November 26, 2015

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Holiday Shoppers Get A Head Start On Thanksgiving

Black Friday used to kick off the holiday shopping season, but now Thanksgiving Day is the new tradition for some shoppers.

Macy’s officials said about 15,000 people were at the 6 p.m. opening at its flagship store in Manhattan. An hour and a half before the Toys R Us in New York’s Times Square opened at 5 p.m., about 40 people stood in line.

And at the 24-hour Wal-Mart store in Naperville, Ill., the aisles were clogged with people and carts by 6 p.m., when employees began pulling shrink wrap off palettes of merchandise to mark the official start of Black Friday deals.

Outside, the scene was much the same. With the parking lot filled to capacity, drivers circled slowly looking for spaces, causing a backup of traffic trying to pull into the lot. Some gave up and parked in the near-empty lot of a fitness center and a Starbucks across the street.

“It’s the worst wonderful time of the year!” an employee laughed as he collected shopping carts.

Shopper Julie Desireau snagged a $10 crockpot and the last $10 deep fryer and promptly hid them under a rack of women’s flannel pajamas. Then the 29-year-old from Chicago called her husband, who was in the toy department with their cart, and told him to come pick her up.

“There’s no way I’m going back there,” she said.

After opening earlier and earlier on the holiday, this year, most of the more than dozen major retailers like Macy’s, Target and Kohl’s opened around the same time they did last year — about 5 p.m. or 6 p.m.

One big exception: J.C. Penney, which is opening two hours earlier at 3 p.m. on the holiday. Staples has reversed course and will close on the holiday. Sporting goods chain REI, which was always closed on Thanksgiving, is bowing out of Black Friday altogether and is asking employees and customers to spend time outdoors and not go shopping.

Still, stores aren’t waiting around to push discounts on holiday goods until the official weekend. Increasingly, they’ve been discounting holiday merchandise earlier in the month. In fact, according to the National Retail Federation, the nation’s largest retail trade group, nearly 60 percent of holiday shoppers have already started holiday shopping as of Nov. 10.

That should take a bite out of the sales this weekend, though Black Friday should still rank as either number one or two in sales for the year.

Overall, the National Retail Federation estimates that about 135.8 million consumers will be shopping this weekend, compared with 133.7 million last year. The trade group expects about 30 million will be shopping on Thanksgiving, compared with 99.7 million on Black Friday.

The group also expects a 3.7 percent increase in sales this year to $630.5 billion for the season. But grabbing those dollars will be tough.

While the economy has been improving, shoppers remain tight-fisted. Unemployment has settled into a healthy 5 percent rate, but shoppers still grapple with stagnant wages that are not keeping pace with rising daily costs like rent. Stores also are contending with an increasing shift to researching and buying online.

In response, Wal-Mart and Target made all deals available later in the stores online Thanksgiving morning. New this year at Target: shoppers who spend $75 or more on Friday will receive a 20 percent discount to use toward a future purchase on any day between Dec. 4 and Dec. 13.

Target CEO Brian Cornell told reporters on a conference call Thursday night that early results show that the discount chain is seeing higher traffic at its stores than last year and shoppers are buying items across the store, from clothing to electronics to toys. He also said that he has been pleased with strong results in online sales. Among some of the most popular doorbuster deals is a Westinghouse TV, marked down to $249.99, a savings of $350, he said. Target also offered 40 percent off of all fashion and accessories.

“This is the start of a really good shopping season,” he said.

Some shoppers came out for the first time on the holiday. Maria Garcia-Chavez, who lives in Denver, stood in line in the snow with her husband and four children to get into J.C. Penney. She came looking for women’s boots, on sale for $19.99

“This is my first time shopping on Thanksgiving. I want the deals,” she said. “You have to come the first day. If we come back tomorrow, you can maybe get the same price — if you’re here at 6 a.m. I’m not going to get up that early. I’d rather sleep.”

But not everyone is impressed with the Thanksgiving lines. By about an hour before Toys R Us in Times Square opened the line swelled to over 100.

“Black Friday isn’t what it used to be,” said Keith Nelson, 54, who works in security in the Brooklyn and was third in line after arriving about 2:15. “Lines used to be longer, people would be sleeping and bringing lounge chairs out here.”

Lisa Gutierrez of Aurora, Illinois, thought her strategy of waiting to go shopping until after kickoff of Thursday night’s Chicago Bears vs Green Bay Packers game was a good one. Until she arrived at the Target near her home and found out the flat screen TVs she had her eye on were sold out almost immediately after the store opened at 6 p.m.

