October 26, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Movies Reenact the 2016 World Series, Jar Jar Binks Takes Over 'Rogue One' and More

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

Poster Parody of the Day:

Obligatorily, the Rogue One: A Star Wars Story poster has been redone with Jar Jar Binks everywhere, this one by artist Olly Gibbs (via Heroic Hollywood):

Mashup of the Day:

Watch the 2016 World Series depicted by mashing Major League and Rookie of the Year plus a few other movies (via Geek Tyrant):

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Timely Promotion Image of the Day:

Speaking of the World Series, Pixar celebrated the digital release of Finding Dory and the start of this year’s baseball championship event with a cute new image of Dory and Hank (via Twitter):

Halloween Prep of the Day:

Learn how to make your own chainsaw hand from Evil Dead II to go as Ash for Halloween:

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Cosplay of the Day:

We’re hoping this little girl hasn’t actually seen the movie her cosplay is based off, but regardless she does a great Harley Quinn from Suicide Squad (via Fashionably Geek):

Screenwriting Lesson of the Day:

Tales from the Screenplay looks at Stanley Kubrick and Diane Johnson’s script for The Shining and how the scares started on the page:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Inferno star Tom Hanks with future wife Rita Wilson, who was born on this day in 1956, and John Candy, whose birthday is Monday, on the set of the 1985 comedy Volunteers:

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows how Insidious: Chapter 2 is basically the same movie as Poltergeist II: The Other Side:

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Meme Art of the Day:

Artist Austin Light was inspired by a meme where one letter is removed from a movie title to make something new, and this is his depiction of “Ron Man,” with TV character Ron Swanson as Iron Man. See more at Nerdist (via /Film).

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 35th anniversary of the release of the original Halloween II. Watch the trailer for the sequel below.

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Tesla Surprise: It's A Profit

The exterior of the new Tesla flagship facility in San Francisco. Tesla attributes its recent profitability in part to the opening of new stores. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images hide caption

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Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Tesla surprised Wall Street Wednesday by posting a profit of nearly $22 million for the third quarter. It’s a surprise because it’s only the second time in the company’s history that it has posted a quarterly profit.

Tesla attributes its newfound profitability to new product launches, increased store efficiency and new store openings. At the same time the company says its investment in self-driving hardware and other product enhancements position Tesla to gain market share.

“We’ve got a chance of being profitable,” said Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk about next quarter on the company’s earnings call. The last time Tesla posted a profit was in the first quarter of 2013.

“That remains to be seen,” says Michelle Krebs, senior analyst for Autotrader, about Tesla’s future profitability. Krebs says the company was able to keep costs in check while focusing on meeting production targets. She adds: “Finally, Tesla has achieved a milestone that investors long awaited — a profitable quarter and a surprise one at that.”

The profitable quarter comes at a particularly good time for Tesla, according to Krebs. Next month, the Tesla board votes on the controversial merger with SolarCity Corp. Musk is the chairman of Solar City, the maker and installer of solar panels, a company founded by his cousins.

In addition to the merger, Tesla is building its “gigafactory” which would be the largest battery factory in the world. The company sees energy storage and production as a key to growth as outlined in a letter to investors.

“Our energy storage products are gaining increased market acceptance, firmly establishing Tesla as a leader in energy storage solutions, and surpassing our competitors in the breadth and scope of our offerings across residential, commercial, and utility-scale storage markets. At the same time, we continue to lay the foundation for future growth. Gigafactory construction and Model 3 development both remain on plan to support volume Model 3 production and deliveries in the second half of 2017.”

Tesla says its activity in the battery realm didn’t keep it from achieving its internal goals. Musk told reporters the company is on track to build the Tesla Model 3, an affordable electric car. The company has set a goal of selling 500,000 vehicles by 2018. Currently, according to Musk, Tesla is building 2,000 vehicles a week. Tesla said earlier this month that it delivered 24,500 vehicles, a 70 percent increase from the same time last year. Tim Higgins of the Wall Street Journal reports on CEO’s plan for expansion.

“Tesla needs about $2.5 billion through the end of 2017 for the Model 3 roll out and the completion of a huge battery factory in Nevada, according to Brian Johnson, an automotive analyst at Barclays.

“The improved results also could help Mr. Musk make the case that he can handle merging Tesla with SolarCity Corp., which could require additional cash. The combined companies ultimately may need to raise $12.5 billion for spending through 2018, according to Oppenheimer & Co. Tesla and SolarCity shareholders are scheduled to vote on a merger Nov. 17.”

“Tesla badly needed this positive outcome after 13 quarters of unprofitable results to reassure investors,” says Rebecca Lindland of Kelley Blue Book. Lindland says keeping the Model 3 on schedule could be a precursor to even better days ahead. “If they do not,” she warns, “then this could be that sunny day that often precedes a perfect storm.”

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Chicago Cubs Beat The Cleveland Indians 5-1 In Game 2 Of The World Series

The Chicago Cubs’ starting pitcher Jake Arrieta dominated the Cleveland Indians for much of Game 2 of the World Series in Cleveland Wednesday. Jason Miller/Getty Images hide caption

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Jason Miller/Getty Images

Updated at 11:30 p.m. ET

The Chicago Cubs beat the Cleveland Indians 5-1 in Game 2 of the World Series. The best-of-seven Series is tied one game apiece as the action moves to Chicago for Game 3 on Friday.

