November 23, 2016

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: Batman vs. Classic Movie Villains, Thanksgiving in Movies and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

Batman finds the hangout of all classic movie villains, including Voldemort and Loki, and takes them on himself in this animated parody:

[embedded content]

Supercut of the Day:

For Fandor Keyframe, Jacob T. Swinney spotlights dysfunctional Thanksgiving dinner scenes in movies:

[embedded content]

Movie Reenactment of the Day:

A British couple likes to recreate scenes from movies, like Alien, with their cats. See more, including The Shining and E.T. at Geekologie.

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows is basically a remake of Double Dragon:

[embedded content]

Movie Homages of the Day:

Here’s another showcase of paintings side by side with the shots in movies they inspired, including one in Eraserhead, from Candice Drouet:

[embedded content]

Reimagined Movie of the Day:

What if Titanic was a modern cruise line instead of a movie? CineFix imagines it so with this fake ad:

[embedded content]

Vintage Poster of the Day:

Franco Nero, who turns 75 today, broke out as the original Django in this 1966 Spaghetti Western:

Actor in the Spotlight:

In honor of the release of Allied, check out some trivia about Brad Pitt via ScreenCrush:

[embedded content]

Film Studies Lesson of the Day:

The Nerdwriter looks at brilliant lighting in animation with focus on the anime classic Akira:

[embedded content]

Classic Movie Trailer of the Day:

Tomorrow is the 60th anniversary of the release of Giant, starring Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean. Watch the original trailer for the movie below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Voters Backed Transit Funds. Will Congress OK Trump Infrastructure Plan?

San Francisco Bay area voters recently approved a sales tax increase to upgrade the aging BART system. Ben Margot/AP hide caption

toggle caption

Ben Margot/AP

On a night that the national election results had her discouraged, Seattle resident Anne Johnson had at least one ballot measure to celebrate: ST3, which will raise the local sales tax in the Seattle-Tacoma area to help pump $54 billion into expanding the region’s rail and bus systems. It passed by a wide margin.

“That is awesome, and we’ve put a lot of work into that, and I’m excited for the direction that that will take Seattle,” says Johnson, who adds that the transit improvements will help people get to their jobs, to school and will have environmental benefits, too.

And Seattle voters aren’t alone in approving new transit funding. San Francisco Bay area voters OK’d a tax increase to upgrade the aging BART system. Los Angeles County voters backed a tax increase to expand light rail, commuter rail and bus rapid transit service. And Atlanta voters approved expanding that city’s transit lines.

Article continues after sponsorship

One of the unheralded national stories from Election Day is just how well trains and buses did at the ballot box, as voters in dozens of cities approved local tax increases to expand and improve public transit.

“Election Day 2016 was historic for ballot measures that supported investment in public transportation,” says Jason Jordan, director of the Center for Transportation Excellence, which tracks such ballot initiatives.

“We saw a record number of measures on ballots,” Jordan says. “There were 77 measures nationwide; 71 percent of those passed. That accounts for almost $170 billion in new transit funding.”

That’s funding that would come directly out of local residents’ pockets, not from Washington.

Transit didn’t just win in big cities and blue states, Jordan adds. Voters approved referendums to boost spend more money on transit in more traditionally car-centric cities, too, including measures for new rail and bus rapid transit in Raleigh, N.C., public transportation projects in Charleston, S.C., and transit expansions in Columbus and Toledo, Ohio, and Indianapolis, among other cities.

“There’s an infrastructure deficit out there, and that’s existing everywhere, red state or blue state,” says Art Guzzetti of the American Public Transportation Association.

Seattle: Sound Transit 3, or ST3, is the third phase of a massive Puget Sound regional transit plan. It increases the sales tax primarily — but includes property and other taxes, too — to raise $27.7 billion over 25 years. All funding goes toward a $54 billion transit expansion plan that would add 62 miles of new light rail to areas that don’t have transit access. It also would add new bus rapid transit to the I-405 corridor, and it would fund other transit services.

San Francisco Bay Region: Bay Area Rapid Transit’s Measure RR is a property tax increase to raise $3.5 billion to update, repair and replace aging infrastructure, to allow for more frequent and reliable service across the BART system.

Los Angeles County: Measure M raises the sales tax a half cent and will generate $120 billion over 40 years to fund the county’s long-term transportation plan, including new light rail extensions, new bus rapid transit, some commuter rail and some will go to expanding roads and highways. About two-thirds of the funding overall goes to transit.

Atlanta: Voters approved a sales tax increase of 0.5 percent to raise $2.5 billion to fund expansion of the MARTA system, including several light rail extensions.

Indianapolis/Marion County: Voters approved a quarter-percent income tax increase to raise $1.68 billion over 30 years to fund the IndyGo Transit plan. Projects include three new bus rapid transit routes include the 35-mile electric BRT Red Line.

