September 16, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Ferris Bueller' Video Game, Jamie Lee Curtis Recreates 'Psycho' and More

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

Movie Remake of the Day:

If you’ve wished there was a Ferris Bueller’s Day Off video game decades ago, this 8-bit redo of the movie will show you what one might have looked like:

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Vintage Image Remake of the Day:

Jamie Lee Curtis redid her mother’s famous shower scene from Psycho for an upcoming episode of the new TV series Scream Queens. She shared a preview (via ComingSoon.net):

Movie Studio Parody of the Day:

Did you know that Pixar has a lab to test the best way to make us cry? It doesn’t really, but here’s a funny sketch pretending it does (via Neatorama):

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Supercut of the Day:

Feel free to pause any moment in this montage of time-pausing sequences in movies, including Big Fish, Click and X-Men: Days of Future Past (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Movie Essay of the Day:

Five years after beginning as a series, Kirby Ferguson’s Everything is a Remix is now a single, re-mastered video essay, in part highlighting movie sampling in Star Wars, Kill Bill, The Matrix and more (via /Film):

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Cinemasters spotlights Steve McQueen and his few films, each celebrated as an absolute work of art:

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Movie Scene Remix of the Day:

As if Disney‘s Alice in Wonderland wasn’t surreal enough, here it is remixed with various art works by Van Gogh, Picasso, Munch, Kahlo and more using a Deep Dream type algorithm (via Reddit):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

If Avengers: Age of Ultron was an episode of The Mighty Morphin Power Rangers or similar ’90s series (via Geekologie):

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Fan Art of the Day:

Speaking of The Avengers, here’s another mashup, this one imagining the Minions finding a new boss in Loki (via Deviant Art):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the Toronto International Film Festival premiere of Four Rooms. This was an exciting anthology as it promised the first work of Quentin Tarantino since Pulp Fiction, though the marketing didn’t focus solely on his part. Watch the original trailer below.

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First Listen: Los Lobos, 'Gates Of Gold'

Los Lobos' new album, Gates Of Gold, comes out Sept. 25.
42:48

Los Lobos’ new album, Gates Of Gold, comes out Sept. 25. David Alan Kogut/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption David Alan Kogut/Courtesy of the artist

How do you go back to the well after 40 years spent drawing up buckets and buckets of creativity? Where do you find the inspiration? How do you get motivated? How do you stare down that blank page one more time?

That was the dilemma Los Lobos inevitably faced as its members prepared to write and record their 24th album, Gates Of Gold, because not many bands have faced that problem. There are no guidebooks for aging rockers looking to stay creative after countless tours, recording dates and songwriting sessions.

But Los Lobos could probably write one.

Gates Of Gold, the group’s first album of new material in five years, practically bursts with the spirit of exploration that has marked Los Lobos’ best work over the years. Musically and culturally, the band speaks to its audience in a way few others have or could.

There is no filler material on Gates Of Gold. After four decades, the songwriting shimmers with concisely drawn reflections on life, as well as slight echoes of 1992’s masterpiece Kiko and its many sonic experiments. But like anyone with 40 years of experience doing one thing and doing it brilliantly — experience drawing on that same seemingly eternal creative well — Gates Of Gold stands on its own.

First Listen: Los Lobos, ‘Gates Of Gold’

There I Go

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Gates Of Gold

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Magdalena

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  • From: Gates Of Gold
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NFL Reinstates 2 Patriots Employees At The Center Of Deflategate

The New England Patriots fans perform a card stunt commemorating their Super Bowl win before their season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers last week.

The New England Patriots fans perform a card stunt commemorating their Super Bowl win before their season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers last week. Gregory Payan/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Gregory Payan/AP

The NFL said today the New England Patriots can reinstate the two employees at the heart of the deflategate scandal, allowing John Jastremski and Jim McNally to return to work.

Jastremski, the team’s equipment assistant, and McNally, the officials locker room attendant, were accused of deflating footballs below league standards during last season’s AFC championship game against the Indianapolis Colts.

The two were suspended by the team during the investigation, which uncovered texting communication in which McNally referred to himself as “the deflator.” The Patriots said that he was referring to weight loss.

Quarterback Tom Brady was also suspended for the first four games of the season, although a judge overturned that suspension earlier this month.

Last week, the Patriots requested that Jastremski and McNally be allowed to return to the team and today the NFL issued a statement approving their reinstatement.

“The Patriots have satisfied the league’s requirements for reinstatement and the league has granted permission for the employees to return,” it said.

Reinstated they may be, but Ian Rapoport of NFL network and NFL.com reported that the two are prohibited from handling footballs.

Jastremski is prohibited from handling footballs & McNally is barred from being a locker room attendant for officials or handling equipment

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) September 16, 2015

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Inside The Vacant Caverns Of St. Louis' Other Beer Baron

4:04

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Anheuser-Busch managed to survive Prohibition by diversifying, while its nearby competitor in St. Louis, Lemp Brewery, failed. But Lemp’s legacy remains in the caves where it used to chill its beer.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

The fact that the name Anheuser-Busch is still in use at all is a tribute to its old owners, the Busch family. When August Busch Jr. addressed the American people by radio in 1933, he personified a remarkable piece of corporate survival – the survival of 13 years of prohibition.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

AUGUST BUSCH JR.: April the 7 is here, and it’s a real occasion for thankfulness, marking a newfound freedom for the American people, made possible by the wisdom, foresight and courage of a great president, with the corporation of an understanding Congress. There is a song in our hearts. Happy days are here again.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: This Bud’s for you.

UNIDENTIFIED CHOIR: (Singing) This Bud’s for you.

