NEW Sugar Pop Magazine

Hi everyone. Wow long time. I am so sorry for not posting more frequently. We have been so busy with the business and getting lots of things on the go. Don't worry we will have some contributors soon. If you know anyone looking to gain some social media experience let me know - we're looking for a social media intern (3 months). Recent news: We launched a new online magazine owned by TOLETTA called Sugar Pop Magazine. It's more about fashion than public washrooms (wink). We've been growing strong and now have over 1200 followers. Check it out. Visit the website www.sugarpopmagazine.com and follow us on Twitter @sugarpopmagz

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Let's go for a drink

Hey ladies. Sorry it's been a little while since my last post. We've been very busy getting everything ready for a our big launch (March 2009). In a few weeks our webstore will be in full swing - yippeeee. Now back to some blog funnies.

What goes through your mind when someone says "Let's go for a drink"? Here are some cute illustrations I found on the web about the differences between men and women.



Fashionista Toiletries 2009

New Line of Stylish Travel Packs of Paper Toilet Seat Covers to Hit Store Shelves March 2009

Ottawa, ON Canada – December 1, 2008. Every woman dreads having to use a public washroom – because you never know what’s on the toilet seat. A local company called TOLETTA prepares to change that by launching the world’s first premium brand of travel pack paper toilet seat covers. Each pack is fun and stylish, and is 20% larger and 42% thicker than most other brands. Women who already use strips of toilet paper or cannot find paper toilet seat covers in the stall, will greatly appreciate the convenience of having small travel packs of premium soft tissues. TOLETTA will be sold direct on the wesbite and will hit the shelves of selected retailers throughout Canada, USA, United Kingdom, Ireland, Poland and South-West Africa in March 2009.

“The product concept came to me and my husband while we were trying to find small travel packs of disposable paper toilet seat covers to use ourselves,” explained Dora Cardenas, Co-Founder and VP Communications, TOLETTA Inc. “Not only was I shocked to learn that travel packs are hard to find but the products we did find didn’t have any ounce of style or quality tissues. All the products we found looked and felt like something you would find in a camping supply store – not exactly something retail stores and supermarkets would be proud to carry on their shelves.”

For those women who are tired of crouching, using strips of toilet paper, or trying to use cheap and flimsy paper toilet seat covers, TOLETTA is an excellent alternative. TOLETTA is not just pretty on the outside. Inside each travel pack contains five disposable paper toilet seat covers made with large and soft tissues. The tissues are also flushable, biodegradable and safe in septic systems. The packaging is small enough to fit conveniently inside a purse. Depending on where you shop, each travel pack will range from $1.49 to $1.99 USD.

“We’re committed to helping support various social causes,” Dora continued. “A percentage of the proceeds from each sale will go towards supporting Breast Cancer Research and Child Poverty Awareness. Together we can make a difference.”

TOLETTA Inc.
Manufacturer of the world’s first premium brand of travel pack paper toilet seat covers. Each pack is fun and stylish, and looks like something you would find on the shelf with beauty products. Tissues are flushable, biodegradable, and safe in septic systems. Pink packs support breast cancer research. Blue packs support child poverty awareness. Please visit www.toletta.com

Kohler Purist Hatbox



Toilet as art: Kohler helps the rich poop better than us
Posted 03.30.2005 by Dave (PoopReport.com)

Back in the 1700s, before the flush toilet was widely popular (that didn't happen until the 1860s), people used to poop in "close-stools" -- essentially seats and cabinets for chamber pots. You opened the lid, did your business, closed the lid, and removed the chamber pot via the front panel for emptying. Close stools were fairly common with many segments of society.

But rich people then were just like rich people now: they didn't want to have anything in common with the masses. So they commissioned ornate, decorative close-stools made out of the finest materials, built by the finest craftsmen. Because if they had to associate themselves with something the rabble used, they wanted to make sure that their version was a whole lot more expensive.

History repeates itsef. I give you the Kohler Purist Hatbox. For rich people who, if they have to poop like the rest of us, at least they can comfort themselves knowing they're pooping on something most of us can't afford.

