---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: HuffPost Canada Lifestyle <dailybrief@huffpost.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 2:30 AM
Subject: Why depression makes you so damn tired all the time
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com <pascal.alter@gmail.com>
From: HuffPost Canada Lifestyle <dailybrief@huffpost.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 26, 2019 at 2:30 AM
Subject: Why depression makes you so damn tired all the time
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com <pascal.alter@gmail.com>
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Hello there! Have a moment to take our survey? It helps us find out a bit more about you and improves this newsletter. 😁Hello, lifestyle friends!We all know that "A Star Is Born" co-stars Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga have chemistry, but at the 2019 Oscars on Sunday, their intimate performance of "Shallow" — the movie's hit duet, which picked up an Academy Award for Best Original Song — was more than any of us were expecting.
Despite the movie's ultimately mixed critical reception, "A Star Is Born" completely revolved around the chemistry between its two stars. And on Oscar night, they reminded us all once again just how palpable and vibrant that chemistry was.
— Alisha Sawhney, HuffPost Canada 🍿Were you forwarded this newsletter? You can subscribe to it here.It was the little film about dumplings that could — and it did! And along the way, "Bao" shone a spotlight on the impressive talent, tasty Chinese eats, and cultural richness for which Torontonians are so rightfully proud. When it was released, Asians in Canada and across North America were touched by the way "Bao" so accurately (and adorably) depicted their realities.For Ernest Hemingway, it was oysters. For Nora Ephron, it was mashed potatoes. For countless recently dumped film and television characters, it's ice cream. Humans have been eating our emotions for as long as we can remember. But that doesn't make it a good idea. There's a science behind emotional eating and comfort food ― the factors that cause cravings and the ways that giving in to those cravings affects us.
Now there is one more place where cameras could start watching you — from 30,000 feet. Privacy advocates fear it's just a matter of time before a hacker gets access (so they can watch you eating your bad inflight meal).
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