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loving the ride

~ exploring the world (with a little vélo love)

loving the ride

Tag Archives: toronto

awesome bike-chain bike stand in kensington market

28 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in bike, gear, photography

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

bike gear, bike safety, biking toronto, canada, cool bike-chain bike stand, cycling, kensington bike stand, kensington market, ontario, toronto

Toronto’s Kensington Market and bikes go hand in hand. Cyclists famously overtake the Market’s one-way streets, casually going in the opposite direction, against traffic. I admit, I’m one of those directionally challenged cyclists who wish cars were banned from the Market.

I champion the idea of moving Kensington beyond Pedestrian Sundays (the last Sunday of the month, from May to October) to making the streets pedestrian-only boulevards every day, even if it meant I couldn’t bike those roads. As it stands, I usually can be found riding south on Augusta, staring down northbound drivers shaking their heads at me.

Yet I’ve never locked my bike to this awesome, artsy bike stand at Augusta and College, in the north end of the Market. Coolest. Bike stand. Ever. Really, the Kensington bike rack tops my beloved City of Toronto post-and-ring bike stands. Not only does it spell out “Kensington,” its namesake neighbourhood, but it also resembles a bike chain!

I mean, a Kensington Market bike-chain bike stand is as cool as a bike-chain grease-mark tattoo. OK, OK, only a bike geek would go gaga over a grease-mark tattoo, but you have to agree that Toronto’s coolest bike stand suits the artsy, crafty, hippy vibe of the hood that has a coffee shop that looks like this when it’s closed:

Kensington Market's Casa Acoreana Cafe, at the corner of Augusta and Baldwin, makes for an artsy backdrop for vintage bikes.

Kensington Market is also a haven for Toronto cyclists because it houses Bikes on Wheels (BOW). The cute boys of BOW are always helpful, whether I’m having problems with my brakes or I need air or those little metal caps that keep the brake cable ends from fraying… It’s no wonder I spontaneously plunked down $53 for the Topeak RaceRocket mini bike pump, when I already had a portable pump and was in the middle of a 120 kilometre ride to Oakville and back. Perhaps I was distracted by the boys, ahem, I mean the boys’ friendliness. Likely I was lured by the high-end but affordable bike gear. I couldn’t help myself. Gear whore, here!

Plus, Kensington is also home to Mike the Bike, a popular source for refurbished bikes, though I’ve never been able to find the storefront on Oxford Street near Spadina Road. Smart guy that Mike presumably is, he posts pics and deets of the bikes on his website, so people like me can find him online!

__________________________________________________________

Bike theft prevention is serious business.

For more on bike safety, check out…
How to Lock Your Bicycle Securely to Prevent Bike Theft
Girly Gear to Light Up Your Ride

Use Your Knog(gin): Ride With a Bright Bike Light 
I Heart My TV Sucks Ride Your Bike Bumper Sticker
‘Cause I Love My Brain, I Want a Nutcase Helmet
Simi Mini Dots Nutcase Helmet Fit for Minnie Mouse
Ring My Bell: Ciao Bello to My Public Bike Bell, Federico! 

how to lock your bicycle securely to prevent bike theft

25 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in bike, outdoors

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

best bike locks, bike gear, bike safety, bike stand, bike theft prevention, bike theft toronto, biking toronto, double bike lock, double locking your bike, lucerne bikes, post and ring, stealing bike toronto, toronto, toronto star, toronto star bike theft

Stealing a bike in Toronto is a cinch, even in broad daylight, according to a recent Toronto Star article that proves bike theft in Toronto goes unreported – even unnoticed – in this city of cyclists and apathetic onlookers. Scary thought.

Cycling in Toronto is all about improving infrastructure, of course, but, sadly, it’s also about bike theft prevention. That’s why I try to lock my bike to a fixed object (one of the City of Toronto’s awesome post-and-ring bike stands), using one of the best bike locks on the market (the Kryptonite New York Standard U-lock), so I thought I was adept at outwitting bicycle thieves. I was wrong.

