April 12, 2017

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: John McClane Vs. the Joker, Imagining Jude Law as Dumbledore and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

Die Hard‘s John McClane has a chat over the phone with Heath Ledger’s Joker from The Dark Knight in this clever mashup:

[embedded content]

Casting Rendering of the Day:

Fandor celebrated the news that Jude Law will be young Dumbledore in the Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them sequel with this Photoshop rending of what he might look like:

?Yer a wizard, Jude! #Dumbledorepic.twitter.com/Ms9qgsuvyo

— Fandor (@Fandor) April 12, 2017

Cosplay of the Day:

Meet cosplayers dressed as sisters Gamora and Nebula from Guardians of the Galaxy in the latest edition of Tyrants of Cosplay:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, who passed away yesterday, sits behind the camera, with actor Steve Martin and director Frank Oz on the set of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels in 1988:

Actor in the Spotlight:

The British Film Institute presents Jack Nicholson’s guide to being Jack Nicholson:

[embedded content]

Studio Showcase of the Day:

Inspired by Hayao Miyazaki coming out of retirement, Distractotron chronicles the history of Studio Ghibli:

[embedded content]

Poster Parody of the Day:

Going in Style is attempting to take on The Fate of the Furious in their second weekend with posters lampooning the latter’s franchise like the one below.

Movie Food of the Day:

Now it’s Binging With Babish’s turn to show us how to make great ramen inspired by Tampopo:

[embedded content]

Fan Art of the Day:

If you love 1980s movies set in the Big Apple, then you’ll love this panting by artist Sam Gibney (via Scott Weinberg/80s All Over):

Well this took a while! Finally completed this 80s Times Square populated by classic movie characters, as if they all existed in the same universe. It was certainly a challenge but naturally a very fun project too! The piece is actually 55″ wide (!) so I’ll reveal a few of the details in other posts, and I guess on Twitter I’ll be able to share the whole thing a bit larger. This is a one-off so I’m afraid won’t be available. Thanks to @mrwistles for the concept and commission. #gilbey80snyc #timessquare #nyc #sketching #illustration #80s #digitalart #digitalpainting #photoshop @photoshop #citydrawing #newyork #newyorkart #newyorkdrawing #newyorkpainting #citypainting #instaart #illustratorsofinstagram #illustratorsoninstsgram #artistsofinstagram #artistsoninstagram #80smovies #ghostbusters #threemenandababy #gremlins #brewstermillions

A post shared by Sam Gilbey (@samgilbey) on Oct 24, 2016 at 5:20am PDT

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 55th anniversary of the release of Cape Fear, starring Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum. Watch the original trailer for the classic thriller below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

United Scrambles To Recover From Ousted Passenger Fiasco

United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz in June 2016. Wednesday, he apologized to a passenger who was dragged off a flight and said “this will never happen again.”

Richard Drew/AP

hide caption

toggle caption

Richard Drew/AP

United Airlines announced that it will compensate all passengers who were on board United Express Flight 3411 Sunday night. That’s the Chicago-to-Louisville flight in which a 69-year-old man was dragged off the plane by airport police officers because he didn’t want to give up his seat.

United spokeswoman Megan McCarthy says the compensation will equal the cost of passengers’ tickets and will come in the form of cash, travel credits or miles.

Earlier in the day, United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz told ABC’s Good Morning America that the company would never again use law enforcement officers when it decides to to remove passengers from a flight.

United personnel had asked for volunteers to give up their seats for four airline employees who were needed in other cities. Three passengers left. Kentucky physician David Dao refused.

Munoz said he felt “ashamed” of the incident which was video-recorded and went viral. “This will never happen again on a United flight. That’s my premise and that’s my promise,” he said.

Munoz offered an apology to Dao, his family and other passengers on the flight. The United CEO had previously referred to Dao as a “disruptive and belligerent passenger” in an internal company communication. That reaction was widely panned as exacerbating United’s PR nightmare.