Raleigh/Wake County, N.C.: Voters approved a half-cent sales tax increase to raise $1 billion over 10 years to fund the Wake County Transit plan, including commuter rail between Durham and Raleigh and new bus rapid transit in four directions from downtown Raleigh.

Now transit advocates hope to capitalize on President-elect Donald Trump’s call to spend up to $1 trillion on infrastructure, a plan which Guzzetti says should now gain bipartisan support in Washington.

“Both sides have an inclination of getting this issue on the agenda early. Both sides believe in infrastructure, and it’s definitely going to be one of the first issues taken up by the next Congress,” Guzzetti says.

Trump’s call to spend big on infrastructure might be the only plan of his that congressional Democrats agree with, and many Republicans, who rejected most of the same kinds of infrastructure funding plans proposed by the Obama administration, now seem to be on board, too.

So what could go wrong?

“It very quickly gets to be much more difficult and complicated when we talk about how we’re gonna pay for this,” says Democratic Congressman Dan Lipinski of Chicago, who sits on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

He’s not so sure his Republican colleagues will go along with funding public transit in big Democratic-voting cities such as his, and even if they do, he’s skeptical about one of the possible funding sources.

Trump wants to create an infrastructure bank, using tax credits to leverage private investment in infrastructure projects. But Lipinski says those are essentially loans that would have to be paid back with revenue from something like tolls.

“We do not, first of all, want to make every road a toll road,” says Lipinski. “And there are things such as public transportation which would not ever get funded in this manner.”

Transportation consultant Steve Schlickman says infrastructure banks are good for toll roads, airports, port facilities and other projects that generate revenue from their users.

Schlickman, who is also former executive director of Chicago’s Regional Transportation Authority and the former director of the Urban Transportation Center at the University of Illinois-Chicago, says any project funded through an infrastructure bank must have the ability to generate enough revenue to pay back the loan.

“The vast majority of our public infrastructure can’t do that,” he says. “What about free roads, mass transit, pedestrian ways, bike ways. They don’t pay for themselves.”

Trump also suggests another funding source for infrastructure projects: repatriation of profits corporations hold overseas. But there are big disagreements over how much to tax those profits and how much money it would really bring in.

Plus, Schlickman says that’s just a one-time source of funds.

“That’s not the type of revenue stream that you would want to rely on,” he says. “But at this point, if that’s all that’s politically doable, then fine, let’s do it.”

Schlickman and other transportation experts say while a long-term funding source, like an increase in the gas tax, is still needed, now is not the time for transit advocates to quibble over such matters.

“I’m very, very happy that we have a president-elect that wants to do something big in infrastructure,” Schlickman says. “Now let’s try and take advantage of that enthusiasm and that leadership and let’s work with him and try to get the best deal we can for everyone.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Pence Expanded Medicaid As Governor, Now He May Be Part Of Cutting It

In 2015, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence announced that the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services had approved the state’s waiver to try a different approach for Medicaid. Michael Conroy/AP hide caption

toggle caption

Michael Conroy/AP

Chris Cunningham was so thrilled with Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act that she readily accepted his invitation to an event celebrating its first anniversary in January.

After eight years without health insurance, Medicaid coverage paid for treatment of her thyroid problem and lung disease and prescription drugs to help both. “It was a game changer for me,” the Indianapolis woman said.

Election Day’s results are on her mind now.

Indiana Gov. Mike Pence was one of 10 Republican governors to expand Medicaid under Obamacare, but as President-elect Donald Trump’s running mate, Pence is now calling for the health law’s repeal and replacement.

If that happens, millions of low-income people around the country added to the state-federal insurance program since 2014 under the health law are at risk of losing their health insurance. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have expanded Medicaid, extending coverage to at least 10 million Americans.

“I don’t see how a compassionate human being can rip health care away from millions of people,” Cunningham said.

Article continues after sponsorship

What Pence did with Indiana’s Medicaid program may place him in the middle ground of political battles to come over Obamacare’s future. He called for the law’s repeal even before joining Trump, but also pushed Medicaid’s expansion in a conservative direction by advocating for stricter eligibility requirements on low-income people receiving government-paid health care.

Neither Trump nor any other top Republican has spelled out what a replacement would look like. Trump has said he supports Medicaid block grants to states — a way of stabilizing federal funding that could ultimately raise states’ costs and force them to cut benefits or eligibility.

The health law allowed states to open Medicaid to all adults with incomes at or below 138 percent of the federal poverty level, with all the extra costs paid by the government for the first three years, 2014 through 2016.

Pence took the federal money but won the Obama administration’s approval to add features that set Indiana apart from other expansion states. For example, recipients are required to pay money — $1 a month for many — into special accounts that Pence contends will make them more conscious of the costs associated with health care.

Healthy Indiana Plan 2.0 pushed Medicaid’s traditional boundaries, which is why it has captured attention in conservative states. The plan demands something from all enrollees, even those below the poverty level. Individuals who fail to keep up their contributions lose dental and vision coverage and face copayments. Those above the poverty level can temporarily lose all coverage if they fall behind on contributions.

