June 28, 2016

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Art House Theater Day: It's Like Free Comic Book Day, But for Movies

For movie fans, every Friday is like a holiday focused on celebrating cinema. And some Wednesdays. And Thursday nights. Tuesdays are also special occasions because that’s when films release on DVD, Blu-ray, and digital platfforms. Then there’s Oscar night, any film festival opening, and plenty more moments for our thing to be the biggest thing. But we’ll still take another more specific opportunity to acknowledge and champion our beloved pasttime of moviegoing and viewing.

This fall, such a time, and with it such an event, is going to happen, with the inaugural Art House Theater Day is scheduled for Saturday, September 24. As Birth.Movies.Death notes, it’s basically the cinephile’s equivalent of Free Comic Book Day and Record Store Day. And like those annual occasions, it’s also about small businesses and honoring them and their wares with essential patronage. There will, of course, be giveaways and featured attractions, including exclusive screenings, and more.

Details are forthcoming regarding what you’ll find at which locations — and there should be more participating locations announced in the next couple months — but at the moment there are 160 indie/arthouse theaters involved, including all of the Alamo Drafthouse locations. One thing you can look forward to at all participating cinemas is an advance preview screening of the new documentary Danny Says, about music industry legend Danny Fields. The doc doesn’t officially open until September 30.

For now, you can find a map and list of the cinemas on the Art House Theater Day website, where there will also be other goodies and more info posted throughout the lead-up to the event.

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Thank You, Pat Summitt: From One Tennessee Girl To Another

Tennessee Head Coach Pat Summitt of Tennessee celebrates with her son Tyler after the Lady Volunteers defeated Georgia in the championship game of the NCAA Women's Final Four in 1996.

Tennessee Head Coach Pat Summitt of Tennessee celebrates with her son Tyler after the Lady Volunteers defeated Georgia in the championship game of the NCAA Women’s Final Four in 1996. Matthew Stockman/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Matthew Stockman/Getty Images

I wasn’t born with an athletic bone in my body, and I’ve never played in a basketball game. But Pat Summitt has been one of my idols for as long as I can remember.

That’s just the way it was when you grow up as a young girl in Tennessee. It’s the only state in the country where the women’s basketball team gets more acclaim and attention than the men’s college team.

I didn’t realize that was an anomaly until I got much older. I didn’t realize that women, in sports or otherwise, didn’t get the same recognition as men, and that they had to work and fight twice as hard. I didn’t realize this because Pat never made us believe it was or should be any different. My parents told me I could do anything I set my mind to, and as a kid growing up in the mountains of East Tennessee, I had an excellent role model who proved that.

She was simply known to us as “Pat,” and you talked about her like she was your next-door neighbor. You felt like she was.

I grew up watching women’s basketball games with my parents with as much frequency as we did Tennessee football in the fall. If they were trailing at halftime, my dad would lean back in his weathered, orange recliner and say, “Oh boy, Pat’s gonna whip ’em into shape at halftime,” referring to her legendary midgame intense “pep talks.”

“Here comes the stare,” he’d say of her famed ice-cold glare if one of her players had messed up or wasn’t giving it her all. Sometimes, if the game got too tense or too close, my mom had to leave the room because she was so nervous. It was serious business in the Taylor household.

Pat never expected anything less than your best. “Here’s how I’m going to beat you — I’m going to outwork you. That’s all there is to it,” she wrote in one of her books.

Yes, Pat didn’t like to lose — who does? And she won more games than any basketball coach ever, men’s or women’s. But she pushed her players to be the best they could, on and off the court. The most astonishing statistic of her nearly four-decades-long career is that every single one of her players graduated with a degree.

She put in the same hard work they did, fighting to get women’s basketball televised. When she was first hired at just age 22, she drove the team van and washed the team uniforms herself.

My earliest memory of Pat was when she came and talked to our gym class at my elementary school when I was in kindergarten. She encouraged us all to be active and exercise (still working on that) and we all got Lady Vols T-shirts that could have fit about three 5-year-olds inside them. I still have that shirt.

It was a special treat for my parents to announce on a Saturday that we were packing our car up to make the two-hour drive to Knoxville to watch a game at sold-out Thompson-Boling Arena with fans singing “Rocky Top” at the top of their lungs. Men’s games hours later would be about half as full, but we didn’t go to those.

As I was leaving a football game at Neyland Stadium one time with my dad, we passed by her. My dad yelled out, “Pat Head Summitt!” and she turned and stopped, gave us hugs, and we all yelled out “Go Vols!” She didn’t know us, but in a sea of orange she stopped and shared a hurried moment with us. We were all Tennessee. She was — and is — Tennessee.

NPR reporter Jessica Taylor, a Tennessee native and lifelong Lady Vol fan, got to meet Summitt in 2012.

