April 11, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Batman Watches 'Thor: Ragnarok' Trailer, 'Star Wars' vs. 'Lord of the Rings' and More

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

Trailer Reaction of the Day:

Batman and Wonder Woman watch the new Thor: Ragnarok trailer with concern in this funny mashup from Movieclips:

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Easter Eggs of the Day:

Speaking of the Thor: Ragnarok trailer, Mr. Sunday Movies comes through with another enjoyably highlight of Easter eggs and other things we missed:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

In honor of The Fate of the Furious arriving in theaters this week, here’s a photo of the cast on the set of the original Fast and the Furious from 2000:

Crossover of the Day:

Darth Vader works for Sauron in this epic mashup from Alex Luthor pitting Star Wars characters against The Lord of the Rings characters:

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Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, Honest Trailers reminds us Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is just another faulty prequel:

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Audio Book Trailer of the Day:

Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny are reprising their roles as Scully and Mulder for a new X-Files audiobook, and here they are to introduce it in a teaser (via Variety):

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Movie Food of the Day:

In the third installment of Fandor’s new Film to Table series, Jason Roberts shows us how to make the perfect red sauce from Goodfellas:

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Cosplay of the Day:

This cosplaying duo is in need of sharing as we approach the 20th anniversary and a 4K re-release of The Fifth Element (via Fashionably Geek):

Fifth Element Cosplay from pics

Fan Theory of the Day:

MatPat of The Film Theorists makes a strong case that the title character of Moana is not a mortal human and is in fact the daughter of Maui:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Anaconda. Watch the original trailer for the camp classic below.

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and

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Maryland Lawmakers Vote To Allow Beekeepers To Shoot Black Bears That Threaten Hives

Honeybees are seen inside a colony at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Bee Research Laboratory in Beltsville, Md., in 2007. Maryland lawmakers approved a bill this week permitting beekeepers to shoot black bears that threaten their hives.

Haraz N. Ghanbari/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Haraz N. Ghanbari/ASSOCIATED PRESS

It’s a cliché that happens to be true: Bears love honey. And in Maryland, lawmakers have passed a bill making it legal to shoot a black bear if it threatens a beekeeper’s hive.

In February, state Del. Mike McKay testified before the Environment and Transportation Committee on behalf of the bill. He wore a vest festooned with the image of Winnie the Pooh.

Del. Herb McMillan noted McKay’s attire didn’t seem to square with his arguments. “I know you came in here talking about Winnie the Pooh, but the gist of the bill is that you can shoot him,” McMillan said, according to The Baltimore Sun.

Existing Maryland law requires a person to have a hunting license and a black bear hunting permit in order to hunt black bears in the state. Exempted is “a person who kills or wounds a black bear in defense of his/her own life, the lives of other individuals, or the lives of animals on the individual’s property.”

This week, Maryland’s General Assembly passed McKay’s bill. So, if the measure is signed by the governor, as of June, the exemption on hunting bears will extend to the owners of honeybee colonies, if the owner has contacted the state’s Department of Natural Resources and installed an electric fence to protect the hive. The measure also provides funds to provide electric fences to beekeepers.

The DNR says it receives about six reports of damage to bee colonies annually, although could be things other than bears. The state has a Black Bear Damage Reimbursement Fund, and it says it gets approximately two claim requests per year.

“We’re concerned about the beekeepers who raise bees for honey and other agricultural uses,” Del. McKay explained in a video interview with the Sun in February. “We know that black bears do attack them, and we just need to figure out a way we can protect the investment, because it is livestock. If a black bear is hurting a lamb or a calf, you have the right to shoot that because it is your investment and your livestock. We just want to extend the same to those who are in the beekeeping industry.”

Four counties in western Maryland have breeding populations of black bears; the state estimates its population of black bears to be more than 1,000. One thousand bears lusting for honey.

“The proverbial bull in the china shop is no comparison to a bear in the beeyard when it comes to damage and destruction,” warns the state’s Department of Natural Resources.

If you’ve got a bear in your beeyard, the Maryland DNR recommends a four-strand electrical fence, with a small piece of bacon coated with honey or molasses affixed to it.

But Allen Hayes, president of the Maryland State Beekeepers Association, says that electric fences aren’t always effective in deterring bears, especially if the ground is very dry. His organization backed McKay’s bill.

If bears really want the hive, says Hayes, “they have been known to take the shock to the get the reward on the other side.”

Eric Mussen is Emeritus Extension Apiculturist at the University of California, Davis. He says that bears have a pretty good sense of smell, and they can catch the scent of a beehive if they get downwind of a nearby colony. “If the colony is living in a tree, often the bear literally tears the tree apart to get to the bees,” he writes in an email to NPR.

Once a bear gets into a colony, Mussen says, it will eat a little honey, but it will devour the bee “brood”: bee eggs, larvae, and pupae — a source of protein and fat.

Bears bring that same appetite — for brood and destruction — to man-made beehives.

“They leave the covers scattered all over; the hive boxes scattered and often broken; the combs pulled out, broken, and strewn about in the apiary; and the combs that had brood in them will have the comb eaten out,” writes Mussen. “The colony will not survive and there may be very little undamaged equipment to salvage.”

“To a small-scale beekeeper, the financial loss is not too severe,” Mussen adds. “However, losing the colony, that requires so much effort to keep healthy these days, is quite a blow. For commercial operators, who may not revisit the apiary for a couple weeks, it can mean very substantial economic loss.”

