Daily Mail
Article
Daily Mail is a recurring publication in the Astral Codex Ten archive, appearing 3 times across 3 issues between March 02, 2021 and April 09, 2024. The archive places it in contexts such as “The Daily Mail talks about being BOILED ALIVE BY INTERNET SLIMMING PILLS!”; “Daily Mail had an interview with psychiatry professor Hans-Peter Volz”; “In an interview with the Daily Mail on 3/4/20, he said that”. It most often appears alongside FDA, S14, 1938 FDA.
Metadata
- Category: Publications
- Mention count: 3
- Issue count: 3
- First seen: March 02, 2021
- Last seen: April 09, 2024
Appears In
- Shilling For Big Mitochondria
- Lavender’s Game: Silexan For Anxiety
- Highlights From The Comments On The Lab Leak Debate
Related Pages
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- FDA (2 shared issues)
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- S14 (1 shared issues)
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- 1938 FDA (1 shared issues)
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- 2,4-dinitrophenol (1 shared issues)
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- 2,4-dinitrophenol (1 shared issues)
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- 2009 flu pandemic (1 shared issues)
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- 2013-16 West African Ebola outbreak (1 shared issues)
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- ACX (1 shared issues)
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- Adam larson (1 shared issues)
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- ADHD (1 shared issues)
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- ATP carrier (1 shared issues)
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- AK-47 (1 shared issues)
External Links
Source Context
Recovered passages from the original issue text. When the raw archive preserved outbound links inside the source passage, they are listed directly under the quote.
The British tabloids had a field day with this. The Daily Mail talks about being BOILED ALIVE BY INTERNET SLIMMING PILLS! And Vice (why is it always Vice?) is somehow even more melodramatic:
Inline links: talks about, even more melodramatic
But recently silexan (derived from lavender) has started to stand out of the crowd. Daily Mail had an interview with psychiatry professor Hans-Peter Volz, who said that silexan should be first-line for anxiety, replacing things like SSRIs and Xanax. And a very reputable professional publication within psychiatry, The Carlat Report, published an article and a podcast touting silexan:
In an interview with the Daily Mail on 3/4/20, he said that his kitten died, after a two-day illness, on the ninth day of him (Connor) having COVID. He said “I don’t know whether it had what I’ve got, or whether cats can even get human flu” (speaking as if it was him in the past, who thought he had flu because he hadn’t heard of COVID yet).
Inline links: an interview with the Daily Mail