Anchor ads are not supported on this page.

4S Ranch Allied Gardens Alpine Baja Balboa Park Bankers Hill Barrio Logan Bay Ho Bay Park Black Mountain Ranch Blossom Valley Bonita Bonsall Borrego Springs Boulevard Campo Cardiff-by-the-Sea Carlsbad Carmel Mountain Carmel Valley Chollas View Chula Vista City College City Heights Clairemont College Area Coronado CSU San Marcos Cuyamaca College Del Cerro Del Mar Descanso Downtown San Diego Eastlake East Village El Cajon Emerald Hills Encanto Encinitas Escondido Fallbrook Fletcher Hills Golden Hill Grant Hill Grantville Grossmont College Guatay Harbor Island Hillcrest Imperial Beach Imperial Valley Jacumba Jamacha-Lomita Jamul Julian Kearny Mesa Kensington La Jolla Lakeside La Mesa Lemon Grove Leucadia Liberty Station Lincoln Acres Lincoln Park Linda Vista Little Italy Logan Heights Mesa College Midway District MiraCosta College Miramar Miramar College Mira Mesa Mission Beach Mission Hills Mission Valley Mountain View Mount Hope Mount Laguna National City Nestor Normal Heights North Park Oak Park Ocean Beach Oceanside Old Town Otay Mesa Pacific Beach Pala Palomar College Palomar Mountain Paradise Hills Pauma Valley Pine Valley Point Loma Point Loma Nazarene Potrero Poway Rainbow Ramona Rancho Bernardo Rancho Penasquitos Rancho San Diego Rancho Santa Fe Rolando San Carlos San Marcos San Onofre Santa Ysabel Santee San Ysidro Scripps Ranch SDSU Serra Mesa Shelltown Shelter Island Sherman Heights Skyline Solana Beach Sorrento Valley Southcrest South Park Southwestern College Spring Valley Stockton Talmadge Temecula Tierrasanta Tijuana UCSD University City University Heights USD Valencia Park Valley Center Vista Warner Springs

Tylenol, Sweat Scents, Volcano Incinerator

Dear Matthew Alice:

While I was waiting for the Tylenol to kick in and stop my headache, I decided to read the ingredient list on the bottle. Active ingredients: Acetaminophen. Inactive ingredients: carnauba wax, cellulose, corn starch, iron oxide, sucralose, talc, titanium dioxide. What? Inactive ingredients? Why are they there if they don’t do anything? Why do I have car wax in my pills?

— Naomi, via email

We’d have an easier time answering this if the research elves weren’t such inactive ingredients. Half of them are hanging out around the wide-screen watching Top Gear. The rest are bugging Grandma Alice for more waffles. They’re contributing nothing here, but we’d be lost without their smiley faces. Same goes for carnauba wax and cornstarch.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The whole point of a Tylenol pill is to deliver to you a tiny dab of easy-to-swallow acetaminophen. But if all they gave you was the fly-speck bit of medicine, you’d have a heck of a time getting one dose out of the bottle. There’d be acetaminophen all over the place — stuck under your fingernails, ground into the carpet, sailing through the air by the open window. What to do? Well, how about mixing the meds into other ingredients that turn nothing into something? The stuff would be inactive (have nothing to do with getting rid of a headache), it would just be stuff that would help move the pills through the manufacturing process and make a coating that’s easy to gulp down. And have no fear. Carnauba is a versatile vegetable wax that can coat your car or, in its food-grade format, your headache pill.

Hey, Matt:

I have a friend who insists he can tell the difference between the smell of his sweat when he exercises and when he’s nervous. Is this possible?

— Abe, North Park

What a fine-nosed friend you have. True enough, we sweat two different kinds of water, but neither one of them has much smell by itself. Eccrine sweat (from glands of the same name) appears all over our bodies when we exercise, but especially in our pits, palms, feet, and foreheads. The stuff is mostly water, salt, urea, and lactic acid. All this is smell-less until it encounters bacteria, which use the moisture to feed, reproduce, and excrete wastes that sorta stink. Apocrine glands, and sweat by the same name, are much sexier. They’re active beginning in puberty and are concentrated in the armpits and groin. The resulting sweat has organic content and also human pheromones, good for attracting the opposite sex assuming you’re not too drenched in eccrine sweat. Again, this sweat has almost no smell of its own but depends on skin bacteria to create a big stink. So, Abe, I can’t prove your friend can tell the difference, but at least he has a little science to back him up.

