August 12, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Mad Max: Fury Road' Meets 'Adventure Time,' the Bloodiest Supercut of All Time and More

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

Movie Mashup of the Day:

After all the art mashing up Mad Max: Fury Road with Adventure Time, it’s only natural we got a fake trailer for “Madventure Time” inspired by those pieces (via Devour).

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Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Mad Max: Fury Road, these War Boys bandanas make for some easy but very cool costumes (via Fashionably Geek):

Trailer Redo of the Day:

Let’s just let the YouTube description for this Fantastic Four tribute speak for its insane self: “4 Fantastic 4 trailers diced up and zippered together in 4 frame intervals, one frame at a time, 4 you.”

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Vintage Image of the Day:

A special hug goes out to John Cazale, who should have turned 80 today. Here is an image from The Godfather Part II, one of his unfortunately few films:

Supercut of the Day:

If blood makes you squeamish, then this is the worst possible supercut for you. For the rest of you, enjoy the splatter from such movies as American Psycho, The Shining and of course everything by Quentin Tarantino (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Fan Art of the Day:

This poster by Deviant Art user CAMW1N redoes the interrogation scene from The Dark Knight with Ben Affleck‘s Batman and Jared Leto‘s Joker (via First Showing):

Star Wars of the Day:

As for professional movie artwork of the day, here’s a great limited edition Star Wars: The Force Awakens print by Mark Englert that will be available at Disney‘s D23 event this weekend (via Gallery 1988):

Directorial Influence of the Day:

Video essayist Jorge Luengo is back with a side-by-side look at Martin Scorsese‘s influences on Boogie Nights:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows us 24 reasons The Lion King is similar to and different from Frozen:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 10th anniversary of the opening of Werner Herzog‘s Grizzly Man. Watch the original trailer for the documentary below.

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Greek Historian: History Shows 'There Is Always An End To All Problems'

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NPR’s Melissa Block follows up with Michael Iliakis, a Greek man who finished up a doctorate in ancient history four years ago and was desperately trying to find a job as a college professor.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Four years ago on this program, I talked with a Greek man named Michael Iliakis who lives in Athens. It was a time of economic free fall in Greece, one of many to come, and we wanted to hear from a Greek citizen about what the future looked like from his perspective. When we spoke back in 2011, Iliakis had just gotten his PhD in ancient history. He’d been sending out a blizzard of job applications and getting nothing but rejections.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

MICHAEL ILIAKIS: I’ve actually lost count. It should be somewhere between 40 and 80.

BLOCK: And he told me that at age 35, he was embarrassed to still be living at home with his parents.

ILIAKIS: This is rather distressing because I had to return home because I couldn’t afford staying alone. And it’s not what I expected my life to be at this age.

BLOCK: At 35.

ILIAKIS: Yes.

BLOCK: And Michael, are you married?

ILIAKIS: I’m trying to (laughter). I have a very good relationship that is heading that direction, but it’s impossible to say when we’ll get married because there isn’t financial stability, meaning that we don’t have two salaries to pay the cost of a married life.

BLOCK: I wonder how all of this shapes how you think about the future, the woman you’d like to marry and potentially the children that you would want to have.

ILIAKIS: Actually, my future, now, is on hold until I, you know, I get that first job. And I’ll pick it up from there. There is nothing that I can do about that right now but keep sending applications, going to interviews and just hoping for the best.

BLOCK: So four years later, is Michael Iliakis still hoping for the best? Well, since this is my last week hosting ALL THINGS CONSIDERED, I figured I’d check in with him one more time.

Hello. Is that Michael?

ILIAKIS: Yes.

BLOCK: Michael, yasou – good to hear your voice again. How are you?

ILIAKIS: I’m fine.

BLOCK: I keep wondering, Michael, if you ever got married.

ILIAKIS: Well, no. That relationship was one of the casualties of the financial crisis.

BLOCK: Really – what happened?

ILIAKIS: I mean, it’s – it was extremely difficult to plan about anything with having limited money and both living with our parents. So when she got the chance for something better, she left – simple as that.

BLOCK: I’m sorry to hear that.

ILIAKIS: It’s, you know, it’s old history by now.

BLOCK: Michael, are you still living in your parents’ home?

