
43 Things That'll Help You Realize The Handyman Has Been Living In Your House All Along (Psst, It's *You*)
NoNo Brackets, aka curtain rod brackets that fit onto your existing blinds so that you don't have to fool with drilling any holes and having to spackle them later or (!!!) get charged when you move out of your rental. Now you can finally put up the curtains you've been eyeing for a minimal amount of work.
A special brush can keep your dryer's lint trap clear of debris and make drying cycles/the appliance more effective for longer. If you aren't already cleaning out the lint trap with every cycle, grab this before calling out a repair person.
Some dishwasher-cleaning tablets can get rid of residue that ends up creating odor and buildup on your dishes. You were lucky to score an apartment with a dishwasher but if it's not super effective, what's the use?! These are honestly so cheap that you'll wanna *add to cart* rather than texting your super to come by for a look.
A sturdy Pikk-It tool with sharp metal teeth that'll un-ensnare tangled hair from your vacuum cleaners, hairbrushes, and even your beloved round brush dryer. Raise your hand if you've ever broken a seam ripper cleaning a vacuum cleaner. (Meee.)
An oil stain remover capable of annihilating that grease stain that you thought made your garage or driveway a goner. No need for a professional assessment!
A foaming garbage disposal cleaner to throw in your sink (the whole packet!), turn on the water, and watch fizz up as it does the tough work below on all the gunk that OTHER PEOPLE have let build up in your disposal.
A jetted tub cleaner you simply run through in a bath cycle and just watch the filth (from previous tenants) EMERGE from the pipes. Then you simply wipe it away! It'll be equally horrifying and satisfying. Worth it.
A SnapPower GuideLight will optimize your regular old outlets instead of a night-light that you have to plug into an outlet that you always have to unplug the coffee grinder or do other tasks. No need to call in an electritian about adding lights!
A set of Snug Plugs if your hair dryer plug keeps falling out of the bathroom outlet and you're starting to wonder if you need to get a pro involved. These little contraptions make a snug fit between outlets and plugs to keep 'em where you want.
Washing machine-descaling tablets can work on both top- and front-loading machines to erase any lingering mildew smells — whether you've had this machine for ages and want to keep it running 'til the day you die. Or you got a steal on a used machine and now you know WHY.
Or if you prefer a liquid solution, a citrus-y Oh Yuk washing machine cleaner that'll work on all washers. Say buh-bye to random debris and nasty smells emanating from your machine.
The Pink Stuff Spray in case you're extremely into the OG cleaning paste and have wondered out loud, "Hm, I wonder what else they make." Well, THIS! Now you can sort out your icky oven situation before calling up a pro (and waiting around for the appointment).
A bottle of dog-spot repair if your puppy has a favorite pee spot and it shows... This stuff will get new grass growin' in no time so you can get back to hosting BBQs.
An under-$50 12-inch showerhead here for a little daily luxury. And if you've been blasted by a rainfall shower in a hotel before, no worries. This has an adjustable flow that'll give you that or some gentle precipitation. And yes, you can handle installation!
A carpet cleaning solution with results so impressive (just cast your eyes below this text!) that you may have to bleep out your own reaction. Get ready to break up with your carpet cleaner rental spot. Remember when your carpet was beige instead of greige?
Stain-lifting pads will tackle the icky pet stains on your wall-to-wall beige carpeting from when your poor dog didn't want to go use the bathroom outside when it was storming.
A standing weeder (without the chemicals!) to help improve your view of your yard. You're not the only one who has trouble enjoying weed-filled scenery. If you normally recruit someone to weed for you because you can't comfortably (or simply don't enjoy) bending down to do it, you'll ADORE this tool.
And a crack weeder tool that'll go where the larger weeder (and your hands!) can't if you're not opposed to getting down on the ground to weed, as long as the weeding is far more efficient!
Some interlocking teak tiles to cover up a hard surface that, tbh, is beyond visual help. They're great for rental properties because you can take them apart and take them with you when you move!
