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Dr Kirk Honda answers upper-tier patron emails. 


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The Psychology In Seattle Podcast ®


Trigger Warning: This episode may include topics such as assault, trauma, and discrimination. If necessary, listeners are encouraged to refrain from listening and care for their safety and well-being.


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SeattleTransAndNonbinary ChoralEnsemble

The taboo on the word ‘moist’ came from the predecessor of OkCupid, which was called TheSpark. Before they introduced their dating site, they were a site for college students where you could take (and create your own) novelty personality assessments, as well as humor, e-cards and their version of cliff notes. The most interesting thing about the site and what made them unique is that they did a lot of data analysis on their personality test results, like seeing whether more men or women would answer true to questions like “in a certain light, nuclear war would be interesting” and other statistics (they continued to do this on OkCupid, which still has a robust archive of statistical articles with plenty of graphs and tables, plus a little irreverence. One of the questions on their most popular test (one which was similar to the MBTI but with different axes, like one was more sensual or more cerebral, and the archetypes would be funny and vaguely offensive persona like “the doormat” or “the beast” instead of like ‘explorer’ or ‘advocate’ etc) was “which of these words is more disgusting: moist or used” (I think what it was meant to answer is whether you’re a more visceral/squeamish or a more empathetic/sensitive person, though they kept that stuff opaque.) when that test became popular, suddenly it seemed like overnight everyone talked about how moist was their least favorite word. Me, I’m a fan of moist things. *whistles W.A.P*

Anonymous

Did this predate Dead Like Me, the TV show? I think it was in the pilot, the girl/ghost spells out MOIST on the refrigerator in magnetic letters because she knows her mom hates the word.

Angel-Rae

In Australia we had Hawaiian pizza (ham and pineapple) at the Pizza Hut in the 1970s. It was one of the normal options. Lots of Australian pizzerias do a bacon and egg pizza. What do you think of that? My favourite pizza is a soft sourdough crust like in Naples.