Anyone who’s endured any portion of a weekly San Francisco Board of Supervisors meeting knows that these are godawfully long and dull affairs during which no sentient human could ever avoid the temptation to check Twitter, Facebook, or the other time-killing delights the world wide web has to offer. The Supervisors themselves are not immune to this! Turns out the the Supes surf the Internet during these six- to eight-hour meetings too, and a fascinating report from the Examiner details the in-meeting web browser histories of each supervisor while they whittle away the time while waiting for these tedious proceedings to end.

In fairness, the Examiner analysis only covers one night of Board meetings on February 28, 2017 — so we cannot generalize this information into regular, everyday web-surfing habits. Most notably, District 11 Supervisor Jane Kim was confronted with a family emergency that night and needed to book a red-eye flight that evening. If that’s the case, her repeated visits to Kayak.com and Priceline.com are totes justifiable and it’s pretty commendable she even stayed for the whole meeting. Further, this data only includes web-surfing on city-issued laptops, not smartphones,

Nonetheless, we are still inclined to snoop! Thanks to information gleaned from an Examiner public records request, these are the websites each supervisor visited during the seven-hour, 43-minute meeting on February 28.

President London Breed (District 5)
While the Board President visited approximately 23 separate URLs from Nordstrom.com, her Facebooking was far more prolific (370 visits, mostly toward the end of the meeting). She did, however, avoid Twitter and “bullshit ass blog” 48 Hills.

Sup. Aaron Peskin (District 3)
Peskin clicked on 48 Hills, though, visiting 28 of the blog’s unique URLs. He also clicked on more than 70 SFGate links, 50 SF Examiner links, and four SFist links (Fist pump! Fist pump! Fist pump!)

Sup. Sandra Lee Fewer (District 1)
Fewer is more of a foodie, with primarily food sites and blogs in her browser history. These included multiple visits to the Gary Danko website (whoa, how much are we paying these people?) and additional visits to FoodNetwork.com, AddaPinch.com, Epicurious, Food.com, and NoBiggie.net. She also read a few articles about divesting from the Dakota Access Pipeline, which is legislation that she sponsored at the Board level.

Sup. Jane Kim (District 6)
As noted earlier, Sup. Kim logged numerous visits to Priceline, Kayak, and Southwestern Airlines. She also logged two visits to Shopify.

Ahsha Safai (District 11)
Fitzgerald Rodriguez describes Sup. Safai’s browsing history as “click-happy on Trump news, mostly on SFGate,” and notes that Safai uses Yahoo Search. Supervisor, that means Putin probably has everything on you. Everything.

Sup. Malia Cohen (District 10)
Sup. Cohen clicked on a measly ten Facebook links.

Sup. Katy Tang (District 4)
Per the Ex, “Tang mostly visited news articles about political appointments, but also read an Uber blog post about ‘Getting SF Ready to Go Back to School’.” (In February?)

Sup. Norman Yee (District 7), Sup. Jeff Sheehy (District 8), Sup. Hillary Ronen (District 9)
Supervisors Yee, Sheehy, and Ronen all went nearly eight hours appearing to be very professional and checking only that night’s Board agenda online.

Sup. Mark Farrell (District 2)
But the prize for illusion of work ethic goes to Sup. Mark Farrell, who had adjusted his privacy settings so that he registered no browser history. Oh, if only he could have been Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairperson.

Related: City Hall Gets Lazy With Board Of Supes Class Photo, Photoshops Peskin In