Luigi's Sink and Drain Plunger — a mini plunger can find a spot under sinks around your home for when your roomie's meal-prepping routine wreaks havoc on your kitchen sink. Grab this and use it in the same amount of time it takes you to google a plumber.
And Green Gobbler Drain Clog Dissolver that'll do a far better job of clearing your bathroom or kitchen drains than the super well-known brand you usually grab. Because clogs never happen at convenient moments. And sometimes your landlord or super can't stop by to help out when you need it.
Solar lights you can stake along a walkway or pond right where you need 'em. Lighting is key for getting more use out of your outdoor space. Oh, and they look nice in the daylight too!
A roll of perma-mulch to use around your garden beds and *keep* there because this stuff (made of recycled tires) imitates wood mulch but won't need replacing. If you have trouble sitting still while there's yard work that needs doing, you'll especially appreciate this.
Some bleach-free outdoor cleaner to spiff up your walkways and other surfaces you can likely tackle before you break out the pressure washer. Its foamy formula is totally safe around your precious plants.
And if cleaner alone won't work, some concrete paint for a refreshed look that'll make a HUGE difference.
A six-outlet wall charger can comfortably fit all the chargers you require. Plus! it has two USB fast-charging ports *and* a night-light. So this could be a solid solution for realizing that you don't have enough outlets on the days you and your partner both work from home.
An expandable under-sink kit will fit around awkward pipes in the kitchen while giving some sturdy ground to those bottles of cleaner. No more cabinet avalanches! Also, permanent cabinet changes can be quite pricey.
A carpet cleaner to transform all sorts of soft surfaces in your home BESIDES your carpet (though it'll do amazing work there too). Turns out, you don't need to buy a new couch after that huge accident. OR rent out a pro carpet-cleaning machine for about half the cost of this beaut. (You'll def use it more than twice and get your money's worth.)
Some magnetic garage handles and faux windows that'll bring some serious curb appeal to your home for an EXTREMELY small fraction of the price of getting some carriage-style doors. They're pricey as heck. These magnets are not.
A rechargeable, stick-on LED wall light will move with you when you want, even if you've just changed your mind within the same apartment or got a rude surprise at a lease renewal. It has three color temperatures, is dimmable, has a sleep timer, and is controlled from an app.
A renter-friendly Tulip shade that'll easily pop over your boob light (or other similarly sized ceiling-flush light you detest). You simply mount a ring on the ceiling with double-sided tape and put on the magnetic shade.
An Angry Orange pet odor eliminator for erasing all the visual (and smelly) evidence of pet accidents on flooring and furniture. You don't need a new chair. You just need this.
A "stained glass" decal to position on front-door windows, transoms, skylights...the possibilities are nearly endless! It'll obscure the view into your home a bit without going whole hog like a blurred window cling that obscures the view on both sides. Also, it just looks really nice!
A magnetic dishwasher cover can help you transform that magical appliance as a design focal point if no matter HOW much you clean your washer, it just doesn't shine like you want.
A roll of wood grain tape to slap on as a "frame" on your bathroom or wall mirror to make your space feel a bit more intentionally designed — even if you inherited a bunch of someone else's design choices.
Some pre-made wall panels that'll attach with a nail gun and glue (or Command strips). What's next? Your cover story for Arch Digest.
A USB-powered, stick-on LED light strip can help improve your TV-watching experience by bringing in a bit of ambient light to your personal theater. You've already got your TV and shelves just where they work, so no need to try and rearrange everything so your movie nights are more enjoyable. Reviewers say this makes quite the impact!
A wireless library light to put a spotlight on any new wall art, or to just really jazz up your existing gallery wall that needs a little something else.
A pack of cabinet pulls with some nice detailing that'll make them seem like you ordered them from RH for $30+ a pop instead of adding them to cart along with some toilet paper and mascara. Kitchen cabinets take up a WHOLE lot of visual space and cost a bunch of money to replace. Swapping out your pulls can make a big difference!
