May 4, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Star Wars Day Tributes, Josh Gad as The Penguin and More

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

Prank of the Day:

The latest Omaze Force for Change video stars Mark Hamill as he surprises fans reenacting scenes from Star Wars movies:

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Movie Character Karaoke:

The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon presents this video of Star Wars characters singing Smashmouth’s “All Star”:

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Fake Audition of the Day:

Danny Trejo celebrated by sharing Machete’s audition for the role of Princess Leia in the original Star Wars:

#MayThe4ThBeWithYou! @elreynetworkpic.twitter.com/l9Kt3dnlyp

— Danny Trejo (@officialDannyT) May 4, 2017

Vintage Image of the Day:

For the occasion, here’s a photo of Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill in a hotel room trying to replicate the poster for Star Wars:

“Naturally they became heroes.” from StarWars

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Not all is completely celebratory, as Mr. Sunday Movies chose today to offer how they’d fix the ending of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Who protects swimmers at those beaches of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story? Why it’s Baywatch Scarif, of course (via Fashionably Geek):

Movie Science of the Day:

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 is out this week, so here’s scientist Kyle Hill explaining how long Star-Lord can survive unprotected in space:

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Rumor Rendering of the Day:

Josh Gad may have teased he’s playing The Penguin in the DC Extended Universe, so BossLogic shows us what that could look like:

Some break time fun – @joshgad Penguin pic.twitter.com/n5cEdaNXpK

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) May 4, 2017

Reworked Movie of the Day:

CineFix cut a new trailer for the classic Bill Murray comedy What About Bob? so it looks like a stalker thriller:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 10th anniversary of the release of Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 3. Watch the original trailer for the superhero sequel below.

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and

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GOP Health Care Bill Would Cut About $765 Billion In Taxes Over 10 Years

The Affordable Care Act took money from the rich to help pay for health insurance for the poor. The repeal bill passed by House Republicans would do the opposite.

retrorocket/Getty Images/iStockphoto

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The health care bill passed by the House on Thursday is a win for the wealthy, in terms of taxes.

While the Affordable Care Act raised taxes on the rich to subsidize health insurance for the poor, the repeal-and-replace bill passed by House Republicans would redistribute hundreds of billions of dollars in the opposite direction. It would deliver a sizable tax cut to the rich, while reducing government subsidies for Medicaid recipients and those buying coverage on the individual market.

Tax hikes reversed

The Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, is funded in part through higher taxes on the rich, including a 3.8 percent tax on investment income and a 0.9 percent payroll tax. Both of these taxes apply only to people earning more than $200,000 (or couples making more than $250,000). The GOP replacement bill would eliminate these taxes, although the latest version leaves the payroll tax in place through 2023.

The House bill would also repeal the tax penalty for those who fail to buy insurance as well as various taxes on insurance companies, drug companies and medical device makers. The GOP bill also delays the so-called “Cadillac tax” on high-end insurance policies from 2020 to 2025.

All told, the bill would cut taxes by about $765 billion over the next decade.

The lion’s share of the tax savings would go to the wealthy and very wealthy. According to the Tax Policy Center, the top 20 percent of earners would receive 64 percent of the savings and the top 1 percent of earners (those making more than $772,000 in 2022) would receive 40 percent of the savings.

Help for the poor reduced

Over time, the GOP bill would limit the federal contribution to Medicaid, while shifting control of the program to states. Depending on what happens to costs, states may be forced to provide skimpier coverage, reduce their Medicaid rolls, or both. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that an earlier version of the bill would leave about 14 million fewer people covered by Medicaid by 2026. (The House voted on the current bill without an updated CBO report.)

CBO also anticipated fewer people would buy insurance through the individual market. With no tax penalty for going without coverage, some people would voluntarily stop buying insurance. Others would find coverage prohibitively expensive, as a result of changing rules governing insurance pricing and subsidies.

The GOP bill would allow insurance companies to charge older customers up to five times more than younger customers — up from a maximum 3-to-1 ratio under the current health law. The maximum subsidy for older customers in the GOP plan, however, is only twice what is offered to the young.

The bill also allows insurance companies to offer more bare-bones policies. As a result, young, healthy people could find more affordable coverage options. But older, sicker people would likely have to pay more.

In addition, because the subsidies offered in the Republican plan don’t vary with local insurance prices the way subsidies do in Obamacare, residents of high-cost, rural areas would also suffer. That could include a large number of Trump voters.

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5 Things To Watch As GOP Health Bill Moves To The Senate

House Speaker Paul Ryan (center) walks to the House chamber ahead of a budget vote on Capitol Hill. Though Ryan was able to deliver 217 votes Thursday to get his GOP health plan through the House, there are still significant hurdles before the bill becomes law.

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After weeks of will-they-or-won’t-they tensions, the House managed to pass its GOP replacement for the Affordable Care Act on Thursday by a razor-thin margin. The vote was 217-213.

