September 16, 2016

No Image

Best of the Week: Toronto Film Festival Reviews, Batman's New Batsuit and More

The Important News

DC Extended Universe: Zack Snyder unveiled Batman’s new suit for Justice League. Billy Crudup will play Barry Allen’s father in The Flash. Margo Robbie will produce her Harley Quinn spinoff.

X-Men: Mr. Sinister will be the villain in Wolverine 3.

Star Wars: Rogue One will be scored by Michael Giacchino instead of Alexandre Desplat.

Sequels: Benicio Del Toro will star in The Predator. Peter Berg wants to make The Rundown 2. Cailee Spaeny will star in Pacific Rim 2.

Remakes: Conrad Vernon will direct the Toxic Avenger remake.

Alternate Cuts: The “black and chrome” version of Mad Max: Fury Road will hit video in December.

Biopics: Stan Lee’s life will be embellished and depicted in a movie. Harvey Weinstein is making a competing Egardo Mortara movie.

Animation: Dax Shepard will co-direct the Scooby-Doo animated feature with Tony Cervone.

YA Adaptations: Storm Reid will play the lead in A Wrinkle in Time.

War Movies: Tom Hanks has written and may star in the World War II movie Greyhound.

Box Office: Sully is a winner for Clint Eastwood and Tom Hanks.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Fifty Shades Darker, Moana, Miss Sloane, Nocturnal Animals, Annabelle 2, Blair Witch, Bastards, The Promise, The Bye Bye Man, Finding Altamira and Trolls.

Hear: A crazy fan theory about The Blair Witch Project.

Watch: X-Men: Apocalypse mall-set deleted scenes. And a video orientation guide to Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters.

See: How Captain America: Civil War should have ended. And Captain America: Civil War redone with video game sounds. And Deadpool inserted into Captain America: Civil War.

Watch: A video essay on why the MCU scores are so bad. And a video comparing similar scores. A reponse theory about film scores.

See: Tim Drake’s action-packed audition video to play Robin.

Watch: 10 ways Indiana Jones uses his whip.

See: All of this week’s best new posters.

Our Features

Toronto Film Festival Reviews: Here’s what we think of Moonlight, Arrival, A Monster Calls and Loving. And here’s what we think of La La Land, Jackie and Sing. And here’s what we think of Bleed for This, Lion, Nocturnal Animals and Colossal.

Interviews: Kurt Russell on his future in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And Kurt Russell on his TV series with Mel Gibson. And Greg McLean on the horrifying original ending of The Darkness. And Adam Wingard on almost directing Furious 8.

Horror Movie Guide: Here’s all the latest horror movie news and trailers.

Comic Book Movie Guide: Meet Martian Manhunter, heart and soul of Justice League.

Home Viewing: Our guide to everything hitting VOD this week. And our guide to all the best indie and foreign films new to DVD.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Episode 573: Why Textbook Prices Keep Climbing

Textbooks. Richard Baker/Corbis via Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Richard Baker/Corbis via Getty Images

Note: This episode originally aired in October 2014.

Listeners have been asking for years why textbooks are getting so expensive. Prices of new textbooks have been going up faster than clothing, food, cars, and even healthcare. On today’s show we found out why prices won’t stop rising.

We speak to a student who took a course that required a $310 textbook, professors who pick the textbooks that their students have to buy, and a CEO of a textbook company who, it turns out, doesn’t like talking about books. We also venture into the parallel universe of the high school textbook market.

Music: ‘Bout That Live‘ and ‘Road Coffee.’ Find us: Twitter/Facebook.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Penn State Under Fire For Planned Tribute To Joe Paterno

Pennsylvania State University is receiving intense criticism for its planned tribute to former football coach, Joe Paterno. Critics say Paterno failed to prevent or adequately report Jerry Sandusky’s repeated sexual abuse of children. Penn State fired Paterno in 2011, after Sandusky’s abuse came to light.

