Oct. 18th, 2012
So, real life has been incredibly busy -
Oct. 18th, 2012 07:56 pm- which means I haven't even had a chance yet to post about how much I love my Festivids assignment!
Problem is, I really don't know what to do for a song. I have a couple of ideas that will do in a pinch, but I'm still hoping to find something better. Still, I'm really tickled about working with this fandom.
Not for nothing, but do you know how hard it is to manage a hectic work day while simultaneously triple checking to make sure that no one is assigned to the same Viddler account as their recipient?
Okay, back to YouTube!
Problem is, I really don't know what to do for a song. I have a couple of ideas that will do in a pinch, but I'm still hoping to find something better. Still, I'm really tickled about working with this fandom.
Not for nothing, but do you know how hard it is to manage a hectic work day while simultaneously triple checking to make sure that no one is assigned to the same Viddler account as their recipient?
Okay, back to YouTube!
I'm not even sure why I'm not dead yet -
Oct. 18th, 2012 10:20 pmGet Up. Get Out. Don’t Sit.
Every single hour of television watched after the age of 25 reduces the viewer’s life expectancy by 21.8 minutes.
By comparison, smoking a single cigarette reduces life expectancy by about 11 minutes, the authors said.
Looking more broadly, they concluded that an adult who spends an average of six hours a day watching TV over the course of a lifetime can expect to live 4.8 years fewer than a person who does not watch TV.
Those results hold true, the authors point out, even for people who exercise regularly. It appears, Dr. Veerman says, that “a person who does a lot of exercise but watches six hours of TV” every night “might have a similar mortality risk as someone who does not exercise and watches no TV.”