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This Arizona News Station Baked Cookies In A Car Because It's So F*cking Hot

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The true meaning of HOT AF.

With summer just underway, this time lapse video proved that Phoenix heat is no joke!

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Facebook: video.php / Via Facebook: 12news

With an excessive heat warning in effect, and temperatures hovering around 115 degrees, 12 News decided to see if cookies could bake in a car.

With an excessive heat warning in effect, and temperatures hovering around 115 degrees, 12 News decided to see if cookies could bake in a car.

According to VisitPhoenix, the average June temperature in Phoenix, Arizona is 102.3 degrees.

12 News / Via Facebook: 12news

So here we go... this guy placed the cookie sheet on the dashboard.

So here we go... this guy placed the cookie sheet on the dashboard.

12News / Via Facebook: 12news

The cookies began to spread and BAKE ... because it was HOT AF.

The cookies began to spread and BAKE ... because it was HOT AF.

12News / Via Facebook: 12news


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17 Cool Treats To Make Your Dog This Summer

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They’ll be the coolest dog in town!

Easy Peanut Butter Cookies

Easy Peanut Butter Cookies

Didya think making a tasty treat means using tons of ingredients? Think again!

sheknows.com

doggydessertchef.com


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What Classic '90s Bath & Body Works Scents Smell Like To Adult Women

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“This reminds me of platform flip-flops and toe rings.”

After I wrote about the rerelease of six classic '90s fragrances from Bath & Body Works, the company offered to send BuzzFeed Life some bottles of the old-school scents.

After I wrote about the rerelease of six classic '90s fragrances from Bath & Body Works, the company offered to send BuzzFeed Life some bottles of the old-school scents.

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed Life

A group of BuzzFeed staffers decided to smell them and share what memories the fragrances brought back.

A group of BuzzFeed staffers decided to smell them and share what memories the fragrances brought back.

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed Life

Cucumber Melon

Cucumber Melon

Loryn: This reminds me of my neighbor's house, because this is what she wore. We would hang out and eat snacks while petting all her cats every day after school. It was a simpler time.

Alexis: My sister got a gift pack of the lotion and the body spray in Cucumber Melon and I felt very grown up spraying some on and wearing it to school in third grade.

Rachel: This reminds me of hanging out after school freshman year, waiting for cheerleading practice to start. You always had to put lotion on so your legs looked nice in those Soffe shorts.

Jess: This reminds me of every birthday party I've ever been to.

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed Life

Monique: This reminds me of platform flip-flops and toe rings.

Alanna: This is vile! I used to think this was such a classy scent. It was for cool girls. It's terrible.

Emmy: Ahhh so good! Reminds me of hanging out in basements and underage drinking and summertime and going to the mall in groups of 10 people.

Kaye: This is my favorite odor in the whole world. I would straight-up eat this. I will probably buy it just to drool over it in the private shame of my bedroom.

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed


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Judd Apatow: Why I Chose Comedy

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“By my 15th birthday, my obsession was full-blown. I needed to become one of them. The question was, how to do that?”

What follows is a slightly edited version of Judd Apatow's introduction to his new book, Sick in the Head, which is now in stores.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

I was always a fan of comedy and... OK, I have been completely obsessed with comedy for about as long as I can remember. I blame my dad. My dad was not a comedian, but he may have secretly longed to be one. When I was a kid, he would play us Bill Cosby records and even took me to see him perform at Hofstra University for my birthday when I was in fifth grade. (Note: In this essay, I was going to talk at length about Bill Cosby, but I can't, in good conscience, because he has more sexual accusers than I have had partners.) From there I discovered Dickie Goodman, George Carlin, and Lenny Bruce, and then, when Steve Martin hit, I completely lost my mind. I bought every album he put out — and couldn't stop doing an impression of him for the next five years. The biggest fight I ever got into with my parents was when we were at an Italian restaurant for dinner and I was trying to rush them out so we could get home in time to see Steve Martin on The Carol Burnett Show. They refused to hurry through their chicken parmesan and, as a result, I never got to see it. I remain furious.

The mid- to late '70s was a golden age in comedy. You had Richard Pryor, Saturday Night Live, Monty Python, SCTV — all in their prime. The club scene was beginning to explode, too. In my room at night, I would circle the names of all the comedians in the TV Guide who were going to perform on talk shows that week so I wouldn't miss any. When I was in fifth grade, I produced a 30-page report on the life and career of the Marx Brothers and paid my friend Brande Eigen $30 to write it out for me, longhand, because he had better handwriting than I did. This, by the way, was not for school. I wrote it for my own personal use.

A comedy freak was born.

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed


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Do You Have A Drinking Problem?

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After years of living in denial, I finally confronted my alcoholism when I was 35. These are the tough questions I had to ask myself.

Jenny Chang/BuzzFeed

My twentysomething social life was one long drink special. Margaritas with a crust of salt on the rim, a frosty pint spilling foam, and the always regrettable "Who wants shots?"

I had always assumed my drinking would calm down after I graduated college. Instead, it ramped up. The bars opened their pearly gates to me, and I sank into those velvet banquettes and ripped vinyl couches.

