September 7, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: He-Man Meets 'Dirty Dancing,' The Fraud of 'Jurassic Park' and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

He-Man and Skeletor perform the climactic dance from Dirty Dancing in this silly MoneySuperMarket commercial (via Geek Tyrant):

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Fan Theory of the Day:

Jurassic Park isn’t actually about the resurrection of dinosaurs but a fradulent amusement park. Cracked explores the wild theory:

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Dream Casting of the Day:

Priyanka Chopra has expressed interest in playing Batgirl in the DCEU. Fans want her to play Catwoman. BossLogic shows what the latter could look like:

Today’s #DailyPS@priyankachopra#Catwomanpic.twitter.com/iVXZTQWnqj

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) September 7, 2017

Video Essay of the Day:

Every movie is about something, except Ghostbusters. That’s the point of the latest video essay by Patrick Willems:

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Poster Homage of the Day:

This week’s official Stranger Things poster pays tribute to the poster for Evil Dead:

The Ultimate Experience in Grueling Curiosity. #StrangerThursdays begins now. pic.twitter.com/x6c9NC0ZwL

— Stranger Things (@Stranger_Things) September 7, 2017

Movie Comparison of the Day:

With the new It hitting theaters tomorrow, Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons the old It miniseries has the same story as A Nightmare on Elm Street:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Elia Kazan, who was born on this day in 1909, directs Marlon Brando on the set of 1954’s On the Waterfront:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Darren Aronofsky’s new movie, mother!, hits theaters next week so The Discarded Image showcases the obsessions of his characters:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Mineralblu’s video highlighting the best cosplay of Dragon Con 2017 includes fans inspired by Baby Driver, Wonder Woman, Wall-E, Star Wars and more:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 25th anniversary of the release of Sneakers. Watch the original trailer for the classic movie below.

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and

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Hackers Accessed The Personal Data Of 143 Million People, Equifax Says

Equifax announced Thursday that its systems were hacked in May, exposing 143 million consumers’ personal information.

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Mike Stewart/AP

Equifax, an international credit reporting agency, has announced that a cybersecurity breach exposed the personal information of 143 million U.S. consumers. In a statement released Thursday, the Atlanta-based agency acknowledged that “criminals exploited a U.S. website application vulnerability to gain access to certain files.”

Those files include data such as Social Security numbers, birthdates and addresses — and, Equifax adds, “in some instances, driver’s license numbers.”

For a span of roughly two months — from mid-May through July 29, when Equifax says it uncovered the breach — hackers had access to this information, as well as the credit card numbers of about 209,000 consumers and “certain dispute documents with personal identifying information” of about 182,000.

All told, the number of American consumers affected constitutes about 44 percent of the U.S. population.

Equifax did not explain why more than two months passed before it discovered the hack, which also affected an unspecified number of consumers from Canada and the U.K.

However, the agency is careful to note, it “has found no evidence of unauthorized activity on Equifax’s core consumer or commercial credit reporting databases.”

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“This is clearly a disappointing event for our company, and one that strikes at the heart of who we are and what we do. I apologize to consumers and our business customers for the concern and frustration this causes,” said Chairman and CEO Richard F. Smith said in a statement.

Equifax handles the data of more than 820 million people and more than 91 million businesses worldwide, the agency says on its website, to transform “knowledge into insights that help make more informed business decisions.”

As gargantuan as the numbers may be, The New York Times points out this is not the largest data breach in history. That dubious distinction goes to Yahoo, which nearly a year ago announced that the personal information of at least 500 million people had been stolen. Just months later, the company said hackers stole data associated with more than 1 billion user accounts.

Equifax, for its part, says it has been in touch with law enforcement and that it has set up a website for consumers to determine whether they have been affected by the breach announced Thursday. It has also set up a call center at 866-447-7559 for the same purpose.

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Governors Sound Off On How To Fix Health Insurance

Governors from left; Bill Haslam of Tennessee, Steve Bullock of Montana, Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, John Hickenlooper of Colorado and Gary Herbert of Utah all testified Thursday about ways t improve the ACA.

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The Senate is again trying to tackle the politics of health care. Rather than going for sweeping changes, lawmakers are acting more like handymen this time, looking for tweaks and fixes that will make the system that’s already in place work better.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., is leading the effort to stabilize the Affordable Care Act’s insurance markets for next year. He’s trying to get a bipartisan bill together in the next 10 days, he said Thursday. He’s working against the clock; insurance companies have only until Sept. 27 to commit to selling policies on the ACA exchanges, and to set their final prices for health plans.

It’s a big ask. And Alexander, who is chairman of the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, was frank about what needed to happen.

“To get a Republican president and a Republican House and a Republican Senate just to vote for more money won’t happen in the next two or three weeks, unless there’s some restructuring,” he told a group of five governors who testified before his committee Thursday.

It was the second of four hearings the committee is holding while developing a new health bill.

All of the governors and most of the senators in the room agreed that the top priority was for Congress to appropriate money for what are called cost-sharing reductions. These reimburse insurance companies for discounts they’re required by law to give low-income customers.

President Trump has threatened to cut off the payments, and insurance companies have responded to that uncertainty by proposing higher premiums for next year.

