February 7, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Honest 'John Wick' Trailer, Behind the Scenes With 'Lego Batman' Voice Actors and More

Chris Rock Eddie Murphy Beverly Hills Cop II - 1024

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

Movie Takedown of the Day:

With John Wick: Chapter 2 out this week, Honest Trailers tries to take out the too-awesome first John Wick:

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Movie Recap of the Day:

With The Lego Batman Movie out this week, here’s a recap of the plot of The Lego Movie in theme-song-parodying rap form:

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Behind the Scenes Video of the Day:

Speaking of The Lego Batman movie, watch the voice stars record their lines while being made to hold their Lego minifig counterparts:

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Cosplay of the Day:

The best kind of Star Wars cosplay is cat Star Wars cosplay, so here’s a feline as Jyn Erso from Rogue One:

“What Chance Do We Have? The Question Is What Choice.” #JynErso #StarWars #RogueOne #cosplay

A photo posted by Cat Cosplay (@cat_cosplay) on Feb 5, 2017 at 3:00pm PST

Movie Cocktail of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, here’s a video on how to make a blue milk (aka Bantha milk) cocktail:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

Zodiac David Fincher is a master of details, proven in this video spotlighting all the close ups in Zodiac:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Chris Rock, who turns 52 today, with Eddie Murphy behind the scenes of 1987’s Beverly Hills Cop II:

Movie Trivia of the Day:

With Wayne’s World currently in theaters for its upcoming 25th anniversary, here’s CineFix with some trivia you may not know about the Saturday Night Live spinoff:

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Weird Video Essay of the Day:

Bojac looks at connections or random nonsense between the Michael Pressman movies Doctor Detroit and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Dante’s Peak. Watch the original trailer for the volcano disaster movie classic below.

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and

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White House Says Medicare Should Leverage Its Buying Power To Pull Down Drug Prices

Medicare accounts for about 29 percent of all spending on prescription medicines in the U.S. each year. stevecoleimages/iStockphoto/Getty Images hide caption

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stevecoleimages/iStockphoto/Getty Images

Drug companies could be forgiven if they’re confused about whether President Donald Trump thinks the government should get involved in negotiating the price of prescription drugs for Medicare patients.

Just a few days before Trump was sworn in he said the pharmaceutical industry was “getting away with murder” in the way it prices medicine, and he promised to take the industry on. It was a promise he’d made repeatedly on the campaign trail.

“We’re the largest buyer of drugs in the world and yet we don’t bid properly,” he said in a news conference in early January. “We’re going to start bidding and we’re going to save billions of dollars over a period of time.”

But last week, Trump appeared to walk that vow back when he met with the leaders of several giant pharmaceutical companies at the White House.

“I’ll oppose anything that makes it harder for smaller, younger companies to take the risk of bringing a product to a vibrantly competitive market,” he said, sitting around a table in the Roosevelt Room, flanked by leaders of five large drugmakers. “That includes price fixing by the biggest dog in the market – Medicare — which is what’s happening.”

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So on Tuesday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer cleared up the confusion, for now at least.

When asked during his daily news briefing whether the president is in favor of having Medicare negotiate lower prices for prescription medicine, Spicer said, “He’s for it, yes. Absolutely.”

Spicer went on to say that the U.S. should be doing what other countries do — bring the government’s purchasing power to bear to get a better deal on medicine prices.

“So his commitment is to make sure that he does what he can,” Spicer said, “and, I think rather successfully, use his skills as a businessman to drive them down.”

Current U.S. law prohibits Medicare officials from interfering in the negotiations between drugmakers and the insurance companies that administer Medicare’s prescription drug plans.

Medicare accounts for about 29 percent of all spending on prescription medicines in the U.S. each year. So, would bringing Medicare’s huge purchasing power to bear in talks over prescription drug prices actually reduce those prices?

The only government report that looks at the issue is a 2007 Congressional Budget Office study that concluded that it would have a “negligible effect” on prices.

Dr. Walid Gellad, director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing at University of Pittsburgh disagrees.

“There’s a reason why the pharmaceutical industry does not want Medicare negotiation to happen,” Gellad told NPR. “And the obvious reason is because it will lower prices.”

Gellad said the CBO report doesn’t take into account the ability the government would have to say no to some particularly high-priced medicines.

