July 28, 2016

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Dave Franco Explains How Wanting to Have Sex With Christopher Mintz-Plasse Launched His Career

You might think that Dave Franco’s career was always a given, that he would be offered big roles by virtue of being the younger brother of the already successful James Franco. That is simply not the case. Sure, name recognition no doubt helped the younger Franco when he was landing tiny cameos in movies like Superbad as Greg the Soccer Player, but as he pursued juicier roles he found himself going through the same audition process as any other actor.

Franco’s big break out was 21 Jump Street. After that he started getting key roles in major movies like Warm Bodies and Now You See Me. But as Franco explained to us in a recent interview for his new movie Nerve, none of those projects would have happened were it not for a very vulgar short film he’d made with Christopher Mintz-Plasse.

And we mean a very, very vulgar short film. Seriously, do not press play on You’re So Hot if anyone with sensitive ears is within hearing range. So how was it responsible for Franco’s rise?

As it turns out, Franco’s early career saw him taking jobs he didn’t really want just to get acting experience. And that’s totally understandable, it’s what all actors go through, but as he puts it, “After a while, I wasn’t working on things that I was proud of, where I would literally tell my friends and family ‘Do not go see this project that I’m in.’ So I started to think I needed to take things into my own hands and that’s when I started making these short films for Funny or Die with this buddy of mine I’ve known since middle school.”

Dave Franco You're So Hot

So these shorts ended up scratching an itch Franco’s acting career wasn’t quite reaching. Meanwhile he’s out auditioning for projects like every other actor does. He tells us he went in for 21 Jump Street seven times, describing it as a “really arduous audition process.” Obviously he ended up getting the job, but it was only after he was cast that directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller confessed to him that the big reason he got it was they loved You’re So Hot.

“That’s so silly to think about, because that’s a video where I’m telling my best friend Christopher Mintz-Plasse that I want to have sex with him, and that landed me my biggest film role at the time,” Franco laughs as he tells the story. “I honestly don’t believe I would be where I’m at right now without those silly short films.”

So does Dave Franco want to branch out from just acting and direct, as James Franco has done a number of times now? “I do have aspirations to do it on a feature scale, but to be honest I’m scared to. It’s a leap. I know I need to just rip the Band-Aid off. It is something I’ll do eventually.”

In the mean time, you can marvel at the NSFW wonder that is You’re So Hot. And if you’re an aspiring actor reading this, maybe take a cue from Franco and start making your own things. You may be surprised what opportunities they eventually create.

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Nerve is in theaters now. Check it out, it’s worth it.

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Regulators Draw Up New Rules To Stop Abusive Practices By Debt Collectors

Richard Cordray, shown here at a March 2015 hearing, directs the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has proposed new rules to overhaul the multi-billion dollar debt collection industry.)

Richard Cordray, shown here at a March 2015 hearing, directs the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has proposed new rules to overhaul the multi-billion dollar debt collection industry.) Steve Helber/AP hide caption

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is drawing up new rules that would curb abusive debt collection practices, which it says generated some 85,000 consumer complaints last year alone.

The rules would limit the number of times debt collectors can contact borrowers to collect debts, and require them to substantiate that they have the right person before doing so. They would also have to make it easier for borrowers to dispute debts.

“Both consumers and responsible businesses stand to benefit by improved standards for debt collection. Consumers deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, and businesses should be able to operate fairly and reasonably to collect the debts they’re legitimately owed,” said Richard Cordray, the bureau’s director, at a field event in California.

The bureau says it receives more complaints about the $13.7 billion debt collection industry than any other issue. Many consumers report being harassed repeatedly to pay debts they don’t owe, or have already paid, the bureau says.

“The basic principles of the proposals we’re considering are grounded in common sense. Companies should not collect debt that is not owed. They should have more reliable information about the debt before they try to collect,” Cordray said.

One problem is that many companies purchase debt from creditors for pennies on the dollar, with the intention of aggressively trying to collect it, but don’t necessarily have correct information about the borrower or even whether the debt has been paid, he said.

The proposals would limit the number of times a company could contact a borrower and prevent the company from using certain channels of communication, such as a work phone, if the borrower requested it.

Debt collection is already governed by the 1977 Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The bureau was given the authority to issue new regulations under the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul bill of 2010.

Bureau officials say the 1977 act needs to be updated in numerous ways.

For instance, the act gave consumers the right to dispute a debt or ask for more information, but few consumers understand they may do so, Cordray said.

Under the proposed rules, companies would be obligated to confirm their information about debts if consumers requested it.

The proposed rules are being released to the public for comment and will be rewritten in greater detail, after industry and consumer groups weigh in.

“The law should protect and promote ethical debt collection, which safeguards the rights of consumers and provides clear and effective rules of the road for collectors,” said James Mastriani, president of Velocity Recoveries, a debt collection firm.

But, he added, “The law should not be misused to enable borrowers to turn legitimate loans into de facto gifts. In the long run, this will reduce the availability of credit for all consumers and make credit more expensive.”

Graciela Aponte-Davis, director of California policy at the Center for Responsible Lending, said the proposals “endorse the common-sense idea that people should not be harassed for debts they do not owe.”

