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260101

THURSDAY 260101

Cindy, Strict!

Lemon and Herb Chicken Drumsticks

The fall of a prolific science journal

An investigation reveals how industrial-scale publishing turned scientific output into a billion-dollar business.

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Complete as many rounds as possible in 20 minutes of:

5 strict pull-ups
10 honest push-ups
15 squats

Chicken drumsticks marinated in lemon, garlic, and fresh herbs, then roasted until golden and tender.

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Photo of Lemon and Herb Chicken Drumsticks
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Ingredients

For the Chicken:
2 lbs chicken drumsticks (about 8–10 pieces)
2 Tbsp butter or tallow (melted, for roasting)
Salt and black pepper, to taste

For the Marinade:
¼ cup olive oil
2 Tbsp lemon juice (freshly squeezed)
1 Tbsp lemon zest
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 tsp fresh thyme (or 1 tsp dried)
2 tsp fresh rosemary, chopped (or 1 tsp dried)
2 tsp fresh parsley, chopped
½ tsp paprika
½ tsp chili flakes (optional, for heat)

Optional Garnish:
Fresh parsley or dill, chopped
Extra lemon wedges

Macronutrients
(per serving, serves 4)

Protein: 32g
Fat: 17g
Carbs: 2g

Preparation

In a large bowl, whisk together olive oil, lemon juice, lemon zest, garlic, herbs, paprika, chili flakes, salt, and pepper. Add chicken drumsticks, toss to coat well, and marinate at least 1 hour (up to overnight in the refrigerator).

Preheat oven to 400°F. Place drumsticks on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Drizzle with melted butter or tallow. Roast 35–40 minutes, flipping halfway, until chicken is golden and reaches 165°F internal temperature.

For extra crispy skin, broil 2–3 minutes at the end.

Garnish with fresh parsley and lemon wedges. Serve hot with roasted vegetables or a crisp salad.

Additionally, stretch for 20 minutes.

Post rounds completed to comments.

This El País investigation examines the collapse of a once-high-output scientific journal, using it as a case study to expose the financial incentives and structural flaws of modern academic publishing. Publishers can generate enormous profits by prioritizing volume over rigor, relying on article-processing fees, lax peer review, and aggressive expansion to flood the literature with papers of uneven quality. As submissions surged, editorial oversight weakened, warnings from researchers were ignored, and credibility ultimately collapsed under the weight of retractions and scrutiny.

The piece situates this journal’s downfall within a broader critique of scientific publishing, where researchers—under pressure to publish—supply free labor as authors and reviewers while publishers reap billion-dollar revenues. The system rewards speed and scale rather than reliability, contributing to irreproducible research and eroding public trust in science.

FULL ARTICLE

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