Funding CSR’s is the easy part, Alexander said.

He was looking for tweaks that will appease conservative Republicans who for years have told their constituents that Obamacare is a failure. They would be hard-pressed to appropriate money to fund it without some substantive changes.

Alexander presented the dilemma to the governors as an opportunity to ask for specific changes they’d like to see happen fast.

“This train may move through the station, and this is the chance to change those things,” he said near the end of the hearing. “And so if you want to tell us exactly what those are, and we got it by the middle of next week, we could use it and it would help us get a result.”

The governors had plenty of ideas.

Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, a Republican, said establishing reinsurance plans — pools of money to help insurers when they face huge costs from severely ill patients — can cut premiums for everyone.

Alaska last year created a reinsurance program that almost immediately slowed down the inflation in health insurance premiums in that state, Lori Wing-Heier, the director of the Alaska’s Division of Insurance, told the committee in testimony Wednesday.

Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire thinks Washington should put up some of the money for such programs.

“I’d be making the argument that at least some of the seed money should be coming from the feds because the feds are going to save money,” she told the governors at Thursday’s hearing.

And the governors unanimously supported Alexander’s proposal to give states waivers that would allow them out of some of Obamacare’s regulations, and enable states to design their own health care systems.

“What we’re really focused on is, how do you make the bureaucracy easier so that you can get these various waivers that pretty much all of us agree offer not only cost savings but in many cases will improve the actual outcomes of health care delivered,” Gov. Steve Bullock, of Montana, told the committee.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said he was concerned that giving too much flexibility would diminish the quality of the insurance policies.

Gov. Bill Haslam, of Tennessee, took issue with that.

“There’s an assumption from the federal government, that’s a little offensive to be honest, that ‘you won’t care for the least of these unless we tell you exactly how to do it,’ ” he said.

The governors were divided on a suggestion by Alexander that catastrophic health plans — which have high deductibles and don’t cover routine health care — should be more widely available. Under the Affordable Care Act such policies are only available to people under age 30.

Alexander said expanding the role of such policies could help gain the support of conservative Republicans in the House and Senate who want consumers to have more and cheaper choices in their insurance plans.

Baker, of Massachusetts, said he opposed expanding such policies, but Gov. Gary Herbert of Utah said he liked the idea.

In the end, Alexander suggested the bill he’ll pursue will likely include funding for cost-sharing payments and a more flexible waiver program. But he says he’s open to ideas.

“The reason for the hearings is for me to learn and listen,” Alexander said.

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New England Patriots And Kansas City Chiefs Kick Off NFL Season

The NFL season kicks off with the New England Patriots against the Kansas City Chiefs. But ongoing civil rights protests and player safety concerns bring questions to this year’s season.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Tonight is the opening game of the NFL regular season. The defending champs, the New England Patriots, face the Kansas City Chiefs. The Patriots are led by age-defying 40-year-old quarterback Tom Brady. While football fans look forward to the game, they’re also trying to digest a number of off-field issues. NPR’s Tom Goldman has more.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: During her nearly 30 years in the NFL, former Oakland Raiders CEO Amy Trask loved nothing more than the first kickoff of the first regular season game. Now a football analyst for CBS Sports, she still loves it.

AMY TRASK: All off-season long we talk about football issues, whether it’s free agency or the draft or team composition or off-field issues. When that foot hits that ball and we have kickoff, it’s a very exciting moment.

GOLDMAN: But this year’s excitement is competing with an inordinate amount of off-field controversy about concussions – we’re now in an age when head trauma not only is recognized, it’s posited by some as a threat to the survival of the game – about the national anthem protests begun last season by quarterback Colin Kaepernick. He still doesn’t have a job. There are allegations, all denied, that NFL owners are colluding to keep him out. In his absence, the protests have grown. This week, the most prominent protester, Seattle Seahawks defensive lineman Michael Bennett, alleged police held him at gunpoint last month without cause during a disturbance in Las Vegas. Bennett is African-American. He says he’s considering filing a civil rights lawsuit.

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MICHAEL BENNETT: Do I think every police officer is bad? No, I don’t believe that. Do I believe there are some people out there that judge people on the color of their skin? I do believe that.

GOLDMAN: Las Vegas police deny Bennett was racially profiled during the incident. And then there’s the case of last year’s top NFL rusher, Ezekiel Elliott of the Dallas Cowboys. He’s been suspended for six games related to domestic violence allegations, allegations he denies. Elliott, who hasn’t been charged, will play this Sunday. A judge is expected to rule tomorrow on a motion to stay the ban. If the judge says no, Elliot’s suspension will start week two. So what’s a football-hungry fan to do, hang their collective heads in shame or press on and enjoy the game? Amy Trask says in many cases, fans will do both. She remembers last season, when then-New York Giants kicker Josh Brown was embroiled in a domestic violence case.

TRASK: I was having a discussion with a fan who was so angry that this player was on the Giants roster as she stood there – and this is really the honest-to-goodness truth – with a shopping bag in her hand, having just purchased for her son a Giants jersey.

GOLDMAN: This kind of cognitive dissonance, as Trask calls it, appears to be here to stay as a troubled game begins for many an exciting new season. Tom Goldman, NPR News.

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