ILIAKIS: No. I’m away 11 months now.

BLOCK: Have you been able to find any steady work over these last four years?

ILIAKIS: No. I’ve been going from job to job, nothing more than two months, and there was always a significant gap between them.

BLOCK: When you think back to the first time you and I talked back in 2011, Michael, think about where Greece was then, where you were then, you said you were hoping for the best. What do you think about what’s happened since, and are you still hoping for the best?

ILIAKIS: I’m saying life is becoming more and more complicated. It’s a sense that you feel pressure from all sides, and whenever you try to make one step forward, you are forced to take three or four steps back.

BLOCK: How do you deal with that pressure? What still gives you pleasure in your life?

ILIAKIS: Well, I can say that I’m one of the lucky ones because my profession is such that I will go to the library, open a book, start doing research, and eventually, I will forget what’s happening around me and focus on the scientific problem.

BLOCK: So maybe looking through books of ancient history puts things in a bit of perspective, maybe.

ILIAKIS: Oh, yes. As a historian, you can see that there is always an end to all problems. That is, this is a situation that is happening now. For better or worse, we are living it, but eventually, it will stop at some point. I don’t know if it’s going to be 10, 15, 20 or 30 years from now.

BLOCK: It sounds like you’re taking the long view.

ILIAKIS: Yes. Well, I’m an ancient historian. A century means nothing to me.

BLOCK: (Laughter). Well, Michael Iliakis, I do wish you all the best, and thanks again for talking with us.

ILIAKIS: Thank you.

BLOCK: That’s Michael Iliakis speaking with us from Athens.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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MLB Home Teams Make History By Going 15-0

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On Tuesday, for the first time in Major League Baseball history, all 15 home teams won.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Finally this hour, a little bit of baseball history.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: McFarland deals down the line.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Fair ball.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Oh, it’s fair ball.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Game over. Mariners win it 6 to 5. Austin Jackson with a game-winner.

SIEGEL: Late last night, the Seattle Mariners beat the Baltimore Orioles at home in the final at-bat.

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

OK, you’re saying to yourself that sounds exciting for Mariners fans, but why do I care about an inconsequential game between two baseball teams having mediocre seasons? Good question. Well, that win marked the first time in baseball history that all 15 home teams won on the same day.

SIEGEL: Now, legions of baseball historians and hard-core fans absolutely live for the game’s random stats and bits of historical trivia.

BLOCK: And it’s rare that a first-time ever event happens without someone knowing ahead of time.

SIEGEL: But Jacob Pomrenke, web editor for the Society for American Baseball Research, says almost nobody realized a 15-for-15 home team sweep had never happened before until it happened yesterday.

JACOB POMRENKE: They hadn’t even been thinking about it. You know, this was something that just kind of wow, you know? I would’ve assumed that this would’ve happened, you know, a long time ago. And this would’ve been the third or the fifth time that this had happened.

BLOCK: Pomrenke says days like yesterday are why fans like him love the game.

POMRENKE: When you go to again you never know what you’re going to see. And you can go to a game on a Tuesday night in August and see something that’s never been done in, you know, nearly 150 years in baseball history.

SIEGEL: And if you’re hoping that maybe this will happen again soon, you should know the likelihood is just one in nearly 33,000.

BLOCK: And that’s more inconsequential baseball than even the biggest fan should ever have to live through.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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'Defunding' Planned Parenthood Is Easier Promised Than Done

Republican presidential candidates (from left) Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Mike Huckabee, Ted Cruz and Rand Paul during the Republican presidential debate in Cleveland on Aug.6.

Republican presidential candidates (from left) Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Mike Huckabee, Ted Cruz and Rand Paul during the Republican presidential debate in Cleveland on Aug.6. Andrew Harnik/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Andrew Harnik/AP

The undercover videos purporting to show officials of Planned Parenthood bargaining over the sale of fetal tissue have made the promise to defund the organization one of the most popular refrains of Republicans running for president.

It’s actually a much easier promise to make than to fulfill. But that’s not slowing down the candidates.

“There is no reason in the world to have Planned Parenthood other than abortion,” Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has said. “We should stop all funding for Planned Parenthood.”

