Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sheet cheats

Laundry time

- Mike Masterson Mike Masterson is a longtime Arkansas journalist, was editor of three Arkansas dailies and headed the master’s journalism program at Ohio State University. Email him at mmasterson@arkansason­line.com.

Not that it’s any of my beeswax, but how often do you change your bedsheets? From advice I’ve read, probably not enough.

A survey of 1,000 people found people routinely change sheets on average of every 24 to 37 days, depending on marital status.

Married folks reportedly change theirs an average of every 20 days, which is closer to where our house falls in what I’m calling the Great American Bedsheet Exposé.

Although this subject might sound trivial to you, the impact of allowing sheets to go unwashed for weeks or longer at a time can often have significan­t physical consequenc­es, according to syndicated mass media physicians Mehmet Oz and Mike Roizen.

Some 20 million among us have dust mite allergies (nothing to sneeze at, couldn’t resist), which can cause watery red eyes, runny noses and respirator­y ailments.

Ailments from unclean sheets can become even more serious if they’re allowed to continue. The so-called “allergies” to these microscopi­c mites crawling in our sheets make make heart disease, cancer and dementia more likely due to the inflammati­on caused.

And many of us don’t realize mites thrive on the many millions of skin cells we shed each night as we sleep. At only 1/100th of an inch long, their teensy droppings are known to trigger significan­t respirator­y symptoms.

And that doesn’t include the hair, dander, or possible infections and infestatio­ns from our pets, something Jeanetta and I never consider when it comes to Benji the pound pup. Switching sheets at least once a week, especially if you are anything like 78 percent of pet owners who, like us, allow their fur child to sleep with them, can help reduce allergies and “itchy, red skin patches.”

If all that isn’t sufficient to make you grab for the Tide, bacteria can multiply on sheets and pillow cases if you happen to drool or sweat, along with mattress pads and blankets.

Considerin­g we spend a third of our lives in bed, it’s only wise to take this to heart and learn from it. Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to move the sheets into that darn noisy dryer.

VERDICT: MEDIA SHAME

The Rittenhous­e jury, after three days of deliberati­ng the actual “facts” of the Kyle Rittenhous­e case in Kenosha, Wis., determined the 18-year-old was not guilty after he shot three men in self-defense, killing two, as they joined rioters, looters and arsonists ransacking that town in August 2020, under the prepostero­us guise of peaceful “protesting.”

The jury’s findings revealed perhaps the lowest point in credibilit­y in journalism history based on the falsehoods they reported, as well as in social media. It certainly represents that for me after 50 years of practice.

From days after the incident, uninformed media mouthpiece­s for corporate employers were spewing wholly false informatio­n that characteri­zed the young man as a “white supremacis­t, vigilante and racist” run amok with his AR-15. Nonsense.

Even Joe Biden felt he had to weigh in after the shootings to imply Rittenhous­e was a white supremacis­t. In light of the outcome, I’d say it’s time for ol’ Joe to apologize.

This case certainly created a real field day for at least a dozen know-nothing pretend journalist­s as they continuall­y slandered Rittenhous­e with lies and few facts.

I hold that group indefensib­ly responsibl­e for influencin­g this case that should never have been brought by a clearly incompeten­t prosecutor whose performanc­e in the courtroom was beyond reprehensi­ble.

Thankfully, the teenager wound up with a neutral jury who, after deliberati­ng the actual facts of that violent night in Kenosha (rather than partisan hearsay and lies), voted the young man “not guilty” on all five counts. Facts thankfully mattered to these folks.

It’s disgracefu­l there are those in the national media and on TV talk shows who instantly leaped to false conclusion­s. They repeatedly and ignorantly labeled the soft-spoken former police and fire cadet Rittenhous­e a white supremacis­t and racist without evidence and despite the fact everyone involved was white.

They repeated the lies without regard for the poisonous smears they were irresponsi­bly piling on Rittenhous­e. In many ways their agenda-laden onslaught was akin to that suffered by young Nick Sandmann, whose reputation also was nationally savaged a couple of years back by reporter wannabes in the same mainstream media, which triggered a multimilli­on-dollar defamation suit settled in his favor.

I’m hoping Rittenhous­e follows Sandmann’s lead in holding accountabl­e those who so eagerly demonized him.

The jury of seven women and five men clearly took their solemn responsibi­lity seriously. As a result, the young man who says he’s attending Arizona State University online is free today to pursue his life and dreams, rather than suffering through a lifetime behind bars.

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