Tuesday, February 5, 2013

McDonald's to put 'Fish McBites' in Happy Meals

(AP) ? McDonald's says it is offering its first new Happy Meal entree in a decade: Fish McBites.

The world's biggest hamburger chain said the Fish McBites will be widely available at U.S. restaurants starting this week through March, to coincide with Lent. The Happy Meals will come with seven pieces of Fish McBites, French fries, apple slices and a drink.

The company had already announced last month that the Fish McBites would be sold on the standard menu in three sizes ? snack (10 pieces), regular (15 pieces) and shareable (30 pieces).

Fish McBites, which are fried pieces of fish, will use the same Alaska Pollock used in the fast-food chain's Filet-O-Fish.

The launch marks the start of what McDonald's says is a bigger pipeline of new limited-time offers for the year ahead. By adding more variety to its menu, the company is hoping it can fend off intensifying competition and tempt customers to eat out more at a time when many are being more careful about their spending.

Brian Irwin, director of marketing for McDonald's USA, said the Fish McBites are a twist on the popular Chicken McBites that were introduced as a limited-time offer last year. He said the company thought they'd work well in Happy Meals because there's a "fun, poppable" aspect to them. That's why McDonald's sells more Happy Meals with Chicken McNuggets than hamburgers or cheeseburgers, he said ? there's something about the dipping that kids like.

Additionally, Irwin said the company's internal research showed that moms wanted more seafood options on the menu.

Although the Fish McBites will be offered temporarily, Irwin said the company might bring them back periodically if they perform well.

Depending on which drink is selected, McDonald's says the Happy Meals with Fish McBites have between 385 calories and 415 calories.

McDonald's, often a target for health advocacy groups that say Happy Meals encourage kids to eat junk food, in 2011 began adding apple slices and reduced the portion of French fries in the meal boxes.

For adults, the Fish McBites will come with tartar sauce and be served in cartons that make them easy to share or eat as a snack on the go, which Irwin said is an important attraction for customers.

"It fits in your cup holder in the car," he said.

The big question is whether they can boost sales in the months ahead. In the last quarter of 2012, McDonald's managed to eke out a higher profit in part by touting its Dollar Menu and urging franchisees to stay open on Christmas. But for January, the company warned that a key sales figure is expected to fall again. That would follow a drop in October, which was the first decline in the monthly figure after nearly a decade.

___

Follow Candice Choi at www.twitter.com/candicechoi

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-04-US-McDonald's-Fish-McBites/id-e001408cdb3640a7af04167418a29334

prop 8 maria menounos proposition 8 ricky martin larry bird chauncey billups caucus results

Monday, February 4, 2013

Love Of Family & Home: Valentine's Day Yarn Wreath with Felt ...

Hey Friends!!

I hope y'all are having a great weekend!

This week wraps-up the last week of our "Dog Days of Winter" Challenges. The theme for this week's challenge is "Love It." That means we want to see all of your Valentine's Day related projects! It can be Valentine's Day decor, crafts, and/or recipes. I'm excited to share my project for the challenge with you today!?

My Valentine's Day Wreath.....

What do you think?!?

I know it's not the traditional Valentine's Day colors, but that's alright with me. Sometimes it's fun to change things up a bit, don't ya think?!

This wreath was super easy to make! I just started with a straw wreath that I purchased at Hobby Lobby. It was $3.99, but I used my 40% off coupon to purchase it. I bought a package of light gray yarn (also from Hob Lob) & just wrapped it around the straw wreath until it was completely covered. There is no need to take the plastic packaging off the straw wreath....just leave it in place!!

Then I got busy making these super fun felt roses to decorate the wreath. I just bought several different colors of felt at Hobby Lobby to make them.?

1. Start buy cutting a circle out of the felt. For larger roses, you'll want a large circle. For smaller roses, you'll need a small one. To give the look of petals, you can cut out of wavy pattern along the outside edge.

2. Then cut your circle in a spiral as shown in the picture above. Continue the wavy pattern throughout until you reach the center of the circle, which will be your flower base.?