Carly Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, echoed many of her fellow candidates by vowing that “we should shut down the government” rather than allow further funding of the organization. Many Republicans — though far from all — have been advocating for a fight this fall over the funding of Planned Parenthood, when it comes time to keep the federal government operating.

Candidates that are or were governors have gone even further — saying they have already eliminated funding for the organization in their states.

“I defunded Planned Parenthood more than four years ago, long before any of these videos came out,” said Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wis., in the recent Fox News debate.

“As governor of Florida I defunded Planned Parenthood,” said Jeb Bush at the same debate; he served as governor from 1999 to 2007. “I created a culture of life in our state.”

But did they really? That depends on how you define the word “defund.”

Both Walker and Bush (along with Gov. Chris Christie in New Jersey and former Gov. Rick Perry in Texas) did reduce state funding for the organization, mostly by cutting off long-standing grants earmarked for family planning programs. (With few exceptions, funds for family planning may not be used for abortion.)

But while the cuts forced the closure of some Planned Parenthood clinics, all four states still have a number of Planned Parenthood clinics operating within their borders — in some cases still collecting state funds as well as federal money.

That’s largely because of a requirement in the Medicaid program, from which Planned Parenthood gets most of its government funding. Medicaid funding is shared between the federal government and the states, although the federal government pays 90 percent of the cost of family planning services.

“There’s a requirement in the [Medicaid] statute for free choice of providers,” said Cindy Mann, who recently stepped down as head of the federal Medicaid program and is now with the law firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips. “The only way you can limit the provider is to establish that they’re not, in fact, qualified as a Medicaid provider.”

Federal courts have agreed. In 2011, when Planned Parenthood was also in the headlines, Indiana passed a law barring Medicaid funding to any entity that also performed abortions, even if those abortions were performed with nonpublic funds. A federal appeals court ultimately blocked that part of the law because it interfered with the Medicaid law’s “freedom of choice” requirements.

“Although Indiana has broad authority to exclude unqualified providers from its Medicaid program, the state does not have plenary authority to exclude a class of providers for any reason — more particularly for a reason unrelated to provider qualifications,” wrote Appeals Court Judge Diane Sykes in the majority opinion. Sykes was appointed by President George W. Bush.

Congress, of course, could defund Planned Parenthood by changing that requirement in Medicaid law.

But Medicaid experts say recent announcements by the Republican governors of Louisiana and Alabama that they are also attempting to evict Planned Parenthood from the Medicaid program in their states are unlikely to become reality.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who is running for president, said in the debate for the second tier of candidates last week that “we just, earlier this week, kicked them out of Medicaid in Louisiana.” None of the Planned Parenthood clinics in the state perform abortions.

In Alabama, Gov. Robert Bentley notified Planned Parenthood last week that he would be ending their contract with the state to serve Medicaid patients. “I respect human life and do not want Alabama to be associated with an organization that does not,” he said.

Neither of those actions is likely to succeed, said Sara Rosenbaum, a law professor and Medicaid specialist at George Washington University.

“This is a right for beneficiaries going back to the original statute,” she said, referring to the ability of patients to choose their health care provider. She added, however, that governors wishing to take such steps for political gain “have nothing to lose,” because it is now up to the providers to sue.

Planned Parenthood has not said yet whether it will challenge the Alabama or Louisiana actions in court.

One way GOP governors have managed to cut Planned Parenthood funding is by dropping out of an optional Medicaid program that provides federal funding to pay for family planning services for women who don’t otherwise qualify for Medicaid but who still have low incomes (usually under twice the federal poverty level, or about $23,500).

That’s how Texas partly defunded Planned Parenthood in 2011. When Medicaid officials said the state’s new law barring funding of organizations that also do abortions violated the federal free-choice-of-provider requirement, Texas was actually expelled from the expanded family planning program — and lost its federal funding. The state instead created its own program with (substantially less) state-only money. Planned Parenthood had been providing just under half of the services for the entire program, so excluding the organization meant women in Texas had trouble getting family planning services.

According to the Texas Policy Evaluation Project, which is studying the impact of the changes, by 2013 the reductions caused 82 clinics (not all of them run by Planned Parenthood) to close or stop providing family planning services. Plus, the cuts prompted other clinics to limit the types of services they provide, and forced women seeking care to pay a bigger share of the cost.

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