January 8, 2016

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Best of the Week: 'Star Wars' Topped the Box Office, Emma Stone Is the New Cruella de Vil and More

The Important News

Box Office Milestone: Star Wars: The Force Awakens became the highest-grossing movie ever in America.

More Star Wars Mania: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is moviegoers’ most-anticipated movie of 2016. The solo Han Solo movie will be set 10 years before A New Hope.

Franchise Fever: Michael Bay will direct Transformers 5. Creed 2 could bring back Apollo. Sylvester Stallone announced the Rambo franchise is dead.

Casting Net: Christoph Waltz could appear in more James Bond movies. Tony Jaa and Jet Li joined XXX: The Return of Xander Cage. Ben Mendelsohn might play the villain in Ready Player One.

Remake Report: Emma Stone will star in Disney’s live-action Cruela De Vil movie. Kelly Rohrbach will play the Pamela Anderson character in the Baywatch movie. Guillermo del Toro might direct The Fantastic Voyage.

New Directors/New Films: Aaron Sorkin will make his directorial debut with Molly’s Game. Martin Scorsese is making two classical music biopics.

Play Time: Dog Day Afternoon is becoming a Broadway show.

Writing Round-up: Beyonce is writing a period drama she might star in.

Weird Science: Mark Zuckerberg is building his own JARVIS a la Iron Man.

Reel TV: Guillermo del Toro has a Trollhunters series headed to Netflix. M. Night Shyamalan is rebooting Tales From the Crypt.

Awards Seasoning: The PGA Award nominees were announced. The BAFTA nominees were announced.

Festival Circuitry: The new Pee-wee Herman movie will debut at SXSW.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: The Boss, The Conjuring 2: The Enfield Poltergeist, Tumbledown, The Crown, Jeruzalem, Ratter and The Get Down.

TV Spots: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and The Fifth Wave.

Watch: An honest trailer for The Martian.

See: More officially released images from Star Wars: The Force Awakens. And behind-the-scenes images showing how the lightsabers looked on set.

Read: The best fan theory about Rey’s origin in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Watch: All of the first six Star Wars movies at the same time.

See: The Little Mermaid mashed with Star Wars.

Learn: How to make BB-8 cake pops. And the back story of the cool Stormtrooper from Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

See: The 14 current stars of the X-Men movie universe in one image.

Learn: What happened to Will Smith’s character from Independence Day.

Watch: Inside Out without all the inside parts.

See: A movie star publicly shamed someone pirating her new movie.

Learn: Why Joss Whedon left the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Watch: A supercut of directors cameoing in their own movies.

See: Why The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter are the same.

Watch: A creepy documentary about the real forest in The Forest.

Our Features

2016 Movie Previews: Our most anticipated movies you may not know about. And the horror movies that will scare you this year.

Comic Book Movie Guides: New Year’s resolutions for the comic book movies of 2016.

Superhero Movie Guide: 5 Wonder Woman comics to read before seeing Batman v Superman.

Horror Movie Guide: The best horror movies of 2015.

RIP: We remembered the important people we lost in December.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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Episode 675: The Cost Of Crossing

The edge of a fence near the U.S.-Mexico border in Hidalgo, Texas, in 2014.
19:03

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The edge of a fence near the U.S.-Mexico border in Hidalgo, Texas, in 2014. Kainaz Amaria/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Kainaz Amaria/NPR

In the last few years, the face of undocumented immigration to the U.S. has changed and so has the business of human smuggling. Make no mistake, sneaking people across the U.S.-Mexico border is a well established, booming business. Today on the show, we meet a businessman and a client in the evolving industry of human smuggling.

For some context consider the changes in recent years: Mexican immigrants have actually been leaving America. Meanwhile, Central American immigration is on the rise. This shift caused alarm when unaccompanied children from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala started showing up at the border seeking shelter. A new wave of people were making their way up through Mexico, trying to cross rivers and deserts to escape nightmarish poverty and gang violence. And many of the people doing this were paying dearly for it.

Between 2012 and 2014, as the Central American immigration crisis began to boil, our reporter for this episode, Jasmine Garsd, was there in both Mexico and Central America. One thing that caught her attention was the complex financial ecosystem that arose from human smuggling. As drug cartels tightened their grip on Mexico, it got harder and harder for anyone to cross the border without hiring a professional who would protect them and pay off local gang-imposed tolls.

The U.S. border got tighter from both sides. When human smugglers caught whiff of how necessary they were becoming and how desperate the migrants were growing, they jacked up their prices to astronomical levels.

You can pay tens of thousands of dollars to get from Honduras to the U.S. these days. The business is intricate, complicated and varied. There are sales pitches and recruitment efforts, There are payment plans, business models, different package deals and, of course, risk.

This week on Planet Money, we cross the border and meet up for lunch in Mexico with a human smuggler, who breaks down his organization’s business model. And, we speak to a woman who tried to be smuggled into the U.S. Her story took a dark, but all too common turn.