Conquering the 'ewww' factor:

Hi Gals,

This is front news on CNN today. I could not have said it better. Great article. Toilet Seat Covers anyone?


By Elizabeth Landau
CNN

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Most of us have them -- the personal ritual to deal with the "ick" of a public bathroom: wiping the seat with toilet paper, using a paper seat cover or even rolling up several pieces of toilet paper to create a thicker barrier between the skin and ... the unknown.


Public bathrooms may be teeming with bacteria, but the toilet seat is probably safe for sitting.

But the toilet seat is actually the cleanest part of the bathroom, one expert says.

Charles Gerba, a microbiologist at the University of Arizona who has studied restrooms and other germ-infested environments for more than 20 years, says that because of the care people take when they're about to sit, other parts of the bathroom are much more prone to delivering bacterial infections.

"One of the cleanest things in the bathrooms we find are the toilet seats," Gerba said. "I'd put my fanny on it any time -- unless it's wet; then you'd want to wipe it first." Avoiding bathroom 'hot spots' »

The Internet has come through for people who just want a clean place to go. New tools like MizPee (nationwide) and Diaroogle (New York only) will point you to the nearest public restroom and display extensive comments about those facilities from users, even delivering the information to your mobile phone. (Warning: CNN makes no promises about the cleanliness of the language in these bathroom locators.)

MizPee launched a year ago for people in San Francisco, California, after co-founder Peter Olfe saw that the city's public library bathroom was "so disgusting," said Dhana Pawar, vice president and co-founder of Yojo Mobile, which created MizPee. "Unfortunately, [MizPee] was inspired by that trip."

Fueled by demand, MizPee has expanded to more than 22 cities in America and six in Europe, and has had more than 300,000 unique visitors. Users rate toilets on a scale from one to five toilet paper rolls and nominate the best and worst toilets for the Flush of the Year award. The site also gives users information on deals at restaurants, shops and services nearby, in addition to toilet trivia called "looisms."

Women tend to have higher standards for bathroom cleanliness than men, often rating any given unisex bathroom lower than men, Pawar said. In general, many more women than men use the site, but male bikers and older men, especially colitis patients, also come to MizPee.

Women are also particularly concerned about finding clean bathrooms with changing stations, Pawar said. "You'd be surprised how few there are."

Pawar said she herself is "really paranoid" when it comes to the restroom.

"I'm one of those really anal people who have to have a clean bathroom," she said.

For many people, public bathrooms generate feelings of anxiety, fear and disgust.

"Basically, everybody is fearful of public restrooms," said Dr. Lisa Bernstein, assistant professor at Emory University School of Medicine, who admitted that her mother always told her that she should never make direct contact with a toilet seat.

Research indicates that fear of the commode itself may be misdirected.

Public bathrooms may contain several kinds of harmful bacteria, including E. coli, salmonella, coliform, rotavirus, cold virus and the potentially deadly form of staph known as MRSA, experts say. But people are more likely to pick up these nasty bugs through touching things in the bathroom with their hands, not their behinds.

Don't Miss
CNET: Diaroogle helps you find clean public bathrooms
"I don't think anyone would voluntarily sit on a seat with urine, but, in reality, urine touching intact skin on the tush won't do anything," Bernstein said.

More concerning, however, is a child who steadies himself or herself on a toilet seat by holding onto it and then leaving without washing hands, she said. Those germs could lead to an infection once the child's hands touch the nose, mouth or eyes.

And don't forget that unwashed hands have handled everything from the door knob to the lock to the flusher. Again, if you touch one of these objects and then rub your eye, nose or mouth, you're apt to transmit that bacteria.

But there is hope. Here are hygiene helpers:

Wash your hands

Yes, it's basic. But, in general, washing your hands is the most effective action you can take to prevent bacterial infections from a public bathroom, experts say.

"You can remove all gastrointestinal and respiratory infection bacteria by washing hands," said Judy Daly, clinical microbiologist at the University of Utah and spokesperson for the Clean Hands Campaign. "Seventeen seconds of a little bit of friction, water and soap will really mediate bacteria."

