September 26, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Blade Runner 2049' Anime Prequel, Artificial Intelligence in the Movies and More

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

Short Movie of the Day:

The third official Blade Runner 2049 prequel short, an anime film by Shinichiro Watanabe titled Black Out 2022, has arrived:

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Video Essay of the Day:

Also in anticipation of Blade Runner 2049, Luis Azevedo created this look at AI in the movies for Little White Lies:

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Screenwriting Lesson of the Day:

Speaking of Blade Runner, Lessons from the Screenplay examines the future noir genre and Blade Runner‘s script specifically:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

This week, singer/actor Meat Loaf turns 70, so here’s a beautiful image of him and Edward Norton from the 1999 movie Fight Club:

Actor in the Spotlight:

In anticipation of Flatliners releasing this week, Jacob T. Swinney looks at Ellen Page’s versatility as an actress of different kinds of movies for Fandor:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

For your obligatory Star Wars item of the day, here’s Alejandro Villarreal with a video essay on George Lucas:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Oh, fine, here’s somethinge else Star Wars-related, a mashup of a Stormtrooper and the Marvel supervillain Venom:

This cosplay is legitimately the scariest thing I’ve ever seen. #venomtrooperpic.twitter.com/IyIYz25SX1

— Anthony (@anthonyranting) September 26, 2017

Video List of the Day:

Watch Burger Fiction’s supercut of the 100 greatest movie gadgets of all time and see how many you wish you could own:

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Remixed Movie of the Day:

Who Framed Roger Rabbit is the latest movie to have its dialogue and other sounds musically remixed by Eclectic Method:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This week marks the 25th anniversary of Michael Mann’s The Last of the Mohicans. Watch the original trailer for the classic movie below.

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and

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Now What? 5 Looming Challenges For The Affordable Care Act

Republicans in Congress say they haven’t given up on getting rid of the Affordable Care Act. They’re just switching tactics.

Katherine Streeter for NPR

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Katherine Streeter for NPR

Republicans officially pulled the plug on their last-ditch effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act on Tuesday.

“We don’t have the votes,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., after a closed-door meeting of Senate Republicans. “And since we don’t have the votes, we’ve made the decision to postpone the vote.” Cassidy, along with Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., put together the proposal they hoped could pass the Senate.

As of Sunday, though, the Senate will no longer be able to pass a health law overhaul bill with only a simple majority. That means the bill is effectively dead, for now.

That message was underscored by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who said, “Where we go from here is tax reform.”

But that does not mean all is smooth sailing for the ACA. Here are five ongoing challenges the law faces.

1. Insurers still face tremendous uncertainty.

Wednesday is the deadline for health insurers to finalize rates for the 2018 individual market open enrollment season, which starts Nov. 1. Yet there has been no resolution to the question of whether the federal government will continue to reimburse insurers for subsidies known as cost-sharing reductions. Those are payments insurers are required to provide to moderate-income enrollees to help them afford deductibles and out-of-pocket costs. The law says the federal government is supposed to make those payments, but a lawsuit has left that an open question, and the Trump administration has repeatedly threatened to stop making the payments.

Without reimbursement of those subsidies, Pennsylvania Health and Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller told the Senate Finance Committee Monday, insurers in her state “reported they would need to request a statewide average increase of 20.3 percent” in the cost of health plan premiums. Those increases are similar nationwide.

A bipartisan effort led by Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., to advance legislation to affirmatively fund the payments was reportedly progressing until Republican leaders stopped them to concentrate on efforts to pass the Graham-Cassidy legislation.

But Alexander and Murray now appear back at it.

Murray said Tuesday she is “ready to keep working on the bipartisan path that could lead to results.”

Alexander similarly released a statement that he would “consult” with Murray and others “on a limited bipartisan plan that could be enacted into law to help lower premiums and make insurance available to the 18 million Americans in the individual market in 2018 and 2019.”

2. The Trump administration has cut funding for efforts to sign people up for insurance.

Administration officials announced earlier this month major cuts to the “navigator” program, which provides funding to community groups that guide people through the complex task of signing up for health insurance through the online marketplaces. Some groups are losing more than 90 percent of their budgets.

The cuts have forced many groups to lay off workers just before open enrollment begins and to limit the areas they serve.

3. The 2018 enrollment period is half the length of 2017’s, and now it will be shorter still.

Trump officials are also slashing by 90 percent the advertising budget that reminds people about open enrollment and how to sign up — from $100 million to $10 million.

