January 27, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: New 'Star Wars' Meets Old, the Big Problem With Disney Princess Movies and More

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

Movie Brand Problem of the Day:

Disney princess movies since The Little Mermaid have been worse for female characters than in the past. Watch the video accompanying a Washington Post report below.

Vintage Image of the Day:

Marlon Brando makes a face at Elizabeth Taylor, many decades before they went on their supposed road trip with Michael Jackson:

Character Comparisons of the Day:

Characters from Star Wars: The Force Awakens meet their original trilogy counterparts in this 8-bit-animation video (via Devour):

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Road Rage of the Day:

Apparently a Jedi Master and a Sith Lord got into some beef sitting in Austin traffic (via Geekologie):

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons why Kung Fu Panda is the same movie as Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith:

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of Kung Fu Panda, here is everything wrong with the animated feature in 15 minutes:

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Mashup of the Day:

What if it was Batman who was starred in Mad Max: Fury Road instead of Bane? Messy Pandas imagined Batman: Omega Road in this poster:

Recut Trailer of the Day:

This redone trailer for Batman & Robin, using some audio from The Dark Knight Rises, almost makes it look like a good movie (via Live for Films):

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Filmmaker in Focus:

This video showcases shots in Paul Thomas Anderson films where the camera follows people as they walk, run or even skate (via Live for Films):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 30th anniversary of the release of Paul Mazursky‘s Down and Out in Beverly Hills. Watch an original TV spot for the underrated 1980s classic, starring Nick Nolte, Richard Dreyfuss and Bette Midler, below.

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First Listen: Sidestepper, 'Supernatural Love'

Sidestepper's new album, Supernatural Love, comes out Feb. 5.
53:31

Sidestepper’s new album, Supernatural Love, comes out Feb. 5. Marica Cardona/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

toggle caption Marica Cardona/Courtesy of the artist

It’s hard to keep a good idea down. In 1996, Richard Blair and Sidestepper introduced their innovative mix of Afro-Colombian and pop music to a Colombian scene that was about to explode onto the world stage.

The masterminds behind Bomba Estereo and the rappers in Choc Quib Town have said that Sidestepper’s music opened their minds to the possibilities of ignoring boundaries and mining Afro-Colombian musical traditions. Now, Blair has reassembled Sidestepper for a new album, Supernatural Love, and it’s hardly a nostalgic look back. Instead, it shimmers and percolates with guitars and Afro-Colombian percussion, it’s sung in Spanish and English, it looks forward constantly and, once again, it illuminates a musical path likely to influence the next generation of Colombian innovators.

Sidestepper, ‘Supernatural Love’

Cover for Supernatural Love

Fuego Que Te Llama

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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On The Line

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Supernatural Love

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Come See Us Play

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Magangué

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Song For The Sinner

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Lover

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Hear The Rain Come

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Celestial

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Supernatural Soul

  • Artist: Sidestepper
  • From: Supernatural Love
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Episode 679: You Asked For It

Who pays to keep up cemeteries?
18:16

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Who pays to keep up cemeteries? Patty M./Flickr hide caption

toggle caption Patty M./Flickr

We ponder the origins of money, the economics of Santa, and the business of cemeteries. Why? Because you asked.

Today on the show, we answer listeners’ questions.

Music: Matt Heaton’s “Happy You Made It.” Send us questions : Twitter/ Facebook.

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Would You Tell The World You Have Schizophrenia On YouTube?

Rachel Star Withers says that video blogging about schizophrenia and depression has helped her manage the disorders.

Rachel Star Withers says that video blogging about schizophrenia and depression has helped her manage the disorders. Courtesy of Rachel Star hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Rachel Star

When she was 22, Rachel Star Withers uploaded a video to YouTube called “Normal: Living With Schizophrenia.” It starts with her striding across her family’s property in Fort Mill, S.C. She looks across the rolling grounds, unsmiling. Her eyes are narrow and grim.

