October 27, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: James Bond vs. James Bond, 'Star Trek: The Force Awakens' and More

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

Double Agent of the Day:

Who would win in a card game between James Bond and himself? This 007 mashup featuring Pierce Brosnan vs. Daniel Craig shows us (via Live for Films):

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Cosplay of the Day:

This week we’re seeing a lot of great Halloween costumes that we’re going to pretend are technically cosplay. Here’s one of an adorable mini Imperator Furiosa from Mad Max: Fury Road. See more photos, including some with her brother as Max at Toyland.

Supercut of the Day:

With Halloween approaching, here’s a timely supercut of scary houses (and hotels) from the movies:

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Video Essay of the Day:

Here’s a really neat video showing scenes that inspired or were used for their movies’ posters (via Devour):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Your reminder that Nicolas Cage has an Oscar, which he won for Leaving Las Vegas, which opened 20 years ago today.

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows us 30 reasons Toy Story 3 is the same movie as Child’s Play 2:

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

Here’s what you get when combine the audio from the new Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailer and footage from J.J. Abrams‘s Star Trek movies:

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Toy of the Day:

Spaceballs may have had a tie-in flamethrower (in the movie anyway), but these Star Wars: The Force Awakens-based flamethrower-wielding Stormtrooper figures from Hot Toys are almost as cool. And they might be more expensive (via Toyland):

Costumed Crime of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, a Ukrainian man dressed as Chewbacca was arrested while trying to vote in a local election. See the video of the Wookie being apprehended by many men below and photos of him and his friends dressed as Darth Vader and Stormtroopers at BuzzFeed.

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This is the 60th anniversary of the theatrical release of Rebel Without a Cause. Watch the original trailer for the iconic movie, one of the few to star James Dean, below.

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A Long Night In Kansas City: World Series Game 1 In Numbers And Images

Alex Gordon and Eric Hosmer (center) of the Kansas City Royals celebrate defeating the New York Mets 5-4 in Game One of the 2015 World Series on Tuesday night in Kansas City.

Alex Gordon and Eric Hosmer (center) of the Kansas City Royals celebrate defeating the New York Mets 5-4 in Game One of the 2015 World Series on Tuesday night in Kansas City. Doug Pensinger/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Doug Pensinger/Getty Images

5-4

Final score in favor of the Kansas City Royals, who beat the New York Mets.

14

Number of innings, tied for the longest World Series game ever. One of two other games that went that long was won by Babe Ruth — then a pitcher for the Boston Red Sox — in 1916, ESPN Stats reported.

17

Total number of strikeouts thrown by both teams’ relief pitchers — 12 for the Royals, five for the Mets — in the last eight innings of the game. Wade Davis of the Royals struck out the side in the 10th inning, and teammate Chris Young — normally a starter — did the same in the 12th inning.

2

Total fielding errors the Royals have had in this entire postseason. A missed grounder by Eric Hosmer in the eighth inning Tuesday night briefly gave the Mets the lead. Hosmer redeemed himself in the 14th inning when he knocked in the winning run.

Alex Gordon of the Kansas City Royals runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the ninth inning Tuesday night, tying the game.

Alex Gordon of the Kansas City Royals runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the ninth inning Tuesday night, tying the game. Jamie Squire/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Jamie Squire/Getty Images

2

Career post-season home runs by Alex Gordon, who hit one over the fence in the bottom of the ninth inning to send the game into extra innings. His previous home run came in the 2014 American League Championship Series, which game the Royals a 10th-inning lead against the Baltimore Orioles.

Alcides Escobar of the Kansas City Royals sprints around the bases during an inside-the-park home run in the first inning Tuesday night.

Alcides Escobar of the Kansas City Royals sprints around the bases during an inside-the-park home run in the first inning Tuesday night. Christian Petersen/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Christian Petersen/Getty Images

15

Number of seconds it took the Royals’ Alcides Escobar to run the 110 meters around the bases on his inside-the-park home run in the first inning. Fast, but not quite Usain Bolt speed (9.58-second 100-meter record). Then again, Bolt gets to run in a straight line.

1929

The last year an inside-the-park home run has happened in the World Series.

Matt Harvey throws a pitch in the first inning against the Kansas City Royals. Harvey gave up three runs and struck out two in six innings.

Matt Harvey throws a pitch in the first inning against the Kansas City Royals. Harvey gave up three runs and struck out two in six innings. Jamie Squire/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Jamie Squire/Getty Images

9

Number of days off Mets starting pitcher Matt Harvey had before Game 1, about double the typical break.

Daniel Murphy of the New York Mets reacts after striking out in the first inning during Game 1 of the World Series at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City.

Daniel Murphy of the New York Mets reacts after striking out in the first inning during Game 1 of the World Series at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City. Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

0

Number of home runs hit by Daniel Murphy of the Mets, breaking a six-game streak. He did get two hits and score a run, putting his post-season batting average at .400 — up from .281 in the regular season.

2

The number of times the Fox broadcast had to cut to the studio because of a loss of power to the network’s production compound. The blackout also affected replay capabilities within the stadium, which stopped the game for a few minutes.

8

As in p.m. — the time (ET) of tonight’s Game 2 of the World Series, broadcast on Fox.