NPR reporter Jessica Taylor, a Tennessee native and lifelong Lady Vol fan, got to meet Summitt in 2012. Jessica Taylor/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Jessica Taylor/NPR

I remember crying in my car when I heard she had been diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s. Tennessee was already in a pretty rough sports period anyway (just see our revolving door of football coaches over the past few years), but the one constant was Pat. Her diagnosis was a gut punch — not just for the fans, but for the entire world of sports. She should have had so many years ahead of her, able to extend her amazing winning record and inspire so many more female athletes and young girls alike. Alzheimer’s robbed us all of that. There was so much more she could have done.

Alzheimer’s is a disease I’m all too familiar with. I watched it rip my grandmother away from me when I was in middle school. By the time she died the week before I left for college, she hadn’t recognized my mother, my aunt, or me — her only grandchild — in years. She was a shell of a human, her eyes glazed over in her nursing home bed as the machines beeped until it was only a long, flat-line hum.

It’s a disease that shreds your dignity and the things that are the very core of you — your memories, your personality, who you are. I live in fear I’m going to lose another family member to it. I imagine that the players and family members who visited Pat in her final days and hours didn’t recognize who she had become. And she wouldn’t have wanted them to remember her that way either.

When Pat told the world five years ago she was battling this evil disease, I wondered how she would do it so publicly. You could begin to see the effects in her final year of coaching, and maybe even before. There wasn’t the same tenacity on the sidelines, that trademark fire. It was heartbreaking to watch.

I met Pat for the last time a few years ago, just after she had been diagnosed and had stepped down as head coach. She was speaking at an Alzheimer’s event here in D.C., and after I gushed to a nice press aide about how much I idolized the woman, she let me in to talk to her.

I shook her hand, told her how much she had meant to me and, even though I certainly never harbored any ambitions of being a basketball player, she had always shown me that a little country girl from the Tennessee hills could grow up to be whatever she wanted to be with enough hard work and determination. I told her how I had always wanted to be a political reporter and was now living that dream in Washington, D.C.

She grasped my palm, simply said, “Thank you, that’s great to hear,” and politely posed for a picture with me.

I finally got to look into those deep blue eyes myself, which had punctuated so many stares emanating from my television and the sidelines. They were softer, sadder, less bright. But she was still there, and she talked later at the event about how she intended to fight this disease and bring awareness to it.

Now, it’s our turn to fight for her and to outwork Alzheimer’s. For Pat Summitt. For my grandmother Iva Lee Grindstaff. For the 5 million people suffering with the disease, each whose family sees its own loved one’s eyes get a bit dimmer every day. Keep fighting. That’s what Pat would have wanted.

Jessica Taylor, a native of Elizabethton, Tenn., is a digital political reporter with NPR.

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Brexit Makes Investors Nervous, But U.K. Recession Isn't Certain

Traders at work at ETX Capital work in central London on Monday. Financial markets in the U.K. and around the world have been in turmoil since the Brexit vote last week.

Traders at work at ETX Capital work in central London on Monday. Financial markets in the U.K. and around the world have been in turmoil since the Brexit vote last week. Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

Last week’s Brexit vote sent financial markets tumbling around the world, wiping out months of stock market gains and pushing the British pound down to levels not seen in more than three decades.

It also raised tough questions about the future of the United Kingdom’s economy, especially with the resignation of Prime Minister David Cameron and the ensuing political turmoil.

“Nobody quite knows what sort of government’s going to come in, and that uncertainty absolutely discourages consumer spending, discourages investment. So the chance of a recession is substantially increased by this,” says Simon Johnson, professor of entrepreneurship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

About 30 percent of the U.K.’s economy is tied to exports, much of it in services, and almost half of that goes to the European Union. After Thursday’s referendum supporting an exit from the EU, exports are expected to take a hit.

“There are potentially some issues over standardization and continuing to conform to European regulations, and there are issues in terms whether tariffs would be applied as well to certain goods,” says Andrew Goodwin, chief U.K. economist at Oxford Economics. “The level of tariffs varies quite considerably across different sectors. So there are lots of issues about how we can actually trade with the EU going forward, if we don’t have a formal free-trade agreement.”

Before the vote, the U.K. economy was growing at an annual rate of little more than 2 percent a year. While much of Europe is just emerging from a long period of deflation and high unemployment, the U.K. has held its own.

“I would hesitate to call it a boom, but the economy is certainly considerably more robust than most of their European Union partners,” Johnson says.

Helping to fuel the growth has been a large wave of foreign money from China, Russia, the Middle East and elsewhere. Investors have been attracted to Britain because of its stable government and its role as an international financial capital. Meanwhile, its membership in the EU allowed companies access to the enormous European market.

Last week’s vote could stem the flow of foreign investment. Goodwin doesn’t believe the U.K. will fall into recession but he estimates that annual growth could fall to 1.4 percent through next year.

