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+4 +1
Bankrupt By Beanies
A short documentary about my family's sordid past with Beanie Babies. Made for my Documentary Production class at The University of Arizona.
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+6 +2
I lived “Breaking Bad”
When “Breaking Bad” debuted in 2008, I was 27 years removed from a methamphetamine addiction. But if I thought about the drug, I could still smell it exactly: Medicinal and metallic and crude and burning. I know fans will be sad when the show ends its sixth and final season later this year, but not me. For me, the show can’t end soon enough.
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+11 +3
Drugs That Cause The Most Harm
Drug-harm experts to rank 20 drugs (legal and illegal) on 16 measures of harm to the user and to wider society
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+5 +1
Regulation of E-Cigarettes Set to Stack Up
Electronic cigarettes could save the lives of millions of smokers, or they could set millions of non-smokers on the path to nicotine addiction, revolutionizing the tobacco industry into the bargain. So the question on the lips of health experts, policy-makers and consumers alike is, are the devices a health problem that needs tight regulation, or a welcome aid to smokers trying to quit?
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+9 +3
Why You’re Hooked On ‘Breaking Bad’
The show developed legions of fans thanks to deft writing, superb acting and the miracles of binge-watching
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+14 +2
Addicted to Oreos? You truly might be
Oreos are as addictive as cocaine, at least for lab rats, and just like us, they like the creamy center best. Eating the sugary treats activates more neurons in the brain’s “pleasure center” than drugs such as cocaine, the team at Connecticut College found.
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+14 +2
That Other Big Afghan Crisis, the Growing Army of Addicts
The addicts stalk the streets of this border post like hollowed-out skeletons, hair matted by filth and eyes glassy. The villages that hug the roads are veritable zombie towns, where families of men, women and children hide their addiction within barren mud compounds.
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+10 +4
10 things e-cigarettes won’t tell you
The cigarettes of the future could be safer, cheaper and less taboo than the smokes of the past. But they also threaten to upend decades of anti-smoking efforts.
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+15 +1
E-cigarettes 'could save millions'
Scientists say that if all smokers in the world switched from cigarettes to electronic cigarettes, it could save millions of lives.
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+8 +2
Why Russia’s drinkers resist AA - The Boston Globe
It’s not easy to export the American recovery movement — even to a nation that needs it.
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+4 +1
Cigars, e-cigarettes and hookahs increasingly popular among youth
Cigarette use among middle school and high school students is on the decline, but public health experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are concerned about other ways that tobacco and nicotine use is rising among kids.
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+19 +1
Smoking baby quits 40 cigarette per day habit
Indonesia’s chain-smoking baby has kicked the habit. That’s the good news. The bad news is that he’s a junk-food junkie, packing on some serious pounds!
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+15 +1
4 Illegal Drugs That Might Be Medicines
After decades of prohibition, research is illuminating new uses for some illegal drugs.
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+23 +1
No smoke without ire: the e-cigarette revolution
All new behaviours raise complex questions of etiquette. The sudden ubiquity of e-cigarettes – electronic substitutes for the cancer sticks of old – is challenging our assumptions about where it is appropriate to "smoke". More than a million people are using them in the UK and, according to Bloomberg, on present trends they will outsell conventional cigarettes by 2047. So is it OK to "fire up" in an office? In a restaurant? In a hospital bed?
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+21 +1
Tobacco Industry Tactics Limit Poorer Nations’ Smoking Laws
The industry is warning countries that their tobacco laws violate an expanding web of treaties, raising the prospect of costly, prolonged legal battles.
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+18 +1
Heroin: art and culture's last taboo
It wrecks lives – but it has also inspired art from the poetry of Baudelaire to the music of Lou Reed. Andrew Hussey traces the path of heroin through modern European culture
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+15 +1
ADHD does not exist
After a long career treating patients complaining of such problems as short attention spans and an inability to focus, neurologist Richard Saul is convinced that ADHD is a collection of symptoms, not a disease, and shouldn’t be listed in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual.
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+20 +1
Online Gaming Is South Korea's Most Popular Drug
In Seoul, where I live, there’s a PC Bang (gaming cafe) on every block, and two TV networks dedicated to Starcraft. To young Koreans, pro gaming offers the same appeal professional sports offer in many other countries. Elite gamers, who often practice up to 12 hours a day, are treated like rock stars, drawing massive audiences to their matches and earning hundreds of thousands of pounds a year.
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+4 +1
This Woman May Have Just Come Up With The Most Innovative Way To Promote Sobriety
You may laugh at this video, but her life is no laughing matter.
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+22 +1
Surgeon general links colon cancer, diabetes to smoking
Fifty years ago, smoking was linked to cancer in the first surgeon general's report on tobacco. On Friday, Dr. Boris Lushniak, the acting surgeon general, issued the 32nd report on tobacco, saying "enough is enough." His goal: eliminating the use of cigarettes and tobacco.
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