The Best Black Friday Deals on Laptops, Tablets, Headphones, and Everything Tech

To paraphrase George Orwell, this year it kinda feels like we have always been in the middle of Black Friday. (Pause here to allow Orwell to cease spinning in his grave.) What was once a single, frenzied day of doorbuster shopping deals has morphed into a month-long marathon of every retailer trying to draw your attention to their sales and promotions, which are obviously the best hey don’t look over there. This goes double if you’re buying tech, as stores from Amazon to Walmart tend to lead with offers on smart TVs, laptops, tablets, and other gadgets.

Lest you get overwhelmed while browsing the many, many offers competing for your eyeballs and dollars, I’ve assembled below a mega-list of some of the best Black Friday tech deals of 2023. That said, if you want to make sure you aren’t missing a thing, you can peruse the rest of our deals coverage here, perhaps while in a post-dinner tryptophan fugue.

The best Black Friday deals on laptops

If you ask me, the season’s best laptop deal is the one I picked up for myself—a 2020 M1 MacBook Air, marked down to $750. But if you don’t want an Apple machine, or prefer something a little more Pro, here are more options.

The best Black Friday deals on tablets

Whether you prefer an Android tablet or you’re among the iPad faithful, Black Friday is a pretty good time to pick up a new tablet, with many models seeing larger than average discounts right now.

The Best Black Friday deals on smart TVs

I just got a new TV during Prime Day but these deals are already making me wish I’d waited. I could have paid basically the same price for a much better model. (Don’t mind me, currently lusting after the $219 Toshiba that’s first on the list…)

The best Black Friday deals on wireless earbuds and headphones

The best Black Friday deals on smartwatches

The best smartwatch deal goes to Walmart, which is selling the second-generation Apple Watch SE for $179 (down from $249).

The best Black Friday deals on streaming devices

I’m park of a Roku family, but if you prefer a Fire Stick or a Chromecast or even an Apple TV, you can get a deal on one of those, too.

The best Black Friday deals on video game consoles

Will this be the year I finally relent and get an Xbox Series S, or will I put that $200 toward more Switch games? Decisions, decisions.

The best Black Friday security camera deals

Home security systems aren’t very festive, but it’s still a great time to grab one.



Source: LifeHacker – The Best Black Friday Deals on Laptops, Tablets, Headphones, and Everything Tech

The Best Black Friday Deals on Treadmills and Walking Pads

A treadmill can be a big investment, but one that seriously pays off when you need to run through the winter or get your cardio in without having to arrange for child care. Fortunately, Black Friday 2023 brings excellent deals on treadmills–and walking pads, too, if you’d like to get your steps in while you work. Here are some of the best deals I’ve spotted. 

Bowflex T10 is 46% off

The Bowflex T10 treadmill features a 10-inch touchscreen that can supply you with personalized workouts or streaming entertainment. (You’ll need a JRNY membership to enjoy the trainer-led workouts, but the basic treadmill functions don’t require it. Your first two months are free.) The settings will take you up to 12 miles per hour and a 15% incline.

NordicTrack Commercial X32i is $500 off

This commercial-grade treadmill has top-notch specs: a 32-inch touchscreen, built-in fans to cool you off while you run, and incline settings that range from -6% (yep, downhill) to a whopping 40%. With an iFit membership, you can get trainer-led workouts as well, with the incline and resistance automatically adjusting.

Echelon’s Stride-S is 40% off

Echelon’s Stride-S has an auto-folding feature for storage, but unlike some of the folding walking pads we’ll discuss in a minute, the Stride-S is a real treadmill, capable of an incline of up to 10% and a speed of 12 miles per hour (that’s a 5:00 mile). 

This Sperax walking pad is under $200

Walking pads are like mini treadmills, and this one is a classic of the genre. It only operates at walking speeds (0.6 to 3.8 miles per hour) and has no handrail–perfect if you want something to put under your desk to get some steps in while you work. 

WalkingPad’s C1 is 20% off

Maybe you’d prefer the original WalkingPad? The specs on the C1 are similar to the Sperax budget model above, only operating at a walking speed. But this walking pad folds in half, the better to hide away, and includes foot control (walk more on the front of the pad to speed it up, on the back to slow it down). 

This SuperFit 2 in 1 treadmill is nearly 50% off

A hybrid of a walking pad and a treadmill, this SuperFit can go up to 7.5 miles per hour, which is about an 8 minute-per-mile pace. You can use it at a desk in walking mode, or fold the handrail up into position to use it for jogging. 



Source: LifeHacker – The Best Black Friday Deals on Treadmills and Walking Pads

The Quickest Way to Soften Butter Without a Microwave

Countless recipes, my own included, indicate “soft butter.” I even have a couple recipes where I instruct for the butter to be “soft like mayonnaise.” The trouble is that while it’s easy to get butter rock solid in the fridge, or totally liquify it in the microwave, it’s hard to strike the pliable temperatures in between. If the usual methods haven’t worked for you, try using the hot glass trick.

The risks of other methods

Yes, you could plan ahead and leave the butter out on the counter overnight. This takes the longest, but it’s the most hands off. Sadly, a lot of bakers forget to do this. Then you’re in a pinch on baking day with a pound of cold (or worse, frozen) butter. You could chop it into chunks and microwave the amount of butter you need to the consistency you need it. This is the fastest method, but it requires a lot of attention, stirring, and mashing. And if you’re not careful, your butter will melt. 

How to soften butter with a hot glass

But here is a third way balances the two extremes: You can soften butter with a glass and some hot water. It’s pretty simple—boil water and pour it into a tall glass, something big enough to hold a stick of butter (or whatever proportion of a stick of butter you need to soften). Place the stick of butter on a plate so it is standing up on one end. Carefully dump the hot water out of the glass, shake off the water drops, and invert the glass over the butter stick. Leave it like this for five to 10 minutes. When you take the glass off, the butter will be pliable. 

Although this trick isn’t faster than microwaving (which is how I normally soften fridge-cold butter), it is more gentle, and it absolutely works. The glass creates a tiny, enclosed sauna for your butter, as the air trapped inside heats up from the warmth of the glass. The warm environment softens fridge-cold butter, but what I like most about this method is that it takes the chill off of frozen butter quickly too. Frozen butter is difficult to chop even to stick into the microwave. Five minutes in a hot glass brings it down to a fridge-like texture. 

If your butter is frozen solid, or if you’d like the butter to soften even more, flip the stick over to stand on its other end and repeat the procedure, waiting another five minutes. Check on it, and repeat if necessary. This method is also effective with multiple sticks of butter under a large glass bowl. Just make sure to flip the sticks over each time you reheat the bowl to ensure even softening. This may take five to 20 minutes of heating water in a tea kettle and flipping sticks of butter, but it sure beats waiting overnight (or risking your recipe on a pool of over-microwaved melted butter).



Source: LifeHacker – The Quickest Way to Soften Butter Without a Microwave

These Are My Favorite Black Friday Sales of the Year

Black Friday deals are in full swing even though it doesn’t officially start until Friday. Most of the deals you’ll find today are already the best they’ll be, so there’s no reason to wait. I price-checked the best deals from Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy and Target, so you don’t have to. The following deals are guaranteed to be the best prices you’ll find, without any tricks or price hikes (you’d be surprised how many “deals” I found designed to trick you). Here are the best deals for TVs, laptops, speakers, headphones, vacuums, video games, Apple, security cameras, and kitchen appliances.

The best Black Friday TV deals

If you’re looking for the best TV deal, Best Buy’s Samsung 85” Class CU7000 takes the throne. It is $897.99 (originally $1,299.99) after a $402 discount. This brings this UHD 4K smart Tizen TV to its lowest price yet, according to Honey’s price history.

The best Black Friday laptop deals

The best laptop deal is Best Buy’s Lenovo Yoga 7i laptop is $549.99 (originally $849.99) after a $300 discount. This 16″ WUXGA tablet hybrid laptop has an Intel Core i5, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. You can save an extra $50 with a My Best Buy Plus or My Best Buy Total membership. This brings this laptop to its lowest price yet, according to Honey’s price history.

The best Black Friday speaker deals

The best Bluetooth speaker deal goes to Walmart’s JBL Charge 4 going for $89 (originally $179.99). This portable speaker is the lowest price it has been, according to Honey’s price history. This 5.75-pound speaker is water resistant with an IPX7 rating and can connect up to two smartphones or tablets at the same time. You can get up to 20 hours of playtime with this speaker.

The best Black Friday headphone deals

If you’re looking for a great deal on noise-cancelling earbuds, look no further than Best Buy’s JBL Reflect Mini, going for $59.99 (originally $149.99) after a $90 discount. These wireless in-ear earbuds with seven hours of battery life are currently matching their lowest price yet, according to Honey’s price history.

The best Black Friday stick and robot vacuum deals

The best stick vacuum goes to Walmart’s Shark IZ362H, currently 43% off at $199.99 (originally $349.99), which is the lowest price it’s been, according to Camelcamelcamel’s price history. This vacuum gives you 40 minutes of running time after two-and-a-half hours of charging. One of the best features of this vacuum is its self-cleaning brush roll, which is great for picking up pet hair and keeping hair rolls from forming at the brush head. You can turn this vacuum into a hand-held vacuum with a longer nozzle to reach high areas in your home. You’ll also have an LED light to see debris more easily on the floor.

The best Black Friday video game console deals

The best console deal comes, perhaps surprisingly, from Dell. They currently have a Nintendo Switch OLED deal with a $75 gift card. Although the price for the OLED model from Dell is not discounted from its usual $349.99, the $75 gift card makes it the best deal available. With the gift card, you can buy any of the games available and still have some money left over. The best game bundle for the basic Nintendo Switch is and has been the Mario Kart bundle for at least three Black Fridays. I have yet to see a better deal from Nintendo on their basic console since its release. You can get the bundle for $299.99 at Best Buy, Target, GameStop, Walmart, or Amazon.

The best Black Friday security camera deals

All these security camera bundles are great. What is best will depend on what you’re looking for.

The best Black Friday smartwatch deals

The best smartwatch deal goes to Walmart’s Apple Watch SE, 2nd Gen (GPS, 40mm), currently going for $179 (originally $249). This is the lowest price this smartwatch has reached, according to Honey’s price history.

The best Black Friday monitor deals

Best Buy wins the best monitor deal award with the Samsung Odyssey Neo G7, currently going for $499.99 (originally $999.99) after a $500 discount. This 43″ 4K UHD smart gaming monitor with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro is the lowest price it has ever been, according to Honey’s price history.

The best Black Friday Amazon product deals

The third-generation Echo Show 5 is currently matching its lowest price at $39.99 (originally $89.99), according to Camelcamelcamel’s price history. You can get it with a free smart light, or, for $10 more, you can get the bundle with the Blink Mini camera instead.

The best Black Friday tablet deals

The Amazon Fire HD 10 Plus tablet is $94.99 (originally $179.99), and that’s the lowest price it’s ever been, according to Camelcamelcamel. This is the Plus version of the 2021 model and is $15 more than the 2023 Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet for an extra GB of RAM.

The best Black Friday kitchen deals

The KitchenAid 5.5 Quart Bowl-Lift Stand Mixer from Best Buy is $249.99 (originally $449.99) after a $200 discount. This is the lowest price in the past four months, according to Camecamelcamel’s price history.



Source: LifeHacker – These Are My Favorite Black Friday Sales of the Year

These Are Amazon’s Best Black Friday Deals on Board Games

Black Friday is the best time of the year to buy a board game or two. Not only are they on sale, they’ll arrive just in time to take advantage of the hours of lazing around the holidays bring. So this year, give the gift of board games and be a hero to your family and friends.

