Yes. There is a legitimate equation for figuring just how much Halloween candy you should buy for trick-or-treating!
The housing blog Apartment Therapy has come up with a formula. The formula is as follows...
kids in your neighborhood
DIVIDED BY
servings in one bag of candy
MULTIPLIED BY
quality of decorations in the neighborhood on a scale of 1 to 5
PLUS
quality of the weather on a scale of 1 t
Skip the grocery stores and the big box stores for your Halloween candy needs. Instead, shop local at Candy Town USA!
Don't just be another house on the block that hands out generic candy that kids don't even like! Stock up on hundreds of the best chocolate, sweet, sour and specialty candies around. Thi...
Once again this year, Brewer Dental Center is offering to buy your Halloween Candy for $1 a pound. In addition to knowing that you might be saving yourself some extra pounds or cavities, you can also know that your candy will be shipped off to our troops overseas via Operation Gratitude...
The website sumocoupon.com compiled some data last year to figure out which Halloween candy was the most popular in each state. The lack of Reese's Cups in any state makes me a bit skeptical, so I thought I would throw this out there just to see how many Montanans agree with this survey...
Since January I've been working out regularly. I do an hour and 3 minutes of cardio in the morning and every 3 or 4 days I do pushups or push weights. For the better part of the first 6 months I started working out I was really good about watching what I ate but working here on the 23rd floor of the Crowne Plaza for Townsquare Media is a daily exercise (see how I did that) in avoiding sugary, ric
Oh goody. Here come's Valentine's Day. Can you feel my enthusiasm? Probably not. I'm not a big fan of it. So, if you dislike Valentine's Day as well, don't worry. You are not alone!
The internet exploded this week with news that a Fargo woman was going to hand out letters instead of candy to kids she deemed as "moderately obese," but is it all just a hoax?
This year, some children in Fargo, North Dakota may get a bigger trick than treat when hitting the streets for trick-or-treating. That's because a woman in the city has decided to take a stand against childhood obesity, which on its face it's a noble effort. However, the method in which she is doing it is turning heads.