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Millions of Cheap Toys Recently Recalled

cheap toy planesrecalled formula 1 race car toys

News Flash - toys that are made cheaply may fall apart and pose choking hazard, or may contain lead (get this) because they are made - cheaply. That’s right folks. If you are buying toys at a discount store or dollar store (maybe a cute little impulse buy for the kid, niece, cousin, etc.) you may want to pause for a moment and think why the toy is so cheap.

Perhaps you should ask yourself, “how are they able to make a remote control formula one racing car and sell it for a dollar and still turn a profit?” And the answer is - because the manufacture it the cheapest way possible and perhaps by turning a blind eye to how much lead is in the paint and how well the small pieces are secured.

The four recent recalls listed below represent millions of units of these cheap $1 dollar toys. If I were to venture a guess about why products like this continue to show up on the shelves of stores around the country, it’s because people still buy them. So the lesson of the day for us, the Consumer is, don’t buy these cheap little toys for the young ones.

Follow the links below and check your kid’s toy bin for any questionable toys.

Related Links;
Toy Airplanes, Cars, and Motorcycles Recalled…
Toy Racing Cars Recalled by OKK Trading Due to Violation of Lead Paint Standard
Plush Insect Toys Recalled by Dollar Tree Stores Due to Choking Hazard
Magnetic Dart Boards Recalled By Henry Gordy Int’l…

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Daddy, Why Do You Write About Me?

I know the title sounds like dialog ripped from a Woody Allen film but really I’m waiting for the day my kid’s become privy to my blogging efforts. But after re-reading David Hochman’s ever-pertinent (2005) Article, Mommy (and Me), from the New York Times, it has me thinking about why I still do this and more importantly why I started in the first place.

I started blogging as a way to learn more about the things that concern me about my kids’ health; not really a personal journal because (to me) that would be boring. Rather, it would be a heavily referenced and indexed pile of notes that I (and of course everyone else) could take advantage of. I chose to take the somewhat academic route not because of some strange lust for expository writing but because I have a hard time believing the sources I come across. What I have discovered along the way is the most important thing to me about my own writing is to share with you my references and be sure the sites and articles I references are fully transparent to you. There is a lot of dubious information out there that is conjecture and misguided or incomplete at best.

Hochman’s article is interesting because even though it was written over three years ago it still rings true with regards to the landscape of parent blogging - for better or worse. I don’t have the money to quote the article directly but the gist of it is summed up quite succinctly by a LA psychiatrist sited in the article who basically says it is (our) drive to rise above the invisibility and the banality of parenting and be seen and heard by the rest of world.

Parts of the article tend to feel a bit acrid but upon closer examination he is merely raising a mirror to some and if his words make us cringe a little (or perhaps laugh nervously), then that’s your dish to deal with. David is a neighbor and I happen to know he is a dad, himself. He seems like a nice guy and a good dad. Upon writing this simple observation about the guy adds another dimension to the said article, there is probably a self-reflexive aspect to his article and that is in my mind what makes it most poignant.

Sited Links:
New York Times | Mommy (and Me)

Related Links:
Details Magazine | Are You Raising A Douchebag?

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Poetic Babies Birth Announcements

February 1st, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in cool schtuff, dad recomendation, life, tech talk
sample image of baby announcementcute newborn

Poetic Babies out of Chicago, will create a online video message for your family and friends: the story of the birth of your child as told by you. Their deluxe package includes video services as well as traditional printed announcements and photography. Check out the sample video - it is quite nice!

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Funding Your Kid’s Future

As a parent it is easy to get lost amongst the day to day minutiae of child rearing. Buying the groceries. Driving the kids here and there. Doing the laundry, again. Buying more groceries. Driving to and from soccer practice - the list is seemingly endless.

Here’s a reminder for all of us (including myself) - don’t forget to squirrel away some money for the kid’s college years. Current financial sources have placed college tuition projections for kids graduating high school between 2011-2022 between $85,706 - $153,486 (based on average college expenses, and tuition for public college or universities with adjusted cost inflation rate of 6%)! By the way that means if you start saving for your newborn’s undergraduate degree right now (he/she enters college in 18 years or 2020) you will have to sack away $710 dollars a month for the next 18 years to cover their college experience!

For parents with teenagers prepping for SAT’s now the issue is all too pertinent. As you may be aware there are a number of online options available to you. One of the biggest scholarship programs out there is the Bill Gates foundation. It was initially funded in 1999 by a one billion dollar grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Check out Scholarships.Com for a fresh listing of resources and scholarships. Their expansive college scholarship database is updated constantly, offers relevant and accurate scholarship & grant information.