But when asked by ABC whether the passenger was at fault in any way, Munoz replied, “No, he can’t be. He was a paying passenger sitting on our seat, in our aircraft and no one should be treated that way. Period.”

In a statement issued on the airline’s website yesterday, Munoz said “It’s never too late to do the right thing.”

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Baseball Moves Beyond The Steroid Era

Steroids used to be the scourge of baseball, to the extent that Congress held hearings about it. Commentator Pablo Torre of ESPN The Magazine says time has been kind to some of the worst offenders.

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

So in baseball, the difference between being a hero and being a lousy cheat sometimes depends on which era we are talking about and which era we are living in. Here’s Pablo Torre, senior writer for ESPN The Magazine.

PABLO TORRE: If the Baseball Hall of Fame ever admits that it should be more of a museum and less of a shrine, these last two weeks would deserve space in a very special exhibit. Nothing related to this new season – it’s because of two asterisked sluggers whom we once banished from Major League Baseball, the most moralistic kingdom in sports. First, there was disgraced steroid user Jose Conseco taking on a new public role – TV analyst for Oakland A’s games on NBC Sports California. And then, not to be outdone, there was disgraced steroid user Alex Rodriguez, who became a full-time baseball analyst for Fox and a guest co-host on “The View.”

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, “THE VIEW”)

JOY BEHAR: So you and J-Lo are an item. So do they call you J-Rod now?

(LAUGHTER)

SARA HAINES: Or A-Lo…

ALEX RODRIGUEZ: We’re having a great time. She’s an amazing, amazing girl, one of the smartest human beings I’ve ever met and also an incredible mother.

TORRE: Not long ago, these gigs for these men would have been unthinkable. As of 2005, performance-enhancing drugs seemed so irreparably toxic that ex-players were being grilled by Senator Bernie Sanders, not Joy Behar.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BERNIE SANDERS: I appreciate all of your efforts, and you’re willing to stand up for the kids of America, that you know you’re role models, you know that steroids are bad, and you want to do everything you can to prevent kids from emulating bad habits.

TORRE: But it’s not just Canseco and Rodriguez who’ve been returned. No less than Mark McGwire, who broke the single-season home run record on steroids in 1998, is now the bench coach for the San Diego Padres. And no less than Barry Bonds, the tainted home run king, was the hitting coach for the Miami Marlins last year. As with Canseco and A-Rod, nobody really protested their presence. So what’s changed? Well, for one thing, Congress realized it had bigger fish to fry. And for another, revelations of steroid use clearly became less shocking and less evil to the average American, which is reasonable. We’ve learned that legions of players – both pitchers and sluggers, both stars and scrubs – have used performance-enhancing drugs. And as criminality goes, asterisks are nothing compared to the last decade of sports villains.

The torrid news cycles around Ray Rice and Donald Sterling and Jerry Sandusky and Aaron Hernandez – they’ve all reshaped the very concept of athletic scandal. And yet, one organization remains absurdly puritanical about the past. The voters for the holy Baseball Hall of Fame keep refusing men like Bonds and McGwire. But our most famous juicers belong in an exhibit right alongside Canseco and Rodriguez, one that reminds us how an asterisk was once a stigma and how it also became a star.

(SOUNDBITE OF WIL BLADES’ “RED LANTERNS ARE BLUE”)

GREENE: That was commentator Pablo Torre. He is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine.

Copyright © 2017 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.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

What Happens To A Congressman's Health Insurance If Obamacare Goes Down?

Members of Congress and their staffs seeking health insurance this year could choose from among 57 gold plans (from four insurers) sold on D.C.’s small business marketplace.

Zach Gibson/Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Zach Gibson/Getty Images

As members of Congress debate the future of the health law and its implications for consumers, how are they personally affected by the outcome? And how will the law that phases out the popular Medigap Plan F – popular supplemental Medicare insurance — affect beneficiaries? We’ve got answers to these and other recent questions from readers.

