February 8, 2016

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: Deadpool vs. Psylocke, 'Justice League' Trailer and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

Deadpool and Psylocke are in two very separate X-Men movies coming out this year, but the following Instagram video shows their actors, Ryan Reynolds and Oliva Munn, in a playful sword fight:

Photoshop Fun of the Day:

Whoever created this picture of younger Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher with a very young Adam Driver is a genius:

Fandom Parody of the Day:

The anticipation for Star Wars: The Force Awakens was a cultural phenomenon that went out of control. This funny video shows us it’s time for the typically just-casual fan to awaken and let it go (via Geek Tyrant):

[embedded content]

Cosplay of the Day:

Matt the Radar Tech (aka Kylo Ren in disguise) and Rey of Star Wars: The Force Awakens showed up together at the Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo’s Mardi Gras Masquerade:

Matt (not Kylo Ren) and Rey hang out at our #C2E2 Mardi Gras Masquerade. #cosplay pic.twitter.com/x3mD9JeukY

— C2E2 (@c2e2) February 7, 2016

Fan-Made Trailer of the Day:

This mash-up of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Independence Day: Resurgence and Marvel movies probably is what Justice League will look like (via Geek Tyrant):

[embedded content]

Actor Comparison of the Day:

Slate explores the common comparison between Channing Tatum and Gene Kelly:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

James Dean, who would have turned 85 today, cuts some celebratory cake in Rebel Without a Cause:

Cooking Video of the Day:

Learn how to make the version of ratatouille seen in Pixar‘s Ratatouille (via Geek Tyrant):

[embedded content]

Reimagined Movie of the Day:

Mashable shows us what The Wizard of Oz would look like as a Michael Bay movie, or at least how it would be sold as a modern blockbuster:

[embedded content]

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 40th anniversary of the release of Martin Scorsese‘s Taxi Driver. Watch the original trailer for the film, which stars Robert De Niro, below.

[embedded content]

and

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Small Batch: The Super Bowl, From Peyton vs. Cam To Twitter vs. Coldplay

Beyoncé, Coldplay singer Chris Martin and Bruno Mars perform during halftime of the NFL Super Bowl 50 football game Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif.
8:16

Download

Beyoncé, Coldplay singer Chris Martin and Bruno Mars perform during halftime of the NFL Super Bowl 50 football game Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif. Julio Cortez/AP hide caption

toggle caption Julio Cortez/AP

Sunday night’s Super Bowl landed a huge TV audience for its battle between the Denver Broncos and the Carolina Panthers, which the Broncos took 24-10. While a football game is a football game, the Super Bowl is also a huge pop culture event, from the halftime show to the buildup and the barrage of advertising. We sat down the Monday morning after to take apart the highs, the lows, and the Beyonce of it all.

As we talk about a little, the halftime show was partially upstaged and made irrelevant by the release of Beyonce’s fascinating, gorgeous video “Formation,” and there’s already lots of interesting writing about it: NPR rounded some of it up here, plus there’s this and this and undoubtedly more by the hour. Dig in.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

Gulf Of Mexico Open For Fish-Farming Business

Divers around the open-ocean aquaculture cage at the Cape Eleuthera Institute in the Bahamas. These cages are not currently used in the Gulf of Mexico, but represent one type of farming technology that could work in the region.
3:46

Download

Divers around the open-ocean aquaculture cage at the Cape Eleuthera Institute in the Bahamas. These cages are not currently used in the Gulf of Mexico, but represent one type of farming technology that could work in the region. NOAA/with permission from Kelly Martin hide caption

toggle caption NOAA/with permission from Kelly Martin

The Gulf of Mexico is now open for commercial fish farming.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced last month that, for the first time in the U.S., companies can apply to set up fish farms in federal waters.

The idea is to compete with hard-to-regulate foreign imports. But opening the Gulf to aquaculture won’t be cheap, and it could pose environmental problems.

Harlon Pearce, the owner of Harlon’s Louisiana Fish, which supplies restaurants and groceries across the South, says he welcomes the change. Around this time of year, his refrigerated warehouse outside New Orleans is stocked with catch.

“You’ve got 30,000 pounds of fish right here, or more,” he says.

He’s freezing a lot of it to keep up with year-round demand. He says he’d like to sell nationwide, to big chains like Red Lobster, but “we never have enough fish to supply the markets. Never,” he says.

That’s true for a couple of reasons. For one thing, the seafood industry in the Gulf still hasn’t bounced back from the 2010 BP oil spill. Secondly, the industry has always fluctuated, because of hurricanes and pollution.

Pearce, who is on the board of the Gulf Seafood Institute, says aquaculture could solve that.

The rest of the world is already heavily invested in farming fish. According to NOAA, 90 percent of fish in the U.S. comes from abroad and half of this is farmed. While fish farms exist in the U.S., the industry has yet to really take off. And, until now, federal waters had been off limits. The U.S. government says that opening up the Gulf to fish farms would reduce American dependence on foreign food and improve security.

“We see it as another important step in building the resiliency of our oceans and fishing communities,” says NOAA Administrator Kathryn Sullivan. “This starts with the Gulf but actually opens the door for other regions to follow suit.”

In the coming years, NOAA will issue 10-year permits to companies that want to set up shop in federal waters, generally 3 miles offshore. The farms, which look like giant floating pens, are allowed to raise fish native to the area only. In the Gulf, that means species like red drum and cobia — not salmon or tilapia.

Some say the farms will hurt struggling fishermen.

