Panera is totally in the wrong here. I don’t have any health condition, but I am pretty sensitive to caffeine and avoid it after 1pm. I ate at Panera for the first time ever last week and made the exact same mistake that Sarah Katz did because the fountain drinks, including lemonade and iced tea, are self serve so all you need to buy is a fountain drink and the employees have no idea what you’re going to choose as a beverage. I walked up to the beverage station and saw that the lemonade was not labeled as containing caffeine while the iced tea next to it had ‘contains caffeine’ written on its sign. I chose the lemonade and didn’t realize it contained caffeine until a co-worker told me about Sarah Katz. I poured the lemonade out and got some lemon seltzer instead. Unless you pay close attention to Panera’s advertising and visit frequently, there is no way you could be expected to know that ‘charged’ means caffeinated especially when the beverage dispenser next to the lemonade says ‘contains caffeine’ and the lemonade does not.
if you want more info on it go watch matpat’s video on it over on food theory. I knew it was full of caffeine before i drank it and i’m fairly tall so caffeine hits less for me but it still a shocking amount of caffeine and suspiciously is around 390 for the largest one. Just 10mg under the 400mg FDA recommended limit
The ONLY reason I found out about the caffeine content was because of some peers. There should have been more warnings. I feel so bad that a life was lost. A person of that age- no doctor would even usually test them for heart issues- no one should find out the hard way.
Yup! I made a similar mistake last year when they first released. Some company brought our office Panera for lunch including some big half-gallon jugs of the lemonade, I saw that the lemonades were caffeinated and went “I used to work at Starbucks, I know how much caffeine goes into a fruity beverage that contains green coffee extract” not realizing the caffeine content of a refresher is like 50mg for a 16oz drink and not QUADRUPLE that. Needless to say, I woke up at 2am that night sweating bullets and in full paranoia mode.
Ceramic definitely flakes off, in my experience it's frankly less durable than teflon. However, at least it's a rock and a precious metal instead of fluorine forever chemical. And the plasma beam tech is actually real cool - we can now make actual diamonds and crazy semiconductors with that stuff.
i think ceramic pans aren't toxic like teflon, they don't outgas. 30000F thing still bs though it's like a phone company telling you their signals are sent at THE SPEED OF LIGHT
In terms of dinner times the thing with Spain is that this is a country where nighttime in summer comes _very late_ for the latitudes. Like, up to 11:30pm late. We're out and about with our cañas until it's like 10 and there's no reason to not do it. Combined with delayed and parted work schedules that have people leave the office at 8pm after a 3 hour "lunch break" at like 2pm the order of the meals is just completely different from even our neighbours. Yes, a restaurant is open for dinner at 11pm and will generally have customers but it's uncommon for said dinner to be a full course meal, or at least less common than what you'd find with a menu at 2:30pm.
the placebo effect thing is how i feel too. ginger ale helps when you're feeling nauseous for this reason also. doesn't matter if it actually helps or not, it still does for me
Re: earlier dinners. I wonder if it's just me or if there is a rising amount of people pushing for 7-3 rather than 9-5 jobs, especially since you mitigate some traffic by going earlier or don't have to have a whole routine for the morning when you just roll out your bed and into the office.
I work 6-230 and Im so glad I can avoid rush hour traffic. Every time I am driving around 5 o clock I am blown away by how terrible our road infrastructure is at handling daily commutes
That frying pan thing, I suspect they laser etched it, or plasma etched it, at some point in the process. And then pretended like a plasma beam or the focal point of a laser has a meaningful 'temperature' (it kind of doesn't)
The wild thing is that the charged lemonade (which was introduced while I was in college) was part of the 'sip club'. The sip club let you get a free drink every two hours, which meant my friends and I were getting MULTIPLE of these lemonades basically every day.
My brother has long qt syndrome and the panera story was so scary when I read about it. The idea that he could just be drinking a lemonade and die is terrifying. The fact that panera advertised this "meonade" as being comparable to coffee is ridiculous and the fact that they had it in the self serve beverage section is recklessly negligent.
I'm a physicist, there are various ways you can technically create a temperature of 30,000 F in a manufacturing process. Remember as a kid when you moved your finger quickly through a candle flame and didn't get burnt? Hot temperature for a short time is feasible. Blasting aluminum with X-Rays will produces plasma on the surface at millions of degrees. I would presume the marketeers defend the lawsuit technically with some justification like that.
Call BS it’s the same amount of caffeine as a coffee. Every time I’ve had a charge lemonade I am wired. I only drink them if I know I’m gonna be having to stay up for a super long time like for a road trip. I’ve had their coffees at the same exact size with the same exact amount, and they do not hit the same.