Heymatt:

I think I’ve come up with a great idea for getting rid of the world’s trash. Why don’t we put it all in a volcano. It must be hot enough to get rid of it all. What do you think of the idea?

— JB, via email

Well, I’m glad I didn’t come up with it. Full of holes, unfortunately. See, JB, most of the volcanoes around the globe are mostly just sitting there with plugs of rock in them, so if we filled them full of trash we’d just have a very hard-to-get-to landfill. And once the volcano did blow, it probably would find a weak spot along the side of the cone before it blew the rock plug. If it did shoot the plug, it would be raining Pampers and old mattresses for miles.

So, say we just threw stuff in active cones, the ones with magma near the surface. Good luck finding somebody to run the garbage up there. Active volcanoes spew out lethal gasses and ash that would prevent even a helicopter from depositing our old refrigerators and cat litter over the cone.

The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

Here's something you might be interested in.
Submit a free classified
or view all
Previous article

Pie pleasure at Queenstown Public House

A taste of New Zealand brings back happy memories
Next Article

Gonzo Report: Eating dinner while little kids mock-mosh at Golden Island

“The tot absorbs the punk rock shot with the skill of experience”

Dear Matthew Alice:

While I was waiting for the Tylenol to kick in and stop my headache, I decided to read the ingredient list on the bottle. Active ingredients: Acetaminophen. Inactive ingredients: carnauba wax, cellulose, corn starch, iron oxide, sucralose, talc, titanium dioxide. What? Inactive ingredients? Why are they there if they don’t do anything? Why do I have car wax in my pills?

— Naomi, via email

We’d have an easier time answering this if the research elves weren’t such inactive ingredients. Half of them are hanging out around the wide-screen watching Top Gear. The rest are bugging Grandma Alice for more waffles. They’re contributing nothing here, but we’d be lost without their smiley faces. Same goes for carnauba wax and cornstarch.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The whole point of a Tylenol pill is to deliver to you a tiny dab of easy-to-swallow acetaminophen. But if all they gave you was the fly-speck bit of medicine, you’d have a heck of a time getting one dose out of the bottle. There’d be acetaminophen all over the place — stuck under your fingernails, ground into the carpet, sailing through the air by the open window. What to do? Well, how about mixing the meds into other ingredients that turn nothing into something? The stuff would be inactive (have nothing to do with getting rid of a headache), it would just be stuff that would help move the pills through the manufacturing process and make a coating that’s easy to gulp down. And have no fear. Carnauba is a versatile vegetable wax that can coat your car or, in its food-grade format, your headache pill.

Hey, Matt:

I have a friend who insists he can tell the difference between the smell of his sweat when he exercises and when he’s nervous. Is this possible?

— Abe, North Park

What a fine-nosed friend you have. True enough, we sweat two different kinds of water, but neither one of them has much smell by itself. Eccrine sweat (from glands of the same name) appears all over our bodies when we exercise, but especially in our pits, palms, feet, and foreheads. The stuff is mostly water, salt, urea, and lactic acid. All this is smell-less until it encounters bacteria, which use the moisture to feed, reproduce, and excrete wastes that sorta stink. Apocrine glands, and sweat by the same name, are much sexier. They’re active beginning in puberty and are concentrated in the armpits and groin. The resulting sweat has organic content and also human pheromones, good for attracting the opposite sex assuming you’re not too drenched in eccrine sweat. Again, this sweat has almost no smell of its own but depends on skin bacteria to create a big stink. So, Abe, I can’t prove your friend can tell the difference, but at least he has a little science to back him up.

Heymatt:

I think I’ve come up with a great idea for getting rid of the world’s trash. Why don’t we put it all in a volcano. It must be hot enough to get rid of it all. What do you think of the idea?

— JB, via email

Well, I’m glad I didn’t come up with it. Full of holes, unfortunately. See, JB, most of the volcanoes around the globe are mostly just sitting there with plugs of rock in them, so if we filled them full of trash we’d just have a very hard-to-get-to landfill. And once the volcano did blow, it probably would find a weak spot along the side of the cone before it blew the rock plug. If it did shoot the plug, it would be raining Pampers and old mattresses for miles.

