February 21, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Superman v. J. Jonah Jameson, 'La La Land' Opening Number Test Run and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

The way movies are shot and edited today, putting J.K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson in the Daily Planet with Man of Steel‘s Clark Kent and Lois Lane seems easy, but it’s also perfect (via ComicBook.com)

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Alternate Poster of the Day:

Speaking of Amy Adams, here’s a beautiful poster for Arrival by Oksana Grivina. See more fan art and posters inspired by this year’s Oscar nominees, including La La Land and Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, at Design Culture.

Awards Show Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of the Oscars, Honest Trailers rips through all of this year’s Best Picture nominees with help from the president:

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Oscars Montage of the Day:

And here’s a timely supercut of the final scenes of the last 45 Best Picture winners (via Film School Rejects):

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Behind the Scenes Video of the Day:

Okay, one more Oscars-related item, here’s a Damien Chazelle’s iPhone footage of a rehearsal of the opening number from La La Land (via /Film):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Apparently Anthony Daniels, who turns 71 today, could wear regular pants while playing C-3PO when his legs weren’t in the shot, as evidenced in this photo from the set of The Empire Strikes Back in 1979:

Random Group of Celebrities of the Day:

For Josh Gad’s latest attempt to get Star Wars secrets out of Daisy Ridley, he’s gathered various stars and filmmakers to do his bidding:

And so it ends. #DaisyRidley #StarWars Give us the truth pic.twitter.com/o4d429ydzL

— Josh Gad (@joshgad) February 20, 2017

Filmmaker in Focus:

Daniel Clarkson Fisher highlights the theme of surveillance in Steven Spielberg movies in this thoughtful video essay:

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Cosplay of the Day:

In addition to being Black History Month, February is also the annual #28DaysOfBlackCosplay. Here’s a woman who fills the month up with lots of great looks (via Rob Liefeld):

#28DaysOfBlackCosplay#colorful

I love my face paint. It’s the easiest & most annoying way to raise the bar on your #cosplay. pic.twitter.com/92NX36IVGz

— TaLynn Kel (@TaLynnKel) February 18, 2017

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 50th anniversary of the U.S. release of One Million Years B.C. starring Raquel Welch. Watch the original trailer for the classic fantasy film below.

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Researchers Failed To Tell Testosterone Trial Patients They Were Anemic

Anemic patients did not know about their condition during a testosterone trial.

Renphoto/Getty Images

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Renphoto/Getty Images

There’s a lesson about one of the testosterone studies released this week that has nothing to do with testosterone: The study on how testosterone affects anemia was designed with an ethical lapse that nobody noticed until the study was complete.

That’s surprising because it was designed and carried out by a couple of dozen of well-regarded scientists. Their protocols were reviewed by 12 university institutional review boards, whose job is to evaluate the ethics of an experiment. It was funded by the National Institutes of Health, and the trial was overseen by a watchdog data safety and monitoring board.

But all of those safety features fell short this time.

A reviewer at JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association, noticed that participants who were diagnosed with anemia (low iron in the blood) at the outset of the study were not told of that fact.

“Abnormal results on this simple blood test could have been an early warning sign of a serious illness which, if diagnosed and treated early could have greatly improved patient outcomes,” says Dr. Bernard Lo, a bioethicist who runs the Greenwall Foundation.

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Lo says low iron levels could be an early sign of colorectal cancer, which is quite treatable if it’s caught early. Lo noted that 126 of the 788 study participants had low iron in the blood, but nobody thought to inform them.

Scientists do not know whether this lack of information actually harmed any of the participants. “But my own feeling is if it happened once, despite all these safeguards, it could happen again” in another major study, Lo says. “It’s a warning sign that there’s a major problem in the system that needs to be addressed.”

Lo and Dr. Deborah Grady at the University of California-San Francisco wrote an editorial about the ethical lapse in JAMA Internal Medicine that accompanied articles about anemia and other studies that showed some benefits and some downsides to prescribing testosterone supplements to older men with low levels.

