So NPR used the phrase "love spuds" in this article to refer to testicles and my brain is having difficulty. I want to laugh and cry at the same time.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/08/08/636901101/boxers-or-briefs-experts-disagree-over-tight-underwears-effect-on-male-fertility
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/08/08/636901101/boxers-or-briefs-experts-disagree-over-tight-underwears-effect-on-male-fertility
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LEGO Americana Roadshow: Building Across America I just checked out this traveling exhibition from LEGO and was quite impressed. The scale ...
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Merry Christmas, everyone!
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When we let politics trump science, people are needlessly put in harm's way. http://arstechnica.com/science/2017/01/self-censoring-fears...
And the external temperature should also be taken in consideration.
ReplyDeleteI wear briefs and always have. Don't tell my children about this; they might cease to exist.
ReplyDeleteI'm always amused by how people read "slightly less likely to" and interpret it as "never" for some reason. Statistics is hard, I guess.
ReplyDeletePatrik Hanson pretty Sure is used for comedy effect to make the article more amicable and less dry
ReplyDeleteIs not the Scientific Journal, is meant for general public
ReplyDeleteBoxers here. BTW, 55 years ago, the popular term was gonads. "I kicked right in the 'nads."
ReplyDeletePhillip Landmeier Gonads, nads, cojones, coins, berries, balls, privates, family jewels, man bits...the list is nearly endless.
ReplyDeleteCraig Froehle I will be an adult and not devolve into men's anatomy of endless length :-P
ReplyDeleteI can do it.
I think I can....