October 1, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' Summed Up in Lego, the Medieval Justice League and More

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

Movie Summary of the Day:

You could buy Avengers: Age of Ultron on Blu-ray this week, or you could just watch the sequel summed up in two minutes in Lego form:

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Murderous Montage of the Day:

See every kill made by a Jean-Claude Van Damme character in this career-spanning supercut (via Geek Tyrant):

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Custom Toys of the Day:

Hopefully Warner Bros. has room in its busy release schedule to produce a movie based on these custom action figures of medieval Dungeons and Dragons-like versions of the Justice League (Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Flash and Green Lantern) by artist Sillof (via Geek Tyrant):

Cocktail of the Day:

Drunk Disney Libation Studios shows us how to make a custom cocktail themed to The Little Mermaid:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Julie Andrews, who turns 80 years young today, with the real Maria von Trapp on the set of The Sound of Music.

Movie Science of the Day:

In a synergetic promotion of the Nerdist-presented horror movie The Hive, Kyle Hill explains the science of collective intelligence, aka “the hive mind”:

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 60th anniversary of the classic Merrie Melodies animated short Knight-Mare Hare, directed by Chuck Jones and starring Bugs Bunny as a “New York wabbit in King Arthur’s Court.” Watch the cartoon in full below.

Cosplay of the Day:

Is that Animal from The Muppets riding a motorcycle or the best cosplay-like helmet of all time (via You Had One Job)?

Supercut of the Day:

Considering how long people had to make do with listening to fights on the radio, this supercut of reaction shots to a boxing match we can’t see is still a step up (via Live for Films):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 35th anniversary of David Lynch‘s The Elephant Man. Watch the original trailer below.

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New EPA Rule Limiting Ground-Level Ozone Draws Fire From All Sides

A new rule from the Obama Administration aims to further reduce the main ingredient in smog. That might sound like good news if you live in a city where smog is a problem. But after the rule was announced, there were plenty of complaints about it.

Technically, the Environmental Protection Agency is reducing the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for ground-level ozone limits from the current level of 75 parts per billion (ppb) down to 70 ppb.

Ground-level ozone is linked to respiratory illnesses and it can worsen diseases like emphysema and asthma. It’s created when pollution from cars, factories, power plants and other sources chemically react with sunlight. It’s primarily a problem during the warmer months of the year.

“Put simply — ozone pollution means it hurts to breathe for those most vulnerable: our kids, our elderly and those suffering from heart and lung ailments,” said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy.

The EPA was under a court-ordered deadline to issue a rule today. A year ago, a scientific advisory committee suggested the agency set the standard between 60 and 70 ppb. Environmental groups are critical of the EPA for setting the new limit at the upper end of that spectrum.

While acknowledging the tighter standard will provide health benefits, John Walke, senior attorney and director of the Clean Air Program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, says the EPA missed an opportunity to set an even lower level, closer to the 60 ppb.

“Setting the safest recommended standard would have saved almost 6,500 lives and avoided nearly 1.5 million more asthma attacks per year than the smog pollution level the administration has chosen,” said Walke.

The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) has been a vocal opponent of tightening the current standard. NAM President and CEO Jay Timmons said that while “a worst-case scenario was avoided” the new rule is “overly burdensome, costly and misguided.”

“The new ozone standard will inflict pain on companies that build things in America—and destroy job opportunities for American workers,” said Timmons.

The EPA’s stricter limits on ground-level ozone also set a new standard that communities around the country will have to try and meet. Some will have a more difficult time than others. The EPA projects that with existing programs to reduce pollution already in place, the vast majority of counties will be able to meet the new standard by 2025.

In responding to criticisms in the wake of her agency’s new rule, McCarthy told reporters she didn’t base her decision on a popularity contest. “What the Clean Air Act tells me to do is make my best judgement on the basis of the science,” said McCarthy.

While her predecessor, Lisa Jackson, had considered an even stricter standard — 65 ppb — McCarthy said now there’s more scientific research available that casts uncertainty over the benefits of setting the standard lower than 70 ppm.

Even though the new standard is now an EPA rule, it may not be the end of the debate. Some advocates for manufacturers and the oil industry are asking Congress to step in and block the new rule.