Testosterone supplements have been controversial for some time, and the Food and Drug Administration increased its warnings about the potential cardiac side effects of taking the hormone in 2015.

Dr. Peter Snyder, a professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania who organized the anemiastudy, readily admits this was an oversight. He says the scientists and review boards had focused their attention on potential harms from the testosterone treatment.

“We put an enormous amount of time and effort into attempting to protect the participants [from the side effects of testosterone], and that’s where our focus was,” he says.

Testosterone can affect the prostate and the heart, so the study was designed to watch for those health risks.

Men with severe anemia were excluded from the trial to begin with, Snyder says. “Men who had a mild degree of anemia weren’t informed because we just didn’t think of that,” he tells Shots. “It didn’t occur to anybody until this review pointed it out.”

Snyder says scientists followed up by sending a letter to all 788 participants, informing of them of their iron levels at the start of the trial as well as at the end.

He says since the trial has now ended, there is no plan to systematically study the men who had mild anemia. “At this point we have not been notified of any problem.”

Ethical lapses like this are not often recognized or highlighted. Lo says this occasion provides an opportunity to trouble-shoot a system that should not fail like this.

Lo says the ethical lapse was not enough to prevent publication of the study.

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Toy Fair Shows Off What's New As Toys R Us Cuts 250 Corporate Jobs

At the International Toy Fair, TOMY International and PlayFusion announced Toys R Us as the exclusive in-store retail launch partner for Lightseekers, the next generation of connected play featuring smart figures, trading cards and more.

Adam Hunger/AP Images for TOMY

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Adam Hunger/AP Images for TOMY

The 114th North American International Toy Fair boosts a chance for industry players to see “hundreds of thousands of innovative new toys and games before they hit store shelves.”

To attend the four-day event in New York City must be a lot like being a kid in a candy store — er — make that toy store.

At the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, hundreds of thousands of square feet are dedicated to the “hottest new toys and trends.”

“Many of the toys and games displayed here are being seen for the very first time — and are likely to top kids’ birthday and holiday wish lists throughout the coming year,” said Steve Parierb, president and CEO of the U.S. Toy Industry Association.

In a statement, industry officials said, “Last year, U.S. toy sales grew 5% and are estimated to be $26 billion. The industry supports more than half a million American jobs and has a total U.S. economic impact of more than $80 billion.”

But not everything is bright and shiny for toy retailers — toy shopping is shifting from brick-and-mortar stores to online retailers.

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Toys R Us is one retailer struggling with that change. The company last week laid off between 10 and 15 percent of its corporate employees.

The Wall Street Journal reports:

“About 250 jobs were eliminated at the Wayne, N.J.-based company, people familiar with the matter said. The layoffs were announced Friday, a day before the toy industry’s annual convention kicked off in New York.”

Amy Von Walter, a spokeswoman for Toys R Us told news organizations:

“The recent changes are not just about cost-containment — our growth plans require us to have the right structure, talent and determination to transform our business and achieve the financial objectives we’ve set for the company.”

Forbes magazine reports that “multiple factors are contributing to the problems at Toys “R” Us or TRU:

People simply aren’t trekking to the malls that previously helped the toy chain dominate. Plus, savvy competitors like Walmart and Target have tripled their toy aisles & seasonal offerings during holiday season, allowing customers to cross TRU off the store list.

Amazon also cuts into sales as a major competitor, but it’s particularly painful as Toys “R” Us has historically had trouble getting products to customers. In 2015, they ran out of on-site goods which prompted TRU to try a new inventory algorithm, but ecommerce fulfillment issues were created as they underestimated holiday volume.

Other toy companies, and retailers in general, didn’t do as well as expected during the holiday season.

Toy’s R Us CEO David Brandon told The Wall Street Journal, “Like other primarily brick-and-mortar retailers, Toys “R” Us had trouble attracting enough shoppers to stores during the critical holiday season as e-commerce sales continued to pick up speed.”

The International Toy Fair closes later today. By the time the 2018 show opens, the industry will have a better idea of how retailers adjusted to the lessons learned from this past holiday season’s disappointing sales.

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