As was revealed to me the other night, bike theft in Toronto truly runs rampant: someone tried to steal my bike last week, after I’d stupidly locked it to a movable bike stand in a poorly lit, little trafficked corner, and the wannabe thief flipped over the stand and my bike (see photo above)! The thief (or thieves?) was likely trying to snake my bike along the stand and off the open end, but I’d locked my bike so tight, it wasn’t budging.

Lesson learned: If you lock your bike properly, it will deter thieves trying to steal it. And so, here are my 6 tips for locking your bike.

1. Buy the best bike lock you can afford.

Locks don’t prevent bike thieves from stealing bikes – locks deter thieves from stealing bikes. Thieves want to grab and go, so they won’t risk being seen by onlookers during the precious minutes it will take to pick a top-notch lock, so invest in the best.

The best is the Kryptonite New York Standard U-lock. I own two!!! Here’s why.

  • Makers of the world’s best bike locks, Kryptonite rates the New York Standard U-lock an 11 out of 12 on its bicycle security scale.
  • The 16 mm steel shackle is a tough nut to crack, even with bolt cutters.
  • The double deadbolt locking mechanism is pretty pickproof.
  • It’s the perfect size to snugly fit around a bike stand and a seat post and rear wheel. The Kryptonite New York Fahgettaboudit Mini lock is too small and only fits around a stand and seat post. Depending on your bike, the Kryptonite New York MC lock may be too long, which will create a gap between your bike and the stand, inviting thieves to wedge a lever in the gap to pry the lock apart.
  • The lock is darn heavy and large. That’s what makes it cumbersome to carry, but that’s also what keeps thieves moving on to the next bike – a bike that is secured with a lock that’s much easier to cut through or pick than yours is.

2. Buy a second locking device (yes, you DO need 2 locks!).

Proper bike theft prevention means making your bike as difficult to steal as possible.
Which is why I always use 2 locking devices: a Kryptonite looped cable combined with my Kryptonite New York U-lock. (When I’m really paranoid about protecting my bike, I use both of my New York locks!)

Since a thief will always try to steal a bike that can easily be taken in seconds, rather than minutes, the trick to protection is using multiple locks. Don’t be lazy about this. Two locking devices are better than one.

3. Lock your bike to a fixed object.

Better yet, lock your bike to a fixed bike stand. Always. I will scour Toronto’s streets, looking for one of 16,000 post-and-ring stands to lock my bike to, because the stands are securely cemented to the sidewalk and I’m able to lock both the wheels and the frame to the pole. They are much sturdier than a wimpy sign post, which I only use when desperate during quick daytime stops.

Remember: a movable object can be moved, even if your bike is locked to it. See the first photo if you don’t believe me. But you do, so let’s move on, shall we?

4. Lock your bike wheels AND your bike frame to a bike stand.
The keyword here is bike: lock your bike to itself as well as a fixed stand.
Double locking your bike means that if a thief steals your bike by breaking the bike stand, the thief will not be able to ride off with your bike if your wheels are locked to your frame. And it’d be mighty suspicious to carry a fully locked bike down the street, no?

Here are 5 steps for securely locking your bike with your U-lock and a looped cable (see photo above while following the instructions below).

  • Place your bike – gears facing out – against a fixed stand.
  • Loop one end of the cable through the front wheel and around the down tube and stand; thread one end of the cable through the other.
  • Don’t leave space for bolt cutters to fit in the gap. If you need to, wrap the cable twice around the seat post, the wheel or both.
  • Fit the U-lock around the bike stand, seat tube and rear wheel. (If you can only fit the U-lock around the bike stand and seat tube, so be it.)
  • Thread one U-lock end through the free cable loop, and lock the lock!

Alternative 1: Loop the cable through the front wheel and down tube twice, securing the U-lock to both looped ends.
Alternative 2: Secure the front wheel with another U-lock or a cable lock instead of a looped cable.

5. Pick a highly visible, well-lit area.
The easiest way to deter someone from stealing your bike? Lock your bike in a highly visible area, as the thief won’t want to be seen stealing. The best spot would be beside a street lamp on a busy sidewalk.

Look for a public place with these 4 must-haves.

