May 24, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Vanilla Ice Brings Back “Ninja Rap,” Gillian Anderson as James Bond and More

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

Movie Premiere Performance of the Day:

Vanilla Ice made an appearance at the premiere of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows to perform “Ninja Rap” from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Secret of the Ooze (via Geek Tyrant):

Movie Promotion of the Day:

Speaking of TMNT, it takes a big fan to want to stay in this apartment that Paramount turned into a re-creation of the Ninja Turtles’ lair and made available to rent via AirBnB — with free pizza delivery. See more photos at Geekologie.

Movie Franchise Takedown of the Day:

Honest Trailers puts down all the X-Men movies in its half-assed celebration of X-Men: The Animated Series:

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Celebrity Tweet of the Day:

Fans want Gillian Anderson to be the new James Bond, and she’s down with the idea and this mock poster:

It’s Bond. Jane Bond.
Thanks for all the votes! (And sorry, don’t know who made poster but I love it!) #NextBond pic.twitter.com/f8GC4ZuFgL

— Gillian Anderson (@GillianA) May 21, 2016

Mashup of the Day:

The latest Hero Swap cartoon imagines the Terminator as the main character of Disney’s Pinocchio:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Bob Dylan, who turns 75 today, filmed by D.A. Pennebaker for the classic documentary Don’t Look Back:

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is also the 75th anniversary of the release of the classic Merrie Melodies short Hollywood Steps Out featuring caricatures of the biggest movie stars of the time. Watch it in full below.

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Abridged Movie of the Day:

Below is just part of a new epic re-telling of Star Wars that you need to go and scroll through (via Sploid).

Adorable Cosplay of the Day:

Now even kids are getting into the mashup cosplay game. Here’s a little girl dressed as Elsa Rey, mixing Frozen with Star Wars: The Force Awakens. See more pics including a custom Lego version of the look at Fashionably Geek.

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of the theatrical release of Thelma & Louise. Watch the original trailer for the Oscar-winning movie, which stars Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon, below.

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and

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Baby Boomers Will Become Sicker Seniors Than Earlier Generations

There will be 55 percent more people with diabetes as Baby Boomers become senior citizens, a report finds.

There will be 55 percent more people with diabetes as Baby Boomers become senior citizens, a report finds. Rolf Bruderer/Blend Images/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Rolf Bruderer/Blend Images/Getty Images

The next generation of senior citizens will be sicker and costlier to the health care system over the next 14 years than previous generations, according to a new report from the United Health Foundation. We’re talking about you, Baby Boomers.

The report looks at the current health status of people aged 50 to 64 and compares them to the same ages in 1999.

The upshot? There will be about 55 percent more senior citizens who have diabetes than there are today, and about 25 percent more who are obese. Overall, the report says that the next generation of seniors will be 9 percent less likely to say they have good or excellent overall health.

That’s bad news for Baby Boomers. Health care costs for people with diabetes are about 2.5 times higher than for those without, according to the study.

It’s also bad news for taxpayers.

The Health Of Baby Boomers As They Age, For Better And Worse

  • GOOD: 50 percent fewer smokers
  • BAD: 55 percent more people with diabetes
  • BAD: 25 percent more people who are obese
  • BAD: 9 percent less likely to say they have “very good” or “excellent” health

Source: UnitedHealth Foundation

“The dramatic increase has serious implications for the long-term health of those individuals and for the finances of our nation,” says Rhonda Randall, a senior adviser to the United Health Foundation and chief medical officer at UnitedHealthcare Retiree Solutions, which sells Medicare Advantage plans.

Most of the costs will be borne by Medicare, the government-run health care system for seniors, and by extension, taxpayers.

Some states will be harder hit than others. Colorado, for example, can expect the numbers of older people with diabetes to increase by 138 percent by 2030, while Arizona will see its population of obese people over 65 grow by 90 percent.

There is some good news in the report, too.

People who are now between 65 and 80 years old have seen their overall health improve compared to three years ago. And people who are aging into the senior community are far less likely to smoke than earlier generations.

“Some of these trends are very good and in the right direction,” Randall tells Shots.

She says the decrease in smoking shows that it’s possible to change health behaviors, nothing that doctors, public health professionals and policy makers used a variety of strategies simultaneously to reduce smoking.

“That’s a good model for what we need to look at to tackle the epidemic of diabetes and the big concern we have around obesity,” she says.

The study also ranked states on the health of their current senior populations. Massachusetts topped the list, jumping to number one from the number six ranking it had the last time the rankings were calculated. Vermont slipped to number two.

Louisiana is the least healthy state for older adults.

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NFL Awards Super Bowls To Atlanta, South Florida And Los Angeles

The Atlanta Falcons' new stadium, seen here on May 16, is currently under construction. The project helped Atlanta win the bid for the 2019 Super Bowl.

The Atlanta Falcons’ new stadium, seen here on May 16, is currently under construction. The project helped Atlanta win the bid for the 2019 Super Bowl. David Goldman/AP hide caption

toggle caption David Goldman/AP

The NFL announced three new sites for upcoming Super Bowls on Tuesday. Atlanta will get Super Bowl LIII in 2019, South Florida will host the following year and Los Angeles will have 2021.

The league had previously announced that the championship game would be held in Houston next year and in Minneapolis in 2018.

Atlanta will be hosting its third Super Bowl ever, and its first since 2000, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. The paper adds:

“The vote capped a year-long effort by the Falcons and Atlanta’s bid committee to secure the game for the $1.4 billion retractable-roof stadium under construction next to the Georgia Dome.

