March 31, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: The High Cost of Going to Hogwarts, a 'NeverEnding Story' Reunion and More

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

Movie Truth of the Day:

Wish you could go to Hogwarts? Find out how much it would cost to attend the wizard school from the Harry Potter movies even with tuition technically being free:

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Movie Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of harsh movie truths, Neil deGrasse Tyson was a champion of The Martian on social media last fall, but now he joins CinemaSins to highlight everything wrong with the Oscar-nominated sci-fi movie:

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Movie Science of the Day:

Speaking of movie science, in the latest edition of Because Science, Kyle Hill answers the burning nerd question of whether Kylo Ren of Star Wars: The Force Awakens could use the Force to pick up Thor‘s hammer, Mjolnir:

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Adorable Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, we continue a week of cute cosplay out of WonderCon with a little girl dressed as TInker Fett, combining the best of Peter Pan and the original trilogy (via Twitter)

Mashup of the Day:

Speaking of mashups involving Tinker Bell, here’s one with the fairy crossed with Harley Quinn of the upcoming Suicide Squad by artist Kris Wimberly (via Geek Tyrant):

Supercut of the Day:

Burger Fiction showcases the 100 best one-liners spoken before a character kills someone. Yes, there’s a lot of Arnold Schwarzenegger:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

In honor of Christopher Walken‘s birthday, here he is at age 13 in his film debut, the 1956 short The Boy Who Saw Through:

Reunion of the Day:

Spotify brought back actors Noah Hathaway and Alan Oppenheimer for this commercial honoring the theme song to The NeverEnding Story (via Reddit):

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Filmmaker in Focus:

See how much Wes Anderson trivia you know with this Screen Crush video about the filmmaker:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 10th anniversary of the releaes of James Gunn‘s Slither. Watch the original trailer for the horror comedy throwback below.

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and

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FCC Votes To Propose New Privacy Rules For Internet Service Providers

The Federal Communications Commission voted to propose its first Internet privacy rules and to expand a phone subsidy program to cover Internet access.

The Federal Communications Commission voted to propose its first Internet privacy rules and to expand a phone subsidy program to cover Internet access. Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images

The Federal Communications Commission is officially proposing to begin regulating how Internet service providers handle user privacy. The agency is looking to restrict the companies’ ability to share with advertisers and other third parties the information they collect about what their customers do online.

The agency’s vote, however, was delayed for more than three hours by last-minute negotiations among commissioners and the chairman. At stake was a budget cap for a telecom subsidy program, which the FCC subsequently voted to expand to cover both phone and Internet service.

The Privacy Proposal

The FCC voted to begin collecting public comment on its chairman’s proposal to let consumers weigh in on what information ISPs collect about them and how that information gets used.

As we reported previously, “as they connect us to the Internet, ISPs have insight into our lives — websites we frequent, apps we download or locations we visit — and may use that data for their own promotions or sell it to data brokers to be used for marketing or other purposes.”

Under this new proposal — formally approved by a 3-2 Democratic majority of FCC commissioners — consumers would be able to opt out of programs that let ISPs use the data they collect to offer other services themselves, but the companies would require explicit opt-in consent for data to be shared with third parties.

“It’s the consumers’ information and the consumers should have the right to determine how it’s used,” said FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler.

Telecom companies are against this proposal, arguing it puts them on an unequal footing with other Internet companies that collect data on users, like Google and Netflix, which are only overseen by the Federal Trade Commission. Republican FCC commissioners, too, dissented from the proposal, calling it corporate favoritism.

The FCC will now collect public comment on this proposal before voting to set new rules.

The Subsidy Changes

Since 1985, a government program called Lifeline has helped low-income people pay for phone service — first landlines and later cellphones. On Thursday, the FCC voted to begin allowing the recipients of the subsidy, which is $9.25 a month, to choose whether to spend it on a phone or an Internet connection, wired or wireless.

This is the vote that delayed the typically punctual FCC under Wheeler. The FCC’s two Republican commissioners and one of the Democrats, Mignon Clyburn, had apparently worked on a last-minute deal to cap the budget of the program at $2 billion a year, but the deal was ultimately scuttled.