Democrats who lost the battle are still convinced they may win the political war. As the Republicans reached a majority for the bill, Democrats on the House floor began chanting, “Na, na, na, na … Hey, hey, hey … Goodbye.” They claim Republicans could lose their seats for supporting a bill that could cause so much disruption in voters’ health care.

Now the bill — and the multitude of questions surrounding it — moves across the Capitol to the Senate. And the job doesn’t get any easier. With only a two-vote Republican majority and likely no Democratic support, it would take only three GOP “no” votes to sink the bill.

Democrats have made clear they will unanimously oppose the bill. “Trumpcare” is just a breathtakingly irresponsible piece of legislation that would endanger the health of tens of millions of Americans and break the bank for millions more,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

It’s The Senate’s Turn

House passage of the American Health Care Act is just a first step. As this measure moves to the Senate, it will face a new set of political and policy challenges. Among them:

  • MEDICAID: The House-passed measure makes the most sweeping changes to the program since its inception in 1965. Some of these changes, such as capping federal funding, would provoke intraparty divisions in the upper chamber.
  • UNINSURED RATES: The Congressional Budget Office initially estimated that the House bill would mean the loss of coverage for 24 million people. Many analysts say this number is now likely higher.
  • TAX CREDITS: Some GOP senators are already on record opposing the bill’s age-based tax credits, charging that they will make coverage unaffordable for older constituents. Others, however, describe these credits as “Obamacare Lite.”
  • PLANNED PARENTHOOD FUNDING: The House would defund this reproductive health organization for a year — a step that draws opposition from a handful of Senate Republicans.

And Republicans in the Senate have their own internal disagreements, too.

Here are five of the biggest flashpoints that could make trouble for the bill in the upper chamber.

Medicaid

House leaders correctly point out that their bill represents the biggest changes to the federal-state health program for the poor since its inception in 1965 — a point that appeared to be drowned out during the most recent House debate that focused on coverage for people with preexisting health conditions.

For the first time, federal funding for low-income people on Medicaid would be limited, resulting in what House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., described at an event sponsored by the conservative National Review as “sending it back to the states, capping its growth rates.” It’s a longtime goal for many conservatives. “We’ve been dreaming of this since I’ve been around,” Ryan said.

But it is not a consensus position in the party. Some moderates support the current program, especially for children and people with disabilities. In addition, many GOP governors took the federal government’s offer in the ACA of near-complete federal funding to expand Medicaid to non-disabled, working-age adults, and they are worried about the impact on their residents and their budgets if the expansion goes away and the program’s funding is restricted.

The House bill, wrote the Republican governors of Ohio, Michigan, Arkansas and Nevada in a letter to House and Senate leaders, “provides almost no new flexibility for states, does not ensure the resources necessary to make sure no one is left out, and shifts significant new costs to states.”

That pushback has also created doubts in the minds of some GOP senators. Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., are among those who have expressed concerns about the House bill, as has Dean Heller, R-Nev., It’s not clear if any of the House changes have satisfied those senators.

Increase In Number Of Uninsured People

The Congressional Budget Office’s initial estimate that the bill could lead to 24 million more Americans without health insurance within a decade spooked many lawmakers in the upper chamber. “You can’t sugarcoat it,” Cassidy told Fox News when explaining that “it’s an awful score.” The final House bill passed without the score being updated, although most outside analysts said the changes were likely to increase the number who would lose insurance.

And Democrats have been using those initial numbers to score rhetorical points, even if they lack the votes in either the House or Senate to stop the bill or change it.

“The CBO’s estimate makes clear that Trumpcare will cause serious harm to millions of American families,” said Schumer. “Tens of millions will lose their coverage, and millions more, particularly seniors, will have to pay more for health care.”

Tax Credits

On one hand, even with the additional $85 billion added by House leaders to help older people pay for their insurance premiums, many moderates feel the age-based tax credits in the bill replacing those in the Affordable Care Act are too small, particularly for people in their 50s and early 60s. The CBO estimated that under the original version of the House bill, premiums for a 64 year-old with an income of $26,000 a year could rise from $1,700 currently to more than $14,000.

That brought a strong rebuke from the powerful AARP, which was an outspoken ACA supporter. “Although no one believes the current health care system is perfect, this harmful legislation would make health care less secure and less affordable,” said a statement from the group.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has said she could not support the House bill in its original form because of concerns about the effects on older constituents.

On the other hand, some conservatives in the Senate are ideologically opposed to offering any tax credits. Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rand Paul, R-Ky., have all expressed concerns about the bill being too much like the ACA, with Paul referring to it as “Obamacare Lite.” They worry that the tax credits amount to a new entitlement.

“For me, it’s a big stumbling block still that there’s taxpayer money that’s being given to insurance companies,” Paul told reporters in late April. “And I’m just not in favor of taxpayer money going to insurance companies.”

