August 6, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: The Science of the Human Torch, Movie Villain Supercut and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Movie Truth of the Day:

Nerdist’s Kyle Hill takes the occasion of a new Human Torch portrayal (in Fantastic Four) to discuss the truth about spontaneous human combustion:

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Supercut of the Day:

Not to be confused with another video we shared recently titled “Meet the Villain” here’s an all new, all great supercut of the best movie villains (via Devour):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

In honor of tonight’s GOP debate, here’s Donald Trump meeting Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin) in 1992’s Home Alone 2: Lost in New York:

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

60 years ago today, the Chuck Jones-directed Merrie Melodies short Jumpin’ Jupiter, starring Sylvester, Porky Pig and the birdlike Jupiterian (currently seen in commercials), opened in theaters. Watch it below.

Movie Trivia of the Day:

Here are 15 things you might not know about Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone via Screen Crush:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Gladzy Kei gives us “Battle Princess Jasmine” based on the character from Disney‘s Aladdin (via All That’s Cosplay):

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Alex Kalogeropoulos mashed up John Carpenter‘s The Thing and David Robert Mitchell‘s It Follows, to show the similarity of their hidden threats (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Filmmaker In Focus:

James Cameron‘s movies are a “cinema of flesh and metal,” according to this video by Martin Kessler:

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Movie Location Vacation of the Day:

Here’s a side-by-side view of what the suburban neighborhood used for the setting of Edward Scissorhand looks like today, in case you were hoping to ever look for the pastel-colored houses (via /Film):

25 Years Ago Edward Scissorhands was filmed near my house

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Russ Meyer‘s cult classic Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! turns 50 years old today. Watch the original trailer below.

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Ferguson Businesses Struggle To Rebuild Post-Riots

Sam's Meat Market was looted and vandalized at least three times during the unrest in Ferguson, Mo., last year.
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Sam’s Meat Market was looted and vandalized at least three times during the unrest in Ferguson, Mo., last year. Cheryl Corley/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Cheryl Corley/NPR

Businesses in Ferguson, Mo., are bracing as the city prepares for peaceful protests marking the one-year anniversary since it was embroiled in violence following the death of 18-year-old Michael Brown. Brown was unarmed when he was shot by police officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9. In November, many businesses were looted, vandalized and set on fire after a grand jury decided to not indict Wilson. Since then businesses have been working to rebuild.

There are two main business districts in Ferguson, one in the downtown area along North and South Florissant Ave., and the other on West Florissant, not far from where Brown was killed by then police officer Darren Wilson.

Along West Florissant Ave., there are some empty lots where once thriving businesses were located. Five buildings in Ferguson and several more in neighboring Dellwood were set on fire during the unrest after Brown’s death. Nearly all have been demolished and most are being rebuilt.

Sheila Sweeney, interim CEO of the St. Louis Economic Development Partnership, points out barbershops, cellphone stores and others that suffered less damage.

I think there’s a general sense of growth that most of them feel. Some are still obviously in need of assistance and a customer base is kind of starting to grow back, and it’s all going forward,” Sweeney says.

The partnership, banks and the state have given about $750,000 to more than 70 businesses in the region — either grants or loans — some at zero percent interest. St. Louis County is funding a matching grant program to help businesses pay the cost of fixing up their facades.

The smoldering remains of a beauty supply store in Ferguson, Mo., in November. Unrest gripped the city after a grand jury decided not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown.

The smoldering remains of a beauty supply store in Ferguson, Mo., in November. Unrest gripped the city after a grand jury decided not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown. Cristina Fletes-Boutte /TNS/Landov hide caption

itoggle caption Cristina Fletes-Boutte /TNS/Landov

At Sam’s Meat Market, there’s an open sign out front but the owner doesn’t want to talk. The grocery store sits back off the road. It was looted and vandalized at least three times during the unrest. Marquess Mull, who often cleans the floors of area businesses, says he expected the market to reopen after it was looted the first time.

But the second and third time, woo, it could take a lot out of a person,” Mull says. “I know it took a lot out of him just to really come back and get that mindset to come back, but this store is definitely important to the community.”

But others don’t feel as positive about doing business in Ferguson.