What type of insurance do our elected representatives in Washington, D.C., have? Is it true that they’re insured on the ACA exchanges now and that any repeal and replacement will affect them too?

Under the Affordable Care Act, members of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Senate and their office staffs who want employer coverage generally have to buy it on the health insurance exchange. Before the ACA passed in 2010, they were eligible to be covered under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. (People working for congressional committees who are not on a member’s office staff may still be covered under FEHBP.)

The members of Congress and their staffs choose from among 57 gold plans from four insurers sold on the DC Health Link’s small business marketplace this year.

Approximately 11,000 are enrolled, according to Adam Hudson, a spokesperson for the exchange. The government pays about three-quarters of the cost of the premium, and workers pay the rest. They aren’t eligible for federal tax credits that reduce the size of insurance premiums.

For some other members of Congress, declining exchange coverage was a political statement.

“There are several who, because of animus to Obamacare, rejected the offer of coverage, and either buy on their own or get it through a spouse,” said Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms.

Proposed bills to replace the ACA don’t affect this provision of the law, said Timothy Jost, a professor emeritus of law at Washington and Lee University School of Law in Lexington, Va., who has written widely on the regulation of health care and its reform.

I am told by our insurance broker that in 2020 Medicare is eliminating Medigap Plan F. Having to switch to a new plan may be difficult for many seniors whose health has deteriorated. Should seniors act early, if needed, to switch Medigap plans while they still have good health?

You needn’t worry. As long as you continue to pay your Medigap Plan F premium you won’t lose that coverage.

“This guy can hang onto his F plan forever,” said Bonnie Burns, a training and policy specialist at California Health Advocates, a Medicare advocacy and education group.”All Medigaps are guaranteed renewable as long as the premiums are paid,” she said.

There are 10 standard Medigap plans, sold by a variety of private insurers, that pay for expenses that Medicare doesn’t include. These supplemental plans are identified by letter from A through N. They cover – to varying degrees — beneficiaries’ out-of-pocket Medicare costs, including deductibles and coinsurance. All the plans with the same letter offer the same basic benefit.

When seniors first enroll in Medicare, insurers must sell them a Medigap plan without taking their health into account. But if those who are eligible wait, or want to switch plans later, they can be turned down.

Medigap plans F and C cover all the Medicare costs that the program doesn’t pay for, including the deductible for Medicare Part B (which covers outpatient care, such as doctor visits). Generally, that Part B deductible in 2017 is $183. Plans F and C are the only two Medigap plans that cover it.

As part of the 2015 Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, Congress decided that, starting in 2020, newly eligible Medicare beneficiaries will no longer be allowed to buy plans that pay the deductibles for Medicare Part B.

“Congress decided that people should have more ‘skin in the game,'” said Burns, referring to the idea that patients will make more prudent health care decisions if they’re on the hook for at least part of the cost.

But the change doesn’t affect anyone who is enrolled in those plans before 2020 or who will be eligible for Medicare by then even if they aren’t yet using it.

And even though Plans C and F will no longer be available to new beneficiaries, Medigap plans D and G will be good substitutes. They provide similarly comprehensive coverage — except for the Part B deductible.

Can my spouse continue to cover me under her health insurance after we are divorced?

Once you’re divorced, it’s unlikely you’ll be able to remain covered as a dependent on your ex-wife’s plan, said J.D. Piro, who leads the health and law group at benefits consultant Aon Hewitt. A few states may allow it, and that could work in your favor if the plan is subject to state law. But many large employers pay their employees’ claims directly rather than buy insurance, and they’re generally not subject to state insurance rules.

However, you may be able to keep your ex-wife’s coverage for up to three years under the federal law known as COBRA. That law applies to companies with 20 or more workers, and several states have similar laws that apply to smaller companies. The catch: You’ll have to pay the insurance policy’s full premium.

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service supported by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. Email questions for future columns: KHNHelp@KFF.org. Michelle Andrews is on Twitter: @mandrews110

Let’s block ads! (Why?)