So, say we just threw stuff in active cones, the ones with magma near the surface. Good luck finding somebody to run the garbage up there. Active volcanoes spew out lethal gasses and ash that would prevent even a helicopter from depositing our old refrigerators and cat litter over the cone.

Comments
Sponsored

The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

Here's something you might be interested in.
Submit a free classified
or view all
Previous article

Classical Classical at The San Diego Symphony Orchestra

A concert I didn't know I needed
Next Article

Second largest yellowfin tuna caught by rod and reel

Excel does it again
Comments
Ask a Hipster — Advice you didn't know you needed Big Screen — Movie commentary Blurt — Music's inside track Booze News — San Diego spirits Classical Music — Immortal beauty Classifieds — Free and easy Cover Stories — Front-page features Drinks All Around — Bartenders' drink recipes Excerpts — Literary and spiritual excerpts Feast! — Food & drink reviews Feature Stories — Local news & stories Fishing Report — What’s getting hooked from ship and shore From the Archives — Spotlight on the past Golden Dreams — Talk of the town The Gonzo Report — Making the musical scene, or at least reporting from it Letters — Our inbox Movies@Home — Local movie buffs share favorites Movie Reviews — Our critics' picks and pans Musician Interviews — Up close with local artists Neighborhood News from Stringers — Hyperlocal news News Ticker — News & politics Obermeyer — San Diego politics illustrated Outdoors — Weekly changes in flora and fauna Overheard in San Diego — Eavesdropping illustrated Poetry — The old and the new Reader Travel — Travel section built by travelers Reading — The hunt for intellectuals Roam-O-Rama — SoCal's best hiking/biking trails San Diego Beer — Inside San Diego suds SD on the QT — Almost factual news Sheep and Goats — Places of worship Special Issues — The best of Street Style — San Diego streets have style Surf Diego — Real stories from those braving the waves Theater — On stage in San Diego this week Tin Fork — Silver spoon alternative Under the Radar — Matt Potter's undercover work Unforgettable — Long-ago San Diego Unreal Estate — San Diego's priciest pads Your Week — Daily event picks
4S Ranch Allied Gardens Alpine Baja Balboa Park Bankers Hill Barrio Logan Bay Ho Bay Park Black Mountain Ranch Blossom Valley Bonita Bonsall Borrego Springs Boulevard Campo Cardiff-by-the-Sea Carlsbad Carmel Mountain Carmel Valley Chollas View Chula Vista City College City Heights Clairemont College Area Coronado CSU San Marcos Cuyamaca College Del Cerro Del Mar Descanso Downtown San Diego Eastlake East Village El Cajon Emerald Hills Encanto Encinitas Escondido Fallbrook Fletcher Hills Golden Hill Grant Hill Grantville Grossmont College Guatay Harbor Island Hillcrest Imperial Beach Imperial Valley Jacumba Jamacha-Lomita Jamul Julian Kearny Mesa Kensington La Jolla Lakeside La Mesa Lemon Grove Leucadia Liberty Station Lincoln Acres Lincoln Park Linda Vista Little Italy Logan Heights Mesa College Midway District MiraCosta College Miramar Miramar College Mira Mesa Mission Beach Mission Hills Mission Valley Mountain View Mount Hope Mount Laguna National City Nestor Normal Heights North Park Oak Park Ocean Beach Oceanside Old Town Otay Mesa Pacific Beach Pala Palomar College Palomar Mountain Paradise Hills Pauma Valley Pine Valley Point Loma Point Loma Nazarene Potrero Poway Rainbow Ramona Rancho Bernardo Rancho Penasquitos Rancho San Diego Rancho Santa Fe Rolando San Carlos San Marcos San Onofre Santa Ysabel Santee San Ysidro Scripps Ranch SDSU Serra Mesa Shelltown Shelter Island Sherman Heights Skyline Solana Beach Sorrento Valley Southcrest South Park Southwestern College Spring Valley Stockton Talmadge Temecula Tierrasanta Tijuana UCSD University City University Heights USD Valencia Park Valley Center Vista Warner Springs
Close

Anchor ads are not supported on this page.

This Week’s Reader This Week’s Reader