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Analysts Says NFL Safety Rules Put Quarterbacks At Risk Of Injury

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The Pittsburgh Steelers’ high-powered NFL offense lost its veteran quarterback, Ben Roethlisberger, to a hurt knee last weekend after a hit by a defensive player. Roethlisberger is the latest high profile quarterback to go down this season, and there’s concern there could be more.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

And now to a different contest. It’s week four of the National Football League season. Tonight, the Pittsburgh Steelers host the Baltimore Ravens. The Steelers don’t have starting quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. He injured his knee last Sunday and joined a growing list of bruised and harried quarterbacks. That list is growing in part because some offensive linemen, the players who are supposed to protect the quarterback, aren’t. Here’s NPR’s Tom Goldman.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Quarterbacks are most effective upright. But the images that define this young season are QBs in varying stages of freefall. After Detroit’s week two loss, one of the first questions for quarterback Matthew Stafford was, what body parts were x-rayed?

MATTHEW STAFFORD: My ribs and chest.

GOLDMAN: X-rays were negative, and Stafford got to play on – not so with Dallas’s Tony Romo and the Steelers’ Roethlisberger, both out for multiple games, both injured by defenders. The blame is falling squarely on the broad shoulders of offensive linemen. They’re used to it. They know nobody pays attention to them unless they make a mistake. But the mistakes are perceived as so numerous now that longtime NFL executive and ESPN analyst Bill Polian described the problem as an epidemic.

BILL POLIAN: It is a sad state of affairs, and if it keeps up, we’re going to be talking about backup quarterbacks playing a lot.

SCOTT PETERS: You know, so I played seven years in the NFL as an offensive lineman, and prior to that…

GOLDMAN: Scott Peters says he was frustrated throughout his career, which ended in 2009, because he never truly learned the technique necessary for his position. Peters, who now teaches line skills using mixed martial arts, thinks it’s still an issue in the league and a big reason for the current problems.

PETERS: Offensive line is not an intuitive position. It’s one that requires a tremendous amount of skill that goes against your intuition, whereas defensive linemen – not to put them down, but it’s more reactive and responsive.

GOLDMAN: Offensive linemen are taught how to repel defenders with hands, arms, foot placement, body angle, all while backing up. But Peters says it’s not taught enough, and the players’ current labor contract is partly to blame. The 2011 CBA aimed to promote more player safety by reducing off-season practice time – five weeks less, in fact. But Peters says that’s leaving O-linemen less skilled and quarterbacks more at risk.

PETERS: The real issue there is the restrictions that say, you can’t do, quote, unquote, “football activities.” So you can lift weights, but you can’t work on your skills that make you better at football. At least you can’t do that with coach’s supervision, and that’s what you need.

ERIC WINSTON: You know, I think that’s, like, a pretty flimsy argument, in my opinion.

GOLDMAN: When Eric Winston says that, understand a couple of things. He’s the president of the players union that fought for that contract with its reduced practice time, and he’s a veteran offensive lineman for the Cincinnati Bengals, a team with one of the league’s best O-lines…

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UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: Dalton throws – A.J. Green at the 50.

GOLDMAN: That’s been more responsible for this…

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UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: Touchdown Cincinnati.

GOLDMAN: …Than miscues and hurt quarterbacks. Winston says offensive linemen have ample time in the off season to work with coaches even with the restrictions – seven weeks’ worth. He thinks O-lines struggle because teams have patchwork units instead of lines that have played together several years like the Bengals and because of bad drafting or teams not wanting to pay a lot for skilled linemen. Also, the current emphasis on spread offenses and passing has turned defensive linemen into huge, speedy quarterback hunters.

WINSTON: I don’t think there’s ever been a time in this league when its been harder to be an offensive lineman. The athleticism now on the defensive line is so great that it makes it so hard to block these guys.

GOLDMAN: As the season goes on, struggling lines will try to come together to play and protect and keep those backup quarterbacks off the field. Tom Goldman, NPR News.

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Many Former Foster Youths Don't Know They Have Health Care

Laticia Aossey was hospitalized while a student at the University of Northern Iowa when she realized she hadn't signed up for health insurance.

Laticia Aossey was hospitalized while a student at the University of Northern Iowa when she realized she hadn’t signed up for health insurance. Matthew Putney/Courtesy of Youth Today hide caption

itoggle caption Matthew Putney/Courtesy of Youth Today

Laticia Aossey was flat on her back in an Iowa hospital bed with a tube up her nose, a needle for a peripheral IV stuck in one arm and monitors pasted to her body. It was early June 2014, a week after her 18th birthday, when a friend brought Aossey’s mail from home — including one ominous letter. Aossey’s health insurance was about to be discontinued.

