• Humorscope,  LGBTSR

    Your Weekly LGBTSr Humorscope: Astrology With Spunk, Snacks & Sparkle

    Welcome to Your Weekly LGBTSr Humorscope, the upbeat horoscope that blends zodiac insights with wit, wisdom and a few cosmic surprises. Whether you’re searching for a lighthearted astrology forecast, or just a weekly dose of feel-good humor, the Humorscope delivers playful predictions for every sign. Read on, check your stars, and enjoy a fresh, entertaining weekly horoscope designed to keep you smiling all week long.

    🌈 LGBTSr Weekly Humorscope

    The stars texted, and honestly? They’re in a mood.

    Aries (March 21–April 19) 🔥🐏

    Your ambition is revved up like you just drank motivational espresso. You’ll attempt three projects at once; two will succeed, one will mysteriously vanish.
    Cosmic Caution: Avoid arguments with inanimate objects — especially printers. They hold grudges.
    Lucky Snack: 🌶️🥟 Spicy dumplings that make you question your life choices.

    Taurus (April 20–May 20) 🌿🐂

    This week is all about cozy pleasures and gentle indulgence. You deserve softness — in blankets, people, and decisions.
    Cosmic Caution: Don’t buy plants you know you won’t water. You’re not running a botanical hospice.
    Lucky Snack: 🧀🥖 Cheese and bread… the Taurus holy sacrament.

  • LGBTSR,  Savvy Senior

    Savvy Senior: How to Appeal a Medicare Coverage Denial

    By Jim Miller

    How to Appeal a Medicare Coverage Denial

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    What steps do I need to take to appeal a denied Medicare claim?

    Frustrated Retiree

    Dear Frustrated,

    If you disagree with a coverage or payment decision made by Medicare, you can appeal, and you’ll be happy to know that many appeals are successful, so it’s definitely worth your time. 

    But before going that route, talk with the doctor, hospital and Medicare to see if you can spot the problem and resubmit the claim. Many denials are caused by simple billing code errors by the doctor’s office or hospital. If, however, that doesn’t fix the problem, here’s how you appeal.

    Original Medicare Appeals

    If you have original Medicare, start with your quarterly Medicare Summary Notice (MSN). This statement will list all the services, supplies and equipment billed to Medicare for your medical treatment and will tell you why a claim was denied. You can also check your Medicare claims early online at MyMedicare.gov, or by calling Medicare at 800-633-4227.

    There are five levels of appeals for original Medicare, although you can initiate a “fast appeal” if you’re getting services from a hospital, skilled nursing facility, home health agency, outpatient rehabilitation facility or hospice, and the service is ending.

  • Book Reviews,  LGBTSR,  Terri Schlichenmeyer

    Terri Schlichenmeyer’s The Bookworm Sez: 10 Best Books of 2025 – Fiction and Nonfiction

    By Terri Schlichenmer
    The Bookworm Sez

    This past year, you’ve often had to make do.

    Saving money here, resources there, being inventive and innovative. It’s a talent you’ve honed, but isn’t it time to have the best? Yep, so grab these Ten Best of 2025 books for your new year pleasures…

    Nonfiction

    Health care is on everyone’s mind now, and “A Living: Working-Class Americans Talk to Their Doctor” by Michael D. Stein, M.D. (Melville House, $26.99) lets you peek into health care from the point of view of a doctor who treats “front-line workers” and those who experience poverty and homelessness. It’s shocking, an eye-opening book, a skinny, quick-to-read one that needs to be read now.

    If you’ve been doing eldercare or caring for any loved one, then How to Lose Your Mother: A Daughter’s Memoir” by Molly Jong-Fast (Viking, $28.00)  needs to be in your plans for the coming year. It’s a memoir, but also a biography of Jong-Fast’s mother, Erica Jong, and the story of love, illness, and living through the chaos of serious disease with humor and grace. You’ll like this book especially if you were a fan of the author’s late mother.

  • LGBTSR

    The Twist Podcast #312: Indiana Comes Through, Worst Words of 2025 Survey, and Ice Skating Fun Facts


    In this episode of The Twist Podcast, co-hosts Mark McNease and Rick Rose take on politics, culture, and everyday absurdities with their trademark irreverence and personal spin. From unexpected political backbone in Indiana to linguistic crimes we’re ready to retire, Episode #312 delivers commentary, humor, and a few surprises.

    The hosts congratulate Indiana’s senators for finally showing a spine, roll out a new “Worst Words of 2025” survey featuring the phrases you never want to hear again in 2026, and cool things down with fun facts about ice skating you probably didn’t know. As always, the conversation blends cultural commentary, politics, entertainment, and personal observations into one twisted take on the world.

