Don't Make an ATMistake!
We’ve all heard about “skimming.” That’s when you use your ATM card and some scam artist has inserted an additional piece of card-reading hardware that will steal you ATM card information. The people that monitor this sort of thing say incidents of skimming were up 500% in 2015 over the previous year.
Here’s how you can reduce the risk of someone getting you valuable information:
- Stick with the Chip – Digital chips are harder to hack (not impossible, but harder). Try to avoid using card readers where you still have to swipe the card's magnetic strip.
- Use a Bank Machine – While not perfect, bank ATMs are more secure. They are better maintained and have 24/7 surveillance cameras. Machines at gas stations and convenience stores account for the majority of card information theft.
- Inspect Before Swiping – If the machine doesn’t accept your card smoothly, walk away. Newer machines also have a flashing light in the card slot. If you don’t see one or it’s partially obscured, you might want to find another machine.
- Always Check Your Card Statements – Make there are no unusual or unfamiliar charges.
- Talk with Your Bank about Alternative Solutions – You might open a separate account with a smaller amount of money just for ATM purchases or you can lower the daily limit for ATM withdrawals.
10 Things to Know about Blood Pressure
Keeping an eye on your blood pressure can help you know if you’re at risk for heart disease or a stroke. But you need to know more than just the raw numbers you get from that free blood pressure machine at your local supermarket or pharmacy.
Here are five facts that can help you “handle the pressure.”
1. Blood pressure climbs as you age – It’s normal, but make sure you are getting it checked regularly to ensure it doesn’t become hypertension.
2. The top number is the one to watch – Systolic pressure is the one to pay attention to because it measures the peak force your pulmonary system is experiencing.
3. The optimum blood pressure number is different for different people – In fact, experts don’t agree on what the ideal pressure should be. Work with your primary care physician to determine what range is optimum for you.
4. Healthy diet and lifestyle changes can work as well as a pill – Cutting back on salt is the easiest. Dropping weight, while more difficult, can also help. It almost goes without saying that regular exercise will not only lower your blood pressure, but can provide other positive health benefits. (Make sure you consult with your physician before beginning any exercise regimen.)
5. Yes, coffee makes blood pressure spike, but… The spike lasts about 3 hours but appears to have no long-lasting effect. So, if you still need that jolt of java in the morning, most experts agree that you can go for it.
5 Ways to Be Sure You Get the Most Accurate Readings
When you’re checking your blood pressure, here are 5 ways to guarantee you’re producing the most reliable readings.
1. Be as still as possible – Make sure you haven’t been doing anything stressful (anything that might raise your heart rate) like exercising or lifting heavy objects. Experts also recommend that you refrain from smoking and caffeinated beverages for at least 30 minutes before you check your pressure.
2. Be seated correctly – Sit up straight (like your mom always told you) in a chair with a solid back on it. Keep your feet separate and flat on the floor. Your arm should be supported, either by an arm rest or place your chair next to a table that will have your elbow at about heart level.
3. Be sure you take your blood pressure at the same time every day – Our blood pressure will vary regularly during different day parts. To make sure you’re comparing “apples to apples,” so to speak, take your readings at the same time of day.
4. Be sure you take multiple readings and keep track of your results – The experts recommend that you take two readings, one minute apart, every time you check your blood pressure. Make sure your record each result. That way, you’ll have a convenient, accurate record to take with you when you visit your healthcare provider.
5. Be careful not to let your clothes interfere with the measuring device – If possible, wear something short-sleeved or sleeveless. If not, loose-fitting long sleeves that can be rolled up without constricting your upper arm works best.
Taking regular readings is important because a single reading is just like a snapshot. It may not give you the best picture. Taking multiple readings over a period of time will bring your true heart health into better focus.
Kookie Talk
We loved Kookie on 77 Sunset Strip not just for the way he dressed and his famous hairstyle. We loved the hipster slang he would use in every episode. We didn’t know if the terms were actually in use among the cognoscenti in large urban areas or if the show’s writers were just making them up. And we didn’t care.
Here are a few classic “Kookie-isms.” See how many you remember:
Don’t point your ears – Don’t turn around
Endsville – The best
Ginchiest – Beyond Endsville
Light up the tilt sign – Lie
Slip me a Washington – Give me a dollar bill
Wheeling – Driving
The beam came to me – I got the idea
Mushroom people – Night owls
Blasting off – Leaving
It’s real nervous – It’s real good
Satchels – Bags under the eyes
That cat has hi-fi thoughts – The guy is smart
Fold a fender – Park a car
I’m still sending – I’ve got more to tell you
Just Sayin'...
After the events of this past week, this may sound good...
The TV That Time Forgot: Video Village
Video Village was one of the first game shows to debut after the infamous quiz show scandals. Up until its debut, most quiz shows fell into one of two categories. 1.) A contestant tried to stump a panel of D-list celebrities (I mean, did anyone ever know what Arlene Francis was “famous” for?) 2.) Two contestants answered questions or solved puzzles while in isolation booths or standing right next to the game show host.
Video Village’s concept was as simple as it was different. It was a board game transferred to TV. The contestants were the living game pieces. They had friends or family members (almost always a spouse or boyfriend/girlfriend) who spun the dice.
The show debuted in prime time on July 1, 1960. A daytime version started on July 11th - both on CBS. For that first summer, game show perennial Jack Narz was the host. The hostess duties were handled by Joanne Copeland, who was eventually to become Mrs. Johnny Carson # 2.
After Narz departed, the show was taken over by a young Canadian lad named Monte Hall.
The game played like any board game. Dice were spun. Players moved the number of spaces indicated and had good or bad things happen to them based on the space they landed on.