Amazon has a ton of interesting board games on sale for Black Friday this year: everything from classics like Catan to future-classics like Mysterium, so no matter what kind of player you are, there’s a board game for you, and it’s probably cheap as hell. Check out the best board games on Amazon for Black Friday below.

Ticket to Ride

This game about building railways across America is best-of-all-time tier for family game night. It’s simple enough for little ones to grasp, but interesting enough to engage adults. A game can be finished in about 45 minutes, give or take, so even the short-attention-spanned will dig it. It’s $27.47 too, half off the regular price

One Night Ultimate Werewolf

I’m a huge fan of deduction-based party games, and Werewolf is a classic. It’s a game for people who are good at social skills like deception and deduction instead of strategy. While you could play a basic game of Werewolf with just some paper and a pen, Ultimate Werewolf has added game elements and an app so that no one has to act as referee. It’s on sale for $19.96, a 20% saving.

Mysterium 

If you want to make the holidays a little spooky, check out Mysterium. This cooperative ghost-hunting game casts one player as the spirit of a murder victim and the rest as psychics, with everyone working together to solve the mystery of Warwick Manor. If you remember the mystery-solving fun of Clue fondly, Mysterium seriously blows it out of the water.

Herstory: The Board Game of Remarkable Women

If you take a look at Herstory and think “Oh, great, an educational game,” then stop limiting yourself: Herstory is that rare game that will teach you something and is also very fun. It combines strategy, engine-building, and set collection in delightful ways, and you’ll learn something about historically important women, too. It’s $19.19, too, less than half the normal price. 

Catan

Catan is one of those “you will always go back to it” board games—it’s among the best resource-gathering strategy games ever made. Catan can be learned in minutes, but it’s deep enough that you could play it for years and still not master it, and It’s half-off at $27.47. If you’re already a fan of the base game, check out an expansion or two. They’re on sale too

Pandemic

Is it too soon to play a game about a global pandemic? Whatever; do it anyway. Pandemic is a cooperative game in which players work together to save humanity from a rapidly spreading disease. If you like pitching-in to solve problems, Pandemic is a great game, and a steal at $28.49 (down from 39.99.)

Wavelength

Wavelength bills itself as “The Party Game Show in a Box,” and I don’t disagree. This is an hilarious social game where players try to read each others’ minds and figure out unexpected connections to arrive at the answers to puzzles. It’s hard to explain, but trust me: it’s among the best party games ever. 

Avalon Hill Axis & Allies 1942

Some families and friend groups are about socializing and carrying-on, but if your peeps are about quietly thinking through complex strategies, you can’t go wrong with Axis & Allies, the classic war game that re-enacts World War II. It’s complicated–the rule book is like a novel! There’s a million pieces! It takes hours to play! (That’s all fun to some people). It’s $50.99, a 30% saving. 

Diplomacy 

If you’re like, “Axis and Allies is for dirty casuals;” give Diplomacy a try. It’s ridiculously complicated, and it’s interminable—a typical game takes more than four hours to complete. Set in the geopolitical nightmare of pre World War I Europe, Diplomacy’s focus on betrayal and skulduggery ensures that at least one friendship will end each time you play it. All that for only $29.49. 

Cat in The Box Deluxe Edition

This card game’s twist is that cards don’t have suits until you play them, so it’s like Schrödinger card game! A cool twist on classic card dynamics with really attractive and cool looking designs, Cat in the Box is only $16.99. That’s 43% off the regular price. 

Codenames: Duet

If you’re in a family of two, and you don’t like competition, this clue-giving game is perfect. Codenames Duet takes the four-player co-op fun of Codenames and retools it for a couple. It’s the kind of game that rewards creativity and out-of-the-box thinking. 



Source: LifeHacker – These Are Amazon’s Best Black Friday Deals on Board Games

Ten Clever Ways to Put Up Christmas Lights With Less Stress

Whether you want to put up a big, showy light show or a modest display for the holidays, getting your Christmas decorations put up can be stressful. Deciding how to attach things without damaging your home, making lights look the way you want them to, and having time left over for celebrating are all challenges of putting up a great display without having an emotional breakdown. Luckily, there are some simple things you can do to make the decorating process simpler and faster so you can have more time to enjoy your holiday times with friends and family.

Make a “reachy stick”

Christmas lights pole and hook
Reachy pole in use
Credit: Becca Lewis

Rather than hauling a ladder or step stool around with you, you can use what I refer to as a “reachy stick.” For the purposes of hanging lights, garlands, and wreaths, this is a pole with an upside-down hook taped to it. If you don’t have a hook, you can use the hook side of a wire hanger or similarly shaped object. Once you have this set up, you can use it to drape lights and garlands over hard to reach areas without getting on a ladder. Keep it for when the season is over so you can get things back down easily.

Pre-attach your hanging hooks

Pre-attach an “s” hook for simpler access. If you’re hanging lights on the edges of your gutter, or along another edge, you can use an “s” hook pre-taped with electrical tape to your strand of lights every few feet. Using your “reachy stick,” you can push the hook up and land it on the edge of the gutter without needing to climb or attach anything permanently to the gutter. To avoid scratching the gutter, you can wrap the hook in electrical tape or choose one with a rubber coating.

Light in swaths, not spirals

When adding lights to a tree or wreath where they will need to be removed at the end of the season, you should lay the lights on the surface of the boughs rather than wrapping them around. For a tree, beginning at the top of the tree, running one strand all the way to the top and then working your way down, laying lights out on the branches as you go will allow you to spread the lights more evenly, have more of the lights per strand be visible, and also remove the lights more easily later on.

Label your lights

Labeling your light strands as you add them to your display can help you chase down any problems, count the number of strands per circuit, and keep your lights organized as you put them away for next year. Using a letter then a number if you have multiple circuits going at the same time can help you sort everything out and keep your counts accurate. The other benefit to labeling strands is that it can help you eliminate problems as you go. If you have an issue with one strand—say, A-3—you can circle back to it later, knowing exactly which strand of lights you’re looking for from the label, and solve the problem or decide to take the strand out of commission. If you don’t want to number the strands, you can also mark a problematic strand with a colorful tape flag so you can easily identify it later.

Pre-light your decor

Light your decorations before you put them up. For wreaths and garlands, adding lights and then hanging them means less time on a ladder, fiddling with light strands. Test the lights on the ground before you start hanging things up so you can troubleshoot from the comfort and safety of a table or the floor. You can use Velcro straps, reusable ties, or electrical tape to attach lights firmly and also avoid damaging them. For tall trees, you can also choose to begin attaching lights to the top portion of the tree before you stand the tree up.

Use smart timers and strips

Using a smart power strip or a smart controlled timer to plug your lights in will give you control over switching them on and off without needing to access the outlet that the lights are plugged into. This can be especially helpful if you want to conceal your power strips and cords behind furniture or in other hard-to-reach locations. Using your phone or smart home hub to control your lights will make turning them on and off much easier.

Store lights without damaging them

Store lights by wrapping them around a bucket, a garden hose reel, or even around the outside of the box they came in. Using a larger object to wrap lights will help prevent them from getting damaged. This method will also help keep lights from getting tangled, which is often how the bulbs get pulled loose, causing the whole string to go out.

Keep connections snug

Keep plugs from getting pulled apart by taping the connections with electrical tape or using a Velcro wrap. This will not only keep your display shining brightly, but can also help reduce the risk of fire from partially connected cords. Keeping the plugs snugly joined will keep your mind at ease, knowing that a loose extension cord isn’t slowly heating up somewhere behind the couch.

Use solar options

For outdoor displays, consider using solar pathway lights with color changing bulbs in them, solar fountain lights, and solar lanterns to add to your overall look. Solar lights don’t need batteries or cords, so they’re a low-maintenance option for adding a pop of colored light to your yard.

Hide your sins with bows

Use ribbons and other embellishments to hide any huge, obvious hooks, plugs, battery packs, or other things you don’t want to include in your display. Make festive bows that match your garlands and wreaths and attach them in places where hanging hardware, Velcro ties, or cord connections are obvious. You can add some ribbon to garlands or other decor before you put it up so that you don’t need to fuss with it on a ladder.



Source: LifeHacker – Ten Clever Ways to Put Up Christmas Lights With Less Stress

How to Disagree About Politics Without Ruining Thanksgiving

For many families, arguments over politics is as much of a Thanksgiving tradition as your Aunt Norma’s “special” green beans. Far-flung relatives who have spent the year steeping in their echo chamber of choice are all but guaranteed to show up to dinner ready to make their opinions forcefully known. But that doesn’t mean this year’s holiday meal has to devolve into a screaming match.

Even in our balkanized political culture, it’s usually possible to disagree respectfully. It isn’t easy, but it’s possible, according to Utah Governor Spencer Cox and Colorado Governor Jared Polis. Polis, a Democrat, and Cox, a Republican, are the co-heads of Disagree Better, an initiative from the National Governors Association aimed at finding a way for Americans of different political beliefs to work together. Their focus is mainly on public policy, but the pair also have practical advice for regular people to share conflicting political views without anyone throwing the cranberry sauce on the floor.

There’s no reason that your MAGA uncle and your woke niece can’t sit down together around the table and have a conversation.

“There’s no reason that your MAGA uncle and your woke niece can’t sit down together around the table and have a conversation,” Polis said at a recent event held at Colorado State University. “We have a holiday coming up, Thanksgiving, a national day of gratitude, and I think around most extended family dinner tables [there are] people of all different political persuasions. It’s a good opportunity to be curious, ask questions, and be civil. I think too often we treat politics as something that can’t be discussed without toxicity, but that’s kind of giving up on what it means to be [in a] Republic.”

One “magic question” to diffuse heated political conversation

According to Governor Cox, there is a “magic question” that you can ask to reach common ground with just about anyone: “Tell me more about why you feel that way.”

“That question does two things: it calms me down, and it shows I’m interested in the other person,” Cox said. “If you ask it enough times to get through to the ‘why,’ you’ll find you have something in common with them. Because it almost always comes down to them loving their country, their family, and their community.”

The worst thing you can do in a political discussion: attack

Whether your goal is to change people’s minds or just make it through the pumpkin pie course without tears, the worst rhetorical tactic you can take in a political discussion is attacking.

“We always think, ‘This time it will work. If I just tell them how stupid they are this time, they’ll change their mind.’ But it never works,“ Cox said. “No one has ever changed anyone’s mind by attacking them.”

Instead of attacking, approach with humility. According to Cox, internally maintaining the idea that you could be wrong is a useful approach to any potentially confrontational political disagreement. Cox says that you don’t need to think you’re probably wrong, just be open to the possibility that you might be wrong. If you do this, you’ll have a much better conversation.

“It gives the other person permission to think they might be wrong as well,” Cox explains.

Identity and politics: addressing the causes of our divisive political rhetoric

One of the key points both Polis and Cox stressed was that our current political climate is not normal.

“You may think that this is what politics is, or this is the way it has to be, but it is not,” Polis said. “I do not accept that.”

Comparing the thoughtful discussion between Cox and Polis with the typical bombast from national political leaders highlights the commodification of political outrage that’s causing much of our current divide.

“If you want to get on cable news you have to say some pretty crazy stuff,” Cox said. “So we end up with a Congress full of performers, people who aren’t accomplishing anything, because that’s what we’re incentivizing.”

His remedy for regular people: turn off cable news.

“My wife and I just celebrated 11 years of not watching cable news, and our marriage is better, our family is better, and we’re happier [and] healthier,” Cox said.

Another issue the governors highlighted as a reason for political arguments: isolation.

