麻豆传媒

Feedback: Noel Edmonds’ electrosmog emissions

Plus sexing up the numbers, Anchor Cheddar formula does the rounds, even-handed policing, and more

Feedback

(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

Positively fruitloopy

VETERAN TV presenter Noel Edmonds is sleeping soundly at night after spending 拢2000 on a computerised yoga mat that recalibrates his electromagnetic fields. Edmonds shared the good news on Celebrity Radio, where he explained that phones and Wi-Fi are covering us all in the wrong sorts of electromagnetism, assuring host Alex Belfield .

That miracle mat is the , which promises a suite of 鈥減rofound鈥 such as better sleep, reduced stress, and, alarmingly, a 500 per cent increase in cellular energy.

To achieve this, the manufacturers claim that the EMPpad 鈥減roduces an electromagnetic pulse at an intensity and frequency which mimics the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field鈥. Handy for astronauts, we presume, but rather redundant for Earth-bound folk.

Duncan Gaskin is told by The Mirror that eating spicy food makes him 鈥溾. 鈥淧ass me a Korma,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 might live forever!鈥

A tall order

READERS may recall that Noel Edmonds previously baffled audiences with talk of 鈥渃osmic ordering鈥, a type of wishful thinking in which the cosmos will fulfill your desires, if you only ask.

This was accompanied by Positively Happy, a book in which the multi-millionaire 鈥渆mbarks on a journey to discover a scientific explanation for his enhanced state of well-being鈥. Edmonds concluded that the answer lies in a positivity formula of 鈥渟cientifically proven elements鈥 in the form of abstruse questions such as 鈥淒o you trust your tap water?鈥 and 鈥淗ow well do you treat your villi?鈥.

You can even file your astronomical demands online at the Cosmic Ordering Site (). Much as Feedback is tempted to ask the heavens for an end to this sort of fruitloopery, we can鈥檛 in good faith rid the world of something that brings so much genuine happiness to Noel Edmonds, and, in a roundabout way, to many of us as well.

Sex by numbers

FOR some weeks, correspondents to the Letters page have wondered how the average lifetime number of sexual partners could be 12 for men and 8 for women, as reported in 麻豆传媒 (27 June, p 34).

The Letters editor has put to bed these discussions, but Feedback is sure the assembled minds here can offer some ingenious hypotheses.

David Parlett suggests that the figures make perfect sense if the number of sexually active men and women is mismatched. 鈥淚f there were a community of 12 women and 8 men, and each possible heterosexual pairing occurred at one time or another,鈥 he writes, 鈥渢hen the women will each have had an average of eight partners and the men an average of twelve. Problem solved.鈥

Damn lies

MEANWHILE Anne Miller suggests: 鈥淭hose who say that it鈥檚 impossible for men to have more lifetime partners than women neglect the implications of population growth.鈥 Given that men seem to prefer younger women, and a growing population has more young than old, Anne reasons 鈥渋t is mathematically straightforward for them to have significantly more lifetime partners than women do鈥.

Finally, Rory Allen writes to identify two explanations for the discrepancy. The first being that men are more willing to take part in same-sex encounters compared with women, while the second is that men are simply more willing to exaggerate. In truth, says Rory, 鈥渢hese numbers tell us more about the inaccuracy of self-reported statistics than they do about sexual activity鈥.

Card games

CHECKING our inbox, we find yet more ideas for renaming contactless cards. S. J. Courtney astutely points out that it would make more sense to name these cards for what they do, rather than what they don鈥檛. 鈥淪ince the user simply waves them over the reader, I suggest they be called wave-overs, possibly spelled wavovers.鈥

Avoiding the dreaded combination of Greek and Latin, Mike Frederick writes with a suggestion that is 鈥渆ntirely Latin and appearing to non-classical scholars to fit the current vogue for portmanteau words鈥. We rather like his solution: 鈥渘ontact鈥.

That鈥檚 rich!

THE use of pseudoscientific equations as an advertising gimmick continues to evolve. Feedback previously mulled the unexplained letters scattered like runes in M&C Saatchi鈥檚 鈥渉oly grail鈥 of marketing (25 July).

Now Anchor Cheddar advances the field again with a 鈥渇ormula for richness鈥 that seeks to quantify the value in our lives through the mysterious interaction of letters coding for attitudes toward success, family and perfection, .

Happily enough, the equation finds that those with the richest lives aren鈥檛 wealthy financiers but married couples on middle incomes and other groups that fall into Anchor Cheddar鈥檚 target market. Fancy that.

Even-handed policing

POLICE in Leicestershire, UK, have been investigating burglaries only at even-numbered homes, reveals the . The scheme is said to have reduced workload with no effect on convictions or public satisfaction (though Feedback wonders if only even-numbered homes were sampled in surveys on police satisfaction).

Five more counties are eyeing a similar cost-saving measure. This presents an interesting dilemma for would-be burglars: if you suspect the local force has such a policy in effect, is it better to stick to odd or even-numbered homes, or spread your risk by alternating between the two?

Topics: electromagnetism

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