  • Lots of pedestrian traffic.
  • Lots of stationary people (people lingering, sitting on a patio or by a window or on a bench – people who might notice your bike and that a stranger is eyeing or handling it).
  • Lots of vehicular traffic.
  • Lots of light, especially at night (streetlights are your friends).

The other night (see the first photo), I locked my bike in a place blocked off by a lot of construction, where there was little vehicular and pedestrian traffic, in a dark corner between two business towers that had closed for the night. And it was a movable stand. All “don’ts”!!! The only “do” I got right was locking my bike properly with 2 locking devices – that’s what saved my bike from being stolen. Nearby, however, were 3 other stands overflowing with bikes, which brings us to Tip 6: There’s safety in numbers. Or at least there should be.

6. Prevent theft by locking your bike with lots of other bikes.
This photo I took of bikes in Lucerne, Switzerland, shows how a bike stand to bike thieves is like a candy store to a kid. However, there actually is safety in numbers when it comes to protecting your bike from theft: if your bike is locked securely, it’s safer with a group of bikes that aren’t locked properly than it is parked by itself.

As I’ve stated all along, bike thieves want to make a quick getaway more than they want to steal an expensive bike. As obvious as that sounds, I used to think it was the other way around.

So remember: if there are tons of bikes in the vicinity, they’ll always try to steal the bike that is the easiest (read: quickest) to grab. Make sure that’s not your bike!

__________________________________________________________

For more on bike safety, check out…
Girly Gear to Light Up Your Ride

Use Your Knog(gin): Ride With a Bright Bike Light 
I Heart My TV Sucks Ride Your Bike Bumper Sticker
‘Cause I Love My Brain, I Want a Nutcase Helmet
Simi Mini Dots Nutcase Helmet Fit for Minnie Mouse
Ring My Bell: Ciao Bello to My Public Bike Bell, Federico! 

skating in the rain at city hall

08 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in architecture, outdoors, photography

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

canada, city hall, ice rink, skating, toronto

Forget about singing in the rain. Ice skating in the rain at Nathan Philips Square is so much cooler! And with the warm, wet weather we’ve been having this winter’s end in Toronto, ice skating through puddles is really the only way to get around our popular outdoor rinks. Popular, at least, when the ice is frozen. Last night, however, only a handful of skaters laced up their ice skates to enjoy the slick surface at the Nathan Phillips Square rink, which made for a picturesque reflecting pool with Old City Hall in the background and space-agey Toronto City Hall, or New City Hall (below), lighting up the night just steps away.

__________________________________________________________

What: Night skating at Nathan Phillips Square
Where: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
When: Wednesday, March 7, 2012, was the last good skating day of the season. Check the city’s outdoor rinks status page for details on which outdoor rinks are operational till March 11.
Caveat: With the Zambonis retired till next year, the ice surface maybe be uneven from melting and refreezing.

Cost: FREE if you have your own skates; rentals are closed for the season.
Why: With this wonky weather, the rinks are relatively empty, so you can have the rink to yourself for a relaxing night skate to say bye to winter!

Want to see Nathan Phillips
Square packed with skaters
during the day? Check out…
Winter Solstice
(Or Let’s Skate, Toronto)


that’s me…dancing in an IDD flashmob!

07 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in dance, inspiration, music

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

art, dance, flashmob, international dance day, performing arts, toronto

That’s right! That’s me on International Dance Day (IDD) 2011, dancing in a flashmob as part of the National Ballet School‘s celebrations in Toronto’s David Pecaut Square, in front of Roy Thomson Hall! Hard to spot, I know. I’m behind the ladies in red: look for purple hair, pink scarf, blue jacket.

I’m sooo not a dancer, yet for that very brief moment last spring – thanks to the National Ballet School (NBS) and International Dance Day – I considered myself one. Best. Experience. Ever. The NBS IDD flashmob was the coolest and waaay-out-of-my-comfort-zone awesomest (I know that’s not a word, but it rhymes and I’m going to plead artistic license here). Go on, check out my moves below! I come in on the second verse of Joel Plaskett’s “Penny for Your Thoughts,” but don’t worry if you can’t find me. Even I have a hard time spotting myself till about 3 minutes and 35 seconds in.