“These systems will take up real space in the ocean and displace fishermen. In fact, there are going to be buffer zones around these facilities where fishermen can’t go,” says Marianne Cufone, an adjunct professor at the environmental law clinic at Loyola University.

And she says the farms run the risk of large fish escapes, which might wreak havoc on the local ecology.

“There have been millions of fish that have escaped all over the world and are causing problems — not just genetic problems, but things like spreading diseases between captive fish and wild fish,” Cufone says. Fish food and waste could also fall out of the pens and affect other marine life.

NOAA officials say they took all of this into account already by weighing thousands of public comments and enforcing certain environmental safeguards, like constant monitoring of cages.

Raising fish in the ocean won’t be quick or easy, says Rusty Gaude, a fisheries expert with Louisiana State University. He notes that NOAA is setting a lot of environmental rules, which can be burdensome. And then there’s the threat that hurricanes pose to floating fish farms.

“These initial efforts may go through some rather painful growing pains,” he says.

But he thinks the plan will become a reality.

“Eventually, the world and the Gulf of Mexico and Louisiana will see aquaculture here in the Gulf of Mexico,” he says.

NOAA and other federal agencies say the first permits could be approved in two years.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.


No Image

When Men Get Breast Cancer, They Enter A World Of Pink

Maria Fabrizio for NPR
4:18

Download

Maria Fabrizio for NPR

At 46 years old, Oliver Bogler’s reaction to a suspicious lump in his chest might seem typical for a man. He ignored it for three to four months, maybe longer. “I couldn’t really imagine I would have this disease,” Bogler says. But when he finally “grew up” and went to the doctor, he was pretty quickly diagnosed with invasive breast cancer.

Now what’s interesting here is that Bogler is a cancer biologist who regularly works with cancer cells, as senior vice president of academic affairs at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Even so, he figured the lump was a benign swelling of breast tissue.

He had good reason to think so. Breast cancer is rare among men. Only 1 percent of all breast cancer cases are in men. Still, that means about 2,600 men receive a diagnosis of breast cancer every year.

But men typically don’t think they are at risk, says Dr. Sharon Giordano, an oncologist who also works at the MD Anderson Cancer Center. “Men don’t think of themselves as having breasts,” Giordano says. “They don’t realize that all men have some residual breast tissue.” So it’s not unusual to see male patients like Bogler who come to her with more advanced breast cancer than the typical female patient.

This could be one reason why men have a lower life expectancy after a breast cancer diagnosis. According to a study published in 2012, in the Annals of Surgical Oncology, men with early breast cancer had a 74 percent survival rate five years after their diagnosis compared to women, whose survival rate was 83 percent.

And men not only can get breast cancer, they can also inherit the BRCA1 and 2 genetic mutations that place them at greater risk. Like women, they can pass that mutation on to their children, who have a 50 percent chance of inheriting a parent’s mutation.

Once men are diagnosed, their treatment is pretty much the same as it is for women — typically surgery to remove the cancer followed by chemotherapy, radiation and hormone suppressing medication like tamoxifen.

That was the case for Bogler, but with one big difference — he had a mastectomy. Most women choose lumpectomies followed by radiation. This is often not an option for men, Giordano says, because their tumors are most commonly right behind the nipple, where there’s not a lot of breast tissue to remove.

The markings on Oliver Bogler's chest are used to guide radiation therapy.

The markings on Oliver Bogler’s chest are used to guide radiation therapy. Courtesy of David Jay Photography hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of David Jay Photography

Unlike women, most men don’t have reconstructive surgery. That’s probably because they don’t even know it’s an option, says Giordano. A lot of male patients would probably be interested in having nipple reconstructive surgery, Giordano says, “So when they are out swimming, or playing basketball and have their shirt off, the surgical changes aren’t quite so obvious.”

And because breast cancer is so much more common among women, men with the disease can experience something of a “gender misfit.” Bogler wrote about his experience in a personal blog he called Entering a World of Pink. Breast cancer clinics are often decorated in lots of pink, and support systems are designed with women in mind. Giordano recalls one male patient who, after a biopsy, was given a pink floral ice pack that came with instructions to “place it inside your bra.”

When Edward Smith was diagnosed about four years ago, he went online to look for information and emotional support. The first couple of chat rooms he joined were not helpful, he says, when the participants found out he was a man. “They weren’t outright nasty or anything, but you could just feel that they were pulling back in terms of the conversation that was going on at the time,” he says.

Eventually Smith found a site that was welcoming — Living Beyond Breast Cancer. The women in this group were helpful, compassionate and willing to talk, Smith says. This was important because he was feeling a bit uncomfortable at work. Colleagues were just “stupefied,” he says, “because most people have never encountered a male who had breast cancer.”

The website recently published a guide for men, which Smith found particularly helpful. The medical information isn’t so different from women, says Jean Sachs, executive director of Living Beyond Breast Cancer, but the experience is very different. “It’s hard to get men to talk about it,” she says. The guide provides a list of men, including Smith, who are willing to talk to other men about their experience.

It’s also important, Sachs says, for men who test positive for the BRACA genetic mutations to understand that they can pass those mutations on to their children, which may encourage newly diagnosed patients to get tested.

The lack of awareness, even among doctors, oncologist Giordano says, means less money for needed research to figure out how breast cancer in men differs from women especially when it comes to life saving treatment. Treatments for men are based on evidence from research trials with women. Giordano’s now heading up research to better understand the biology of the disease in men and to try to figure out the most effective hormone therapy for men with breast cancer.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.