May 4, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Star Wars: Episode VIII' and Han Solo Spinoff Teases and More 'Star Wars' Day Treats

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

Thank You of the Day:

Daisy Ridley (Rey) is joined by BB-8, Vober Dand, Admiral Ackbar and a resurrected Ello Asty to wish you a happy Star Wars Day and thank you for contributing to the Force for Change charity in this official video teasing a set from Episode VIII:

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Tease of the Day:

Christopher Miller, co-director of the upcoming solo Han Solo movie, tweeted this image and statement making us excited for the prequel spinoff:

Can’t wait to get “shooting”!#MayThe4thBeWithYou pic.twitter.com/HlteYut6m0

— Chris Miller (@chrizmillr) May 4, 2016

Band Reunion of the Day:

Watch a short documentary on the Cantina Band and fake concert footage from their reunion at Coachella in this Nerdist video:

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Poster Tribute of the Day:

The poster for Star Wars: The Force Awakens inspired this one for Sharkado: The 4th Awakens, which had already parodied its title (via Twitter):

Movie Legacy of the Day:

On Twitter, Pixar shared this video of all the Star Wars references in the Toy Story movies:

Truly wonderful, the mind of a filmmaker is. #MayThe4thBeWithYouhttps://t.co/zUPnpN14CY

— Disney•Pixar (@DisneyPixar) May 4, 2016

Fan Art of the Day:

BB-8 is cute, but wouldn’t he be cooler if he could take part in more of the action? He needs this fan-designed mech suit (via Twitter):

Behind the Scenes Fight of the Day:

Three 1980s hand models, employed for a Return of the Jedi toy commercial, get into a squirmish with real lightsabers in this new Nerdist sketch (via Live for Films):

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Cosplay of the Day:

Elizabeth Banks tweeted this photo of herself in Leia’s slave bikini:

Happy @starwars day! Finally got my hands on a gold bikini. #MayThe4thBeWithYou pic.twitter.com/56S7JWmdES

— Elizabeth Banks (@ElizabethBanks) May 4, 2016

Alternate Endings of the Day:

The Frost Bros changed the ending of The Force Awakens just a bit to make it really weird:

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And here’s another weird one from Twitter:

LMAO Who Did This?! @HamillHimself #DaisyRidley #StarWarsDayhttps://t.co/c6R10RTqG1

— yourENTERTAINMENT (@yourENTnews) May 4, 2016

Classic Trailer of the Day:

20 years ago, the following trailer advertised the return of Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi to theaters, with some modifications:

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and

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DOT Announces Recall Of Up To 40 Million More Takata Air Bag Inflators

Mark Rosekind, administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, speaks Wednesday during a news conference on Takata air bags in Washington, D.C.

Mark Rosekind, administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, speaks Wednesday during a news conference on Takata air bags in Washington, D.C. Mark Wilson/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Mark Wilson/Getty Images

The Department of Transportation on Wednesday announced the recall of an additional 35 million to 40 million faulty air bag inflators made by Japan’s Takata Corp., an auto-parts supplier.

Already, 28.8 million Takata inflators have been recalled. In all, this massive action will add up to the largest safety recall in U.S. history.

DOT’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said the problem comes down to this: “the inflators’ propensity to rupture.” Those ruptures have been tied to 10 deaths and more than 100 injuries in this country.

“The acceleration of this recall is based on scientific evidence and will protect all Americans from air bag inflators that may become unsafe,” Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said.

The government says “time, environmental moisture and fluctuating high temperatures contribute to the degradation of the ammonium nitrate propellant in the inflators. Such degradation can cause the propellant to burn too quickly.”

That rapid burn can rupture the inflator and spray shrapnel into drivers and passengers.

“People who receive notification that there is a remedy available for their vehicle should act immediately to have their inflator fixed,” NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind said.

He urged vehicle owners to check SaferCar.gov for information about any open recalls. On that website, owners also can find out what to do to have safety problems fixed free of charge. The specific car and truck models included in the latest Takata recall were not immediately released.

Last year, NHTSA imposed the largest civil penalty in its history on Takata for violations of the Motor Vehicle Safety Act. NHTSA has appointed an independent monitor to assess, track and report the company’s compliance with the recall program.

Takata makes air bags, seat belts and other parts for the auto industry. Now it faces huge losses. Takata said earlier this week that it would book one-time charges totaling 20.1 billion yen, or $189 million, to cover cost of the recalls and settlements with victims.

The company has been hit with widespread criticism for moving too slowly to recognize the problem and provide authorities with complete and accurate information. Now, it will take years to replace all of the defective parts.

Many consumers have expressed frustration through social media. Rick DeGaetano, a computer consultant in Hayward, Calif., spoke by phone with NPR after he took to Facebook to vent about the potential danger — and financial harm — done by Takata.

DeGaetano said his friend’s car was affected. Even aside from worrying “that you’re going to get shrapnel in your face if you get in an accident,” his friend also has to worry about losing money, DeGaetano said. “It hurts the resale value of your car,” he said.