Dionneshea Forland has been in business for 10 years running Missouri Home Health and Therapy out of an office building on West Florrisant. She had to move out last August and again in November. Vandals stole computers and office furniture. Her clientele dropped because therapists weren’t comfortable coming to the area. Her client base is slowly growing, but Forland is still moving out.

I think businesses are having a hard time with coming back to where they were at before the incident happened,” Forland says. “I think the visual when you ride down West Florissant is not a good visual.”

Ferguson Mayor James Knowles says the city is making progress and even attracting new business. He says perceptions about West Florissant are caused in part by people he says are taking advantage of a situation.

“It’s very difficult when you have a group of 30 kids that show up on the lot of McDonalds scream, yell, intimidate people, scare people and claim it’s their right to do it, and it has nothing to do with any movement,” he says.

Knowles says the good news is that Ferguson will have more businesses overall than last year — among them, a call center that a managed health care company plans to open, creating up to 200 jobs. And Starbucks will locate a shop on West Florissant.

Jerome Jenkins, who owns a diner called Cathy’s Kitchen in downtown Ferguson, says the crowds are good at breakfast and lunch but it’s slower at night. People still unsure if they should come out after 5,” he says.

While some may view Ferguson as a city scarred by violence, Jenkins calls it a goldmine.

“So Ferguson will not fail, and we will rise out of the ashes from a riot not because we have this great idea but because we are surrounded by economic development,” he says.

Other business leaders say they just want people to recognize all the work that’s been done in the past year to help bring the community back.

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Will Brazil Be Ready For Summer Olympics? The Athletes Weigh In

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In Brazil, the countdown has begun for the 2016 Summer Olympics. Brazilian organizers say everything is on track, but concerns persist over the water quality for some of the events.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

It’s a year until the start of the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and despite worries over construction quality and delays, Brazil is promising that everything is on track. All this week, Rio has been running Olympic test events. NPR’s Lourdes Garcia-Navarro spent this morning at one venue, itself the subject of controversy over the quality of its water.

LOURDES GARCIA-NAVARRO, BYLINE: The rowing Olympic test matches are underway in Rio de Janeiro’s lagoon. It’s a beautiful, cloudless day, and there is, as you can hear, a lot of excitement.

UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: (Chanting) U.S.A. U.S.A. U.S.A.

JENNIFER MOFFAT: I am beyond excited. We’ve been looking forward to this for months, and I just can’t believe it’s finally happening.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: That’s Jennifer Moffat from Manlius, N.Y., who’s here watching her daughter row. These test events allow organizers to make sure that facilities are working and to run through operations – kind of like dress rehearsals. And so far, so good on what’s happening on the surface of the water. Last week though, an Associated Press investigation found that the water quality here is basically equivalent to raw sewage. So we decided to ask one of the U.S. coaches here about whether or not there should be a change of venue.

CONAL GROOM: The conditions have been great. The water is a great lake to row on and pretty. It’s fair. So if FISA has us racing – if the – our governing body has us racing, then we’re not worried.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: That’s Conal Groom, who coaches the men’s sculling team. He says at this point, most Olympians have been training for this course.

GROOM: It’s a sport that looks really simple – a bunch of round buoys in a body water – but there’s a lot of technical stuff. You know, the athletes and the infrastructure have just put too much work to prepare for this course, this setting.

GARCIA-NAVARRO: Other athletes agreed. Both the world sailing and rowing bodies have said they will be testing the waters for viruses, something that they weren’t doing before, but they haven’t called for a change of location. And Rio is promising it will try and improve water conditions before the games. So it seems for now, all will go ahead as planned.

But as one Brazilian resident of the city quipped to me outside the rowing venue, I’m sure it’ll be a fine for the athletes, but we will have to deal with our terrible water long after the Olympians are gone. Lourdes Garcia-Navarro, NPR News, Rio de Janeiro.

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Patients In Iowa Worry About Private Management Of Medicaid

Brenda Hummel and her 7-year-old daughter Andrea in their home near Des Moines, Iowa. Andrea was born with severe epilepsy and gets her health care through Medicaid.
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Brenda Hummel and her 7-year-old daughter Andrea in their home near Des Moines, Iowa. Andrea was born with severe epilepsy and gets her health care through Medicaid. Clay Masters/Iowa Public Radio hide caption

itoggle caption Clay Masters/Iowa Public Radio

Brenda Hummel’s 7-year-old daughter Andrea was born with severe epilepsy. Like many children with significant diseases or disabilities, she has health insurance through Medicaid. Hummel navigated Iowa’s Medicaid resources for years to find just the right doctors and care for her daughter. But now Iowa’s governor, Republican Terry Branstad, is moving full speed ahead with a plan to put private companies in charge of managing Medicaid’s services, and that has Hummel worried.