“The bid, titled ‘Atlanta Transformed,’ emphasized the new stadium and its close proximity to other downtown attractions that were not in place when the Super Bowl was last played at the Georgia Dome.”

Earlier this year, the NFL had warned that the city could jeopardize its bid over Georgia legislation that restricted rights of LGBT people. Under pressure from the league and Atlanta businesses, the governor vetoed the bill in March, as The Two-Way reported.

The last time Los Angeles hosted the Super Bowl was 1993, The Los Angeles Times reports; the city’s new stadium is expected to open in 2019.

“There have been seven Super Bowls in the L.A. area, including the first,” the Times says, “but the city was taken out of the rotation when the Rams and Raiders left after the 1994 season.” (The NFL approved the Rams’ move back to Los Angeles in January.)

The Florida Sun-Sentinel notes that the bidding process has become more competitive in recent years “due to the economic windfall that it brings. The league has been favoring cities with new or significantly renovated stadiums.

The stadium in South Florida is undergoing a $450 million renovation by Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.

2017: Houston

2018: Minneapolis

2019: Atlanta

2020: South Florida

2021: Los Angeles

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The Judgment Of Paris: The Blind Taste Test That Decanted The Wine World

On May 24, 1976, the Judgment of Paris pitted some of the finest wines in France against unknown California bottles in a blind taste test. Nine of the most respected names in French gastronomy sat in judgment.

On May 24, 1976, the Judgment of Paris pitted some of the finest wines in France against unknown California bottles in a blind taste test. Nine of the most respected names in French gastronomy sat in judgment. Courtesy of Bella Spurrier hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Bella Spurrier

It was the tasting that revolutionized the wine world.

Forty years ago today, the crème de la crème of the French wine establishment sat in judgment for a blind tasting that pitted some of the finest wines in France against unknown California bottles. Only one journalist bothered to show up – the outcome was considered a foregone conclusion.

“Obviously, the French wines were going to win,” says journalist George Taber, who was then a correspondent for TIME magazine in Paris. He says everyone thought “it’s going to be a non-story.”

Taber did show up — as a favor to the organizers. And he ended up getting the biggest story of his career: To everyone’s amazement, the California wines – reds and whites — beat out their French competitors.

“It turned out to be the most important event, because it broke the myth that only in France could you make great wine. It opened the door for this phenomenon today of the globalization of wine,” Taber says.

The Judgment of Paris, as that May 24, 1976, wine tasting has come to be known, began as a publicity stunt. Steven Spurrier, an Englishman who owned a wine shop in Paris, wanted to drum up business. So, prompted by Patricia Gallagher, his American associate, Spurrier decided to stage a competition that highlighted the new California wines they’d been hearing so much about.

Spurrier tapped nine of the most respected names in French gastronomy for the job. They included sommeliers from the best French restaurants in Paris, the head of a highly regarded French vineyard, and Odette Kahn, the editor of the influential Revue du vin de France (The French Wine Review.)

As the sole journalist present, Taber had a lot of access, and he had a list of the order of the wines being served during the tasting. The judges didn’t. He watched as they swirled and spat.

At one point, Taber says, a judge – Raymond Oliver, chef and owner of Le Grand Véfour, one of Paris’ great restaurants — sampled a white. “And then he smelled it, then he tasted it and he held it up again, [and] he said, “Ah, back to France!” Taber recalls.

From left: Patricia Gallagher, who first proposed the tasting, wine merchant Steven Spurrier, and influential French wine editor Odette Kahn. After the results were announced, Kahn is said to have demanded her scorecard back. “She wanted to make sure that the world didn’t know what her scores were,” says George Taber, the only journalist present that day. Courtesy of Bella Spurrier hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Bella Spurrier

Except it was a Napa Valley Chardonnay. The judge didn’t know that. “But I knew,” Taber says. And once he realized what was happening, Taber says, “I thought, hey, maybe I got a story here.” Decades later, he penned The Judgment of Paris, an account of that day and its aftermath.

When the scores were tallied, the top honors went not to France’s best vintners but to a California white and red – the 1973 Chardonnay from Chateau Montelena and the 1973 Cabernet Sauvignon from Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars. (A bottle of each now resides at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.)

Taber says the results shocked everyone. When it was over, Kahn unsuccessfully demanded her scorecard back – according to Taber, “she wanted to make sure that the world didn’t know what her scores were.”

Wine writer David White says the tasting was a major turning point for the wine industry. “The 1976 judgment totally changed the game,” says White, who writes the popular wine blog Terroirist and is the author of the forthcoming book, But First, Champagne: A Modern Guide to the World’s Favorite Wine.

While winemaker Robert Mondavi played a major role in making California the wine powerhouse it is today, the Paris tasting was equally influential, White says. As the late Jim Barrett, part owner of Napa Valley’s Chateau Montelena, told Taber back in 1976, the results were “not bad for kids from the sticks.”

And it wasn’t just California that was transformed. The results “gave winemakers everywhere a reason to believe that they too could take on the greatest wines in the world,” White says.

In the aftermath of the tasting, new vineyards bloomed around the U.S. (think Oregon, Washington and Virginia) and the world — from Argentina to Australia.

The Judgment of Paris prompted the world’s winemakers to start sharing and comparing in a way they hadn’t done before, says Warren Winiarski, the Polish-American founder of Stag’s Leap, whose Cabernet Sauvignon took top honors among the reds in Paris.

As a result, he said at a recent Smithsonian event in honor of that long-ago tasting, “the wines of the world are better, the wines of France are better.”

Which means the world’s wine lovers were the real winners that day.

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