3. Starting at the outside of the felt/circle, begin rolling your felt towards the center.

4. The more you roll it, the more it should start resembling a rose.?

5. When you get to the end, you will be left with the base at the center of the circle. Hot glue the felt rose to the base to secure it. If the base is wider than the rose itself, simply trim off any excess.?

To dress them up a bit, I hot glued a pearl to the center of each rose. This is completely optional. ?I used my leftover pearls from this project. Then I hot glued each rose to the wreath.?

Once I had all of my roses made, I decided to add a little bunting to the center of the wreath. I just used some cardstock & my cricut machine to cut out my triangles & the letters "XOXO".

You can secure the bunting to the wreath using straight pins and/or hot glue.?

Once my bunting was added, the wreath was ready for a little photoshoot....




I just hung my wreath using some pink & white polka dot ribbon that I found at Walmart. You can hang yours however you like!

So, that's it!! Easy peasy & super cute!! Or at least I think so! :)

Be sure to come back tomorrow to show off your Valentine's day creations!! We can't wait to see what you've been working on!!

Don't forget, if you link up on just one blog, your project will be seen on all NINE blogs!! So, get those projects completed & get your posts ready!!

If you don't have a blog, I would still?LOVE?for you to join in!! Share a picture of your project with me on my?Facebook Page! I will be sharing some of my favorites over the course of the week!

I hope you all have a beautiful Sunday!!

Linking up here....
Better Mom Mondays at?The Better Mom
Tutorials & Tips Tuesday at?Home Stories A to Z
Get Your Craft On at?Today's Creative Blog
Tuesday Talent Show at?Chef in Training
One Project At a Time at?A Bowl Full of Lemons
Frugal Friday at?The Shabby Nest
Link Up With Me at?Liz Marie Blog
Weekend Wrap-Up Party at?Tatertots and Jello

Don't Miss Out -?DIY projects, home decorating, crafts & more by checking out?my subscribe page.


Source: http://www.loveoffamilyandhome.net/2013/02/valentines-day-yarn-wreath-felt-rose-tutorial.html

jon corzine austin rivers austin rivers sweet home alabama etch a sketch the host hoodie

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Thanks To GitHub, The Enterprise Just Walked Away With The Crunchies

tomprestonwernerIt's the Crunchies' after party and GitHub Co-Founder and CEO Tom Preston-Werner is sitting at a table by the front door at Absinthe in San Francisco with the Crunchies statue he had just accepted for best overall startup.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jxtrkoNOqss/

chris brown and rihanna nightline brady quinn brady quinn bloom box fat tuesday obama sweet home chicago

Saturday, February 2, 2013

All the dirt on an ancient earthen mound

The enormous earthen monument Poverty Point, built on a Mississippi River bayou some 3,200 years ago, is an impressive feat of engineering. Hunter-gatherers moved more than 26.5 million cubic feet (750,000 cubic meters) of dirt to create concentric ridges and several large mounds in what is today northern Louisiana.

Now researchers say one of the most impressive earthworks at the site likely took shape in fewer than 90 days, built by thousands of Native American laborers using a "bucket brigade" system.

Archaeologists excavating parts of Poverty Point, which is now in the running to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site, analyzed core samplings and sediments from one of the massive earthen features known as Mound A. Curiously, they found no traces of rainfall or erosion during the construction phase of the mound.

"We're talking about an area of northern Louisiana that now tends to receive a great deal of rainfall," said researcher T.R. Kidder, an anthropology professor at Washington University in St. Louis. "Even in a very dry year, it would seem very unlikely that this location could go more than 90 days without experiencing some significant level of rainfall. Yet, the soil in these mounds shows no sign of erosion taking place during the construction period. There is no evidence from the region of an epic drought at this time, either." [ In Photos: Earthly Mounds Shaped Like Animals ]

Mound A, which stretches across 538,000 square feet (50,000 square meters) at its base and rises 72 feet (22 m) above the Mississippi River, is thought to be the last addition to Poverty Point's altered landscape. If it were built today, it would take a 10-wheel dump truck more than 30,000 loads to move the estimated 8.4 million cubic feet (238,500 cubic m) of dirt that make up the mound, Kidder and his colleagues said. But hunter-gatherers likely did it with bushel baskets.