“People are too lonely and so they’re finding their tribes [online.] Like, if I don’t have any friends, at least we can hate the same people together on Facebook.” Cox said.

According to Cox and Polis, incentivized political poison combined with loneliness has resulted in a population that aligns itself with ideological positions to an unhealthy degree. Part of how we can all do better, according to the governors, is to try to not define ourselves by our political affiliations.

“If you think of yourself first as a conservative or progressive or a liberal or whatever, then you’re doing something wrong,” Cox said. “Historically, our political identity was way down the list of how we defined ourselves. Growing up, we were Rams, we were Aggies, we were moms and dads, Americans, Coloradans, and eventually you get down to ‘I’m a Democrat’ or ‘I’m a Republican.'”

Talk about politics, but talk about other things too

While engagement and healthy discussion of current events is positive, at the end of the (Thanksgiving) day, there are a lot of things you can talk about that aren’t politics.

“We should be able to engage and have these conversations, but if that’s all you want to do, everywhere you go. you’re not going to have any friends,” Cox said. “So get real friends and talk about other things.”

“If the conversation starts to derail or get heated, turn on football,” Polis suggested. “The Rams are going to beat Nevada this weekend. We can all cheer for that.”

When you shouldn’t have a political conversation

With all respect to Governor’s Polis and Cox, their discussion centered on semi-normal people, but there are folks with whom it is not possible to have a useful political conversation at all, and some of them might be around your dinner table this Thanksgiving. A person who doesn’t recognize the humanity of others—transphobes, antisemites, sexists, racists of all kinds—isn’t expressing a view that’s worth considering or engaging with. Maybe the person behind the argument isn’t irredeemable, but their ideas are. You’re under no obligation to tolerate intolerance, and with levels of extremism rising in the United States, political arguments can lead to violence, especially if there’s drinking involved—and there’s always drinking involved at Thanksgiving.

Ultimately, if a hateful relative is attending a family dinner, you probably shouldn’t. Whatever sense of obligation you might feel to your family at the holidays shouldn’t override your safety, both physically and emotionally, so say “no thank you.” Offer an explanation if you think it’s best, or just say “I made other plans,” or “I have COVID.” You’re an adult, after all. You could also try the “If they are going to be there, I am not” approach, but don’t be surprised if you’re not the one chosen.

On the other hand, life is messy. Family dynamics can be complicated. Principles can be surprisingly malleable. You might have your own reasons to attend Thanksgiving dinner even though your racist uncle Carl will be passing you the mashed potatoes. Maybe it’s the last times you’re likely to see your grandmother, or maybe you don’t want to be written out of someone’s will. If you do put yourself in that situation, ignore Governors Polis and Cox’s advice. Saying, “tell me more about why you feel that way” while internally maintaining that you might be wrong is not a good approach to an argument about whether people should be murdered by the state for crossing a border or whether Democrats are actually Satanic child molesters.

As for how you should handle it, I don’t know if there’s a right answer. My own instinct (derived from my dysfunctional background, no doubt) is to avoid, deflect, and change the subject—anything to prevent a scene. But others say you should openly confront hatred in your daily life, maybe even if it ruins everyone’s Thanksgiving. If you have any answers, I’m all ears.



Source: LifeHacker – How to Disagree About Politics Without Ruining Thanksgiving

The 26 Best Historical Epics Streaming Right Now

Historical epics once ruled the box office, reliably taking home both cash and trophies each year. That’s changed over the past decade or so; much of Hollywood’s big money now goes into either science-fiction spectacles or superhero franchise films, traditionally expensive period epics having fallen a bit out of fashion—at least on the big screen. Ridley Scott, though, hasn’t given up, with the Gladiator director fighting to keep the form alive: the sprawling, big-budget Napoleon is out soon, and an improbable Gladiator sequel is underway as his next film. It might be an uphill battle: 2022’s The Woman King got great reviews and still only did decent box office business, while Scott’s own The Last Duel, from 2021, got similarly good reviews while having lost quite a bit of money. Still, though, movie tastes are always a bit cyclical, and if we’re starting to see stirrings of superhero fatigue, there might be an opening for some big-budget trips to the real-life past.

Titanic (1997)

Historical setting: The north Atlantic, April, 1912

There’s melodrama here, for sure, but James Cameron’s tearjerker is also a glorious portrait of a very particular moment in time, luring us in with the glamour of its era before hitting us with the costs to those living their lives on the lower decks of society. It’s also a wonderfully fastidious feat of recreation, in which the plot cleverly takes us on a tour of Titanic. By the end, we feel like we know her as well as any of her passengers.

Where to stream: Paramount+


Malcolm X (1992)

Historical setting: The entirety of the life of Malcolm X, 1925 – 1965

Spike Lee dodges every dull biopic trope in presenting the life of the Black activist who helped to define the 1960s and the era of the civil rights movement. It’s stylish and propulsive, while Denzel Washington practically channels the movie’s subject with his extraordinary performance.

Where to stream: Tubi


The Last Duel (2021)

Historical setting: Medieval France, circa 1386

Ridley Scott’s previous epic adapts a nonfiction work by Eric Jager involving a trial by combat in medieval France between Jean de Carrouges (Matt Damon) and Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver) following the rape of Jean’s wife, Marguerite (Jodie Comer). Scott cleverly approaches the story as a European Rashomon, with the story presented from the very different points of view of each man, before we get the full picture from Marguerite’s perspective. History, and the players in the duel, might not have cared about that point of view, but Scott and the film do.

Where to stream: Fubo


Schindler’s List (1994)

Historical setting: World War II-era Germany, Poland, and Czechoslovakia

Steven Spielberg earned his first directing Oscar for this wrenching, essential film set during the Holocaust. Oskar Schindler, an industrialist and Nazi himself, becomes slowly disillusioned with, and then horrified by, the actions of the party, employing over 1,000 Jewish refugees to work in his factories as a means of saving them from the concentration camps.

Where to stream: Showtime, Fubo


Aguirre: The Wrath of God (1972)

Historical setting: 16th century South America

Probably the lowest-budget epic you’ll find on this list, Werner Herzog’s film follows conquistador Lope de Aguirre (played by a legendarily unhinged Klaus Kinski) on his hunt for the mythical golden kingdom of El Dorado. The real-life Aguirre was called El Loco for his grandiose and megalomanical plans; Herzog and Kinski capture the feel of a doomed obsession. The movie was a tremendous inspiration for Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now.

Where to stream: Tubi, Vudu, The Roku Channel, Freevee, Shout Factory TV, Plex


The Battle of Algiers (1966)

Historical setting: Algiers, 1954–1962

A shockingly relevant film about the tensions between Algerian nationalists and French forces in North Africa, a conflict that erupted into a three-year war. Director Gillo Pontecorvo’s hyper-realistic film is thrilling on one level, but also deeply challenging. While the movie’s morality leans slightly toward the Algerians trying to reclaim their home from the French, it’s also clear that the shocking acts of violence perpetrated by the guerrilla fighters render any discussion of heroes or villains ridiculous.

Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel


Battleship Potemkin (1925)

Historical setting: Odessa, 1905

Sergei Eisenstein’s masterpiece of revolutionary propaganda has ked a cinematic life well beyond its intended purpose (that being: honoring the first Russian Revolution on its 20th anniversary). Groundbreaking and wildly influential, echoes of its style and editing techniques can be found in everything from Laurel and Hardy to Star Wars and beyond, with Brian De Palma’s The Untouchables famously recreating one of the film’s most iconic scenes on the Odessa steps, in which a baby carriage rolls out of control amid chaos.

Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel


Gladiator (2000)

Historical setting: The Roman Empire, circa 180 CE

Ridley Scott tells the story of a high-ranking Roman officer forced into the gladiatorial arena after running afoul of the incoming emperor, Commodus; the movie was a box-office champ and an awards-season favorite for its year, signaling a revival of the historical epic genre that never quite materialized. But since we’re talking so much about Scott, his next historical epic is set to be a sequel to this Oscar winner.

Where to stream: Netflix, Paramount+


Ran (1985)

Historical setting: Sengoku-period Honshū, Japan

One of Akira Kurosawa’s later films, and his last real epic, Ran is still among the director’s most beloved, blending Japanese history and folklore with hints of Shakespeare. Set in the 16th century, Kurosawa fictionalizes the story of real-life daimyō Mōri Motonari by blending it with King Lear. Elderly warlord Ichimonji Hidetora (Tatsuya Nakadai) decides to divide his kingdom between his three sons, only to discover that greed and lust for power are more powerful than loyalty. It was the director’s most expensive film, with lush cinematography and elaborate period design.

Where to stream: Prime Video


The Death of Stalin (2017)

Historical setting: Moscow, 1953

Armando Iannucci brings his trademark dark wit to the story of the political power plays and jockeying that occurs in the wake of the passing of the Soviet leader. As he did in Veep, Ianucci lays bare the grasping, petty covetousness that lies behind power politics, no matter how outwardly respectable. It might not be the most historically accurate bit of history on film when it comes to the details, but it’s nevertheless among the most honest.

Where to stream: Hulu, Tubi, The Roku Channel


Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985)

Historical setting: Tokyo, from the 1920s to 1970

Paul Schrader’s kaleidoscopic drama starts on the last day in the life of Yukio Mishima, a writer who famously committed public seppuku. One of Japan’s most significant 20th-century artists, Mishima’s rejection of modern material culture lead him to an extreme traditionalism and saw him founding his own private army. He’s an unconventional subject for an unconventional historical epic (one that sees moments from his works dramatized alongside scenes from his life), but this was a life lived on a large scale, for better and worse.

Where to stream: The Criterion Channel


Becket (1964)

Historical setting: 12th century England

It’s based on a play rather than the specific history, so there’s much here that’s either dubious or flat-out wrong. Still! It’s a big, fun, old-school cinematic epic about the political and religious struggle between Henry II (Peter O’Toole) and Thomas Becket (Richard Burton), the king’s one-time friend who becomes an opponent as Archbishop of Canterbury. Burton is a little bit of a snooze, but O’Toole is clearly having a ton of fun—he’d play the character again, and be joined by Katherine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine, in The Lion in Winter just a few years later.

Where to stream: Peacock, Tubi, Freevee, The Roku Channel


From Here to Eternity (1953)

Historical setting: Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii, 1941

In the early going, this feels more like a solid romantic melodrama than a war picture—the film’s iconic image is of Deborah Kerr and Burt Lancaster making out on the beach. But it’s all in service of drawing us into the lives of the the people in the orbit of Schofield Barracks on Oahu, played by an all-star cast including Lancaster and Kerr, as well as Montgomery Clift, Frank Sinatra, Donna Reed, and Ernest Borgnine among others. By the time the bombs start to drop, we’re deeply invested in these character’s lives and fates.

Where to stream: Max


All Quiet on the Western Front (2022)

Historical setting: Western Europe, 1917-1918

Idealistic soldier Paul Bäumer (Felix Kammerer) hopes to be a hero when he signs on, with his friends, to fight with the German army. His visions of glory and noble sacrifice are quickly shattered as he’s forced to confront horrors, and learns that survival is the best he can hope for. Though it doesn’t have quite the power of the 1930 original, it’s still a powerful film about the futility of war, set amid the trenches of World War I.

Where to stream: Netflix


Edward II (1991)

Historical setting: 14th century England

Filmmaker, provocateur, and activist Derek Jarman removes any historical ambiguity from the relationship between Edward II and his beloved courtier Piers Gaveston (not that it was particularly ambiguous) while imagining medieval Europe as a postmodern fantasia, rife with intentional anachronisms and Annie Lennox on the soundtrack. Think Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette, but gayer.