“My heart dropped. I just wondered to myself, ‘Are they going to pull this tube out, unhook me from everything and roll me down to the street?’ ” Aossey said. “Could I get the medicine I needed?”

When children “age out” of foster care at age 18 in Iowa, they are eligible to receive Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act until they turn 26. But Aossey, a ward of the state as a foster child, had not filled out the necessary paperwork. Then she fell ill with stomach ulcers, acid reflux and cyclical vomiting.

She was in college at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, and instead of using her dormitory address she had used a friend’s home address. The state Medicaid office sent the paperwork to complete her health care enrollment to her friend’s address in Iowa City, so she did not receive it right away.

“The first call I made from the hospital to get it straightened out, the woman said, ‘Your parents need to call,’ ” Aossey said.

“My parents? I was in foster care. I had no parents. Then she said my caseworker, an adult, my boss, somebody … [other than] me had to call. She wouldn’t talk to me. I was 18.”

Aossey’s doctors finally calmed her fears, and a couple of days later, she said, a caseworker arrived to help her complete the paperwork. She realized she could have managed that before things became complicated in the hospital.

“Be an adult,” Aossey advises other foster youth. “Find a way to do your paperwork. Do not rely on other people for something you should do.”

Aossey is one of 400,000 foster youth in the nation, and one of approximately 23,000 per year who age out of foster care when they turn 18 (or 21 in some states). They are all eligible for Medicaid, regardless of income, under the Affordable Care Act until 26.

Federal law requires states to cover former foster youth, and the federal government provides Medicaid matching funds to pay for it. But 21 states chose not to expand their Medicaid programs under Obamacare. And some states make enrollment for former foster youth easier than others.

“In some states, where the state is not embracing ACA in general, there wouldn’t be a particular incentive for them to inform young people of their eligibility,” says Celeste Bodner, founder and executive director of Foster Club, a national advocacy organization for foster youth. “If you want to call that a hostile environment, I don’t think that is a stretch.”

In California and New York, youth who age out of foster care are automatically enrolled in Medicaid. But even then, social services providers say they often need help figuring out health care.

The Jewish Child Care Association, which serves 750 foster youth of all faiths and backgrounds in New York City, puts significant resources into getting teens in foster care ready to be independent. A state-funded program includes guidance on filling prescriptions and managing health care.

“Navigating anything as a 20-year-old under the best of circumstances is tough and anxiety-provoking,” said Ronald E. Richter, CEO of the JCCA and a former commissioner of New York City’s Administration for Children’s Services. “Not all 20-year-olds come in for help with a smile on their face. Systems are not built for an anxious, stressed out 20-year-old.”

California automatically enrolls foster youth in Medi-Cal, its Medicaid program, but even that seemingly foolproof method has its glitches.

The Covered til 26 campaign, run by the advocacy organization Children Now, has tried to canvass the foster youth population, yet some slip through the safety net because of coding issues or questions about eligibility, changing addresses, incarceration, health issues and the sheer complexity of the system.

And in states without automatic enrollment, “What tends to happen when kids age out of foster care is that nobody tracks them, nobody keeps in touch with them,” said Bodner, of Foster Club. “It is extremely difficult to get word out to kids age 18 to 26 who are eligible. It can be an issue because that 18 to 26 population is really tough to find, there is no master list or a mailing list. This group is particularly transient.”

Many former foster children also would qualify for Medicaid based on income, but they may not be aware that they are eligible because of their foster status.

“It’s a complete maze,” said Bodner. “They get tracked into an income-qualification category as opposed to the automatic eligibility.”

Medicaid coverage for former foster children takes the place of insurance coverage that other young adults are eligible for through their parents, according to Jessica Haspel, a senior associate who handles welfare policy for Children Now in California.

“These are youth that have experienced abuse and neglect and the state has become their parent,” Haspel said. “It is giving them an equal protection other youth have had. It is about equity.”

Ray Glier writes from Atlanta. This story was produced by Youth Today, the national news source for youth-service professionals, including child welfare and juvenile justice, youth development and out-of-school-time programming.

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