The key to sustaining that New Year's resolution: Turkey

Turkey Dinner
The key to sustaining that New Year's resolution: Turkey

(BPT) - Every year many Americans establish New Year’s resolutions, setting their sights high with the turn of the calendar, but few of them are able to sustain those resolutions. According to online global activity data analyzed by Strava, most people report failing their resolution by Jan. 12. Additionally, a study conducted by the University of Scranton found that just 8% of resolvers could stick to their pledge for two years without slips.
New Year’s resolutions are very difficult to maintain, especially if you are trying to build a healthier lifestyle. According to a 2019 Marist Poll, two of the top resolutions are losing weight and eating healthier. To sustain a nutritious diet, consumers need to identify food options that are not only healthy but also delicious and convenient.

5-Second Water Hack Melts Food Craving


Denver, Colorado, USA - December, 1st 2019 - People who struggle to lose weight now have an easier, scientifically-proven option for breaking the weight gain cycle and shedding unwanted pounds: Leptitox. Sonya Rhodes just announced the release of a brand-new weight loss product. It is set for worldwide distribution as of October 2019 and is looking to change the dieting industry. Based on science-backed research on the underestimated and previously shrouded subject of leptin resistance, the all-natural supplements feature powerful herbs, select vitamins and amino acids to arm the body with the ability to fight and reverse leptin resistance—the cause of weight gain and obesity.


“Before we understood the role of leptin resistance in obesity and the inability to lose weight we had no other choice but to attack body fat in all the wrong ways,” says Sonya Rhodes, co-founder of Leptitox. “With the discovery of leptin, and the phenomenon of leptin resistance we finally know the right way to target the obesity epidemic we’re facing. And that’s what we’ve done with the Leptitox supplements; combined our awareness of leptin resistance with the desperation and despair people feel around their inability to lose weight when they’re doing everything they can.”

Knotts Berry Farm 1973 8MM Video USA

Train and Hobby Shop Knotts Berry Farm 1973
Train and Hobby Shop Knotts Berry Farm 1973

The video was shot by my 17-Year-Old Brother with a Kodak 8MM Camera. Our Family were on holiday from Australia in the US. The Film was Restored to DVD in 2012, The Video for youtube was very hard to edit because of the fast panning and condition of the film was isn't good though at least I was able to share a Past Memory








The theme park sits on the site of a former berry farm established by Walter Knott and his family. Beginning around 1920, the Knott family sold berries, berry preserves, and pies from a roadside stand along State Route 39. In 1934, the Knotts began selling fried chicken dinners in a tea room on the property, later called "Mrs. Knott's Chicken Dinner Restaurant". The dinners soon became a major tourist draw, and the Knotts built several shops and other attractions to entertain visitors while waiting for a seat in the restaurant. In 1940, Walter Knott began constructing a replica Ghost Town on the property, the beginning of the present-day theme park. The idea of an amusement park really picked up in the 1950s when Walter Knott opened a "summer-long county fair".



Knott's first theme park logo: a prospector, with pack mule.
In 1968, for the first time, an admission price was required to get into the park, originally set at 25 cents. The Calico log ride was added in 1969. The park became a popular destination for conservative college students in the 1960s, especially as conservative organizations like the California Free Enterprise Association, the Libres Foundation, and the Americanism Educational League were based there. According to Assistant Professor Caroline Rolland-Diamond of the Paris West University Nanterre La Défense:
it also appealed to conservative Americans, young and old, because the idealized representation of a past devoid of social and racial tensions that it offered stood in sharp contrast with the political and social upheavals affecting California since the Free Speech Movement erupted at the University of California at Berkeley in 1964.
— Caroline Rolland-Diamond, Revue française d’études américaines (2016)
On April 12, 1974, Cordelia Knott died. Walter turned his attention toward political causes, Roaring Twenties re-themed Gypsy Camp in the 1970s with the addition of a nostalgic traditional amusement area, Wheeler Dealer Bumper Cars, Knott's Bear-y Tales. Then with the northward expansion of a 1920s-era Knott's Airfield themed area featuring the Cloud 9 Dance Hall, Sky Cabin/Parachute Sky Jump and Motorcycle Chase steeplechase roller coaster above the electric guided rail Gasoline Alley car ride. 
Info Source Wikipedia

Inglewood, California 1973 8mm Film

Cars of Inglewood, California
Tivoli Hotel Inglewood, California 1970's
Tivoli Hotel Inglewood, California 1970's


Cars of the Time, Inglewood, California 1970's


Orky II and Corky II Killer Whales 1973 Marineland of the Pacific


Orky II and Corky II were Orca whales and lived at Marineland of the Pacific located at the tip of the beautiful Palos Verdes Peninsula in Los Angeles County, it was the largest oceanarium in the world. Orky and Corky were moved to Seaworld, San Diego in 1987 following the closing of Marineland. 
Sadly Orky died in 1988.  Corky, at over 35 years old, is alive and well.


Universal Studio Flash Flood Special Effects



Universal Studio Flash Flood 1973 Hollywood, This special effect was a big deal in those day's. Now it nothing Special.


Universal Studios Animal Actors Training Stage 1973

Universal Studios Animal Actors Training Stage, Nice little Pubby Dog


Movieland Wax Museum Buena Park California 1973


Movieland Wax Museum was the largest wax museum in the United States. Located in Buena Park, California.

Movieland Museum was a beautiful 

golden Rolls Royce parked outside 


of the entrance since Movieland opening in 1962.