Agree with you that if chicken soup is a placebo effect, then that's not a bad thing to worry about. However, it should be noted that the placebo effect isn't real, pretty much by definition. People tend to erroneously think that the placebo effect is that the body can trick itself into healing itself, but that isn't the case. It's just purely a trick, plain and simple. People who "get better" from a placebo effect were going to get better whether they thought they were getting a wonderdrug or if they thought they were on death's door. The mentality of it simply doesn't play a role. Placebo is just used as a control in drug studies and the purported effect is just a funny little trick than anything actually serious.
When I’m sick and don’t have energy, my favorite activity is to boil a chicken, cut up vegetables, and make homemade chicken soup and not to sit in bed with my iPad. 😂
Doesn’t Americas aging demographics explain prime dinner reservation time moving earlier better than “Netflix theory” or people working from home just eat earlier because it was about when they were home and not when they were hungry. 12:31
on the soup thing i feel like beyond the placebo the answer is just that soup obviously helps when you're sick and everyone has known it for thousands of years and someone just thought it would be twee squee totally XD random to I F*CKING LOVE SCIENCE™ it and look i know the article probably comes from a good place and it's kinda mean for me to shit on it but that is some fresh baked millennial cringe
Not gonna lie really digging this series
why would you lie about that
@@daybrake2 for that "manic supportive fan" clout
16 minutes is a great length, IMO. Just enough time to watch while on a little break and I feel like it suits the content well.
Panera is totally in the wrong here. I don’t have any health condition, but I am pretty sensitive to caffeine and avoid it after 1pm. I ate at Panera for the first time ever last week and made the exact same mistake that Sarah Katz did because the fountain drinks, including lemonade and iced tea, are self serve so all you need to buy is a fountain drink and the employees have no idea what you’re going to choose as a beverage. I walked up to the beverage station and saw that the lemonade was not labeled as containing caffeine while the iced tea next to it had ‘contains caffeine’ written on its sign. I chose the lemonade and didn’t realize it contained caffeine until a co-worker told me about Sarah Katz. I poured the lemonade out and got some lemon seltzer instead. Unless you pay close attention to Panera’s advertising and visit frequently, there is no way you could be expected to know that ‘charged’ means caffeinated especially when the beverage dispenser next to the lemonade says ‘contains caffeine’ and the lemonade does not.
if you want more info on it go watch matpat’s video on it over on food theory. I knew it was full of caffeine before i drank it and i’m fairly tall so caffeine hits less for me but it still a shocking amount of caffeine and suspiciously is around 390 for the largest one. Just 10mg under the 400mg FDA recommended limit
We have a word for caffeinated. It's caffeinated. Not charged...
The ONLY reason I found out about the caffeine content was because of some peers. There should have been more warnings. I feel so bad that a life was lost. A person of that age- no doctor would even usually test them for heart issues- no one should find out the hard way.
Yup! I made a similar mistake last year when they first released. Some company brought our office Panera for lunch including some big half-gallon jugs of the lemonade, I saw that the lemonades were caffeinated and went “I used to work at Starbucks, I know how much caffeine goes into a fruity beverage that contains green coffee extract” not realizing the caffeine content of a refresher is like 50mg for a 16oz drink and not QUADRUPLE that. Needless to say, I woke up at 2am that night sweating bullets and in full paranoia mode.
Ceramic definitely flakes off, in my experience it's frankly less durable than teflon. However, at least it's a rock and a precious metal instead of fluorine forever chemical. And the plasma beam tech is actually real cool - we can now make actual diamonds and crazy semiconductors with that stuff.
I think a 15 minute average is a great length for this type of newsy commentary content
2:31 internet shaquille referencing an extranet shaquille video on an internet shaquille stream that is later cut into an extranet shaquille video
Shaqception. Soon he will complete the infinite content loop
i think ceramic pans aren't toxic like teflon, they don't outgas. 30000F thing still bs though it's like a phone company telling you their signals are sent at THE SPEED OF LIGHT
the ceramic can definitely flake though and i don't think titanium and ceramic minerals are good to eat but it's not a fluorocarbon
In terms of dinner times the thing with Spain is that this is a country where nighttime in summer comes _very late_ for the latitudes. Like, up to 11:30pm late. We're out and about with our cañas until it's like 10 and there's no reason to not do it. Combined with delayed and parted work schedules that have people leave the office at 8pm after a 3 hour "lunch break" at like 2pm the order of the meals is just completely different from even our neighbours. Yes, a restaurant is open for dinner at 11pm and will generally have customers but it's uncommon for said dinner to be a full course meal, or at least less common than what you'd find with a menu at 2:30pm.
