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22 Jul 05:31

30 Percent of Moms Can't Afford Diapers - The Atlantic

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

Infants use about 240 diapers per month. A year’s supply of diapers costs $936. That means a single mother mother working full time at the minimum wage can expect to spend 6 percent of her annual pay on Pampers alone.

Meanwhile, the two biggest programs that assist low-income mothers, SNAP (food stamps) and WIC, don’t cover diapers or baby wipes.

That might be why, in a study of 877 pregnant and parenting women published in Pediatrics in 2013, a team of researchers found that needing diapers and not being able to buy them was a leading cause of mental health problems among new moms.

For the study, Megan Smith, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine, approached women in New Haven, Connecticut, and asked them one simple question:

“If you have children in diapers, do you ever feel that you do not have enough diapers to change them as often as you would like?”

Almost 30 percent of the women responded “yes”—they often lacked sufficient diapers. Their explanations of what they did to “stretch” the diapers reflect the harrowing reasons why so many new moms feel depressed and anxious.

“I can't soothe my baby because I can't put a clean diaper on my baby.”

Mothers would take the diapers off, dump out the poop, and put the diapers back on. They would air-dry the diapers. They’d let their kids sit in wet diapers for longer than they should—a practice that can lead to UTIs and other infections. Other moms have reported potty training infants who are less than a year old—at least six months earlier than is recommended—in order to save money.

I learned more about this study during a week-long training with the California Endowment Health Journalism Fellowships, where I am a grantee this year. Smith presented her work to the fellows and described what she’s done to help these mothers. The women told Smith things like, “My self-esteem plummets. I can’t soothe my baby because I can’t put a clean diaper on my baby,” she recalled.

The diaper deficit hurts more than moms’ self-worth: Many daycare centers require a week’s supply of diapers before mothers can enroll their children. Without the required diaper stash, women can’t drop their kids off and look for work.

“An adequate supply of diapers may prove to be a tangible way of reducing parenting stress and increasing parenting sense of competency, enabling parents to be more sensitive with their children, and thereby improving parenting quality and overall child outcomes,” Smith wrote in the study.

Smith now works with the New Haven MOMS Partnership, a support network for new mothers and their children. The Partnership operates several resource centers that offer stress-management classes and job-search help at locations across the city—including in places where moms are already likely to be, like Stop & Shop grocery stores.

The first thing the moms receive when they arrive for counseling? A bundle of fresh diapers.

Original Source

22 Jul 05:17

Outdoor advertising, Brian Kane




© Brian Kane


© Brian Kane


© Brian Kane


© Brian Kane

Outdoor advertising, Brian Kane

22 Jul 05:17

3D Zoetrope

22 Jul 05:17

Vanishing point, Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco


Andres Orozco

Vanishing point, Andres Orozco

22 Jul 05:13

Why Arent More Women Riding Citi Bikes?

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

Why Aren’t More Women Riding Citi Bikes?:

brutereason:

This is interesting. The safety concern is the main reason I don’t use a bike for commuting, but the concerns about being messy that the professor interviewed in his article glibly dismisses are also real. It’s not about vanity, it’s about the fact that, as a woman, I have to follow higher standards for hygiene and personal grooming than men do. I can’t show up at work a sweaty disgusting mess and expect to keep my job.

22 Jul 05:13

exgynocraticgrrl: Tony Porter: A Call To Men"Tony is the...

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

















exgynocraticgrrl:

Tony Porter: A Call To Men
"Tony is the original visionary and co-founder behind A CALL TO MEN: The National Association of Men and Women Committed to Ending Violence Against Women. He is the author of "Well Meaning Men...Breaking Out of the Man Box - Ending Violence Against Women" and the visionary for the book, NFL Dads Dedicated to Daughters.

Tony's message of accountability is welcome and supported by many grassroots and established organizations. He’s currently working with numerous domestic and sexual violence programs, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, colleges and universities around the country. He has worked with the United States Military Academy at West Point and the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis.

Tony is an international lecturer for the U.S. State Department having worked in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, United Kingdom and Brazil. In addition, he has been a guest presenter for the United Nations' Commission on the Status of Women and has been a script consultant for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit." - (x)

Hey guys! Go collect each other like this guy! This is what actual ally work looks like!

Stop wringing your hands at me and asking me what to do and how sad you are about sexism jfc.

