The Best And Worst Hot Dogs To Buy At The Grocery Store
Are they weiners, frankfurters, coneys, weenies or just hot dogs? No matter what you call them, you definitely know a great dog when you taste one. Here is our ranking of hot dogs that can be bought in a grocery store, from worst to best.
While Bar-S has sold the most hot dogs in America every single year since 2006, it's not because everyone loves them. Rather, people buy Bar-S brand because they are almost always the cheapest hot dogs available. If you're feeding a bunch of hungry kids, you might as well go with the cheapest ones around, right?
If you taste Bar-S Classic Franks without any condiments on top, you'll find that they are legitimately terrible. From their wretched smell while being cooked in the microwave to their filmy texture once they enter your mouth, you will regret going the cheap route when you eat these hot dogs.
You probably bought these hot dogs because you thought you were going the healthier route by eating turkey. While it can be argued whether these hot dogs are actually healthier than the ones made out of beef or pork, what you can't deny is how absolutely bland Jennie-O Turkey Franks taste. After you take a bite, you are greeted by virtually no discernable flavors. Then the meat just starts disintegrating in your mouth.
Jennie-O claims that their turkey franks have 40 percent less fat than comparable beef franks. While that may be statistically true, they also have about 99 percent less flavor.
Watch the video to learn more about the best and worst hot dogs to buy at the grocery store!
#HotDogs #Franks
Bar-S Classic Franks | 0:15
Jennie-O Turkey Franks | 0:53
Eckrich Cheese Franks | 1:26
Oscar Mayer Classic Beef Uncured Franks | 1:55
Ball Park Original Beef Franks | 2:37
Wellshire Sugar-Free All-Natural Beef Franks | 3:13
Sugardale Hot Dogs | 3:42
Applegate Naturals Beef Hot Dogs | 4:07
Boar's Head Uncured Beef Frankfurters | 4:40
Dietz & Watson Deli Beef Franks | 5:14
Sabrett Skinless Beef Frankfurters | 5:44
Hebrew National All Natural Uncured Beef Franks | 6:10
Nathan's Famous Angus Beef Franks | 6:39
A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie - Jungle (Prod. by D Stackz / Dir. by Gerard Victor) [Official Music Video]
The official video for A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie's Jungle from his debut mixtape 'Artist'.
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The official YouTube channel of multi-platinum rapper/singer-songwriter: Artist Dubose, known as A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie. He made waves with the breakout hit “Still Think About You” featured on his 2016 debut mixtape, ‘Artist.’ The mixtape also introduced fans to “My Shit” which went on to become RIAA certified platinum and was also listed as one of “The Best Songs of 2016” on Apple Music.
A Boogie went on to release the 3x platinum “Drowning feat. Kodak Black” along with the platinum singles “Jungle” and “Timeless.” In fall 2017, A Boogie released his gold certified debut album, ‘The Bigger Artist,’ jumping into the Top 5 on Billboard’s Top 200 and #1 on Billboard’s Emerging Artists chart.
He is nominated for the 2018 BET Awards for “Best New Artist” and the release of his sophomore album, ‘Hoodie SZN’ spent two weeks as the #1 album on the Billboard 200.
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Senate Impeachment Trial Of President Trump | Day 4 | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
Watch live coverage as Chief Justice John Roberts presides over the U.S. Senate’s impeachment trial of President Donald Trump. The two articles of impeachment charge Trump with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
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Senate Impeachment Trial Of President Trump | Day 4 | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
Impeachment trial of President Trump | Jan. 23, 2020 (FULL LIVE STREAM)
Opening arguments in President Trump’s impeachment trial began on Jan. 22 in the Senate. House managers, led by Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.), will present three days of opening arguments. Then, senators will have 16 hours to ask questions in writing. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. will read the questions out loud, and the appropriate side — defense or prosecution — can answer them.
President Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives in December for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Impeachment does not mean that the president has been removed from office. In the next phase, the Senate must hold a trial to make that determination. A Senate impeachment trial has happened only two other times in American history and once in the modern era. At the center of the Democrats’ case is that Trump sought to withhold military assistance and an Oval Office meeting until Ukraine announced investigations into former vice president Joe Biden and his son.
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Senate Impeachment Trial Of President Trump | Day 3 | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
Watch live coverage as Chief Justice John Roberts presides over the U.S. Senate’s impeachment trial of President Donald Trump. The two articles of impeachment charge Trump with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
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Senate Impeachment Trial Of President Trump | Day 3 | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
Impeachment Trial Day 3: Democrats detail Trump-Ukraine timeline in opening arguments
House Democrats presented an exhaustive account of President Trump's efforts to pressure Ukraine on the second day of the Senate impeachment trial, walking senators through a detailed timeline to argue the president abused his power and should be removed from office. Follow Live Updates:
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U.S. House: Debate & Vote on Articles of Impeachment
The House Rules Committee debates and votes on two articles of impeachment against President Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
BMF Chairman Thomas Mace Archer Mills discusses his new book
Thomas Mace Archer Mills, Chairman of the British Monarchist Society speaks to Preston FM about his new book: 'To The Queen, A royal Drinkology'.
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Michael Hudson on the History of Debt Cancellation, Austerity in Europe & Rental Costs
Note: Due to issues with the audio, we recommend viewers watch with subtitles. We apologize for any inconvenience. Thanks for watching!
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In this exclusive interview with author, economist and anthropologist Professor Michael Hudson, we talk about his latest book “...and forgive them their debts.” which chronicles finance and debt cancelation through the ages. Furthermore we examine the related topic of austerity in Europe and also analyse why rental costs are sky rocketing in cities.
Michael Hudson is President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trends (ISLET), a Wall Street Financial Analyst, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City and author of J is for Junk Economics (2017), Killing the Host (2015), The Bubble and Beyond (2012), Super-Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (1968 & 2003), Trade, Development and Foreign Debt (1992 & 2009) and of The Myth of Aid (1971), amongst many others. ISLET engages in research regarding domestic and international finance, national income and balance-sheet accounting with regard to real estate, and the economic history of the ancient Near East. Michael acts as an economic advisor to governments worldwide including Iceland, Latvia and China on finance and tax law.
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BMF Chairman Thomas Mace Archer Mills discusses the British Monarchist Society
Thomas Mace Archer Mills, Chairman of the British Monarchist Society speaks to Preston FM about the BMS
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Charity Shops
In many towns in England, the main shopping street is called High Street. We often use the expression high street to mean the main shopping street of any town or suburb, no matter what its real name is. Or we talk about the high street to mean shopping facilities generally, particularly shops that people use every day like food shops. So, when a newspaper writes about high street prices, for example, they just mean the prices of everyday things that people might buy in high street shops.
And we often complain that high street shops are the same boring shops everywhere in England. Many high street shops are branches of big national chains. For example, there is Next, and Marks and Spencer, which sell clothes; and WH Smith, which sells stationery, books and magazines; and Boots, the chemists; and Woolworths, where you can buy almost anything, provided that it is cheap and made of plastic. You can find these shops in most high streets in England. In most high streets, too, you will find one or more charity shops.
Charity shops are shops which are run by charities to help them raise money. People bring things that they no longer want, and the charity shop sells them to other people. What sort of things? Clothes, shoes, hats, bags, children's toys, books, CDs, crockery, kitchen things, mugs commemorating the wedding of Charles and Diana -- all sorts of things, in other words.
The first charity shop was set up in 1947. Since then, charity shops have become very successful in England. There are over 7000 of them altogether. They raise well over £100 million each year for the charities that own them. They are cheap to run. Often they occupy shop premises that no-one else wants, and where the rent is low. Most of their staff are volunteers. The shops do not have to pay tax on their profits. The charity OXFAM, which helps people in developing countries, has the best-known charity shops in England, but there are many others, including shops run by small local charities.