__________________________________________________________

What: A flashmob, silly! Specifically, the National Ballet School of Canada‘s second annual flashmob on International Dance Day, April 29, 2011. I rehearsed for two months with the school’s teachers-in-training to perfect my smooth moves!
Where: Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In David Pecaut Square, beside Roy Thomson Hall, in the heart of the entertainment district. This year’s flashmob could be anywhere in Toronto! Psst…in 2012 we’re doing it Bollywood style!
When: International Dance Day takes place every April 29, with dance flashmobs occuring worldwide! There might even be one in your city.
Why: Flashmobs are a spirited way to celebrate a love of dance.

__________________________________________________________


Want to learn the lowdown
on how I got flashmobbing?
You’ll find out soon…
oh so soon!

casa loma: a castle in the heart of toronto

12 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in architecture, photography, travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

arts, canada, casa loma, castle, toronto, travel and tourism

What’s that? A castle in Toronto, you ask? As incredulous as it sounds, we do have a castle, and it’s called Casa Loma. Of course, Casa Loma’s not a real castle. This is Toronto, after all. But we call the mansion – the largest private home in Canada – one anyway. And I can see it through my apartment window as I type.

Named for the land on which it was built (Casa Loma, or “the house on the hill”), the castle dates back to 1911 and was the home of financier Sir Henry Pellatt. It’s now run by the City of Toronto as a tourist attraction and was refurbished by the Kiwanis Club of Casa Loma with period furnishings, including some of the Pellatts’ originals.

As a child, I loved exploring the rooms (there are secret passageways!) and gardens. As an adult, well, I love saying I live near a castle. And as much as I love being out and about, here and abroad, I always look forward to coming home to my gorgeous view, with Casa Loma in the distance. (Of course, with all the big ol’ trees between us, I can only see it peeking through when the branches are bare!)

__________________________________________________________

What: Casa Loma, home/castle turned heritage/tourist attraction
Where: 1 Austin Terrace (just 110 steps – phew! – to the top of the hill north of Spadina Road and Davenport Road), Toronto
When: Open daily 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Cost: Ticket prices include multimedia tour guide, $20.55 (adults), $14.63 (seniors + youth),  $11.32 (children)
Why: I love learning about the history of Toronto. Plus, it’s in my hood. And it was built on the neighbouring Austin family‘s private golf course (the Austins’ former home, next door to Casa Loma, is now Spadina Museum and is worth a visit too!). That’s a bit of Toronto trivia for you!

ps your mystery sender (love!)

09 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in art, fashion, film, inspiration

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

fashion, london, mystery, paul smith, short film, toronto


Last night, I saw the doc Calvet as part of Doc Soup, Hot Docs‘ monthly documentary screening series here in Toronto. Intense film, but, gosh, what’s stuck in my head is the short before Calvet: Benjamin Wigley‘s PS Your Mystery Sender. The quirkiest snippet of a film. I wish…I wish it were longer than its wee 9 minutes. It’s about Paul Smith. The Paul Smith! U.K. fashion designer Paul Smith. And how someone has been sending him random objects in the post for 20 years. No boxes. Just unwrapped seemingly random items creatively plastered with relevant postage stamps (a surfboard mailed with stamps of the ocean) and marked with his address, but no return addy. And he has no clue who’s been sending them. Items like an E.T. doll, a football, an orange safety pylon with “happy birthday” written inside the cone (LOVE!!!), a dressmaker’s judy, a watering can, a diorama of his studio…the list goes on. I sooo want to mail him something myself, but I don’t know how it could clear customs unwrapped. You could try it yourself, though. His addy is: 40-44 Floral St., Covent Garden, London, England WC2E 9DG. Tempting, very tempting, no? You can watch the whimsical trailers above and below – I dare you not to smile!

