June 8, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Ghostbusters' Day Cast Crossover, the Best Blockbuster Budget Break Down and More

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

Cast Photo of the Day:

Today is Ghostbusters Day (the anniversary of the original movie’s release), so Paul Feig tweeted a great photo of the old guard and the new guard together:

I mean, c’mon, how can this picture NOT make you happy? This is an epic group of people. Happy Ghostbusters Day! ?????? pic.twitter.com/s5kSvaRZs5

— Paul Feig (@paulfeig) June 8, 2016

Movie Budget Breakdown of the Day:

Vanity Fair produced a $200,000,0000 movie’s end credits where the names are all replaced by how much they usually earn:

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Cosplay of the Day:

The latest greatest mashup cosplay combines Baymax from Big Hero 6 and a Stormtrooper from Star Wars (via Fashionably Geek):

Video Essay of the Day:

Speaking of Disney animated films, watch a Must See Films essay on the art of storytelling in Finding Nemo:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

With this being Ghostbusters Day, here’s an old pic from the set of the 1984 original:

Reworked Trailer of the Day:

If Battlefield Earth had a modern style trailer like this, maybe it wouldn’t have been such a box office flop:

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

On Best Friends Day, Guardians of the Galaxy buddies Rocket Raccoon and Groot become even more adorable mashed with My Neighbor Totoro (via Darth Blender):

Filmmaker in Focus:

The British Film Institute honors the little-known director Alan Clarke with a focus on his influential use of steadicam and walking shots:

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Reunion of the Day:

Lea Thompson is reuniting with Howard the Duck in comic book form, teased in the tweet below.

Exclusive: ‘Howard the Duck’ movie star returns for new comic version https://t.co/DTGdZOWfSl pic.twitter.com/WJV3L3f1PC

— Hollywood Reporter (@THR) June 7, 2016

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Ivan Reitman’s Evolution. Watch the original trailer for the Ghostbusters-like sci-fi comedy below.

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and

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In Texas, Strict Laws On Clinics Drive Demand For Abortion Pill

The abortion pill is booming in Texas. Since the FDA loosened restrictions, more women are circumventing strict state laws on Texas abortion clinics by taking the pill as an alternative to surgery.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Women who seek an abortion in Texas have slightly more choice these days. In March, the Food and Drug Administration simplified rules on abortion medication. Texas is deeply conservative with some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation. But as NPR’s John Burnett reports, there has been a sharp increase in women choosing nonsurgical abortion.

JOHN BURNETT, BYLINE: The waiting room at Whole Woman’s Health Clinic in San Antonio has big, black easy chairs and soothing mauve walls hung with feminist posters. A young woman who asked to be identified by her initials, H.D., says she’s here to terminate a seven-week presidency. Like more and more women in Texas, she’s asking for a small, white tablet.

H D: The reason that I would choose the pill versus the surgical procedure is the comfort of your home without you having to deal with coming to the office and then being hounded outside by, you know, protestors or what have you. And a lot of times you don’t want too many people knowing what’s going on. With the pill, I feel like it’s more kind of to yourself.

BURNETT: Texas is hostile territory for abortion rights. In 2013, the GOP-controlled State House passed a sweeping bill that medical experts say is unnecessary. It imposed new restrictions on surgical and medical abortions. Believing the FDA rules on abortion pills were plenty strict, lawmakers told women to start following the federal protocol. It worked. Use of the abortion drug in Texas fell sharply. Then

in late March, the federal agency relaxed its rules, effectively giving women an end run around the legislature’s anti-abortion posture. The new FDA label on abortion medication requires fewer doctor visits, meaning women can take most of the abortion pills at home. The dosage is lower, and they can take the medication for a pregnancy of up to 10 weeks. Before, it was seven weeks.

The response was immediate. Whole Woman’s Health, which has three Texas abortion clinics, has seen requests for the abortion bill jump from 1 in 10 patients to more than half of all of its patients. Planned Parenthood has noted a of four-fold increase in women seeking the abortion drug at its five clinics in Texas. Rachel Bergstrom-Carlson manages the Planned Parenthood clinic in Austin.

RACHEL BERGSTROM-CARLSON: Many women felt that it was a more natural feeling, a more personal experience that didn’t have to be so clinical and surgical. They were in their home. They were in charge of their own bodies.

BURNETT: Medication abortion is a combination of two pills, Mifepristone and Misoprostol, that stop a pregnancy and induce a miscarriage. Taken together, the pills have a 95 percent success rate. The abortion pill became legal in the United States in 2000. Today in the U.S., just over a third of women who get abortions in the first nine weeks use medication according to the Guttmacher Institute, a non-profit that studies abortion issues.

And the number is climbing. Researchers say more women ask for it, and more abortion providers offer it. To abortion foes, both procedures are equally bad. On a recent weeknight, Rosita Rodriguez stands with a group of Catholic women holding a vigil outside an abortion clinic in McAllen.

ROSITA RODRIGUEZ: We’re against abortion in any way. We are against the pill, and we are against everything that goes against the moment of conception. That’s why we’re praying.

BURNETT: The new FDA guidelines are a rare bit of good news embattled abortion rights advocates in Texas, but it’s far from a cause for celebration, says Janet Crepps. She’s senior counsel at the Center for Reproductive Rights in New York.

