Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:
Audition Fight Reel of the Day:
Tim Drake (the voice of Hiro in Big Hero 6) made a concept fight demo to show that he should play Robin in the DC Extended Universe (via /Film):
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Weird Video of the Day:
Speaking of the DCEU, “Weird Trailer” maker Aldo Jones took his dancing Bruce Wayne from his version of the Justice League spot and put him in a lot of other movies:
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Franchise Analysis of the Day:
Every Frame a Painting looks into why the Marvel Cinematic Universe has such bland music scores in this deep analysis video essay:
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Raw Footage Reel of the Day:
The below video contains four minutes of awesome, fiery footage from the making of Mad Max: Fury Road before digital effects added and subtracted things (via The Playlist):
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Vintage Image of the Day:
Ian Holm, who turns 85 today, gets applied with condensed milk by director Ridley Scott as Sigourney Weaver stands by on the set of Alien in 1978:
Hollywood Craftsman of the Day:
The latest Academy Originals video spotlights casting director Bernie Telsley, who talks about finding the ensemble for Across the Universe:
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Mashup of the Day:
Star Wars meets Ghostbusters in this clever piece of fan art from Messy Pandas:
Redone Movie of the Day:
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows retold in 8-bit video game style:
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Movie Comparison of the Day:
Couch Tomato shows us 24 reasons why the new live-action Jungle Book is also basically a remake of The Lion King:
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Classic Trailer of the Day:
Today is the 60th anniversary of the release of The Bad Seed. Watch the original trailer for the classic thriller below.
An official, photographers, cheerleaders and others wait for play to resume during an NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament second-round game between the Butler Bulldogs and the Virginia Cavaliers in March in Raleigh, N.C. This coming spring the Road to the Final Four won’t go through North Carolina, as the NCAA has decided to move three games out of Greensboro. Grant Halverson/Getty Imageshide caption
toggle captionGrant Halverson/Getty Images
The NCAA announced Monday evening that it would relocate seven championship sporting events out of North Carolina during this school year, citing the state’s HB2 law limiting civil rights protections for LGBT individuals, WUNC’s Dave DeWitt reports.
The events moving out of state include first and second rounds of the Division I Men’s Basketball Championship — part of the Road to the Final Four — originally slated to be in Greensboro, DeWitt reports.
In a press release, the Board emphasized that “NCAA championships and events must promote an inclusive atmosphere for all college athletes, coaches, administrators and fans. Current North Carolina state laws make it challenging to guarantee that host communities can help deliver on that commitment if NCAA events remained in the state.”
The state Republican party countered late Monday with a scathing press release written by spokeswoman Kami Mueller.
“This is so absurd it’s almost comical. I genuinely look forward to the NCAA merging all men’s and women’s teams together as singular unisex teams. Under the NCAA’s logic, colleges should make cheerleaders and football players share bathrooms, showers and hotel rooms. This decision is an assault to female athletes across the nation.”
HB2 earlier cost the state the 2017 NBA All-Star game, DeWitt notes. The law limits anti-discrimination protections for LGBT individuals and requires transgender people to use public bathrooms that match the sex listed on their birth certificates, rather than the gender with which they identify.
Equality NC executive director Chris Sgro writes in a press release that “it has become clear that the shadow HB2 has cast on North Carolina is hurting our economy, our reputation and our people every day.”
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a rally in Florida on Friday. Mark Wallheiser/Getty Imageshide caption
toggle captionMark Wallheiser/Getty Images
The tables turned for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton over the weekend. For much of the campaign, Clinton has been sitting back, staying quiet and allowing Trump’s gaffes, offensive statements and flip-flops to take up the news cycle.
But then Clinton had a terrible few days. First, she declared that half of all Trump supporters belong to a “basket of deplorables” that includes racists, sexists, homophobic people and other broadly biased groups — a soundbite that Trump quickly made into an attack ad. Then she appeared weak and wobbly as she left early during a memorial ceremony commemorating the Sept. 11 attacks, emboldening Trump supporters who had been questioning her health for weeks.
While Clinton’s “deplorables” comment and pneumonia made the headlines and cable chyrons on Monday morning, Trump didn’t stay entirely quiet, as he made a bit of under-the-radar news himself. Here’s a roundup of what you might have missed:
Trump claims Janet Yellen should be “ashamed”
On Monday morning, Trump told CNBC that he thinks Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen is playing politics with monetary policy, trying to goose economic growth with low interest rates to help President Obama’s legacy.
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“Well it’s staying at zero because she’s obviously political, and she’s doing what Obama wants her to do,” he said.
(Trump hasn’t always been so opposed to Yellen; in an April interview, he said she was doing a “serviceable” job as Fed chair.)
While it’s true that presidents can nominate Fed chairs who share their economic views, the president doesn’t control Fed policy.
One safeguard against this is that members of the Board of Governors are appointed for 14-year terms, meaning they will necessarily serve during multiple presidents’ administrations. In addition, the chair’s terms don’t match up to the president’s terms. When Obama took office, the George W. Bush-appointed Ben Bernanke was Fed chair, and Obama later reappointed him. If elected, Trump couldn’t replace Janet Yellen as chair until early 2018.
Furthermore, Trump seemed to imply that the president can change interest rates. He said he believes that the Fed’s current policy is that “the new person that becomes president, let him raise interest rates or her raise interest rates, and watch what happens to the stock market when that happens.”
To be clear: The president does not and cannot set interest rates, which are determined by meetings of the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Markets Committee (of which the Fed chair is a member). The next meeting of that committee is next week.
