Human Brain Sees Men as a Whole, Woman as Parts

Printer-friendly versionSend to friend
Posted by Johnny Robish on July 24, 2012 - 10:18pm
Human Brain Sees Men as a Whole, Woman as Parts: A glimpse at any magazine rack will tell you that women are frequently the focus of sexual objectification, but new research finds that the brain actually processes images of women differently than those of men, contributing to this trend. Funny, but true. In fact, even women tend see men more as “a whole,” only they tend spell it “a-hole.”

Kirstie Alley Sued Over Fraudulent Weight Loss Methods: TMZ is reporting that a Los Angeles woman has filed a class action lawsuit against Kirstie Alley, alleging that Alley did not lose 100 pounds by using Organic Liaison - a weight-loss program she developed and markets - but rather by dancing the weight off during "Dancing With The Stars" Season 12 and by following a strict low-calorie diet. If found guilty, Alley could be legally required to pig-out like crazy to eradicate any traces of the fraudulent weight loss.

http://johnnyrobish.com

Burger King Employee Posts Photo Stepping in Lettuce: A Burger King Employee has been fired after anonymously posting a photo of himself stepping in the restaurant’s lettuce to the internet image board 4chan. Fortunately for the company’s reputation, most people who regularly patronize fast food restaurants view lettuce, tomatoes or any other vegetable as simply something you have to scrape off the sandwich to get to the meat.

Late Night Computer Use Linked to Depression: A study conducted by a team of neuroscientists at Ohio State University Medical Center found that sitting in front of a computer screen late into the night could increase your chances of becoming depressed. Yea, especially when you’re up late, trying to pay all your bills online. Luckily, studies like this tend to put most of us to right to sleep.

http://johnnyrobish.com

Dangers of Prolonged Sitting: For people working in sedentary desk jobs, emerging research shows that sitting for long periods of time contributes not only to heart attack, stroke and overall death risk, but also lower life expectancies. So kids, next time your teacher tells you to “sit down and be still,” its probably because she’s trying to kill you.