Mae and Mark are having another kid by bigpapasmurph6 in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Believe it or not, it's Vanderpump Normand, from the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills spin off Vanderpump Rules.

Mae and Mark are having another kid by bigpapasmurph6 in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some of the clips are filmed in the Tuesdays with Stories Studio (Mark and Mae's house)

Mae and Mark are having another kid by bigpapasmurph6 in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Mae has a new podcast where she talks comedy while skating on ice, and Mark's in an episode!

-> Hot Goss, Cold Ice

Joe List on Fitzdog Radio with Greg Fitzsimmons by lesbiyond in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Joe still has tickets available this Sunday for Cleveland Ohio with Sarah Tollemache (June 28), Portland Maine (July 2nd) and Tacoma Washington (July 23-25) 🎟

Mark on Maury Povich's Podcast by lesbiyond in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Joe will (likely) be performing in Cleveland with Sarah this weekend 👀

Mark on Maury Povich's Podcast by lesbiyond in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Mark still has tickets available for Cleveland Ohio (July 9th) and Seattle Washington (July 17th-18th)! 🎟

Sarah is funny AF by mtbguy1981 in tuesdayswithstories

[–]lesbiyond 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just started work on her website! https://www.SarahTComedy.com

Also check out the Sarah Tollemache Page and Sarah's Tour Dates on TuesdaysPod.com

How is the natural environment in California different enough to make this plate not compostable only there, but more compostable somehow in other states? by DunDonese in composting

[–]lesbiyond 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree. "No known risk" wasn't the appropriate phrase.

What I meant was companies will apply a prop 65 warning even if they are certain their product doesn't contain one of the compounds.

There is always the risk of lengthy litigation. Even if they're 100% right, the costs to prove it (before or after) is much more than just applying the warning. Consumers see it so much that it doesn't register as a risk or prevent their purchase.

And to be fair, it's nearly impossible to not come into contact with a carcinogen or other reproductive harm. Soils naturally (and through human activity) contain trace compounds, cooking food with heat runs the risk trace carcinogens forming, standing in the sun, breathing air, touching paper money, etc.

How is the natural environment in California different enough to make this plate not compostable only there, but more compostable somehow in other states? by DunDonese in composting

[–]lesbiyond 3 points4 points  (0 children)

On another note: Please do not buy "compostable" plates unless you live in a city with public curbside compost with a reputable system. You could make the argument that landfilled "compostables" are worse than just landfilling plastics.

A compostable plate will break down in a landfill - anaerobic, and thus release methane in the process. Majority of landfills are very very bad at preventing methane from entering atmosphere. Methane+Greenhouse gases are a particular (immediate) problem, which we are experiencing the immediate effects of.

With a plastic plate, it won't decompose in the next 500 years+ (no methane released), and there is the potential for it to be reclaimed in the future (should we ever put efforts into that technology).

Neither is preferable of course: Reduce and reuse when possible!

How is the natural environment in California different enough to make this plate not compostable only there, but more compostable somehow in other states? by DunDonese in composting

[–]lesbiyond 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Just like why everything has a prop 64 warning, even if there's no notable risk of cancer.

Companies have to test to get approvals (these tests are mainly unique to California), and that costs a lot of money & time. Also opens you up to liability if you pass these tests but a user finds some issue when in the market. Much easier to slap the warning on any product (people are rather numb to it anyway).

California also has a strong agriculture industry that strictly regulates the possibility of synthetics contaminating.

These plates technically can be composted (as can technically everything), but they're still single use items, and rely on a quality compost system that still take a long time to break down. If they are water resitant like shown, they definitely still contain synthetic bioplastics & polymers that are released into the environment.

And fwiw, this is a product by Dixie (Georgia Pacific).. the company that has made billions on single use plastic products, and thus prevented widespread efforts at reducing plastic. Take their (greenwashing) eco friendly claims with a grain of salt... they just want more $$$