“That’s a bummer,” she said. On the bright side, “at least it’s not a total madhouse in here.”

The Naperville, Ill., Target was busy but calm about two hours after opening. Most but not all checkout lanes were open and lines were short. Parking was readily available.

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The Geek Beat: 8 Geeky Things To Be Thankful For This Year

It’s the time of year for giving thanks, and Hollywood has given geeky movie fans a lot to be thankful for this year.

Not only did 2015 give us some of the biggest blockbusters in cinematic history, but it also provided more than a few nice surprises that reminded us why movies can be so amazing. In honor of Thanksgiving, here are eight things to be thankful for that hail from the geekier corners of Hollywood.

Sequels

Just a few years ago, it seemed like bad sequels might end up being the death of good movies. This year has been an altogether different story, though. Of the films generating the most buzz in geeky circles this year, the vast majority are sequels.

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That list includes such notable films as Jurassic World, Mad Max: Fury Road, Furious 7, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Spectre, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, and the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens, among others. Sequels also account for four of the five highest-grossing films of the year worldwide so far. Sure, this could be the exception to the rule, but there’s no denying that sequels were a big part of what’s making 2015 so good for geeky movies.

Vin Diesel

In just a few short years, Furious 7 star Vin Diesel has become one of the most entertaining actors to keep on your radar – especially for fans of geeky movies. Along with keeping the Fast & Furious franchise rolling along at high speeds, Diesel has worn his geek cred on his sleeve while promoting The Last Witch Hunter – a movie based on a character he role-played in Dungeons & Dragons campaigns – and spoken at length about his own, well-established fondness for sci-fi and fantasy fare.

Sure, he’s an action hero, but he also seems like one of us – and it’s difficult not to cheer for the guy and look forward to more Richard B. Riddick, Groot, Dom Toretto, or any other characters he brings to the screen.

Nostalgia

Our fondness for the the movies and pop culture of days gone by can be a powerful force, and that’s been particularly evident this year. Back in June, Jurassic World made us all remember what it was like to catch our first glimpse of a brontosaurus in the original Jurassic Park, and just a few months ago we got all caught up in Back to the Future madness as part of the franchise’s 30th anniversary.

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Right now, Star Wars has just about everyone feeling like a kid again thanks to its generation-spanning appeal, and we’re still a month away from the premiere of The Force Awakens. This year, everything old has indeed become new again when it comes to geeky movies, and that’s been a very, very good thing.

Surprises

They’re few and far between in the modern movie marketing environment, but surprises can still be found in sci-fi, superhero, and fantasy fare – it just takes a little luck, a lot of willpower, and in some cases, clever publicity teams. While Terminator: Genisys opted to spoil one of its biggest twists, quite a few other films arrived in theaters this year with some of their biggest secrets intact.

Of course, if you’re the sort who seeks out every piece of news regarding your most-anticipated movies, you’re probably going to end up knowing more of the plot going into the film than the director intended. Fortunately some of this year’s biggest movies were able to keep some of their big moments under wraps. The appearance of Jurassic World‘s Indominus Rex and the relationship between Chris Pratt’s character and his velociraptor pals, for example, were cool elements made even cooler by learning about them as the film unfolded. Similarly, much of the plot of The Force Awakens remains unknown at this point, and we’re probably not alone in hoping it stays that way until we’re sitting in the theater next month.

Deadpool

Given the number of perfectly valid reasons why this film might have never been made, it’s nothing short of a holiday miracle that Marvel’s mouthy mercenary is getting his own “R”-rated solo movie. From the film’s necessary rating to the character’s wasted debut in X-Men Origins: Wolverine to the general lack of mainstream awareness of Deadpool, everything seemed to be working against this pipe dream of a project.

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And yet here we are now, mere months from taking a seat in a theater and watching Ryan Reynolds crack jokes while shooting, slicing, and otherwise dismembering bad guys, clad in the iconic colors of one of Marvel Comics’ most popular – and most irreverent – characters to come out of the ’90s. Is this the real world? Because I’m still not sure.

Ridley Scott

The director of Alien, Blade Runner, Legend, and so many other films that form the foundation of any good geeky movie collection has been back at it lately, pushing ahead with new projects like the current blockbuster The Martian and keeping the world of Alien in motion with his desire to connect the prequel film Prometheus to the rest of the Aliens franchise.

