h a l f b a k e r yEureka! Keeping naked people off the streets since 1999.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Sounds like it'd work [+]. |
|
|
Seems like a Tom Sawyer approach to buttering vitamin D on the skin, where it will not be absorbed because skin is picky, and where sun will not hit it because it is under a coat, because it is snowing. |
|
|
But it might be a good marketing pitch to sell some lotion so I will restrain my bone. |
|
|
I'm calling no idea here, because black people burn and tan
just like us lily-white honkies, only maybe not as easily. I
don't know about that last part, as I'm very, very Nordically
white (I'm not Caucasian). |
|
|
In the winter, it's actually easier to burn on exposed skin,
because UV rays are reflected from the snow almost
effectively as if the ground were mirrored. The occasional
black people I meet up at the ski mountain often complain
that their cheeks are burned. So, no, unless you're black or
have access to a pool of live black test subjects, I'm not
buying it. Sorry. |
|
|
Some bituminous substances increase
photosensitivity, thus acting as reverse sunscreen
(creosote is notorious for this). They may or may not
increase the production of osteoporosis-preventing
vitamin D. |
|
|
But it might be a good marketing notion
to sell some pitch so that I will retain my bone. |
|
|
At high latitudes in winter, *everybody* is short on UV exposure. |
|
|
And considering the chemical root of 7-dehydrocholesterol, I think it would be only natural to give this product the scent (and flavor) of bacon. |
|
| |