Came for te Extranet Shaquille, stayed for the sudden Mirror’s Edge reference
the placebo effect thing is how i feel too. ginger ale helps when you're feeling nauseous for this reason also. doesn't matter if it actually helps or not, it still does for me
Re: earlier dinners. I wonder if it's just me or if there is a rising amount of people pushing for 7-3 rather than 9-5 jobs, especially since you mitigate some traffic by going earlier or don't have to have a whole routine for the morning when you just roll out your bed and into the office.
I work 6-230 and Im so glad I can avoid rush hour traffic. Every time I am driving around 5 o clock I am blown away by how terrible our road infrastructure is at handling daily commutes
What is the Charge? Eating a meal? A succulent Spanish meal?
Loving this series!
SHAKKY BOYYY did anyone ever buy the $1000 foot pics Patreon tier back in the good ole days?
more than 5 actually
@@netshaq2thats LA Cruset money right there. 😂
That frying pan thing, I suspect they laser etched it, or plasma etched it, at some point in the process. And then pretended like a plasma beam or the focal point of a laser has a meaningful 'temperature' (it kind of doesn't)
The wild thing is that the charged lemonade (which was introduced while I was in college) was part of the 'sip club'. The sip club let you get a free drink every two hours, which meant my friends and I were getting MULTIPLE of these lemonades basically every day.
best youtuba out rn
My brother has long qt syndrome and the panera story was so scary when I read about it. The idea that he could just be drinking a lemonade and die is terrifying. The fact that panera advertised this "meonade" as being comparable to coffee is ridiculous and the fact that they had it in the self serve beverage section is recklessly negligent.
i prefer the longer lengths, but appreciate the good content either way you cut it.
6pm and then the delay while your food is cooked basically makes it a 7 oclock dinner anyway
The placebo effect is mind-blowing. You can even get a placebo effect when you are told ahead of time it's a placebo!
Love this series!
I really like this series ❤
Plasma vapor disposition is a thing
I drink a pot of coffee most everyday, 390mg of caffeine doesn't seem like very much in that context
For a second I thought the guy in the thumbnail was Stavros Halkias 😂
I'm a physicist, there are various ways you can technically create a temperature of 30,000 F in a manufacturing process. Remember as a kid when you moved your finger quickly through a candle flame and didn't get burnt? Hot temperature for a short time is feasible. Blasting aluminum with X-Rays will produces plasma on the surface at millions of degrees. I would presume the marketeers defend the lawsuit technically with some justification like that.
fav series on yt rn
as someone who likes to be home before 9pm, i would absolutely love to get dinner at 6 or 7!
This guys drinking the equivalent of my entire calorie allowance in beer every day
“Maybe when I edited this one down it’ll be 6 minutes instead of 16”.
Lmao it is 16 minutes
Call BS it’s the same amount of caffeine as a coffee. Every time I’ve had a charge lemonade I am wired. I only drink them if I know I’m gonna be having to stay up for a super long time like for a road trip. I’ve had their coffees at the same exact size with the same exact amount, and they do not hit the same.
The cookware you displayed at 6 minutes is high quality but im not spending 2 months income on kitchen stuff
Agree with you that if chicken soup is a placebo effect, then that's not a bad thing to worry about. However, it should be noted that the placebo effect isn't real, pretty much by definition. People tend to erroneously think that the placebo effect is that the body can trick itself into healing itself, but that isn't the case. It's just purely a trick, plain and simple. People who "get better" from a placebo effect were going to get better whether they thought they were getting a wonderdrug or if they thought they were on death's door. The mentality of it simply doesn't play a role. Placebo is just used as a control in drug studies and the purported effect is just a funny little trick than anything actually serious.
When I’m sick and don’t have energy, my favorite activity is to boil a chicken, cut up vegetables, and make homemade chicken soup and not to sit in bed with my iPad. 😂
thats why you gotta UberEats the chicken soup
Ninja neverstick is one of my favorite non-stick pans.
Wild Gura feature at 00:29
Me and my partner usually book 5-6pm. We like to eat. We eat too much. We want time to decompress after
As an European, it's still weird to hear that you eat diner as early as 5pm, that's our snack time!
I take offense at the suggestion that we have dinner at midnight in Spain! It’s more like… 10pm 😭😂
I wished there was more minutes
Doesn’t Americas aging demographics explain prime dinner reservation time moving earlier better than “Netflix theory” or people working from home just eat earlier because it was about when they were home and not when they were hungry. 12:31
CTRL + shift + t
on the soup thing i feel like beyond the placebo the answer is just that soup obviously helps when you're sick and everyone has known it for thousands of years and someone just thought it would be twee squee totally XD random to I F*CKING LOVE SCIENCE™ it and look i know the article probably comes from a good place and it's kinda mean for me to shit on it but that is some fresh baked millennial cringe