22 Jul 04:52

Google Maps for Android finally adds custom names for places [Update]

by Ron Amadeo

Ron Amadeo

Behold! A custom place name in Google Maps. Here's how to make one.

12 more images in gallery

Google Maps added a timeline view to Android today, which allows users to easily view their location history on mobile. That's all well and good, but buried in the new timeline feature is one of the most-requested features that Google Maps has been lacking: custom place names. Pick a spot on the map, press some buttons, and type in a name. It seems like a very simple, basic functionality that every map application should have, but somehow Google Maps has neglected the feature until now.

It's very hidden, but it's there. You'll need the just-released Google Maps for Android version 9.12 (download here), which has the new "Timeline" option in the navigation drawer. The Timeline is a new feature for mobile that allows you to browse your Google Maps location history. Location history has been available on the desktop site for some time and was in the Android version until it was removed in 7.0, but now it's back.

By flipping through your location history and "editing" a place in your timeline, you'll be able to add a name to it. At the bottom of the edit place—which really only seems meant to edit your location history—will be a link that says "add a personal place." This is the magic link that will let you name a place on the map, save it, and have the point display on the map along with your custom name.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

22 Jul 04:51

Bug in widely used OpenSSH opens servers to password cracking

by Dan Goodin

A recently disclosed bug in OpenSSH software used to remotely access Internet-facing computers and servers allows attackers to make thousands of password guesses in a short period of time, a defect that could open systems to password cracking, a security researcher has warned.

Under normal circumstances, OpenSSH will allow just three or six login attempts before closing a connection, the researcher who goes by the moniker KingCope wrote in a blog post published last week. The recently discovered vulnerability, however, allows attackers to perform thousands of authentication requests during an open login window, which by default lasts two minutes. As a result, attackers who cycle through the most commonly used passwords face much better odds of finding the right one, since the vulnerability allows them to try many more candidates than they otherwise would.

KingCope wrote:

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

22 Jul 04:50

Studies find genetic signature of native Australians in the Americas

by John Timmer

The exact process by which humanity introduced itself to the Americas has always been controversial. While there's general agreement on the most important migration—across the Bering land bridge at the end of the last ice age—there's a lot of arguing over the details. Now, two new papers clarify some of the bigger picture but also introduce a new wrinkle: there's DNA from the distant Pacific floating around in the genomes of Native Americans. And the two groups disagree about how it got there.

Prior to the advent of cheap DNA sequencing, there were all sorts of ideas regarding the peopling of the Americas. While migration across the Bering land bridge was the consensus opinion, it wasn't clear how many migrations took place—or even who, exactly, did the migrating. Because of the physical diversity of modern Native American populations, people have suggested additional migrations across the Pacific or even from Europe or Africa.

The Clovis people, who had what appears to have been the continents' first distinctive technology and culture, caused further confusion. Some argued that these represented the first humans in the Americas, while others argued they represented a distinct migration into a sparsely populated hemisphere. Language groups created their own confusion.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

22 Jul 04:50

Caitlin T. McCormack Crochets Animal Skeletons #ArtTuesday

by Stephanie

NewImage

From Beautiful/Decay via deMilked:

The morbid sculptures of Caitlin T. McCormack would fit right in at your next Halloween party. She creates beautifully intricate skeletons of fictional creatures – rodents, seahorses, insects and animals. Not only do they look fragile, macabre, antique, precious and ghoulish, but you would probably be surprised to learn what they are made from. The artist actually discovered that covering crocheted cotton string in PVA glue stiffens the material, producing a bone-like effect.

Her dark, heavenly creatures are usually displayed, sprawled out and pinned to a dark board of some sort. They look as if their skin and meat has been carefully dissected and discarded, leaving their skeletal remains to be gracefully displayed for all to delight in their discovery. Not only does McCormack craft these intricate alien-bone-forms, but also delicate lace work, dramatic dresses that look like they were worn to a ghost’s wedding, and charming little illustrations and plasticine characters that usually reference a well known horror story.