Where to stream: Tubi, The Roku Channel, Pluto, Freevee


Asoka (2001)

Historical setting: The Mauryan Empire (covering much of modern-day India), 3rd century BCE

Hyper-stylized in its action sequences and peppered with musical interludes, the film tells a dramatized version of the life of the titular Mauryan emperor (Shah Rukh Khan), who famously discovered Buddhism and pacifism following an early life of violent conquest. Luckily, that transition comes late in the film, so we still get plenty of brilliantly choreographed action sequences in the lead-up. It was a massive success in much of Asia, and a rare Indian film of its time to receive a wide global release.

Where to stream: Netflix


Seven Samurai (1954)

Historical setting: Sengoku-period Japan, 1586

Both a dramatic and technical achievement, Akira Kurosawa’s masterpiece succeeds brilliantly as a straight action movie, but establishes the members of the assembled team as unique and complicated individuals, in many ways not that much better than the bandits they’ve been hired to fight. In the movie, penniless villagers decide to hire samurai to defend themselves from raiders. Since they have nothing to offer but food, they have no choice but to seek out only the most desperate rōnin to help them. The rag-tag band of outsiders is forced to come together in the face of a merciless onslaught and, while it’s more about its historical setting than any particular real-life events, there’s striking verisimilitude alongside the movie’s style.

Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel


The Northman (2022)

Historical setting: Northern Europe, circa 895 CE

Shockingly underseen, Robert Eggers’ The Northman isn’t based on any particular bit of Scandinavian history, instead blending elements of legend and mythology into a scrupulously recreated historical setting. Alexander Skarsgård plays Amleth, a Viking warrior-prince who narrowly escapes a coup that wipes out his dynasty, beginning a Shakespearean quest for vengeance at any cost. The film offers a starkly nihilistic worldview while simultaneously challenging ideas of honor taken to extremes. Nicole Kidman’s performance is delicious.

Where to stream: Peacock


The Fortress (2017)

Historical setting: Joseon State Korea, 1636

A war movie that avoids looking much like a war movie at all, The Fortress takes place during Qing invasion of Joseon in 1636. The Joseon state of modern-day Korea had maintained a relationship with the Ming dynasty of China, but came under pressure from the Qing prior to an all-out invasion. The film follows the end of that story, when King Injo and his retainers sought refuge in the title’s fortress. This isn’t the story of an Alamo, though, instead one of moral compromise and politics as the fort’s defenders fight to navigate between two larger powers while under literal siege. The movie was a massive hit in South Korea, picking up several major awards.

Where to stream: Netflix


The Woman King (2022)

Historical setting: Dahomey, West Africa, 1823

Though the movie has much deeper ambitions, there’s something to be said for the pure joy of watching surprisingly swole Viola Davis lead a team of all-but-unstoppable African women warriors as they fight back against colonialist invaders. Set in West Africa in 1823, and based on the real-life the Agojie (also known as the Dahomey Amazons), the movie stars Davis as General Nanisca, leader of the country’s army, forced to navigate complicated regional politics even though her skills, and the movie’s most exhilarating scenes, involve kicking slave-trader ass.

Where to stream: Netflix


1917 (2019)

Historical setting: The Western Front of World War I, 1917

Sam Mendes’ World War I drama has no business working as well as it does, given that its premise includes a bit of a gimmick: It’s presented as though it’s been filmed in two continuous takes, with no cuts in between. The result might have wound up feeling like a video game, but instead the conceit brings an uncommon, harrowing immediacy to the story of two soldiers Will Schofield (George MacKay) and Tom Blake (Dean-Charles Chapman), desperate to deliver a message that would cancel an offensive that they know to be doomed.

Where to stream: Showtime, Fubo


The Last Emperor (1987)

Historical setting: China, particularly Beijing, in the early 20th century

Though not to be taken as a history lesson (very few narrative movies should be), Bernardo Bertolucci’s gorgeous epic makes everything of its location, shooting inside Beijing’s Forbidden City. John lone is excellent as the grown-up Puyi, made emperor of China at age two, and forced to abdicate by the age of six. The movie charts his life in defiance of, and then as a puppet of, China’s new Communist government.

Where to stream: Max, The Criterion Channel


Kesari (2019)

Historical setting: Saragarhi (modern Pakistan), 1894

There’s not much here that’s particularly challenging, but Kesari is nevertheless a rousing story of military courage and heroism in the face of impossible odds. The film follows the events around the Battle of Saragarhi, during which 21 Sikh soldiers of the British Raj fought 10,000 Afghani attackers, 300-style, in 1897. The movie’s politics are complicated, but the performances are top-notch, and the battles are impeccably choreographed.

Where to stream: Prime Video


Spartacus (1960)

Historical setting: The Third Servile War, the Mediterranean in the first century BCE

Stanley Kubrick’s Roman Republic-era epic dodges most of the sword-and-sandal conventions that the movie’s release year might suggest, instead telling a rousing tale of freedom and nonconformity. Written by blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo, Spartacus challenged not only Roman-style slavery, but the then-modern Communist witch hunts.

Where to stream: History Vault


13 Assassins (2010)

Historical setting: Eco period Japan, 1844

Near the end of the Tokugawa Shogunate, the utterly sadistic (not to mention corrupt) Lord Naritsugu is to be offered a seat on the Shogunate Council, a promotion that will not only see the cruel lord’s power increase, but will likely set off a civil war between his supporters and those who hate him. The Shogun’s justice minister decides that assassination is the only way, and so hires a dozen samurai in order to carry out the execution. The kinetic and violent film reminds us that director Takashi Miike made his name in several memorably visceral horror films.

Where to stream: Hulu


Rustin (2023)

No wars here, exactly, though the Civil Rights Movement was an era of violent conflict; there are few better, nor more ignored, prisms through which to view it than than that of the life of Bayard Rustin (a brilliant Colman Domingo), one of the movements leaders, and the chief architect of the March on Washington. As an openly queer man, though, he was ignored and erased from the history of the movement—at least until this suitably epic biopic.

Where to stream: Netflix



Source: LifeHacker – The 26 Best Historical Epics Streaming Right Now

You Can Now Try ChatGPT’s ‘Chat With Voice’ Feature for Free

You can pay a monthly premium to use ChatGPT, but the free version often can handle more than enough to allow you to experience what generative AI has to offer. Without paying, you can take advantage of OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 model and ask ChatGPT to produce some interesting, hilarious, useful, or concerning outputs. And now, you can literally ask it out loud.

See, while the free version is useful, there are more great features locked behind the company’s $20 per month ChatGPT Plus plan. Without paying, you miss out on the more powerful GPT-4 model, plug-in support, and the ability to connect ChatGPT to the internet, among others.

Thankfully, even in the midst of a company crisis, OpenAI has had time to rollout one previously Plus-only feature to all users: voice chat.

ChatGPT voice chat is here for all

OpenAI rolled out voice chat to ChatGPT Plus users back in September. The feature replaces the text-based ChatGPT interface with something more like a voice assistant: As you speak to ChatGPT, you’ll see a waveform reacting in kind. The assistant will automatically recognize when you’re done talking, and will switch into a “thought bubble” interface as it responds to your question or request.

The company always planned to bring voice chat to free users, and while it took a couple months, the feature is finally here:

Voice chat doesn’t actually do anything more (or anything different) than text-based ChatGPT, but it does make interacting with the chatbot feel a bit more natural. Or, at least, brings us closer to a real world Her situation.

How to use ChatGPT voice chat

Note: I’m using ChatGPT Plus to walk through voice chat, so it’s possible there are some discrepancies between my experience and the one presented in the free version. That said, here’s a primer on how to use it.

This feature is only available on the official ChatGPT app for iOS and Android, not the web app, so, to start, make sure to download the app to your phone. Once you open the app and set everything up, start a new chat and look for the headphones icon in the bottom right corner of the screen. Voice chat is rolling out as of Tuesday, so you should see it once you upgrade the app.

Tap the headphones, and you’ll see a pop-up explaining the “chat with voice” feature. To continue, hit Choose a voice. You have five different choices: Juniper, Breeze, Cove, Ember, and Sky, who sounds remarkably like Scarlett Johansson. (Someone at OpenAI really likes Her.)

Once you pick your voice and continue, you’re in! By default, ChatGPT will listen for your voice right away, and wait until you’re done speaking to continue. However, you can hold down on the mic to record your question or request, then let go to prompt ChatGPT to respond.

ChatGPT will save a transcript of your voice chat to the main chat, so when you exit voice chat, you’ll see your conversation as you normally would. You’ll be able to differentiate between voice chat transcripts and text conversations by the microphone and waveform icons next to your prompts and ChatGPT’s responses, respectively.



Source: LifeHacker – You Can Now Try ChatGPT’s ‘Chat With Voice’ Feature for Free

TikTok Myth of the Week: Vegetables Are Bad for You

In the wellness world, things you’ve already heard are boring. Why would you want to hear yet another person tell you something you’ve heard a million times: that almost any exercise can be good, that a healthy diet includes a variety of foods including vegetables, and so on? It’s much more interesting to watch somebody tell you secrets that mainstream medicine doesn’t want you to know. 

On TikTok, a bunch of (mostly) white (mostly) dudes proudly announce they don’t eat their vegetables, and you shouldn’t either. Ready to dig in?  

Why TikTokers say vegetables are bad for you

Here is a little story that has a few grains of truth to it. Vegetables are plants, specifically the roots, stems, leaves, and (arguably) seeds of those plants. Plants don’t want to be eaten. So they make toxic compounds, the better to kill off anyone who tries to eat them–including you. 

This talking point is parroted from video to video, and the TikToker usually follows it up with examples of specific toxins, health conditions, and vegetables that you must avoid if you want to be healthy. Sometimes they will also use the term “anti-nutrients,” a category that does not necessarily overlap with those toxins, but we’ll get to specifics in a bit. 

(The TikTokers tend to forget that any relationship between an eater and an eat-ee, in nature, is an arms race. The plant evolves a toxin; the plant-eater evolves resistance to that toxin. Have they never planted a garden and watched it feed all the neighborhood insects, slugs, and squirrels? Do they think we are more fragile than insects, slugs, and squirrels? I have so many questions.)

Sometimes there will be an acknowledgement that “some” people can eat vegetables and be healthy, but that anybody whose health is imperfect should simply stop eating most or all veggies. Fruits are sometimes demonized as well, although there are also TikTokers who say they will eat fruits but not vegetables. 

Are vegetables actually bad for you? 

What? No! Of course not! Mountains of scientific evidence back up the idea that the more vegetables you eat, the better. 

These studies have their drawbacks, as all studies do: they are mainly observational, and they combine many types of vegetables and different ways of measuring them. But even so, the results consistently and overwhelmingly point to vegetables reducing our risk of many health conditions. 

For example, a 2022 study designed to evaluate the evidence behind vegetable recommendations found that eating about 12 ounces of vegetables per day, compared to eating none, reduces the risk of strokes, coronary heart disease, and esophageal cancer. This 2008 study found that people who eat at least three servings of vegetables a day reduce their risk of coronary heart disease by 70%. (There was also a 60% reduction from five servings of fruit.) 

And this 2017 meta-analysis found that the more fruits and vegetables you eat, the lower your risk of the above chronic diseases and cardiovascular disease, cancer, and all-cause mortality. The more fruits and vegetables people eat, the better, they found, up to about 600 grams for cancer prevention and 800 grams for everything else. To put that in real-world terms, 800 grams of vegetables is 28 ounces, or about five to seven servings of fruits and veggies per day. 

So what’s the deal with these supposed toxins and anti-nutrients?

Two things are true at the same time: yes, there are toxins and anti-nutrients in vegetables. And, they are not harmful enough to matter to us in normal quantities and with normal food preparation techniques. 

