Wherever you are in the country, you’ll want to check out Sonic, Wienerschnitzel, and Dog Haus. Also, Nathan’s Famous is doing its yearly promo – hot dogs only cost a NICKEL from 11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. It’s what they originally cost when their first store opened in Coney Island in 1916.
Fun fact: According to the Hot Dog and Sausage Council, we’ll eat about SEVEN BILLION of them just in the three-plus months between Memorial Day and Labor Day. That’s 818 hot dogs a second. Los Angeles eats more of them than any other city, followed by New York, Dallas, Chicago, and Philadelphia.
But per capita, cities in North Carolina dominate the list. Raleigh-Durham is first. Then it’s Greensboro, North Carolina, Buffalo, New York, Paducah, Kentucky(???), and Charlotte, North Carolina comes in fifth.
Here’s a quick list of specials for you doggers!
1.Steamie Weenie, Las Vegas has $1.50 hot dogs, $2.50 chili dogs. Dine in or take out – no limit!
2 Nathan’s Famous is selling hot dogs for a NICKEL again. That’s what they cost when their first store in Coney Island opened in 1916. The limit is two per customer, and it’s only for two hours . . . from 11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.
3. Dog Haus is giving out free hot dogs all day. You have to text them “FREE DOG” to get a mobile coupon. (The number is 833-440-1110.)
4. Sonic is selling Chili Cheese Coneys for $1.29, about 50% off.
5. Wienerschnitzel has a deal where you get four Chili Dogs for $4.
6. Love’s truck stops have free hot dogs if you download a coupon through their app. And Pilot Flying J stores have a buy-one-get-one deal.
7. Target is doing 25% off select hot dog brands if you’re a rewards member.
8. 7-Eleven rewards members can can get a Big Bite hot dog for $1 through their mobile app through August 1, 2023 at participating locations.
9. Original Hot Dog Factory you can score a free all-American hot dog with no additional purchase necessary, on July 22 from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Happy dogging!
Yes There Are Mosquitos in Las Vegas -- Here's Help
YES! We DO have mosquitos in Las Vegas – and the two we have always seem to bite me! Anywhere I go I get bit! Time to pull out the mosquito repellent.
For the most part mosquitoes just leave bothersome, itchy bites on your skin. But they can also pose a serious and sometimes deadly risk to your health. When a mosquito bites you, it may transmit harmful pathogens that cause dangerous diseases like malaria, Dengue fever, Zika and West Nile.
How to avoid mosquito bites
Female mosquitos bite to get vital nutrients from our blood. They use these nutrients to make their eggs. One single bite can breed about 100 mosquitos!
There are several ways to avoid bites. Wearing long, loose clothing, limiting time outside, placing screens over your windows and getting rid of standing water that mosquitoes seem to love.
Still, one of the best ways to protect yourself from hungry mosquitoes is by using mosquito repellents. There are a lot of them out there, so here’s what you need to know to protect yourself this summer
Early mosquito repellents
The use of mosquito repellents goes far back in time. Some of the oldest records of the use of mosquito repellents date back to early Egyptian and Roman history. Back then, the popular repellent was smoke smudge from fires.
Today, we have more options than our ancestors when it comes to choosing what type of mosquito repellent to use – sprays and lotions, candles, coils and vaporizers, to name some.
These repellents actually interfere with a mosquito’s sense of smell, taste or both. Didn’t know their noses or tongues were that sensitive. The repellent either blocks or overstimulates these senses, but it’s still unknown exactly how. Who cares, right? As long as they work!
Repellent tests:
For some products, testing was as simple as putting a volunteer’s treated arm into a cage with 25 mosquitoes and waiting for the first mosquito bite. If they didn’t – it worked!
For others, like citronella candles, a candle or device was put between a person and a cage of mosquitoes. Depending on the repellent efficacy of the device, mosquitoes either flew toward the person or away -easy enough. However when I’m around, mosquitos LOVE citronella!
Mosquito repellents that don’t really work:
Bracelets don’t work. Department stores and pharmacy chains sell hundreds of different varieties of bracelets. They are marketed as “mosquito repellent” bands, wristbands and watches. They vary from plastic to leather. Even if they’re loaded with repellents, they can’t protect your whole body from mosquito bites.
Ultrasonic repellent devices have failed as well. There are electrical plug-ins, free-standing variations that claim to emit a high-frequency sound that deters mosquitoes by mimicking bats. but, in scientific studies, ultrasonic repellent devices fail to repel the buggers. In fact, one lab found a slight increase in mosquito attraction to the wearer.
Dietary supplements like vitamin B, garlic and so on – also a no go! No scientific evidence points to these working.
Light-based repellents? Nope! Thought colored light bulbs do work well on moths, beetles and stinkbugs, but not on mosquitoes.
Here is a ranking of mosquito repellents that DO work.
DEET. Chemical name, N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide, was developed in the 1950s by the U.S. Army and is a well-established mosquito repellent with a long history of use. The higher the percentage, the longer the protection time is – up to six hours.
iStock via Getty Images Plus
Picaridin
This is a synthetic repellent that can protect for up to six hours at a 20% concentration. It is a promising alternative for DEET.
Cliff Partlow via Getty Images
OLE: Oil of lemon eucalyptus,
OLE works with the active ingredient, and is a plant-based alternative to DEET and picaridin. Its repellent properties can last for up to six hours.
iStock via Getty Images Plus
Essential Oils
Some work well, some not so much. A study tried 20 different essential oils in a 10% essential oil lotion mixture. Clove oil, Cinnamon oil, Geraniol all worked for 60 to 90 minutes. Citronella oil worked for only about 30 minutes.
iStock via Getty Images Plus
A Spiderman Outfit
I mean, if you’re going to cover up, you might as well do it in style.
Carla Rea is the morning show co-host on “The Mike and Carla Morning Show" on 96.3 KKLZ, in Las Vegas. She has been working with her partner and friend Mike O'Brian for the past 25 plus years. At KKLZ for 12 years. Carla Rea is a Gracie Award winner. She started out in talk radio, "when talk radio was still fun" Rea says. Prior to, and along with doing the morning show, Carla is also a comedian. You may have seen her on Conan O'Brien, Evening at The Improv, Showtime, or several comedy clubs across the country. Carla also worked as a light feature reporter at KSNV/NBC Las Vegas, going behind the scenes at various shows, and restaurants on the Las Vegas strip. As a content creator 96.3 KKLZ, Carla writes in a sarcastic, cheeky, unapologetic way on Las Vegas, movies, TV, celebrities, and this thing we call life.
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