Read more and visit Caitlin T. McCormack’s site

NewImage

NewImage


Screenshot 4 2 14 11 48 AMEvery Tuesday is Art Tuesday here at Adafruit! Today we celebrate artists and makers from around the world who are designing innovative and creative works using technology, science, electronics and more. You can start your own career as an artist today with Adafruit’s conductive paints, art-related electronics kits, LEDs, wearables, 3D printers and more! Make your most imaginative designs come to life with our helpful tutorials from the Adafruit Learning System. And don’t forget to check in every Art Tuesday for more artistic inspiration here on the Adafruit Blog!
22 Jul 04:32

cyberspace

21 Jul 22:13

Congress to Introduce Legislation to Double Minimum Wage to $15 an Hour

Presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders will introduce a bill in Congress to up the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

21 Jul 22:10

Why Solving Murders Is Going to Get a Lot Harder

by Maddie Stone on Gizmodo, shared by Annalee Newitz to io9
firehose

ok but skull pile

Carbon emissions aren’t just changing the climate — they’re making it harder to solve crimes. As our atmosphere fills with fossil carbon, scientists will have a tougher time using radiocarbon dating, a standard forensic technique, to analyze human remains and wildlife tissues.

Read more...










21 Jul 22:10

Great Job, Internet!: Season three credits of The Simpsons and The Wire = The Wiresons

by Alex McCown

In some ways, the opening credits for The Wire and The Simpsons have a lot in common. Both shows’ credit sequences stick to a basic essential template, but update and alter it throughout the seasons in noteworthy and interesting ways. Sure, The Wire has a different iteration of its theme song from year to year, but Lisa’s saxophone solo varies accordingly, as well. Plus, both shows had a third season. (Sorry, Party Down—we still miss you!)

This fusion of the two shows—setting The Wire’s season three song to clips from season three of The Simpsons, mimicking the same visual cues as the HBO show—results in The Wiresons, an animated series about the complex and politically fraught world of a cartoon Baltimore. Credit should go to YouTuber CasimirN for managing to take clips from only season three of the animated hit and turn it into a ...

21 Jul 22:09

Centralia, The Town That's Always On Fire

Centralia is, to put it mildly, not safe to live in. As a result, the town is abandoned, the postal service revoked the town's zipcode, and its unused highway is covered entirely in graffiti.
21 Jul 22:09

For $725 Million, You Can Buy A Texas Ranch That's The Size Of A Small Nation

For sale: Largest ranch in the US within a single fence. Texas fixer-upper with more than 1,000 oil wells; 6,800 head of cattle; 500 quarter horses; 30,000 acres of cropland; tombstones for legendary cowboys, long-dead dogs, and a horse buried standing up.
21 Jul 22:08

News in Brief: Woman Assaulted By Celebrity Just Needs To Sit Tight For 40 Years Until Dozens More Women Corroborate Story

NEW YORK—Realizing she might as well relax a little until her allegations are deemed credible in 2055 or so, 28-year-old Jill Garza confirmed Tuesday that she just needed to sit tight for around 40 years until a few dozen more women corroborated her story of being sexually assaulted by a beloved celebrity. “There’s nothing really for me to do except hang out for a few decades and just keep an eye on how many other women come forward with stories horrifyingly similar to mine,” said Garza, adding that she didn’t really see any other option except waiting around until she was nearly 70 as similar accusations slowly accumulated. “Maybe I’ll kind of set the ball rolling and actually won’t have to wait more than a decade to be taken seriously, but for now I’ll just plan to stay put and check in with my ...










21 Jul 22:07

News: Long John Silver’s Introduces New Golden Fried Abomination From The Deep

LOUISVILLE, KY—Calling it an “exciting new menu item dragged from the darkest reaches of the salty abyss,” executives at seafood restaurant chain Long John Silver’s introduced their latest fast-food offering Thursday, the Golden Fried Abomination From The Deep.

The deep-fried ocean beast, which was reportedly subdued by the restaurant’s fishermen following an arduous three-day-long battle in the North Sea that claimed the lives of 80 good men, will be available at participating franchise locations for a limited time only.

“We are pleased to offer our guests a taste of the unimaginable horrors that lurk in the briny deep,” said company spokesperson Eric Hutcherson, adding that the nightmarish, slithering mass—whose powerful, iron-like tentacles could snap ships’ masts as though they were so much kindling—is dredged in Long John Silver’s signature batter and cooked until golden brown. “Pulled straight from Davy Jones’ Locker, which it made ...










