No Bad News

In today’s world, there seems to be more bad news than good news. The truth is, there’s just as much good news out there; the media just isn’t reporting it. If you’re tired of being fed only bad news by the media, you’ve come to the right place. Here you’ll find lighthearted news: inspirational, funny, uplifting and interesting.

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Pet Food Food Tasters Are a Special Breed



You might think that anyone who considers taste-testing pet food is desperate, a bit wacky, or both — but you’d be wrong. The job is actually a highly-skilled one, more like a combination of researcher and taster. Generally, someone with a doctoral degree, a food taster’s main job is testing, not tasting. The job involves evaluating a given pet food’s nutritional value, writing reports, and determining ways to enhance new pet foods. Still, at some point they have to get down to the business of sampling it. Before digging into a bowlful of pet food, the taster first appraises its smell. While many animals wolf down their food, its smell is actually one reason they really like it. After evaluating the smell, it’s time to nibble that kibble. As with all food tasting, testers evaluate the flavor, texture and consistency, and then — thankfully — spit it out. You may be wondering……..is it really necessary to taste pet food? The answer is a resounding yes. Pets can be just as selective about their food as we are. If a pet food taster thinks a particular pet food tastes awful, it’s a safe bet that the pet will think so too. The good news is that the average salary of a pet taster is a respectable $120,000 a year. It kind of makes the job a bit more……..well……palatable.
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Car Dealership Revokes Offer to Buy BMW, Blaming a Wayward AI Chatbot



After his 2021 BMW required major repairs, Zack Giacomelli (pictured) decided he wanted to sell the car back to BMW Toronto, the same dealership from which he bought the car in 2023. At first, the buy-back process seemed easy. After submitting an online inquiry, Zack got a text from Quinn at BMW Toronto, who made a firm buy-back offer of $27,162.79. Zack, a 31-year-old funeral director, was satisfied with the offer, as it was just enough to cover what he still owed on the car. He said he was feeling really good about the offer, but that good feeling didn’t last long. Moments later, a sales consultant from BMW Toronto called to revoke the offer, explaining that Quinn wasn’t a real person, but rather an artificial intelligence chat-bot that had made the offer in error. Zack’s shock turned to anger when the dealership told him the buy-back offer would be, at best, $20,000. Part of Zack’s frustration stemmed from the fact that he was never informed that he was communicating with a chat-bot. Since Canadian law stipulates that companies can be held liable if AI chat-bots dole out bad information, BMW Toronto reinstated Quinn’s original offer of $27,162.79. BMW Toronto sales manager Scott Shadbolt explained that Quinn had misunderstood the amount Zach owed on the car as the amount BMW would pay to buy back the car. He further explained that Quinn was never programmed to independently negotiate contracts, only to relay human-generated buy-back offers. Moving forward, only human employees at BMW Toronto will present customers with buy-back offers.
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Here’s What Really Happens to Your Donated Clothes



Think someone else is getting cozy in the like-new sweater you just donated? Think again. Only 15% of clothing in the U.S. is recycled at all; the vast majority is just thrown away. So what happens to the clothing you donate? Unfortunately, most clothing donated to Goodwill, Salvation Army and other charities doesn’t end up on the backs of needy children in your community. They get sold to textile recyclers. Sure, that’s better than a landfill, but if your clothing isn’t picked up in a few weeks, it can end up as carpet padding, insulation or rags — or even sold overseas. An alternative is to sell your clothes online. Here are a few sites that do just that:

  • Facebook Marketplace is a resale business that’s free to anyone with a Facebook account. You can even target buyers within a specific radius of your home.  
  • eBay is a long-running online marketplace. eBay charges a percentage of the total sale price, including shipping. For clothing, the website charges 15% if the sale is $2,000 or less; 9% if the sale is over $2,000. 
  • Poshmark does the work of finding a buyer and provides you with a prepaid, pre-addressed shipping label to mail the item. Poshmark takes a flat commission of $2.95 for sales under $15 and 20% on items over $15.  
  • • ThredUp is unique in that you don’t set the price — the platform does, based on past sales, brand and quality. You can either mail your clothing to ThredUp using a free shipping label, or receive an empty bag in the mail to fill with the items you want to sell. They do all the work of taking photographs, posting pictures, pricing the items, and selling the item. ThredUp uses a sliding scale where your payout percentage increases as the item's listing price increases. Items selling for $5-$19.99 earn 3%-15%; $20-$49.99 earn 15%-30%; $50-$99.99 earn 30%-60%; $100-$199.99 earn 60%-80%, and $200 and up earn 80%.

 

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America’s Most Secure Prison



Just two hours outside of Denver, in a concrete pit among the Rocky Mountain foothills, sits the highest-security prison in America. Its official name is the U.S. Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, but everyone calls it ADX. It’s home to the most dangerous criminals and escape-prone offenders in federal prison, including drug kingpin Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, unabomber Ted Kaczynski, Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols, and World Trade Center bombers Zacarias Moussaoui and Ramzi Yousef. At other institutions, inmates are placed in solitary confinement for short stints in response to violent or aggressive behavior, but at ADX, inmates are confined to their 7X12 concrete cells 23 hours a day and receive their meals through a slot in the cell door. Their only glimpse of the outside world is through a thin slit of a window aimed at an empty sky. This deprives prisoners of learning the layout of the prison and the location of their cells. The only time inmates are allowed out of their cells is for an hour of exercise, where they're locked alone inside a caged pen. For the prisoners at ADX, they’re serving a life sentence in near-absolute isolation. Since ADX opened in 1994, there has not been a single successful escape. 
 


 
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