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Michigan university’s banished words list is perfect, full stop

Lake Superior State University has the perfect way to celebrate 2026, by banishing the word “perfect” and nine other terms from the English language.

The school in Sault Ste. Marie, MI has collected submissions from around the world since publishing its first “banished words” list in 1976. 

What started as a fun New Year’s Eve party suggestion has become an annual tradition.

University President David Travis says faculty members sifted through 1,400 submissions to curate its 50th list.

“What they look for are classic examples of overuse, misuse, and simply words that are useless,” he says. “And they come up with the top ten.”

The judges don’t limit their choices to words. They also consider choice phrases, such as “6-7,” which caught on in 2025.

Dr. Travis says “6-7” has no clear definition.

“It’s simply a fun word that people get excited about when they see the two numbers together,” he says.

Let’s get cooking

Here’s the complete list for 2025, with comments from people who nominated them:

  1. 6-7 (six seven): “There are six or seven reasons why this phrase needs to be stopped,” says Paul E. from Wisconsin. The volume of submissions for this one could have taken up the whole list, at least slots 6-7. Scott T. from Utah adds, “it’s time for “6-7” to be 86’ed.”
  2. Demure: “It’s very said more than very done, and we’re all very done hearing it!” remarks Tammy S. Often used in the phrase ‘very demure, very mindful,’ Madison C. shares that the overuse “waters down the real meaning.”
  3. Cooked: “Hearing it…my brain feels ‘cooked,’” groans Zac A. from Virginia. Parents and guardians led the charge on this one, with some feeling this isn’t enough.
  4. Massive: “Way overused! (often incorrectly),” exclaim Don and Gail K. from Minnesota. This word’s massive overuse has secured its place on this year’s list.
  5. Incentivize: In the longstanding effort to turn nouns into verbs, this is another culprit. Two separate submissions likened hearing this word to “nails on a chalkboard.”
  6. Full stop: “For the same reason ‘period’ was banished…redundant punctuation,” explains Marybeth A. from Oregon.
  7. Perfect: “There are very few instances when the word actually applies,” notes Jo H. from California.
  8. Gift/gifted (as a verb): “I found this on the 1994 list, but it will make me feel better to recommend that it be included once again,” reveals James S. from Oklahoma. Another case of a noun being used as a verb.
  9. My bad: In the 1998 banishment, Elizabeth P. from Michigan suggested, “students and adults sound infantile when using this to apologize.”
  10. Reach out: First banished in 1994, this saying has strayed from the positive message it once intended to deliver. “What started as a phrase with emotional support overtones has now become absurdly overused,” asserts Kevin B. from the United Kingdom.

It’s all in fun

The good news is no one’s going to arrest you if you use any of these words or phrases. Dr. Travis says it’s supposed to be tongue-in-cheek. But he admits not everyone takes it that way.

“We sometimes get a nasty letter from someone saying, ‘I refuse to stop saying that word,'” he says. “And we just kind of smile and chuckle because they thought we were being really serious.”

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GLWA takes steps to reduce sewage backups in southwest Detroit

The Great Lakes Water Authority has started building a new tunnel in southwest Detroit. The project will divert excess stormwater from a large sewer line along the Rouge River to a retention and treatment basin nearby.

Potential to address a longstanding problem

GLWA Chief Operating Officer Navid Mehram says the tunnel will reduce the risk of flooding. Additionally, it should mean fewer basement sewage backups during heavy rain. “We’re making an investment in our existing system by rerouting some flows, so that we can leverage an existing facility that wasn’t receiving all the flow it can treat,” Mehram says.
GLWA officials pose with part of a tunnel boring machine
The tunnel will be almost 4,000 feet long and several feet wide. Nehram says GLWA expects to finish the job in 2028. “Our projects are very large,” he says. “This is a tunneling project, which is extremely complicated.” Besides reducing sewage backups, Mehram says the project will also make the system more resilient to heavy rain. “This not only provides us with water quality improvements along the Rouge River, but it can also provide a backup for our Water Resource Recovery Facility,” he says.

Who’s paying for it?

The project will cost $87 million. Mehram says GLWA will use both government grants and sewer rate revenues to pay for it. He says it will not increase customers’ bills.

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Lake Erie’s summer algal bloom was relatively mild

This year’s harmful algal bloom in western Lake Erie was among the mildest this century.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration monitors the development of algae in the lake each year.

On a scale of 1 to 10, NOAA rated this year’s bloom between 2 and 3, which is mild. Compare that with 2011’s very severe bloom, which peaked between 9 and 10.

NOAA researcher Rick Stumpf says each bloom is different. He and his colleagues use several factors to rate each one.

“The mildness is a reflection of how much bloom there is,” he says. “The amount of biomass, the quantity, and how severe it is over the peak 30 days.”

Weather is a big factor

The amount of rainfall in the spring also affects the bloom’s development. Algae feed on phosphorus, a common chemical in farm fertilizer. When farmers apply it to their fields, rain will wash some of it into streams and creeks. That water then flows into the lake through the Maumee River in Ohio.

