In 1993, Eddie Antar, founder of the Crazy Eddie electronics store chain, is led in handcuffs after being extradited from Israel. Thousands of commercials starred pitchman Jerry Carroll who touted the chain’s prices as “insane.” Danield Hulshizer /APhide caption
toggle captionDanield Hulshizer /AP
If you ever saw a Crazy Eddie commercial, then you know the electronics retail giant’s prices were “insane!”
At its height, the chain had 43 stores in four states. Eddie Antar started the chain in 1969 with a store in Brooklyn, N.Y. The chain’s growth was helped by the introduction of the VCR.
In 1984, the chain went public. Stockholders, during a revolt in 1987, took over the company, and shortly after that it was discovered that $45 million in merchandise was missing.
At the same time, federal prosecutors had been building a fraud case against Antar, charging that he had defrauded shareholders through stock manipulation, according to The New York Times.
In 1990, Antar fled to Israel after being indicted on securities fraud and insider trading.
Three years later he was extradited back to the U.S. In 1995, his conviction on racketeering and stock fraud charges were overturned on appeal.
He eventually served seven years in prison after pleading guilty in a plea bargain to one charge of racketeering conspiracy.
Antar died on Saturday but a cause of death was not disclosed. He was 68.
While Antar was the man behind Crazy Eddie, he was not the pitchman who appeared in commercials.
For more than 13 years, Jerry Carroll, a radio DJ, was the man who starred in thousands of radio and TV ads.
Carroll’s fast-talking, shout-at-you style made the commercials memorable.
The ads always ended the same, with Crazy Eddie prices being touted as “in-SAAAANE!”
Stan Wawrinka, of Switzerland, holds up the championship trophy after beating Novak Djokovic, of Serbia, to win the men’s singles final of the U.S. Open tennis tournament on Sunday in New York. Darron Cummings/APhide caption
toggle captionDarron Cummings/AP
Mere minutes before heading out to face Novak Djokovic in the U.S. Open final in New York, Stan Wawrinka met in the locker room with his coach and felt as nervous as he ever had. Wawrinka was shaking. Started to cry, even.
Why?
“I don’t want to lose the final in a Grand Slam, that simple. That’s the only reason,” he explained later. “The feeling of: You don’t want to lose. I don’t want to come to the court and lose a final. So close, so far.”
Once he was on the court, and got over some shaky play at the very start, Wawrinka’s game and mindset were strong as can be, as they always seems to be these days when the stakes are highest. Repeatedly pointing his right index finger to his temple, the gesture he uses when showing his mettle, Wawrinka surprisingly wore down No. 1 Djokovic and beat the defending champion 6-7 (1), 6-4, 7-5, 6-3 for his first U.S. Open title and third Grand Slam trophy overall.
“He was the better player. He was tougher mentally,” said Djokovic, offering two of the highest compliments a tennis player can receive from the talented Serb. “He knew what to do.”
The 31-year-old Wawrinka is the oldest U.S. Open men’s champion since Ken Rosewall was 35 in 1970. He entered Sunday having spent almost exactly twice as much time on court during the tournament — about 18 hours vs. about 9 hours — as Djokovic, who benefited from injuries to three opponents that withdrew before or during matches.
“Honestly, after the match, I was completely empty,” the third-seeded Wawrinka said. “I put everything on the court. Not only today, but the past two weeks.”
By breaking in the final game of the second and third sets, and by saving 14 of 17 break points he faced, Wawrinka already had gained the upper hand by the time Djokovic clutched at his left leg and grimaced after missing a forehand while getting broken early in the fourth.
Djokovic was granted the unusual chance to have a medical timeout at a time other than a changeover. He removed both shoes and socks so a trainer could help with bleeding toes. Wawrinka complained about the 6-minute break, and Djokovic looked over and apologized. Later, Djokovic started limping and received more treatment.
“We played almost 4 hours,” said Djokovic, “and I think I can speak in the name of Stan, as well: We both felt it.”
Wawrinka has won only five of 24 career meetings against Djokovic, but has now beaten the 12-time major champion on the way to each of his own Grand Slam titles, including in the 2014 Australian Open quarterfinals and 2015 French Open final.
Before this matchup, Djokovic praised Wawrinka as “a big-match player,” and, boy, is he ever. Wasn’t always, though: Playing in the shadow of his far-more-accomplished Swiss countryman and good pal, Roger Federer, Wawrinka needed until his 35th appearance at a major, at age 28, just to get to the semifinals for the first time.
But look at Wawrinka now.
He has won 11 consecutive tournament finals.
He is 3-0 in Grand Slam finals, beating the No. 1-ranked player each time. Take that trio of highest-stakes matches out of the equation, and Wawrinka is 0-19 in all other matches against the top man.
And he did it Sunday by coming back against Djokovic, whose French Open title in June completed a career Grand Slam and made him only the third man — and first in nearly a half-century — to win four consecutive major tournaments.
Djokovic had been 51-0 in U.S. Open matches when taking the first set. This time, though, the thick-chested Wawrinka eventually began bullying Djokovic from the baseline, not only with his best-in-the-game one-handed backhand, but off both wings.
“He likes to occasionally whack the ball quite hard, and I don’t think that Novak likes that,” said Wawrinka’s coach, Magnus Norman. “Stan is maybe one of the few guys who can really hit through Novak if he has a good day.”
