July 13, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Tyler Perry Parodies 'Halloween,' Mark Hamill Shares Dancing Stormtroopers and More

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

Movie Poster Parody of the Day:

This parody of the original poster for 1978’s Halloween is an official poster for Tyler Perry’s Boo! A Madea Halloween:

Controversy Buster of the Day:

Nobody cares if some bros aren’t happy with a female Ghostbusters, but how about we hear from female ghosts, including those of historical women Harriet Tubman and Amelia Earhart, on the matter:

Movie Trivia of the Day:

With the Ghostbusters reboot out this week, here’s ScreenCrush with a bunch of trivia about Ghostbusters II:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

And here’s 24 pieces of proof that Pixels is already basically a remake of Ghostbusters II:

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Party Performance of the Day:

Mark Hamill posted this video of dancing Stormtroopers (the crew inside the costumes is called Boogie Storm) at the cast and crew wrap party for Star Wars: Episode VIII:

Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, here’s a video tutorial from the DIY Costume Squad on how to make your own Force Awakens Poe Dameron X-wing fighter pilot suit:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

A boom microphone partially blocks our view of Harrison Ford, who turns 74 today, as he films a memorable scene from The Empire Strikes Back with Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill and Peter Mayhew in 1979:

Filmmakers in Focus:

Darren of Must See Films highlights how well the Russo brothers direct action in Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Captain America: Civil War:

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Fan Art of the Day:

Here’s what Scream would look like as a pulp magazine cover story, from artist Stephen Andrade:

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Legally Blonde. Watch the original trailer for the Reese Witherspoon comedy below.

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Episode 711: Hooked on Heroin

Heroin usage is on the rise.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

When we meet the heroin dealer called Bone, he has just shot up. He has a lot to say anyway. He tells us about his career—it pretty much tracks the evolution of drug use in America these past ten years or so. He tells us about his rough past. And he tells us about how he died a week ago. He overdosed on his own supply and his friend took his body to the emergency room, then left.

Bone’s addiction is so fierce that he was looking for his next fix almost as soon as he left the hospital. In Bone’s world, death isn’t a deterrent. Death is an obsession, even an attraction. It means a higher high if you can get close to death.

And that is easy for Bone, because heroin is very cheap right now.

America is facing a heroin epidemic. Deaths from overdoses are about three times what they were a decade ago. Part of what is driving this is price. Part of it is newer, stronger heroin. Neither of those two factors are an accident.

Today on the show, how heroin became America’s bargain drug and why so many people bought in. We hear from a dealer, a user and a DEA agent about the hurt, the want, and the twisted economic forces driving addiction.

Music: “My Name Is Trouble” and “Take It Back.” Find us: Twitter/ Facebook

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Opioid Bill Reframes Addiction As A Health Problem, Not A Crime

A woman lobbying Congress holds two versions of naloxone which can be used to reverse an opioid overdose.

A woman lobbying Congress holds two versions of naloxone which can be used to reverse an opioid overdose. Al Drago/CQ-Roll Call Inc. hide caption

toggle caption Al Drago/CQ-Roll Call Inc.

The Senate is set to approve a bill intended to change the way police and health care workers treat people struggling with opioid addictions.

The bill is an amalgam of more than a dozen proposals passed through the year in the House and Senate. And while it has lots of new policies and provisions — from creating a task force to study how best to treat pain, to encouraging states to create prescription drug monitoring programs — it doesn’t have much money to put them in place.

President Obama had requested $1.1 billion to help pay for more addiction treatment programs and other initiatives. But the version agreed to by House and Senate Republicans last week didn’t include all that money. In the end, it will probably get about half that much.

“It’s clear that efforts to prevent and treat the opioid epidemic will fall short without additional investments,” Sen. Patty Murray, D-Washington, said in a statement after House and Senate negotiators hammered out the final bill.

But Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., argued that the money for treatment has been rising for three years.

“Our friends on the other side say, you have to fund it. We are funding it,” he said in a statement on the Senate floor Friday. “And they helped fund it. We’ve increased funding for opioids already by 542 percent.”

Still, Democrats are expected to support the bill even without the additional money.