Some vinyl picnic table and bench covers will help your OG picnic table in your yard look more presentable while protecting you from splinters. No need to think about a swap or hiring someone to sand down the bench and paint the table.
A Scumbug to help keep your pool from getting too gross too quickly after you've done the FULL clean (or paid someone to do said full clean) and opened it up for the season. It soaks up sunscreen, oils, and other gross stuff enjoying your backyard retreat. When it gets discolored, simply wring it out, rinse it, and then put it back in its watery home.
And a grout pen you can use to work some *cheap magic* over a sweeping amount of visual space on floors and backsplashes with a huge impact for just a bit of your time. I should know. I've done it to my bathroom floor and find it lasts about a year!

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Los Angeles Times
a day ago
- Los Angeles Times
What if L.A.'s so-called flaws were underappreciated assets rather than liabilities?
In the wake of January's horrific fires, detractors of Los Angeles — an urban reality often seen as a toxic mixture of unsustainable resource planning and structurally poor governance systems — are having a field day. Their criticism is not new: For most of the 20th century — and certainly for the last five decades or so — Los Angeles has been seen by many urbanists as less city and more cautionary tale — a smoggy expanse of subdivisions and spaghetti junctions, where ambition came with a two-hour commute. Planners shuddered, while architects looked away, even as they accepted handsome commissions to build some of L.A.'s — if not the world's — most iconic buildings. In 1961, Jane Jacobs, the famed urban theorist and community activist, referred to 'the ballet of the good city sidewalk' in her landmark 1961 book 'The Death and Life of Great American Cities.' If Manhattan was her 'ballet of the sidewalk,' L.A. was a suburban parking lot with delusions of grandeur. 'Los Angeles is a city of pleasure and peril; we've always known this,' Zeina Koreitem, founding partner of Downtown L.A. architecture studio Milliøns, said following the fires. 'We consume our environment instead of living with it.' And yet, like so many Hollywood plot twists, maybe we misunderstood the protagonist. What if L.A.'s so-called flaws — its low density, car culture and decentralized sprawl — weren't liabilities in a changing world, but underappreciated assets? Not because they were the right urban solutions all along, but because the systems beneath them are shifting? Urban form has always followed transportation infrastructure. Roman roads influenced the creation of grid-based military cities. Railways shaped satellite towns. Subways gave rise to vertical density. Today, the emergence of autonomous mobility solutions like robot taxis as well as distributed energy — decentralized, small-scale energy generation located near where energy is actually consumed — is redrawing those relationships once again — and the L.A. model just may be a big beneficiary in the long run. Dismissed as the nemesis of sustainable urbanism, L.A. can, in fact, be well-positioned for the next chapter. Technologies like rooftop photovoltaics, vehicle-to-grid systems and AI-optimized resource flows do not depend on compactness. They benefit from space, sunlight and flexibility — qualities that Los Angeles has in abundance across its 1,600 square miles of urbanized area. That vast, polycentric mass — long derided by urban experts residing in denser cities — can also be an asset in the years ahead as autonomous mobility becomes ubiquitous. Elastic, demand-driven autonomous services — which will inevitably also extend to Los Angeles airspace — can and will complement an increasingly built-out Metro light rail system and increased bus rapid transit routes, helping open up economic opportunities to those in once disadvantaged, isolated neighborhoods. Instead of forcing the city into a European mold, perhaps the question is how the city's existing DNA might evolve. Could its low-rise form become a testing ground for neighborhood-scale energy networks? Could it become a solar-powered metropolis built on microgrids, where each district produces and manages its own resources? There is already a shift underway. L.A.'s wide boulevards and streets are being reimagined for a new mix of mobility modes: e-bikes, delivery bots, shared shuttles, autonomous vehicles. A city that was once an ode to the freeway is fast becoming a globally recognized source of innovations in multimodal transport. This is what CoMotion LA has been looking at for the last eight years: bringing together public and private stakeholders to imagine a city of seamlessly connecting mobility options. Young Angelenos increasingly prioritize neighborhoods where