December 1, 2016

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Today in Movie Culture: Felicity Jones Shows Off Her 'Rogue One' Moves, 'Toy Story' Meets 'Mad Max' and More

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

Talk Show Appearance of the Day:

Felicity Jones was on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon this week showing off some of her action moves from Rogue One: A Star Wars Story plus a badass clip:

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Movie Science of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, Kyle Hill explains why the iconic double sunset in the first movie would actually be cooler in real life:

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Custom Fan Build of the Day:

And also speaking of Star Wars, see Colin Furze create a giant AT-AT in a backyard for a kid’s playhouse (via Geek Tyrant):

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Mashup of the Day:

Given the fact that Disney’s Moana pays homage to Mad Max: Fury Road, maybe Toy Story 4 should, too, a la this Messy Pandas fan poster:

Set decades after humanity expires, toys roam the planet looking for purpose and double AA batteries. #toystory4 #disney #pixar #poster pic.twitter.com/lo8Tmvxqhu

— MessyPandas (@MessyPandas) November 27, 2016

Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Moana, the movie just came out in theaters, but the title character has already been perfectly cosplayed by the woman in the video below. See more photos of her in reenactments and convention appearances at Fashionably Geek.

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Vintage Poster of the Day:

Woody Allen, who turns 81 today, and Bette Midler, who turns 71 today, on the cartoony poster for Paul Mazursky’s 1991 film Scenes from a Mall:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Martin Scorsese gets a nice tribute montage via the BFI’s trailer for their upcoming retrospective of his movies:

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Character in Close-Up:

Kaptain Kristian shines a spotlight on the iconic Godzilla with a historical look at his origins and how he’s changed over the years:

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Supercut of the Day:

Need something to brighten your mood today? Here’s a supercut by Jose Rico of the best smiles in the movies (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 60th anniversary of the release of The Girl Can’t Help It. Watch the original trailer for the Jayne Mansfield classic below.

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and

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In Idaho Lumber Country, Trump Voters Wait To See If He Can Jumpstart Jobs

The Tri-Pro Forest Products facility in Orofino, Idaho, closed in October after operators said they didn’t have a steady enough supply of logs to keep the sawmill running and profitable. Kirk Siegler/NPR hide caption

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Kirk Siegler/NPR

A few weeks before the election, the Tri-Pro lumber mill in north Idaho shut down. It was the second mill to close in the area in six months, putting more than a hundred people out of work.

While that’s big economic loss for any community, it was especially tough for the tight-knit town of Orofino and its 3,000 or so residents.

“It’s going to be a struggle, quite honestly,” says Mike Reggear, the supply manager and only employee left on the Tri-Pro payroll.

The mill officially closed Oct. 4, after operating on the site in one incarnation or another for nearly 60 years. The shuttered lumberyard is now eerily quiet as Reggear ties up some loose ends; the old mill, kilns and saws are ready to be hauled out.

“There were living-wage jobs [with good benefits] that have now been lost,” Reggear says, shaking his head.

Like most people in Clearwater County, where Orofino is located, Mike Reggear has spent his entire life working in the timber business. “Clearwater County has taken a double shot to the nose,” he says, following the closure of two mills that left more than a hundred people out of work. Kirk Siegler/NPR hide caption

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Kirk Siegler/NPR

The story behind Tri-Pro’s closure is an all-too-familiar one lately in north Idaho: Reggear says there just wasn’t a steady enough supply of logs available locally to keep the sawmill running and profitable. The amount of federal land open to logging has dwindled since the 1980s, and imports from Canada are cheaper.

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But just like any economic story in rural America today, it’s more complicated than that. And even in Idaho’s deeply conservative timber country, there are mixed feelings over whether President-elect Donald Trump can do much to turn things around.

Changing Times

Timber towns like Orofino, situated along railroad lines and rivers, were put on the map more than a hundred years ago when it seemed like there was a limitless supply of timber in the Northwest woods. The federal government — and specifically the U.S. Forest Service, run as an extension of the U.S. Department of Agriculture — was in the business of actively promoting logging.

