February 26, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Lego Versions of Oscar Nominees, How to Kill Deadpool and More

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

Oscar Montage of the Day:

Today’s supercut of this year’s Best Picture nominees involves Lego versions of Room, The Revenant, Mad Max: Fury Road and the rest:

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Best Picture Parody of the Day:

Gooky Gak! From the brilliant minds at Funny or Die, here’s a horse carcass sleeping bag based on Best Picture nominee The Revenant, plus a bonus gag involving action figures based on the movie’s production:

Rest up for Sunday’s Oscars in The Revenant Horse Sleeping Bag! Kids love it.https://t.co/PPhVlYSxam

— Funny Or Die (@funnyordie) February 25, 2016

Fake Toy of the Day:

There are plenty of fans of The Witch who would totally buy this talking Black Phillip toy if it was real (via Midnight Marauder):

Custom Toy of the Day:

Check out the fan-created Lego set for a genuinely rolling BB-8 from Star Wars: The Force Awakens (via Gizmodo):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

A youngish Alfred Hitchcock directs a scene from one of his early pre-Hollywood films, The Skin Game, which was released in the UK on this day 85 years ago:

Re-release Trailer of the Day:

Here is a new trailer for the 4K restoration of Akira Kurosawa‘s Ran, which opens in NYC today (via The Playlist):

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Fan Theory of the Day:

The Film Theorists explore ideas how Deadpool can actually be killed. Not that Fox would have any interest in him dying anytime soon:

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Mashup of the Day:

Speaking of Deadpool, Batman isn’t very happy about the guy and his R-rated record-breaking box office success. Watch:

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Roundtable Parody of the Day:

“Unknown” actress and comedian Molly Hawkey inserted herself into the 2014 THR Actress Roundtable, taking over Reese Witherspoon‘s spot next to Julianne Moore, Laura Dern, Patricia Arquette, Hilary Swank, Amy Adams and Felicity Jones and it’s kind of awkward (via The Film Stage):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 30th anniversary of the theatrical release of Pretty in Pink. Watch the original trailer for the teen movie classic below:

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and

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Economists On Candidates' Proposals: Mostly Bad

Presidential candidates are making a slew of promises on the campaign trail.

We took a sample of the most economically novel proposals and asked a panel of economists: Are they good or bad?

Our panel includes 22 economists from across the political spectrum. They identified themselves as left, right and center. And some couldn’t categorize themselves.

We based our list of economists on the University of Chicago Booth School of Business’s IGM Economic Experts Panel, which does regular surveys like this.

Thanks to all the economists who responded: Daron Acemo?lu, Alan Auerbach, Katherine Baicker, Abhijit Banerjee, David Cutler, Darrell Duffie, Aaron Edlin, Oliver Hart, Hilary Hoynes, Kenneth Judd, Steve Kaplan, Pete Klenow, Eric Maskin, Bill Nordhaus, Larry Samuelson, José Scheinkman, Richard Schmalensee, Carl Shapiro, James Stock, Nancy L. Stokey, Richard Thaler and Christopher Udry.

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The Stethoscope: Timeless Tool Or Outdated Relic?

Kidney specialist Steven Peitzman, a professor at Drexel University College of Medicine, says physicians who are now in their 60s and 70s used to get praise if they had the "ear" to hear and interpret subtle sounds through a stethoscope.
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Kidney specialist Steven Peitzman, a professor at Drexel University College of Medicine, says physicians who are now in their 60s and 70s used to get praise if they had the “ear” to hear and interpret subtle sounds through a stethoscope. Kim Paynter/WHYY hide caption

toggle caption Kim Paynter/WHYY

To hear a patient’s heart, doctors used to just put an ear up to a patient’s chest and listen. Then, in 1816, things changed.

Lore has it that 35-year-old Paris physician Rene Laennec was caring for a young woman who was apparently plump, with a bad heart and large breasts. Dr. George Davis, an obstetrician at East Tennessee State University who collects vintage stethoscopes, says the young Dr. Laennec didn’t feel comfortable pressing his ear to the woman’s bosom.

“So he took 24 sheets of paper and rolled them into a long tube and put that up against her chest, listened to the other end and found that not only could he hear the heart sounds very, very well, but it was actually better than what he could hear with his ear,” Davis says.

Or, it could have been poor 19th century hygiene — lice and the smell of unwashed bodies — that kept Laennec from getting too close to his patient.

Either way, he went home and crafted a wooden cylinder with a hole down the middle, and that became the first stethoscope.

It took a while for the art of listening to the body through a tube to catch on. But the new tool fit into an evolving idea that doctors needed a more focused approached to diagnosis, “that you should distinguish tuberculosis from a lung abscess — and not just call it all consumption,” says Dr. Steven Peitzman, a professor at Drexel University College of Medicine.

He says doctors used to get praise if they had the ‘ear’ to hear and interpret the subtle body sounds that travel through a stethoscope’s rubber tubing; the stethoscope is the iconic symbol of a physician.

Vidya Viswanathan, a first-year student at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, is still getting used to hers.

