October 28, 2016

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Best of the Week: 'Doctor Strange' Reviewed, 'Deadpool 2' Changed Direction and More

The Important News

X-Men Universe: Deadpool 2 lost director Tim Miller. Fans petitioned for Quentin Tarantino to direct Deadpool 2. David Leitch is the real top choice for Deadpool 2.

Marvel Cinematic Universe: Taika Waititi confirmed Miek is in Thor: Ragnarok.

DC Extended Universe: Ben Affleck says he is trying really hard not to fail with The Batman.

Star Wars: The solo Han Solo movie will be about him winning the Millennium Falcon. Rogue One will feature a familiar kind of relationship.

Indiana Jones: The fifth movie will have a proper quest and won’t have George Lucas involved.

Sherlock Holmes: The third movie has compiled an impressive writers’ room.

James Bond: Mexico City is starting a Day of the Dead parade inspired by Spectre.

Godzilla-Kong Universe: Michael Dougherty will direct Godzilla 2.

Horror: Friday the 13th producers want the franchise to have its own Force Awakens.

Sci-fi: Peter Jackson will direct Mortal Engines. Alien: Covenant revealed a new name for its creatures. God Particle was revealed to be a Cloverfield movie. The Cosmere books are being turned into a mega-franchise.

Comedy: The makers of Bad Moms teased up to 10 sequels.

Action: Gerard Butler will return for the sequel Angel Has Fallen.

Biblical Epics: Joachim Ronning will direct Tom Cruise in Methuselah.

Biopics: Jennifer Lawrence will star in a Zelda Fitzgerald movie. Scarlett Johansson will also star in a Zelda Fitzgerald movie. Mel Gibson says there’s an hour of unseen Braveheart footage. Jack O’Connell will star in an Alexander McQueen biopic.

Family Films: Margot Robbie joined the voice cast of Peter Rabbit. Shaun the Sheep Movie is getting a sequel. The Incredibles 2 is coming sooner than expected. Kevin Hart will play Santa Claus for Disney.

Video Game Movies: Shawn Levy will direct Uncharted.

Box Office: Madea beat Jack Reacher in their opening weekend.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, Split, Rules Don’t Apply, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, Man Down, Always Shine and Kill Command.

See: The 2016 World Series depicted via baseball movies.

Watch: Dwayne Johnson sings a new Lin-Manuel Miranda song in Moana. And they both tell theater audiences to silence their cell phones.

See: Tom Hanks revisits scenes from Big. And his David S. Pumpkins character invades classic horror movies.

Watch: The Logan trailer redone with X-Men animated series footage.

See: Early test footage for the original Halloween. And Halloween redone in video game graphics.

Watch: A weird version of the Doctor Strange trailer.

See: All the live-action Batmans in one movie.

Watch: Donald Glover talks about Star Wars on Ellen.

See: Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man again.

Watch: Sausage Party redone as a Pixar movie.

See: All of this week’s best new posters. And Jar Jar Binks takes over the Rogue One poster.

Our Features

Movie Reviews: Doctor Strange proves Marvel movies are evolving.

Interviews: Andrew Garfield on why he’s glad he’s no longer Spider-Man.

Comic Book Movie Guide: The discord of Deadpool 2 tells us about the sequel.

Studio Preview: Our guide to Paramount’s upcoming movies as previewed this week.

Movie Theater Preview: Our tour of the new Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn.

Home Viewing: Our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

and

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Episode 732: Bad Form, Wells Fargo

In the banking industry essentially "U5" is a report card from all of your former employers, like a permanent record.

Cultura RF/Getty Images

A couple of weeks ago, we did a show about the massive scandal at Wells Fargo bank. How good employees were pushed to do bad things. Like opening up bank accounts that customers never asked for.

After the show aired, we talked to ex-employees who said, you know: The fraud, that’s only half the story. Many of them said that after they left Wells Fargo they were surprised by how hard it was to get another job in banking. They’d apply, get to the interview, it’d go great. And then suddenly, silence and rejection. Like something was tripping them up over and over again right before they could get a new job. Some of them just gave up on banking all together.

What was happening had everything to do with a little-known form called a “U5.” This is a form in the banking industry that’s essentially a report card from all of your former employers, like a permanent record.