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Ex-Cardinals Scouting Director Pleads Guilty To Hacking Astros

A former St. Louis Cardinals director for baseball development, Chris Correa, pleaded guilty to five counts of unauthorized access to protected information on the Houston Astros, including scouting and injury reports, trade discussions and draft rankings.

According to the Department of Justice, Correa, 35, admitted that from March 2013 through at least March 2014, when he was in charge of scouting for the Cardinals, he illicitly accessed the Astros’ online database, called Ground Control, as well as email accounts of people in the Astros organization to obtain proprietary data.

Each count carries a maximum possible sentence of five years in federal prison and a possible $250,000 fine.

A Justice Department statement said:

“In one instance, Correa was able to obtain an Astros employee’s password because that employee has previously been employed by the Cardinals. When he left the Cardinals organization, the employee had to turn over his Cardinals-owned laptop to Correa along with the laptop’s password. Having that information, Correa was able to access the now-Astros employee’s Ground Control and e-mail accounts using a variation of the password he used while with the Cardinals.”

Federal investigators began looking into a possible breach this summer. It became apparent that the hack may have had something to do with the Cardinals’ familiarity with a former executive, Jeff Luhnow, who had gone to work for the Astros.

As we reported at the time:

“Luhnow became the Astros’ general manager in late 2011; prior to that, he was a vice president in the Cardinals organization, focusing on evaluating players. A report Tuesday by The New York Times says investigators suspect the Cardinals broke into the Astros’ network of special databases where the team kept ‘discussions about trades, proprietary statistics and scouting reports.’

“The information compiled by Luhnow could be particularly valuable — he’s a former business consultant whose analytical approach was credited with modernizing how the Cardinals evaluated talent. Despite being a divisive figure, he rose to lead the team’s scouting department.”

“Unauthorized computer intrusion is not to be taken lightly,” U.S. attorney Kenneth Magidson said in the DOJ statement. “Whether it’s preserving the sanctity of America’s pastime or protecting trade secrets, those that unlawfully gain proprietary information by accessing computers without authorization must be held accountable for their illegal actions.”

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Why Employers' Incentives For Weight Loss Fall Flat With Workers

Why bother?

Turnbull/Ikon Images/Corbis

Promising workers lower health insurance premiums for losing weight did nothing to help them take off the pounds, a recent study found. At the end of a year, obese workers had lost less than 1.5 pounds on average, statistically no different than the minute average gain of a tenth of a pound for workers who weren’t offered a financial incentive to lose weight.

“Our study highlights some of the weaknesses” of workplace wellness programs, said Dr. Mitesh Patel, assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and the study’s lead author.

The study, published in January’s issue of the journal Health Affairs, reported the results of a yearlong randomized controlled trial to test the effectiveness of financial incentives to encourage weight loss among 197 obese employees of the University of Pennsylvania health system.

Participants were asked to lose 5 percent of their weight. Each was assigned to one of four study groups. The control group wasn’t offered any financial rewards. The three other groups were offered an incentive valued at $550.

People in one group were told they would begin receiving health insurance premium discounts biweekly immediately after reaching their weight-loss goal. In another group, the people were told they would receive biweekly premium adjustments the following year if they reached their goal. Volunteers in the final group were eligible for a daily lottery payment if they met their daily weight loss goal and weighed in the previous day.

At year’s end, no group had met the 5 percent weight-loss target. Participants’ average weight was virtually unchanged, whether or not they had a financial incentive to lose pounds. Nineteen percent of participants did meet the 5 percent target, but they weren’t concentrated in any particular group.

The study was structured to reflect typical employer workplace wellness plans. “Our study showed that the incentive is not what motivated people, at least in this design,” Patel said.

Eighty-one percent of employers with 200 or more workers that offer health insurance also offered weight loss, smoking cessation or lifestyle coaching programs, according to the 2015 employer health benefits survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research and Educational Trust. About two-thirds of large companies offered workers cash or merchandise for participating in these programs, the survey found, with 34 percent offering lower premiums or cost sharing. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

The health law encourages wellness incentives by increasing the maximum reward for outcomes-based wellness incentives from 20 to 30 percent of the cost of health coverage, and up to 50 percent if the program is aimed at reducing tobacco use.

This study shows that how incentive programs are designed can make a big difference in how effective they are at changing behavior, Patel said.

The incentives may have failed for a number of reasons, he said. The $550 premium discount may not have been large enough. Bundling the financial reward into the insurance premium on a paycheck rather than making a separate payment to the worker may have affected how it was perceived. Other details — such as the fact that participants weighed themselves at work rather than at home — may have been off-putting to some participants.

Patel also noted that many employer plans don’t pay workers anything until they reach their goal, a situation similar to this study.

“Someone should be encouraged along the way,” he said. “We’ve found from studies that if you want to motivate people, they need regular feedback.”

Please contact Kaiser Health News to send comments or ideas for future topics for the Insuring Your Health column.

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