NPR business intern Naomi LaChance contributed to this report.

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Major Chains Sports Authority, Sport Chalet Close Hundreds Of Stores

Two large sporting goods chains, Sports Authority and Sport Chalet, are in the process of closing hundreds of stores nationwide. NPR’s Robert Siegel talks with Jim Peltz, who has been covering this story for the Los Angeles Times.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Sports are competitive. The sporting goods industry is competitive, too. So much so that two major chains are closing up shop. Sports Authority and the West Coast retailer Sports Chalet have more than 500 stores between them, and nearly 200 are already shutting down.

Jim Peltz has been writing about this for the LA Times and joins us now. And tell us first what’s going on with these two chains? Why are they struggling?

JIM PELTZ: Well, there’s a lot of reasons, Robert. The problem with Sport Chalet and Sports Authority is that they sort of had all of these competitive pressures hitting them from all different sorts of directions. They were up against much more prosperous and larger rivals such as Dick’s Sporting Goods. They were up against the mass merchandisers such as Target and Wal-Mart. They were up against the enormous power of Amazon.com and the online sector, and then they had a few of their own problems. Mainly, they were heavily in debt.

SIEGEL: You mentioned Dick’s Sporting Goods. They’re doing all right, so is REI. What are those stores doing differently than Sports Authority and Sport Chalet?

PELTZ: Well, let’s take each one of them. Dick’s Sporting Goods is sort of considered the leader in the sporting goods business now. It’s up to about 650 stores. They have tremendous selection. They have competitive prices. Its size, its scale, as they like to say in business circles, is really important with regard to suppliers. If you’re a large, prosperous chain, you’re going to cut better deals with your suppliers, which means in turn that you’ll have competitive pricing compared to a much smaller, less prosperous company. So that’s one of the key reasons.

SIEGEL: And REI?

PELTZ: REI, which is Recreational Equipment Inc., is well-known for its hiking and its mountain climbing and things like that. They bring a very well-versed staff. When you go into one of their stores, not only do you have help that really knows what they’re talking about, they also have all of those cool indoor rock climbing things where you can try out some of their equipment, try out their apparel and so forth. And they’ve clearly created a special niche there and they’re well-known for it.

SIEGEL: Has the sporting goods business generally – apart from the competitive pressures from Amazon or Target or other mass merchants – has the actual business changed a lot over the past few years?

PELTZ: It’s changed tremendously, Robert. And it used to be – if you think back in the day – if you just needed your basic sporting goods – say, a little leaguer needed a new glove or you wanted the new tennis racket or a set of golf clubs, you just went into a basic sporting goods store and that was that.

Nowadays when people think of, like, going into a sporting goods store, they may very well be thinking of real particular new products such as an activity tracker that comes from Fitbit or maybe they want to buy yoga pants or something like that that come from an outfit like Lululemon. So really the scope and the breadth of what a sporting goods retailer is all about has widened tremendously in the last 10 years.

SIEGEL: Sports Authority is headquartered in a suburb of Denver. It’s actually – Sports Authority’s name is on the stadium where the Denver Broncos play.

PELTZ: Correct.

SIEGEL: What’s going to happen there, chapter 11 stadium?

PELTZ: Well, it may be chapter seven because they’re actually going to liquidate.

SIEGEL: I see.

PELTZ: But all kidding aside, the speculation is pretty widespread that that name won’t be on Mile High Stadium, as it used to be known. When the start of the NFL season comes in September, the Denver Post is among those that have reported that they expect the naming rights to go elsewhere.

SIEGEL: Jim Peltz, thanks for talking with us.

PELTZ: My pleasure. Thank you, Robert.

SIEGEL: Jim Peltz, business reporter for the Los Angeles Times.

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 Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Indiana Town Struggles To Contain HIV Outbreak Fueled By Drug Abuse

A year after Indiana declared a state of emergency because of an HIV outbreak fueled by drug abuse, the availability of drug treatment continues to lag.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Last spring, the state of Indiana declared an emergency after a major HIV outbreak in the small town of Austin. Drug users there were injecting the painkiller Opana and sharing needles.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

At the time, the response was to open a one-stop shop where people could pick up clean needles and information about drug treatment. They could also get health insurance, state IDs and job training. Well, now, one year later, that response has been scaled way back. And the people at the center of this outbreak have been left with very few resources. Our colleague, Kelly McEvers, has the story.

KELLY MCEVERS, BYLINE: Four days a week, this is what happens in Austin, Ind. A little white SUV goes up and down the streets with clean needles and sharps containers where you can throw away old needles.

So you’ve got people who are expecting you?

BRITTANY COMBS: Yes.

MCEVERS: Oh, OK.

COMBS: We have, like, a set schedule that we do, and then we kind of drive around.

MCEVERS: Brittany Combs is a public health nurse for the county.

COMBS: We’re just going, like, right down the road for this first one, so…

MCEVERS: She drives up and down the streets of Austin, passing out clean needles.

COMBS: Everybody’s going to be outside today.