If Medicare, for example, said it would pay for only one of the two major Hepatitis C medications on the market today — drugs that cost upwards of $40,000 for a course of treatment — Gellad estimates the drugmakers would cut the price by at least $10,000 to win the government’s business.

That sort of negotiating is already allowed at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

“If Medicare were to get the same prices for drugs as in the VA you’d have billions, tens of billions of dollars of savings,” Gellad told NPR.

The Medicare prescription drug program was created in 2003; the program’s drug coverage is handled exclusively by private insurance companies. There is no direct government pharmacy coverage.

That means each insurer negotiates prices for medications separately. If one insurance company strikes a deal regarding one drug, another company may negotiate a better price for a competing medication.

A 2015 study jointly published by Carleton University and the public advocacy group Public Citizen showed that Medicare pays, on average, 73 percent more than Medicaid pays for brand-name drugs, and 80 percent more than the VA pays.

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No Image

White House Says Medicare Should Leverage Its Buying Power To Pull Down Drug Prices

Medicare accounts for about 29 percent of all spending on prescription medicines in the U.S. each year. stevecoleimages/iStockphoto/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

stevecoleimages/iStockphoto/Getty Images

Drug companies could be forgiven if they’re confused about whether President Donald Trump thinks the government should get involved in negotiating the price of prescription drugs for Medicare patients.

Just a few days before Trump was sworn in he said the pharmaceutical industry was “getting away with murder” in the way it prices medicine, and he promised to take the industry on. It was a promise he’d made repeatedly on the campaign trail.

“We’re the largest buyer of drugs in the world and yet we don’t bid properly,” he said in a news conference in early January. “We’re going to start bidding and we’re going to save billions of dollars over a period of time.”

But last week, Trump appeared to walk that vow back when he met with the leaders of several giant pharmaceutical companies at the White House.

“I’ll oppose anything that makes it harder for smaller, younger companies to take the risk of bringing a product to a vibrantly competitive market,” he said, sitting around a table in the Roosevelt Room, flanked by leaders of five large drugmakers. “That includes price fixing by the biggest dog in the market – Medicare — which is what’s happening.”

Article continues after sponsorship

So on Tuesday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer cleared up the confusion, for now at least.

When asked during his daily news briefing whether the president is in favor of having Medicare negotiate lower prices for prescription medicine, Spicer said, “He’s for it, yes. Absolutely.”

Spicer went on to say that the U.S. should be doing what other countries do — bring the government’s purchasing power to bear to get a better deal on medicine prices.

“So his commitment is to make sure that he does what he can,” Spicer said, “and, I think rather successfully, use his skills as a businessman to drive them down.”

Current U.S. law prohibits Medicare officials from interfering in the negotiations between drugmakers and the insurance companies that administer Medicare’s prescription drug plans.

Medicare accounts for about 29 percent of all spending on prescription medicines in the U.S. each year. So, would bringing Medicare’s huge purchasing power to bear in talks over prescription drug prices actually reduce those prices?

The only government report that looks at the issue is a 2007 Congressional Budget Office study that concluded that it would have a “negligible effect” on prices.

Dr. Walid Gellad, director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing at University of Pittsburgh disagrees.

“There’s a reason why the pharmaceutical industry does not want Medicare negotiation to happen,” Gellad told NPR. “And the obvious reason is because it will lower prices.”

Gellad said the CBO report doesn’t take into account the ability the government would have to say no to some particularly high-priced medicines.

If Medicare, for example, said it would pay for only one of the two major Hepatitis C medications on the market today — drugs that cost upwards of $40,000 for a course of treatment — Gellad estimates the drugmakers would cut the price by at least $10,000 to win the government’s business.

That sort of negotiating is already allowed at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

“If Medicare were to get the same prices for drugs as in the VA you’d have billions, tens of billions of dollars of savings,” Gellad told NPR.

The Medicare prescription drug program was created in 2003; the program’s drug coverage is handled exclusively by private insurance companies. There is no direct government pharmacy coverage.

That means each insurer negotiates prices for medications separately. If one insurance company strikes a deal regarding one drug, another company may negotiate a better price for a competing medication.

A 2015 study jointly published by Carleton University and the public advocacy group Public Citizen showed that Medicare pays, on average, 73 percent more than Medicaid pays for brand-name drugs, and 80 percent more than the VA pays.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)