    In this episode:

    • Indiana politics and a rare moment of accountability
    • The Worst Words of 2025 survey (and why we’re done with them)
    • Ice skating fun facts and surprising history
    • Culture, language, humor, and personal reflections

    The Twist Podcast is a weekly podcast covering politics, culture, entertainment, language, and life, hosted by Mark McNease and Rick Rose, featuring smart conversation with a sharp edge and a sense of humor.

    👉 Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts, and on our YouTube channel (YouTube.com/@TheTwistPodcast). Follow and share!

     

  • LGBTSR

    LGBTSr Fun Facts: Five Things You May Not Know About Ice Skating

    ❄️ Five Fun Facts About Ice Skating ⛸️

    1️⃣ Early skates were… bone. Literally.

    The earliest ice skates, used over 4,000 years ago, were made from animal leg bones — usually horse or deer — and strapped to the feet.

    2️⃣ Figure skating was once manly and muscular.

    In the 1800s, figure skating was considered a rugged sport for men only, with moves designed to show off strength. The graceful spins and jumps we know today came later.

    3️⃣ The first skating “rinks” weren’t ice at all.

    Before refrigeration, fancy hotels built indoor “rinks” out of a weird mixture of lard, salt, and sawdust to mimic ice.

    4️⃣ Ice dancing has strict rules — including how long you can stare at your partner.

    Partners must maintain “character-appropriate” eye contact but not too much, or it looks like a soap opera on skates.

    5️⃣ Blades don’t cut the ice — they melt it.

    Your skate blade creates a thin layer of water as you glide, letting you slip across the surface.

  • Humorscope

    Your Weekly LGBTSr Humorscope – Now With Cosmic Cautions and Lucky Snacks for Every Sign of the Zodiac

    🌈 LGBTSr Weekly Humorscope

    Your cosmic forecast with humor, snacks, and just the right amount of nonsense.

    ♈ Aries (March 21–April 19) 🔥🐏

    You’re energized and impulsive — a cosmic combo platter. Someone tries to slow you down, and you pretend to listen. Productivity rises anyway.
    Cosmic Caution: Don’t sign up for anything that includes the phrase “You’ll barely notice the time commitment.”
    Lucky Snack: 🔥🥨 Extra-spicy pretzels.

    ♉ Taurus (April 20–May 20) 🍰🐂

    Comfort and coziness rule your week. A pleasant surprise arrives, probably soft, sweet, or wearing fleece.
    Cosmic Caution: Beware emotional entanglements with baked goods.
    Lucky Snack: 🍩 A cinnamon bun that could double as a pillow.

    ♊ Gemini (May 21–June 20) 💬👯‍♂️

    Your thoughts run wild — in a fun way, mostly. Conversations sparkle, though people might need subtitles for your speed.
    Cosmic Caution: Reread messages before sending, including the ones you think are “simple.”
    Lucky Snack: 🥜 Mixed nuts (on brand for you).

  • LGBTSR,  On the Map

    On the Map: A Day Trip to NYC’s Bryant Park and Lunch at Chez Josephine

    Narration provided by Wondervox.

    By Mark McNease

    Ever since moving permanently to our home in New Jersey we prefer to visit New York City by bus. After driving back and forth for over a decade, spending most weekends at our little house in the Jersey woods, the last thing I ever want to do again is drive into Manhattan. So we take the Trans-Bridge bus line instead, leaving from Clinton and arriving at Port Authority a little over an hour later. It makes for an easy and stress-free way to visit our old hometown and be back before bedtime.

    This trip was to visit some new friends who were in the city for a week’s vacation. It was a shorty, with just a couple hours before lunch and a return in time to have dinner with local friends for a birthday celebration. We arrived around 11:00 a.m. and headed over to Bryant Park to stroll through the booths and vendors they have set up for the holiday month.

    From November through early January, New York’s Bryant Park transforms into a festive, and crowded, winter wonderland with holiday stalls and shops. If you’re there on a weekend  it can be mobbed, especially once you get past Thanksgiving and head into the December homestretch. These stalls are set up in the heart of the park, creating a marketplace that does its best to capture the spirit of the season.

    In addition to the stalls, the park hosts a collection of holiday shops that are often housed in wooden cabins or tents, decorated with lights and ornaments. These also serve as a community gathering space where visitors can enjoy live entertainment, holiday-themed activities, and seasonal performances. And don’t miss the iconic ice-skating rink. I scored a new winter scarf that’s about six feet long, appropriately colorful and warm enough for the frigid temperatures we’ve found ourselves in.