Those cuts are even more significant this year because for the first time since the law’s implementation, open enrollment starts in November, rather than December, and lasts only 45 days.

“Most people don’t know the open enrollment dates, and they don’t know that the deadline this year is Dec. 15, not Jan. 31, like last year,” wrote Lori Lodes, who ran outreach for the ACA in the Obama administration, in a recent op-ed for Vox.

Trump administration officials said they don’t think advertising is cost-effective, but Lodes wrote that “my office produced reams of data that proved the overall effectiveness of outreach advertising.”

Additionally, HHS announced late last week that it will shut down HealthCare.gov for maintenance from 12 a.m. to 12 p.m. every Sunday during open enrollment, except for Dec. 10 – a step critics say could further undermine enrollment efforts.

4. The Trump administration is dragging its feet on giving states flexibility to stabilize their markets.

Back in March, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services chief Seema Verma, who oversees the ACA, sent a letter to states encouraging them to use the law’s waiver process to improve the functioning of their individual insurance markets. In particular, they suggested states could create “reinsurance” programs that would help lower premiums by providing a payment mechanism for the most expensive patients.

But when Minnesota took up that invitation, the administration delayed its response. When it finally did grant permission last week, HHS also informed the state that it will lose significant funding for a program that provides insurance to the state’s low-income residents.

Gov. Mark Dayton, a former Democratic senator, said in a letter to Price that “we have now been informed that Minnesota would lose more federal Basic Health Plan funding than we would receive in federal support for reinsurance,” and described the entire waiver process as “nightmarish.”

5. Republicans could take another shot at a full overhaul next year — or even this year.

While the acknowledgment that the GOP lacks the votes to overhaul the health law means an immediate vote will not happen, the Republicans have potentially two more shots to try to pass a bill with a simple majority vote.

What triggers the ability to pass a bill in the Senate without threat of filibuster is a formal budget resolution. Republicans have still not passed a budget resolution for fiscal 2018, which begins Oct. 1. The upcoming resolution is expected to call for a major tax cut bill. Some Republicans, notably Graham himself, have suggested adding health language to that resolution, which would be allowed.

But that would complicate efforts for both bills.

More likely is that Republicans could try again for a health overhaul via its fiscal 2019 budget resolution, which is due next April. That would leave them only a few months before the 2018 elections. Still, it’s possible, particularly if they can use the time to reach consensus.

That is clearly what sponsors of the latest GOP bill have in mind.

“We’re on a path to pass” his bill, Graham told reporters. “It’s just a matter of when. It will be in this Congress, under a better process.”


Kaiser Health News, a nonprofit health newsroom, is an editorially independent part of the Kaiser Family Foundation.

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Facebook Faces Increasing Scrutiny Over Election-Related Russian Ads

For months, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg had claimed that security experts at Facebook had found no evidence of Russians involved in fake news. Now, Facebook is turning over thousands of ads to Congress it said had been placed by a Russian agency.

Noah Berger/AP

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Noah Berger/AP

Facebook is under increasing pressure to scrutinize its advertising content after it discovered that at least 3,000 ads on the site had been placed by a Russian agency to influence the 2016 presidential election. The revelations about the ads came after months of denial by CEO Mark Zuckerberg that Facebook played any role in influencing voters.

As has been widely reported, the pressure on the company began shortly after the 2016 election. But Zuckerberg rejected the idea that fake news on the network had any impact on voters. He called that a “crazy idea” and said “voters make decisions based on their lived experience.”

But at a conference in Lima, Peru, shortly after the election, then-President Barack Obama pulled Zuckerberg aside and made a personal appeal to him to take the threat of fake news seriously because it wasn’t going away and would return again to haunt the next election, The Washington Post reported. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., also had conversations with the company trying to push Facebook to look carefully at activity on the site leading up to the election.

For months, Zuckerberg hclaimed that security experts at Facebook had found no evidence of Russians involved in fake news. Then, last week Facebook said it would turn over the content of ads to Congress it said had been placed by a Russian agency.

Members of a hacking group connected to Russia’s military intelligence unit, the GRU, began creating fake Facebook accounts as early as June 2016 to amplify stolen emails from the Democratic National Committee, the Post reported.According to the Post, some of those ads specifically sought to deepen disagreements about Muslims and the Black Lives Matter movement.