Health Library
MayoClinic.com: Health Library
The American Society for Microbiology, which sponsors the Clean Hands Campaign, found in a study last year that about 77 percent of men and women washed their hands in public restrooms, down 6 percent from 2005. The observational study also found that women washed their hands more than men.

"It's such an easy intervention," Daly said. "If you get it to be a habit for a 30-day period, it's something you do automatically."

Use automatic devices

Recent bathroom additions like automatic hands-free faucets and paper towel dispensers diminish contact between your hands and bathroom items that may bear bacteria, Bernstein said.

Don't let your belongings touch the floor

Gerba's research found that the highest concentration of germs in a public bathroom are on the floor, the outside of the sanitary napkin disposal and the sink and water taps.

When Gerba looked at women's purses, he found that one-third of them had fecal bacteria on the bottom. Make sure you hang your shoulder bag on a hook. If none is available, some people swear by hanging the strap around their necks.

Use the first stall

The middle stall of a public restroom usually has the most bacteria because people use it the most. "I guess people like company," Gerba said. The first stall will probably be cleaner.

Recognize the best and the worst

As a rule, the cleanest toilets are usually in hospitals, because they use disinfectants heavily, but the worst are in airports and airplanes, Gerba said. The small size of airplane bathrooms, including the sinks themselves, make it hard for people to wash their hands -- in fact, Gerba's study found a thin layer of E. coli in an airplane bathroom.

As for the airports themselves, "In the men's room at Chicago O'Hare, I don't think the toilet seat ever gets cold," Gerba said.

Don't hold back

It's fine for a woman to hover over the toilet seat if she doesn't want to sit down, but if she doesn't empty her bladder completely, she's at risk for a urinary infection, Bernstein said.

"You may be doing yourself more harm than good," she said.

Along the same lines, you can develop urinary infections from "holding it in" too long just because you don't want to use a particular facility. Better in a public stall than not at all.

Put it in perspective

Although the bathroom seems like a nasty place, the possible infections from the dreaded stall are no different from the ones you can get anywhere else in public.


"They're the same bugs we transmit shaking hands," Bernstein said. "People are more freaked out about restrooms, but the same thing applies anywhere in public."

After all that research -- he's had the cops called on him while prowling around bathroom floors -- Gerba has no problem with sitting down on public toilets. But Bernstein still uses one or two seat covers, "because of what my mother taught me," she said.

Public Washroom Prank

Hi ladies. I hope you had a great weekend. Here is another powder room video I found on YouTube. This has to be one of the funniest public washroom pranks I have ever seen. Check it out - you'll have a good laugh.

Deadly Butt-Cheek Disease

PIKE PLACE MARKET, SEATTLE – A deadly strain of Hinternoccoci bacteria was soundly thwarted in its attempt to spread from a public toilet seat to the butt-cheek of area man Todd Stanley Tuesday.

Before taking his seat on the public toilet, Stanley carefully removed a disposable paper toilet seat cover from the dispenser in the stall, placing it squarely on the communal throne.

"Most bacteria and viruses have to get inside your body to be of any real danger," said UW toiletologist Doctor Frank Pinkerton. "In order to reach your bloodstream, germs like Hinternoccoci are capable of burrowing through the immensely thick layers of fat in the posterior. I cannot stress enough the vital importance of stopping the spread of these determined deadly diseases by placing a thin layer of toilet paper on the seat before use."

"Imagine a vast army of microbes, teeming about on the toilet seat—armed to the teeth and thirsty for blood—human blood," Dr. Pinkerton continued. "As the unsuspecting victim approaches, the bacteria are euphoric, foaming at their single-celled mouth-like openings and beating against one another in vicious anticipation."

"But alas, just before the unwitting fool enters the thirsty clutches of the germ forces, he reaches out and covers them with some sort of magical barrier! The army's intense weaponry is useless against the mystic forces of the single-ply tree-based obstruction. Dejected and defeated, they console themselves by throwing a party for Charlie, whose mitochondria just differentiated him into super-virus status."

Upon further examination of Dr. Pinkerton's credentials, it was determined that his doctorate was in fact issued by Quaker Oats as the prize in a box of Cap'n Crunch.

By John Fostr
Naked Loon Technology Reporter