The ex-employees we talked to say they pushed back against the crazy sales culture at Wells Fargo. In retribution, they say, the bank marked them with a scarlet letter that is badly damaging their careers.

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Today on the show, we continue our investigation into Wells Fargo. And we go deep into this mysterious document, the U5. We’ll find out the well-meaning origins from someone who helped create the system. And we look into how Wells Fargo branded their workers with it. Plus, how hard it’s been for bankers to fight back.

Music: “Stars Above” and “Goldbrick.” Find us: Twitter/ Facebook.

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Cleveland Indians Beat Chicago Cubs 1-0 In Game 3 Of The World Series

Cleveland’s Coco Crisp hits the RBI single that allowed the Indians to beat the Cubs 1-0 in Game 3 of the World Series in Chicago on Friday. Cleveland leads the Series two games to one. David J. Phillip/AP hide caption

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David J. Phillip/AP

The Cleveland Indians beat the Chicago Cubs 1-0 in Game 3 of the World Series in Chicago, after the Indians’ pinch-hitter Coco Crisp helped break the scoreless deadlock in the top of the seventh inning.

Cleveland now takes a 2-1 game lead in a Series that has featured dominant pitching by the winning team of each game.

After three innings, game 3 shaped up as a pitcher’s duel, with both Chicago Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks and Cleveland Indians starter Josh Tomlin allowing no runs.

Since there’s no designated hitter in a National League park, the Indians’ DH (and lead-off hitter) Carlos Santana played left field.

One of the key storylines to note is the absence of Cubs designated hitter Kyle Schwarber from the starting lineup. The young slugger spent the season rehabbing a torn-up knee, and was just activated for the Series. His hitting was a key reason why the Cubs won Game 2. But Schwarber hasn’t been cleared to play in the field, and since Game 3 is in Chicago, a National League city, there is no DH.

Fans arrive at Wrigley Field Friday before Game 3 of the World Series between the Chicago Cubs and the Cleveland Indians. Charlie Riedel/AP hide caption

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Charlie Riedel/AP

Indians starter Josh Tomlin was in command through four-plus innings, while Cleveland’s three relievers kept the Cubs hitters off balance the rest of the game.

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The fifth inning had seen the departure of both starting pitchers.

Indians manager Terry Francona took Josh Tomlin out after he gave up one hit — just the second Cubs hit of the night — and got the next batter to ground out. Indians reliever Andrew Miller was brought in to get the final out of the frame.

The Cleveland Indians mounted their most serious threat in Game 3 thus far, in the top of the fifth inning by knocking Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks out of the game after loading the bases with a hit, a walk, and a hit batsman. But Cubs reliever Justin Grimm induced Francisco Lindor to hit into a double play.

In the sixth, Cubs reliever Carl Edwards retired the side without incident. Indians reliever Andrew Miller struck out the three Cubs batters he faced in the bottom of the inning.

The Indians broke the scoreless deadlock in the top of the seventh inning when pinch-hitter Coco Crisp singled to score pinch-runner Michael Martinez from third base. Martinez was running for Roberto Perez who opened the frame with a single. Martinez went to second on a sacrifice bunt and third on a wild pitch by Cubs reliever Carl Edwards.

The Cubs threatened to score in the bottom of the ninth, putting runners on second and third, but they couldn’t score.

Game 4 of the Series will be played Saturday. The scheduled pitchers are John Lackey for the Cubs and Corey Kluber for the Indians. Kluber was the winner of Game 1 in Cleveland.

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FDA Faults Hospitals For Failing To Report Safety Problems With Medical Devices

After several prominent safety problems with medical devices in hospitals emerged, the Food and Drug Administration inspected 17 hospitals across the country in late 2015 to assess their compliance with reporting regulations. Congressional Quarterly/CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images hide caption

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Congressional Quarterly/CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images

Federal regulators said 12 U.S. hospitals, including well-known medical centers in Los Angeles, Boston and New York, failed to promptly report patient deaths or injuries linked to medical devices.

The Food and Drug Administration publicly disclosed the violations in inspection reports this week amid growing scrutiny of its ability to identify device-related dangers and protect patients from harm.

