August 11, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: Roger Moore as 007 in 'Spectre,' Heath Ledger's Joker Journal and More

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

Movie Recasting of the Day:

We’ve seen a mashup recasting Pierce Brosnan in the Spectre trailer, now it’s Roger Moore‘s turn (via /Film):

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

In honor of Straight Outta Compton coming out this week, Honest Trailers slams the Eminem movie 8 Mile:

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Production Diary of the Day:

From the 2012 documentary Too Young to Die, Heath Ledger‘s father offers a glimpse at the actor’s journal used while preparing for his role as The Joker in The Dark Knight (via Legion of Leia):

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 65th anniversary of the theatrical release of the animated short Popeye Makes a Movie, in which Popeye makes a movie. Watch it in full here:

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Star Wars of the Day:

One of the most clever fan-made food items based on the Star Wars movies is a tauntaun cookie with candy guts that you can tear out of its belly. But now you need a candy Luke Skywalker to stuff into the vacancy (via Neatorama).

Supercut of the Day:

If you like Arnold Schwarzenegger movies just for the explosions, all you need is this video (via Devour):

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Supercut master Jacob T. Swinney presents all of Spike Lee‘s head-on (usually fourth-wall-breaking) shots in three minutes for Press Play:

Movie Trivia of the Day:

In honor of another stoner comedy coming out (American Ultra), CineFix lists seven things you probably don’t know about Dazed and Confused:

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Video Essay of the Day:

Now You See It explores sexual, particularly phallic, symbolism in film, featuring parts of Alien, A Clockwork Orange and more:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

10 years ago today, Judd Apatow premiered his feature debut, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, in Hollywood. Watch the original trailer, which doesn’t make it seem nearly as funny as it really is, below.

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China Cut Its Currency — And Touched Your Life. Here's How

You may not pay in Chinese yuan notes, but a drop in their value affects your spending power.

You may not pay in Chinese yuan notes, but a drop in their value affects your spending power. Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images

When China suddenly cut the value of its currency Tuesday, investors everywhere were caught off guard.

And they didn’t like it. They sent both stock and commodity prices much lower. Even interest rates fell.

Now maybe you are wondering: Huh? What does this China move mean for me?

Before we get to that, let’s first run through what happened on the other side of the world:

— China’s government wants to reverse an economic slowdown there. So it decided that to boost growth, it had to take steps to lower export prices and attract foreign customers.

— That meant cutting the value of its currency, the yuan, by nearly 2 percent.

— So now China can, in effect, offer its goods at a discount in the global marketplace, gaining an advantage over competitors, including U.S. manufacturers.

That triggered a lot of fears, including these:

— Investors worry that China’s unexpected move tells us that the country’s economy is even weaker than they thought. If it is weaker, then China might start pulling back on purchases of goods and services from other countries.

— U.S. manufacturers fear that other central banks might follow China’s lead and devalue their currencies too. U.S. exports already are down this year, so tougher competition would be unwelcome here.

— Economists don’t like currency or trade wars that distort free markets. And political anger in Washington is rising. Many lawmakers already had been calling for measures to penalize currency “manipulators.” Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said in a statement that China’s latest currency move means “it’s past the time to do something about it.”

Those fears roiled markets:

— Stock prices took a big hit, with the Dow Jones industrial average falling to 17,403, down 212 points. The S&P 500 index tumbled 20 points to 2,084. European stocks fell too, down by 1.6 percent.

— Commodity prices got slammed because a lot of investors figure that China will be buying less of everything. So oil and metal prices fell especially hard, but so did corn, wheat and lumber.

— Interest rates slipped on U.S. Treasuries because investors wanted to put their money somewhere safe. When investors are eager to own Treasuries, then the U.S. government can offer lower rates. So the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to a two-month low of 2.13 percent.

What does all of this mean for your wallet?

Here are some upsides:

— U.S. consumers got good news on oil prices, which fell to a six-year low of $43.28 per barrel. That pretty much guarantees bargains at the pump this fall. Many experts say gas could be averaging less than $2 a gallon by winter.

— All sorts of commodity prices fell, so that should beat back inflation. For example, if copper and lumber cost less, then builders can hold down prices for new homes.

— Those lower commodity prices might encourage the Federal Reserve to hold off on raising interest rates this fall. If Chinese imports are cheaper, and gas is lower and food prices are restrained, then the risk of inflation is down, so why raise rates?

Here are some downsides:

— Tumbling commodity prices may sound good if you are a consumer, but not if you are a miner or a farmer or an oil field worker. Lower prices could mean lower profits and more layoffs.

— If you’re a saver, you may feel like you just can’t win. Interest rates are down on your bank savings, and the stock in your 401(k) retirement account is down too.

— If you are a U.S. manufacturer who must compete with China, you too may feel like the deck is stacked against you.

It’s not easy sorting out whether on balance, China’s move will hurt or help you because it depends on whether you mostly consume commodities or produce them — and whether you mostly save money or borrow it.

But in any case, a decision made by a few officials in China reached into your wallet on Tuesday. Small world.

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Jets Quarterback Geno Smith 'Sucker-Punched' By Teammate, Left With Broken Jaw

New York Jets quarterback Geno Smith will have surgery after a teammate broke his jaw in a locker room altercation Tuesday.

New York Jets quarterback Geno Smith will have surgery after a teammate broke his jaw in a locker room altercation Tuesday. Seth Wenig/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Seth Wenig/AP

New York Jets quarterback Geno Smith will miss a lot of playing time after being “sucker-punched” by a teammate Tuesday. The fracas left him with two fractures in his jaw.

IK Enemkpali, a reserve linebacker who threw the punch, was promptly released by the team. Head coach Todd Bowles told reporters the altercation “had nothing to do with football.”