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Walgreens To Buy Drugstore Competitor Rite Aid For $9.4 Billion

On Tuesday, Walgreens confirmed that it plans to acquire drugstore competitor Rite Aid for $9.4 billion.

As The Wall Street Journal first reported, the move “would create a drugstore giant at a time when companies in nearly every corner of the health-care industry are seeking to gain advantage from bulking up.”

NPR’s Sonari Glinton reports for the Newscast unit:

“Walgreens buying the Rite Aid chain gives the company more than just stores, though it will get a lot of those.

“Walgreens is currently the largest drug store retailer and Rite Aid is No. 3. The combined company would have 18,000 stores worldwide.

“In addition to getting a retail presence that’s bigger by 50 percent, Walgreens is getting more leverage as a buyer of pharmaceuticals.

“The combination of the two companies would need the approval of the Federal Trade Commission, which studies retail mergers, to make sure they comply with antitrust law.

“Rite Aid is expected to keep its name after the deal closes.”

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Heroin, Opioid Abuse Put Extra Strain On U.S. Foster Care System

A young boy talks with Tina Cloer, director of the Children's Bureau, in Indianapolis. The nonprofit shelter takes in children from the state's Department of Child Services when a suitable foster family can't be found. Cloer says the average length of stay at the shelter has increased from two days to 10 in 2015.
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A young boy talks with Tina Cloer, director of the Children’s Bureau, in Indianapolis. The nonprofit shelter takes in children from the state’s Department of Child Services when a suitable foster family can’t be found. Cloer says the average length of stay at the shelter has increased from two days to 10 in 2015. Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media hide caption

itoggle caption Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media

Last year, Erin and Isaac Hougland of Indianapolis got certified to become foster parents, with the hope of adopting a baby. Just a few weeks later, they got a call.

An 8-week-old baby needed a home. All they knew was that the boy’s mother was a heroin addict and had left him at the hospital. They were told that because of the drugs, the baby might require some special care. But mostly, he just needed a place to go.

“Both of us were just like, ‘Let’s do it,’ ” says Isaac Hougland. “We wrapped up what we were doing at work and went to the hospital.”

The Houglands’ foster son is part of a new national influx of kids coming into foster care because parents abusing heroin or prescription painkillers can no longer care for them.

A recent report by the federal government shows that, after years of decline, the number of children in foster care is going up again. Roughly 265,000 kids entered foster care last year — the highest number since 2008.

Between September of 2013 and September of 2015, Indiana saw the number of “children in need of services” jump by 40 percent. In more than half of new cases in which children had to be removed from their homes, substance abuse was listed as a reason. As in other states (such as nearby Ohio), officials in Indiana blame heroin and prescription painkillers.

The increase is taxing the child welfare system, officials say. Children of addicts often need special care and counseling, and they often stay in the system longer because it can take months or years for their parents to get clean.

Marilyn Moores, a juvenile court judge in Indianapolis, says many case managers and court employees are feeling overwhelmed with the rising number of child welfare cases they're seeing.

Marilyn Moores, a juvenile court judge in Indianapolis, says many case managers and court employees are feeling overwhelmed with the rising number of child welfare cases they’re seeing. Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media hide caption

itoggle caption Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media

“We have more children than we’ve ever had in our system in Indiana,” says Mary Beth Bonaventura, director of the state’s Department of Child Services. “That puts a stress on the staff, a stress and strain on providers.” And it’s increasingly a challenge, she says, “to find and recruit and train qualified foster families.”

If the Houglands hadn’t provided a home for their foster son, he might have ended up at an emergency shelter like the Children’s Bureau, a nonprofit in Indianapolis. The organization takes in kids from the Department of Child Services when a foster family can’t be found quickly.

“Kids come in here 24/7,” says Tina Cloer, who directs the Children’s Bureau. “So we accept kids all day and all night, and we get calls all day and all night.”

The shelter has been full more often this year, she says, as it has become harder to find kids foster homes. Last year, the average stay was just two days — now, it’s 10. “We have kids that have been here as long as 2 [or] 2 1/2 months,” Cloer says.

The large number of cases burdens other parts of the system, too.

Indiana’s Department of Child Services has a burnout problem: It has lost about a quarter of its case managers in the past year.

“I’ve had a case where we’ve had nine case managers on it — in a year,” says Marilyn Moores, a juvenile court judge in Indianapolis. “That’s the far end, but it’s not unusual to have three or four.”

This year, the child services department started a counseling program for employees, in hopes of retaining more case managers. And the state approved the hiring of 230 more people, but finding and training them will take time. Recruiting can be tough, says Bonaventura.

“If you don’t recruit the right people, they’re out the door the minute they realize how stressful and how gut-wrenching this work is,” she says.

Meanwhile, as the number of cases rises, Moores says, the stress continues to mount for everyone involved, including court employees.

“It just reached a point where every system partner involved in this that I’ve talked to in the last week, when I’ve talked to them, at some point they get tears in their eyes,” she says. “They are just overwhelmed.”

After more than a year of waiting, Erin and Isaac Hougland are looking forward to finally adopting their foster son. But it might take a little longer than usual. Adoption paperwork is piling up, too.

This piece comes from Side Effects Public Media, a public radio reporting collaborative that explores the impacts of place, policy and economics on health.

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