I enjoy visiting charity shops. They are all different, unlike the big high street shops. There is always a chance that I will find something really interesting or unusual. Here are some of the things I have learned about charity shops:
they have a special smell, of old clothes.
women are much more likely than men to give used clothes to a charity shop, and more likely to buy clothes there.
people who bought CDs of really bad bands ten years ago eventually give the CDs to a charity shop.
if you go to a charity shop in an area where well-off people live, you can often find expensive designer clothes at bargain prices.
it always takes three charity shop volunteers to operate the till.
Finally, here is another way in which charity shops are really useful to busy families in modern Britain. Your children arrive home. They tell you proudly that they are in a play at school. And they need costumes -- before tomorrow. No problem. Give them £5 and send them to the nearest charity shop. They will come back with some amazing rubbish. They will take it to school next day to wear in the school play. Everyone will say they look wonderful. And when they come home again -- why, you can take it all back to the charity shop, of course.
The New Forest, places to visit here, Lymington Hampshire, England ( 9 )
Lymington is a port on the west bank of the Lymington River on the Solent, in the New Forest district of Hampshire, England. It is to the east of the South East Dorset conurbation, and faces Yarmouth on the Isle of Wight which is connected to it by a car ferry, operated by Wightlink. The town of Lymington lies within Southampton and S.W. Hampshire and contains the villages of Beaulieu, Boldre, Hordle, Milford-on-Sea, Pennington and Sway. The town has a large tourist industry, and is situated near the beautiful New Forest. It is a major yachting centre with three marina's. A beautiful, Georgian market town, Lymington ( population 14,330 ) is situated on the southern edge of the New Forest, between Southampton and Bournemouth and at the western end of the Solent. The town is world renown as a sailing resort; there are two large marinas Berthon and Haven and two sailing clubs RLYC and Lymington Town. Lymington has several interesting independent shops including some designer boutiques. On Saturday a market is held in the High Street, the origins of which probably date back to the 13th century. At the top of the High Street is the Parish Church, St Thomas Church ( built around 1250 ), from the bottom of the High Street a cobblestone road leads down to the Old Town Quay, still used as a base by commercial fishing boats.
The earliest settlement in the Lymington area was around the Iron Age hill fort known today as Buckland Rings. The hill and ditches of this fort still remain, and an archaeological excavation of part of the Walls was carried out there in 1935. It has been dated to around the sixth century BC. There is also another supposed Iron Age site at nearby Ampress Hole. Evidence for later settlement (as opposed to occupation) however is sparse before Domesday. Lymington itself began as a Anglo-Saxon village. The Jutes arrived in what is now South West Hampshire from the Isle of Wight in the 6th century and founded a settlement called limentun. The Old English word tun means a farm or hamlet while limen is derived from the Ancient British word lemanos meaning elm-tree. The town is recorded in the Domesday book of 1086 as Lentune. About 1200 the lord of the manor, William de Redvers created the borough of New Lymington around the present quay and High Street while Old Lymington comprised the rest of the parish. He gave the town its first charter and the right to hold a market. The town became a Parliamentary Borough in 1585 returning two MP's until 1832 when its electoral base was expanded. Lymington continued to return two MP's until the Second Reform Act of 1867 when its representation was reduced to one. On the passage of the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 Lymington's parliamentary representation was merged with the New Forest Division.
From the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century Lymington was famous for making salt. Salt works comprised almost a continuous belt along the coast toward Hurst Spit. From the early nineteenth century it had a thriving shipbuilding industry, particularly associated with Thomas Inman the builder of the schooner Alarm, which famously raced the American yacht America in 1851. Much of the town centre is Victorian and Georgian, with narrow cobbled streets, giving an air of quaintness. The wealth of the town at the time is represented in its architecture. Lymington particularly promotes stories about its smuggling history; there are unproven stories that under the High Street are smugglers tunnels that run from the old inns to the town quay. Lymington was one of the boroughs reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835. In addition to the original town, 1932 saw a major expansion of the borough, to add Milton ( previously an urban district ) and the parishes of Milford on Sea and Pennington, and parts of other parishes, from Lymington Rural District - this extended the borough west along the coast to the border with Christchurch.