walking, biking and public transit are viable. Following a COVID-induced hiatus, downtown's renaissance, with banks converted into lofts and vibrant public spaces, is showing — once again — a new appetite for urban living. Los Angeles is even emerging as a global pioneer in rethinking the curb — often treated as an afterthought — looking at ways those stretches of sidewalk can serve new functions: a charging node, a logistics port, a civic gathering point. Meanwhile, the scattershot green spaces across Los Angeles offer another opportunity. Rather than a singular large park like New York's Central Park or Boston Common, the city could develop an ecological mesh, a 'sponge city' capable of managing stormwater and heat while fostering public life. Because sustainability is not only about emissions or energy. It is also means access, health and shared space. This isn't about longing for midcentury Los Angeles, or about replicating Copenhagen. It's about testing new possibilities — much like what we're exploring this year at the Biennale Architettura in Venice. There, participants from diverse disciplines are investigating how we can adapt to a changing planet. We begin with the understanding that climate change is no longer a distant threat; it is a present condition. Our response must be adaptive, experimental and iterative: a continuous process of design evolution, shaped by trial and error, much like nature itself. But the United States and the world do not need a single model of urban sustainability — they need many. New York might go vertical and social. Barcelona is building out superblocks for pedestrians. Rotterdam is going resilient and water-wise. And Los Angeles? It could — and we believe, it will — become a solar-powered, biodiversity-rich metropolis that helps us rethink what urban sustainability really means. The sustainable city of the future should not look the same everywhere. It should build on the best of what each place already is and push that to its most imaginative conclusion. 'No city has ever been produced by such an extraordinary mixture of geography, climate, economics, demography, mechanics and culture,' said Reyner Banham, the British architectural historian who wrote about Los Angeles a half-century ago. 'Nor is it likely that an even remotely similar mixture will ever occur again.' Los Angeles may have been the warning of the 20th century. But it could become the blueprint of the 21st. John Rossant is chief executive of CoMotion and international impresario of the multimodal transportation world. Carlo Ratti is the director of the Senseable City Lab at MIT and the curator of the Biennale Architettura 2025.


Buzz Feed
2 days ago
- Buzz Feed
Do Cheez-Its Taste Different By Factory? I Found Out.
Several months ago, a clip from the podcast The Consumers went viral after guest Andy Woodhull made the claim that Cheez-Its manufactured in Kansas City, Missouri, are better than Cheez-Its from other factories. He claims that if a serial number on the bottom of the box starts with the letter K, that means that the Cheez-Its come from this superior KC facility. He suggests that whenever shopping for Cheez-Its, you should always check for that letter K; that's how you know you have the good stuff. The post caused quite a stir, with many people on the Internet confirming that they could taste a difference in boxes of Cheez-Its. Some even detailed arguments with family members about how one box tastes "off" and not like the Cheez-Its they know and love. Seeing this, I thought it would be very simple to test. Just go to the grocery store and buy two boxes of Cheez-Its: one with a K serial number and one without a K. According to the Internet, the other Cheez-It factory is in Cary, North Carolina, and it claims to be the world's primary producer of the cracker. So I was prepared to have a difficult time finding a box with a K serial number. Like a madman, I spent 20 minutes at my local grocery store looking at the bottom of every single box and package of Cheez-Its on the shelves. Every single one of their serial numbers started with a K. A worker came up to me and asked me if I was alright. I ran away. I went to other grocery stores and convenience stores in my area. It was K's all the way down. How can this be? People on the Internet are absolutely certain about the differences in taste from box to box. I decided that the only way to really know if a Cheez-It came from Kansas City was to go to the actual factory. I piled myself and my dog Sassy into the car and drove to Kansas City. I reached out to Cheez-It to see if they would allow me to take a tour of their Kansas City factory. Unfortunately, they could not accommodate a tour, but they did give me a whole load of free snacks for the trip, as well as a giant Cheez-It-shaped pool float. Both boxes of Cheez-Its and the float had the K serial number. I promise this wasn't sponsored, nor did Cheez-It expect me to write a glowing review of their KC factory Cheez-Its. At every gas station stop along my journey, I would check the Cheez-Its. All of them were K's. I thought that maybe because I was west of the Mississippi, the KC factory supplied that part of the country, and that I would find some non-K packages towards the east. I reached Kansas City and stood outside the factory, wondering what magic inside made these crackers so good. Hey you! Want to cook recipes in step-by-step mode right from your phone? Download the free Tasty app right now. Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania — my search continued all the way to my ancestral homeland of Philadelphia. I still could not find a Cheez-It box that did not have a K serial number. My family begged me to stop this quixotic search; they could see the madness forming in my mind. I shrugged them off and set out on the road again, leaving them with Cheez-Its to remind them of me. Virginia, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas — only K's. By the time I got to New Mexico, I had given up hope. I was not going to find a box of Cheez-Its made in Cary, North Carolina. I returned to my home in Los Angeles a defeated man, having driven nearly 6,000 miles. In the days following the trip, I was still disturbed. All these people on the Internet claim they can taste a difference between Cheez-Its. But if all Cheez-It packages have a K serial number, which, according to the viral podcast clip, means they are the best of the best, how is there a difference? In desperation, I emailed Cheez-It again. Here's the email of desperation I wrote:"1. Based on this viral TikTok, the claim that Cheez-Its made in Kansas City have a serial number that starts with the letter K. Is there any truth to this claim? And if so, how would you be able to distinguish a package of Cheez-Its that are made in the Cary factory? 2. Would it be possible to obtain a package of Cheez-Its that were guaranteed to be produced in the Cary factory? I had so much fun doing what essentially was a 6,000 mile scavenger hunt, but I feel a little deflated that I was not successful in finding these Cary Cheez-Its. I think the article I am writing would have such a better ending if I could say that I found them." Was it actually fun? Perhaps that was a little lie to get the answers I needed. Two days later, I received a response from Cheez-It. Here was Cheez-It's response:"Rather than looking at the letters and numbers on the barcode or serial number, if you want to know where your crackers are baked, you'll need to look at the date code on the package, which also tells you when they Cheez-It cracker package date codes include a 'K' while others include a 'P.' K in the date code means the product was baked in Kansas City, Kansas, and P in the date code means the product was baked in Cary, North Carolina. Regardless of the letters in the date code, the Cheez-It crackers delivered to our consumers are the same delicious recipe and don't differ in production process, quality and taste." My reality was shattered. I spent three weeks searching the bottoms of Cheez-It boxes, when the answer to all my questions was simply on the top. I went back to my local grocery store, where this entire search all began. There they were, clear as day. A "K" and a "P." Standing in the aisle, I wept. The same worker from three weeks before approached me, asking if I was alright. I ran screaming from the store, hands filled with the two boxes of Cheez-Its. Once home, I forced my roommate, Rekha, to do a taste test with me. Visually, the Cheez-Its look exactly the same. Can you guess which cracker is from where? Rekha and I tasted both with a palate cleanser in between them. Was the KC cracker a little tangier and cheesier? Was the NC cracker a little saltier? It was hard to say. We did a blind taste test. I was able to guess which cracker was which, but Rekha was not. The results, ultimately, were inconclusive. I think if I did 100 blind taste tests, the results would be 50/50. What is truth? Are we presented with information every day that we just accept as true? Does our collective unconsciousness create memories about the taste of Cheez-Its until it is manifested into the world as a reality? Clearly, this endeavor has led me to ponder some of life's great questions. And I will have to keep living with the famous Operation Ivy lyric at the forefront of my mind: 'All I know is that I don't know nothing.' But at least for now, this mystery about the K serial number on a Cheez-It box can be put to rest. If you can't get your hands on Kansas City factory Cheez-Its, why not make your own by downloading the free Tasty app? No subscription (or 6,000-mile search) required.