“I negotiated in good faith to have a budget mechanism in place that ensures millions of new households will have the opportunity to afford advanced telecommunications services,” Clyburn said. “Upon further deliberation, I concluded that such a mechanism could not fully achieve my vision of a 21st century Lifeline program.”

The program, funded through fees paid by telephone companies and users, spent about $1.5 billion in 2015 and has no cap. It had in the past come under fire for waste and abuse and underwent updates and changes in 2012. Republicans have long called for restrictions to the subsidy’s budget.

The FCC voted — also 3-2 along party lines, with stern and impassioned objections from the Republicans — to set a budget of $2.25 billion a year without a hard cap and impose new eligibility checks, service standards and a funding review process. The FCC estimates that the subsidy currently helps about 12 million households afford phone service.

The Unfinished Business

The FCC has a few other things on tap for the coming weeks:

  • Airwaves Auction

The agency on Tuesday launched a major auction of airwaves, or in telecom parlance, spectrum. It’s expected to take several months.

The agency plans to first reclaim airwaves from TV stations and then sell them to telecom companies in what’s going to be the most complex auction of radio frequencies in history. The idea is to incentivize broadcasters to give up some of their airwaves, freeing up more spectrum for the growing use of mobile devices.

  • Cable Merger

The regulators are also expected to deliver a verdict on the proposed $67 billion cable merger of Charter Communications, Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks. All signs are pointing to an approval with conditions, but the timing and details are unclear.

As the New York Times reports, the deal would create the second-largest broadband provider behind Comcast and third-largest video provider after Comcast (whose bid to buy Time Warner Cable was rejected last year) and DirecTV (which was bought by AT&T last year).

  • Net Neutrality

And the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals will decide whether the FCC gets to keep the hotly debated “net neutrality” rules that redefined the agency’s authority over Internet service providers.

Though the timing of the court decision is uncertain, Wheeler in an interview with NPR earlier this month said it could be “in the next few weeks,” consistent with the industry’s expectation of the ruling sometime this spring.

The key question in front of the court is whether the FCC had proper authority to reclassify broadband Internet as a more heavily regulated telecommunications service, similar to traditional telephony.

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FDA Approves Experimental Zika Screening For Blood Donations

On Wednesday, the FDA approved an experimental test that screens blood donations for the Zika virus. It’s a response to a blood donation shortage in Puerto Rico, where local donations were halted out of fear of spreading the virus.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

The federal government has been paying for blood banks around the country to ship blood to Puerto Rico. The FDA issued guidelines last month to stop blood donations on the island because of the Zika virus. The virus is most commonly transmitted through mosquitoes, but Brazil has reported cases of transmission through blood transfusions. Puerto Rico has more than 300 reported Zika cases.

Within the next week or two, Puerto Rico will be able to start collecting blood again. That’s because the FDA has just give the go-ahead to a new test to screen blood donations for the virus. Peter Marks is the director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. Welcome to the show.

PETER MARKS: Thanks very much.

MCEVERS: This test was developed by the drug company Roche, and it will be used on what’s called an investigational basis. First, can you tell us what that means?

MARKS: So investigational use of a test means that data continue to be collected on the tests performance at specific participating sites that are conducting the test. And that means that the test itself has not yet received approval to be marketed commercially.

MCEVERS: Is there any question at all about whether or not this test actually works?

MARKS: So the best way that I can answer that is to say that, yes, the test is under investigational use. But before we allowed this investigation – new drug application to proceed, we carefully considered any potential risks prior to determining that it was safe for it to proceed.

And we also considered the possibility that the test might malfunction in a manner that could put patients at risk. And we consider the latter really highly unlikely. So we feel that it was reasonable to allow this test to proceed at this time.

MCEVERS: OK. I mention that blood banks from all over the U.S. have been sending blood to Puerto Rico. Was there a real possibility of a blood shortage if Zika were to spread to Florida or other Gulf states?