Loampit Vale Roundabout Lewisham
theo harpik,
This was filmed on 13th July 2014 the day before roadworks commences on the roundabout for Lewisham Gateway Redevelopment. This whole area will be transformed over the next few years. Original video by Keith Pharo (theo harpik).
The Croft - Derby - Host
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The Croft is a brand new student accommodation development opening in Derby in September 2019.
The Croft is central to all you could need as a student. The University of Derby’s four campuses in Derby are all just a short walk away, and the city centre is right on your doorstep. So, whether it’s a day of lectures, a shopping trip, a bite to eat with friends or a big night out, you’ll find it all within a stone’s throw of The Croft. And when you step inside, The Croft has everything you need for the best student experience including an on-site gym, games area, study room and common room.
All our rooms have been designed to help you make the most of your time at university. They will be ultra modern, and include lots of little luxuries like high-tech kitchens and beautiful bathrooms. All pictures are indicative as all rooms slightly vary.
Derby:
In the heart of the UK upon the banks of the River Derwent lies Derby, a bustling city with a history of innovation and a gutsy attitude as steadfast as the ram that is its emblem.
The University of Derby recently climbed 25 places to make it into the top thirty of the Guardian University Guide 2019, this was achieved by particular focus on providing industry-relevant applied education, improving both employability of graduates and student satisfaction. Over the last decade the university has invested £200 million on state-of-the-art facilities and its reputation continues to go from strength to strength.
There is the well established Museum and Art Gallery in the city centre, housing an eclectic range of displays of paintings, artefacts and educational dioramas. The nearby Quad is a cultural hub that brings an exciting and challenging programme of film, exhibitions and activities to promote the arts in the city.
Every possible high street store you could need is provided by the huge INTO shopping centre, which also houses a plethora of chain restaurants, a cinema, bowling alley and mini golf. Bargains aplenty can be found in the adjacent Eagle Market which is also the home to the university owned Derby Theatre. There are all manner of trendy fashion boutique and alternative shopping to found up in Sadlers Gate, and interesting mix of modern and medieval places to drink and eat around the Cathedral Quarter.
Derby has a long industrial history, being a major centre of mills, factories and the rail industry during the 19th century, and to this day it remains famed for its precision engineering and manufacturing. Many world class transport manufacturers are based in the area, such as the world’s second largest commercial euro-engine maker, Rolls-Royce, also there is Derby Litchurch Lane Works, the UK's only remaining train manufacturer, also in the area are Toyota’s UK headquarters and the JCB factory. The city also has a strong new technology and creative sector, notably being the birth place of Core Design who developed the well known Tomb Raider series of computer games, the main character of which gives The Croft its name.
When you need a break from the city, a short train or bus journey will take you into the spectacularly beautiful Peak District, where hiking, biking and every imaginable kind of adventure sport is available, as well as stunning views of natural beauty and monumental marvels of engineering.
There is a flourishing student community, and with a reasonable cost of accommodation and plenty to do, Derby truly is a great place to study.
** WORKING COTTON MILL ** Helmshore Cotton Mill & Wool Mill | Lancashire
Amazing Machines! Last Working Cotton Mill in Rossendale. Mill Tour - Raw Cotton to Finished Yarn. How does it all work? See and hear the machinery in action. Subtitles Available. Books on the Lancashire Cotton Mills:
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Hamden Guest House, Cambridge
Hamden Guest House, 89 High Street, Cherry Hinton, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, CB1 9LU, England
Click on the blue link above to read more about the Hamden Guest House or to book your stay there.Or visit for bargain prices on many more hotels in Cambridgeshire in the UK and around the globe.
Dedham and Flatford Mill filmed in 4K by Rodger Tamblyn
Set by the River Stour, Dedham is in the heart of Constable Country. It was here that Britain's greatest landscape artist John Constable went to school. The attractive high street is lined with Georgian-fronted houses, old inns and a large art and crafts centre. The magnificent 15th C. church was built from the wealth of the medieval cloth industry.