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Penn State University is being criticized for its decision to honor its former football coach, Joe Paterno, during a game on Saturday. The school’s tribute is for the 50th anniversary of Paterno’s first game as Penn State head coach.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

The university fired Joe Paterno back in 2011. This was after a grand jury indicted Jerry Sandusky for sexually abusing children over decades. Sandusky had been a defensive coordinator for the football team.

MCEVERS: Paterno has been faulted for not adequately reporting Sandusky’s crimes. And before Paterno died in 2012, he said he wished he had done more. But there’s an ongoing fight over the former coach’s legacy.

CORNISH: We asked Erin McCarthy about tomorrow’s commemoration. She’s a senior at Penn State and an intern at The Philadelphia Inquirer, covering Penn State football.

ERIN MCCARTHY: On Saturday, there’s going to be a focus, it seems, on the players that he impacted. That was their pretty much exact phrasing in that statement from the athletic director, Sandy Barbour. And the co-captains of the 1966 team will participate in the coin toss and different types of video presentations and clips of that game throughout the game tomorrow.

MCEVERS: Charlie Thompson is a reporter for The Patriot-News in Harrisburg. He says the decision to hold the commemoration has a lot to do with pressure from people who went to Penn State and feel like Paterno was made into a scapegoat.

CHARLIE THOMPSON: There have been surveys that suggest that more than 90 percent of Penn State alumni believe that it is time and it is fitting for the university to honor Paterno and his contributions to Penn State.

CORNISH: Among current students, opinion is mixed. A Daily Collegian editorial condemned the planned commemoration and said Paterno is, quote, “no longer a community hero.”

MCEVERS: But senior Erin McCarthy says, you can still find a lot of fans around state college, too.

MCCARTHY: You know, you walk around downtown, and a lot of stores have cut outs of Joe Paterno, Joe Paterno wall hangings and shirts. And it’s a part of the culture here that, despite what happened in 2011, doesn’t seem to have gone away.

CORNISH: The events of 2011 haven’t gone away, either. Former University officials are still facing charges related to the Sandusky case.

MCEVERS: A victim advocate who worked with survivors of Sandusky’s abuse talked to Yahoo News and called tomorrow’s commemoration incredibly insensitive.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

What's The Secret To India's Paralympics Success?

Devendra Jhajharia of India competes in the javelin throw at the 2016 Paralympic Games. The gold medal winner lost his left arm in an accident when he was 8. Friedemann Vogel/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Friedemann Vogel/Getty Images

Deepa Malik was about to make history. Seated in a custom-made chair on a hot day in Rio, Malik — paralyzed from the chest down — held a 6.5-pound shot put between her neck and right shoulder. She took a deep breath and hurled the shot 15 feet across the throwing circle. The throw got Malik a silver at the Paralympic Games in Brazil this past Monday — and made her the first Indian woman to win a Paralympics medal.

“My first thoughts were, ‘Oh my God, have I really won?’ ” says Malik, 45, via email. She developed a spinal tumor in her early 30s and has been paralyzed since. “To become the first Indian woman to win a Paralympic medal is an honor, and it is something I will cherish for the rest of my life.”

A few days later, Devendra Jhajharia also had a historic win at the Summer Games. When he was 8, Jhajharia touched a live wire in his small North Indian village; his left arm had to be amputated. Everywhere he went, people commented on his missing limb, telling his mother he would forever have to rely on her. Tired of being called weak, Jhajharia was determined to prove them wrong.

And boy, did he ever. The 36-year-old javelin thrower just beat his own 2004 Athens Paralympic record and won a Paralympic gold for a second time.

Malik and Jhajharia are part of a team of 19 athletes representing India at the 2016 Paralympic Games and proof of a change that’s taking over the country. In fact, this modestly sized group is India’s largest-ever Paralympic delegation. (China sent the largest delegation of 308 athletes; Brazil sent the second largest at 285; and at 279, the U.S. had the third largest.)

“It’s fabulous,” says Deepthi Bopaiah, executive director of GoSports Foundation, a nonprofit organization that funds professional athletes in India. “This is definitely a great start for India. I think more people will come forward to support these athletes.”