But she expressed concern that some parts of the proposals don’t protect consumers from unwarranted collection attempts.

“Specifically the proposal does not go far enough to require that debt collectors adequately document that they are pursuing the right person for the right debt,” she said.

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Doctors Need A New Skill Set For This Opioid Abuse Treatment

Dr. Michael Frost demonstrates use of Probuphine, an implant that dispenses medication to treat opioid addiction.

Dr. Michael Frost demonstrates use of Probuphine, an implant that dispenses medication to treat opioid addiction. Karen Shakerdge/WXXI hide caption

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In a big hotel conference room near New York’s Times Square, six doctors huddle around a greasy piece of raw pork. They watch as addiction medicine specialist Michael Frost delicately marks the meat, incises it and implants four match-sized rods.

“If you can do it well on the pork, you can easily do it on the person,” Frost tells his audience.

Frost consults for Braeburn Pharmaceuticals, the company behind the newly FDA-approved treatment Probuphine, and is teaching doctors how to use it. They are learning to implant it in pork so they can later implant it in patients’ arms.

Although addiction specialists welcome Probuphine, which delivers a constant dose of the drug buprenorphine over six months, at this early stage it’s complicated for physicians to add it to their repertoire. Because physicians who treat addiction don’t necessarily have experience with surgery or access to sterile spaces, some are having to learn a new skill and develop new systems.

Probuphine is unlike any other addiction treatment on the market. It promises to be life-changing for people already stable in recovery using medication-assisted treatment, who would otherwise need a daily dose of a similar drug to stay free of cravings and withdrawal pains.

Patients using Probuphine were 14 percent more likely to stay opioid-free compared to those using a daily sublingual version of buprenophine, according to a study published this month in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association. Patients in this study had been stable on buprenorphine for an average of three and a half years beforehand. The authors do caution against generalizing these findings. Most participants, they note, were white, employed, had at least a high school education and were previously addicted to prescription opioids rather than heroin.

“They don’t have to be dependent on taking something every day. It takes the choice out of that,” says Ella Leers, a doctor who treats substance abuse at the Carnegie Hill Institute in Manhattan.

The FDA approved Probuphine under the condition that physicians are trained and tested before implanting or even prescribing the treatment. There are three kinds of certification: implanter, prescriber or both. If doctors can’t perform the implanting themselves, they need to coordinate with another doctor who can.

To date, over 1,800 healthcare practitioners have been certified — 27 have implanted dozens of patients, according to a representative for Braeburn Pharmaceuticals, Probuphine’s maker.

Gloria Baciewicz, chief of addiction psychiatry at the University of Rochester Medical Center, says using the new treatment will take some adjustments. But, she adds, there need to be as many effective treatments as possible for opioid use disorder.

“Now with Probuphine, we have to take it up to a whole different level because we have to have either agreements with implanters or a room where we can implant. We have to get the equipment. There will be a lot more to do,” she says. Her team was already planning on moving to another space, which will have the facilities they need to conduct minor surgery.

Prescribing Probuphine may also call for a new approach to the counseling and behavioral therapy that is typically recommended for those on medication-assisted treatment.

“If you’re implanting something that can be there for six months, you want to make sure that the patients are still coming in to get the other types of support that they can use because of their addiction issues,” says Leers.

There are also questions about insurance coverage. Billing codes are still being established. For now, doctors need to buy the Probuphine kits that run almost $5,000 themselves, and then bill patients or insurance companies.

Braeburn has offered to help physicians verify if an insurance plan would reimburse any of the cost. According to the company, Blue Cross Blue Shield and United Healthcare approved reimbursement for a few patients who have implants. Medicare, Medicaid and the VA have Probuphine in their formulary and are required to cover it if deemed medically necessary.

Despite having to get certified and the other hurdles, many doctors welcome the treatment option. Opioid drug overdoses have reached epidemic levels — roughly 78 Americans die every day from opioid overdose, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

So it’s good to have a another way to deliver medication-assisted treatment, says Richard Rosenthal, medical director of addiction psychiatry for the Mount Sinai Health System. Rosenthal was one of two principal investigators on a Probuphine clinical trial.

“Everybody is waking up to the fact that we’re in the midst of an opioid epidemic,” says Rosenthal. “There are actually very few medications for addiction of any kind. Given the addiction treatment system in the United States, most of the treatment that’s given is psychosocial. There’s very little use of FDA-approved medications.”

Probuphine made a difference, says Scott Jernigan of Jacksonville, Fla. He was in recovery for almost a year, taking another medication, when he signed up for a Probuphine clinical trial. He said Probuphine freed him from weekly doctor visits and pharmacy runs, and from fears of how sick he’d feel if he missed a dose or forgot to take his medication.

“[It] meant that I could become more of what my normal is going to be,” Jernigan says.

Some specialists recommend patients stay on medication-assisted treatment for years, or even indefinitely. For now, Probuphine can only be prescribed for two runs of six-month use and is meant for people already stable on 8 mg or less of a medication like buprenorphine.

Authors of the JAMA study suggest further investigation of Probuphine to gauge issues often associated with buprenorphine, such as diversion or pediatric exposure.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, Side Effects Public Media and Kaiser Health News.

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