“Washington Post” Reports On Trump Foundation
Trump’s charitable foundation has already been facing scrutiny for a $25,000 donation that violated IRS rules and that some say was politically motivated. Now, the Washington Post has also found what it calls five “phantom donations.”
The Post further reported:
Five times, the Trump Foundation’s tax filings described giving a specific amount of money to a specific charity — in some cases, even including the recipient’s address. But when The Post called, the charities listed said the tax filings appeared wrong. They’d never received anything from Trump or his foundation.
The Post asked Trump’s staff to explain all five of these apparent errors.
The nickname refers to Warren’s claims that she is of Native American heritage. The Washington Post’s Fact Checker reported that they couldn’t find reliable documentation to confirm that fact.
Meanwhile, many have slammed Trump for his repeated use of the nickname.
“Make no mistake — these jabs were racist,” Simon Moya-Smith, culture editor at Indian Country Today, wrote in May.
Trump says his physical results are coming
Over the weekend, Trump had already said that he would go on The Dr. Oz Show to discuss his “personal health regimen.” But then on Fox News Monday morning, he said he would release yet more health details from a physical he underwent last week.
“This last week I took a physical, and I’ll be releasing when the numbers come in, hopefully they’re going to be good. I think they’re going to be good. I feel great,” he said.
Clinton likewise revealed that she would be releasing more detailed health records this week.
A new “deplorables” ad
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The Trump campaign made quick use of the “deplorables” comment, turning around a campaign advertisement that claims Clinton is “viciously demonizing” American voters.
In that remark, Clinton had taken aim at Trump’s supporters, and not Trump himself. In doing so, she gave him a soundbite that he will be able to use for the entire election.
Drug users in recovery listen to a counselor at a treatment center in Westborough, Mass., in March. John Moore/Getty Imageshide caption
toggle captionJohn Moore/Getty Images
The nation’s opioid problem comes with staggering physical and emotional costs to patients and families. But the financial burden on the health system has been harder to peg.
A report set to be released Tuesday shows a more than thirteenfold increase in spending by health insurers in a four-year period on patients with a diagnosis of opioid dependence or abuse.
From 2011 to 2015, insurers’ payments to hospitals, laboratories, treatment centers and other medical providers for these patients grew from $32 million to $446 million.
While the latest figure represents a small portion of the overall spending on medical care in the United States, the rapid rise is cause for concern, says Robin Gelburd, president of Fair Health, a nonprofit databank that provides cost information to the health industry and consumers.
“That really shows the stress on the health system and the impact on the individuals,” said Gelburd.
The Fair Health study found a sharp difference in how much insurers spend on individual patients with such a diagnosis.
On average, insurers spend $3,435 a year on an individual patient, but for those with an opioid dependence or abuse diagnosis, that amount jumps to $19,333. Those numbers reflect what insurers actually paid. The report also includes data on what providers charged, amounts that are lowered by their contracts with insurers.
The study, out Monday, builds on a study Fair Health released in early August that found a thirtyfold increase in the volume of insurance claims related to opioid dependence diagnoses between 2007 and 2014.
The latest study by Fair Health — part of a series — looked at amounts associated with claims billed by providers and paid by insurers for the types of medical services used.
Both studies use de-identified claims data from insurers representing more than 150 million insured Americans who either have insurance through work or buy coverage on their own.
There have been other efforts by several researchers to quantify the cost of the opioid problem on the overall economy, estimated in the tens of billions of dollars.
The new report adds to the available data “that it’s not just the human cost associated with the opioid crisis that is enormous, but also that the economic costs are staggering,” said Dr. Andrew Kolodny, senior scientist at Brandeis University. He didn’t work on the study.
The surge in spending on patients with opioid diagnoses is likely a combination of factors, the report notes. As media attention focuses on drug dependency, more people may be seeking treatment. At the same time, prescription and illegal use of narcotics may also be increasing.
The study found that emergency room visits and laboratory tests accounted for much of the spending.
Based on claims volume, the fastest-growing set of services in terms of utilization were for alcohol or drug therapy. Lab tests, including checks for barbiturate or opioid use, weren’t far behind.
Researchers didn’t use 2015 data for lab test costs, noting that a change in billing codes was made that increased the number of categories — and, in some cases, appear to generate higher charges by insurers. It is too early to estimate the long-term effects of the change, Gelburd said.
The report gives some examples of the changes, however. For example, one billing code for a test on opiate use commonly brought in a $31 payment from insurers prior to the change. The two billing codes that replaced it now are commonly paid at $78 and $156.
The new billing codes may reflect new technology in testing, said Gelburd. She said some observers speculate that the rapid increase in lab spending might reflect that, with more patients in therapy, the tests are being used to ensure they are taking their proper medications and not abusing narcotics.
But the spending might also reflect a growing use of very expensive urine and blood tests when less expensive ones would be sufficient, said Kolodny.
“I worry about profiteering,” said Kolodny. “We do need tests, but not the expensive ones. A lot of clinics are making extra money off these lab tests.”
The overall increase in spending across all types of medical services “is a societal issue,” said Gelburd, who says policymakers need to ensure that changes are made to address the problem.
“Are medical school curricula adjusting to recognize the growing need for these services? Are insurers increasing the number of providers in their networks to ensure sufficient access? Are consumers being educated? It’s an issue that has to be dealt with in all quadrants.”
Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Julie Applebyis on Twitter:@Julie_appleby.