August 28, 2015

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Best of the Week: New 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Teaser, 'Doctor Strange' Gets Another Great Actor and More

The Important News

Star Wars Updates: dropped a new Star Wars: The Force Awakens teaser. New images and info surfaced about the Force Awakens villain Kylo Ren. More The Force Awakens images and rumors and toy details also arrived online.

First Look: Michael Fassbender in Assassin’s Creed. New Captain America: Civil War concept art.

Casting Net: Mads Mikkelsen might play the villain in Doctor Strange. Lea Seydoux might play the female lead in Gambit. Robert Pattinson is heading to space. Anne Hathaway is heading to space to fight zombies. Haley Bennett will star in The Girl on the Train. Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Schumer will co-star in a movie they write together. Jason Mitchell joined Kong: Skull Island.

Franchise Fever: Vin Diesel will begin filming xXx 3 in December. Max Landis pitched an idea for American Ultra 2. Superman may not get his own movie for a while. Borderlands is the next video game to attempt a movie franchise.

New Directors/New Films: M. Night Shyamalan will make another movie with Joaquin Phoenix.

Remake Report: The next Blade movie could be about his daughter.

Box Office: Straight Outta Compton still reigned in US theaters. Terminator Genisys opened big in China.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Ashby, Baskin, Love the Coopers, The Iron Giant re-release, Campus Code, Kill Your Friends and When Animals Dream.

Watch: The cast of Star Trek Beyond honors Leonard Nimoy.

See: A G-rated animated remake of Fight Club.

Watch: A remake of the Suicide Trailer with Toy Story footage. And an Empire Strikes Back trailer in the Force Awakens trailer style. And an honest trailer for Mad Max: Fury Road. And a silent film trailer for Mad Max: Fury Road. And a homemade Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice trailer.

See: Evidence that Daniel is the true villain of The Karate Kid. And evidence that Harry Potter is the true villain of his series.

Learn: Which Hollywood movies Quentin Tarantino wishes he made and more.

See: How breaking the fourth wall is used in movies.

Check Out: Google’s new movie review aggregator.

Watch: A quick cut of Blade Runner.

See: What James Spader looked like in his Avenger: Age of Ultron performance capture suit.

Watch: Key & Peele imagines what the Gremlins 2 writers room was like.

See: The Star Trek fan film that costs more than most real movies.

Watch: Neil deGrasse Tyson stars in a new viral video for The Martian.

See: This week’s best new movie posters.

Our Features

Summer Movie Recap: The best action of this summer’s blockbusters.

Video Game Movie Guide: Franchises Nintendo might soon turn into movies.

Classic Movie Guide: Celebrating the 15th anniversary of Bring It On.

Sci-fi TV Series Guide: Why you need to be watching The 100.

Comic Book Movie Guid: Does Superman need his own movie?

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week. And here’s our guide to everything hitting DVD this week.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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NHL Hall-Of-Fame Coach Al Arbour Dies At Age 82

Al Arbour, the longtime coach of the New York Islanders, led the team to four Stanley Cup titles.

Al Arbour, the longtime coach of the New York Islanders, led the team to four Stanley Cup titles. Jim McIsaac/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Jim McIsaac/Getty Images

Al Arbour, who set an NHL record by coaching 1,500 games, has died at age 81. As the head coach of the New York Islanders, he led the team to four Stanley Cup championships in 19 seasons. He also won four NHL titles as a player.

“Al will always be remembered as one of, if not the, greatest coaches ever to stand behind a bench in the history of the National Hockey League,” Islanders President and General Manager Garth Snow said, as the team announced Arbour’s death Friday.

“Arbour was being treated for Parkinson’s disease and dementia near his home in Sarasota, Fla.,” NHL.com reports.

When he retired in 1994, Arbour had logged 1,499 games as a coach. He made it an even 1,500 in 2007, when the Islanders brought him back to coach one game. An inductee of the NHL Hall of Fame, Arbour won 782 games as a coach — second all-time to Scotty Bowman (1,244 wins).