 

 

to bixi, with love

03 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in bike, gear

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

bicycle-sharing program, bike share, bixi, bixi montreal, bixi toronto, cost bixi toronto, cycling, montreal, toronto, winter riding

Shhh! Don’t tell her I’ve been cheating. I (sheepishly) admit I’ve been cheating on my hybrid, Trixie, with my bike share, Bixi. She’s cute, no? It’s all because I’ve been derailed from B-icicling by this darn rotator cuff injury (heed my winter riding dos and don’ts). Trixie has sat immobile since I was thrown from it and landed on my shoulder, and I only just got round to cleaning off the salt from that night (bad Jen! salt is the death of a bike). But, alas, Trixie’s handlebar and front wheel are still askew, and I’m not yet pain-free to ride comfortably – or safely.

So to get to or from physio, I’ve taken to hopping on Bixi now and then. And I do love how she handles in this non-winter: fat tires that can get through snow just fine. I’d shelled out $95 for a membership in October 2010 to support the Toronto bike share program that was short the 1,000 subscribers needed to get funding so the wheels could start rolling in May 2011.

A Bixi devotee, I use it whenever I visit Montreal, where it started, but with two bikes of my own, I only use Bixi Toronto maybe once a month, the odd time I’m out without my bike. But I must say, it’s been superconvenient being able to hop on and off it as needed. I just might keep using Bixi once I’m able to ride Trixie – it’s handy having a bike on demand!

grand slam

10 Tuesday Jan 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in words

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

performance art, poetry, slams, spoken word, the drake, toronto, toronto poetry slam

Poetry slams rock. The Toronto Poetry Slam at the Drake Hotel Underground
is always packed to standing room only. It’s a monthly spoken word competition, where five judges score each poem based on content and performance. Anyone can sign up to slam. Poets must be prepared with three poems, as there are three rounds, with poets eliminated in each round, going from 12 poets to six to three. Poems must be original and under 3 minutes and 10 seconds; props, costumes and musical instruments aren’t allowed, but teams are. The judges, by the way, are people like you and me, plucked from the audience and of no relation to the poets. Judges can be solo or a team, and their interaction – the entire audience’s interaction, in fact – is all part of the fun.

As I said, poetry slams rock, and the slams at the Drake get rowdy, with booing (of low-scoring judges), cheering, laughing, swearing, sighs of recognition, and snaps of agreement or encouragement. The slam is a community. It’s poets getting up on stage to share their life, in a rhythmic, entertaining way that’s unlike what most people imagine poetry readings to be. Because it’s not just a reading – it’s a slam. And of course, there are lots of poems about breakups and heartache, but there are also political poems, comedic poems, even team poems and musical poems! To quote poet Kay’la Fraser at last night’s pre-slam open mic, the slam is “not a spectator sport. It’s a coliseum where word slayers and truth sayers become gladiators and battle it out with tongues as sharp as their intellectual resolve…[it’s] a beatniks’ revival, a revolution in the making…our art, our life.” Here she is performing This Poetry Game, her ode to the slam.


What: Toronto Poetry Slam
Where: Drake Hotel, 1150 Queen St. W., Toronto, Ont.; 416-531-5042; 866-DRAKE-TO
When: Usually the last Saturday of the month
Time: The slam starts at 8 p.m., but there’s always a lineup before doors open at 7 p.m. (The line for the semifinals starts before 6 p.m.; the finals sells out in advance, so get your tickets early.) Slam and pre-slam open mic signup is at 7:30 p.m.
Cost: Regular slam, $5; finals, TBA

the mediatheque

04 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by lovingtheride in film, travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

documentary, free screenings, mediatheque, national film board, nfb, planet in focus, toronto, toulouse

When I lived in Toulouse, I’d bike by the library every day on my ride along the Canal du Midi to French class at the Alliance Française. From my grade-school French classes, I’d learned that the word for “library” in French was bibliothèque (librarie means “bookstore”); however, in Toulouse I learned that bibliothèque in general referred to the university libraries, which Toulouse has plenty of, since it’s a university town (that’s one of the reasons why I quickly fell in love with Toulouse – it reminded me of my hometown hood, the Annex). The three-storey city library – I should call it the grand library – in Toulouse is known as the médiathèque, and a multimedia mecca it is.