SIEGEL: It took a clever brewer to survive the national ban on alcohol. From the start, the Busch family had acted with confidence that it would outlast the 18th Amendment. They diversified into soft drinks and refrigerated railroad cars. They brewed low-alcohol beer and Budweiser barley malt syrup. More on that in a moment. I saw one measure of Anheuser-Busch’s cleverness. I saw what happened to the local competition that wasn’t so confident or clever.

Let your Gothic imagination run wild. We are deep underground in dank caves and basements that could be the set of a horror movie. Not far from Anheuser-Busch headquarters in St. Louis is where the Lemp family used to brew Falstaff beer. And last year, we were given a rare tour of the caves and chambers underneath the complex which hasn’t produced beer since Prohibition began. Before artificial regeneration, this is where lager beer was kept chilled.

SHASHI PALAMAND: So we’re headed into the third basement of building five, which is the oldest building in the complex and was used, basically, for the heart of the operation, which was the actual brewing of the beer.

SIEGEL: Shashi Palamand is the current owner of what’s left of the Lemp Brewery complex – 23 buildings. The place has been shut down since the family gave up brewing. In 1922, the president, William J. Lemp Jr., shot and killed himself. Lemp’s father had shot himself 18 years earlier. His sister shot herself, and years later, his brother would do the same. In the years before Prohibition, the Lemp’s were among the richest beer barons in St. Louis.

PALAMAND: So these are the old lagering chambers. This area we’re in was part of the natural caves but has been heavily modified.

SIEGEL: These are virtually semi-circular chambers that run down – oh, my gosh – it must be 40 yards or so.

PALAMAND: Barrel vault – that’s the best way to describe them.

SIEGEL: The Lemps even turned one part of a cave right under their mansion into a luxurious recreation center.

PALAMAND: This was a natural chamber that was converted into a theater for entertainment of the Lemp family and their friends. There’s a door in the back there you can see, and that led to a spiral staircase that goes to the surface, which was the location of the first Lemp mansion. And back in the days when there was really no air conditioning in houses, the Lemp family, I’m sure, entertained the high-powered people of St. Louis and decided to – after their dinner, perhaps – to retire to this nice and cool chamber. And they would have plays down here. And you can see the evidence of the lights – the old light fixtures here. And the debris you see is actually not debris. It was old sets.

SIEGEL: The Lemp Brewery ended up looking like a maze of vacant catacombs under a mansion that the locals declared haunted. Meanwhile, Budweiser became a national favorite. One especially shrewd piece of diversification by Anheuser-Busch was that corn malt syrup. It was sold together with baker’s yeast, and the label said this. Warning – do not add the yeast to the other ingredients or risk fermentation. Needless to say, many took the warning for exactly what it was – instructions to brew your own. And needless to say, it sold well and helped keep Anheuser-Busch in business until Prohibition was over.

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Despite Improving Economy, Poverty Remains Unchanged In 2014

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The Census Bureau released its annual report on income, poverty and health insurance coverage for 2014 on Wednesday. Poverty in the U.S. was unchanged last year, despite more jobs.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Despite an economy that’s doing better and more jobs, the U.S. poverty rate stayed the same last year. New figures from the Census Bureau showed that almost 1 in 7, or about 47 million people, were poor in 2014, and median household income remained flat. There was some good news, though, when it came to the number of Americans with health insurance. NPR’s Pam Fessler has more.

PAM FESSLER, BYLINE: The poverty rate was 14.8 percent last year, the same as the year before. That’s not great, says Valerie Wilson of the Economic Policy Institute because 2014 was a year with an especially big growth and jobs.

VALERIE WILSON: But unfortunately, that did not translate into wage, growth, income growth or significantly reduce poverty rates.

FESSLER: And last year, a family of four living on about $24,000 or less was considered poor. The Census Bureau also says median household incomes stayed basically the same at almost $54,000. But there were some big disparities. While 10 percent of non-Hispanic whites were poor last year, the poverty rate for blacks and Hispanics was about two-and-a-half times higher. And while that wasn’t a big change, Wilson says one change last year was very striking.

WILSON: African-American children saw an increase in their poverty rate this year by about 3.4 percentage points. And that was actually the only group of children for whom the poverty rate increased.

FESSLER: In fact, 37 percent of African-American children were poor. And the overall child poverty rate – 21 percent – was the highest of any age group. But Jane Waldfogel of Columbia University says there are some encouraging signs in an alternative measure also released today by the census. It shows the impact of safety net programs such as food stamps and tax breaks, something that the official poverty measure does not.

JANE WALDFOGEL: So the most important anti-poverty program for families with children are the refundable tax credits, the earned income tax credit and the child tax credit, and together, those are reducing child poverty by about 7 percentage points this year.

FESSLER: While that’s a substantial decline, Waldfogel says poverty among children in the U.S. remains exceptionally high. Kay Hymowitz of the Manhattan Institute in New York sees a lot of troubling numbers in today’s report. She says the addition of millions of jobs to the economy has had an uneven impact.

KAY HYMOWITZ: We’re not seeing an increase in income for those who are not able to take advantage – full advantage of the knowledge economy and are pushed into low wage service jobs.

FESSLER: She’d like to see more emphasis on education and work incentives such as the earned income tax credit. Hymowitz notes that today’s report shows that working families as well as those headed by married couples have far less poverty than those that are not.

HYMOWITZ: Single-mother families are five times as likely to be poor as married-couple families. Now that’s quite a dramatic difference.

FESSLER: Although Hymowitz did notice a small but disturbing uptick in poverty last year among those with a bachelor’s degree or higher and for families headed by married couples. One bright spot in today’s report involves health insurance. The Census Bureau says almost 90 percent of Americans were insured last year, the first full year of Obamacare. That means nearly 9 million more people had coverage than in 2013. Pam Fessler, NPR News, Washington.

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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