21 Jul 22:07

Newswire: Adult Swim has canceled China, IL

by Sam Barsanti

It’s a sad day for fans of Adult Swim’s unique brand of weirdo cartoons, as the late-night programming block has decided not to renew China, IL for a fourth season. That news comes straight from China, IL creator Brad Neely, who tweeted that the show is “done forever.” Neely also said that his next project is called “TV SUCKS” and that it will live forever, but that was most likely a joke.

Update China, IL is done forever. My other show called TV SUCKS lives forever and will air soonish.

— Brad Neely (@bradneely) July 20, 2015

China, IL was about “the worst college in America,” and it ran for 30 episodes, plus some online shorts that aired before the show itself was picked up. In addition to Neely, the show starred Greta Gerwig and Hulk Hogan, which is pretty cool for a cartoon that probably wasn’t watched ...

21 Jul 22:06

A Neural Network Designs Magic: the Gathering Cards, and It's Hilarious

by Ed Grabianowski

What happens when you feed the text of every Magic card ever made to a deep neural network and ask it to design its own cards? Part genius, part gibberish—and maybe a little poetry. But mostly, it just makes you laugh your ass off.

Read more...










21 Jul 22:06

Photo Finish: FIFA Retires Sepp Blatter’s Routing Number










21 Jul 22:05

The Muppets Pilot Pitch Too Good For This World, Too Pure - "They're going to be so upset. Except the band. They're always happy. Legally now."

by Jessica Lachenal

Much has been said about the Muppets’ return to prime time TV. Yes, it’s going to be shot “documentary style,” much like The Office, and it’s going to use cutaways and celebrity cameos and everything you’d expect from a comedy show these days. But The Jim Henson Company isn’t a company that does what everyone expects. In fact, there’s something just so perfectly toned and timed with this pilot pitch that has us all so incredibly excited for the show.

This 10 minute pilot was shown to attendees who went to the Muppets Comic-Con panel. But everyone’s written accounts of the video don’t really do it justice. It’s absolutely worth checking out, and we are so glad that it’s officially released here now.

The jokes are irreverent, they’re written perfectly, timed perfectly, they’re packed with just enough references to really zing, and they really don’t seem afraid of “going there.” The segment where Fozzie and his girlfriend are talking to her parents about her dating him is just too good. This pilot is written in such a way that it’s self-aware enough to poke just the right amount of fun at itself, and it never feels cheap. In fact, the level of detail in some of the sight gags is stunning. See: the Bean & Beluga coffee cup in the office scene.

If this pilot really is indicative of the kind of Muppets show we can expect, you can damn well expect us to be watching every week.

(via The Hollywood Reporter)

—Please make note of The Mary Sue’s general comment policy.—

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21 Jul 22:05

Newswire: It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia’s Rob McElhenney to direct Minecraft movie

by William Hughes
firehose

uhh

Enacting a transformation almost as dramatic as that time when he got really fat for a year, It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia creator Rob McElhenney has confirmed that he’ll be adding “director of family-friendly video game adaptations” to his current duties as writer and star of a gleefully amoral FXX sitcom. According to a post on the front page of Mojang AB, the company behind massively successful block-smashing simulator Minecraft, McElhenney has been tapped to direct the planned film adaptation of the Microsoft-owned property.

Warner Bros. acquired the film rights to Minecraft last year, after the massive success of The Lego Movie sent it on a cube-seeking frenzy, gobbling up block-based IP like the toddler child of extremely negligent parents. Night At The Museum director Shawn Levy was originally attached to the project, but dropped out after his proposal for ratcheting a plot onto the skeleton of the ...

21 Jul 22:04

David Ortiz and Rob Gronkowski sang a love song, about iced coffee

by James Dator
firehose

again

Yes, they're back. There's another David Ortiz and Rob Gronkowski Summer Jam courtesy of Dunkin' Donuts and this one is a love song ... about iced coffee.

Don't believe it? Just listen to Gronk.

SB Nation presents: Rob Gronkowski is having an awesome offseason

21 Jul 22:02

Japanese Manhole Cover Art Prints by David Robert #ArtTuesday

by Jessica
firehose

via Bunker.jordan

NewImage

Via Spoon & Tamago.

It’s no secret that Japanese manhole covers are some of the most intricate and colorful in the world. So French-born designer and illustrator David Robert decided to create replicas; not from cast iron but on paper.

