Chicago Tribune

Balancing Act: Men are from Waffle House, women are from IHOP — and other sexist nonsense we learned from Ernst & Young

I'm still trying to get my head around the pancake thing.

"Women's brains absorb information like pancakes soak up syrup so it's hard for them to focus," female executives were told at an Ernst & Young training seminar in 2018. "Men's brains are more like waffles. They're better able to focus because the information collects in each little waffle square."

Men are from Waffle House, women are from

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune4 min read
‘Fallout’ Review: Walton Goggins As A Swaggering, Post-apocalyptic Cowboy
If fears about “the bomb” permeated life in the mid-20th century, the video game “Fallout” takes that premise to its worst conclusion. In a post-nuclear wasteland, some survivors have been recreating their 1950s-era idyll underground in elaborate bom
Chicago Tribune3 min read
Musician Steve Rashid Plans Chicago-area Concert At Studio5 Venue He Helped Create
CHICAGO — The creative life can be, to borrow some words from the musical “Annie,” a “hard knock life,” or, as writer Maya Angelou once put it more gently, “You can’t use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have.” Few people I know have mor
Chicago Tribune3 min read
‘Dead Boy Detectives’ Review: Hardy Boys For The Supernatural Realm
A pair of teenage ghosts solve mysteries for their supernatural clientele in “Dead Boy Detectives” on Netflix, an eight-episode season that sits squarely in the YA genre. Picture something like “The Hardy Boys,” but British. And dead. Edwin (George

Related Books & Audiobooks