The night time version ended after the summer of 1960. The daytime version ran until June 15, 1962.
Two kid show versions were spun off: Kideo Village (from September 1961 to June 1962) and Shenanigans with Stubby Kaye on ABC (in 1964 and 1965).
The “home version” board game from Milton Bradley was a no-brainer.
BTW – Both Video Village and Shenanigans featured Kenny Williams (who later joined Monte Hall on Let’s Make a Deal) as the announcer.
Friday Night at the Drive-In: "Ocean's 11" (1960)
The Rat Pack (started by Humphrey Bogart and inherited by Frank Sinatra after Bogey’s death) made two movies in the sixties. Neither were great shakes as movies go, but the first one, Ocean’s 11, is a wonderful time machine back to a place and time that no longer exist.
Released in 1960, Ocean’s 11 can be seen as the 1950’s last hurrah. In just a few short years, the British invasion in music and fashion would change everything. Film historians think the film was conceived as way to give Frank, Peter Lawford, Joey Bishop, and the rest something to do with their days while they were headlining at the Sands resort at night.
Thanks to George Clooney’s remake, most know the plot centers around Sinatra and his old army buddies attempting to rob 5 Vegas casinos simultaneously (in the Clooney remake, it's only 3).
It doesn’t really matter. The plot takes a back seat to the easy-going repartee of the ensemble cast. Frank and especially Dean Martin get to croon. Sammy Davis, Jr. is still relegated to the role of a garbage man who riffs on old Amos & Andy impressions and the Rat Pack’s one female member, Shirley MacLaine shows up for a totally pointless scene with Dino near the film’s climax.
No worries. The fun comes from digging on the late 1950’s fashions (a time when men still wore hats) and a fascinating look at a Las Vegas that seems downright quaint by today’s standards.
In 1960, most American had still not made the trip to Sin City. The daytime casino action was centered around Fremont Street with just a handful of resorts on a patch of barren desert road known as “The Strip” pulling in the evening crowd with their shows.
Compared to today’s palaces like the Venetian, Bellagio and others, the Sahara, Riviera, Sands, Desert Inn and the Flamingo depicted in Ocean’s 11 have all the glitz and glitter of a redecorated rumpus room in a suburban basement somewhere in the Midwest.
But it was a time when this small band of entertainers ruled the town like royalty.
So give yourself a treat and take a trip to 1960 with the Rat Pack. And hang on through the credits. The film’s best joke happens at the very end as Ocean’s 11, now 10, make their way along the Strip on foot.
BTW – The other Rat Pack film was Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964).
Making Home Renovations Pay
Fixing up your home? You might want to tell your insurance company about it.
8 of the 10 largest home insurers offer little-publicized discounts for certain renovations or upgrades.
Go to BankRate.com and type in "home insurance discounts" for more information.
Vitamin C to See
Research indicates that vitamin C can reduce the risk of developing cataracts.
But don’t start popping pills. The study also should that this benefit only comes from dietary vitamin C. In others words, you need to consume citrus fruits and dark green vegetables!
The Essential Boomer Album Collection - Part 9
Tapestry (1971)
Carole King was already one of rock’s most successful songwriters. But no one could have predicted that when she finally started singing her own songs, she would create one of the best selling albums of all-time by a female vocalist, especially when her only previous album had not climbed higher than #84 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Tapestry has sold more than 25 million copies and is considered one of the top 50 albums ever released by a rock artist.
Together with her then-husband, Gerry Goffin, King had already secured a place in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame co-writing such tunes as:
- Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
- Take Good Care of My Baby
- Some Kind of Wonderful
- The Loco-Motion
- Chains
- Go Away Little Girl
- Up on the Roof
- One Fine Day
- I’m into Something Good
- Just Once in My Life
- Pleasant Valley Sunday
And so many more.
While King often sang on the demo discs (records produced quickly and only intended to demonstrate the song to potential recording artists), she was reluctant to release an album of her own. Friends, including James Taylor, kept encouraging her. So in the spring of 1970, she released Writer. It stiffed.
Undeterred, the very next year she released Tapestry. It was like a dam bursting. Powered by a monster double-sided single “It’s Too Late” b/w “I Feel the Earth Move,” Tapestry roared up the album charts, becoming the first album by a solo female artist to ever rack up at least 10 million in sales.
She copped four Grammys that year for Album of the Year, Best Female Pop Performance, Song of the Year and Record of the Year. Tapestry remained on the Billboard charts for 313 weeks (second only to Dark Side of the Moon).
Her subsequent albums have been very well received, five of them landing in the Top 10.
There is no question that any essential album collection for a Baby Boomer has to include Tapestry. It’s not “too late” to include it in yours.
Before You Take That Cold Medicine, Read This
As we roll into cold and flu season, many of us will be guzzling those over-the-counter remedies we think will help us cope with the symptoms.
There is a potential downside. Actually, there are SEVERAL potential downsides.
Acetaminophen – Many over-the-counter pills and fluids contain this common pain reliever (the main ingredient in Tylenol). It’s also found in many cold medications. If you taking both pain relief pills and cold syrup, you may quickly find yourself consuming way more than the 3,000-4,000 milligram dosage recommended as the maximum safe dosage.
Too much acetaminophen can lead to nausea, stomach pain, loss of appetite, and ultimately to liver damage. (We don’t have to tell you that liver damage is something we want to avoid.)
Be a Romper Room Do-Bee: You should also stay away from alcohol when taking acetaminophen. And check the ingredients of all the medications you’re taking to keep yourself under that 3,000-4,000 milligram number.
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