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Marina Orlova is (too) Hot For Words (dotcom)


Brains, vocabulary and beauty...

She's the hottest philologist you'll ever meet, she's Marnia Orlova from HotForWords.
Marina burst in on the scene in mid 2007 with hotforwords.com. She followed this up by the launching her YouTube channel, where she takes requests from YouTube viewers for words to discuss, and she releases 5-7 videos each week discussing the origins of these words, in a fun and playful manner!

Oh yeah, she's also really, really hot.

Marina is the #1 Guru on YouTube, she’s consistently the most watched channel on ALL of YouTube as well - just ahead of Universal Music Group and the NBA, her videos are seen over five million times each week (She is currently at 142,710,735 video views on YouTube alone and counting!), she hosts a bi-weekly radio show on Maxim Radio on Sirius Satellite Radio, she’s currently writing a book for HarperCollins on fun word origins - yet nobody really knows much about Marina, other than what her channel states - that she is from “The Capital of the Republic of Lexicon” and her hometown is “Etymologia”

Called the “Sexiest Philologist in the world” by New Yorker Magazine, Marina was voted the World’s #1 Sexiest Geek by Wired Magazine’s Sexy Geek of the Year Contest, she’s been on the Bill O’Reilly Factor Show on Fox a few times teaching him a few word origins :-), she was voted the 5th hottest woman on the net by G4 TV and she was mentioned in Cosmopolitan Magazine as one of the top 3 channels on YouTube! As her tag-line at the beginning of her videos states “Intelligence is Sexy” - Marina is definitely doing her part to try to prove that point! For a video recap of all this, watch this segment from G4 Television’s Attack of the Show.

Ghrelin Mimetic and Cenegenics

A growing interest in Ghrelin Mimetic as the answer to muscle mass maintenance in seniors is giving the cenegenics medical institute a higher profile.

Here are the details:

It's hard for many of us to imagine, but some seniors have a difficult time performing simple daily routines (such as housework) because of age-related loss of muscle, called sarcopenia. A common "prescription" calls for more exercise -- which can lead to frustration when it doesn't seem to work.

The fact is, a person's muscle weight is influenced by many factors, including hormones. For instance, human growth hormone (HGH) levels decrease with age, and this drop is associated with a decline in muscle mass.

A new study in the "Annals of Internal Medicine" takes a unique look at this aspect of metabolism. Researchers asked if they could curtail the decline in HGH and whether doing so would help people improve their muscle weight. For two years, they studied 65 healthy adults (men and women), ages 60 to 81. They divided them into two groups -- one took a placebo, and the other took ghrelin mimetic, a substance to stimulate production of growth hormone. Result: Those receiving ghrelin mimetic did, indeed, increase HGH and muscle mass.

This small study is intriguing. If we become able to help seniors stay independent by maintaining their muscle weight and strength, we may improve their quality of life. Plus, we may curtail the societal and health care costs that come with frailty in an aging population. HealthSmart

Obsession with health supplements and youthfulness a danger to seniors?

Las Vegas, United States, December 7: Blame it on the regular and concerted media advertising, but the fact is that American society and their culture make them youth-obsessed. This is just what a latest research has found out.

Aging is considered a catastrophe in U.S. and you could not possibly think of growing old gracefully; on the contrary, you may feel compelled to avoid the very idea of turning 60 or 70. The commercials advertising American obsession with youthfulness are only fuelling up the desire to look and stay younger.

No wonder clinics specializing in age management are finding a ready market to cash in on the society’s obsession with staying young. A Las Vegas based clinic, Cenegenics Medical Institute, run by Dr. Jeffry Life, is one of the many clinics that claim to turn the desire of many Americans to stay young into a reality. The 69-year old doctor is a role model for many of his patients.

“He’s the man,” says Ed Detwiler, one of his patients while pointing towards a framed copy of Life’s photo on the office wall at Cenegenics.

The 47 year old Detwiler, who has been Life’s patient for more than three years, is an epitome of Americans’ desire to live a long and a healthy life. A real estate developer in suburban Las Vegas, Detwiler says he rigorously follows everything that is prescribed by his doctor to stay young and healthy. “If I were stooped over and bedridden, what kind of quality of life is that?'' asks Detwiler.

This could mean bringing a few lifestyle changes including a combination of healthy eating habits and following an exercise regime to stay clear-minded and recharged with positive energy. He makes it a point to inject himself with human growth hormone each day and receives testosterone injections every week.

It is quite common to look and feel younger, and Detwiler represents this common sentiment of the society he is living in. “If I can get out and be active and travel and see the world and be able to make a difference in other people's lives, then yes, I would want to have as long an existence as possible,'' he reaffirms.

The quest for youth is not new. “In 1,500 B.C. people were ingesting tiger gonads to rejuvenate them,'' says Dr. Gene Co, an expert on aging in George Washington University. However, now it seems to be taking on a new urgency.

Decades ago, people hated being labeled “poor”. But now, it seems people will do anything to avoid being labeled “old”. From Botox, wrinkle fillers, hormonesdefine of various kinds or going under the knife with cosmetic or plastic surgery in order to look younger and have tighter skin, the list of age-defying tactics seems to be endless. According to findings of a research on people who live up to 100 years, having healthy eating habits, along with regular physical as well as mental exercise are considered vital clues for a long and a healthy life. “The quest to live forever and the desire to avoid diseases and not suffer'' is understandable, agrees S. Jay Olshansky, a public health professor and longevity researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

However, the growing cause of worry is that we are becoming too much focused on treatments that could result in dangerous side effects and jeopardize our lives, both physically as well as emotionally. medguru

DAVID GREGORY: New Face of Meet The Press

38-year-old chief White House correspondent David Gregory named new host of political interview show.

NEW YORK (AP) — David Gregory's new job as moderator of "Meet the Press" was made official Sunday with an announcement on the long-running NBC interview program that he will take over starting next week.

The 38-year-old chief White House correspondent was introduced by Tom Brokaw, who stepped in as temporary host last June after the death of Tim Russert, the program's moderator since 1991.

"I've thought a lot about what it means to succeed somebody like Tim Russert," Gregory told viewers. "I'm not Tim. But along with this great team, I can just work real hard to make him proud."

A ratings leader with enormous influence, "Meet the Press" brings Gregory "one of the greatest jobs there is," he said in an interview after the broadcast. "It's a place where accountability reigns, where leadership is explored and where people come to understand how the government works and try to understand the important issues of the day."

In addition to his "Meet the Press" responsibilities, Gregory will be a regular contributor for "Today" and continue as a backup anchor. He will also continue as a regular contributor and analyst on MSNBC and for NBC News coverage of special events, the network said.

A Los Angeles native who joined NBC News in 1995, Gregory was MSNBC's chief anchor on Election Night and during general election debates, and has hosted an hourlong political show weekdays on MSNBC.

Sunday's announcement came after months of speculation about who would be chosen, with unconfirmed reports surfacing last week that NBC had settled on Gregory. Until then, Andrea Mitchell, Chuck Todd and Gwen Ifill were also among those thought to be contenders.

The choice of Gregory was "a natural decision," said NBC News president Steve Capus, explaining "he's got a full skill set" as a broadcast journalist.

For more details, please visit AP.

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