A view from Lake Erie Metropark.
Algae can grow close to shoreline areas as in this photo of Lake Erie from 2017

Stumpf says lower-than-average rainfall in 2025 meant less phosphorus for algae to consume, and thus a milder bloom. He also says this year’s growth started later than usual.

“The last few years, the bloom’s been pretty well-developed in July,” Stumpf says. “This year, it wasn’t until well into August when you had the greatest quantity of bloom.”

Stumpf says one way farmers can limit the amount of phosphorus in the lake is to test their fields for it early.

“If you’ve got enough phosphorus in the field, you may not have to fertilize for a couple of years, and that can make a big difference.”

Navigating the shutdown

Stumpf says the federal government shutdown in October did affect some of NOAA’s observations. But he says by then, researchers had enough data to rate the bloom accurately.

“We do a lot with satellite data, and that data has continued throughout this year’s bloom,” he says.

That data will also help NOAA figure out what other factors affect harmful algal blooms and how they’ve changed over the last 25 years.

Size doesn’t always matter

The size of each bloom doesn’t necessarily reflect how toxic it is. For example, the 2014 bloom was rated moderate to severe (5 out of 10). But it produced enough toxin to contaminate Toledo’s municipal water system that year.

In general, Stumpf says algal blooms can harm people and animals who are exposed to them. He says the best way to prevent that is to avoid areas of green scum on the surface of the lake.

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New flu variant, vaccine guidance worry MDHHS’s top doctor

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services is urging people who can get this season’s flu shot to do so.

So far, the agency says about 20% of those eligible to receive the vaccine have been immunized.

New strain appears in the UK

Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian is the state’s chief medical executive. She says a new variant of H3N2 influenza is causing severe cases of flu in England.

A photo of Natasha Bagdasarian wearing a black top standing against a gray background.
Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian

“What’s happening in Europe and England is sometimes a harbinger of what’s to come in places like Michigan,” she says. “And what we’ve been seeing [there] is an early flu season and a more severe flu season.”

Early studies have shown that this season’s flu vaccine offers some protection against the new variant.

“In England, they’ve seen that in folks under 18, the vaccine is about 75% protective in terms of keeping them out of the emergency department and the hospital,” Bagdasarian says. “It’s about 40% effective in those over 18.”

While the vaccine does not prevent all cases, Bagdasarian says it does reduce one’s chances of getting really sick.

“What we’re trying to do here is not stop all cases of the flu, but we want to keep people out of the hospital, the ICU, and stop them from dying,” she says.

Vaccinations have been declining since COVID

As for the low vaccination rate this season, Bagdasarian says it’s a trend. Fewer people have been getting annual flu shots since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. She worries that an outbreak of severe flu might overwhelm Michigan’s hospitals.

“When our health systems are full of people with influenza, that means there’s less care to go around,” she says. “None of us want to see a health system that’s overwhelmed with flu cases.”

Bagdasarian says fewer children are receiving routine vaccinations for other diseases such as measles and polio. She fears that recent developments at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could make that worse.

Skeptics turn health policy on its head

For example, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recently recommended that children should only receive the hepatitis B vaccine if their mothers have tested positive or their status is unknown. Decades of research have shown that immunizing newborns against the virus is safe and has drastically reduced childhood cases of hepatitis B and other liver disease.

Bagdasarian attended the ACIP meeting virtually. She questions the qualifications of many who spoke.

“There were not enough scientists,” she says. “There were not enough health professionals, pediatricians, physicians.”

Instead, Bagdasarian notes that some of the presenters had non-medical backgrounds and don’t understand health care. She says that jeopardizes America’s health policies.

“The recommendations they voted on are liable to cause increased confusion and hesitancy and maybe put obstacles in people’s place when they’re trying to get vaccines,” she says.

Bagdasarian’s specialty is infectious disease. She says she’s treated patients with end stage liver disease, measles, and other preventable illnesses. She does not want the U.S. to go back to the time when these things were common.

“Many of these vaccines are things that we took when we were kids,” she says. “To deprive our own children of these life-saving benefits is sad.”

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Michigan seeks 5th straight win over Ohio State

The College Football Playoff’s last two national champions collide in Ann Arbor on Nov. 29.

Ohio State won the CFP title in January 2025. Michigan won it in 2024 and has beaten the Buckeyes four straight times, including last year’s contest in Columbus. 

OSU was heavily favored to win that game but lost to unranked U of M 13-10.

Head coach Ryan Day’s team recovered and roared through the playoffs, beating Notre Dame in the championship game.

Michigan lives rent-free in OSU’s head

Columbus Dispatch sportswriter Joey Kaufman says the Wolverines seem to have a psychological edge in this long-running rivalry.

“It just feels like, for whatever reason, Michigan has been in Ohio State’s head,” he says.