The artist, who works for creative director Morihiro Hirano, travels around Japan making tracings of some of the more beautiful manhole covers he finds. He considers them “souvenirs” of the different places he’s visited. Now, the series of manhole cover prints are going to be on display in an exhibition aptly titled SOUVENIR. The show runs from July 18 – August 22, 2015 at Kai in Tokyo.

Read more.

NewImage

21 Jul 21:58

mysharona1987: At this point, the courts have so many double...

firehose

via ThePrettiestOne





mysharona1987:

At this point, the courts have so many double standards, I’m surprised irony hasn’t covered itself in honey, with a sign that says “Eat Me. This is ironic, but in an ironical-type,”  and left the hungry, post-modernist bears to wait for them.

21 Jul 21:57

Photo

firehose

via Bunker.jordan
Ceres heart



21 Jul 20:18

"As for Write what you know I was regularly told this as a beginner. I think its a very good rule..."

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

“As for “Write what you know,” I was regularly told this as a beginner. I think it’s a very good rule and have always obeyed it. I write about imaginary countries, alien societies on other planets, dragons, wizards, the Napa Valley in 22002. I know these things. I know them better than anybody else possibly could, so it’s my duty to testify about them.”

-

Ursula Le Guin

(via invisibledragon)

21 Jul 18:28

One word explains Donald Trump’s rise

by Christopher Ingraham
firehose

via Matthew Connor: "I would posit that Trump taps into a lot of people's racism as well as anger, but not many people tell pollsters that they're racist.

Also, for perspective, Michele Bachmann was in the lead four years ago, so."

Don't underestimate this guy. Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Donald Trump is now the 2016 GOP frontrunner.

That sentence would have sounded ridiculous a month ago, but here we are. The billionaire real estate mogul and reality star has tough-talked his way to the top of the ticket for 24 percent of Republican voters, according to the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll. As The Upshot's Nate Cohn explains, Trump's post-announcement poll bump is of a completely different magnitude than what we're seeing elsewhere in the crowded GOP field.

All of which has observers scratching their heads and asking: what do people see in the guy?

A lot, as it turns out. On a recent trip to rural Upstate New York I was surprised by the intensity of support for Trump among friends and family members I talked to. In many cases, their support for Trump boiled down to a simple fact: they were angry.

anger

Angry at Obama, angry at congressional leaders, and angry at the political establishment as a whole. And they're not alone -- surveys show that anger toward the government, particularly among Republicans, has been rising over the course of Obama's two terms in office. When asked how they felt toward the federal government, 37 percent of Republicans said "angry" in a Washington Post poll from last fall. By contrast, in September 1998, at the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, only 14 percent of Republicans said they were angry.

Anger toward the establishment is a powerful motivating force. And Donald Trump is currently the candidate in the best position to channel it. All of the other major GOP candidates, from Jeb Bush to Marco Rubio to Ted Cruz, are career politicians, firmly ensconced in the party establishment that so many voters have grown distrustful of. Trump is the only big-name candidate who can truly claim the coveted mantle of the "outsider."

Beyond that, the latest Post-ABC poll showed that the number one quality Republican voters are looking for in a candidate is "a strong leader." Add it all together and for a lot of voters, you come up with a Platonic ideal of a candidate that looks and talks a lot like Donald Trump -- an outsider who can shake things up, who isn't afraid to speak the truth even if it offends, and one who has proven leadership abilities. Throw in an (alleged) $10 billion fortune and you've got a highly potent candidate on your hands, at least for this particular moment.

Whether Trump can sustain this sort of energy all the way through 2016 is a different question entirely. Conventional wisdom has it that Trump will burn up and implode at literally any minute now, and with each "gaffe" and malapropism observers start writing political obituaries. But Trump's resiliency has so far been surprising.

Would Americans actually vote a reality TV billionaire into the White House? It doesn't seem likely. On the other hand, when Terminator 3 came out in July 2003 it didn't seem plausible that the movie's star would win the governor's mansion of one of the nation's largest and most liberal states just four months later, either.

Scott Clement contributed to this report.

 











21 Jul 18:27

Signs Your Industry is Being #Disrupted By Tech Guys

by Matt Lubchansky
firehose

via Rosalind

Some guy comes to your office and removes the vowels from all the signs.

Read more Signs Your Industry is Being #Disrupted By Tech Guys at The Toast.