“We acknowledge that companies are very nervous and they will be quite reticent about investing and committing to big investment plans while there’s so much uncertainty. However, we don’t think the impact on the consumer sector will be quite as large,” he says. Continued consumer spending should offset some of the negative effects of the Brexit vote, he says.

The vote will probably lower growth somewhat, but the impact will be limited, says Thomas Simons, a money market economist at Jefferies and Co.

“We wouldn’t see a huge decline in activity. Rather we would see a more cautious tone for their business investment overall,” he says.

“The other thing to keep in mind is that although the U.K. voters have said they want to leave the EU, they are still in it right now. So all the current trade agreements are still in place and business will continue as usual, it’s just that investment for future activity will decline.”

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States Offer Privacy Protection For Young Adults On Parents' Health Plan

How do you stay on the family health plan without your parents finding out about your health issues?

How do you stay on the family health plan without your parents finding out about your health issues? Alex Williamson/Ikon Images/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Alex Williamson/Ikon Images/Getty Images

The Affordable Care Act opened the door for millions of young adults to stay on their parents’ health insurance until they turn 26.

But there’s a downside to remaining on the family plan.

Chances are that Mom or Dad, as policyholder, will get a notice from the insurer every time the grown-up kid gets medical care, a breach of privacy that many young people may find unwelcome.

With this in mind, in recent years a handful of states have adopted laws or regulations that make it easier for dependents to keep medical communications confidential.

The privacy issue has long been recognized as important, particularly in the case of a woman who might fear reprisal if, for example, her husband learned she was using birth control against his wishes. But now the needs of adult children are also getting attention.

“There’s a longstanding awareness that disclosures by insurers could create dangers for individuals,” said Abigail English, director of the advocacy group Center for Adolescent Health and the Law, who has examined these laws. “But there was an added impetus to concerns about the confidentiality of insurance information with the dramatic increase in the number of young adults staying on their parents’ plan until age 26” under the health law.

Federal law does offer some protections, but they are incomplete, privacy advocates say. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 is a key federal privacy law that established rules for when insurers, doctors, hospitals and others may disclose individuals’ personal health information. HIPAA contains a privacy rule that allows people to request that their providers or health plan restrict the disclosure of information about their health or treatment. People can ask that their insurer not send to their parents the ubiquitous “explanation of benefits” form describing care received or denied, for example. But an insurer isn’t obligated to honor that request.

In addition, HIPAA’s privacy rule says that people can ask that their health plan communicate with them at an alternate location or by using a method other than the one it usually employs. Someone might ask that EOBs be sent by email rather than by mail, for example, or to a different address than that of the policyholder. The insurer has to accommodate those requests if the person says that disclosing the information would endanger them.

A number of states, including California, Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Maryland, have taken steps to clarify and strengthen the health insurance confidentiality protections in HIPAA or ensure their implementation.

In California, for example, all insurers have to honor a request by members that their information not be shared with a policyholder if they are receiving sensitive services such as reproductive health or drug treatment or if the patient believes that sharing the health information could lead to harm or harassment.

“There was concern that the lack of detail in HIPAA inhibited its use,” said Rebecca Gudeman, senior attorney at the National Center for Youth Law, a California nonprofit group that helps provide resources to attorneys and groups representing the legal interests of poor children. She noted that HIPAA doesn’t define endangerment, for example, and doesn’t include details about how to implement confidentiality requests.

Concerns by young people that their parents may find out about their medical care leads some to forgo the care altogether, while others go to free or low-cost clinics for reproductive and sexual health services, for example, and skip using their insurance. In 2014, 14 percent of people who received family planning services funded under the federal government’s Title X program for low-income individuals had private health insurance coverage, according to the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association.

Even though most states don’t require it, some insurers may accommodate confidentiality requests, said Dania Palanker, senior counsel for health and reproductive rights at the National Women’s Law Center, a research and advocacy group.

“Inquire whether there will be information sent and whether there’s a way to have it sent elsewhere,” Palanker said. “It may be possible that the insurer has a process even if the state doesn’t have a law.”

Insurers’ perspective on these types of rules vary. In California, after some initial concerns about how the law would be administered, insurers in the state worked with advocates on the bill, Gudeman said. “I give them a lot of credit,” she said.

Restricting access to EOBs can be challenging to administer, said Clare Krusing, a spokesperson for America’s Health Insurance Plans, a trade group. A health plan may mask or filter out a diagnosis or service code on the EOB, but provider credentials or pharmacy information may still hint at the services provided.

There’s also good reason in many instances for insurers and policyholders to know the details about when a policy is used, experts say. Policyholders also may have difficulty tracking cost-sharing details such as how much remains on the deductible for their plan.

In addition, “if a consumer receives a filtered or masked EOB, he or she has no way of knowing whether their account has been compromised or used as part of fraudulent activity,” Krusing said.

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Michelle Andrews is on Twitter:@mandrews110.

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