Proponents, including Pence, have said the strategy makes Medicaid recipients share financial responsibility for their care and that it will save Indiana money by reducing unnecessary services and inappropriate emergency room use.

Pence has said Indiana’s program has lowered ER use, led to recruitment of more physicians by paying them more and succeeded in getting most recipients to contribute monthly payments.

“This is an innovative, fiscally responsible program,” Pence said at the expansion’s first anniversary event that Cunningham attended in Indianapolis. “We are improving outcomes, improving lives and improving the fortunes of Hoosiers.”

Cunningham said last week she remembers that day well and the personal connection Pence made with her and other new enrollees.

“It does give me hope that Gov. Pence started Medicaid expansion here and talked highly of it,” she said. “When I met him that day, it gave me a sense that even though I didn’t agree with 75 percent of what he stood for, I found him to be a really good man [who] really wanted to improve the health situation for people of Indiana.”

Indiana hospitals are also hoping Pence will be an advocate for preserving the expansion.

The expanded Medicaid program pumped millions of dollars into the state’s hospital industry by providing them more paying patients and increasing their Medicaid reimbursements.

Brian Tabor, executive vice president of the Indiana Hospital Association, said the election results have him worried about the future of Medicaid and Obamacare. But knowing Pence will have Trump’s ear could make a difference.

Pence “understands that with some flexibility, states can be successful at expanding coverage and that bodes well for states like Indiana,” he said. “He is passionate about the health and security that Medicaid provides to Hoosiers. I am confident that he will have a significant policy role in the White House and will use that in a way to preserve what we have in Indiana.”

Tabor said that while block grants or a per capita limit for Medicaid would give states more autonomy in running the program, he worries it would mean cuts in federal funding that would hurt recipients and providers.

Medicaid’s expansion in Indiana has provided vital funding to hospitals, particularly those in rural areas that have struggled to stay open. “It’s been a lifeline to many rural providers,” he said.

Susan Jo Thomas, executive director of Covering Kids & Families of Indiana, an advocacy group, seems less hopeful for the future of Medicaid expansion and the program overall even with Pence as vice president.

“It’s scary to us,” she said of the prospect of losing Obamacare and Medicaid becoming a block grant program. While Republicans have proposed the block grant idea since the 1980s, she noted it could find stronger support because Congress has turned more conservative and most states have conservative governors.

For Cunningham, Medicaid expansion in 2015 came at the right time. She had been managing several group homes for the disabled in 2008 when she ended her career to care for her own disabled husband.

“I was in a desperate situation and I’ve been very grateful for the help,” she said.

For her at least, worries about not having insurance will fade next May.

That’s when she will turn 65 and enroll in Medicare.

This story was produced through a collaboration between NPR and Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization. You can follow Phil Galewitz on Twitter: @philgalewitz.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Women Take On Big-Wave Surfing, Once The Domain Of Men, At Mavericks

Sarah Gerhardt surfs Mavericks in northern California. Elizabeth Pepin Silva/otwfront.com hide caption

toggle caption

Elizabeth Pepin Silva/otwfront.com

Imagine a wave so big it darkens the horizon as it rolls in.

Just south of San Francisco, this surf spot is called Mavericks.

Sarah Gerhardt is the first women to surf this famously dangerous big-wave spot. She did that in 1999 when she was 24. Now, at 42, she’s one of six women comprising the first women’s heat in a surfing contest there.

The women will compete for $30,000 in the Titans of Mavericks, surfing waves that swell well beyond 30 feet.

“Mavericks is the best big wave spot in California, regularly 40 to 50 and sometimes 60 to 100 feet tall with huge rocks, and there’s a shark attack out there every year,” Gerhardt tells NPR. “People’s leashes have been caught in the mouths of sharks, and it is very cold. That water temperature gets down to 48 or 49 and then of course the air temperature in the winter can get be in the 30s or 40s. It’s terrifying — but I wanted to surf it anyway.”

Gerhardt started surfing as a teenager, and eventually was lured by big waves — even though, she says, they left her “trashed.” “I loved it, and I never looked back,” she says. “I always wanted to be out in bigger surf.”

Article continues after sponsorship

Paddling up to the top of that first Mavericks wave, she says, her brain told her “Don’t go!”

“And then … all of a sudden you’re going 30 miles an hour heading into oblivion,” she says. “And when I kicked out I was like, ‘Wow, I can’t believe that was so amazing. I want to do that again.’ “

As part of the first women’s heat in the Titans of Mavericks event, she hopes to inspire younger surfers. “Women surfing big waves has not peaked yet, and it’s just going to get better and better and better,” she says. “And it kind of feels almost like closure, and that I can pass the torch on to that next generation who’s coming after me.”

The event will be called when the conditions are right, anytime between now and March 31.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)