September 26, 2016

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: 'Zootopia' Gets Political, Tom Hanks Crashes a Wedding Party and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Political Party of the Day:

As in political-themed get-together, there’s a Zootopia-themed viewing party for tonight’s presidential debate, and this invite has turned the Republican and Democrat animal icons into characters you’d find in the hit Disney movie (via THR):

Movie Food of the Day:

Speaking of Disney, in honor of National Pancake Day, here are some exquisite flapjacks inspired by The Little Mermaid, which are almost too beautiful to eat:

Flip your fins and flapjacks for @drdancake‘s #TheLittleMermaid creation. pic.twitter.com/OEdr3zeeog

— Disney (@Disney) September 23, 2016

Wedding Photos of the Day:

Tom Hanks photobombed a lucky newlywed couple’s wedding photo shoot in NYC’s Central Park over the weekend:

Tom Hanks rather brilliantly photobombs a couple’s wedding photos in Central Park https://t.co/DCJdn7obg3 pic.twitter.com/0WqKI2V4X5

— Yahoo Movies UK (@YahooMoviesUK) September 26, 2016

Actor in the Spotlight:

Speaking of Tom Hanks, Burger Fiction highlights his career in this video on his evolution in TV and movies:

[embedded content]

Opening Shot of the Day:

Darren of Must See Films looks at the opening shot of Boogie Nights in this video essay on the economy of storytelling:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Olivia Newton-John, whose birthday is today, kicks it to John Travolta on the set of Grease in 1977:

Movie Comparisons of the Day:

Candice Drouet has made another video showcasing similar shots in classic movies, such as Persona and Mulholland Drive, side by side:

[embedded content]

Reworked Trailer of the Day:

The Boy Who Could Fly, which was released 30 years ago today, is sold as a thriller in this recut trailer:

[embedded content]

Alternate Movie Poster of the Day:

Some of the prints of this excellent poster for The Fly by artist Matt Ryan Tobin glow in the dark (via Geek Tyrant):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of “Crocodile” Dundee. Watch the original trailer for the fish out of water comedy below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Live Fact Check: Trump And Clinton Debate For The First Time

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton debate Monday night.

Meg Kelly/NPR

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton went head to head Monday night in the first presidential debate.

NPR’s politics team, with help from reporters and editors who cover national security, immigration, business, foreign policy and more, live annotated the debate. Portions of the debate with added analysis are underlined in yellow, followed by context and fact check.

You can follow more highlights of the debate at nprpolitics.org.

Note: The transcript on this page was updated live as the debate proceeded. We are working to correct the transcript as it comes in, but owing to the live nature of the event, there may be some discrepancies.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Live Fact Check: Trump And Clinton Debate For The First Time

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton debate Monday night.

Meg Kelly/NPR

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton went head to head Monday night in the first presidential debate.

NPR’s politics team, with help from reporters and editors who cover national security, immigration, business, foreign policy and more, live annotated the debate. Portions of the debate with added analysis are underlined in yellow, followed by context and fact check.

You can follow more highlights of the debate at nprpolitics.org.

Note: The transcript on this page was updated live as the debate proceeded. We are working to correct the transcript as it comes in, but owing to the live nature of the event, there may be some discrepancies.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

From Humble Roots, Arnold Palmer Changed How People Viewed His Sport

NPR’s Robert Siegel talks with Michael Bamberger, a senior writer at Sports Illustrated, about the legacy of Arnold Palmer. He died Sunday at age 87.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

The death of Arnold Palmer marks the loss of a rare professional athlete who changed the way people viewed his sport. He came from humble roots to shine in a game associated with the well-to-do. He played with a vigor that reminded you that hitting a golf ball is in fact an athletic feat. He was a golden boy who attracted fans who adored him. Michael Bamberger joins us now. He’s a senior writer for Sports Illustrated. Welcome back.

MICHAEL BAMBERGER: Thank you, Robert.

SIEGEL: How would you describe the impact that Arnold Palmer had on the game of golf?

BAMBERGER: Well, he really redefined golf for American middle-class weekend athletes. It was a game that was considered off limits prior to Arnold. And because of Arnold and ever since, it’s been a major leisure time activity for literally tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of people. He also sold an enormous number of color TVs along the way. So Arnold’s impact is immeasurable.

SIEGEL: But you say people thought it was off limits because they, like Arnold Palmer, came from working-class roots, and this was a game that people who belonged to country clubs played.

BAMBERGER: Arnold sort of made his first mark in golf by winning the 1954 U.S. Amateur in Detroit. He defeated someone who was from a prosperous Long Island family, and that sort of set the tone really for the rest of his career.

And even though there were certainly other golfers, including Ben Hogan, who he sort of replaced as America’s leading golfer who also came from working-class humble origins, as you say, he did it with a verve and a style that was irresistible. He had an enormous amount of sex appeal that drew women to him in great numbers, but men live vicariously through that same charisma as well.

SIEGEL: Yes, his fans, Arnie’s Army, were a phenomenon. He was a hugely popular athlete.

BAMBERGER: He was. And interestingly, Robert, he remained so long after his days as an athlete were over because he had a rare ability, like certain actors, like maybe a Tom Hanks or maybe like a George Clooney have to connect with people. He could connect with galleries in the thousands or be it a rubber chicken dinner with several hundred people there. And everyone had the feeling of connecting individually with every single individual person.

SIEGEL: In addition to being a great golfer and handsome athletic-looking guy, Arnold Palmer came across as a very sunny personality. Was that for real? In private was he that nice?

BAMBERGER: I wouldn’t describe Arnold as nice. I would say that he was interesting and that he was truthful. I would say he was much darker in his private life because there were losses in golf that haunted him literally for the rest of his life. And most particularly he never won a PGA Championship which he needed to have completed the cycle of winning the four great major golf championships.

But also he had numerous opportunities, a half a dozen or more opportunities that he could tick them off rapid fire to win U.S. Opens, which was really the crown jewel to him of all golf championships. And he won in 1960.

And as he said, he never really could get back the deep aggressiveness that let him get into a gear to get the job done after he won that 1960 U.S. Open. So really everything he achieved after that 1960 Open did not really measure up for him because that was his grail, was that U.S. Open.

SIEGEL: Michael Bamberger of Sports Illustrated, thanks for talking with us about the late Arnold Palmer.

BAMBERGER: Robert, thanks for having me.

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?)