Add to all of that a Blade Runner sequel that Scott seems confident enough about to discuss whenever the subject comes up, and this year has been a busy one for the visionary filmmaker’s sci-fi endeavors. Consequently, it’s also been a good year for fans of the Alien franchise and Blade Runner, and for all great sci-fi.

Mad Max: Fury Road

Where to even start with Fury Road, one of this year’s best movies? It’s the sequel we didn’t know we wanted, but now that we’ve seen it, we can’t imagine this year’s movie landscape without it. Imperator Furiosa. The Warboys. Max. Those cars. Those amazing, wonderful, glorious cars. Heck, we even love the chrome spraypaint. WITNESS THIS!

The Hype Machine

The pitfalls of the modern movie marketing machine are well documented, particularly when it comes to the ever-present threat of spoilers. Still, this year has given us quite a bit to like about the hype – but only if you relax and let yourself get caught up in it.

While some fans might be hesitant in the lead-up to a potential blockbuster (since it could end up being terrible, after all), others throw caution to the wind and embrace the hype, immersing themselves in the unfiltered joy of something new on the horizon. This year featured a lot of opportunities for the latter, with massive, long-running promotional campaigns for films like Furious 7, Jurassic World, and Avengers: Age of Ultron that encouraged you to let yourself be carried away by the positive buzz and channel that inner child who’s easily excited about, well… anything.

We’re currently in the midst of exactly that sort of scenario with The Force Awakens, and if you’re the sort who’s happy to get caught up in all of the toys and teasers and such, it’s a very cool time to be a fan.

Question of the Week: What geeky things are you thankful for this year?


Rick Marshall is an award-winning writer and editor whose work can be found at Movies.com, as well as MTV News, Fandango, Digital Trends, IFC.com, Newsarama, and various other online, print, and on-air news outlets. He’s been called a “Professional Geek” by ABC News and Spike TV, and his personal blog can be found at MindPollution.org. You can find him on Twitter as @RickMarshall.

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On The 3rd Anniversary Of The Infamous 'Butt Fumble,' Mark Sanchez Gets The Start

Updated 3:30 p.m. ET: Eagles Lose To The Lions, 14-45

On Thanksgiving Day three years ago, Mark Sanchez, then quarterback for the New York Jets, fumbled the football after running into his own crouching lineman’s backside. The New England Patriots, en route to a 49-19 victory, scooped up the ball and ran it back for a touchdown.

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“Butt fumble,” perhaps the ultimate sports blooper, was born.

The #Eagles will start QB Mark Sanchez today vs the #Lions, per @AlbertBreer & me. Sam Bradford (concussion, shoulder) sits for another week

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) November 26, 2015

Sanchez finished out the 2012 season with the struggling Jets, missed the 2013 season with a shoulder injury and then signed with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2014. Until two weeks ago, he was the Eagles’ backup quarterback behind Sam Bradford. But with Bradford still out of commission due to a concussion and shoulder injury, Sanchez was once again at the helm when the Eagles faced the Detroit Lions today at 12:30 p.m. ET. He acquitted himself well, throwing for 2 touchdowns and completing 19 of 27 passes, though the Eagles were ultimately trounced 45-14.

Sanchez was also under center last season on Thanksgiving when the Eagles’ starting quarterback Nick Foles was injured. Sanchez played well — no butt fumbles, no regular fumbles — and led the team to a 33-10 win over the Dallas Cowboys.

And on Turkey Day back in 2010, Sanchez also got the win, helping the Jets beat the Cincinnati Bengals 26-10.

Sanchez is now 3-1 in his career on Thanksgiving.

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Many Health Co-Ops Fold, Others Survive Startup Struggles

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Rick and Letha Heitman, of Centennial, Colo., bought their health plan in 2015 through Colorado HealthOP, an insurance cooperative that will close at the end of the year. HealthOp’s CEO says the co-op was “blindsided” when some promised federal subsidies failed to materialize. John Daley/CPR News hide caption

toggle caption John Daley/CPR News

Thousands of Americans are again searching for health insurance after losing it for 2016. That’s partly because some large, low-cost insurers — health cooperatives, set up under the Affordable Care Act — are folding in a dozen states.

The startups were supposed to shake up the traditional marketplace by being member-owned and nonprofit. But it was tough to figure out how much to charge. Plans available through the co-ops tended to be priced low, and customers poured in.

Yet many of these new customers, it turned out, had costly medical conditions, so when co-ops had to start paying their bills, the math didn’t add up.