I sometimes wondered if I had a problem. I had a tendency to black out — to forget episodes from a night of drinking, even though I remained surprisingly functional (well, "functional" may not be the word for someone pouring beer on her own head) — and every pamphlet, doctor's questionnaire, and glossy magazine quiz I took listed blackouts as a risk factor for alcoholism.

The problem with checklists for alcoholism is that they look a lot like, well, being young. Do you ever drink to get drunk? Have you ever gone to work with a hangover? They might as well ask: Have you ever been 25?

Over the following decade, I kept wondering about my drinking, as my bar bills grew steeper — Patron instead of Jose Cuervo — and my taste more refined. I continued to build the case that my drinking was normal, totally normal. See that guy over there? He's at the bar every night. At least I'm not that bad. I had a good job, I never crashed my car. And yet, I was stuck.

There is a saying among former drunks: "At first drinking is fun, then fun with problems, then just problems." By my mid-thirties, I had found myself in the "problems" portion of the evening.

I quit drinking at the age of 35. How did I know it was time? I arrived at a preponderance of the evidence. Some people do have a lightning flash of recognition, but for me it was more of a slow dawning. I had to sift through data, gather bits of knowledge. I took health surveys online. I talked to my therapist. I read the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous (the bible of AA) and many alcoholism memoirs: Drinking: A Love Story, and Lit, and Smashed, and A Drinking Life, and The Tender Bar, all of which offer compelling and varied tales of people who put the cap back on the bottle for good. Listening to other people's stories may have helped me more than anything else. The more I heard other people's struggles, the more I found words for my own.

The following is a list of aha moments for me. It is not an authoritative list; it's simply one person's experience. I can't stress this enough. What alcoholism looked like for me may not be what it looked like for someone else, and how I define alcoholism may be different from a medical professional (they use the phrase "alcohol use disorder") or another problem drinker. I really can't tell anyone else if they have a drinking problem, or if they're an alcoholic, or if they need to quit. These are complicated questions you must answer on your own. What I can do is show you how I answered these questions for myself.

I spent my early career at alternative newsweeklies, where beer was sometimes kept in the fridge, and anyone walking in with sunglasses and a hangover got a high-five. You see this spirit at many companies with lots of employees in their twenties: Get the work done, and we don't ask questions.

For a long time, I was getting the work done, which is probably why none of my bosses ever confronted me about my drinking. By my thirties, I had developed some red-flag habits. In the evenings, I kept a bottle of wine by my side. I brought my laptop to the bar, and drank pints while I wrote stories. I had an insane workload, and the drinking was partly an attempt to make it tolerable. I told myself I deserved the booze, and the work didn't suffer. But then it did.

One morning, I came into my Manhattan office at 10:30 a.m., having stayed up drinking till 4, and my deeply beloved assistant editor Gchatted me at my desk: "You might want to chew some gum." He could still smell the booze on me, because I was still drunk. Another morning, I called in sick because my hangover was so toxic I couldn't possibly make it without vomiting on myself in a cab or a subway. My friends at work emailed me condolences, and I felt like such a loser.

I stopped being able to write. I had panic attacks when I woke at 5 a.m. If you've ever had a high-pressure position, then you know these can also be part of your job description. But the data points start to converge: Drinking WAS interfering with my ability to work. I was not functioning so well anymore, and it's debatable if I ever really had been.

Like lying about your weight, lying about your drinking is something many people who are not alcoholics do. "How many did you have, honey?" "Oh, two." They do it for benign reasons (they forgot) and slightly sketchy ones (to avoid an argument, to maintain a perfect image). But how often are you lying? And why?

I engaged in the typical "downscaling of the number" when necessary, but I did other things. In New York, I would go out to dinner with friends, share a bottle of wine or two, and then stop by the bodega on my way home to buy a six-pack of beer. I did this because even after a night of drinking, I needed more. I would sometimes find myself dropping casual lies to the guy who worked at the bodega about how I was just hanging out with a friend at home. Why was I lying to the guy at the bodega?

Because I knew what I was doing was wrong.

I lived alone at the time, and could drink as I wished without anyone's commentary, but I could feel the watchful eyes of those bodega guys, who probably saw my wine-stained mouth and my droopy eyes. Mostly I tried to get out of there without any interaction at all.

Other humans can be a valuable metric for our own behavior. Are you afraid of getting caught at something? It might be because what you're doing is wrong.


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This Guy Transforms Himself Into The Kardashians With Makeup And It's Amazing

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His Caitlyn Jenner is on point, too.

Meet Filipino makeup artist Paolo Ballesteros.

Ballesteros is renowned as the host of Filipino TV series Eat Bulaga!, and he has quite the Instagram following.

instagram.com

He's no stranger to recreating creepily realistic celebrity looks.

He's no stranger to recreating creepily realistic celebrity looks.

His Megan Foxx, Anne Hathaway, and Julia Roberts transformations are next level.

Instagram: @pochoy_29

I mean, LOOK AT THIS KATY PERRY.

instagram.com

But Ballesteros decided to take on a bigger project. A whole family clan. THE KARDASHIANS.

But Ballesteros decided to take on a bigger project. A whole family clan. THE KARDASHIANS.

E! Entertainment Television


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