Top products from r/shittyaskreddit

We found 13 product mentions on r/shittyaskreddit. We ranked the 14 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/shittyaskreddit:

u/penwraith · 2 pointsr/shittyaskreddit

I <3 the book "his needs, her needs" amazon link

it's an 80s book. not politically correct.

I love it because the advice is very pragmatic.

> I will work my ass off

the book discusses 10 needs. if you know your partner's top needs, then you can spend more time on what they value the most. I know someone whose girlfriend really loves "domestic support".... typically that's a male need, but she has a demanding career so it's very important to her. the time he spends fulfilling that NEED is appreciated.

the book is good because we may not even know ourselves what our top needs are because many people don't have a vocabulary for relationship skills.

> be a good man to my wife and kids to ensure that they never feel that type of pain from me.

that's admirable.

u/MorallyDeplorable · 3 pointsr/shittyaskreddit

That's quitter talk. Go put these on and make her happy.

u/sidsixseven · 2 pointsr/shittyaskreddit

You'll need one of these... It's reusable and only $5 on Amazon. OXO Good Grips Brush

u/Web_Rand · 2 pointsr/shittyaskreddit

Yes. If you're attractive, it's "Let's have sex." If you're unattractive, RTFM.

u/deepyell · 3 pointsr/shittyaskreddit

According to Hunter Davies, that's very close to the original Lennon/McCartney lyrics ("I ain't got nothing but love babe, 7 days a week, assuming the week had 8 days but in reality the most I can manage right now is 6") - written during their brief "literal" phase. The higher-ups at Parlophone balked, feeling that this awkward phrase in the refrain would cause the song to be too long for a 45 RPM single, and difficult to sing along to. The Beatles grudgingly agreed to change the wording, which resulted in an unexpected hit.

u/doctorquinzeal · 1 pointr/shittyaskreddit

if you have an interest in this issue, you should read the works of others who care, too. the psychology of denial (if anti-vaxxers are factually incorrect)..... I couldn't find a good psychology recommendation..... but this book from 2019 called "the misinformation age" is about media manipulation from a scholarly perspective. it does not offer solutions, but describes the problem in depth.

> Philosophers of science Cailin O’Connor and James Weatherall argue that social factors, rather than individual psychology, are what’s essential to understanding the spread and persistence of false beliefs. It might seem that there’s an obvious reason that true beliefs matter: false beliefs will hurt you. But if that’s right, then why is it (apparently) irrelevant to many people whether they believe true things or not?

https://www.amazon.com/Misinformation-Age-False-Beliefs-Spread-ebook/dp/B07L14B7P1/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=misinformation+age+cailin&qid=1557037844&s=gateway&sr=8-1-spell