July 15, 2016

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Best of the Week: 'Ghostbusters' Reviewed, More 'Rogue One' Footage Revealed and More

The Important News

Star Wars: New Rogue One: A Star Wars Story footage, poster and concept art were revealed. More Star Wars Land concept art was unveiled.

Star Trek: Chris Hemsworth will return for Star Trek 4.

DC Extended Universe: Kiersey Clemons, Rita Ora and Lucy Boynton are up for the female lead in The Flash.

Marvel Cinematic Universe: Spider-Man: Homecoming will be partly set at a dance. New Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 concept art revealed the new team.

X-Men Universe: Fox is developing another X-Men TV show.

Universal Monsters: Javier Bardem will be Frankenstein’s Monster.

The Dark Tower: Some major characters from the books will not be in the movie.

Ghostbusters: The new Ghostbusters will get an extended version on home video.

Horror: Michael and Peter Spierig will direct Saw: Legacy. New Line unveiled a first look at the new Pennywise from It.

Musicals: Barbra Streisand will star in a new version of Gypsy. Zendaya joined The Greatest Showman on Earth.

Remakes: John Carpenter might score the next Halloween remake. Colin Farrell will star in a remake of The Beguiled.

Casting: Gillian Jacobs joined Life of the Party. Misty Copeland will star in Disney’s The Nutcracker and the Four Realms.

Video Game Movies: Steve Pink will direct a Rent-A-Hero movie. Legendary Pictures might make a new Pokemon movie.

YA Adaptations: Jessica Yuh Nelson will direct Darkest Minds.

Box Office: The Secret Life of Pets was the first original movie ever to open with more than $100 million.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: La La Land, Loving, Boo! A Madea Halloween, A Monster Calls, Rules Don’t Apply, The Hollars, Goat and Tallulah.

TV Spot: Star Trek Beyond.

Clips: Star Trek Beyond and Pete’s Dragon.

Behind-The Scenes: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.

Watch: An honest trailer for Ghostbusters II. And a video of Ghostbusters II trivia.

See: The cutest Ghostbusters cosplay. And the cutest Harry Potter cosplay.

Watch: A video essay on the sexism of Ghostbusters.

See: A baby who knows the Rocky II training montage by heart.

Watch: How Superman: The Movie should have ended.

See: The best new movie posters of the week. And a bunch of Rogue One poster parodies.

Watch: The Bourne series recapped.

Our Features

Movie Review: Ghostbusters is just and funny as the original.

Interview: Gareth Edwards on the uniqueness of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.

DC Movie Guides: Everything you need to know about Jared Leto’s Joker. And 5 great changes in the Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Ultimate Edition.

Marvel Movie Guide: What the Spider-Man: Homecoming casting says about the movie.

Sci-Fi Movie Guides: The best of the unused concept art for Independence Day: Resurgence. And an appreciation of Ghostbusters.

Convention Guide: 5 things we want to see revealed at Star Wars Celebration.

List: 10 great scary-funny movies.

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

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Herbalife Agrees To Pay $200 Million To Settle Complaints It Deceived Consumers

Shares of Herbalife rose after the Federal Trade Commission's decision, and the company says it's ready to move on.

Shares of Herbalife rose after the Federal Trade Commission’s decision, and the company says it’s ready to move on. Richard Drew/AP hide caption

toggle caption Richard Drew/AP

Herbalife has agreed to pay $200 million to reimburse consumers who lost money on its nutrition supplements and will also make major changes in its sales and distribution practices, the Federal Trade Commission announced on Friday.

The FTC filed a complaint accusing the company of deceiving consumers about how much money they could make selling its products, noting that most Herbalife distributors make no money at all.

But federal officials stopped short of calling the company a pyramid scheme and allowed it to keep operating. That was seen as a victory for the company on Wall Street, where Herbalife had become the target of a short-selling campaign by investor William Ackman.

Still, the FTC had extremely tough words for Herbalife and made clear it sees many of its practices as deceptive.

“Herbalife is going to have to start operating legitimately, making only truthful claims about how much money its members are likely to make, and it will have to compensate consumers for the losses they have suffered as a result of what we charge are unfair and deceptive practices,” said FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez.

Among other things, the FTC said Herbalife would have to revamp its compensation system so that participants are rewarded for how much they sell, not simply for signing up new distributors.

At least two-thirds of a participant’s compensation must be based on actual sales that can be tracked and verified, it said.

“This settlement will require Herbalife to fundamentally restructure its business so that participants are rewarded for what they sell, not how many people they recruit,” Ramirez said.

The FTC said in a statement that the overwhelming majority of Herbalife distributors earn little or no money:

“Finding themselves unable to make money, the FTC’s complaint alleges, Herbalife distributors abandon Herbalife in large numbers. The majority of them stop ordering products within their first year, and nearly half of the entire Herbalife distributor base quits in any given year.”

Harsh as the decision seems, it is a big blow to hedge fund manager Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management, who has been trying for years to tar Herbalife as little better than a pyramid scheme.

Ackman reportedly shorted the company by a billion dollars, essentially betting that it would fail, in which case he would have made a lot of money. But after the FTC’s announcement allowing Herbalife to keep operating, its stock price rose.

Herbalife said in a statement that many of the FTC’s allegations are “factually incorrect” but chose to accept the settlement to avoid lengthy and costly litigation.

“Moreover, the Company’s management can now focus all of its energies on continuing to build the business and exploring strategic business opportunities,” the statement said.

“The settlements are an acknowledgment that our business model is sound and underscore our confidence in our ability to move forward successfully, otherwise we would not have agreed to the terms,” said chairman and CEO Michael O. Johnson.

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