Everywhere in the Hummel household, there are signs of just how much care Andrea needs. Her bedroom, for instance, looks like a typical kid’s room — stuffed animals, a frog light that shines images on the ceiling, and a butterfly mobile. But the bed stands out – the head of the bed goes up and down so Andrea can have her head elevated when she sleeps.

“When she was throwing up all the time when she was in a regular bed, I hardly got any sleep,” Hummel explains, “because if I heard her coughing, I knew she was choking.”

Andrea has this bed thanks to Medicaid — as well as her wheelchair and nurses, like Nate Lair who’s been with the family for years. When Hummel gets home from work, Lair says, Andrea’s personality changes.

“That’s when she turns on the diva attitude,” he says, laughing.

That diva attitude is significant progress. For years, Hummel says, her daughter showed very little personality. Seizures interrupted her development.

Now Andrea is able to go to school and do normal activities. But her mom worries that having a private business in charge of Medicaid will jeopardize the level of care Andrea gets.

“She hasn’t been in the hospital for 2 1/2 years, I think,” says Hummel. “So when they look at that, they may think, ‘[Her services] are not medically necessary. She’s doing great and doesn’t need these services that are costing money.’ But, in my eyes, she can fall back to having seizures any time. We’re not out of the woods at all.”

Maybe it’ll be OK, Hummel says, but she just doesn’t know enough.

Medicaid serves a large population in Iowa. The state expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, and is now open to not only its traditional population — the poor and disabled — but also to adults who earn as much as about $16,000 a year for a single person, and as much as $32,000 for a family of four.

Amy McCoy, who is with Iowa’s Department of Health, says patients will continue to receive the same care under the new system, and the changes will save money and streamline the services.

Iowa Senate President Pam Jochum wants to make sure the transition of Medicaid recipients to private companies has good oversight.

Iowa Senate President Pam Jochum wants to make sure the transition of Medicaid recipients to private companies has good oversight. Clay Masters/Iowa Public Radio hide caption

itoggle caption Clay Masters/Iowa Public Radio

“Some people might have five doctors,” McCoy says. “Through this care-coordination effort, they can make sure everybody’s on the same page with their treatment.”

McCoy says having private insurers manage Medicaid is nothing new.

“Thirty-nine states are using some kind of managed care,” she says. “So other people have done this. We have models to look after, and we have companies who have experience.”

But a lot of states, including Kansas and Kentucky, have not done so well, says Pam Jochum, president of the Iowa Senate and a Democrat.

“You know, when I was a kid growing up my mother would say, ‘If everybody jumps off the bridge, are you going to, too?’ ” Jochum says. “Of course not! The point is that just because everyone else is doing it doesn’t make it better.”

Families like Brenda Hummel’s have a natural ally in Jochum; she, too, has a daughter with special needs who has been on Medicaid all of her life. Still, even with Jochum’s opposition to the changes in Medicaid, the process in Iowa is moving forward. Gov. Branstad did not need legislative approval when he announced the switch to managed care in January.

In response, some lawmakers, including Jochum, insisted on a committee to oversee the transition and to make sure that consumers are treated fairly.

“There is no way,” Jochum says, “you can put that many people into a system all at once, with various degrees of disabilities and need, and think anyone can manage that and manage it well.”

Eleven companies have submitted bids to manage most of the $4 billion program, and Iowa plans to announce later this month which insurers will win the bid.

Brad Wright studies health policy at the University of Iowa. He says a lot of states have experimented with this idea, but on a smaller scale.

“They’ve not … done what Iowa is proposing to do — or at least most have not done this — which is to put everyone into it,” Wright says.

The only hurdle that stands in the way of approval, he says, is an OK from the federal government.

“If that happens,” Wright says, “starting in January, it’s full steam ahead.”

This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with local member stations and Kaiser Health News.

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