August Debut of the P&G brandSAMPLER On Facebook 8/1

Pencil it in! P&G brandSAMPLER’s back! Starting August 1, you’ll be able to register for more savings & samples for you & your family from brands including Head & Shoulders®, Always® & Prilosec OTC® – while supplies last! Don’t miss out! Are you excited about this month’s participating brandSAMPLER brands?

Starts 8/1 at noon ET.

For more like this, read Just Facebook Stuff &  Just FREEBIES

 

 

Want more FREEBIES? Sign up for WomanFreebies, and then go wait by your mailbox!





Just Rock N Roll To Me: Stream The Entire “Concert For Bangladesh” For FREE On iTunes.

George Harrison organized The Concert for Bangladesh in 1971 with a little help from his friends. Watch it now for FREE on iTunes.

The Concert For Bangladesh was the event title for two benefit concerts organized by George Harrison and Ravi Shankar, held at noon and at 7:00 p.m. on August 1, 1971, playing to a total of 40,000 people at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Organized for the relief of refugees from East Pakistan (now independent Bangladesh) after the 1970 Bhola cyclone and during the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities and Bangladesh Liberation War, the event was the first benefit concert of this magnitude in world history. It featured a supergroup of performers that included Ravi Shankar, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Billy Preston, Leon Russell, Badfinger, and Ringo Starr.

An album was released later in 1971 and a concert film was released in 1972, with later releases for home video. In 2005, the film was re-issued on DVD accompanied by a new documentary.

The concert raised US$243,418.51 for Bangladesh relief, which was administered by UNICEF. Sales of the album and DVD continue to benefit the George Harrison Fund for UNICEF.

Source: Wikipedia





Just For Your Birthday: FREE Meals & Deals- Fox & Hound

What’s better than eating for FREE? Eating for FREE on your Birthday! Read Just For Your Birthday: FREE Meals & Deals for new places to register your Birthday. Fox & Hound will give you a FREE entrée with purchase.





Bruegger’s Is Going To Put A FREE Bagel Where?

Sign up for emails from Bruegger’s, and they will somehow slide a FREE bagel with cream cheese into your inbox. Or maybe they will email you a coupon, I’m not sure.

For more like this, read Just Restaurant Deals.

If you ♥ to eat out, it’s time to get your Groupon! SAVE up to 90% on local eateries, spa’s, activities and much more. And it’s FREE to join! Start SAVING today.





Smokey Bones Coupon: SAVE $10 Off $20

Use this coupon until August 4 to SAVE $10 on a $20 bill at Smokey Bones. Find locations here.

For more like this, read Just Restaurant Deals.

If you ♥ to eat out, it’s time to get your Groupon! SAVE up to 90% on local eateries, spa’s, activities and much more. And it’s FREE to join! Start SAVING today.





Picture Of The Day- July 31





FREE Preview: Dish Network- WE tv And IFC

You can catch a free preview of WE tv and IFC going on now until August 29th on Dish Network.

For more like this, read Just Movies & TV.

Source: FREE Preview TV.

 

 





For Those Who Serve: Public Safety & Military Appreciation Days At Worlds Of Fun & Oceans Of Fun

Police, correction officers, firefighters, EMTs and active, retired & reserve members of the military–thank you for all you do!  We would like you to be our guest during Public Safety and Military Appreciation Days, August 15 – 19, 2011.

Present your official photo I.D. at any Worlds of Fun or Oceans of Fun Front Gate ticket window Aug. 15 – 19 and receive free admission to Worlds of Fun, Oceans of Fun or both!

For more like this, read For Those Who Serve.





Just Healthy: Healthy Eating Habits Programmed During Infancy

A new study proposes that our earliest eating experiences establish dietary habits for the rest of our lives. If we eat healthy, “complex” foods in infancy, these tastes become programmed as our favorite flavors for our whole lives.  One more reason making your own baby food is a good idea.

Scientific American reports:

Today, unfortunately, most of those early lovin’ spoonfuls contain more sugar and salt than is nutritionally wise. A recent study in the Journal of Public Health found that 53 percent of processed baby and toddler foods lining supermarket shelves (at least in Canada) have an excessive number of calories from simple sugars, and 12 percent of them have too much sodium. The authors, noting how overindulgence on both of these nutrients is tied to cardiovascular disease and diabetes, suggest that early exposure to overly sweet or salty meals could promote a taste for these unhealthy ingredients in the future.

How does breast milk play into these research results?  I  have never tasted it since I was a baby, but I have read it tastes like warm vanilla ice cream. If that is the case, wouldn’t that hardwire our brains for sweets?

Apparently, there is a reason kids crave sweets:

Children do have an increased affinity for sweet foods compared to adults, presumably due to their nutritional needs required for active growth. But there has been little evidence to support the idea that increased sugar intake will affect preferences as an adult. “The liking for sweets,” Beauchamp says, “is a particularly strong case where you [have] a very big biological component.”

I always enjoy viewing annoying aspects of my children’s behavior as developmental. From dropping things from a high chair to craving sweets, it’s helpful to remember our children are instinctually motivated.  When it comes to eating habits, we do have some say:

Our diets are unhealthy, that much is clear. Now, an increasing number of scientists and physicians wonder if our propensity for unhealthy, obesity-inducing eating might be tied to the food choices made during our first weeks and months of life. Indeed, the latest research indicates that what we learn to like as infants paves the way for what we eat as adults. If true, we might be able to tackle the obesity epidemic in a new and more promising way, one that starts with the very first spoonful.

Whole foods from the start are obviously the first step towards lifelong healthy eating.

Source: EcoChildsPlay