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Quote of the Week

January 14th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in life

“Love is the answer… but while you’re waiting for the answer, sex raises some pretty interesting questions.” ~ Woody Allen

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INTERVIEW: Phil Lerman - A Guy With Dadditude

December 21st, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in dad recomendation, interview, life, parent stuff
Dadditude by Phil Lerman

I have had the special opportunity to interview Philip Lerman, author of the recently published book - Dadditude. When Phil, about to turn 50, quits his job as the producer of one of the longest-running network TV shows ever (America’s Most Wanted), he believes a lifetime of management experience will carry him through his new job of full-time fatherhood. He’s sure that his years of controlling a wild pack of roving producers have prepared him to conquer the world of one small boy in a Beatles haircut.

Lerman soon learns how easily a three-year-old can take that belief and stuff cheese balls in its ear.

By turns poignant and hilarious, Lerman’s journey from the control room to the playroom (and, ultimately, from obsessing about control to accepting the natural chaos of things) offers a lesson for the modern age: that somewhere between strict discipline and unconditional love, lies¦ Dadditude.

MD: What is Dadditude, in a nutshell for those who haven’t heard of the book?

PL: I think it’s all about Dads learning to find that middle ground between always being right (which, of course, we are) and going with the flow (which, of course, is not exactly our best thing, truth be told). Dads love consistency, but Dadditude’s about learning the Zen Riddle of parenting: That It’s OK to be consistent just not all the time.

MD: Who is your target audience? Do you have one? If I was to venture a guess I would say by your “Every-Man” conversational tone it is probably for any and every guy out there and maybe more importantly every woman, since it is a wonderful meditation on all the funny neurotic and silly stuff that (I will speak of myself only here) we Dads think about.

PL: Actually, moms have been enjoying the book (and anytime you can make a mom happy, you know, you get karma points, so that’s a good thing). They tell me they’ve been reading sections to their husbands in bed. So I have now been officially inducted to the American Foreplay Society, an honor for which I am truly grateful.

Women, however, don’t get why there are so many asides about music and lyrics and movies and such. Guys like that a lot more. That’s a guy thing.

MD: I gotta ask, what does you wife think of the book?

PL: She likes it a lot, although she says I mention her boobs a few too many times. But hey, when you’re a guy talking about pregnancy, let’s be honest: there are certain side-effects that we are just crazy about.

MD: Fast-forward twenty years from now, what do you think your son, Max, will think of the book?

PL: I hope he thinks, wow, my dad was a funny guy, and a cool guy. But that’s what every man wants from his son. When they asked God about the bible and said hey, what do you think your son with think of the book in 20 years, he said basically the same thing. Not that I’m comparing myself to God, or anything. He’s much, much taller.

MD: By the way, I love the idea of Intermittent Reinforcement. Can you talk a little bit about this? How did you arrive at this? Was it something that came from managing “run-and-gun” productions on America’s Most Wanted for so many years?

PL: Just the opposite, actually. It all goes back to that question of consistency. As a manager in the workplace, you can be consistent it’s expected, in fact. A run-and-gun operation like AMW requires almost military precision. If anyone sends a fax and doesn’t follow up with a phone call to confirm, you have to reprimand them about it, because one day the whole operation will stop because that fax didn’t go through. To be fair to a roomful of employees, you try to react to things as consistently as possible.

Parenting is the opposite. Dads WANT it to be about consistency if I pick up the baby when she cries, she will learn that crying brings daddy to the room, so I must never do this — but moms know you have to pick your battles if you’re gonna get through the day. Remembering what we learned back in Psych 101 that the rat learns more quickly through intermittent reinforcement is the hardest thing for dads. We just have to keep reminding ourselves that kids are much more pliable, more flexible, than we think (although, in my experience, they’re really lousy at sending faxes).

MD: What would you say to younger guys thinking about having kids someday. What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of having kids later in life?

PL: People tell me, Phil, you’re too old to have a kid. You don’t have the stamina, you don’t have the strength, you don’t have the ability to pull an all-nighter anymore. Well, I’m here to tell you they’re absolutely right.

But there are advantages to being an older dad, too. You tend to have more patience. You tend to crave going to the bar less, and being home more. Most importantly, you’ve either had kids before, or your friends have, and you know how astoundingly quickly it goes by. So you are more likely to spend time with your child now, rather than putting it off. So many of my friends who had kids at an earlier age say, you know, I wish I spent more time with them when they were little. I feel like I missed a lot. So, us older dads benefit from their testimony, and can pass it along.

Here’s the thing, when the days ahead of you are shorter than the days behind, you tend to appreciate each one a little more, to thank God for the blessing of being with your child, today, now. And so you put down the paper and get down on the rug and pick up a car and make the car noise, and fall blissfully into this moment, this perfect moment with your child, perfect just because you’re lucky enough to share it, and if there’s anything older dads can teach younger ones, it’s that: just Be Here Now. The rest will take care of itself.

Related Links:
Dadditude.Com
FOX & Friends | Interview With Phil Lerman

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