October 28, 2015

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Today in Movie Culture: Michael Bay and Kristen Wiig's Oscar Bait, 'Ghostbusters' the Sitcom and More

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

Fake Oscar Bait of the Day:

Kirsten Wiig went on Jimmy Kimmel Live and debuted the trailer for her new (fake) Oscar contender, the Michael Bay-helmed Crying in a Sweater:

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Supercut of the Day:

With SPECTRE hitting theaters soon, here comes a wave of James Bond movie supercuts. This one is just of Bond villains laughing (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Fake TV Series Based on a Movie of the Day:

IFC is having fun promoting its broadcast of Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II this month with this fake Ghostbusters sitcom opening (via /Film):

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Toys of the Day:

They don’t come out for another month, but you can now pre-order these and more explicit talking Pulp Fiction action figures:

Star Wars of the Day:

The original Star Wars trilogy gets a fan-made trailer in the style of the new Star Wars: The Force Awakens spot. Not just featuring the latter’s audio, either.

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 60th anniversary of the classic Tex Avery animated short Deputy Droopy, starring Droopy Dog. Watch the cartoon in full below.

Cosplay of the Day:

If you’re having trouble choosing which Inside Out emotion to go as for Halloween, take inspiration from 5 year old Penny Restauro of Catonsville, Maryland, who is going as all of them. Thanks to her mom/photographer, Allison Restauro, for giving permission to showcase this clever costume.

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of Inside Out, Honest Trailers tried to rip it inside out but their lighter emotions got the better of them:

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Movie Location Recreation of the Day:

Speaking of Pixar movies, here’s a piece of a bedroom completely recreated in the image of Andy’s room in Toy Story 3. See more photos of project, which is part of a live-action remake of the sequel at Geek Tyrant.

Classic Trailer of the Day:

With Halloween approaching, it’s worth noting the strange decision to release Hocus Pocus in the middle of the summer. Watch the original trailer for the beloved 1993 movie below.

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Uber Surge Price? Research Says Walk A Few Blocks, Wait A Few Minutes

This map, created by Christo Wilson of Northeastern University, shows Uber surge price areas in Boston.

This map, created by Christo Wilson of Northeastern University, shows Uber surge price areas in Boston. Courtesy of Christo Wilson hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Christo Wilson

Uber prices vary in these sections of the Bay Area, as shown on a map created by Christo Wilson. He found differences in surge frequencies by cities, with San Francisco Uber prices surging 57 percent of the time.

Uber prices vary in these sections of the Bay Area, as shown on a map created by Christo Wilson. He found differences in surge frequencies by cities, with San Francisco Uber prices surging 57 percent of the time. Courtesy of Christo Wilson hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Christo Wilson

Christo Wilson has created this map to show Uber surge areas in Manhattan, where he says prices surge 14 percent of the time.

Christo Wilson has created this map to show Uber surge areas in Manhattan, where he says prices surge 14 percent of the time. Courtesy of Christo Wilson hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Christo Wilson

Uber has shaken up what it takes to get from point A to point B in cities across the country with a simple premise: If you need a ride, a driver nearby could pick you up within minutes.

Behind that idea is an algorithm, which promises to keep supply and demand in constant balance, encouraging drivers toward busy areas and tempering customer requests by increasing the price of each ride. It’s called surge pricing.

Those who have used Uber know what surge pricing is a temperamental beast. It changes quickly, varies seemingly unpredictably and has gotten heat from consumers, regulators and even drivers themselves. Uber says without surge pricing, the whole premise of a ride in minutes falls apart when there’s a crush of demand.

But how exactly does Uber’s algorithm work? The company doesn’t say. A team of researchers at Northeastern University decided to find out by doing what they call algorythmic auditing.

They found that for customers, it pays to be patient — or to walk a few blocks to a less crowded area.

“If you go on eBay or Amazon, you can see, these are all the people who are selling the product, these are all different prices,” says Christo Wilson, one of those researchers. “But Uber is different. They have this algorithm and they say it changes prices based on supply and demand, but it’s a black box. You have to trust that it’s working correctly, because you can’t verify. You don’t know how many customers there are, you don’t know how many other drivers there are.”