As Wawrinka placed one stinging shot after another right on a line, Djokovic looked up at coach Boris Becker while gesticulating with his hands and muttering. He went from appearing locked-in at the outset to completely drained in every way.
On one point, Wawrinka delivered a shot so hard it knocked the racket from Djokovic’s grasp and against a wall behind the baseline.
After smacking a forehand winner to end a 20-stroke exchange near the end of the second set, Wawrinka pointed to his temple. Did it again after a forehand passing shot drew an errant volley for a break early in the third.
And so on.
Wawrinka nearly was gone before the end of the U.S. Open’s first week, one point from losing in the third round against 64th-ranked Dan Evans. Sunday’s victory made Wawrinka the first man to win the tournament after saving a match point since — yes, that’s right — Djokovic in 2011.
“You’re a great champion, a great person. Because of you, I am where I am today,” Wawrinka told Djokovic, a close friend, afterward. “We know each other (for) many, many years, and I had the chance to practice many times with him and to play him on a big stage.”
With that Djokovic, threw his left arm around Wawrinka’s shoulders, knowing which of the two was more up to the task on this day.
Cassie Ray (seen with her husband, Gerry) got a surprise bill from an out-of-network anesthesiologist after an operation. Courtesy of Cassie Rayhide caption
toggle captionCourtesy of Cassie Ray
When it comes to navigating the intricacies of health insurance, Cassie Ray considers herself a pro. She actually reads her policy, including the fine print.
So when the 57-year-old from Fairfield, Calif., needed routine follow-up surgery after a mastectomy, she did her homework. “I looked up on my insurer’s network and made sure the outpatient facility that I was being referred to was in my network,” Ray says.
A month later, she received an unwelcome surprise: a $580 bill for an out-of-network anesthesiologist.
“I called the facility back, and at first, I felt like, this has to be a mistake. They’ll fix it,” Ray says.
Instead, the clinic said her only option was to negotiate the bill directly with the doctor. Ray’s experience illustrates the surprise of balance billing.
The unexpected charged come when patients are treated by an out-of-network provider at an in-network facility.
After several failed attempts in recent years, the California legislature last week passed AB-72, which aims to protect patients’ pocketbooks when they’re hit by these surprise bills. Gov. Jerry Brown has until the end of September to sign or veto the legislation. He is expected to sign it into law.
A 2015 Consumers Union survey suggests the surprise bill phenomenon is fairly common. It found nearly 1 in 4 Californians who’d had hospital visits or surgery in the prior two years reported receiving an unexpected bill from an out-of-network provider.
“They can range in price from a hundred dollars to many thousands,” says Betsy Imholz, special projects director for Consumers Union. “So it’s a big financial burden on consumers.”
In Ray’s case, she says she tried to speak with a manager at the outpatient clinic, but no one returned her repeated calls. Then the bills stopped coming, so she figured all was resolved. Soon after, however, her bill was sent to collections.
“I was so frustrated,” she recalls. “I was just in tears as I was dealing with it.”
Ray says it took about seven months of wrangling before her insurance company finally paid the bill and she was able to clean up her credit rating.
“My immediate response was, there does need to be a law to fix this,” says Ray. “This is so wrong.”
The legislation, by Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) and six colleagues, would limit a patient’s financial obligation to no more than what he would have owed if the provider had been in-network.
While agreeing that “patients should never have surprise bills,” Dr. Karen Sibert, president-elect of the California Society of Anesthesiologists, says her organization and a number of other specialty medical groups oppose AB-72.
At issue, Sibert says, is the bill’s formula for paying doctors who fill the gap left when insurance companies don’t have enough providers in their networks. The legislation would set the payment rate at either the amount the insurer normally pays a doctor on contract for such services or 125 percent of the Medicare rate, whichever is greater.
That’s insufficient, argues Sibert. “It’s a problem because it removes any incentive for insurance companies to reach fair contracts with physicians.”
Without such an incentive, she says, insurance companies will continue to stick consumers with inadequate provider networks.
The powerful California Medical Association agrees with Sibert about the bill’s payment formula, but it has shifted its position on AB-72 from opposed to neutral, says Janus Norman, the Association’s vice president of governmental affairs.
There are a few reasons for the change of heart, he says. First, the bill would create stricter oversight of how in-patient services are delivered, and it would allow for tougher regulations on insurers if the state finds their provider networks to be inadequate.
The provision regarding tougher regulations, “is one improvement that AB-72 included that prior legislation did not,” he says.
In addition, the measure would give out-of-network doctors the chance to appeal payment disputes with insurers through an independent third party, and the decision would be binding, another important change from previous versions of the bill, Norman says.
The California Association of Health Plans and the Association of California Life and Health Insurance Companies don’t have a formal position on AB-72, according to an analysis by the Assembly Health Committee. Instead, they have expressed “concerns” about the measure, the committee said.
“While they laud the authors’ efforts to protect consumers from balance billing,” the analysis says, the insurer groups worry that the legislation might lead to higher premiums and cost-sharing, and that the bill’s dispute resolution process might spark more lawsuits between providers and health insurance firms.
Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, a consumer health care advocacy coalition, says Gov. Brown took an interest in the legislation.
“The governor’s office did provide input during the negotiation process and we are hopeful that he will sign it,” he says.
Consumers Union’s Imholz says the California Medical Association’s neutral position on the legislation was key in getting AB-72 across the finish line.
She predicts that if Brown signs the measure, a number of other states now considering similar protections against surprise bills will likely follow suit next year.
This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, KPCC andKaiser Health News.