MARKS: The good news is that currently, the blood supply in the United States is quite adequate. And there actually is an interorganizational disaster task force which has been monitoring the situation and feels that, at least at this point, the blood supply would be adequate to meet the needs would there have been spread of Zika to a larger area on the continental United States.

MCEVERS: So let’s say if Zika were to be transmitted elsewhere in the U.S., could this test be rolled out quickly to affected areas?

MARKS: So I’m going to have to defer part of that to the sponsor, Roche. But my understanding is that they are aware of the potential need that this could be a larger outbreak than the existing one in Puerto Rico.

MCEVERS: If you can, put this in perspective for us in terms of other developments regarding Zika.

MARKS: So in terms of the perspective of having a blood screening test, I would say that this is a major step forward in helping to keep the blood supply safe. It will allow blood to potentially be collected in areas where there is active transmission, which is quite important for something like Zika which could be transmitted by either mosquitoes or could possibly be sexually transmitted. So we feel it is a step forward.

MCEVERS: Dr. Peter Marks heads the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. Thank you very much.

MARKS: Thank you.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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U.S. Women's Soccer Team Members File Wage Discrimination Complaint

Five members of the U.S. women’s national soccer team have filed a federal complaint against the U.S. Soccer Federation, alleging wage discrimination.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Five of the best-known members of the U.S. women’s soccer team have filed a federal complaint against the U.S. Soccer Federation. They accuse it of wage discrimination. Female soccer players, the complaint says, earn a fraction of what male players make and the women have had far more success on the field. NPR’s Nathan Rott reports.

NATHAN ROTT, BYLINE: All right, let’s start with two approximate numbers. The first is 40 percent. That’s what a women’s soccer player that makes a World Cup team should expect to earn compared to a male counterpart, about 40 percent of what he makes according to the complaint that was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The second number also listed in that complaint is 20 million, as in $20 million, which is how much more money in revenue the women’s team generated last year than the men’s. It’s numbers like that and the discrepancy between them that compelled the five U.S. women’s national soccer team players to file a federal wage discrimination complaint. Here’s the team’s co-captain Carli Lloyd in an interview with her teammates on NBC’s “Today.”

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CARLI LLOYD: The pay disparity between the men and women is just too large.

ROTT: The players are being represented by prominent sports attorney Jeffrey Kessler. He represented NFL star quarterback Tom Brady during the Deflategate inquiry and has worked on a number of other cases. He told NPR in an email that they believe they have a very strong case of blatant gender discrimination and that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission will agree. Heidi Hartmann agrees. She’s president of the Institute for Women’s Policy Research. And she says the difference in pay between male soccer players and female is egregious.

HEIDI HARTMANN: We’re not talking about comparing ice skaters to football players. We’re talking about comparing soccer players to soccer players.

ROTT: But Hartmann says it’s not necessarily surprising. She says federal wage data shows that there’s about a 21 percent gap between men’s and women’s pay in the U.S. overall. And the claim that men’s soccer players get everything from bigger bonuses to higher per diem than women on international trips is in line with other national trends too.

HARTMANN: This is not uncommon in the rest of the business world. That – it just happens that men will get more of these bonuses and awards than women.

ROTT: Hartmann says she’s hopeful that the tension brought to the issue by a group as popular as the U.S. women’s soccer team will help raise awareness. And it’s hard to argue with that popularity.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: (Chanting) USA, USA, USA.

ROTT: It wasn’t all that long ago that the U.S. women’s soccer team was doing their victory lap around the country in front of thousands of fans at rallies like this one in Downtown Los Angeles.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: World Cup champions.

(APPLAUSE)

ROTT: When the U.S. women won their third World Cup last year, the final became the most-watched soccer game in U.S. history, men or women. But it’s fair to say that the relationship between U.S. soccer and the women’s team is already strained. U.S. soccer sued the women’s national team players’ union last month over a contract dispute over their collective bargaining agreement.