As the above studies on vegetables and health show, the good outweighs the bad. People don’t get sicker the more vegetables they eat; they are healthier. You don’t need to dig into the specifics of what lectins or sulforaphanes or tannins do to our body to know that the big-picture answer is that we should be eating our veggies. 

But I know you want to hear the details, so let’s take a look at a few of the big names in anti-vegetables TikTok. 

Lectins

Lectins are plant proteins that bind to carbohydrates. They can prevent absorption of some nutrients, and can sometimes cause gastrointestinal illness. For example, there are dozens of case reports of people developing vomiting and diarrhea from lectin poisoning after eating undercooked kidney beans. This is why it’s important to boil your beans for 10 minutes, instead of simply soaking and slow cooking. (Canned beans have already been cooked enough to destroy the lectins.) 

As Harvard’s Nutrition Source explains, “It is important to remember that eating foods with a high amount of active lectins is rare.” Cooking destroys or significantly reduces the lectin content in foods. It’s unlikely that you’re even getting much lectin content in your food at all. 

The TikTokers who say that lectins can cause gastrointestinal issues aren’t speaking from clinical evidence; aside from cases where people overdosed on lectins (like the kidney bean poisoning), most of our evidence is from studies that don’t involve humans or the kinds of vegetables humans routinely eat. Is it possible that some people are sensitive to the effects of certain lectins? Sure. But are lectins found in vegetables ruining our health in any kind of universal or widespread way? It’s pretty clear they are not. 

Lectins also have their upsides: they are antioxidants, and can also slow the absorption of carbohydrates, potentially helping to avoid blood sugar spikes after eating. Foods that contain lectins include legumes (beans, lentils) and whole grains. These foods contain fiber, vitamins, and other healthful components, and there’s plenty of evidence that overall, these foods are good for us.

Oxalates

We’ve long known that it’s bad to eat large doses of foods that are high in oxalates or oxalic acid; that’s why, when you buy rhubarb at the grocery store, the red stalks don’t come with leaves attached. Rhubarb leaves are notoriously high in oxalates. Other vegetables, mainly leafy greens like spinach (but also potatoes!), contain oxalates in smaller amounts. 

But, again, most of our grocery-store vegetables don’t contain enough oxalates to be a health issue. Cooking reduces the oxalate content further. If you have a history of oxalate-containing kidney stones, the American Urological Association suggests that you might want to limit high-oxalate vegetables. (Not avoid them entirely, as TikTokers would suggest, but simply enjoy them in small doses.) 

You see how the risks sound a lot different when you listen to TikTok rants versus getting your information from medical sources. TikTok told me that oxalates cause kidney stones and kidney failure; Colorado State University’s nutrition center told me that the oxalate in most kidney stones is manufactured by the body itself, that drinking plenty of water is the best nutrition-based tip for avoiding kidney stones, and that “it is recommended to include many oxalate-containing plant foods in the diet as evidence suggests that these foods play a vital role in disease prevention.” 

Toxic reactions to vegetables look pretty different than what TikTok wants us to believe

The sweet spot for TikTokers, medically speaking, is when you feel kind of yucky and aren’t sure why. Then you’ll try their diet, or their supplements, or at least keep watching their content and boosting their engagement metrics. 

In reality, there are plenty of opportunities for us to have bad reactions to toxic compounds in vegetables, with dramatic results that would lead you to seek immediate medical attention–and this is exactly why the FDA, the WHO, and other organizations warn against exposing ourselves to the dangerous ones. They want us to be sure that we fully cook our kidney beans, that we don’t eat rhubarb leaves, that we avoid honey made from mountain laurel and rhododendron flowers, and that we don’t eat peach pits or apple seeds. (Re: the latter, “accidentally eating a seed or pit will not harm you,” but please don’t eat them in large amounts.)

TikTokers can, of course, attempt to weaponize this information to scare us away from perfectly harmless vegetables. For example, one video states that celery is poison because it contains an acid that makes you susceptible to sunburn. The part about sunburn is true! (The part about poison is not.) Celery juice can sensitize your skin to UV exposure; so can lime juice, causing the reaction nicknamed “margarita hand.” A woman developed a severe reaction when she ate an entire pound of celery before heading to the tanning salon. This does not mean you need to avoid celery entirely. 

Nor should you believe the videos from a sea moss supplement company that say celery’s acidic pH indicates it is man-made and not from nature (huh?) or that broccoli gets stuck in our digestive system for up to 4 weeks if we do not purchase sea moss supplements. (This is the 100-year-old “your guts are full of stuck poop” myth all over again.) 

Meanwhile, many of the compounds that TikTokers demonize–including tannins, sulforaphanes, and glycoalkaloids–seem to have beneficial effects as well as potentially harmful ones. Here’s an article from the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center recommending that we seek out cruciferous vegetables specifically for their sulforaphane content. 

In conclusion, vegetables are still good for us, no matter what TikTok says. I won’t make you eat them–I’m not your mom–but please don’t believe the online fearmongering.



Source: LifeHacker – TikTok Myth of the Week: Vegetables Are Bad for You

‘Batch’ Your Cocktails for Holiday Hosting Success

We’re wading into the deep waters of the holiday season now. While I like to offer up food ideas for easy party planning, I think we need to address an equally important player: beverages. As a person who loves hosting holiday parties, one of the biggest ways I help myself is by batching cocktails. It saves time, mess, and stress. I’d love for you to have more time for mingling and less time spent mixing, so use this batching tip guide to prepare your holiday cocktails and mocktails in advance. 

Batching is a host’s best friend

The concept is simple: Batched cocktails are simply large batches of pre-mixed drinks without the ice. Many cocktail recipes are ratios, or they have measurements that are easily multiplied. Which means that, depending on the concoction, you can pour large quantities of the ingredients together and store the mixture in the fridge or freezer for hours or days before you need it. Once it’s party time, your theme drink simply needs its final preparation. Often that step is only as complicated as pouring it over ice. 

Batching ahead of time means that he day of the festivities, you get more time to focus on plating charcuterie boards, answering the doorbell, or actually eating your own snacks and talking to people who you like. Be sure to let your guests know where the batch is so they can help themselves. This allows them to be more independent and embrace the “make yourself at home” holiday vibe.

Now that you understand the rewards of batching, here are a few tips to get you on the pathway to success. 

Choose the right cocktail

Not every cocktail is going to keep well in the fridge or freezer, so you have to be discerning when doing your research. Cocktails that are high in alcohol work well for batching, like martinis, a negroni, a Long Island iced tea, a sazerac, or a paper plane. These drinks have little juice or non-alcoholic components which means they’ll store well without losing flavor. Keep in mind particularly for a martini, that unless you’re planning on stirring or shaking the cocktail with ice just before serving it “up,” you’ll need to dilute it to account for that missing step. Here’s a ratio for properly diluting your bottled martini.

Carefully consider drinks that are largely sparkling wine, soda, or tonic (basically anything bubbly). They’re going to lose all of their festive fizz while sitting in the fridge. That doesn’t mean you can’t have a sparkling topper. To make the most of batching, choose a beverage that has a base you can prepare in advance, a Long Island iced tea for example, and then add the sparkling topper (Coca-Cola here) to each glass as needed. Pour the base into a cup over ice (if using), and top with the appropriate fizzy drink. You’ll need to let guests know about this step and leave the soda, tonic, or champagne available for them, and even if you have to top the drinks for people yourself this is still much faster than mixing each one individually from scratch. 

Save the egg-white-dependent, cream-foamed, and muddled drinks and make those to-order. These drinks look and taste best right after being prepared.

How much should you batch?

I very proudly made a large batched cocktail once. Two hours into the festivities it had clean run out. Of course, I had stocked my home bar for folk to rummage through, but I was hoping the clever browned butter-washed whiskey cocktail would be a mainstay throughout the evening. I had grossly underestimated how much to batch. 

In times like these, it’s better to do some math. Get a headcount that’s as accurate as possible, and account for four servings per guest for a four hour party. Some guests won’t have the cocktail, some will have fewer than four and a few will have more, but this calculation should land you close to an appropriate batch. Obviously, if you know two friends will only drink wine then you can subtract those servings. If you have 10 people likely to partake, you’ll need 40 servings of the batch. 

Use the number of servings to help you calculate the amount you need for each component. This will help you shop for ingredients. If your recipe requires two ounces of gin per serving, you’ll need 80 ounces of gin. Most liquor bottles are in milliliters, so you’ll need to do some quick internet converting from ounces. Since a handle of alcohol is usually 1.75 liters, you’ll need a handle plus a normal 750 milliliter bottle of gin. (No one said batching was cheap. Mocktail anyone?)

How to store it 

Store your beautifully batched cocktails in pitchers or large bottles that have secure lids. I like these swing-top glass bottles, they’re small enough to fit comfortably in the fridge or freezer, yet large enough to hold several servings. The small opening makes it easier to pour without making a mess (especially if your friends are getting tipsy), and this particular set comes with a handy collapsible funnel if you don’t already have one. Use your ounce calculation from earlier to help you decide how many bottles you need. 

Where to store it

The two best places to store your batched cocktails are the fridge or the freezer, mostly because a cold drink is a better drink, but also because juices, and other ingredients that might oxidize at room temperature (like vermouth), will have a longer life in the fridge. Longer life means you can batch one day or even a week ahead of time. If the cocktail or mocktail you mixed includes freshly squeezed juices as a primary ingredient, consider mixing the batch the day of, or the night before. The juices won’t “go bad,” but they can lose some of their flavor. 

Store any batches that are high in alcohol content (about 30% ABV or higher) in the freezer. They won’t freeze in a conventional home freezer, and at most they could become slushy. (Here is an ABV calculator for cocktails, which can be handy for multiple reasons.) Drinks with dairy ingredients, like milk or cream, should be stored in the fridge just in case. If those become slushy, the texture of the dairy ingredient might change after thawing. 

When the party starts, simply perform the final steps: Iced cocktails get poured over ice, while drinks served “up” are either already properly diluted or you’ll have to pour the concentrate into a shaker to shake or stir before straining. Maybe all you have to do is top off the batched mix with Champagne. Grab your own, and bask in the warm glow of the holiday season.



Source: LifeHacker – ‘Batch’ Your Cocktails for Holiday Hosting Success

Use This New Google Maps Feature to Make Plans With Your Friends

Group texts are often the default way of making plans, but anyone in an overactive chat knows how quickly they can become a headache. The nonstop notifications, derailed conversations, and missed messages sometimes make group chats a less-than-idea place to coordinate. But a new feature on Google Maps is offering an alternative, allowing users to collaborate with others to make plans and decide activities with less opportunity for going off-map. Here’s how to use it.

How to use Google Maps to make plans with a group

In a Nov. 15 blog post, Amanda Leicht Moore, director of product for Google Maps, shared some tips for using the app. While most of them highlight existing functions—like searching for the cheapest gas and opting to take a route that avoids tolls—there’s an update to Google Maps’s list feature that allows multiple people to collaborate on a shared list to make plans, instead of relying on a group text.

To start the shared list, pick a starting point in Google Maps, then hit Save to add it to a list. Choose (+) New list, then give it a name (“Saturday road trip”), then hit Invite Collaborators to share it with a group. Invited users will see the collaborative list link on their end, and, when they tap on it, can tap Join to hop in.

Once in the list, anyone in the group can suggest activities and places to visit by adding them in Google Maps. Each suggestion shows who added it, and you can add a note if you want people to understand why you chose this location.

From here, the other members can express their opinion on each location by voting with an emoji. (Google suggests a heart in support of a particular spot, and a thumbs-down against it.) If everything works as intended, you’ll end up with a solid plan that at least some people are excited about, all without sending a single group text.

