Tuesday, August 25, 2009

How To Make Shake And Bake Meth

How To Make Shake And Bake Meth
Shake and Bake Meth Is Meth Made Easier It's not just for chicken anymore. The once famous bread crumb coating for chicken and pork is now being used to describe the faster and easier way to make methamphetamine. Shake and bake meth is all the rage, allowing meth users and makers to produce the drug on the run and in smaller doses thereby bypassing the laws intended to stop the production of this deadly drug.
What one needs to make shake and bake meth almost sounds like an episode of MacGyver: an empty two-liter soda bottle, a few handfuls of cold pills and some noxious household chemicals and you got a mini meth lab in a bottle. Apparently, you have to do Shake the bottle and the volatile chemical reaction produces one of the most addictive drugs in the entire world. While shake and bake meth may be seen as good news by meth users and sellers, it is certainly not good news for the rest of us. Although easier, shake and bake meth is just as dangerous to make as traditional meth.
Shake and bake meth doesn't even require a flame like a traditional meth lab nor does it give off the foul odor normally associated with manufacturing methamphetamine. Shake and bake meth also requires far less pills of decongestant pseudoephedrine (aka cold medicine) which allows for meth users and sellers to fly under the radar as the purchase of this drug is regulated to prevent the manufacturing of methamphetamine. The small amount of cold medicine required to make shake and bake meth doesn't trigger suspicion that someone is making the deadly drug.

Heather Podesta

Heather Podesta
Heather Podesta is the striking DC lobbyist who has made a name for herself as one of the toughest sharks in Washington waters. Sometimes with and sometimes against husband and fellow lobbyist Tony Podesta, Heather is having the summer of her life, according to a Washington Post profile. But Heather Podesta is enjoying the heavy workload, with the intersection of health care, economic reform, and environmental reform creating a perfect storm for Washington lobbyists.
The article paints Heather as the ultimate insider, constantly trading in the currencies of power, influence and good old cash. Heather Podesta is high-profile for a lobbyist and earlier this year, she and her husband donated Shepard Fairey's "Hope" portrait of Barack Obama to the National Portrait Gallery. She's also donated more than $48,000 so far this year to various political candidates and groups, and her life consists of nearly non-stop fundraisers.
"This is a very good time to be a Democratic lobbyist ... it's incredibly exciting to be able to engage with Democrats and really see things happen," Podesta told the Post. "It's always a good time to be Heather Podesta." When President Obama began vilifying lobbyists during his campaign, Heather took offense and commissioned a Gothic-style scarlet L, which she wore as a mark of pride. She says the L soon became a hot item and she gave away more than 100 of them.

Thirtysomething

Thirtysomething
The Legacy of Thirtysomething It’s been over 20 years since Thirtysomething went on the air and 18 years since it departed and now finally the first season will be released on DVD today. What I find so interesting about the show is how far reaching into TV and films — but mostly TV — that the participants of the show have had on our lives.
In the LA Times, Marshall Herskovitz said that their goal was to make movies and they thought that the show would be something that they did for a little while until they could get their movies made. Hershkovitz and his co-creator Ed Zwick are both incredibly creative men and the show proved to be a training ground for an entire generation of creative people. (Many of the cast members were able to direct episodes) They created two other amazing series, My So-Called Life and Once and Again that were thoroughly underappreciated. (It still makes me angry when I think about it.) They’ve also done some great movies The female writers on the show included Winnie Holzman who co- created My So-Called Life. She also wrote the book for the musical Wicked which is still playing to sold out audiences on Broadway.
But looking at the cast the men and the women shows exactly where women and men stand in the TV business creatively. I’m not saying the women of Thirtysomething haven’t had incredible careers. They have. Patricia Wettig has continued to act and is so good as Holly of Brothers and Sisters. Melanie Mayron still also acts but she is more well known now as a director having worked on shows including: Dawson’s Creek, Tell Me You Love Me, In Treatment among many others. Mel Harris has also been acting over the years but has not had another breakout series. Polly Draper has a huge hit with the creation of the show The Naked Brothers Band which she writes and directs and produces.
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