Random musings and general banter.

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I wouldn't even restrict it to chavs, a lot of society are either unable to or unwilling to think for themselves, and are easily persuaded, manipulated etc. Why we have such a big advertising sector.
Coupled with that we have a society that seems to idolise and want follow & copy, hang onto their every word and action, of any tom, dick or harry for being a celeb, tv personalities, influencer etc. Makes for easy pickings for those celebs/influencers wishing to take advantage of those that idolise them.
Humans in general are really a bunch of sheep. Some are way more sheepish than others.
I didn't restrict it to chavs. I said there must be a strong contingent of them which explains why there are so many brand-a-likes, clothing, trainers, perfume and watches on offer.

It would be interesting to know what the key demographics are of the IW audience / customer base but we can only make educated guesses.
 
Medical Will Help/May Help Hour..

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Well, not often other than Leap Years am I remotely persuaded to buy a product shown on this version of Ideal World, but I am going to take a punt and try this emu balm. I suffer from ‘shot knees’ through years of walking for work, essentially. Both are down to the bone now. The pain at times can be intolerable. Hell - it may work or it may do nothing, but I won’t know until I try some. Not buying it from Ideal World, though. £3 cheaper on Amazon…
 
Well, not often other than Leap Years am I remotely persuaded to buy a product shown on this version of Ideal World, but I am going to take a punt and try this emu balm. I suffer from ‘shot knees’ through years of walking for work, essentially. Both are down to the bone now. The pain at times can be intolerable. Hell - it may work or it may do nothing, but I won’t know until I try some. Not buying it from Ideal World, though. £3 cheaper on Amazon…

Emu oil made it on the list of the FDA's "health frauds", and the few scant animal studies on emu oil (which is what's in the balm) is weak, very vague (i.e. "slight reduction in redness" - nothing to back up the wild claims IW throw out), and as of 2024 yet to be replicated in humans in clinical studies.

As with most health products: if it's sold more on anecdotes and alleged testimonies, and talk of "natural, used for thousands of years", it's probably quackery. Arsenic and mercury were used as natural remedies for a long time too. If there's a sniff of real science involved, they'll bang you over the head with it in the marketing - like the collagen supplement companies do with the cherry-picked stats from the few clinical studies that show any effect.

And apparently a lot of emu oil sold is fake (as emu farms aren't that common), so be wary of anything too cheap or, if from Amazon, being sold by random brands with auto-generated gobbledygook brand names.

Though, I should add, placebo effect is not to be dismissed.

All pharmaceutical drugs go through blind human trials (where one group has the real thing, the other a dummy) and every single time a % of the placebo group (but not all) will see improvements, often quantitive, measurable clinical improvements for whatever the 'issue' is. It's a shame scientists aren't as interested in finding out exactly how placebo is triggered and works, rather than dismissing "placebo" as "not real" when it's the opposite.
 
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Used to tease my late Mum about her using arnica gel for her bad knees until I got sciatica along with a torn cruciate ligament. Prescription Painkillers helped but to be truthful I’d try anything to ease the pain. Gave the arnica gel a go not thinking for a minute that it’d help as I’m a real sceptic. It did. Never without it now. Slightest twinge I slather it on. Whether it does actually work or my mind thinks it does, pain is always eased.
 
Used to tease my late Mum about her using arnica gel for her bad knees until I got sciatica along with a torn cruciate ligament. Prescription Painkillers helped but to be truthful I’d try anything to ease the pain. Gave the arnica gel a go not thinking for a minute that it’d help as I’m a real sceptic. It did. Never without it now. Slightest twinge I slather it on. Whether it does actually work or my mind thinks it does, pain is always eased.
I try to be open minded, as long as something alternative is not likely to harm me I'll give it a go, even if its only a placibo effect. So glad that the arnica gel has helped you, I've never tried that.
 

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