On top of that, co-ops were counting on a variety of funding streams from the federal government, and some of that money never materialized. Of the 23 health co-ops that opened in 22 states with the advent of Obamacare, just 11 are still in business.

The failure of one of these insurers, Colorado HealthOp, has hit Rick and Letha Heitman hard. The couple says that Colorado HealthOp, which is due to close at the end of the year, saved Rick’s life when he was diagnosed with an aggressive prostate cancer last spring.

“I owe them for taking care of me,” says Rick, who owns a construction business with his wife. “They helped me at a time when I needed it a lot.”

Now, about 80,000 people, including the Heitmans, are suddenly on the hunt for new insurance plans on Colorado’s exchange.

Co-ops Left Holding The Bag

Julia Hutchins, HealthOP’s CEO, says the co-op got walloped by the equivalent of a fast-moving tornado after the federal government said it wouldn’t be paying co-ops millions in subsidies that she and others expected.

“We were really blindsided by that,” Hutchins says. “We felt like we’d done our part in helping serve individuals who really need insurance, and now we’re the one left holding the bag.” HealthOp was on track to becoming profitable, she insists.

Linda Gorman, director of the Independence Institute, an advocacy group and think tank in Colorado, says the new co-ops were in over their heads.

“You shouldn’t go into business counting on federal subsidies,” Gorman says. “The notion that you should beat up on for-profit entities and then form these nonprofits and everything will be magically OK is unfortunate to begin with, and we’ve wasted a lot of taxpayer money on that. We’ve wasted two to three billion dollars on subsidies for these co-ops.”

But the HealthOP’s senior IT manager Helen Hadji, a Republican, says she blames conservatives in Congress for not authorizing the money needed to keep the cooperatives afloat.

“This is a federal failure,” Hadji says. “This is all a political battle to dismantle Obamacare.”

Colorado’s co-op captured 40 percent of the individual market on the state’s exchange. Now, as customers like Rick and Letha Heitman hunt for new insurance for 2016, they are facing higher prices.

The Heitmans paid about $500 a month last year for their co-op plan. For 2016 they’ll likely have to pay double or triple that to get health insurance that includes the doctors who are treating Rick’s cancer.

Slower Growth Was Key To A Connecticut Co-Op’s Success

In Connecticut, a different story is playing out. If Colorado saw an early surge in membership because of low prices, Connecticut’s co-op nearly priced itself out of the market in its first year, charging rates that were much higher than its competitors. For 2015, HealthyCT only got 3 percent of the state’s business under the Affordable Care Act.

“In that first year, the reason we had such low market share was that consumers — new to the industry, new to insurance — most of those individuals bought on price,” says Ken Lalime, who runs the co-op.

And starting the business was hard, Lalime says.

“Nobody’s built a new insurance company in the state of Connecticut in 30 years,” he says. “There’s no book that you pull off the shelf and say, ‘Let’s go do this.’ “

Lalime faced the same problem other co-ops faced nationally. He didn’t know who his customers would be, didn’t know whether they’d be sick or healthy and didn’t know how much to charge. In the end, his co-op charged too much.

However, even though that meant relatively few sign-ups in year one, the slow start actually helped. The co-op didn’t have a huge number of claims to pay immediately, and those that it did pay didn’t break the bank.

“Hindsight, yes, that didn’t hurt us — to be able to take it slowly,” Lalime says.

In year two, HealthyCT’s average premiums were more competitive — and the co-op went from a 3 percent share of the market to 18 percent. For 2016, its initial premium request came in high; it subsequently revised that number to be much lower, and the state overseers eventually announced that HealthyCT’s premiums will go up 7 percent.

Paul Lombardo, an actuary for the state of Connecticut, says the back-and-forth is an indicator that setting the price of premiums is still a bit of a gamble under the Affordable Care Act. These are still early days, he says. So few people signed up with HealthyCT in the beginning that the health co-op didn’t have enough information to guide its decisions about 2016 premiums.

“There wasn’t a lot of data to say, OK, we can use 2014 experience to project forward,” Lombardo explains.

For now, HealthyCT is holding its own.

“They’re in good standing,” Lombardo says. “The premium we think that we’re setting for 2016 — albeit a little bit higher than they wanted it to be on the revision — is appropriate. And we look to have them go through the full year — as any of our other health plans do in 2016.”

Enrollment for 2016 health insurance on the Affordable Care Act’s exchanges will continue until Jan. 31.

This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with Colorado Public Radio, WNPR and Kaiser Health News.

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