Timber mill towns like Orofino were put on the map more than a hundred years ago when the timber supply in national forests seemed limitless. Today many federal lands are closed to logging, and unemployment rates in these towns are among the highest in Idaho. Kirk Siegler/NPR hide caption

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Kirk Siegler/NPR

The environmental mood of the country is significantly different today. So is the economy — mechanization, for instance, has meant that fewer people are needed to log in the woods or work in the mills.

At best, logging is a seasonal occupation, says Jerry Spencer, “so you try to diversify a little bit — because you can’t live on [work] eight months a year.”

One night over Coors Lights at the Ponderosa Restaurant, Spencer says he feels lucky he still can find work as an independent contractor, logging in the woods when he can.

Spencer and one of his buddies had been splitting time between north Idaho and the oil fields in North Dakota and Wyoming, where they drove trucks. Then oil prices tanked.

He’s not too eager to talk politics, but Spencer says he’s glad Donald Trump won.

“I’m Republican, almost everybody in this county’s Republican,” he says. “It’s a logging, resource-based county and that’s how it is.”

Now that the election is over, Spencer says he’s hopeful things can get better — “but I’m not going to bet on it, just yet.”

The main reason for his pessimism, he says, is that even if Trump were to open up more federal land to logging, there are hardly any mills left here to handle all that wood.

Still, the president-elect’s talk of returning to a time when natural resources — mining, timber and oil — were king resonates here.

“Those resources is what built this country,” Spencer says. “You can say what you want, but it was all built off of mining, timber, oil … the United States wasn’t built off of tech companies.”

Urban-Rural Divide

In the rural West, it’s not unusual to hear jabs like that directed at city dwellers. But the divide seems even more pronounced since the election.

Folks in Orofino are proud of their heritage as loggers and miners, but today, Clearwater County routinely has one of the highest unemployment rates in Idaho.

In Orofino’s quaint, small downtown, there are for-lease signs in empty store fronts. Locals will tell you they have to work two or three jobs — at the school, the Best Western, or for one of the local outfitters. Some are forced to commute 40 miles downriver to Lewiston.

Still, when it comes to the latest mill closure, many of the same locals grudgingly say they saw this coming for years.

“The first thing you do is cuss and kick the ground and rant a little bit, but the second is, you pull yourself up by those bootstraps and figure, OK, where do we go from here?” says Chris St. Germaine.

In the 1980s, St. Germaine moved to Orofino to take a job with the U.S. Forest Service after ski-bumming her way across the West. Today she runs the county’s one-person Office of Economic Development.

St. Germaine’s arrival in Orofino coincided with the time that the amount of federal lands available for logging started shrinking. The local timber economy subsisted because of logging on private lands, but even that has flat-lined. So St. Germaine and other civic leaders are pushing to diversify.

Despite the mill closures, it hasn’t been all doom and gloom: A rifle scope manufacturer opened recently, as did a company that makes jet boats. The hope is to draw more companies that cater to the fishing and hunting economy, and retrain mill workers.

“Clearwater County is a place where you can build it here, and test it out your back door,” St. Germaine says.

An Industry ‘Strangled’

But these are all long-term projects that likely won’t help people like Pat Goetz, who is scrambling to find jobs right now.

After working mostly as a bookkeeper in the timber industry since 1986, Goetz was laid off when Tri-Pro closed. So far the only jobs she’s seeing advertised are minimum wage.

Pat Goetz, 63, has worked in the timber industry since 1986. She lost her job and her health insurance when Tri-Pro abruptly shuttered in October. Kirk Siegler/NPR hide caption

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Kirk Siegler/NPR

“Once you take timber out of the equation in counties like Idaho County, Clearwater County, there isn’t much else,” she says.

Losing her health insurance was the biggest shock. At 63, she’s not yet eligible for Medicare, and she’s not sure whether she can afford to go on the exchanges to buy a replacement plan.

Goetz says she gets depressed watching, as she puts it, an industry being strangled to death.

“Young kids have to go somewhere else in order to make a living,” Goetz says. “My children had to move out.”

Like a lot of people in town, Goetz also didn’t think twice about voting for Donald Trump. She’s hoping he can help bring back timber towns like hers.

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Legal Battles Over Abortion Continue In States Across U.S.