Here’s what Wilson and his colleagues, Le Chen and Alan Mislove, did. In simplest terms, they created 43 Uber accounts and wrote a script that logged into those accounts, pinged Uber’s servers every 5 seconds (as a regular account would) and recorded the information about Uber drivers in Manhattan and San Francisco.

The team tested their tracking methodology on a public database of New York taxis to make sure they could extrapolate information about the vast majority of cars in the fleet. Then they studied Uber cars’ comings and goings, and eventually combined that research with Uber’s publicly available tools and information to analyze how they correlated with surge prices.

In their paper, presented Thursday at the Internet Measurement Conference in Tokyo, they share what comes down to a few big takeaways:

  • Surge prices do temper demand.
  • Sometimes they do entice more drivers to go to busy areas and sometimes they don’t.
  • They vary not only by city but also by sections of the city with what appear to be manually created boundaries of each surge area.
  • They most commonly last less than 10 minutes and often less than 5 minutes (and prices are updated every 5 minutes).

“[Surge pricing] is working in a sense that it is responding to supply and demand, but I would argue that it’s not working as intended,” says Wilson, who is an assistant professor in the College of Computer and Information Science.

“What we see is that demand drops precipitously, cars stop getting booked and drivers are just sitting there. And actually there’s a lot of drivers who drive away from surges … . If the incentive was working the way it should, you would expect there always to be an incentive for [drivers] to always move in. But in this case, the result is mixed.”

With that, comes advice to Uber users: When prices are surging, waiting a few minutes or walking a few blocks to a different area may result in a cheaper ride.

Uber doesn’t dispute the existence of pre-defined surge areas and the super-fast turnaround of surges, and says both allow the app to quickly calibrate supply and demand.

Wilson suggests that it’s the short lifespan of a surge price that may create the mixed response from drivers, not giving drivers enough time to respond to the price surges that effectively reflect the demand from five minutes earlier.

Uber spokeswoman Molly Spaeth tells All Tech that the company has heard its drivers’ calls for better ways to make use of the surge prices — to make them work as they are intended.

Uber earlier this month revealed a redesigned app for its drivers. One of the elements is meant to help drivers predict where the next wave of customers will be located on an even more granular level than the surge area maps that Wilson’s team has figured out, which you can see on this page.

“People love Uber because they can push a button and get a ride quickly and reliably—wherever they are in a city. And dynamic or surge pricing helps make that possible,” Spaeth says in a statement.

“It encourages drivers to go to the neighborhoods with the highest demand, ensuring there’s always a ride available within minutes. Contrary to the findings in this report—which is based on extremely limited, public data—we’ve seen this work in practice day in day out, in cities all around the world.”

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Cueto's Complete Domination: World Series Game 2 In Numbers And Images

Johnny Cueto of the Kansas City Royals throws a pitch in the third inning Wednesday night against the New York Mets in Game Two of the 2015 World Series in Kansas City.

Johnny Cueto of the Kansas City Royals throws a pitch in the third inning Wednesday night against the New York Mets in Game Two of the 2015 World Series in Kansas City. Jamie Squire/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Jamie Squire/Getty Images

7-1

Final score in Game 2 as the Kansas City Royals beat the New York Mets, taking a 2-0 lead in the World Series.

9, 5

Number of innings pitched and base runners allowed by winning pitcher Johnny Cueto on Wednesday night. In his disastrous prior outing in the American League Championship Series, he gave up eight runs in two innings.

Minnesota Twins pitcher Jack Morris tosses confetti from his pickup truck during a parade celebrating the team's 1991 World Series championship.

Minnesota Twins pitcher Jack Morris tosses confetti from his pickup truck during a parade celebrating the team’s 1991 World Series championship. Bill Waugh/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Bill Waugh/AP

1991

The last time an American League starter pitched a complete game in the World Series, which Jack Morris of the Minnesota Twins did it.

4, 0

Innings pitched by the Mets and Royals bullpens, which each had to go a long 8 innings in Game 1. Mets relievers gave up three runs in the eighth inning.

135

Number of minutes shorter Game 2 was than Game 1.

Alcides Escobar of the Royals scores a run on a two-run RBI single hit by Eric Hosmer in the fifth inning of Game Two of the World Series.