"The Poverty Point mounds were built by people who had no access to domesticated draft animals, no wheelbarrows, no sophisticated tools for moving earth," Kidder explained in a statement. "It's likely that these mounds were built using a simple 'bucket brigade' system, with thousands of people passing soil along from one to another using some form of crude container, such as a woven basket, a hide sack or a wooden platter."

The researchers believe to complete such a feat in such a short amount of time would have required about 3,000 laborers. This suggests that as many as 9,000 archaic Native Americans might have flocked to Poverty Point for the huge construction project, assuming that many of the workers were accompanied by their wives and children, the team said.

"Given that a band of 25-30 people is considered quite large for most hunter-gatherer communities, it's truly amazing that this ancient society could bring together a group of nearly 10,000 people, find some way to feed them and get this mound built in a matter of months," Kidder said.

"These results contradict the popular notion that pre-agricultural people were socially, politically and economically simple and unable to organize themselves into large groups that could build elaborate architecture or engage in so-called complex social behavior."

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Egyptian mummy's elaborate hairstyle revealed in 3-D

      Nearly 2,000 years ago, at a time when Egypt was under the control of the Roman Empire, a young woman with an elaborate hairstyle was laid to rest only yards away from a king's pyramid, researchers report.

    2. Elusive giant squid is still a deep mystery
    3. Goggle-wearing rats learn predictive skills
    4. Climate change views swayed by weather

Poverty Point was recently nominated to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of its cultural significance. Artifacts excavated at the site come from as far away as the Ohio and Tennessee river valleys and the Appalachians of Alabama and Georgia, indicating the Poverty Point civilization was heavily involved in trade, the Louisiana Office of Cultural Development's Division of Archaeology noted in its UNESCO application.

The new research was detailed online last month in the journal Geoarchaeology.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/50669647/ns/technology_and_science-science/

taraji p. henson shuttle discovery bonnie raitt internal revenue service intc tupac andrew shaw

Friday, February 1, 2013

Gamers vs. bullies: 'We won. You can win too'

Featured

Video

2012 was a great year for video games, but one game stood out from all of the rest. NBCNews.com's Todd Kenreck reports. Play video

When Mark Kilborn was a kid, bullies mocked him because of his weight and picked on him because he was a ?nerd? who enjoyed playing video games. Girls pretended to like him, only to embarrass him for the amusement of their friends if he dared respond.

For Magnus Hollmo, a thin and fragile kid who preferred drawing or working on his computer, the abuse was not only verbal, but physical. And there was no escape: The bullies persecuted him during school and then hunted him down after.

Racist bullies tormented?Shahid Kamal Ahmad?throughout much of his childhood, so much so that it ?made me dread every waking and sleeping moment,? he told NBC News in a recent interview. ??Life was unbearably dark and hopeless for a long time.?

But that was then, and this is now. Years later, Kilborn, Hollmo and Ahmad are part of Beyond the Final Boss???a project started by video game professionals in an effort to show young victims of bullying that, no matter how miserable life might seem, it does get better. Much better. And they are living proof.

After all, these days Kilborn has a wife and children he adores not to mention a dream job as an audio director for best-selling games like ?Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3? and ?Borderlands." Hollmo is an art director at Electronic Arts who has worked on ?The Sims? ?and says that,??"Every day I am surrounded by things that I only dreamt about as a young boy."

As?for?Ahmad,?he's not?only?a senior business development manager at Sony Computer Entertainment, helping to?shepherd games onto the company?s machines,?he?started?the?Beyond the Final Boss?project?along?with respected indie game developers Mike Bithell and Byron Atkinson-Jones.

After a conversation on Twitter revealed that they?all?shared something in common???a young life marred by bullying???the?trio?created?a?website?and?Facebook?page?where?game?professionals?could?tell their stories about being bullied ... and about going on to live happy, successful lives.

Like the It Gets Better project,?which?reaches?out?to bullied?LGBT youth,?Beyond the Final Boss' goal?is?to give kids hope,?Ahmad?says.?To that end, they?named the project after the final, toughest enemy?that?players encounter in a video game?and gave?it?the?motto:?"We were bullied, but then we won. You can win too."?

