January 15, 2016

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Best of the Week: Oscar Nominations, Golden Globe Winners, 'Cloverfield' Sequel and More

The Important News

Awards: The Revenant and Mad Max: Fury Road led the Oscar nominations. The Revenant and The Martian led the Golden Globe winners. Ridley Scott and many first-timers received DGA Award nominations. And the worst movies got their Razzie nominations.

Box Office: The Revenant was not able to knock Star Wars: The Force Awakens from its box office throne.

More Star Wars Mania: Eight actors were shortlisted for the role of young Han Solo. Princess Leia will appear on Star Wars Rebels. Star Wars VIII will reportedly be much darker. J.J. Abrams commented on the theories of Rey’s parentage.

Marvel Madness: Ryan Coogler was confirmed to helm Black Panther.

DC Delirium: Amber Heard will play Hera in Aquaman and Justice League.

Sequelitis: Creed 2 was set for a November 2017 release. World War Z needs a new director. George Miller confirmed he still is going to make more Mad Max sequels.

Franchise Fever: Chronicles of Narnia is being rebooted. Fast and Furious 8 will take the series in a new direction. Ridley Scott said Alien: Covenant will aim for a hard R rating.

Casting Net: Adam Driver will star in the next Jim Jarmusch movie.

Remake Report: Ridley Scott might direct the movie version of The Prisoner. Jake Kasdan will direct the Jumanji remake.

New Directors/New Films: Louis Leterrier will direct The Fireman. Guillermo del Toro might direct Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

Play Time: Quentin Tarantino is adapting The Hateful Eight for the stage.

R.I.P.: David Bowie died of cancer at 69. Alan Rickman also died of cancer at 69.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: 10 Cloverfield Lane, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Green Room, The Secret Life of Pets, Money Monster, Free State of Jones, Rabid Dogs, Sing Street, The Witch and Triple 9.

TV Spots: Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Race.

Watch: A fake trailer for a serious version of Dumb & Dumber.

See: New Deadpool marketing fun.

Watch: A fake trailer for Ride Along 3.

See: How they shot the craziest scene in The Revenant.

Watch: The Revenant parodied as an Oregon Trail movie.

See: The best Star Wars cosplay of the last five years.

Watch: The official music video tie-in promoting China’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens release.

See: Where Maz Kanata appears to show up in The Phantom Menace.

Watch: A time-lapse tribute to the 70mm projection of The Hateful Eight.

See: The problem with movie trailers today.

Learn: How Hollywood makes their movies scientifically accurate.

See: Hologram recreations of your favorite movie scenes.

Our Features

Movie Reviews: 13 Hours might be Michael Bay’s angriest movie.

Geek Movie Guide: What if the Oscars only nominated geek movies?

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: A brief history of science fiction at the Oscars.

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: How to manage the hype for 10 Cloverfield Lane.

Comic Book Movie Guide: Looking back on the 1978 Doctor Strange.

Comic Book Movie Guide: Who we’d like to see play the villains of all the DC movies.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week. And here’s our guide to all the best new indie and international DVD and Blu-ray releases.

and

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Wall Street Traders Get Mauled By The Rampaging Bear

Stocks on Wall Street and around the world fell on Friday as concerns about oil prices and the Chinese economy persisted.

Stocks on Wall Street and around the world fell on Friday as concerns about oil prices and the Chinese economy persisted. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Spencer Platt/Getty Images

On Friday, Wall Street traders got the same treatment as the main character in The Revenant: A big fearsome bear attacked again and again.

By the close, stock prices were badly mauled. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 2.4 percent of its value, tumbling 391 points to close at 15,988.

The S&P 500 index dropped 2.16 percent to 1,880 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index lost 2.7 percent to 4,488.

Wall Street’s rough day started during the night, when investors in Asia and Europe began dumping shares. First, China’s Shanghai composite index plunged 3.6 percent, falling into bear-market territory — down 21 percent from a high in late December. Then Stoxx Europe 600 dropped 2.8 percent.

All of that selling was tied to the bad news for energy companies. Their troubles worsened as Brent crude oil, the global benchmark, fell to $29.05 a barrel. West Texas crude closed at $29.42. Those prices are stunning, considering that oil was selling for nearly $115 as recently as June 2014.