According to Moore, the new and improved list feature is rolling out, and will be available globally on iOS and Android over the next few weeks.



Source: LifeHacker – Use This New Google Maps Feature to Make Plans With Your Friends

What's New on Disney+ in December 2023

Disney+ has a handful of original series with episodes dropping throughout the month of December. There are two Doctor Who specials, Wild Blue Yonder and The Giggle (December 2 and December 9, respectively) that follow November’s premiere of The Star Beast, plus The Doctor Who Holiday Special: The Church on Ruby Road (December 25).

Catch the two-episode premiere of the fantasy series Percy Jackson and the Olympians (adapted from the novels of the same name) on December 20 plus episode three on December 27.

Over in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, there’s season two of the animated series What If…?, in which The Watcher (voiced by Jeffrey Wright) guides viewers through storylines across the multiverse. The first episode premieres on December 22, with additional episodes dropping daily through December 30.

And if you haven’t had enough holiday content, there’s the season two finale of The Santa Clauses (December 6), the premiere of Diary of a Wimpy Kid Christmas: Cabin Fever (December 8), and Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade (December 26).

Here’s everything coming to Disney+ in December 2023.

Disney Plus series with new episodes premiering weekly in December 2023

  • Dancing with the Stars (Season 32)—Tuesdays, finale on December 12

  • Soundtrack #2 (Korean Original)—Wednesdays

Movies and complete series/seasons coming to Disney Plus in December 2023

Arriving December 1

  • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

  • The Shepherd—Disney+ Originals premiere

  • Timeless Heroes: Indiana Jones & Harrison Ford—Disney+ Originals premiere

Arriving December 2

  • Doctor Who: Wild Blue Yonder—Disney+ Originals premiere

Arriving December 5

  • Isabel Preysler, My Christmas (Spanish Original)

Arriving December 6

  • The Ghost and Molly McGee: White Christmess/Perfect Day (S2, 1 episode)

  • SuperKitties (S1, 3 episodes)

  • Villains of Valley View: A Very Villain Christmas (S2, 1 episode)

  • The Santa Clauses (Season 2 finale)

Arriving December 8

  • The Mission

  • Diary of a Wimpy Kid Christmas: Cabin Fever—Disney+ Originals premiere

Arriving December 9

  • Doctor Who: The Giggle—Disney+ Originals premiere

Arriving December 11

  • Science Fair: The Series (Complete Season 1)

Arriving December 13

  • The Curse of Oak Island (S2, 10 episodes)

  • Dance Moms (Complete Seasons 3-6 and 8)

  • Kiff (S1, 3 episodes)

  • Mickey Mouse Funhouse (S3, 4 episodes)

  • PJ Masks: Power Heroes Music Videos (Shorts) (S1, 5 episodes)

  • PJ Masks: Power Heroes (S1, 5 episodes)

Arriving December 15

  • CMA Country Christmas Special

Arriving December 20

  • Hailey’s On It!: We Wish You a Merry Chaos-mas (S1, 1 episode)

  • Pupstruction (S1, 4 episodes)

  • Percy Jackson and the Olympians—Disney+ Originals premiere

  • Chip ‘n’ Dale: Park Life (Season 2) (UK Original)

Arriving December 22

  • Marvel Studios’ “What If…?” Season 2—Disney+ Originals premiere (additional episodes daily Dec. 23–30)

Arriving December 25

  • Doctor Who Holiday Special: The Church on Ruby Road—Disney+ Originals premiere

Arriving December 26

  • Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade

Arriving December 27

  • Me & Winnie the Pooh (S1, 9 episodes)

  • Playdate with Winnie the Pooh (Shorts) (S1, 11 episodes)

  • Rewind the ’90s (S1, 10 episodes)



Source: LifeHacker – What’s New on Disney+ in December 2023

What's New on Hulu in December 2023

Hulu has a wide range of content worth watching in December, starting with season one of the series Culprits, which follows the lives (and deaths) of elite criminals after they pull off a high-stakes heist (December 8). Later in the month, catch Maggie Moore(s), a comedy thriller about multiple murders in a sleepy small town starring John Hamm, Tina Fey, and Nick Mohammed (December 22).

Also on the docket are Blue Jean, the BAFTA-nominated film set in England during the Margaret Thatcher years that tells the story of a teacher navigating life amid anti-LGBTQ+ legislation (December 14) and Raffa, a docuseries about the life of pop and LGBTQ+ icon Raffaella Carrà (December 27).

Here’s everything coming to (and leaving) Hulu in December, including seasons of Hulu Original series A Historia Delas, Such Brave Girls, Letterkenny, and Dragons of Wonderhatch.

What’s coming to Hulu in December 2023

Arriving December 1

  • The Eric Andrew Show: Complete Season 6

  • CoComelon – JJ’s Animal Time: Complete Season 2

  • One Piece: Complete Season 11 (Dubbed)

  • Airheads, 1994

  • The Bourne Identity, 2002

  • The Bourne Supremacy, 2004

  • The Bourne Legacy, 2012

  • The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe, 2005

  • The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian, 2008

  • The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader, 2010

  • The Day The Earth Stood Still, 2008

  • District 9, 2009

  • Epic Movie, 2007

  • Epic, 2011

  • Ever After, 1998

  • Hansel And Gretel: Witch Hunters, 2013

  • Harry Brown, 2009

  • Harvard Park, 2012

  • High School High, 1996

  • High-rise, 2015

  • Hostel: Part III, 2011

  • Hudson Hawk, 1991

  • The Hustler, 1961

  • House Of Flying Daggers, 2004

  • Hustlers, 2019

  • Hysteria, 2012

  • I Am Number Four, 2011

  • Johnson Family Vacation, 2004

  • Juno, 2007

  • Magic Mike XXL, 2015

  • Magic Mike, 2012

  • The Marine, 2006

  • Masterminds, 2016

  • The Matrix, 1999

  • The Matrix Reloaded, 2003

  • The Matrix Revolutions, 2003

  • National Treasure, 2004

  • National Treasure: Book Of Secrets, 2007

  • The Omen, 2006

  • Paddington 2, 2018

  • Planet of the Apes (2000), 2001

  • Shutter, 2008

  • The Sitter, 2011

  • Sommersby, 1993

  • Splash, 1984

  • Tombstone, 1993

  • War, 2007

  • A Walk in the Woods, 2015

  • When In Rome, 2010

  • You Again, 2010

Arriving December 3

  • The Jingle Bell Jubilee, 2023

Arriving December 4

  • Mob Land, 2023

Arriving December 6

  • We Live Here: The Midwest: Documentary Premiere

  • A Historia Delas: Complete Season 1

  • Crazy Rich Asians, 2018

Arriving December 7

  • Snapped: Complete Seasons 16-18

  • I Survived . . . Complete Season 5

  • I Survived a Crime: Complete Season 1

  • The Bling Ring: Special Premiere

Arriving December 8

  • Culprits: Complete Season 1

  • The Mission: Special Premiere

  • Proximity, 2020

Arriving December 9

  • Maestra: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed)

  • Meet Me Under the Mistletoe, 2023

Arriving December 10

  • The Matrix Resurrections, 2021

Arriving December 11

  • Science Fair: The Series: Complete Season 1

Arriving December 13

  • Moving: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed)

  • Undead Unluck: Series Premiere (Dubbed)

Arriving December 14

  • Dragons: The Nine Realms: Complete Season 8

  • Swamp People: Complete Season 14

  • Blue Jean, 2022

  • Higher Power, 2018

  • I Was Possessed: Complete Season 1

  • A Nurse To Die For: Special Premiere

  • Top Shot: All-Stars: Complete Season 5

Arriving December 15

  • Such Brave Girls: Complete Season 1

  • CMA Country Christmas

  • 2 Days In New York, 2012

  • Alan Partridge, 2013

  • Freakonomics, 2010

  • I Give It A Year, 2013

  • Lemon, 2017

  • Results, 2015

  • The Giver, 2014

  • White God, 2014

  • The Retirement Plan, 2023

Arriving December 20

  • Dragons of Wonderhatch: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed)

  • Woori the Virgin: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed)

  • Boom For Real: The Late Teenage Years Of Jean-Michel Basquiat, 2017

Arriving December 21

  • Horimiya: Season 2 Premiere (Dubbed)

  • Murder In-Law: Complete Season 1

  • Nightwatch: Complete Season 5

  • Truck Night in America: Complete Season 1

  • A View To Kill For: Special Premiere

  • Operation Napoleon, 2023

Arriving December 22

  • Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation: Season 2 Part 1 Premiere (Dubbed)

  • Maggie Moore(s), 2023

Arriving December 25

  • Once Upon a Time In Hollywood, 2019

Arriving December 26

  • Letterkenny: Complete Season 12

  • The Devil is a Part-Timer!: Season 2, Part 2 Premiere (Dubbed)

Arriving December 27

  • Rewind the ’90s: Complete Season 1

  • Raffa: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed)