Toulouse’s Médiathèque de José Cabanis dazzled me with such novelties as private viewing stations and music centres (where you could actually play the library’s own instruments!). I borrowed my friend’s library card and would go to the Médiathèque after school with some classmates. We’d check out a DVD, pile into our cosy club chairs, put on the provided headphones and watch a flick in French with French subtitles. It was scads of fun, and I was wholly impressed a public library was equipped with such entertainment. Toulouse even had a separate petit médiathèque devoted to CDs!

So when I returned to Toronto, I was excited to discover we had our own médiathèque, the NFB Mediatheque, in the heart of the Entertainment District. Opened in 2002, the NFB Mediatheque is run by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). As the country’s public film producer and distributor, NFB produces docs as well as animated and dramatic films and shorts – all from a Canadian perspective. And sure, you can watch hundreds of NFB films for free online and in the comfort of your own home, but if you’ve access to the Toronto Mediatheque (or the Montreal CineRobotheque) and its digital viewing stations, I say pay a visit and watch some of the 6,000-plus films on-site.

The Mediatheque even presents free screenings, and the cost for special events is minimal at only $5. I’m heading to one tonight, Waking the Green Tiger. Winner of the 2011 Best Canadian Feature Film Award at Toronto’s Planet in Focus Environmental Film Festival, Waking the Green Tiger is a documentary about a campaign to stop a huge dam in southwestern China. After the screening, there’s a Q&A with director Gary Marcuse (via Skype) and WWF Canada communications specialist Weiwei Su. The discussion (or will that be socializing?) will then move north one building, to the Friar & Firkin
(160 John St.). C’mon, you know you want to join in on the discussion!

The Upper Yangtze River in southwestern China, from the documentary Waking the Green Tiger.

What: NFB Mediatheque
Where: 150 John St., Toronto, Ont.; 416-973-3012
When: Tuesday to Sunday
Cost: Digital viewing stations and some screenings, free; workshops and some screenings, $5


let it snow!

21 Wednesday Dec 2011

Posted by lovingtheride in outdoors, tech

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

easter egg, google, let it snow, snow, toronto

Though we’re lacking in snow here in Toronto and much of Canada, we can still enjoy gently falling flurries and frosty windows on which to write messages to ourselves. Just google the phrase let it snow in Firefox, and watch the snowflakes fall across your screen, then be amused as your screen fogs up with frost. Write whatever bon mots you want on your now-frosty “window,” and defrost when you’re done. How cool is that? (Yeh, I said it.)

A ho-ho-ho-holiday cheer on a faux frosty morning put a smile on this snowbird’s face.

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jennifer krissilas

A girl, her bike, a wee bit o' wanderlust...a lust for life in general. And all things pretty. We can't forget the pretty.

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Oh, the outdoor adventuress. Exploring the world (with a little vélo love). Disguised as a freelance editor. Just a girl, her bike, a wee bit o' wanderlust...a lust for life in general. And all things pretty. We can't forget the pretty. Or the sweets. xoxo jen

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Recent Posts

  • happy new year to all, and to all a good (and safe) night!
  • christmas carollers bring festive cheer to toronto
  • remembrance day: lest we forget
  • TIFF in the park brings classic screwball comedies to toronto all summer long
  • toronto port authority’s sail-in cinema returns, august 16-18, 2012
  • comfy, custom-fit wolverine ics hiking shoes
  • alexi murdoch turns up the heat in toronto
  • it wouldn’t be canada if we didn’t have to stop for geese crossing the road
  • and this is why i dislike the MMVAs
  • toronto’s open roof film festival heralds the start of summer
  • world naked bike ride day: toronto cyclists bare all for the environment
  • luminato celebrates creativity in toronto and the world
  • i heart: “this bike is my car” bike bell
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  • Hi @SUANDBU! When is the Bathurst outpost slated to open? I need to know ASAP for a magazine story. Thanks! 5 years ago
  • Hi @DrSheilaSahni! A reminder that if you're able to reply to the Word doc ASAP today (before noon your time), that's best. Thanks! 6 years ago
  • Hi @DrSheilaSahni! Just checking whether you'll be able to respond to that fact-check email by EOD today. Thanks! 6 years ago
  • Hi @DrSheilaSahni! A heads-up that I e'd a fact-check query re: a reprint of this AARP article: bit.ly/2jApnGw 6 years ago
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