And that’s a good thing, says Linda Rosenberg, president of the National Council for Behavioral Health, because the bill helps expand treatment in significant ways.

For example, it allows nurses and physician assistants to treat people with addictions using medications, which is considered the evidence-based standard.

“Treatment capacity is really a crisis. There just isn’t enough,” Rosenberg tells Shots. “But what this bill does to address that — it expands the kinds of people who can prescribe medications for addictions. And that’s a very big deal.”

She says that provision alone can help because nonprofit treatment centers will be able to use nurse practitioners and physician assistants rather than trying to hire doctors, who are both scarce and expensive.

The bill also allows the Department of Health and Human Services to give grants to states and community organizations for improving or expanding treatment and recovery programs. It has several provisions that would allow police departments to send people with addiction problems to treatment rather than to jail.

In one of the few areas of the bill that includes funding, lawmakers authorized the Department of Justice to spend $100 million a year for five years to find alternatives to jail for opioid abusers, and to allow prisons to use methadone or buprenorphine to treat inmates with opioid addictions.

Rosenberg says these measures help change the definition of addiction from a crime to a health problem.

“It’s a health care issue and not a moral failing issue,” she says. That’s a big reversal from the “war on drugs” campaigns of a few decades ago.

And the legislation allows more people to have access to naloxone, the drug that can reverse an opioid overdose, reducing the risk of death. Access would be expanded for people working in schools and community centers.

The bill encourage pharmacies to fill standing orders for the drug so that those likely to come in contact with someone suffering an overdose will have the drug on hand, according to Mike Kelly. He is the U.S. president of Adapt Pharma, which sells Narcan, a nasal spray version of naloxone.

“This bill addresses getting Narcan out into the community, outside of emergency and first responders,” Kelly says. “The big thing here is this will fund recovery.”

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Singer Alters Canadian Anthem To Say 'All Lives Matter' At All-Star Game

The Tenors, shown on the scoreboard, perform the Canadian national anthem prior to the MLB baseball All-Star Game on Tuesday.

The Tenors, shown on the scoreboard, perform the Canadian national anthem prior to the MLB baseball All-Star Game on Tuesday. Gregory Bull/AP hide caption

toggle caption Gregory Bull/AP

“O Canada,” the national anthem of our neighbors up north, comes in two official versions — English and French. They share a melody, but differ in meaning.

Let the record show: neither version of those lyrics contains the phrase “all lives matter.”

But at the 2016 All-Star Game, the song got an unexpected edit.

At Petco Park in San Diego, one member of the Canadian singing group The Tenors — by himself, according to the other members of the group — revised the anthem.

The new Canadian Anthem? #AllStarGame pic.twitter.com/ViCfYZ4YAd

— Taylor Jones (@TJ) July 13, 2016

Instead of singing, “With glowing hearts we see thee rise, the True North strong and free,” Remigio Pereira sang, “We’re all brothers and sisters. All lives matter to the great.”

Pereira also held up an “All Lives Matter” sign.

The other three singers, who say they weren’t aware of Pereira’s plans, weren’t singing any words at the time. In video of the moment, you can see one of them turn and stare at Pereira before turning back to face forward.

Major League Baseball says it was also unaware of Pereira’s intention to change the song.

The revision has been controversial for several reasons. The phrase “all lives matter” is often used by opponents and critics of the Black Lives Matter movement.

“It has been perceived to use reductive reasoning to trivialize the problems specifically facing black people,” the CBC notes.

The change to the song has also been sharply criticized by those who say it is highly inappropriate to politicize a national anthem — or, indeed, to change it at all.

In a statement posted on Twitter, The Tenors wrote that Pereira’s actions were “disrespectful” and “shameful,” and said he would not be performing with them until further notice.

pic.twitter.com/3rHG1e1Akf

— The Tenors (@TenorsMusic) July 13, 2016

Pereira took to Twitter to defend his lyrical decision.

“I’ve been so moved lately by the tragic loss of life and I hoped for a positive statement that would bring us ALL together. ONE LOVE,” he wrote on Twitter.

“That was my singular motivation when I said all lives matter,” he said.

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Recommended article from FiveFilters.org: Most Labour MPs in the UK Are Revolting.