Oil and other commodity prices have been falling amid fears that China’s growth is slowing dramatically. A few years ago, China was gobbling up raw materials, such as iron ore, copper and coal. Now, as that country’s growth cools, it is buying far less of everything.

That’s hurting producer nations, especially in Africa, Latin America and even here in North America. So prices are way down for materials sold in bulk. And for oil, the problem has been made much worse by surging supplies. Iran is expected to soon flood the market with new oil exports.

And then other bad news piled on. A new report on the U.S. producer price index showed wholesale prices decreased 0.2 percent in December. And retail sales slipped 0.1 percent last month.

Intel Corp. added more gloom when it said its first-quarter sales would fall short of some forecasts. That knocked its stock price down 9 percent.

Investors are looking around and seeing energy companies laying off workers and currencies from commodity-producing countries in flux and questions being raised about weakness in manufacturing.

Such factors added to the pessimism, and this did not help: The U.S. stock market will be closed Monday for Martin Luther King Day. Traders typically get more jittery when they can’t sell shares while other global markets are doing business.

So people moved money away from stocks and into safer investments, such as U.S. Treasury securities. There were so many takers for the benchmark 10-year Treasury note that its yield slipped to a three-month low of 2.0295 percent.

Analysts scrambled to remind average investors that markets are volatile and that the U.S. economy has lots of strengths, including robust job growth, cheap gasoline and an improving housing sector.

Or as Hugh Glass, the much-mauled character put it in The Revenant: “Don’t give up, as long as you’ve got a breath in you.”

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Doula Support For Pregnant Women Could Improve Care, Reduce Costs

A doula is trained to provide advice and support for women through pregnancy and childbirth.

A doula is trained to provide advice and support for women through pregnancy and childbirth. Mike Harrington/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Mike Harrington/Getty Images

Childbirth historically involved a support system of women who assisted a woman from her pregnancy through the birth and in the immediate postpartum period afterward.

Today, obstetricians and midwives provide prenatal care and help a woman deliver her baby. Doulas continue to fulfill the historical role of emotionally supporting a pregnant woman through labor and childbirth, helping her advocate for herself and communicate with her caregivers.

A study published online Thursday by the journal Birth suggests that offering women the support of a certified doula could save Medicaid and perhaps private insurers real money — nearly $1,000 a birth — by reducing cesarean and preterm births.

Previous research has shown lower rates of cesarean births, more satisfaction from mothers and better newborn Apgar scores — a measure of a baby’s condition at birth — among mothers who use doula care. In fact, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says in guidelines for safe prevention of cesarean births that doula care is “probably underutilized.”

This is the first study, however, to show a reduction in preterm births and a net savings for public insurance. Cesarean births — about a third of all U.S. births — cost about twice as much as vaginal births, and the 1 in 10 U.S. infants born preterm (before 37 weeks) incur medical costs 10 times greater than those of full-term infants.

“What is coming together now is a research consensus and a professional consensus of the benefits of doula care,” said lead author Katy Kozhimannil, an associate professor in the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. “The barriers to access are financial, cultural and geographic. The financial barrier ought to be the first to fall.”

Her analysis compared 1,935 women in Minnesota who accepted state doula services covered by Medicaid with 67,147 Medicaid-covered women throughout the northern and midwestern U.S. who didn’t get help from doulas.The doulas visited with the mothers four times leading up to the birth, provided support during labor and delivery and made two postpartum visits to the women.

In comparing the groups, 4.7 percent of the women using doulas had preterm births compared with 6.3 percent of the women who didn’t get doula help. Similarly, 20.4 percent of doula-supported women had cesarean deliveries compared with 34.2 percent of the women without doulas All told, an estimated $986 per birth would be saved if all the women received doula services, the analysis found.

How doulas decrease the odds of a cesarean birth isn’t entirely clear. One way might be by reducing cesareans recommended out of convenience, such as during a more slowly progressing labor.

“One of the questions doulas are trained to help women remember to ask is, ‘Is this an emergency or do I have time to think about it?’ ” Kozhimannil said. “If it’s an emergency, it’s outside the doula’s scope of work. If it’s not, that’s an opportunity for the doula to help the woman come to a decision with her clinician.”

However, there is a potential risk if inadequately trained doulas practice outside their scope of care, says Aaron Caughey, chair of the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.