Cubs starting pitcher Jake Arrieta disarmed the Indians’ batters, holding them hitless until the sixth inning, when they scored their only run. The Indians stranded two runners in the seventh inning, a runner in the eighth inning and another in the ninth. But they never mounted a real challenge to Cubs relievers Mike Montgomery or Aroldis Chapman.

The Scoring

In the first inning, Indians starting pitcher Trevor Bauer gave up one run on a single by Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant, who then came home on a double by Anthony Rizzo.

The Cubs scored their second run in the third inning on a base hit by Kyle Schwarber, driving in Rizzo from second base.

The Chicago Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber is back from a major injury just in time for a big hitting performance in the World Series against the Cleveland Indians. David J. Phillip/AP hide caption

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David J. Phillip/AP

The Cubs scored three runs in the top of the fifth inning after Cubs reliever Zach McAllister walked Rizzo and then gave up a triple by Ben Zobrist. Reliever Bryan Shaw was brought in to face Schwarber who followed with a single, scoring Zobrist. The Cubs scored their third run of the frame when Shaw walked Addison Russell with the bases full, scoring Schwarber.

The Indians finally got on the board scoring a run in the bottom of the sixth when Cubs starter, 2015 Cy Young award winner Arrieta, threw a wild pitch scoring Jason Kipnis, who had the Indians first hit of the night. Arrieta was replaced by reliever Montgomery.

Schwarber’s story is one Cubs fans (and TV commentators) love. After hitting 16 homers as a rookie last year, he tore up his knee in early April and hadn’t played since then until last night. He’s been in the lineup as the designated hitter. If anyone on the field was “just-happy-to-be-here,” it’s Kyle Schwarber.

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California Rules About Violence Against Health Workers Could Become A Model

California rules would require site-specific assessments to identify violence risks for health care workers and plans to mitigate them. Dana Neely/Getty Images hide caption

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Dana Neely/Getty Images

Workers in California’s hospitals and doctors’ offices may be less likely to get hit, kicked, bitten or grabbed under workplace standards adopted by a state workplace safety board.

Regulators within the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health approved a rule last Thursday that would require hospitals and other employers of health professionals to develop violence prevention protocols and involve workers in the process. The standard now will be reviewed by the Office of Administrative Law, which proponents expect will approve the new rules. The earliest they could take effect would be January 2017.

“This is a landmark day for the entire country,” said Bonnie Castillo, a registered nurse who is director of health and safety for the California Nurses Association/National Nurses United, which represents 185,000 registered nurses across the U.S.

There are no federal rules specifically protecting workers from violence, but some states, including California, New York, Illinois and New Jersey require public employers to take preventive measures, according to the American Nurses Association.

The Cal/OSHA rules apply to private health care facilities in the state and are more robust than existing workplace protection rules, union officials say. Site-specific assessments will be done to identify violence risks, and the resulting plans to prevent injuries will address concerns identified by workers.

“California has now set the bar with the strongest workplace violence regulation in the nation,” wrote Castillo in a statement.

Two unions, the California Nurses Association and the Service Employees International Union, have been pushing for more comprehensive protections because of what they see as an alarming rate of health care workplace assaults, such as the 2010 strangling death of a nurse at a state-run psychiatric hospital in Napa.

“Unfortunately, [violence] is sort of a daily occurrence,” said Kathy Hughes, a registered nurse and spokesperson for the SEIU Nurse Alliance of California. She said her union formed a campaign and talked to hundreds of health care professionals, many of whom had accepted the idea that assaults happen at work. But “violence shouldn’t be part of the job,” said Hughes.

The California Nurses Association sponsored the 2014 bill that required the board to adopt the violence prevention rules this year.

National research shows that health care workers are at a “substantially higher” risk of workplace violence than the average worker. In 2013, for example, private-sector hospital workers were five times more likely to take time off from work because of an injury caused by violence than a typical private sector worker.

Workplace safety standards already exist in California, but the Cal/OSHA rules are specifically designed to prevent violence.

“It can’t be a cookie-cutter approach,” said Hughes, adding that emergency departments and pediatric care units pose different dangers to workers, so safety protocols can’t simply be a canned plan found on the Internet.

Both the California Nurses Association and SEIU say they hope the new California standards will become a national model.

Testimony at hearings leading up to the approval of the rules to prevent violence suggest that worker assaults vary in severity.

As a student nurse at a San Francisco hospital, Amy Erb remembered being kicked in the head by an agitated, confused patient with a traumatic brain injury.

Other health care workers told stories about patients throwing lamps, lifting caregivers up by their necks or stuffing dirt into the mouths of their colleagues.

Under the new rules, California employers wouldn’t be liable for every act of violence against a worker, such as a mass shooting, but they could be cited by Cal/OSHA for not following protocols, Hughes said. The standard applies to hospital-affiliated facilities and clinics, including home health care settings and drug treatment programs.

Hospitals and physicians were at the table when regulators hammered out the workplace rules. The California Hospital Association didn’t provide comment for this story, but it had been opposed to creating new standards when lawmakers looked at the issue in 2014. Hospitals also wanted “workplace violence” to be better defined.

The hospital trade association said several recent trends may contribute to violence at health care facilities. Cuts to mental health care services lead to more psychiatric patients in hospitals. The aging patient population may include more Alzheimer’s patients, some with aggressive tendencies. And hospitals caring for current or recently released prisoners face a higher risk of violence.

This story was produced by Kaiser Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.

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