She sits down in front of a deserted white cottage and starts sharing. “I see monsters. I see myself chopped up and bloody a lot. Sometimes I’ll be walking, and the whole room will just tilt. Like this,” she grasps the camera and jerks the frame crooked. She surfaces a fleeting grin. “Try and imagine walking.”

She becomes serious again. “I’m making this because I don’t want you to feel alone whether you’re struggling with any kind of mental illness or just struggling.”

At the time, 2008, there were very few people who had done anything like this online. “As I got diagnosed [with schizophrenia], I started researching everything. The only stuff I could find was like every horror movie,” she says. “I felt so alone for years.”

She decided that schizophrenia was really not that scary. “I want people to find me and see a real person.” Over the past eight years, she has made 53 videos documenting her journey with schizophrenia and depression and her therapy. And she is not the only one. There are hundreds of videos online of people publicly sharing their experiences with mental illness.

In her early videos, Withers glowers. She tried to give off an aura of toughness befitting the daughter of a Hell’s Angel biker. But there’s also a sense that terror is a deep undercurrent in her life. “All right, let’s go,” she says in the video “Watch If You Forget,” where she documents getting electroconvulsive therapy for depression. Then, in the next few seconds, “I’m about to start the electroshock therapy and, yeah, I’m pretty nervous.”

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Things have changed a lot since then. Now, almost all her videos open with Withers flicking her black curls, arms raised with swagger: “Hey, what’s up! I’m Rachel Star!”

That public sharing of mental illness might be making a huge impact on the way our society views these disorders, especially for those of us who are digital natives. Millennials tend to be more comfortable talking about mental health issues, according to a poll released Jan. 14 by the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, along with two national suicide prevention foundations.

When it came to seeing a mental health professional, for instance, 48 percent of survey respondents between the ages of 18 and 34 said that it was a sign of strength. About 35 percent of all prior generations felt the same way.

“Our young people are accepting that mental health problems exist, and they want help for it, and they are not looking at these things as something to be ashamed of,” says Anne Marie Albano, a clinical psychologist at Columbia University who is on the board for the ADAA.

She thinks that social media and videos like Withers’ have helped lower stigma around mental illnesses. “Young people take advantage of this,” Albano says. “It gives the opportunity for people to tell their stories and post images. This allows them to feel more hope than prior generations.”

There might be other reasons young people are less concerned about stigma surrounding mental illness. Perhaps as you age, your outlook becomes more pessimistic, says John Naslund, a Ph.D. candidate at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice who studies social media and mental health. He notes that the ADAA poll found that a higher percentage of older adults than young people didn’t believe that something like suicide could be prevented. “Maybe they’ve been through this before and have had people close to them take their own lives.”

He hopes things really are getting better. “It’s very possible. That would be a very exciting change in the way society views mental illness,” Naslund says. But the problem has not been solved. Even if information moves quickly, change is slow. “It’s really important to acknowledge that people who have serious mental disorder still face a lot of stigma,” he says.

When she was younger, Withers struggled with a lot of shame and humiliation over her disorders. “For so many years, I felt like a freak,” she says. Part of that was the religious community she had joined. “Think militant Christian. Like a militaristic type,” she says. When she was 17, she graduated from high school early to attend the former Teen Mania Ministries Honor Academy in Dallas. “I honestly thought that’s what God wanted me to do.”

At the same time, her mental condition was deteriorating. She says her schizophrenia was starting to emerge and transform into something unmanageable. The counselor at Honor Academy diagnosed her with depression and prescribed pills. They didn’t help. Eventually she told them about her hallucinations. “This being a Christian place, they decided I was possessed by demons.”

For three days, Withers fasted. Each morning, she met three of the school’s spiritual advisers, and they spent the day performing an exorcism in a closed room. They read Bible verses, and Withers confessed to everything she could think of that might be construed as a sin — even watching demon-related TV shows like Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

At the end of the crucible, Withers was on the floor, exhausted. “I was young and here are these people who you know, I’m told, are close to God. I was like … OK. It must be right,” she says. “Surprise! It didn’t work. I spent six more months there as an outcast.”