OSU hasn’t beaten its archrival since 2019. The two teams did not play in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kaufman says this year, the scarlet and gray are treating it as a normal game.

“They’ve tried to structure their routine to be more akin to a typical game week rather than ‘Michigan week,'” he says.

That does not mean the game will be less intense. OSU players and fans, still stinging from last year’s defeat, despise “the team up north” as much as ever. 

People have covered up the letter “m” with red “x” stickers on signs throughout Columbus. And Kaufman says many fans are still sore after Michigan players planted a large, blue block “M” flag in the center of Ohio Stadium.

“Even though the rivalry has meant less than ever in terms of the on-field stakes and the national championship, the bitterness is evident,” Kaufman says.

Michigan scores a touchdown against Illinois in 2016

“The Game” or just “a” game?

During the latter half of the 20th century, the winner of this game invariable won the Big Ten Conference championship and a berth in the Rose Bowl. Since 2001, conference realignment and the playoff system have lowered the stakes. It’s possible to lose the game and still win a national title. 

In 2025, Ohio State enters Michigan Stadium unbeaten and ranked first in the College Football Playoff rankings. Michigan, at 9-and-2, is 15th. A fifth straight win could earn the Wolverines a berth in the 12-team playoff field and a trip to the conference championship in Indianapolis on December 6. OSU is a virtual lock for the playoff, but beating the maize and blue would solidify their position as the tournament’s top seed.

Kickoff is scheduled for noon at the Big House. 

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DNR makes progress in months-long ice storm cleanup

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources has cleaned up most of the tree damage from last winter’s historic ice storm in the northern Lower Peninsula.

But crews are not done yet.

Many broken limbs still dangle from treetops, while fallen branches block backroads in many counties.

DNR fire management specialist Nate Stearns says debris shut down more than 3,000 miles of state forest roads at one point. Since then, they have fully or partially reopened most of them.

“We’re at 366 miles of impassable roads and 169 miles of partially closed roads, so we’ve made some really good progress,” he says.

A tree rests on the roof of a house in northern Michigan.
A tree rests on the roof of a house in northern Michigan.

Fire danger looms in 2026

Fallen timber remains on the ground in some hard-to-reach areas, providing potential fuel for wildfires. Stearns says that hasn’t been a problem this year, but it could cause trouble next spring.

“As that dries out and starts to decay, it’ll be like tinder for starting a campfire,” he says. “And any fire that does start on state land could give responders a more difficult time with access and fire intensity.”

Stearns says property owners in the northern Lower Peninsula and the eastern U.P. should consider composting or chipping wood debris instead of burning it. He says that will reduce the risk of wildfires.

More work to do

The DNR took a break from cleanup during Michigan’s firearms deer hunting season. But crews will try to pick up as much debris as they can before heavy snow forces them to wait until the spring to resume.

The ice storm also caused widespread power outages in 12 counties. The Federal Emergency Management Agency granted Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s initial request for disaster aid. In October, she asked for more assistance, but FEMA rejected it.

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America’s Thanksgiving Parade is ready to roll

Detroit loves a parade. Hundreds of thousands of people line Woodward Avenue each Thanksgiving to watch a stream of floats, marching bands, balloons, and celebrities make their way from midtown to downtown.

The 2025 parade will be the 99th in the city’s history. Only Philadelphia’s Thanksgiving parade is older.

Tony Michaels is the president and CEO of The Parade Company, which organizes the event. He says it takes a whole year to plan.

“It’s a massive, massive undertaking,” he says. “We’re building 120-foot floats, we’re selling sponsorships, we’re making sure sponsors are taken care of.”

In addition to The Parade Company’s staff, Michaels says about 2,000 volunteers sign up to help. Some carry banners, others hold balloon leads or drive floats.

Floats and balloons take over Woodward Ave. each Thanksgiving

“They do so much, it’s unbelievable, and without them, we cannot pull this off,” he says.

The parade begins in the Cultural Center district near the Detroit Public Library and the Detroit Institute of Arts. It proceeds about three miles south to Campus Martius.

Michaels estimates nearly 1 million people will line the parade route.

Stars shine

This year’s event will be Mike Duggan’s last parade as mayor. He’s one of the grand marshals, along with retired WDIV-TV news anchor Devin Scillian. 

Michaels says they won’t be the only celebrities taking part. Detroit-born Actor Sam Richardson is scheduled to appear. He co-created and starred in the Comedy Central series “Detroiters” with Tim Robinson. 

“We have Christopher McDonald, who played Shooter McGavin in the ‘Happy Gilmore’ movies,” Michaels says. “And we have Dexter Bussey, one of the great Detroit Lions.”

A century of tradition

The J. L. Hudson Company sponsored the first Thanksgiving parade in 1924. It has been held every year since except 1943 and 1944 due to World War II. The 2020 parade took place in a different location without spectators because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2025 parade will pass by the new Hudson’s Detroit tower. 

Gardner-White is the parade’s presenting sponsor. WDIV-TV will televise the event.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

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