Alcides Escobar of the Royals scores a run on a two-run RBI single hit by Eric Hosmer in the fifth inning of Game Two of the World Series. Doug Pensinger/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Doug Pensinger/Getty Images

4

Total runs-batted-in in the series by Royals first-baseman Eric Hosmer, who knocked in the winning runs in both World Series games. He has 27 RBI in 28 total career post-season games.

3

Number of runs the Royals batted in with two outs.

0

Hits for Mets post-season star Daniel Murphy. He did walk twice.

83

Percentage teams with 2-0 leads in seven-game MLB series that win those series, according to ESPN.

10/30

The series resumes Friday at 8:00 p.m. ET in New York, broadcast on Fox.

Miami Marlins fan Laurence Leavy, rear right, is shown wearing a bright orange Marlins jersey Oct. 22 during a playoff game in Kansas City. Leavy's orange Marlins jersey made him easy to spot amid a sea of Kansas City Royals blue. He said that a Royals official approached him offering to move him to the team owner's suite, but that he declined.

Miami Marlins fan Laurence Leavy, rear right, is shown wearing a bright orange Marlins jersey Oct. 22 during a playoff game in Kansas City. Leavy’s orange Marlins jersey made him easy to spot amid a sea of Kansas City Royals blue. He said that a Royals official approached him offering to move him to the team owner’s suite, but that he declined. Charlie Riedel/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Charlie Riedel/AP

1

Fan in a bright orange jacket directly behind home plate for the second straight game. Get to know Laurence Leavy, aka Marlins Man.

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Latitudes: Our Favorite Global Music In October

Moroccan-German singer Namika.

Moroccan-German singer Namika. Hannes Caspar/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption Hannes Caspar/Courtesy of the artist

Born Hanan Hamdi, Namika is a German singer from a Tamazight (Berber) Moroccan family. Her debut single, “Lieblingsmensch” (Favorite Person), went to No. 1 in Germany last month with its catchy tune and lighthearted feel.

Among the compliments Namika ladles on her guy is one that’s endearing in any language: “With you, the dishwater from the gas station / tastes like coffee in Hawaii, yeah.” And Namika’s video for “Lieblingsmensch,” which was shot in Morocco, is just as breezy and warm as her song.

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Namika Vevo YouTube

Another bright and bubbly earworm that’s got me hooked this month is a tune from Sakanaction, a Japanese art-rock band from Sapporo. Their tune “Shin Takarajima” (New Treasure Island) is the theme song for the movie Bakuman, which in turn is based on the Bakuman manga series and was released in Japan earlier this month.

Not only is the song super-hooky, but I love the visual style of Sakanaction’s video — especially the band’s gray-swathed deadpan in the midst of a squad of sunny cheerleaders.

Speaking of music for the silver screen: A massive costume drama is coming from Bollywood this December. Bajirao Mastani is based on the true story of an 18th-century Marathi warrior-turned-prime minister, and the woman who became his second wife, a dancer named Mastani.

The golden-hued video for the song “Deewani Mastani” gives a glimpse of director Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s lush visual style for this film. The song itself, featuring lead vocalist Shreya Ghoshal (with actress Deepika Padukone as Mastani), includes certain historical nods, including elements of classical courtly traditions borrowed from Persia and a qawwali-style chorus.

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Eros Now YouTube

Meanwhile, I’m really digging the retro surf guitar roots in a new song from the smoky-voiced Turkish artist Gökçe K?l?nçer, who splits her time between London and Istanbul. The video is very simple — just K?l?nçer taking a nighttime walk through London — but the groove is definitely deep.

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DokuzSekiz Müzik YouTube

Finally, I’ve got a track that you may have already heard in a Samsung Galaxy commercial that was rolled out last month: Lady Leshurr’s “Queen’s Speech, Episode 4.” She’s a rapper from a town near Birmingham, England, whose parents came from the Caribbean island of St. Kitts.

Her wordplay comes fast and furious, and her lines are just as razor-sharp as her self-awareness as a female hip-hop artist. She told The Guardian a couple of years ago that she turned down a deal with Atlantic Records in the U.S. because she didn’t like the way they planned to pit her against Nicki Minaj. But after all that, it’s the Galaxy spot that may open the doors to America for Lady Leshurr — and her meticulously maintained smile.

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Lady Leshurr YouTube

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