Reducing this kind of stigma is a fundamental reason Withers continues making videos. She wants others to see those struggling with mental disorders with more compassion, and she wants people with a mental diagnosis to see themselves more positively.

Comment on a video uploaded by Rachel Star Withers

YouTube

After she posted her first video, Withers says, “People just come out of the woodwork emailing me, messaging me. The friends I’ve had the longest time, even people I’ve never met in real life with schizophrenia and like disorders. We just started talking.” She got invited to mental health forums and to mental health support groups on Facebook.

“Thank you for these videos. They really help me to better understand my sister,” YouTube user Kathryn Hatzenbuhler posted under one video.

These online communities are an important part of Withers’ life now. “Whenever I’m posting on Twitter, I’ll put #schizophrenia and #schizophrenic. I’m hoping to find other people who are having problems,” she says.

Withers ended up making a coloring book for kids with schizophrenia, and she shares ways she has figured out to deal with her visions and voices.

Via webcam, she showed me two askew mirrors in her room that can be angled away from the viewer. “People with mental disorders don’t do well with mirrors. I just start hallucinating,” she says. “It’s real hard putting on makeup, you have to imagine. Having the mirrors at an angle helps.”

In one video, she talks about walking up to one of her hallucinations to touch it, and that alone took away some of the fear. “It’s kind of something to help you get used to your hallucinations, so you know how to respond, because the voices are always horrible. The voices are never like, ‘Oh my God, you look so good today.’ “

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YouTube

There’s no hiding her disorder from anybody on Facebook, so people she knew in real life started finding out. It caused her pain at some jobs (“This one girl was like, ‘Oh she’s crazy. I’m not working with her’ “), but it also led some people to talk about their own or their family’s experiences with mental disorder. “They’ll be like, ‘So … I saw your post, Rachel. I had a question.’ “

Researchers think there’s a potential gold mine of mental health benefits in exchanging messages and encouragement online like this. “Social support is always the No. 1 variable that predicts a better prognosis and better care management of anyone’s illness,” Albano says.

It’s a small leap from there to think that participating in mental health-focused communities on YouTube and Facebook might actually be making people healthier and preventing suicides. “That’s probably absolutely correct,” says Patrick Corrigan, a professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology. But scientists are only just now beginning to measure the effect social media might have on clinical outcomes. “It’s quite a new area of thinking, online peer-to-peer support for mental illness,” Naslund says.

But there’s an obvious downside to being public on social media about mental health problems. “Say I have a network of friends and I have a breakdown one day. It will spread through social media, maybe in negative ways,” says Michael Lindsey, a professor of social work at New York University. That could be through someone’s real social groups, like at work or school, or it could be anonymous, via Internet trolls. For those already depressed, anxious or paranoid, cruel comments and messages could have a terrible impact.

But in Naslund’s research, he says that problems with online attacks have been extraordinarily rare. “If someone did post a derogatory comment, seemed a little harmful, other people would come to the defense and say, ‘Don’t listen to that,’ ” he says. “[Social media are] way more supportive than we imagined.”

According to Naslund, the benefits seem to vastly outweigh the harms. “That’s clear in the literature,” he says.

And Withers agrees. She doesn’t think that people with mental health problems usually go on social media and spiral out of control even more. “I’m sure it happens somewhere on some area of the Internet,” she says. “But I think usually when I’m feeling depressed and stuff, but then I see someone else thinking of hurting themselves, the opposite kicks in. It’s like, no. You have so much to live for. You’re able to pull yourself out in a way to help someone else.”

When Withers does get trolls, she blocks them. “Anything remotely violent towards me gets blocked,” she says. “Like — I’m not going to respond to that. Don’t call me that word.”

Still, she cautions others to think carefully before coming out to the world about their mental illness. It can be dangerous, she admits. She says she gets phone stalkers and death threats. But she is still glad that she did it. It’s uncomfortable for her to think what might have happened if she never went online about her depression and schizophrenia. “I see myself being a lot more closed off,” she says. “I hope I would have found other people’s videos.”