A year ago, the foundation launched an exclusive program for India’s para-athletes, and that program has funded most of the participants at this summer’s Paralympics.

So far, India has won two golds, one silver and one bronze medal. That’s double the success of its 2016 Olympic counterpart of more than 100 athletes.

Several factors have led the country to this summer of excellence. For starters, the Indian government recently passed a first-of-its-kind corporate social responsibility law requiring certain companies, based on their earnings and revenue, to contribute 2 percent of their profits to social development — including education, poverty and sport programs. “It’s really changed the game for us,” says Aparna Ravichandran, head of partnerships at GoSports Foundation.

Since its inception eight years ago, the foundation has relied on the support of individuals and small organizations, but this recent mandate has resulted in funding from multinational companies and other large partners. The government also launched a “Target Olympic Podium Scheme,” an initiative that has set aside a little over 300 million rupees, or more than $4 million, for the program.

These cash incentives have made a world of difference to athletes — several of whom are from extremely humble backgrounds. They also convey to a society that’s biased toward academics that sport can be a legitimate and lucrative career.

“They’re able to see money,” Bopaiah says, adding that athletes can win hundreds of thousands of dollars through sponsorships as well as rewards from the government. For instance, the government of Tamil Nadu in southern India has promised high jumper Mariyappan Thangavelu 20 million rupees, close to $300,000, for winning a gold in this year’s Paralympics.

Policy changes have also led to better media coverage and more awareness of the needs of athletes with disabilities. A few years ago, Mahantesh Kivadasannavar, a partially blind cricketer, helped form the Cricket Association for the Blind in India, or CABI, with “the prime objective to focus on promoting and fostering the game of cricket for the blind,” he says. This relatively new group — still in need of regular funding — is managed by visually impaired cricket enthusiasts.

Para-cricket involves slight modifications to the original sport. For instance, the cricket ball is made of plastic with steel ball bearings on the inside that rattle, letting the batter know of an approaching ball. Also, cricket wickets are made of steel instead of wood. In a country that worships cricket, CABI helps select 17 visually impaired cricketers from a group of roughly 10,000 hopefuls to represent India at international events — including the second annual T20 World Cup cricket tournament for the blind scheduled for early next year.

Kivadasannavar is also part of the Indian Association of Para Sport Organizations — a recently formed coalition of like-minded groups and agencies.

The group is the brainchild of Rajesh Tomar — former president of the Paralympic Committee of India, or PCI, which has often come under criticism. PCI’s parent body, the International Paralympic Committee, suspended the organization several times in the past few years over internal conflicts as well as mismanagement of athletes and events.

Only recently did the international arm lift its ban on PCI, allowing athletes to represent India at this summer’s Paralympics.

The poor planning manifests itself in other ways, too. “There’s not much help in terms of sending in their entries, paying their entry fee on time, getting their visa, getting their travel documents processed on time,” says Ravichandran of GoSports.

In addition, despite some improvements, athletes continue to struggle with a lack of handicap-accessible infrastructure and access to appropriate training facilities in India. “The deeper we got into that ecosystem, the clearer it became that there’s so much more support needed,” she says.

Some of that support comes from coaches and other role models, who have already walked this somewhat confusing and challenging path.

Niranjan Mukundan can vouch for the power of a good coach. Born with a spinal defect and a club foot, this 22-year-old swimmer was crowned junior world champion last year at the International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports event in the Netherlands. It was “one of the best moments of my life,” he says.

When Mukundan was 8, his coach, John Christopher, from Bangalore, introduced him to the world of para-swimming. Less than a year later, Mukundan participated in his first national event and won a silver medal.

When she isn’t out winning medals for her country, Malik serves as a motivational speaker and a role model, hoping to inspire people through her journey.

“I think it is important to lead as an example,” she says. “Now, with my latest achievement, I hope to strike a chord with people back home — particularly differently abled women in India — and inspire them to come out of their homes.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)