"When you're being bullied, practically your whole existence is dark and saturated with pain,"?Ahmad said.??"We want youngsters to know that the path they're on doesn't end at the feet of the final?boss???that there is life and?fulfillment?and light and happiness?beyond?the final?boss."?

And he says?the?response?has?been?stunning.?As?word?has?spread,?game makers of ?all kinds and?from?around?the?world?have?begun?submitting their stories. (Go here if you have a story to tell).?

"In a way, you can say that bullying got me to where I am today,??Hollmo?writes on the website. "It made me more introverted and instead of being able to be social, I focused a lot on my art and computer knowledge. I learnt skills that helped me get my first job in the games industry.?

And now, he says,??My life today is so completely different in all ways possible.?I get to work with something I love every day, and I even get paid for doing so!??I am surrounded by amazing and creative people."

Kilborn believes that game makers are in a unique position to reach the victims of bullying. ?

?Often people are bullied for being smarter, more creative, or just different from their peers.?These traits are what we in the industry often seek in our team mates,"?he told NBC News.??We're also the creators of a form of escapism often used by victims of bullying, so that might draw more victims to our message. I hope so at least.?

And Kilborn's message to kids who are?suffering?is this: "I want them to know that outcasts often are victims of bullying, but?they're also some of the most successful people in the world.?What makes you different, what makes you a target, is often what?will make you successful in the world."

Winda Benedetti?writes about video?games for NBC?News. You can follow her tweets about games and other things?on Twitter?here?@WindaBenedetti??and you can?follow her?on?Google+.?Meanwhile, be sure to check?out the?IN-GAME?FACEBOOK PAGE?to discuss the day's?gaming news and reviews.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/ingame/gamers-vs-bullies-we-won-you-can-win-too-1B8189698

bay bridge presidents day band of brothers presidents george washington russell westbrook horsetail falls

Bomb explodes outside Pakistani mosque, killing 15

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) ? Police say a bomb exploded outside a mosque in northwestern Pakistan as worshippers were leaving Friday prayers, killing 15 people.

Local police chief Mian Mohammad Saeed says the explosion in the town of Hangu also wounded 35 people.

Saeed said the bomb was placed at one of the mosque's exits leading to a market.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bomb-explodes-outside-pakistani-mosque-killing-15-094719593.html

mia super bowl tom coughlin wes welker eli manning eli manning

Pentax Optio WG-3 and WG-10 offer ruggedized shooting with a unique design, we go hands-on (video)

Pentax Optio WG3 and WG10 offer ruggedized shooting with a unique design, we go handson video

Some might call it ugly; we'll say unique. Regardless of your take on Pentax's ruggedized Optio housing, you'll get a capable waterproof shooter, with a handful of practical features. Two new models appeared this week at CP+ in Yokohama, Japan, and while both may look like they came from the same mold, the feature sets differ vastly. The more powerful compact, the WG-3, is also the slightly larger flavor. It packs a 16-megapixel CMOS sensor, a sharp 3-inch LCD and a 4x, f/2-4.9 lens. Its survivability stats, printed around the lens, include waterproof to 14 meters (46 feet), shockproof to 2-meter (6.5-foot) drops, crush-proof to 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of force and cold-proof to -10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit). Then there's the WG-10, which is basically just a rebranded WG-1, so we won't focus much on that.

Both cameras have similar designs that scream "rugged" -- in other words, if you're a fan of Panasonic's original Toughbook design, you might find these attractive. They're incredibly solid-feeling, so while trade show tethers prevented us from doing any durability testing, they definitely look the part. We spent a few minutes with the WG-3 (or WG-III as indicated to the right of the lens) -- it's almost intimidating in appearance, as if it's telling other cameras to watch their backs. The display is sharp and bright and the camera was generally responsive, though it certainly won't break any records for speed. Interestingly, the WG-10, which we were originally told was a Target-exclusive, and therefore only available in red, was displayed with a black finish as well -- perhaps Pentax has different plans for that model in Japan, which makes sense, considering that there aren't any Target stores here. Either way, you should expect to see both of these hit stores in April, or you can sneak a peek now in our hands-on video after the break.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/lbiqFLbZVNI/

censor pipa and sopa sopa pipa wikipedia blackout kyla pratt justified season 3 custer