    Having planned the visit several months ago, I wasn’t sure where to have lunch. I ended up looking at several restaurants, including a few I was familiar with from my 11 years working at a news agency in the heart of Times Square (it was not the Times!). I saw some photos of a place called Chez Josephine, and without having any knowledge of its history I said let’s eat there. It was a perfect choice.

    Founded with the vision of celebrating the legacy of Josephine Baker, a legendary performer and civil rights activist who moved to Paris, Chez Josephine pays homage to her life and contributions through its decor and menu. The restaurant features a selection of French-inspired dishes, including classic escargot, coq au vin, ratatouille, and a variety of desserts suited to the clientele.

    Located on 42nd Street just west of 9th Avenue, the restaurant attracts everyone from theater enthusiasts on their way to a show, to tourists to locals seeking a cozy dining experience, to a couple Jersey guys heading into the city for lunch. Our server, Andy, was extremely nice and friendly, and surprised us by telling us he was the owner’s son. Apparently Josephine’s son,  who founded restaurant, left it to Andy’s father Manual when he passed away, and it’s been in his hands ever since.

    We loved this place! It was quiet, with an old-ish elegance that was cozy without being stuffy. There are portraits and reminders of Josephine Baker everyone, including the paper hand-towels in the bathroom that had her image on them. We will definitely be back.

    By mid-afternoon were on the bus returning to Clinton, after an absolutely perfect trip to a city that will always hold a place in our hearts.

  • Savvy Senior

    Savvy Senior: Tips and Tools for Adapting to Vision Loss

    Narration provided by Wondervox

    By Jim Miller

    Tips and Tools for Adapting to Vision Loss

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Can you recommend some good resources or products that can help seniors with severe vision loss? My wife has diabetic retinopathy, and it’s gotten worse over the past year.

    Need Help 

    Dear Need,

    I’m very sorry about your wife’s vision loss, but you’ll be pleased to know that there are many resources and a wide variety of low vision products and technologies that can help with many different needs.

    According to the American Optometric Association (AOA), it’s estimated that 12 million Americans ages 40 and older are living with uncorrectable vision loss, which is often caused by age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma or diabetic retinopathy. These conditions become more common with age and can make daily tasks like cooking, reading or watching television much harder.

    But optometrists who specialize in low vision – reduced vision that can’t be rectified with glasses – have many aids and technologies that can help. Here are a few different low vision products as recommended by Consumer Reports, along with some suggestions for finding a specialist who can help your wife adapt to her vision loss.

  • LGBTSR

    Cover Reveal: ‘Blank Page to Bookshelf’ – Early 2026

    Two years in the making …

    I’m writing the final draft of a book based on my workshops for the past nearly-two years: fiction writing essentials, character creation, and self-publishing. I love doing the workshops, and this is a natural outgrowth of that. One of the most rewarding things I learned the past couple years is how much I’ve learned in 50+ years of writing, 15 of self-publishing … it’s a natural progression for me to write this book, and a bit of a ‘what’s next?’ venture. We’re about to find out—what’s next for me, what’s next for this country, what’s next? It really is the question that kept me going through the rough times and difficult years, especially in my youth. I was determined to stick around not just to prove a point, but to find out what my life would look like after whatever crisis I was in had finally passed. I’m still asking myself that question, and I’m still excited to see what comes next.

  • Book Reviews,  LGBTSR,  Terri Schlichenmeyer

    Book Review: The Grave Robber: The Biggest Stolen Artifacts Case in FBI History and the Bureau’s Quest to Set Things Right, by Tim Carpenter

    By Terri Schlichenmeyer
    The Bookworm Sez

    “The Grave Robber: The Biggest Stolen Artifacts Case in FBI History and the Bureau’s Quest to Set Things Right” by Tim Carpenter
    c.2025, Harper Horizon $29.99 299 pages

    You wouldn’t call yourself a perfectionist.

    Still, if something is amiss, you feel a need to make it right. Something’s broken, you fix it. If it’s off, you make it right. That goes for minor issues or, as in the new book “The Grave Robber” by Tim Carpenter, matters of grave importance.

    The tipsters were adamant. Don Carlin Miller had “Indian bones.”

    And so, on a cool, cloudy fall afternoon, FBI bomb tech coordinator and sometime art crime expert Tim Carpenter and one of his associates headed to a remote property near Indianapolis., in search of the truth.