Some of the reporting lapses were found at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, New York-Presbyterian Hospital and two hospitals in Los Angeles — Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Dr. Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said the violations pointed to a larger problem among hospitals nationwide in reporting patient harm tied to medical devices.

“We believe that these hospitals are not unique in that there is limited to no reporting to FDA or to the manufacturers at some hospitals,” Shuren wrote Monday in an agency blog post. “Hospital staff often were not aware of, nor trained to comply with, all of the FDA’s medical device reporting requirements.”

Under federal rules, hospitals have 10 days to report serious injuries potentially caused by devices to the manufacturer and notify both the manufacturer and the FDA about any deaths that may have resulted. Manufacturers are required to file reports to the FDA within 30 days of learning about an injury or death that may have been caused by a device. For the most serious problems that would require immediate action to prevent major public health harm, companies have five days to report them to FDA.

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It’s hard to discern from the FDA inspections which devices were involved or other details in many cases because the reports released publicly are brief and partly redacted by the FDA. The reports indicate that in some cases hospitals reported events late and in others not at all.

At Massachusetts General, FDA investigators found reporting delays of 10 months and 18 months in two separate patient deaths related to devices.

In a statement, hospital spokeswoman Terri Ogan said the FDA’s findings all have been addressed. “Massachusetts General Hospital takes its reporting obligations very seriously and strives to comply with all requirements in a comprehensive and timely manner,” she said.

At Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, Calif., an FDA investigator found that a patient died from complications related to a multidrug-resistant infection and cardiac arrest following a procedure involving a duodenoscope, a long and flexible instrument put down a patient’s throat.

According to FDA records, the hospital learned through test results that the patient’s infection was likely related to 14 other confirmed infections caused by contaminated duodenoscopes. “However, this death was not reported to the FDA and the manufacturer by your facility,” the FDA inspector wrote in a December 2015 report.

A spokeswoman for Huntington Hospital, Eileen Neuwirth, said, “We have taken steps to ensure rigorous compliance going forward.”

Many of the hospitals involved — such as Cedars-Sinai — said they welcomed the agency’s feedback and supported efforts to improve device oversight, but some disputed them or offered explanations.

New York-Presbyterian said in a statement that it filed medical device reports “in accordance with FDA regulations” and none of the agency’s findings related to the quality or safety of patient care. Also in a statement, UCLA said it promptly reported scope-related cases to the FDA but that the agency asked for duplicate reports through a separate system.

The findings underscore concerns raised by a Senate report in January, which exposed reporting failures by hospitals as well as mistakes by device makers that contributed to multiple superbug outbreaks across the U.S. from contaminated duodenoscopes. The FDA’s oversight of medical devices was also faulted in the report.

As many as 350 patients at 41 medical centers worldwide have been infected or exposed to contaminated duodenoscopes from 2010 to 2015, according to the FDA.

The agency initiated its investigation of hospitals’ reporting in December 2015, a month before the Senate report was released. But the agency was already under fire by then for spotty oversight of duodenoscope manufacturers and other devices.

Shuren said in his blog post that the agency focused on 17 hospitals where safety issues had occurred involving either duodenoscopes or power morcellators, a surgical tool used in hysterectomies. Morcellators are used to cut up benign growths called fibroids, but the FDA has warned about the device spreading cancerous tissue in the abdomen and pelvis. The investigators examined incidents involving other devices as well.

Other than publicly announcing the violations, Shuren said the agency didn’t plan on taking further action against the hospitals. Instead, he said he wants to work with the hospital industry to improve monitoring of devices.

“We feel certain there is a better way to work with hospitals to get the real-world information we need, and we should work with the hospital community to find that right path,” Shuren wrote.

Lawmakers, health policy experts and the FDA have proposed various reforms aimed at strengthening device surveillance, including tracking insurance claims data to supplement the injury reports and automating so-called adverse event reports through electronic health records.

The issue may take on more urgency after federal authorities this month highlighted the infection risk from yet another commonly used device — heater cooler units used in open-heart surgeries. The FDA is holding a public meeting Dec. 5 on improving hospital-based surveillance of devices.

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can follow Chad Terhune on Twitter: @chadterhune.

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