“I can’t think of a lot of negatives fundamentally in the routine use of doulas,” he said. “But in my clinical experience, the one possible negative is that a lot of the time the individuals who use doulas have a certain mindset about birth, and the doula can sometimes serve to block the clinician from practicing in the way the clinician might wish.”

For example, a doula might discourage a woman from agreeing to a rupture of membranes recommended by a clinician even if breaking her waters is medically indicated, he said. If physicians, midwives and doulas work together from the start, disputes over care are less likely.

Why doula care might affect preterm birth is also uncertain but might partly result from a reduction in stress because of the support of a doula during prenatal care, Caughey said.

Kozhimannil’s team analyzed preterm births and cesarean births separately, but another analysis that combined them revealed no reduction in cesareans among preterm births. She said that’s a good thing because it means the reduction occurs among healthy deliveries and not the complicated ones more likely to need a C-section.

Although the researchers adjusted the analysis for mothers’ age and race/ethnicity and having high blood pressure or diabetes during pregnancy, the groups may still have been too different for adequate comparison, wrote Adam Powell, a health economist and president of Payer+Provider Syndicate, in an email.

He pointed out that the larger control group may have included some doula-assisted births, albeit a small number, but that the better health of the women in the doula group may not have been fully accounted for in the statistical adjustments.

“It is not surprising that the intervention group was in better health than the control group as the intervention group had to be proactive about their health in order to be included in the group,” he wrote since only 15 to 20 percent of the mothers eligible for Medicaid-covered doula services used them.

The study’s findings would be stronger if the women had been randomized through a lottery to receive doula support or not, Powell said.

Even so, insurers can look through their own claims for answers. “Medicaid programs and health care companies generally have the data to conduct these analyses with their own data,” Kozhimannil said. “There is no reason they shouldn’t consider adding doula care or at least exploring that option.”

She pointed out the importance of this study’s findings in terms of the racial disparities in poor birth outcomes in the U.S.

“It’s important in an equity context because preterm birth is so much more frequent among black women compared with white women and preterm birth is the largest contributor to infant death,” Kozhimannil said. “The infant mortality rates and the disparities in infant mortality are something we’ve been reckoning with as a country for 100 years without good progress. Any identification of interventions that can help address issues related to preterm birth and especially disparities in preterm birth is urgently needed.”

Tara Haelle is a freelance health and science writer based in Peoria, Ill. She’s on Twitter: @tarahaelle

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Carolina Panthers' Star Thomas Davis Earns Praise Off The Field

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The most well-known player on the NFL’s best team this season is quarterback Cam Newton of the Carolina Panthers. But the heart and soul of the Panthers is linebacker Thomas Davis who has come back from three gruesome knee injuries and is one of the league’s best defenders. And that’s just one piece of Davis’ reputation in Charlotte, N.C., where his work with kids is what stands out to many parents.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

The Carolina Panthers enter the NFL playoffs this weekend with the best record in the league and the best record in the team’s 21 seasons. Its big star is quarterback Cam Newton, but Thomas Davis is the heart of the team. Davis has come back from three gruesome knee injuries to be one of the league’s best linebackers. Around Charlotte, though, what Davis does off the field is just as important as what he does on it. From member station WFAE, Michael Tomsic reports.

MICHAEL TOMSIC, BYLINE: Every Sunday, Panthers fans love this sound.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

TOMSIC: That’s linebacker Thomas Davis miked up, delivering a punishing hit for one of the NFL’s best defenses.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

THOMAS DAVIS: I couldn’t hit him with the right side. I said I’m just going to give him everything I got with this left though.

TOMSIC: There’s something else Davis does that some kids and parents are even bigger fans of – he meets with middle schoolers, like Bryson Ellis, to teach them about leadership.

BRYSON ELLIS: If you didn’t communicate and if you weren’t – you didn’t make sure your voice was heard then, like – it’s not that you didn’t contribute, but you weren’t going to do that well because if everybody’s too scared to say anything, then you can’t get anything done.

TOMSIC: Ellis says that’s a theme at Davis’ leadership academy – speak up, but also listen and work together. This school year, Ellis has gone from a somewhat shy eighth-grader to student council president. His parents, Tracy and Tim Ellis, say the Panthers linebacker has played a big role in their son’s life.

