June 11, 2016

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Creator Takes The Belmont Stakes In A Photo Finish

Creator, with jockey Irad Ortiz Jr, and Destin, with jockey Javier Castellano, race to the finish during the 148th running of the Belmont Stakes on Saturday.

Creator, with jockey Irad Ortiz Jr, and Destin, with jockey Javier Castellano, race to the finish during the 148th running of the Belmont Stakes on Saturday. Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images

Creator closed with a rush and caught Destin at the wire to win the $1.5 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday, with Preakness winner Exaggerator finishing well back in the field.

The 3-year-old gray colt trained by Steve Asmussen came flying down the stretch as Destin tried to hang on to the lead. But it was Creator, who finished 13th in the Derby and skipped the Preakness, who won by a nose. It was the fourth time the Belmont was decided by a nose — the closest possible margin of victory.

Preakness winner Exaggerator was sent off as the 7-5 favorite in the field of 13. He was closer to the lead than usual, but wound up 11th.

A year ago, American Pharoah ran to Triple Crown glory at Belmont Park, but the achievement wasn’t on the line this time. Nyquist won the Kentucky Derby, but finished third in the Preakness and did not run in the Belmont.

The winning time for 1 1/2 miles was 2:28.51.

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Best of the Week: 'Ghostbusters' Casts United, New Details and Hopes for 'Justice League' and More

The Important News

DC Delirium: The Justice League movie will just be titled Justice League. James Wan revealed he chose Aquaman over The Flash. Justice League Dark may be an animated movie. Joker and Boomerang Suicide Squad spinoffs may be in the works.

Marvel Madness: Michael Barbieri joined Spider-Man: Homecoming as a friend of Peter Parker. Kenneth Choi also joined Spider-Man: Homecoming as a Peter’s principal. Doctor Strange and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 will be at Comic-Con.

Remake Report: Splash is getting a remake with a twist. Francis Lawrence will direct the Battlestar Galactica movie.

Franchise Fever: Cate Blanchett is in talks for the new Ocean’s Eleven spinoff.

Sequelitis: John Boyega joined Pacific Rim 2. Anthony Hopkins joined Transformers: The Last Knight. Mackenzie Davis joined Blade Runner 2. Mel Gibson is making The Passion of the Christ 2.

Casting Net: Sacha Baron Cohen will star in a Mandrake the Magician movie. Jennifer Lawrence is starring in another biopic.

New Directors, New Films: Ron Howard will direct the sci-fi movie Seveneves.

Box Office: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows underwhelmed but still won the weekend.

Animation Station: Phillipa Soo joined the voice cast of Disney’s Moana. How the Grinch Stole Christmas was pushed back a year.

Stunt Stories: Christopher Nolan plans to crash a $5 million antique plane for Dunkirk.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Ghostbusters, The Legend of Tarzan, The Shallows, Yoga Hosers, Kicks, Independent’s Day, Guernica and the Netflix series Stranger Things.

TV Spots: Suicide Squad.

Watch: 6 spooky clips from The Conjuring 2. And a terrifying Conjuring 2 candid camera prank.

See: A new production photo from Star Wars Episode VIII.

Watch: Ghostbusters character intro videos.

See: The old and new Ghostbusters casts united in a photo. And on Jimmy Kimmel Live!.

Watch: An honest trailer for Zootopia.

See: Deleted characters from Zootopia. And all the hidden Mickey Easter eggs in Zootopia.

Learn: How a blockbuster budget gets broken down to every single employee.

See: A first look at Jack Reacher: Never Go Back.

Watch: An animated recap of the Alien movies in under three minutes.

See: How Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull should have ended.

Learn: What went wrong with Fantastic Four from Toby Kebbell’s perspective.]

Watch: Deadpool mashed up with Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

See: Unused concept art for Marvel’s Black Panther costume.

Watch: Jude Law explains why he turned down the role of Superman.

See: What 2001: A Space Odyssey looks like animated by artist Pablo Picasso.

Watch: Horror icons from The Ring and The Grudge playing baseball in Japan.

See: This week’s best new movie posters.

Our Features

Marvel Movie Guide: What a solo Black Widow movie looks like.

DC Movie Guide: Hopes for a proper Man of Steel trilogy capper.

Geek Movie Guide: What we want from Pacific Rim 2.

Horror Movie Guide: All the latest horror news and trailers.

