of the fractious GOP caucus seemed willing to revisit the matter and push through to an agreement. As The New York Times’ Robert Pear and Jeremy Peters reported, House Republicans and the White House “restarted negotiations,” and renewed hopes shone in statements on both sides. Freedom Caucus member Rep. Dave Brat (R-Va.) told the Times, “I think everyone wants to get to yes and support President Trump.” And Ryan echoed those determinations:

“We’re not going to retrench into our corners or put up dividing lines,” Mr. Ryan said after a meeting of House Republicans was dominated by talk of how to restart health negotiations. “There’s too much at stake to get bogged down in all that,” he added.

GOP legislators have since struggled to maintain even this meager level of optimism. But on Thursday morning, the effort to revive a health care deal took another hit after President Donald Trump decided unilaterally that everyone was definitely going to “retrench into their corners” and “get bogged down in all that.”

“The Freedom Caucus will hurt the entire Republican agenda if they don’t get on the team, [and] fast,” tweeted Trump, “We must fight them, [and Democrats], in 2018.”

So, I realize this phrase is getting a real workout in the early weeks of the Trump administration, but: that escalated quickly. It’s not yet April, and Trump is doling out primary threats to members of his own party? Bear in mind, Trump had only spent about three weeks attempting to negotiate this health care deal before bailing. It can take longer than three weeks to close on a new home, something thousands of Americans do every week. It’s madness to see Trump looking to go nuclear on his antagonists this soon into his tenure. (It makes you wonder what might happen when literally going nuclear is among his options.)

One also has to wonder: Has Trump now settled on the House Freedom Caucus as the target of his recriminations? Because, over the course of six days, he has spat his anger in every conceivable direction.

As The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman reported, Trump called up the Times of his own volition hours after the bill was pulled and painted Democrats as the real culprit, fuming, “The good news is they now own health care. They now own Obamacare … and when it explodes, they’ll come to me to make a deal.”

(An interesting and hilarious tangent worth noting is that Thursday morning, after he’d assailed the Freedom Caucus on Twitter, Trump added this 140-character outburst: “The failing @nytimes has disgraced the media world. Gotten me wrong for two solid years. Change libel laws?” That he personally initiated an interview with the paper in his hour of need is something we can all look forward to seeing The New York Times’ lawyers note in their own defense.)

And on the day after the GOP’s American Health Care Act was pulled, Trump was urging his Twitter followers to tune in and watch Jeanine Pirro’s show that night on Fox News ― which kicked off in the 9 p.m. hour with Pirro saying, “My opening statement: Paul Ryan needs to step down as speaker of the House. This is not on President Trump.” Since then, representatives of Ryan’s office, as well as the Trump White House, have insisted up and down that nobody should read the rather obvious implication of the president pointedly urging his most ardent fans to be in front of their televisions as Pirro’s show opened. On Fox News Sunday, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus told host Chris Wallace that it was all just a funny coincidence.

“Oh, come on,” replied Wallace.

But the oh-come-ons just keep coming on. Now, it’s the House Freedom Caucus’ turn in the barrel. It’s worth noting that Trump’s Thursday moment of aggro is not by any means the first shot he’s fired in the Freedom Caucus’ direction. “Democrats are smiling in D.C. that the Freedom Caucus, with the help of Club For Growth and Heritage, have saved Planned Parenthood & Ocare,” tweeted Trump on Sunday. A day later, he stabbed out another missive, aimed their way: “The Republican House Freedom Caucus was able to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. After so many bad years they were ready for a win!”

However, it’s one thing to merely snipe about the Freedom Caucus on Twitter ― threatening its members with a primary election challenge is another matter entirely. And it’s really not clear that Trump has thought all of this through. (I know, that’s an evergreen sentiment as well.) The tidal forces of our politics typically work against the party in the White House during the midterm elections, in that the out-party tends to gain more seats. Right now, the way Democratic voters are sorted in already-gerrymandered districts should be enough to preserve GOP majorities in the House, but it sure would suit the Democratic Party’s fancy if Trump were to actively work to unseat his own party’s incumbents.

Besides, as the American Conservative’s Daniel Larison points out, it might be a worse outcome for Trump if he takes this big swing at the Freedom Caucus and misses:

The bigger danger for Trump is that he will be ignored and these members will coast to re-election (as most incumbents usually do anyway), and that will show how little influence he has in his own party. Trump also misunderstands the House members he is trying to bully if he thinks that going after them publicly like this will make them “get on the team.” Trying to intimidate the members into falling in line will more likely make them less cooperative, because many of them will take as a test of conviction. Beyond that, it will allow them to separate themselves from Trump in the eyes of their voters. That might make some of them vulnerable to a primary challenge, but at this point distance from Trump will help many of them in a general election.

“Trump operates as if he were well-liked and held in high esteem by most Americans,” writes Larison, “That is not the case.”

Indeed, we’re talking about a president whose major accomplishments thus far include near-constant chaos, a gigantic public legislative failure, and approval ratings that are setting all the wrong records. Where does Trump get the notion that he has leverage with Freedom Caucus members, or the pull to unseat them? How would a primary campaign against these particular legislators even work? Their constituents sent them to Washington to be anti-establishment insurgents. Isn’t that what Trump purports to be as well? One key advantage that the members of the Freedom Caucus have over Trump is that they have come by their ideological leanings honestly, and their voters have fully bought in.

Besides, spearheading a primary challenge against some 30-odd Republicans is a task that would require a lot of time and energy. Considering the fact that Trump couldn’t hack three weeks of health care reform negotiations before throwing in the towel, I doubt anyone in the Freedom Caucus is particularly fearful of his stamina.

~~~~~

Jason Linkins edits “Eat The Press” for The Huffington Post and co-hosts the HuffPost Politics podcast “So, That Happened.” Subscribe here, and listen to the latest episode below.  

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