TRACY ELLIS: He’s definitely more comfortable in a leadership role now, so I definitely feel that it has benefited him in that particular way by helping him to win the student council president of the school.

TIM ELLIS: He’s become more assertive and more aware of what being a leader is and doing the right thing, so I definitely think that that’s been a positive event for him.

TOMSIC: About 90 middle school boys and girls have gone through Davis’ program. He says the idea came from his own experience as a kid.

DAVIS: A lot of the things that I do now stem from a lack of things that I had growing up. So I didn’t really have anyone to show me at that early age, you know, how to be a leader, how to go about doing things as a young man, so that’s one of the reasons why we wanted to start this program.

TOMSIC: Davis and his younger sister were raised by their single mom in Shellman, Ga., population 1,000. He received the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award last year for excellence on and off the field. In this video from the ceremony, Davis walks through his hometown.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

DAVIS: This is one of the many houses that we stayed in growing up. To take a hot bath, I would have to boil water on the stove. We had to run an extension cord from one of our neighbor’s house, you know, just to have a light.

TOMSIC: On Christmas, he says there were years he woke up without a gift. Last month, Davis unloaded dozens of boxes of toys so other kids wouldn’t have that experience – kids like Towanda Gaston’s two daughters.

TOWANDA GASTON: It means a lot to me because sometimes, you know, you don’t have as much as you want and do as much as you need to do. So for me, it’s a blessing, honestly.

TOMSIC: At the toy giveaway and at his leadership academy, Davis doesn’t just provide money, take a few photos and leave. He’s committed, and his teammates say he’s the same way at his day job. Here’s how defensive tackle Dwan Edwards describes him.

DWAN EDWARDS: He’s a tremendous leader, one of the harder working guys on our team. And he sets the tone for us, and we follow his lead.

TOMSIC: He’s also one of only two NFL players to come back from three ACL tears, one of the most serious knee injuries. The Panther’s coach calls Davis the emotional heart and soul of the team. Bryson Ellis, one of the middle schoolers who meets with him, has his own take.

BRYSON: He really cares. He’s genuine. There are some people who are just going to, like, do it and forget about it, but he’s actually a really nice person.

TOMSIC: Those are the reasons Ellis is such a fan. But make no mistake, he’ll enjoy watching Davis make big tackles this Sunday on the football field, too. For NPR News, I’m Michael Tomsic in Charlotte.

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Songs We Love: Tribu Baharú, 'Made in Tribu Baharú'

Tribu Baharú
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Tribu Baharú, Pa'l Más Exigente Bailador (Tambora 2015)

Tribu Baharú, Pa’l Más Exigente Bailador (Tambora 2015) courtesy of the label hide caption

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There are very few guarantees in life. But one of them must — must! — be that as soon as you hear “Made in Tribu Baharú,” you’ll start moving. (I promise.) It’s a song from Tribu Baharú, a band from Bogotá, Colombia — and the sextet’s high-energy, abundantly joyful calls to the dance floor belie a complicated history.

Tribu Baharú’s musical style, called champeta, originated as a type of folk music within communities of African descent along Colombia’s Caribbean coast. Not acknowledging their country’s African heritage and its history in the slave trade, many people in Colombia looked down on the sounds of champeta and the people it represented. (In fact, there are reportedly still people who would like to try to squelch champeta; these days, the charge is that it encourages teen pregnancy.)

In the 1970s and ’80s, traveling West African sailors docking in ports like Cartagena and Barranquilla carried along LPs of Congolese soukous as well as Ghanaian and Nigerian highlife bands. Colombian artists began soaking up the lilting guitars and big, jazzy harmonies, and all those influences started commingling in the “picó” (sound system) culture of Colombia’s ports. That is how a modern, dazzlingly energetic and decidedly African champeta was born.

Tribu Baharú is a band of champeta champions, who turn that melange of influences into an incredibly fun live show. The first time I saw this group live was in Spain in 2014; that night, they turned a crowd of spectators into a solid mass of sweaty dancers. If you are in New York City, you can have your own turn this coming Sunday night, when Tribu Baharú appear at the annual showcase — summit, really — of musical talents from around the world: globalFEST.

Tribu Baharú’s album Pa’l Más Exigente Bailador is out now on Tambora.

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