During his playing days, Arbour, a defenseman, was on Stanley Cup-winning teams for the Detroit Red Wings (1954), Chicago Blackhawks (1961), and the Toronto Maple Leafs (1962 and ’64).

Born in Sudbury, Canada, Arbour became a coach after playing in the NHL and other pro leagues for parts of three decades. He spent three years as the head coach of the St. Louis Blues, moving into that role directly after playing there.

In 1973, Arbour became the head coach of the Islanders, a young team that he eventually turned into a perennial contender.

From The New York Times:

“With General Manager Bill Torrey supplying the future Hall of Famers Denis Potvin on defense, Bryan Trottier, Mike Bossy and Clark Gillies at forward and Billy Smith in goal, Arbour coached the Islanders to the league championship from 1980 to 1983. The Islanders became the second franchise in N.H.L. history to win four consecutive Stanley Cup titles, the Montreal Canadiens having captured five straight Cups from 1956 to 1960 and four straight in the seasons before the Islanders’ streak.”

Arbour is survived by his wife, Claire, and children Joann, Jay, Julie and Janice.

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On Wall Street: Not Much Fun, But It Sure Was Interesting

There was good news along with the bad at the New York Stock Exchange this week.

There was good news along with the bad at the New York Stock Exchange this week. Richard Drew/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Richard Drew/AP

This week on Wall Street, investors experienced thrills, chills, tears and giggles as their investments plunged, soared, dropped, rose, dipped, moved sideways — and then ended about where they started.

On Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average inched down 12 points to 16,643 for the day, ending a bit higher than last Friday’s 16,459 close.

So if you just got back from spending a week on a tiny desert island with no smartphone, you might look at the Dow’s close and think it was a pretty tame week.

You would be very, very wrong.

This was one of the most volatile weeks in years for markets all over the world. Stocks, commodities and currencies whipsawed up and down as investors tried to make sense of conflicting economic news. On one side of the seesaw, there was terrible news out of China, suggesting that manufacturing there was slowing much more than economists had thought.

If China, the world’s second-largest economy, really is slowing dramatically, then it will be buying far fewer commodities, like coal, copper, iron ore and so on. Reduced demand would beat down the developing countries that produce many commodities, and that in turn would slow the whole global economy and hurt a lot of currencies.

So panic selling broke out everywhere on Monday morning — in Asia, Europe and the U.S.

But wait.

On the other end of the seesaw, the U.S. economy started moving up. A revision of the second-quarter gross domestic product turned up evidence of much stronger growth. And other reports showed durable-goods orders and consumer spending rose in July. Personal income was up too.

So through the week, the global investing narrative kept shifting from a scary story about China to a cheery one about the United States.

Also contributing to the ups and downs were conflicting rumors about whether the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates next month. All of this caused big stock-price swings, often within the same hour.

There’s a measure of market shifts, based on S&P 500 options. It’s called the CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX, and it rose 5.5 percent to 27.53 on Friday. That was well above its 10-year average of about 20 for the sixth straight session.

As the week’s dust settled, the winners were the U.S. and European markets, which both rose a bit. But Chinese stocks, as measured by the Shanghai Composite, had lost nearly 8 percent for the week.

If you want quiet, steady growth in your retirement savings, then you might want to close your eyes and brace yourself: Analysts are saying the volatility will continue, at least until the Federal Reserve’s intentions are clear.

Those coming market swings may have negative effects on the broader economy.

As measured by the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, Americans’ confidence is starting to falter, dropping 1.2 points to 91.9 this month, a report showed Friday.

Americans are becoming “more pessimistic in their economic and financial outlook due to the volatility in equity markets and worries over the financial issues in China and Greece,” IHS Global Insight economist Chris Christopher said in his analysis.

“If the U.S. stock markets stabilize, consumer sentiment is likely to respond to fundamentals — lower energy prices, improved job prospects, a housing market that is gaining traction, and modest consumer price inflation. Looking ahead, we expect consumer confidence to rebound in the coming months, if and only if, financial markets cooperate,” he wrote.