Classic Movie Guides: Remembering City Slickers. Celebrate the anniversary of Raiders of the Lost Ark with a look at its fan film remake.

Interviews: Jon M. Chu on Now You Can See Me 2.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

and

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New Airport Security Lanes In Atlanta Are 30% More Efficient, TSA Chief Says

Passengers line up to check in before their flights in May at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix. Two new automated security lanes at the Atlanta Airport are aimed at reducing long wait times.

Passengers line up to check in before their flights in May at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix. Two new automated security lanes at the Atlanta Airport are aimed at reducing long wait times. Matt York/AP hide caption

toggle caption Matt York/AP

A new type of airport security screening lane is being tested in Atlanta, and “initial results show dramatic improvements,” according to the head of the Transportation Security Administration.

The “innovation lanes” are aimed a reducing wait times, and Peter Neffenger says that two new automated lanes designed by Delta have shown a 30 percent improvement in efficiency since they were rolled out last month. Delta thinks this new model should be able to double the productivity of airport security lanes.

Speaking at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on Tuesday, Neffenger said these new lanes are “an example of the way in which we need to modernize and bring TSA into the 21st century.”

According to Delta’s chief operating officer, Gil West, the airline “funded everything” and “went from concept to start-up in less than two months.” He hails the results as a “game-changer.”

In the new lanes, customers “come through the lane not just one at a time, one after each other, but five at a time. You’re able to move in the process at the speed you’re capable of, not the person in front of you,” West says.

Rather than waiting single-file, there are five automated stations in a row for customers to deposit their belongings into bins. That means customers don’t need to wait for the person in front of them to finish unloading before they move their luggage into the cue.

The system also has an automatic rollers system and bin return, and diverts baggage out of the line if it requires further screening. It’s similar to the system used at London’s Heathrow Airport.

You can see the new lanes in action in this video from Delta:

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YouTube

The experiment in Atlanta comes as the TSA has been under fire for long security lanes at airports across the country, as NPR has reported.

Neffenger told the senators that the number of passengers screened annually continues to climb: “This year TSA will screen some 742 million people, projected. By comparison to 2013, TSA screened 643 million people, so our approach to screening requires a similar transformation.”

He adds that the TSA plans to launch similar projects with major airlines and airports in the coming months.

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This Doctor Wants To Help California Figure Out Aid-In-Dying

Lonny Shavelson has studied America's experiments with aid in dying. He's now helping patients and doctors in California come to grips with the state's new law.

Lonny Shavelson has studied America’s experiments with aid in dying. He’s now helping patients and doctors in California come to grips with the state’s new law. Courtesy of PhotoWords.com hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of PhotoWords.com

Few people have the unusual set of professional experiences that Lonny Shavelson does. He worked as an emergency room physician in Berkeley, Calif., for years, while also working as a journalist. He has written several books and takes hauntingly beautiful photographs.

Now he’ll add another specialty.

California’s End of Life Option Act, a law legalizing physician aid-in-dying for people who are terminally ill, took effect this week. Shavelson has become a consultant aimed at answering questions from physicians and patients about the practice — and plans to become a physician to terminally ill patients seeking to end their lives.

I first met Shavelson in 1996 as I was covering the reaction to Oregon voters’ approval of Measure 16, the state’s Death with Dignity Act.

Oregon was the first state to approve the practice, and in 1996 the law was held up in court. I turned to Shavelson as he had published A Chosen Death, a moving book that followed five terminally ill people over two years as they determined whether to amass drugs on their own and end their lives at a time of their choosing. He was present at the death of all of them.

He followed the issue of assisted suicide closely for several years more, but ultimately moved on to other projects, among them a book about addiction and a documentary about people who identify as neither male nor female.

Then last fall came the surprising passage of California’s End of Life Option Act, giving terminally ill adults with six months to live the right to request lethal medication to end their lives. The law took effect Thursday.

Copies of the covers of Shavelson's books decorate his office wall.

Copies of the covers of Shavelson’s books decorate his office wall. Lisa Aliferis/KQED hide caption

toggle caption Lisa Aliferis/KQED

Shavelson decided he has to act, although he feels “quite guilty” about having been away from the issue while others pushed it forward.

“Can I just sit back and watch?” Shavelson told me from his cottage office in his backyard in Berkeley. “This is really an amazing opportunity to be part of establishing policy and initiating something in medicine. This is a major change … [that] very, very few people know anything about and how to do it.”