In a statement regarding this issue, U.S. soccer says its efforts to be advocates for women’s soccer are unwavering and it says it’s committed to negotiating a new collective bargaining agreement that addresses compensation with the Women’s National Team’s Players Association at the end of this year. In a tweet responding to that statement, U.S. soccer co-captain Becky Sauerbrunn says, quote, “where in the statement do they address or even attempt to refute the pay discrepancy?” She ends it with the hashtag Equal Play Equal Pay. Nathan Rott, NPR News.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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Latitudes: Hear Great Global Music Right Now, With A World Premiere

Guitarist Asad Ali from the Sachal Ensemble of Lahore, Pakistan.

Guitarist Asad Ali from the Sachal Ensemble of Lahore, Pakistan. Mobeen Ansari/Courtesy of the artists hide caption

toggle caption Mobeen Ansari/Courtesy of the artists


It was five years ago that an unassuming — and highly unlikely — band became the toast of the jazz world. Pakistan’s Sachal Ensemble includes studio musicians from their country’s once-healthy film industry, which began to decline in the 1970s in a wave of political and religious pressure.

With their audience at home close to eviscerated, the members of the Sachal Ensemble and their champion and impresario, banker Izzat Majeed, were casting about to find some way of appealing to an international audience. They wound up blending distinctly American jazz with South Asian instruments like sitar, sarod, tabla and dholak along with Western instruments that had long been incorporated into local music, like violin and guitar.

The group’s road to a 2013 collaboration with Jazz At Lincoln Center became the subject of a documentary film, Song of Lahore, which will be in theaters in May. Along with the documentary, an album featuring the enemble with many well-known American guest artists, including Wynton Marsalis, Nels Cline, Jim James, Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks, and Meryl Streep.

On this track — premiering here on NPR Music — the Sachal Ensemble works with Sean Lennon on a cover of Nick Lowe’s “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love and Understanding,” a song made famous by Elvis Costello. Perhaps unsurprisingly, their collaboration rides a rather George Harrisonian psychedelic wave.

The Easter Sunday bombing in Pakistan took place in the Sachal Ensemble’s hometown of Lahore, in an act of terrorism that seems to have been intended as an attack particularly on Christians there. The musicians’ work and this song in particular feel all the more tragically timely.

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An Indian rapper named Divine (a.k.a. Vivian Fernandes) has made something of a cottage industry in repping the harder-edged neighborhoods of his hometown, Mumbai — light-years away from the playgrounds of India’s super-wealthy.

The beat and backing tracks on this new song, “Jungli Sher” (Jungle Lions), tip toward the bombastic. But Divine’s flow is packed with brilliant internal rhymes and trenchant observations like “Hope is the rickshaw of the poor/on which the rich cruise.” (To catch the translation, turn the subtitles to “English [United Kingdom]”.) The video’s visuals, shot via iPhone, are just as scrappy as the lyrics.

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The Congolese-French singer and rapper known as Maître Gims (Gandhi Djuna) has a brand-new ballad featuring Sia called “Je Te Pardonne” (I Forgive You), out this week. It’s already been viewed on YouTube well over 2 million times. That’s a big ballad, but I still prefer the thoroughly African beats of his smash-hit ode to well-dressed men called “Sapés comme jamais” (Dressed Like Never Before), featuring fellow rapper Niska.

Being a sapeur — that is, an adherent to the Société des Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes (The Society of Ambiance-Makers and Elegant People) — is a way of life for a certain stratum of Congolese men. And that is something that Maître Gims can claim as part of his heritage. His dad, Djuna Djanana, was a band member for Congolese rumba legend Papa Wemba, the artist nicknamed Le Pape (The Pope) de la Sape.”

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By this time, it’s no secret that I’ve become a big fan of the trio of sisters who call themselves A-WA: Tair, Liron and Tagel Haim. They come from southern Israel and draw deeply from their Yemeni Jewish roots, not just in terms of the language they sing in — Yemeni Arabic — but also in their particular aesthetic. They frame their tradition with thrillingly up-to-date sounds and ideas.

So I was thrilled when they agreed to a late-night meetup with the NPR Music crew at SXSW this year to perform a lullaby of sorts, an achingly sweet love song, sung in Arabic and in three-part harmony, called “Ya Shaifin Al Malih.”

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