JANET CREPPS: This is definitely a positive step for women – the FDA label change and the increased availability of medication abortion. But it’s not addressing the root problem, which is all of the unnecessary regulations that are closing clinics and placing obstacles in the path of women seeking abortions.

BURNETT: Both sides are now watching the Supreme Court, awaiting a landmark ruling on the constitutionality of Texas’ controversial anti-abortion law that’s expected this month. Observers say whether the justices strike down the law or uphold it will dramatically affect access to both types of abortion – medication and surgical. John Burnett, NPR News, Austin.

SHAPIRO: Tomorrow on MORNING EDITION, John reports on the growing number of women crossing the border into Mexico to buy pills for do-it-yourself abortions.

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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Drone Taxis? Nevada To Allow Testing Of Passenger Drone

The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International in January in Las Vegas. The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger.

The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International in January in Las Vegas. The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. John Locher/AP hide caption

toggle caption John Locher/AP

The idea: a drone taxi that can transport a single passenger for up to 23 minutes.

A Chinese company called EHang and the state of Nevada are trying to make this happen by moving forward with testing the EHang 184 drone. It’s billed as the “world’s first passenger drone capable of autonomously carrying a person in the air for 23 minutes,” as The Guardian reported.

“I personally look forward to the day when drone taxis are part of Nevada’s transportation system,” Tom Wilczek, Aerospace and Defense Industry Specialist for the Governor’s Office of Economic Development, said in a statement.

As The Guardian points out, that could take a while: “Given that fully autonomous road vehicles are unlikely to be widely available until the middle of the next decade, the time when commuters can simply jump in a flying autonomous taxi drone to get to work appears to be some time off yet.”

The GOED and the Nevada Institute for Autonomous Systems reached an agreement with EHang last month and “will help guide EHang through the FAA regulatory process with the ultimate goal of achieving safe flight,” according to the GOED statement.

The drone was first introduced in Nevada at the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show in January in Las Vegas. Testing is expected to begin this year at the Nevada FAA UAS Test Site, though no specific dates have been announced.

You can see the drone in action here:

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YouTube

According to the video, the designer was inspired to design “an absolute safe aerial vehicle” after two of his friends were killed in airplane crashes.

The experience is meant to be extremely simple for the passenger. The company explains: “After setting up the flight plan with a single click, user can take off on any location, sit, relax and enjoy the flight.”

It’s that simplicity that has raised safety questions. As Business Insider wrote after the drone was unveiled, “The first question I had was what would happen if the flight-control tablet crashed or some technical issue arose mid-flight.” Similarly, “there weren’t any physical controls such as a steering wheel or joystick to be found.” The site says that according to EHang, there are “multiple fail-safes in place to take over if there’s a specific failure,” and a flight control center that “can intervene if necessary.”

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Louisville, Ky., Celebrates Muhammad Ali With 'I Am Ali' Festival

A celebration of Muhammad Ali’s life that focused on children happened Wednesday in Ali’s hometown of Louisville, Ky. The festival included music, dance and educational activities and intended to remind young people that they, like Ali, “can become the greatest at whatever they choose.”

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Muhammad Ali will be laid to rest in Louisville, Ky., later this week. Today his hometown celebrated with a festival that focused on children and their dreams for the future. Rick Howlett of member station WFPL reports.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

GREG FISHER: I am Ali.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: I am Ali.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: I am Ali.

RICK HOWLETT, BYLINE: On the steps of the Kentucky Center for the Arts, Louisville Mayor Greg Fisher leads children in a chant of the festival’s theme, I am Ali, which urges young people to recognize their potential for greatness the way Ali did in the boxing ring and beyond.

Nearby people are lining up to sign a large canvas banner. Because of you, we are a better people, wrote one admirer. Truly the greatest, said another. Thank you for all your strength and courage. Inside the center there were educational booths, zoo animals and places to make crafts or color.

Jenny Friesen, who’s not old enough to remember Muhammad Ali’s boxing days, came to the festival with her dad and her sister. But the 11-year-old says Ali has inspired her to work hard toward her goal of becoming a teacher.

JENNY FRIESEN: If you’re passionate about something that – you can do that if you would like to do it because you’re your own person, and you don’t have to listen to what other people say.

HOWLETT: Andrea Houston of Louisville, who brought her young niece and nephew, calls the event a blessing.

ANDREA HOUSTON: It’s celebrating one of your own and teaching your children that excellence and practice and doing good in school and whatever it is that you desire to do – that you can be great at it if you just put your mind to it.

HOWLETT: Just a short walk from the festival, children are being handed roses to place at a makeshift memorial at the cultural center Mohammed Ali helped build. Tony Jackson, his wife and their two young sons are paying their respects. Jackson says there was much more to Ali than what people saw in the boxing ring.

TONY JACKSON: At the same time he was a loving, caring person, and he loved kids. He loved kids.

HOWLETT: Five-year-old Rodderick Woods, visiting with his mom, is wearing boxing gloves, a cape and a gold medal. He’s brought along a poster he’s made for the champ and can recite one of Ali’s most famous lines.

RODDERICK WOODS: Float like a butterfly. Sting like a bee.

HOWLETT: The mayor’s office is planning more Ali events this week, including a bicycle ride through his old neighborhood. For NPR News, I’m Rick Howlett in Louisville.

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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