His website, Bay Area End of Life Options, went up in April, and he outlined the law at grand rounds at several Bay Area hospitals this spring. His practice will be focused on consulting not only with physicians whose patients request aid-in-dying, but also with patients themselves, including offering care to patients who choose him as their “attending End-of-Life physician,” as he indicates on his site.

Shavelson is adamant that this is “something that has to be done right.” To him, that means starting every patient encounter with a one-word question: “Why?”

“In fact, it’s the only initial approach that I think is acceptable. If somebody calls me and says, ‘I want to take the medication,’ my first question is, ‘Why? Let me talk to you about all the various alternatives and all the ways that we can think about this,’ ” he predicts he will say.

Shavelson worries that patients may seek aid-in-dying because they are in pain. So first, he would like all his patients to be enrolled in hospice care.

“This can only work when you’re sure that the patients have been given the best end-of-life care, which to me is most guaranteed by being a part of hospice or at least having a good palliative care physician. Then this is a rational decision. If you’re doing it otherwise, it’s because of lack of good care.”

California is the fifth state to legalize aid-in-dying, joining Oregon, Washington, Vermont and Montana. The option is very rarely used. For example, in 2014 in Oregon, 155 lethal prescriptions were written under the state’s law, and 105 people ultimately took the medicine and died, a death rate under this method of less than 0.5 percent.

Under the California law, two doctors must agree that a mentally competent patient has six months or less to live. One of the patient-doctor meetings must be private, between only the patient and the physician, to ensure the patient is acting independently. Patients must be able to swallow the medication themselves and must state in writing, in the 48 hours before taking the medication, that they will do so.

Shavelson says he has been surprised by the lack of understanding he hears from some health care providers about the law. One person insisted the law was not taking effect this year; another asked how the law would benefit his patients with Alzheimer’s disease. To be clear, the law took effect June 9, and patients with dementia cannot access the law because they are not mentally competent.

Renee Sahm was one of five terminally ill people whose experiences were chronicled by Shavelson in his 1995 book A Chosen Death.

Renee Sahm was one of five terminally ill people whose experiences were chronicled by Shavelson in his 1995 book A Chosen Death. Courtesy of Lonny Shavelson hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Lonny Shavelson

The law does not mandate participation by any health care providers. Many physicians are “queasy” with the new law, Shavelson says he’s hearing, and are unwilling to prescribe to patients who request the lethal medication — even though they tell him they think the law is the right thing to do.

“My response to that is as health care providers, you might have been uncomfortable the first time you drew blood. You might have been uncomfortable the first time you took out somebody’s gall bladder,” he says. “If it’s a medical procedure you believe in and you believe it’s the patient’s right, then it’s your obligation to learn how to do it — and do it correctly.”

Shavelson said he predicts that many physicians who are initially reluctant to provide this option to their patients may become more comfortable after the law goes into effect and they see how it works.

Burt Presberg, an East Bay psychiatrist who works with cancer patients and their families, saysa talk he attended by Shavelson sparked a conversation at his practice. In my own talk with him, he peppered his statements with “on the other hand,” as he clearly wrestled with his own comfort level of handling potential patient requests.

Presberg spoke of his concern that patients can suffer from clinical depression at the end of life, sometimes feeling they are a burden to family members who could “really push for the end of life to happen a little sooner than the patient themselves.” He spoke from his experience of successfully treating terminally ill patients with clinical depression.

“Depression is something that’s really undertreated,” Presberg said. “I often talk to people about the difference between [that and] normal sadness and normal grieving at the end of life.”

He said he believes Shavelson will be aware of treating depression, “but I do have concerns about other physicians,” he said. “On the other hand, I think it’s really good that this is an option.”

Shavelson says he’s already received a handful of calls from patients, but he mostly spent the time before the law took effect talking to other physicians. He needs a consulting physician and a pharmacist who will accept prescriptions for the lethal dose of medicine.

Then he returns to the patient. “It’s important … that we’re moving forward,” he says. “It’s crucial that we do that because this is part of the rights of patient care to have a certain level of autonomy in how they die.”

To many of the doctors who feel “queasy” about moving to end a patient’s life, this type of care “isn’t so tangibly different to me,” Shavelson says, than other kinds of questions doctors address.

“I’m just one of those docs who sees dying as a process, and method of death is less important than making sure it’s a good death.”

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