MCEVERS: This is most of what’s left of the one-stop shop – this mobile needle exchange run by Brittany Combs and two other staffers in their spare time. Most days, Brittany Combs does her regular job for eight hours, then she comes out here for two to three more hours and doesn’t get paid for it.

COMBS: We’re basically volunteering our time, yes.

MCEVERS: I mean, basically, if you stopped caring, like…

COMBS: Oh, it wouldn’t – it wouldn’t get done. Oh, there’s no way. There’s no way it would get done.

There’s Theresa now.

MCEVERS: We pull up to a house, and two women open the door. One is named Theresa, and the other doesn’t want to give her name. They don’t want to be identified because they’re doing drugs illegally.

COMBS: How are you doing?

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: Oh, pretty good.

MCEVERS: Brittany writes down how many needles one woman is getting.

COMBS: And you don’t share with anybody, right?

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: Hell no. Hell no.

COMBS: I didn’t think so. And you only use them once, right?

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: Right.

COMBS: What have you been using, just Opana?

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: Yeah, Opana. Opana – anything I can get in me. Can I just get my needle?

COMBS: Yep.

MCEVERS: Then, Teresa says she wants to quit using Opana. She says she went to the health department’s satellite office in town. There is an addiction clinic there with a doctor who comes once a week. Theresa says she couldn’t get an appointment. She says what she really wants is a prescription for Suboxone, a drug that blocks the effects of opioids, like Opana and heroin, and helps with withdrawals.

THERESA: I need, you know, Suboxone to get off the stuff. But I never did get to go see a doctor, so, you know, I just quit.

MCEVERS: She doesn’t mean she quit using Opana. She means she quit trying to stop using Opana.

THERESA: I mean, I can’t wait. I can’t get off of them by myself.

MCEVERS: Brittany Combs, the public health nurse, says this happens a lot. People say they want to stop using drugs, but there aren’t very many options. Research has found that medication-assisted treatment through drugs like Suboxone helps people stop abusing other drugs. And it’s linked to stopping the spread of infectious diseases.

COMBS: The Suboxone is what most of our people want. They’re actually buying it illegally on the street to try to quit themselves. That’s how desperate they are.

MCEVERS: But not many doctors are authorized to prescribe Suboxone, and even they are limited in how many prescriptions they can write. Also, many doctors only take cash for Suboxone. Brittany Combs says one patient called around for months looking for a doctor who would prescribe it and take insurance.

COMBS: I have somebody who came in the program, and he’s excited. He said, I finally got a Suboxone doctor. He has to go almost to Cincinnati to get his Suboxone. So now he has to get someone to drive him over there in order to get his meds.

MCEVERS: So that is if you’re extremely motivated.

COMBS: Extremely motivated and have access to things like car rides, which a lot of these people don’t.

MCEVERS: Cincinnati is almost a hundred miles away. That doctor Theresa was talking about – the one who comes once a week – can prescribe Suboxone. But this doctor will only do that after a drug user has completed a 30-day inpatient treatment program. The closest one is the next county over, and the waiting list there is four to six weeks.

JASON MOUNT: There’s the old jail there.

MCEVERS: One of the few places you can get help if you’re drug user in Austin, Ind., is the county jail, says Jason Mount, the local prosecutor.

MOUNT: Well, in a rural county, what you find is that, you know, the jail is where people await trial, but it’s also a mental health facility. It’s also a detox facility. It’s also a homeless shelter. We don’t have any of those resources otherwise, so a lot of those people in the margins – this is where they wind up.

MCEVERS: Most drug users end up detoxing in jail – basically quitting cold turkey. But they can also get hooked up with services, like a nurse, and they can get on that waiting list for inpatient rehab. Plus, officials say, the jail will still soon administer another medication-assisted treatment, Vivitrol. That’s a once-a-month shot that blocks the effect of opioids. The state of Indiana has just budgeted an additional $30 million over the next two years to try to get people treatment rather than jail time. But that’s earmarked for people with felony convictions.

MOUNT: I would love to see a situation where it would be easier for somebody Scott County, before they ever came in contact with the criminal justice system – to be able to walk in someplace and get themselves into treatment. We’re working on those things, and they’re getting better. But historically, that’s been a real obstacle for us.

MCEVERS: There are people in the county who are applying for grants to train hospital workers to deal with addiction. And they’re trying to highlight the stories of people who’ve been through recovery. Still, Scott County, Ind., is the lowest-ranked county in the state for health outcomes. Officials say it’s like a lot of places in Indiana and around the country that are just starting to deal with the opioid epidemic.

SIEGEL: That’s our co-host Kelly McEvers. Tomorrow, we’ll have the story of one woman in Austin, Ind., and her struggle to stop using Opana.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #2: This time last year, I had a home. I had a car, my house full of furniture, a lot of nice stuff – you know, a big sectional sofa and a glass coffee table and a real heavy cherry dinette set. I had my kids, rings on every finger, you know, money in the bank. And in 12 – less than 12 months – gone.

SIEGEL: That story tomorrow on ALL THINGS CONSIDERED.

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 Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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