
First, I invented a new game! “Drugstore Shoplifter” is a quiz adventure.

Moving on, I could not be more excited about this week’s issue. “I know this is a lie because the interviewer is still alive.” “F*cking New Yorkers hahaha who gives a f*ck what they think.”Ī third comment on the survey, referring to New York’s reputation as a dangerous city: Referring to the survey, one person remarked: “To the OP sorry, he's married, no matter how much you try and get his attention you aren't going to date him!” But the funniest responses came after I posted the essay to the Jordan Peterson Fan Club on Facebook. The remarks left in the CAFÉ ANNE comments section were all thoughtful and delightful. Issue #42, which included my weird essay about Jordan Peterson and a survey of 50 New Yorkers asking how they’d identify him, generated the most reader comments ever. Want lifestyle and wellness news delivered to your inbox? Sign up here for Yahoo Life’s newsletter. It’s also generally not recommended to freeze eggs in their shell." "There are food safety risks involved, such as cross-contamination and under-cooking the egg, that could cause food-borne illness if not properly handled. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service. “Due to the risk of food-borne illness, especially among an at-risk population like children, it would not be recommended to do this method of egg preparation," said a spokesperson for the U.S.

Unfortunately, experts told TODAY that cooking frozen eggs could lead to serious issues, particularly in little ones. However, some people found out the hard way that the trend resulted in diarrhea, cramping and bloating.Īnother trend-gone-wrong on TikTok included fried "mini-eggs" which were supposed to be kid-friendly. It featured people filling water bottles with honey, corn syrup, or a mix of both and stashing it in the freezer before eating it, Women's Health reported. Last summer, a frozen honey trick rose in popularity. However, this isn't the first time people have crafted dangerous combinations of ingredients for the popular app. TikTok is a common spot for fun food trends, like whipped coffee and cloud bread, to pop up. “The effects can be quite bad depending on how much you inhale.” “Inhaled, these medicines also enter your bloodstream really quickly and are not going past your liver for detoxification,” Hartman said. Inhaling it into your lungs can be particularly toxic. In addition to eating the chicken, inhaling the meat when it's doused in NyQuil can prove to be quite dangerous because it's an aerosolized form. If you ate one of those cutlets completely cooked, it’d be as if you're actually consuming a quarter to half a bottle of NyQuil.” “When you cook cough medicine like NyQuil, however, you boil off the water and alcohol in it, leaving the chicken saturated with a super concentrated amount of drugs in the meat.

"Taking medicine with food typically isn’t dangerous, since many people do it with their daily dosage of medicine," Aaron Hartman, a physician and assistant clinical professor of family medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University, told Mic.com. Back in 2017, anonymous image site 4Chan showed several people making "sleepytime chicken,"and trend has been spotted on Youtube. This isn't the first time the bizarre phenomenon made the rounds on the Internet. Several of the original videos featuring the trend have since been deleted from TikTok. This content is not available due to your privacy preferences.