“It was something very childish. He got cold-cocked, sucker-punched, whatever you want to call it, in the jaw. He has a broken jaw, fractured jaw, it requires some surgery.”

Smith, who is the process of trying to resurrect his career with the Jets, will miss six to 10 weeks with the injury.

Smith took to Instagram vowing, “ILL BE BACK!

A photo posted by Geno Smith III (@genosmith7) on Aug 11, 2015 at 11:03am PDT

Jets fans — no strangers to heartbreak — are likely to take this incident pretty hard, especially because Smith was reportedly having a strong training camp.

As NFL.com reports:

Jets fans are used to calamity happening to their team at the quarterback position, but this is a new one. Smith was one [of] our candidates to improve this season as a starter, largely because of how well he fits in offensive coordinator Chan Gailey’s system.”

Summer skirmishes are nothing new in NFL training camps, though the severity of this injury to arguably the team’s most important position is remarkable. The altercation comes one day after Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton got into a scuffle with a teammate during practice.

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Doctor Recalls Facing Cadavers, Mortality In Gross Anatomy Lab

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Eleven years ago, NPR’s Melissa Block followed a group of first-year medical students in one gross anatomy lab as they confronted cadavers and mortality. She checks back in with one of those students.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

This is my last week hosting this program. I’m going to take some time off and come back as a roving correspondent doing long-form reporting and profiles of fascinating people. This week, I’m going to check in on a few of the other fascinating people I’ve interviewed over these past 12 years, some of the stories that have stuck with me the most.

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UNIDENTIFIED MAN: You can see muscle here. See that? That’s muscle.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Oh, look at that. Look how you can see it. Oh…

BLOCK: Eleven years ago, I spent time with a class of first-year medical students at the University of Maryland in Baltimore. It was their first day in gross anatomy lab, their first day dissecting a cadaver. I wanted to hear what they were discovering about the body, about sickness and mortality. When I met with the students again at the end of the year, we talked about what they’d learned from their body donors. Here’s Ally Parnes from 2005.

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ALLY PARNES: Our cadaver had obviously put up a strong fight to stay alive. He had melanoma that had metastasized and there were tumors all over his body. That was really difficult for us because we went through the process of his dying. What I learned is how precious life is how, much suffering people will actually put up with just to stay alive and just to stay here a little bit longer. I just remember thinking that I’ll see patients and how important it is to remember that our will to fight is really enormous and it’s a precious gift that we try to hold onto.

BLOCK: That’s Ally Parnes, then a first-year medical student, now a doctor. I’ve stayed in occasional touch with Ally over the years. She’s now a radiologist specializing in breast imaging, and she joins me now to catch us up on what and how she’s doing.

Ally, welcome back to the program.

PARNES: Thanks so much for having me, Melissa.

BLOCK: I do wonder how often you think about your experience in that gross anatomy lab, that man, the cadaver, you came to know so well.

PARNES: I do actually, from time to time, think about him. I actually think it was interesting just listening. I didn’t remember having said that, but, the fact that life is precious and people will really struggle to hold onto it as long as they can – I tell my patients, you’re stronger than you think you are, and it’s amazing what the human spirit can overcome.

BLOCK: Its interesting Ally ’cause you have also written about your experience as a breast cancer survivor yourself. You were diagnosed really early, right? You were, what, 40?

PARNES: Yes, the walking poster child for mammography, as it turns out. And a complete coincidence. People ask me, did you go into breast imaging because you were diagnosed with breast cancer? No, it was a couple months before I was going to start my breast imaging fellowship that I myself was diagnosed through a mammogram and subsequent biopsy.

BLOCK: So seeing medicine from a whole different perspective – obviously, as a patient, as well as a doctor.

PARNES: Yes. You know, I won’t say I’m happy I got cancer…

BLOCK: I wouldn’t expect you to.

PARNES: … (Laughter) But I do think it can be incredibly helpful in how I interact with patients. I saw a patient once who – you could just see it in her eyes that she felt all alone and very scared. At that moment, I did tell her that I knew what she was going through because I had been there. And I watched a transition instantly with her. And it was quite powerful to be able to help someone, kind of reach out my hand and have her kind of walk along with me through what she had to get through that day in terms of a biopsy. So there’ve been a lot of experiences that have been, I guess, richer. There’s a lot more depth to some of the experiences I’ve had.

BLOCK: How is your health, Ally?

PARNES: Oh, thank you, I am very fortunate to say my health is excellent. My oncologist says, I consider you cured. The fact that I was able to find it early was huge for me.

BLOCK: Well, I’m glad to hear you’re doing well.

PARNES: Melissa?

BLOCK: Yes?

PARNES: Can I share, like, a couple things?

BLOCK: Sure.

PARNES: I don’t think I ever told anyone this, but, from that anatomy lab, I remember we got to the part where we had to dissect the breast. And it hit me – that is just, it feels so wrong because here is this person, we’re just lopping off this part of her body that was so personal to her because it was part of her femininity, part of her intimacy, and – maybe, if she had had children – fed her babies with this one piece of her body that we were just cutting off and bringing across the room. I remember thinking about that when I had a choice of doing a lumpectomy and prophylactic mastectomies. I ended up deciding to do bilateral prophylactic mastectomies. And I actually think it was helpful for me to have had that experience because I was able to truly understand what I was getting myself into.

BLOCK: Wow. I’m sure it didn’t make it any easier.

PARNES: No. It’s not the right choice for everyone by any stretch, but it was the right decision for me for sure.

BLOCK: Ally, thanks again so much. I really appreciate you talking to us.

PARNES: Thanks so much, Melissa. It was great to talk to you.

BLOCK: Dr. Ally Parnes was a medical student when I first interviewed her 11 years ago. Now she’s a radiologist.

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