The Maryland legislature has been squarely in the bee camp lately. Last year lawmakers passed the Pollinator Protection Act, which bans consumers from buying pesticides that contain neonicotinoids, which are believed to harm bees. The Associated Press reports that Maryland beekeepers lost nearly 61 percent of their hives in 2015, about twice the national average.

“A beekeeper has the right to protect his or her property in an extreme situation,” Hayes said. “The state legislature obviously agrees with us.”

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Major League Baseball Implements Rule Changes To Speed Up Play

Major League Baseball announced some rule changes to speed up game play. More radical changes could be coming, but it’s not yet clear whether these new rules will actually work.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Major League Baseball is stuck between centuries. Just about everyone agrees that games drag on far too long for the distracted, modern audience. The average major league game takes about three hours and postseason games are much longer. But purists balk at any changes to the game.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

And a lot of those purists are the players themselves. Commissioner Rob Manfred wanted to really shake things up for the season, like setting time limits between pitches and limiting how often a manager can visit the pitcher’s mound. But the players didn’t agree. A frustrated Manfred spoke to the press back in February.

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ROB MANFRED: I believe it’s a mistake to stick our head in the sand and ignore the fact that our game has changed and continues to change. I’m firmly convinced that our fans, both our avid fans and casual fans, want us to respond to and manage the change that’s going on in the game.

CORNISH: There were some rule changes. The intentional walk is a lot snappier now. Instead of throwing four straight balls to put a dangerous batter on first base, teams now simply signal for the walk.

SHAPIRO: The Chicago Cubs were the first team to do this in a regular season game when they gave a free pass to St. Louis Cardinals star Yadier Molina.

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UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: Well, remember of course, if there is an intentional walk, there’s no more four pitches. And Molina’s going down to first. They just said to him, we’re going to walk you. So Molina takes off the shin guard, hands the bat, got a little smirk on his face. This is the way it’s going to be done now.

CORNISH: While players and apparently broadcasters try to wrap their heads around the no-pitch intentional walk, Jonah Keri says it won’t impact the game much at all.

JONAH KERI: I think you save 39 seconds per major league game.

SHAPIRO: Keri covers baseball for Sports Illustrated. Commissioner Manfred can make unilateral changes without a blessing from the players’ union next year. But Keri says even the most drastic rule changes aren’t really going to make the game more appealing to younger fans.

KERI: You know, if we’re sitting here talking about, should it be four pitches for an intentional walk, I think that by then, the – you know, the horse is kind of already out of the barn. You’ve got to really go to work on younger fans where they live. You’ve got to figure out, what are their digital tendencies? What do they do for entertainment? And you have to try to get in there and be a part of that conversation.

CORNISH: Yes, change comes slowly to a game steeped in tradition and statistics and the way it’s been played for generations, especially if baseball wants more fans. Perhaps Rob Manfred can get an intern to show him how to make a meme to post on his Twitter feed.

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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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Civilians With Severe Burns Treated At Texas Military Hospital

Physician assistant James Williams, right, describes the treatment of burn patients as “a very tactile type of medicine.”

Wendy Rigby/TPR

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Wendy Rigby/TPR

The burn unit at the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research in San Antonio, Texas, is hot. Sometimes, it gets up to 102 degrees in there, among the patients.

People with severe burns can’t regulate their own body temperatures well, so the air has to keep them warm.

“We see a lot of gruesome stuff,” says physical therapist Melissa Boddington. At the height of the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, more than one thousand wounded service members were flown to the hospital.

The burn center’s mission is to treat members of the military for burns from fire, explosions, chemicals or radiation. The treatments can include skin grafts, amputations and inpatient rehabilitation to regain mobility or learn to live with a body that has changed dramatically.

Rehabilitation often takes months for patients at the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research Burn Center in San Antonio, Texas.

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Wendy Rigby/TPR

More than 15 years of war have led to major advances in burn care. In one case, a roadside bomb blast in Afghanistan burned more than 97 percent of one Marine’s body. He was flown to San Antonio, and survived.

Thousands of U.S. troops are still in war zones, but with the end of major combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan and fewer soldiers coming home badly burned, the military burn center is treating more civilians.

Col. Booker King, the director of clinical services, says burn specialists also work with orthopedists, eye doctors or kidney specialists because people who come in with burns often have other serious injuries as well.

Most of the patients treated at the burn center right now are civilians who were burned in car wrecks, house fires, cooking incidents or workplace accidents in the oil industry. Because the hospital is on a military base, Fort Sam Houston, a special dispensation from the Secretary of the Army allows them to be treated there.

Therapists spend much of their time stretching patients to keep them limber as they heal.

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Wendy Rigby/TPR

70-year-old Marty Wender spent 90 days in the intensive care unit at the burn center after he fell while he was taking a hot shower. He either passed out or hit his head. By the time his wife found him unconscious, he had burns over 20 percent of his body.

“When EMS showed up, they thought I was dead,” he says. “It was across my chest. The biggest burn was on my back and on my right arm and my two hands.”

The staff at the burn center helped Wender recover from his injuries. He lost two fingers.

“It keeps everybody honed, ready to get the job done,” says James Williams, a physician assistant in the burn unit. “It’s a very tactile type of medicine. If you’re not using your skills, you can lose them.”

“[We] treat a 17-year-old who got burned from throwing gas on the grill the same as we would treat a soldier who may have gotten injured in combat,” he explains.

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