Arriving December 28

  • Married at First Sight: Complete Season 16

  • An Amish Murder: Special Premiere

  • Happy Face Killer: Special Premiere

Arriving December 29

  • It Lives Inside, 2023

Arriving December 31

  • The ABCs Of Death 2, 2014

  • The ABCs Of Death, 2012

  • Bad Milo!, 2013

  • Honeymoon, 2014

  • I Saw The Devil, 2010

  • Jack And Diane, 2012

  • Marrowbone, 2017

  • Satanic, 2016

  • Splinter, 2008

  • Vanishing On 7th Street, 2010

  • V/H/S, 2012

  • V/H/S 2, 2013

  • V/H/S: Viral, 2014

  • XX, 2017

  • Zombieland: Double Tap, 2019

What’s leaving Hulu in December 2023

Leaving December 7

  • Proximity, 2020

Leaving December 14

  • In the Fade, 2017

  • Serena, 2014

Leaving December 27

  • Guns Akimbo, 2020

  • The Accountant, 2016

Leaving December 31

  • Abduction, 2011

  • After Earth, 2013

  • Alita: Battle Angel, 2019

  • An American Citizen, 1992

  • An Education, 2009

  • Beyond JFK: The Question Of Conspiracy, 1991

  • Billy Madison, 1995

  • Blackthorn, 2011

  • Blade, 1998

  • Blade 2, 2002

  • Blade: Trinity, 2004

  • Body At Brighton Rock, 2019

  • The Boston Strangler, 1968

  • The Bourne Identity, 2002

  • The Bourne Supremacy, 2004

  • The Bourne Legacy, 2012

  • Bogus, 1996

  • Bohemian Rhapsody, 2018

  • Christmas Cupid, 2010

  • Conan the Barbarian, 2011

  • Crash Pad, 2017

  • Crush, 2002

  • The Deep End Of The Ocean, 1999

  • D.E.B.S., 2005

  • Dark Shadows, 2012

  • Daybreakers, 2010

  • Dazed and Confused, 1993

  • Death on the Nile, 2022

  • Devil’s Due, 2014

  • Die Hard 2, 1990

  • Don’t Say A Word, 2001

  • Double Platinum, 1999

  • Driven, 2019

  • Elf, 2003

  • Exorcist: The Beginning, 2004

  • The Experiment, 2010

  • Fat Albert, 2004

  • Fighting, 2009

  • Flight Of The Phoenix, 2004

  • Ford v Ferrari, 2019

  • Four Christmases, 2008

  • Fred Claus, 2007

  • Fun with Dick and Jane, 2005

  • Funny People, 2009

  • Garfield, 2004

  • Godzilla, 1998

  • The Gospel According To André, 2017

  • Guess Who’s Coming to Christmas, 2013

  • Hanna, 2011

  • Hell or High Water, 2016

  • Holiday In Handcuffs, 2007

  • Hollywood Homicide, 2003

  • Horses of McBride, 2012

  • Interview With the Vampire, 1994

  • Into The Woods, 2014

  • It’s Christmas Carol!, 2012

  • Jack Frost, 1998

  • Little Miss Sunshine, 2006

  • Madea’s Big Happy Family, 2011

  • Man on a Ledge, 2012

  • The Magic Crystal, 2011

  • The Matrix, 1999

  • The Matrix Reloaded, 2003

  • The Matrix Revolutions, 2003

  • Men In Black, 1997

  • Men In Black II, 2002

  • Men In Black 3, 2012

  • A Merry Friggin’ Christmas, 2014

  • The Mistle-Tones, 2012

  • The Muppet Christmas Carol, 1992

  • National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, 1989

  • Nativity 3: Dude Where’s My Donkey?!, 2014

  • Nativity 4: Nativity Rocks!, 2018

  • The New Age, 1994

  • Night at the Museum, 2006

  • The Nutcracker And The Four Realms, 2018

  • Oblivion, 2013

  • The Other Woman, 2014

  • Pain & Gain, 2013

  • Parental Guidance, 2011

  • Phone Booth, 2003

  • The Polar Express, 2004

  • The Possession, 2012

  • Q&A, 1990

  • Rise of the Planet of the Apes, 2011

  • The Rocky Horror Picture Show, 1975

  • Rudy, 1993

  • The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause, 2006

  • Saving Silverman, 2001

  • Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, 2019

  • Space Jam, 1996

  • Steve Jobs: The Man In The Machine, 2015

  • Stoker, 2011

  • Stripper, 1986

  • Sunchaser, 1996

  • Sweet Home Alabama, 2002

  • Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, 2006

  • That Night, 1993

  • Tim & Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie, 2012

  • To The Wonder, 2012

  • Todo Cambia, 2000

  • Tower Heist, 2011

  • Tropic Thunder, 2008

  • Turtle Beach, 1992

  • The Village, 2004

  • The Wedding Singer, 2005

  • 3 Idiotas, 2017



Source: LifeHacker – What’s New on Hulu in December 2023

These Are the Best Black Friday Deals on Streaming Devices

With major streaming content providers rolling out bargain prices for their movies and TV shows, it’s a good time to pick up a new device to actually do the streaming. There are a ton of devices out there that will hook up to your TV and let you watch Netflix, YouTube, etc., and the shopping holiday deals have made them extremely affordable. I’m talking “fewer than 20 bucks” affordable.

Here are our picks for best Black Friday streaming device deals.

Amazon Fire devices

Amazon is offering Black Friday deals on its Fire line of streaming devices, and there’s something for every budget. Each of these devices comes with six months of MGM+ for free.

  • Amazon Fire TV Stick Lite: This cheap-as-chips streaming stick can be yours for the Black Friday price of $15.99, marked down from $29.99. It’s compatible with Alexa, lets you stream movies and TV from major streaming services and listen to music from Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pandora too. If you pay for MGM+ already, you should buy this even if you already have a streaming device: MGM+ is $49.99 a year, so you’d be saving money even if you never use the Stick at all.

  • Amazon Fire TV Stick: A step up from the “lite” version, this devices streams in full HD. You can watch endless hours of content and stream music too for $19.99, half-off its regular price. It also comes with MGM+ for six months, so the above sneaky savings still apply.

  • Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max: Along with the music and movie streaming and support for Wi-Fi 6E, the 4K Max comes with “Ambient Experience” that “lets you display over 2,000 pieces of museum-quality art and photography.” Cool, I guess. The Max costs $39.99, marked down from $59.99,

  • Amazon Fire TV Cube: According to Amazon, the Fire TV Cube contains an octa-core processor that is 2X as powerful as Fire TV Stick 4K Max. Not only can you use it to stream movies and music in high definition, it also lets you manage your smart home on screen. It’s on sale for $109.99, marked down from $139.99.

Chromecast with Google TV (4K)

The 4K version of Google’s streaming device is on sale through Best Buy for $37.99, marked down from $49.99. It features voice control, a recommendation system, kid-friendly profiles, and it comes with six months of Peacock Premium for free.

Chromecast with Google TV (4k)

Roku streaming devices

Like Amazon, Roku is offering Black Friday deals on a number of its video streaming devices and has something for everyone, no matter how much or how little they want to spend.

  • Roku Express: For $29.99, you can have fast, seamless streaming with the Roku Express. It comes with 400+ free live TV channels, and the Roku channel too. It’s no frills, but it’s easy and cheap.

  • Roku Ultra: Roku’s top-of-the-line streaming device is selling for $69.99, a saving of $30 from its regular $99.99 price. The Ultra supports Cinematic Dolby Vision picture & Dolby Atmos sound. It comes with a chargeable remote control, and a remote-control-finding feature for when you lose the thing.

  • Roku Streambar: If you need a device to stream video and provide premium audio, the Streambar has you covered. For $99.99, you get both a top-of-the-line streaming device and a decent soundbar. If you want to upgrade to full surround in the future, the Streambar is compatible with other Roku speakers.

2021 Apple TV 4K

Apple’s 4K streaming box features 64GB of storage, 4K High Frame Rate HDR with Dolby Vision video, and that special Apple style. It also features Apple Arcade, Apple Fitness+, and Apple Music—in other words, it’s the perfect addition to your Apple home. In keeping with Apple’s identity, it’s fairly expensive at $179.95, but the Black Friday price on Amazon is a little cheaper than the usual price of $199.99.

2021 Apple TV 4K with 64GB Storage

Tablo 2-Tuner Over-the-Air DVR

This is one of those “you didn’t know you always needed it” products. It’s a DVR for both streaming an over-the-air video. So cord cutters can record what they like from their smartphones, Amazon Fire devices, Roku, Google TV, and digital antenna, then play it back on any compatible device on the network. The $79.95 price is 20% off the usual $99.95 price. 

Tablo 2-Tuner Over-The-Air DVR



Source: LifeHacker – These Are the Best Black Friday Deals on Streaming Devices

How to Tell If Tree Roots Are Growing in Your Sewer Line

Ignoring clogged plumbing is never a good idea. But what if you’ve tried snaking and plunging your slow-draining sink—and perhaps even enlisted the help of a professional plumber—and you still can’t figure out what’s causing the clog? If you live in a house, it may be time to start looking into whether there are tree roots blocking your sewer lines. Here’s why that happens, and the signs that root-filled pipes are behind your plumbing problems.

What causes roots to grow in pipes?

Large trees can have extensive root systems: While some parts may be visible on the surface of your lawn, others sprawl out underground, searching for sources of water, oxygen, and nutrients—like cracked sewer lines. Even a small crack generates enough humidity to attract the roots of a tree on or near your property, allowing them to enter the pipe, and grow until it’s blocked.

But just because you don’t see a tree on or close to your property doesn’t mean you’re out of the woods. Even if a tree has been removed, its roots may remain inside your pipes for years to come.

How do I know if tree roots are in my sewer line?

Because your sewer line is underground and not easily accessible, you’ll need to pay attention to the signs that tree roots may be growing inside of it. These include:

  • Slow-moving drains in sinks, tubs, and/or showers

  • Gurgling sounds coming from toilet bowls

  • Backed-up toilets that don’t flush all the way

  • The smell of sewage and/or sulfur (rotten eggs) inside or outside your house, or coming from any drain

  • Lower water pressure

  • Whistling or banging sound coming from your pipes

  • A visible sinkhole in your lawn

  • Parts of your lawn have become waterlogged

What can I do about tree roots in my sewer line?

If it appears as though tree roots may be clogging your sewer line, you’ll need to decide whether it’s time to bring in a professional, or try one of these DIY options:

Foaming root killer

This is a root killer created specifically for this purpose, not the kind you’d use in your yard— though it’s also available at any hardware or home and garden store. Be sure that the product you purchase contains dichlobenil. To use it, pour the powder into your toilet bowl and flush. The foaming will start when the powder comes in contact with the water.

Rock salt

Get two pounds of rock salt, and split it up into four half-pound portions. Pour the first half-pound of salt into the toilet, and flush until it’s gone. Repeat this process with the remaining 1.5 pounds of rock salt, then leave the toilet alone—no flushing, dumping, etc.—for 12 hours. Try flushing the toilet again. If it’s still clogged, it’s a job for a professional.

Copper sulfate 

Although copper sulfate gets the job done, it’s also toxic to humans and other animals, and has been banned in some areas, including multiple counties in California. Be sure to check your local laws before using it. If you’re in the clear and decide to use copper sulfate, you’ll need to pour half a cup into the toilet, flush until it has washed out of the bowl, then pack up any people and pets residing in your household, and leave for a few hours while your home airs out.



Source: LifeHacker – How to Tell If Tree Roots Are Growing in Your Sewer Line

The Newest Nest Hub Is 50% Off for Black Friday

Black Friday deals are here, and right now you can pick up the second-generation Google Nest Hub 7″ for half the usual price. It’s currently $49.99 (down from $99.99) at Best Buy, Walmart, and Target. This is the lowest price it’s hit in the last four months, according to Honey’s price history.

The Google Nest Hub is the perfect bedside companion

The second generation of the Google Nest Hub 7″ was released in 2021 and is the latest version of the device. One of its biggest changes from the previous version is its ability to track your sleep. A built-in Google Soli motion-sensing chip is able to track your sleeping and breathing when it’s placed on a nightstand next to you (although if you sleep with someone else, there is no way for the Nest Hub to distinguish who is moving, coughing, or having bad sleep). It also has 50% more bass for better audio, a feature that lets you pause or play your content by waving your hand, and a machine-learning chip that learns your common commands so it can handle them more efficiently. One of the biggest omissions is a camera; other smart screen companions like Amazon’s Echo Show do have them, so you can video chat with your contacts. You can read the full “excellent” review of the Google Nest Hub from PCMag here.

If you do want a Google Assistant companion with a screen that has a camera, Google launched the Nest Hub Max in 2019, and it’s currently $129.99 (originally $229.99) at Best Buy. It doesn’t have as good of a display, and the sound quality won’t be as good, but it does have a bigger screen with a camera, so you’ll be able to take video calls while your hands are busy. (You can read the full, also “excellent” review from PCMag here.)



Source: LifeHacker – The Newest Nest Hub Is 50% Off for Black Friday

How to Protect Your Finances From Identity Theft

With Black Friday and Cyber Monday right around the corner, you’re sure to be entering your credit card info online a heck of a lot more than usual. As you do so, how can you be sure you’re not opening yourself up to credit card fraud and other kinds of identity theft? Having your identity stolen can be a nightmare that damages your finances and credit score. Fortunately, there are steps you can take to help protect yourself.

How to protect your finances from identity theft

Monitor your accounts

Carefully monitor all of your financial accounts on a regular basis. This is good advice all year, but especially during the holidays. Watch for any suspicious activity, such as purchases you don’t recognize.

If you see something suspicious, contact your payment method’s fraud department immediately. Here’s our guide to when you might need to dispute a credit card charge versus file a fraud complaint.

It’s a good idea to review your credit card and bank statements thoroughly each month, and to check your credit report at least once a year for accounts you don’t recognize. On that note…

Check your credit report

Get a copy of your credit report from each of the three major credit bureaus once per year. You can do this at any time at no cost through Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Scan the reports for any accounts you don’t recognize as your own. This helps you catch fraudulent activity in your name faster.

