Welcome to my blog

The sky is the limit. All of us see and hear things from time to time that has us thinking, "say it ain't so"! This blog is dedicated to those of us who just can't put up with it anymore: false statements, misquotes, "they said" people, and just right out lies.

Please don't rely on what anyone says (especially me) based on face value. Be informed by doing your own research and don't believe something because that's what "they" say. Who the heck is "they"?

I will also try to stay current with some of the top stories that affects us all everyday.

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Saturday, August 21, 2010

Moving sale planned at 'Amityville Horror' house


AMITYVILLE, N.Y. – The owner of the New York house made famous in the 1979 film "The Amityville Horror" is holding a moving sale.

The five-bedroom Dutch Colonial on Long Island has been on the market since May for $1.15 million and is under contract. Owner Brian Wilson is holding a moving sale Saturday. Items include furniture and exercise equipment, not loot from the house's infamous past.

The Oscar-nominated film is based on the story of the Lutz family's brief stay in the house in 1975 after six members of the DeFeo family were shot and killed as they slept. Oldest son Ronald DeFeo Jr. was convicted.

The crime spawned a book and a series of movies that chronicled various supernatural horrors, including visions of walls oozing slime and moving furniture.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Women find men in red more appealing?


NEW YORK (Reuters) – Men wanting to catch the eye of women should dress in red, a color which new research shows makes them more alluring to the opposite sex.

Women in the United States, England, Germany and China said they found men pictured wearing red, or framed in red, more sexually attractive than in other colors, the research published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology showed.

Andrew Elliot, an author of the study from the University of Rochester, said red was thought to be sexy color for women only.

"Our findings suggest that the link between red and sex also applies to men," Elliot said. "For women, the color made a big difference."

Despite cultural differences related to the color, the findings of women being attracted to men in red were consistent throughout the countries.

The research consisted of seven experiments, some split into two parts, each with a group of between 20 and 57 people aged 19 to 22 years old. Women participated in all the experiments, while men were included as a control group in one.

Women also associated red with higher status, a trend Elliot said is analogous with other primates.

"In chimpanzees, the highest-ranking male turns more red quite dramatically during a competition for primacy," he explained. "It's a clear status indicator. Females view that, and they go out of their way to mate with the highest ranking male available."

The researchers suggested that for men wearing the color may trigger a change in behavior and that something as simple as wearing a red tie could give a more confident business presentation.