Withers attributes a lot of her transformation to electroconvulsive therapy. She says it knocked out a lot of her deep depression. And Withers thinks sharing on the Internet has also helped. “It helps me to vocalize it and put it all out there,” she says, and it makes her feel like she is less “broken and sick” when other users empathize with her online.

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Rachel Star YouTube

Recently, she posted a video to YouTube called “There Will Be Beautiful Days.” It’s short, reaching just past a minute long. Withers smiles and says she knows things are hard now. Maybe harder than they’ve ever been. But it’s going to be OK. And at some point, you’ll have some good days. Maybe even just one great day, but it’ll be enough. It will make life worth fighting for.

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Radio Legend Barney Hall, The Calm Voice Of NASCAR, Dies At 83

"Whether you met him or not, you felt like you knew him," NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley says of longtime broadcaster Barney Hall.

“Whether you met him or not, you felt like you knew him,” NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley says of longtime broadcaster Barney Hall. MRN hide caption

toggle caption MRN

For more than 50 years, Barney Hall was the man who helped fans enjoy stock car racing – and make sense of the chaos that can break out when cars hurtle around a track. An integral part of the Daytona 500 and other iconic races, Hall died Tuesday from complications following a medical procedure.

From the first running of the Daytona 500 in 1959, Hall missed calling the race only four times. He set the tone for covering NASCAR on the Motor Racing Network from the very start, joining MRN in the year of its founding in 1970.

From MRN President David Hyatt:

“In a world that can have its share of egos, Barney’s humor and humility kept everyone around him firmly grounded. His smooth and easygoing delivery was the mark by which others were measured. His co-anchor, Joe Moore, once commented that ‘Barney was the calming force in the midst of a raging storm and simply by listening to him, you knew there was safe passage through it.'”

Calling Hall “the voice of NASCAR,” NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley says, “He was not just a trusted voice to listeners and race fans, he became what many believe is the most trusted journalist in NASCAR by the sport’s competitors for decades.”

Winston Kelley added, “Whether you met him or not, you felt like you knew him. His easy, conversational delivery made you feel like you were listening to one of your closest friends or relatives tell you a story.”

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In one of the fastest-moving sports in the world, Hall was revered for navigating any situation — high-speed crashes; confusion in the pits; lead changes; the scramble for the checkered flag – with steady intelligence.

In contrast to the excited style of many TV sports announcers, Hall urged his colleagues to concentrate on being precise and informative. His career was an example of that, and he was credited with guiding younger broadcasters along the same path.

“Just because the cars are going 200 miles per hour, doesn’t mean you have to,” is the advice Hall gave to many journalists, according to an interview with MRN reporter Alex Hayden in Motor Racing Digest.

As ESPN’s NASCAR commentator Alan Bestwick once recalled, “He and I were sitting down one night, and he said, ‘Alan, there’s nothing wrong with doing things with a little class and a little dignity.’ “

Hall called his last full race at Daytona in 2014 – seven years after he had been inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association’s Hall of Fame.

In 2012, not only did NASCAR and the NASCAR Hall of Fame announce that they would give a new award for media excellence to Hall (along with another longtime broadcaster, Ken Squier) — they also named the award after the pair.

Hall was a native of Elkin, N.C., a town he called home throughout his life. He first worked in radio after enlisting in the Navy, where he worked with Armed Forces Radio. He then landed a job as a disc jockey for local station WIFM.

“Dumb luck,” was how Hall once explained that turn of events:

“I was in a bowling alley… and the manager of the local radio station was on the team I was on. He was just sitting there on the bench, and he said, ‘You don’t know where a man could get a good radio announcer, do you?’

“And I said, ‘Yeah.’ He said, ‘Where?’ I said, ‘You’re looking at him: me!’

“He said, ‘Do you have experience in radio?’ and I said, ‘Yes sir — which was kind of a fib.’ “

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