Planned Parenthood

As Republicans have been vowing for years, the House-passed bill would defund Planned Parenthood, although only for a year. That’s likely because a permanent defunding would actually cost the federal government more money, according to the CBO, as some women who lose access to birth control would become pregnant, have babies and qualify for Medicaid. Birth control is vastly cheaper than health care for mothers and babies.

But while cutting funding for Planned Parenthood is overwhelmingly popular in the House, there are a handful of GOP senators, including Collins and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, who have said they are likely to oppose a bill carrying this provision.

Procedural Problems

The budget process Republicans are using to avoid a Democratic filibuster in the Senate, called reconciliation, has very strict rules that require every piece of the bill to be directly related to the federal budget. It will be up to the Senate parliamentarian, a Republican appointee, to make those determinations.

That’s why the bill does not wipe away all the ACA’s private insurance regulations, including the requirement that insurers not discriminate against customers who have preexisting health conditions.

Some analysts have suggested that the House amendment sought by conservatives to allow states to waive some of the health law’s regulations might run afoul of Senate’s “Byrd Rule,” which limits what can be included in a budget reconciliation measure.

“It could be argued that any budgetary effects of the waiver are ‘merely incidental,’ ” said the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in a blog post.

Even Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., who negotiated that amendment that won the backing of conservatives, conceded that it could prove problematic in the upper chamber. “There’s still a lot of work that needs to be done before we can celebrate and all go home,” he said in an interview outside the House chamber.

Democrats say it is one of several provisions in the House bill that might not pass parliamentary muster in the Senate.

For example, analysts have suggested that the GOP replacement for the much-disliked “individual mandate” requiring most people to have insurance or pay a fine might not pass Byrd Rule scrutiny either. That’s because the 30 percent premium penalty that people with a lapse in insurance would have to pay under the bill would go to the insurance company, not the federal government, so it would have no budget impact.

A third potentially problematic element of the original House bill would allow insurers to charge older adults five times more in premiums than younger adults — up from a ratio of 3-to-1 under the Affordable Care Act. That provision could be viewed as not directly affecting federal spending, some analysts predict.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

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'Is That Your New Pink Leg?!': A Girl Is Embraced As She Shows Off Her Prosthesis

Schoolmates give Anu, 7, hugs after she wore her new prosthetic sports blade on the playground at her school in Birmingham, England.

BBC Midlands

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BBC Midlands

Anu is seven and goes to school in Birmingham. Look what happened when she showed her friends her new sports blade. It’s just gorgeous!???? pic.twitter.com/Aa1UlnhlQy

— BBC Midlands Today (@bbcmtd) May 3, 2017

Video of a little girl running onto the playground to show off her new sports blade prosthesis has gone viral — and we’ll warn you that the video may induce effects ranging from involuntary “Awwws” to spontaneous tears.

Anu, a cute and plucky 7-year-old, is at the heart of the video from BBC Midlands, which posted footage of the girl wearing her new prosthetic leg at her school in Birmingham, England, for the first time, in a version of show-and-tell on the playground.

“Look what happened when she showed her friends her new sports blade,” BBC Midlands said in a tweet that was liked thousands of times. “It’s just gorgeous!”

“Is that your new pink leg?” one girl can be heard asking Anu in the video, as kids gather around her. Anu’s friends give the girl hugs, and she’s the center of attention. But within seconds, she’s off and running with her schoolmates.

“I’m not crying, it’s just allergies,” reads the most popular reply to the posting.

“It makes me run faster and do my street dancing faster,” Anu tells BBC Midlands, describing the prosthetic blade that was customized for her.

“My favorite color’s pink,” Anu told the network — and because a child is allowed more than one opinion, she added, “but violet is my favorite color, too.”

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Anu has grown up using a regular prosthetic leg — her right leg had to be amputated shortly after she was born because her umbilical cord had wrapped tightly around her leg and cut off blood circulation, according to the Birmingham health foundation that worked with her.

But Anu — short for Anupurba — has survived and thrived, going from being on a respirator to help her heart and lungs to dancing and running with her school friends.

“We’ve never had such a wonderful reaction to something we’ve filmed,” BBC Midlands said in an update via Facebook, adding that it has received hundreds of messages about Anu.

One of those reactions came from Rozanne Brown, who wrote, “Kids give me hope!! This is beautiful.” She added, “We could really learn from them.”

The BBC spent time with Anu and her family as it reported on Britain’s program to aid children who need prosthetic limbs to pursue sports. The National Health Service got a grant of some $2 million for that effort after last summer’s Paralympics, but the money was split between research efforts and the “active limbs” program, and further funding is in doubt.

The cost of a new prosthetic leg can range from around $5,000 to tens of thousands of dollars, according to the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, which specializes in orthopedic surgery.

While some prostheses can last 2-5 years or longer when worn by adults, children “need a change of socket every year to accord with their growing bodies,” according to the Comprehensive Prosthetics and Orthotics group in Illinois.

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