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First Watch: Rodrigo Amarante, 'I'm Ready'

August 28, 201512:00 PM ET

On this week’s All Songs Considered we play a new song from Brazilian Rodrigo Amarante. The song is the backdrop to the opening sequence to a new Netflix original series called Narcos, which rolls out today. It’s based on the life of drug lord Pablo Escobar and the Medellín Cartel.

This week Rodrigo Amarante has also released a new video for the song “I’m Ready,” from his last album, Cavalo, one of my top three records of 2014. The video is a single shot of Rodrigo performing the song in the cavernous Cisterna de Marvão in Portugal. It’s a romantic and wistful introduction to a very talented and singular musician.

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Poll Finds Most Women Believe Mammograms Should Be Done Annually

Most women 40 and older believe they should have mammograms every year to screen for breast cancer, the latest NPR-Truven Health Analytics health poll finds.

The finding is at odds with current recommendations by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force that women with typical risks for breast cancer have screening mammograms every two years starting at age 50 and until they turn 75.

The decision about mammograms for women in their 40s is a personal one. The task force found a small net benefit for biennial screening of women ages 40 to 49. The guidelines say women should take into account their health situation as well as their views on the benefits of early cancer detection and potential harms, such as unnecessary biopsies and surgery.

The USPSTF said there wasn’t enough evidence about the benefits from mammograms for women age 75 and up to make a recommendation.

The task force is working on an update to the mammography guidelines, which have sparked controversy since they were last revised in 2009. The thrust of the draft advice is pretty much the same as it has been, but there’s more nuanced discussion of the benefits and potential harms for women in their 40s.

The NPR-Truven Health poll found almost two-thirds of women ages 50 to 74 believe that they should have a mammogram annually. For women 40 to 49, the number drops to 56 percent. For women under 40, about 45 percent believe they should have a mammogram every year. Overall, 57 percent of women believe an annual mammogram is appropriate.

“The Task Force is happy to see that women are making informed decisions with their doctor about breast cancer screening and continue to have access to mammography screening,” Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, vice chair of the USPSTF, told Shots in a statement emailed after she reviewed the poll’s findings. “Mammograms are an important tool in helping women avoid deaths from breast cancer. The value of mammography screening increases with age, with women ages 50 to 74 benefitting most from screening. In this age group, the evidence indicates that women get the best balance of benefits to harms when screening is done every 2 years.”

She added, “The decision to start regular mammography screening for women in their forties should be an individual one that women make in consultation with their doctors and after consideration of their health history, preferences, and how they value the potential benefits and harms of screening.”

The task force’s advice is influential, but its guidelines aren’t the only ones around. The American Cancer Society, for instance, recommends that women 40 and older “have a mammogram every year and should continue to do so for as long as they are in good health.”

After reviewing the poll’s findings, Dr. Michael Taylor, Truven’s chief medical officer, told Shots: “There needs to be more education about the problem of false positives. If you do mammography every year starting at 40, you’re going to find a lot of things that don’t matter.” There may be benefits for some women, but many will also be subjected to unnecessary biopsies and surgeries, he said. “We don’t think enough about the harms of interventions” triggered by mammography, he said.

As for the belief that annual mammograms are best, Dr. A. Mark Fendrick, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, says, “It’s much much harder to take away something that you’re already doing than it is to start a behavior from time zero.”

“More isn’t always better,” Fendrick says about screening tests, including mammograms. But there are some people with family histories of disease or who have specific genetic risk factors who should be screened more often, he says.

Overall, 48 percent of respondents were aware that the Affordable Care Act requires insurers to cover mammograms without any out-of-pocket costs.

The NPR-Truven Health Analytics Health Poll on mammograms was conducted in June. More than 3,000 women across the country were interviewed. The margin for error is plus or minus 1.8 percentage points. You can find the questions and full results of the latest poll here. For previous polls, click here.

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