Some doctors say clinicians can now get much more information from newer technology than they can get from a stethoscope. Clinging to the old tool isn't necessary, they say.

Some doctors say clinicians can now get much more information from newer technology than they can get from a stethoscope. Clinging to the old tool isn’t necessary, they say. Kimberly Paynter/WHYY hide caption

toggle caption Kimberly Paynter/WHYY

“You don’t realize until you are wearing it and trying to use it, how pokey it is in your ears,” she says. “I’m almost embarrassed to wear it because it implies I have knowledge I don’t have yet.”

Medical schools teach the art of listening.

“I am astounded at the things I’ll find with my stethoscope,” says Allison Rhodes, a third-year student at the Perelman School of Medicine. “I had a patient that had pneumonia, and it was really wonderful to be able to listen to her and say, ‘This is what I think it is.’ And then, later, see on the chest X-ray that that was exactly what it was.”

But some argue that the stethoscope is becoming less useful in this digital age. Dr. Bret Nelson, an emergency medicine physician at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, says clinicians now get a lot more information from newer technology.

An ultrasound, for example, turns sound waves into moving images of blood pumping and heart valves clicking open and shut; those visual cues are easier to interpret than muffled murmurs, and may produce a more accurate diagnosis, Nelson says.

He admits the stethoscope is an icon but doesn’t buy the argument that if you lose the stethoscope, you lose the tradition of “healing touch.”

“Pulling an ultrasound machine out of my pocket, or wheeling the cart over next to the patient [and] talking through with them exactly what I’m looking for and how I’m looking for it — the fact that they can see the same image on the screen that I’m seeing strengthens that bond more than anything in the last 50 years,” Nelson says.

Nelson is 42 years old and graduated from medical school 16 years ago. He teaches medical students, and says it’s helpful to show new learners what “lies beneath.” At Mount Sinai, when medical students are taught to examine a heart, they learn how to use the stethoscope and an ultrasound machine on the same day.

“They know how to feel it, they know how to listen to it, and they know how to look at it,” Nelson says.

Still, obstetrician George Davis wants to keep the stethoscope around for a while. High-tech machines and imaging scans are great backup resources, he says, but his stethoscope helps him figure out which patients actually need additional testing.

“How much do those ultrasound machines cost?” Davis asks. “I can get a good stethoscope for less than $20. We are not going to sit there and do an echocardiogram on every patient who walks through the door.”

Davis worries that a whole generation of doctors is learning to rely too much on technology; he wants to hold on to first-line tools that are safe, effective and cheaper.

“Shouldn’t we be using what is low-tech and practical?” he asks.

Nelson counters that point-of-care imaging is becoming less expensive every day. Twenty years ago, he says, an ultrasound machine was as big as a refrigerator and cost $400,000. Today, a handheld, portable device plugs into a computer tablet and costs less than $10,000.

Many care providers in the community may even have an ultrasound in their pocket one day soon, he says. Who would have foreseen that today we have, “a slide rule, a calculator, a flashlight, a phone, a computer terminal and 36 video games,” all on one device — our smartphone.

This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with WHYY’s health show The Pulse and Kaiser Health News.

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After Approving Anti-Corruption Reforms, FIFA Members Elect New President

A worker cleans the stage during a break at the FIFA electoral congress on Friday in Zurich.

A worker cleans the stage during a break at the FIFA electoral congress on Friday in Zurich. Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

After overwhelmingly approving new reform measures, FIFA members have narrowly elected Gianni Infantino of Switzerland as their next president.

The first round of voting wasn’t decisive — while Infantino, general secretary of Europe’s UEFA soccer organization, edged out Sheikh Salman of Bahrain, the favorite leading into the election, neither reached the required two-thirds majority of the 207 votes.

In the second round of voting, which only required a simple majority, Infantino took home 115 votes.

Earlier Friday, the members of world soccer’s governing body overwhelmingly voted to approve new anti-corruption reforms.

The reforms were approved by 89 percent of FIFA at their meeting in Zurich, The Associated Press reports.

But NPR’s Tom Goldman notes a reported 22 delegates voted against the package — suggesting some FIFA holdouts are resisting reform.

The reform package sets term limits for the FIFA president and other officials — three terms of four years — and replaces the existing executive committee with a 36-member FIFA Council, which will include more women. It also separates FIFA’s policy decision-making from its business practices, Reuters reports.

FIFA has long faced accusations of corruption, but the organization’s reputation hit a new low last year when several high-ranking leaders — including FIFA vice presidents — were indicted by the U.S. on charges of bribery, racketeering, money laundering and wire fraud.

FIFA officials hope the newly passed reforms “will help show U.S. prosecutors the soccer body is serious about changing its culture, and protect its status as a victim in the American investigation,” the AP writes.

The extraordinary congress in Zurich was called by outgoing FIFA President Sepp Blatter, who announced last year that he would resign. But Blatter is not in attendance at the congress.

Disgraced by the bribery scandal, Blatter was banned from the sport for eight years in December. His suspension was reduced to six years on Wednesday.

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