Whatever a Trump administration does when it comes to abortion, state by state legal battles over the procedure will continue to play out. More lawsuits and another restrictions were announced this week.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

There’s plenty of speculation about how the incoming Trump administration might restrict abortion. The president-elect has said he’d like to see the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade and leave it to each state to decide whether to keep abortion legal. Trump has also nominated a staunch abortion opponent to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Now, the fact is it’s already pretty hard to get an abortion in some states, and the legal battle is ongoing. Developments this week made that clear.

Joining us to talk more is NPR’s Jennifer Ludden. And I understand you want to start with Texas. That’s because officials there announced a state regulation that will require aborted fetuses to either be buried or cremated. What’s behind this?

JENNIFER LUDDEN, BYLINE: Well, supporters say this is about dignity, as they put it. This would show the same respect for unborn infants as for other human beings. They say that aborted fetuses should not be just treated as medical waste as happens now. Under the new rule, now it would be up to medical providers to pay for this burial or cremation.

Abortion rights groups say that, you know, this is a cost that’s going to be passed down to women that would create another kind of barrier to the procedure. And they also say that mandating, you know, cremation or burial of a fetus is a psychological burden. It really aims to shame women. And they plan to challenge the Texas rule before it’s slated to take effect December 19.

CORNISH: Now, how common is a statute like this?

LUDDEN: Well, Vice President-elect Mike Pence signed a similar law in Indiana earlier this year. Louisiana also passed one. Both those laws had been put on hold by courts before they took effect. I spoke with Americans United for Life, which promotes model legislation like this, and they say they are talking to lawmakers in other states, and we can expect to see more laws like this.

CORNISH: Meantime, abortion rights groups have actually filed new lawsuits I understand in three different states. What are they challenging?

LUDDEN: Right, so there’s Planned Parenthood, the ACLU and the Center for Reproductive Rights. They filed three lawsuits against three different laws in three different states. In North Carolina, there is a law that bans abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. It has an exception only in the case of medical emergencies.

In Missouri, there are restrictions on doctors and clinics, and abortion rights groups say they have closed all but one clinic that performs abortion in that state. And then in Alaska, there is a restriction that abortion rights groups say has forced women to fly to other states to have second-trimester abortions.

CORNISH: Now, abortion policy didn’t play that big a role in the election this year. I mean why do you think that these legal challenges are happening now?

LUDDEN: So this is really part of a process that, you know, has been going on for a number of years. We have had in recent years hundreds of abortion restrictions passed across the country driven by Republican-dominated legislatures. They have been working their way up. And earlier this year, we saw a landmark Supreme Court decision. The Supreme Court overturned laws in Texas, and in doing so it said that abortion restrictions should benefit women’s health. And despite supporters’ claims, these laws in Texas did not do that.

Now, abortion rights groups have said this is a case that they can apply to a lot of other restrictions. This is a precedent that will help them overturn other laws. And this week they said they’re going on the offensive with these three new lawsuits, and there’s going to be more to come.

CORNISH: So isn’t there a new risk for abortion rights groups in pursuing these legal challenges – right? If these lawsuits work their way up to the Supreme Court, there could be one or more justices appointed by President Trump by then.

LUDDEN: Right, and abortion rights groups do concede, yes, there is a new risk now. But they also say, you know, there is long-term precedent. That’s a big factor in Supreme Court decisions. And they point out that many justices from different administrations have all upheld a constitutional right to abortion over many decades, so they’re hopeful that that could still be the case on a Trump Supreme Court.

CORNISH: That’s NPR’s Jennifer Ludden. Jennifer, thank you.

LUDDEN: Thank you.

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.

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New York Yankees Great Derek Jeter Finds Golf 'Frustrating'

Retired baseball star Derek Jeter says he’s addicted to the game of golf, and played the other day with Tiger Woods. Jeter says it is “probably the most frustrating thing” he’s ever done.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Good morning. I’m Steve Inskeep. Derek Jeter retired from the New York Yankees but hasn’t given up sports. The one-time baseball star took up golf. He says he’s addicted to the game and played the other day with Tiger Woods. But as golfers know, it’s a tricky game. Jeter says it’s probably the most frustrating thing he’s ever done. The Yankee shortstop, who once hit Randy Johnson’s 95-mph fastballs, is now struggling to hit a ball that doesn’t even move. You’re listening to MORNING EDITION.

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.

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