Dedham is rated as having some of England's most beautiful Lowland landscapes, particularly the Water Meadows of the River Stour, which passes along the northern boundary of the village forming the boundary between the counties of Essex and Suffolk.
Walkers will find countryside paths to in the Dedham Vale, including a popular 3 mile circular walk between Dedham and Flatford. You can also walk to the nearby villages of Flatford, Manningtree, East Bergholt and Statford St Mary.
Filmed in August 2019, on a Panasonic Lumix TZ100 (ZS100) in 4K resolution and using the new zhiyun crane-m2 stabilising Gimble.
Editing and compiling was done in Wondershare Filmora 9.
Impeachment trial of President Trump | Jan. 31, 2020 (FULL LIVE STREAM)
A crucial vote is anticipated Jan. 31 on whether to call witnesses in the Trump impeachment trial, including former national security adviser John Bolton. In a manuscript of his new book, Bolton reportedly says that Trump directly tied the holdup of nearly $400 million in military assistance to Ukraine to investigations of the Bidens.
Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives in December for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Impeachment does not mean that the president has been removed from office. In the next phase, the Senate must hold a trial to make that determination. A Senate impeachment trial has happened only two other times in American history and once in the modern era. At the center of the Democrats’ case is that Trump sought to withhold military assistance and an Oval Office meeting until Ukraine announced investigations into former vice president Joe Biden and his son.
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The Peak District - Cromford and the Arkwright Mills
As part of my mini series of videos exploring the Peak District, Kevin Hall and I have come to Cromford in Derbyshire. We are joined by Sue Blount who wishes to take us to Sir Richard Arkwaright's famous mills and the original workers cottages in North Street where weavers lived and had looms in the attics.
Cromford is one of the significant sites in the development of the Industrial Revolution. Richard Arkwright built his cotton mill to make use of the water frame. Some cottages and farm buildings pre-date Arkwright's time, but a large part of the village was built to house the mill workers. They were provided with shops, pubs, chapels and a school.
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Manhatten Transfer - On A Little Street In Singapore No.20 3rdwk May 1978 UK
Manhatten Transfer - On A Little Street In Singapore (Vinyl)(RadioSpeed) Got to No.20 in the third week of May 1978 in the United Kingdom. Uploaded by former Radio DJ John Magnetron. And Going by the Guinness Book of Hit Single Records and the British Book of Hit Singles, which was compiled from information that was gathered by organizations such as the British Market Research Bureau, the New Music Weekly and Gallup. As well as falling back on the overlay of chart music seen on other Internet sites which reflects chart positions of music in the same periods. These Chart positions should, therefore, be the same as the BBC Chart positions as they were played at the time. But it should be noted that the said ‘book entries’ are found in these uploads and that chart positions from ’The Official Chart Company Internet site’ are not the same reflection although similar. The importance of the Public Playing the original Vinyl on certain internet sites, are recognized and appreciated in certain professional fields such as Radio, as it helps program organizers check that the tracks that are now used from Compact Disc, Mp3 Wav and Wma tracks of the same music, are, in fact, the definite article and not re-recordings or the same music played at a different speed. (RadioSpeed) in the UK was not a definite or purposeful difference, but was about 44,43 or 42 R.P.M caused by both, in different Radio Studios, cases of ’loss’ such as, Electrical, and Mechanical, heat resistance and, more so, drag from the Tone Arm. In Cases where a Record Deck had a variable speed, it is possible that the DJ’s made them turn that slightly bit slower so as, more often, over run, ‘News Time’ etc, as you could always fade the record out, but a DJ’s Nightmare is always being left with nothing to say, the minute before the hour. So a song played now at (RadioSpeed) such as it was unpredictably during, for example, the 1970’s, the equable slower speed from the past, will bring back more memories than any old nostalgic tune that has somehow, now, speeded up. Of Course, The re-productive qualities of 45's through these sites are not good enough for professional use!