Buzz Feed
2 days ago
- Buzz Feed
44 Impressive Cleaning Products
A no-scrub weekly shower cleaner to spray on after you shower, wait 8–12 hours while it tackles mold and mildew stains, soap scum, and just about any gross grime without YOU having to scrub. Talk about practical to the max. An impressive foaming drain cleaner you'll want to post to the socials — even if it pulls out some truly disgusting filth that you'd otherwise not wanna advertise to the universe. You can use it on sink, tub, *and* floor drains... and might just have you seeking out filth like John Waters. Bioclean, a hard water stain remover if you're tired at looking at all the streaks and soap scum on your shower doors, fixtures, grout, and basically everywhere else in your bathroom. One reviewer swears that you should "Buy a lifetime supply immediately." An instant stain and mildew remover to revamp all sorts of outdoor surfaces like siding, patio furniture, and boats BUT it'll also come in handy inside on surfaces like shower surrounds that seem like they're too far gone. Affresh dishwasher tablets can get rid of residue that ends up creating odor and buildup on your dishes. Turns out, you don't need a new dishwasher, it just needs a proper cleaning. A foaming garbage disposal cleaner you simply throw in your sink (the whole packet!), turn on the water, and watch fizz up as it does the tough work below on all the gunk that OTHER PEOPLE have let build up in your disposal. You don't see them overzealously dumping, but you KNOW it's happening. A jar of the The Pink Stuff — a cleaning paste made to handle all kinds of sticky, stuck-on situations like this nasty-looking stove top or a kitchen faucet that seems to develop a cruddy coating as soon as you blink. An incredibly powerful grout cleaner can erase years of nasty buildup that you've just come to live with over the years. This'll come in handy for your floors *and* backsplash. A reusable microfiber Swiffer mop pad because WOW those disposable ones seem to disappear like magic in your home and, tbh, can't really tackle the weird residue all your hairspray and styling products leave behind on your bathroom's tile floor. A sturdy Pikk-It tool that'll un-ensnare tangled hair from your vacuum cleaners, hairbrushes, and even your beloved round brush dryer. Raise your hand if you've ever broken a seam ripper cleaning a vacuum cleaner. (Meee.) A pack of stain-removing, nontoxic cleaning cups to clean out your Keurig's innards once your coffee starts tasting a bit funny. A powerful toilet tank cleaner can remove rust and other mineral deposits. Sure, guests aren't looking in your tank every time you use it, BUT you know if it's looking gross or not. A dryer lint trap brush will keep it clear of debris and make drying cycles/the appliance more effective for longer. PLUS, this is a basic safety thing everyone should do! A garbage disposal brush so you can safely clear the leftovers outta there without sticking grossly (and unsafely) sticking your fingers down there. (Go watch the great horror movie To Let and then you'll *really* wanna buy this.) A jetted tub cleaner that'll simply run through in a bath cycle and just watch the filth (from previous tenants) EMERGE from the pipes. Then you simply wipe it away! It'll be equally horrifying and satisfying. Worth it. A bottle of plant-based stainless steel cleaner and polish spray (that comes with a microfiber cloth) for a low-lift transformation. You lucked out with stainless steel-appliances in place — which so happen to be $$$. Their upkeep shouldn't be! A power scrubber brush you can attach to your drill/driver to help get at all kinds of messes. Work smarter, not harder. A Cerama Bryte cooktop cleaning kit to finally get rid of the gunk that seemed like it would never come off of your stove you've been avoiding eye contact with for the past six years. A bottle of Goo Gone foaming spray will help you win the good fight against greasy spills and messes. Your oven is about to get a makeover. A makeup brush cleanser because you and I both know you're not washing your beauty tools as frequently as you should. (Same.) A powerful dishwashing spray that, honestly, if you buy anything from this list, this should be it — especially if your old house *doesn't* include a dishwasher. You can spray down that casserole dish caked with enchilada sauce, let it sit, and you simply wipe and rinse away that saucy mess in a few minutes after you've conquered your meal. (Can you sense an enchilada theme here?) A carpet cleaning solution with results so impressive (just cast your eyes below this text!) that you may have to bleep out your own reaction. Get ready to break up with your carpet cleaner rental spot. Remember when your carpet was beige instead of greige? A mold and mildew removal gel can turn back time on your shower surround in a mere six hours. (Can't wait for Cher to drop that remix.) A bottle of nontoxic Folex Carpet Spot Remover will make all sorts of horrific stains disappear quickly. *And* there's no rinsing or vacuuming involved. An Angry Orange pet odor eliminator for erasing all the visual (and smelly) evidence of pet accidents on flooring and furniture. You don't need a new chair. You just need this. Bottle Bright cleaning tablets to revive the look (and taste!) of the stainless-steel thermos you use every dang day but aren't so great at washing like you should. A targeted cleaner that has a commercial-strength formula that'll cut through the mess to annihilate tough soap scum on shower doors, tub bottoms, sinks, whatever. An MVP-worthy pet urine stain–removing spray to help turn back the clock on that ancient stain in the hallway outside your bedroom. Stain-lifting pads can tackle the icky pet, coffee, or even blood stains on your wall-to-wall beige carpeting. Magic Eraser cleaning sheets can fit into all the nooks and crannies you wish your OG Magic Eraser could fit — like that air vent in the living room. A pumice stone that'll scrub away hard water marks and you should most definitely label as "TOILET" so people don't use it on their feet(!!!!). A microfiber window blind cleaner with three blades can help you quickly get through cleaning the blinds. No more hoisting them up and dealing with a cloud of dust. Some gooey cleaning compound to detail vents and other hard-to-clean areas of your car. It feels like a child's plaything but WOW does it work. A powerful tire cleaner will clean off the road dust (and so much more) on all sorts of wheels. And a bug remover to clean the gore from your windshield, grille, and side mirrors. A Baseboard Buddy, which is really just fancy talk for a 4-foot extendable pole that makes cleaning molding, ceiling fans, grates, and, yes, baseboards easy without grabbing a ladder or making your knees sore. A Skoy Scrub with the right amount of power to tackle the stuck-on messes that are haunting your surfaces and kitchen tools without doing any damage. Seems like this is the perfect cleaning solution for your beloved pan you always go for that has that stuck-on residue you've been afraid to tackle, lest you damage the non-stick surface! It'll also *safely* clean glass and cooktops without any scratches. A millipede-like hair remover with more than 4k hooks and loops can ensnare all that hair down there and save ya' a drain replacement or costly visit from the plumber. Some bleach-free outdoor cleaner to spiff up your walkways and other surfaces you can likely tackle before you break out the pressure washer. Its foamy formula is totally safe around your precious plants An upholstery cleaner to undo whatever it is your kids are doing to your backseat. (Please, I don't want to know.) A mold and mildew removal gel that'll transform your shower surround in a mere six hours. Sadly, I think this is the closest we're getting to hopping timelines and universes because the Tardis only exists in our hearts and on our TVs. An all-natural scour paste that'll really attack some layers and LAYERS of crud on all sorts of surfaces. A mold and mildew remover to work its magic on gross grout stains while you kick back and catch up on your stories. A natural, plant-based cleaner in case the reason you let things reach gas station–bathroom levels is because you can't stand the smell of bleach. This stuff will tackle grime, streaks, spilled foundation, soap scum, and basically whatever else ends up on your bathroom surfaces. AND it'll leave behind a eucalyptus and tea tree scent, a vast improvement from smelling like an indoor pool.