Set up alerts

Many banks and credit card companies allow you to set up alerts to notify you of certain account activity. For example, you can be alerted for any charges over a certain amount or when a withdrawal is made. These alerts allow you to take quick action if fraudulent activity occurs.

Use strong passwords

Create unique, strong passwords for all your financial accounts. Avoid common or easily guessed passwords that identity thieves could crack. Use a mix of letters, numbers, and symbols. And if you upgrade your passwords to be as random (aka strong) as possible, you don’t have to worry about constantly changing them.

Still, changing your passwords is especially important if you receive word your information has been compromised in a data breach, Make sure change your password at any sites where you use the same login information—and stop reusing passwords already!

Freeze your credit

If you suspect fraud, placing a freeze on your credit prevents new accounts from being opened in your name without the freeze being lifted. This makes it harder for thieves to open fraudulent accounts. Just remember to lift the freeze when applying for legitimate new credit.

Be wary of scams

Don’t fall for phone calls, emails or texts asking for your personal information. Banks and financial institutions will not contact you asking for sensitive data like passwords or social security numbers. Avoid clicking links or downloading attachments from sources you don’t know. And yes, even in the digital age, ATM card skimming still happens. For more, read up on all the ways your credit card information can be stolen.

Being proactive is the best way to thwart scammers and other bad actors. Monitoring your accounts, using strong passwords, and checking your credit are essential steps. With proper precautions, you can help secure your finances. For more, stay up-to-date with Lifehacker’s scam coverage here.



Source: LifeHacker – How to Protect Your Finances From Identity Theft

Turn Your Thanksgiving Turkey Carcass Into a Killer Soup Overnight

It’s the end of the Thanksgiving meal. Looming over the kitchen clean-up crew is the turkey carcass, while stacks of plates are being hauled towards the counters by “helpful” dinner guests—as are serving dishes, glasses and tableware ephemera. At this point in the meal, you usually want to throw everything at the wall, but you need to keep it together long enough to dispense with leftovers and start the dishes rolling. Allow me to make your life easier by solving one problem quickly: We’re going to make turkey noodle soup that is so good, you will find yourself making it again next month—and it actually saves you work. 

How to make the best turkey soup

At the end of the meal, have one person assigned to removing any turkey left on the carcass. The goal isn’t slices; just get it off the bird as best you can—the larger the pieces, the better—and throw it in a resealable plastic storage bag. Have a large, empty stockpot waiting on the stove and toss the carcass in there, as well as any bones that made it back from the table. It’s fine if there’s leftover meat on the bones; it’ll help flavor the broth, too. If there happens to be vegetables lying around from appetizers or prep (raw or cooked carrots, onions, garlic, celery, fennel, or mushrooms), toss those in too. In fact, you can save carrot and garlic peels, onion trimming, and other vegetable ends during meal prep to toss in at the end of the night. Fill the pot with enough cold water to cover the carcass, then put that pot in the oven and turn it on to the lowest setting, usually 180-200°F, and ignore it until the next morning. 

In the morning, remove the pot and allow it cool just enough to pour it through a colander, so the soup ends up in a smaller pot, and then throw away whatever remains in the colander; you should be left with a nice, clear, golden broth. Turkey has very little fat, so you don’t need to strain it again. 

Next, chop up celery, carrots, and mushrooms, toss them into the pot, and heat it up over medium heat to a simmer. Allow it to simmer for thirty minutes, taste it, and adjust with salt and pepper, then toss in your egg noodles. Allow them to simmer for five to 10 minutes, and if you feel so inclined, throw some chopped parsley in.  It is great as is, but a minute or so before you serve it, you can toss in some leftover shredded turkey meat, just long enough to heat through. 

This soup makes the best of a bird that is often only so-so. The bones have been roasted, so they offer depth to the broth. Turkey broth, it turns out, is far tastier than the turkey itself. Mostly, though, you’ve managed to delay dealing with the carcass until the next day, and you ended up with an entirely separate meal that is fantastically easy to reheat.

Post-Thanksgiving turkey noodle soup

Ingredients:

  • 1 turkey carcass

  • Cold water to cover

  • 16 ounces of carrots, chopped

  • 1 whole stalk of celery, chopped

  • 8 ounces of mushrooms, chopped

  • 12 ounces of egg noodles

  • 2-3 tablespoons of fresh parsley, chopped (optional)

  • Leftover shredded turkey meat (optional)

  1. Add carcass and leftover vegetables to a stockpot, cover in cold water and place in oven. Turn oven to lowest setting, and leave on overnight.

  2. Remove pot, cool enough to handle, and pour entire contents through colander into a smaller pot. Discard whatever is in the colander; the broth should be golden and clear.

  3. Put pot on medium heat, add chopped celery, carrots, and mushrooms. Allow to simmer for thirty minutes, season to taste, and add the egg noodles. Simmer for five to 10 minutes, until noodles are cooked. Add shredded turkey back in, if desired.

  4. Garnish with chopped parsley, if desired, and serve.



Source: LifeHacker – Turn Your Thanksgiving Turkey Carcass Into a Killer Soup Overnight

Today's NYT Connections Hints (and Answer) for Wednesday, November 22, 2023

There are two devilishly tricky categories today, so buckle up, it’ll be a fun ride! If you’re looking for the Connections answer for Wednesday, November 22, 2023, read on—I’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solutions to all four categories. Along the way, I’ll explain the meanings of the trickier words and we’ll learn how everything fits together. Beware, there are spoilers below for November 22, NYT Connections #164! Read on if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Connections game. 

If you want an easy way to come back to our Connections hints every day, bookmark this page. You can also find our past hints there as well, in case you want to know what you missed in a previous puzzle.

Below, I’ll give you some oblique hints at today’s Connections answers. And farther down the page, I’ll reveal the themes and the answers. Scroll slowly and take just the hints you need!

Connections board for November 22, 2023: SCARF, PASS, MIRROR, CLARK, RAVINE, APPLE, COWL, WOLF, CRAVEN, CANYON, GORGE, BASHFUL, GULP, CHEN, QUEEN, GULCH.

Credit: Connections/NYT


Does today’s Connections game require any special knowledge?

There are some references to an old but well-known movie, and some geographical terms. It will help to know that a GULCH is a narrow, steep-sided ravine.

Hints for the themes in today’s Connections puzzle

Here are some spoiler-free hints for the groupings in today’s Connections:

  • Yellow category – Valleys.

  • Green category – Shovel it in.

  • Blue category – Who’s the fairest of them all?

  • Purple category – See birds? Sea birds? 

Does today’s Connections game involve any wordplay?

Yes. There’s a category that looks like the theme must relate to names, but it’s actually something far trickier that relates to the spelling of those words. (There’s also a category that’s tricky because the words all refer to a certain movie; that’s not wordplay but I have to mention that because it’s going to trip a lot of folks up.)

Ready to hear the answers? Keep scrolling if you want a little more help.


BEWARE: Spoilers follow for today’s Connections puzzle!

We’re about to give away some of the answers. Scroll slowly if you don’t want the whole thing spoiled. (The full solution is a bit further down.)

What are the ambiguous words in today’s Connections?

  • A SCARF can be something you wear, like a COWL, but it is also a verb meaning to WOLF down your food. 

  • A GORGE can be a geographical feature, like a RAVINE, or a shortening of GORGEOUS. But today, you’ll want to think about how one can GORGE on the food one SCARFs down. 

  • To be BASHFUL is to be shy. BASHFUL is also one of the characters in Disney’s Snow White

What are the categories in today’s Connections?

  • Yellow: AREAS BETWEEN MOUNTAINS AND HILLS

  • Green: EAT VORACIOUSLY

  • Blue: FEATURED IN “SNOW WHITE” 

  • Purple: “C” + BIRD

DOUBLE BEWARE: THE SOLUTION IS BELOW

Ready to learn the answers to today’s Connections puzzle? I give them all away below.

What are the yellow words in today’s Connections?

The yellow grouping is considered to be the most straightforward. The theme for today’s yellow group is AREAS BETWEEN MOUNTAINS AND HILLS and the words are: CANYON, GULCH, PASS, RAVINE.

What are the green words in today’s Connections?

The green grouping is supposed to be the second-easiest. The theme for today’s green category is EAT VORACIOUSLY and the words are: GORGE, GULP, SCARF, WOLF.

What are the blue words in today’s Connections?

The blue grouping is the second-hardest. The theme for today’s blue category is FEATURED IN “SNOW WHITE” and the words are: APPLE, BASHFUL, MIRROR, QUEEN.

What are the purple words in today’s Connections?

The purple grouping is considered to be the hardest. The theme for today’s purple category is “C” + BIRD  and the words are: CHEN, CLARK, COWL, CRAVEN.

How I solved today’s Connections

RAVINE, CANYON, GORGE, and GULCH are all sharp valleys formed by rivers, but I’m one away. I don’t think PASS fits as well into the theme, but it’s probably what I’m missing. 

So I look at other meanings of my four words. GORGE can match with GULP, SCARF, and WOLF to mean greedily eating. 🟩 RAVINE, CANYON, GULCH, and PASS are indeed my missing group of valleys. 🟨

MIRROR, QUEEN, and APPLE strike me instantly as iconic elements of Snow White (Disney’s 1937 film, specifically); the title character’s dress also features a distinctive COWL. But just before I hit submit, I look at what’s left and realize that BASHFUL is also a character in that movie. So what do I remove from my movie set? Possibly George COWL, who Google tells me is a director of classic movies. 

That was the right move. 🟦 I remember Wes CRAVEN from our group of horror movie directors on Halloween, which is why I wondered if COWL could be a director as well. I now google whether there is a director named CHEN (there are several) or CLARK (ditto). I submit the group, but I would have never guessed the theme–C words with a bird in them. 🟪

Connections 
Puzzle #164
🟨🟨🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟪🟪🟪🟪

How to play Connections

I have a full guide to playing Connections, but here’s a refresher on the rules:

First, find the Connections game either on the New York Times website or in their Crossword app. You’ll see a game board with 16 tiles, each with one word or phrase. Your job is to select a group of four tiles that have something in common. Often they are all the same type of thing (for example: RAIN, SLEET, HAIL, and SNOW are all types of wet weather) but sometimes there is wordplay involved (for example, BUCKET, GUEST, TOP TEN, and WISH are all types of lists: bucket list, guest list, and so on).

Select four items and hit the Submit button. If you guessed correctly, the category and color will be revealed. (Yellow is easiest, followed by green, then blue, then purple.) If your guess was incorrect, you’ll get a chance to try again.

You win when you’ve correctly identified all four groups. But if you make four mistakes before you finish, the game ends and the answers are revealed.

How to win Connections

The most important thing to know to win Connections is that the groupings are designed to be tricky. Expect to see overlapping groups. For example, one puzzle seemed to include six breakfast foods: BACON, EGG, PANCAKE, OMELET, WAFFLE, and CEREAL. But BACON turned out to be part of a group of painters along with CLOSE, MUNCH, and WHISTLER, and EGG was in a group of things that come by the dozen (along with JUROR, ROSE, and MONTH). So don’t hit “submit” until you’ve confirmed that your group of four contains only those four things.

If you’re stuck, another strategy is to look at the words that seem to have no connection to the others. If all that comes to mind when you see WHISTLER is the painting nicknamed “Whistler’s Mother,” you might be on to something. When I solved that one, I ended up googling whether there was a painter named Close, because Close didn’t fit any of the obvious themes, either.

Another way to win when you’re stuck is, obviously, to read a few helpful hints–which is why we share these pointers every day. Check back tomorrow for the next puzzle!



Source: LifeHacker – Today’s NYT Connections Hints (and Answer) for Wednesday, November 22, 2023