In a live video, Zuckerberg announced a series of reforms meant to guard against international agents trying to influence voters. He announced changes to the way political ads would be placed. Advertisers will be required to disclose who sponsored their ads. Users will be able to see an advertiser’s webpage, who is behind an ad, what other ads they’ve sponsored and who else is being targeted. This should enable users to understand the deeper motivations of an advertiser. The company is also adding 250 employees to focus on election integrity and security.

However, Zuckerberg also admitted, “I wish I could tell you we’re going to be able to stop all interference, but that wouldn’t be realistic.”

It is especially hard to catch bad actors because of the way that Facebook’s advertising model works. Before the Internet, there were human salespeople who sold ads and did the placements. Now, the process is automated. An advertiser signs up online and pays money to target a specific kind of user — say, someone who lives in a certain area and is interested in leather shoes. That makes it much easier for bad actors like Russia to outsmart the computers.

This is a problem not only at Facebook but at most tech companies — including Google and Microsoft. In fact, lawmakers are beginning to think these companies need more government oversight around political advertising, which has been true for other media for decades. A company like Facebook is virtually a monopoly. Close to 70 percent of Americans use the social network.

Senate Democrats have been crafting legislation that would require Internet companies to disclose the names of individuals and organizations that spend more than $10,000 on election-related ads.

Undoubtedly, the fear of being regulated is part of why Facebook is trying to take the lead now on the issue of fake news on the site. Google and other tech companies are likely to lobby hard against any regulations. However, congressional deadlock could be on their side since Congress hasn’t been passing much of anything lately.

(Facebook pays NPR and many other media companies to create video content on the site.)

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4 College Basketball Coaches, Adidas Executive, Charged In Bribery Case

The Department of Justice announced fraud and corruption charges for a scheme allegedly involving four college basketball coaches and the head of global sports marketing for Adidas, plus five other defendants. NPR’s Robert Siegel talks to Mike DeCourcy of Sporting News about the case.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

The Department of Justice has brought charges in a wide-ranging college basketball bribery and fraud case. Here’s how U.S. Attorney Joon Kim laid it out at a news conference today.

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JOON KIM: Coaches at some of the nation’s top programs soliciting and accepting cash bribes, managers and financial advisers circling blue-chip prospects like coyotes and employees of one of the world’s largest sportswear companies secretly funneling cash to the families of high school recruits.

SIEGEL: Ten people have been charged, including four assistant college basketball coaches and an executive at Adidas. All have been arrested. Mike DeCourcy is a college basketball columnist with The Sporting News, and he’s been covering this case. Welcome to the program.

MIKE DECOURCY: Thank you, Robert.

SIEGEL: The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York described two separate schemes. Let’s talk about the first one. This involved the assistant coaches being bribed. What was the alleged scheme, and who did they say was involved?

DECOURCY: Well, there are four assistant coaches, including a coach at Auburn, associate head coach Chuck Person, as well as assistant coaches at Oklahoma State, Southern California and Arizona. They are charged with accepting bribes for delivering particular players who had gone through their programs to a particular financial management firm. And then of course the financial management firm would profit from their association with those players as they turned professional.

SIEGEL: It’s alleged that the coaches took money in order to direct the players to those companies. And the second scheme – what’s charged there?

DECOURCY: The second case involves a scheme to direct particular players to particular schools who were affiliated with one of the conspirator’s apparel company.

SIEGEL: And we should say the apparel company isn’t named I guess in this. But the – it’s Adidas obviously from reading between the lines.

DECOURCY: The – one of the indicted people was an executive at Adidas.

SIEGEL: Bill Sweeney of the FBI New York field office said at the news conference today that this investigation is ongoing. And he said to others conducting business this way in college sports, we have your playbook. Do you assume they’re going to be more indictments in this case?

DECOURCY: I would not rule that out. But I think the point that was made by the FBI agent was more like, don’t do this stuff because we’ll catch you. And before, the problem had always been if you get caught, well, you might lose your job at school, or your school might go on probation or lose a post-season tournament or something like that. Now there’s a lot more at stake. I think there was a cavalier attitude when it was only the NCAA. They had to be worried about – those three letters, the FBI, are a lot more intimidating than the four in the NCAA.

SIEGEL: Yeah. Of the people indicted, only one name rings a bell with me, and that’s Chuck Person, an assistant coach at Auburn but also a former star basketball player there and a longtime NBA player.

DECOURCY: What’s interesting about that is Chuck Person, according to statistical websites, made over $22 million in his NBA career and is making over a quarter of a million dollars a year as the associate head coach at Auburn. So why would he need the money that he was alleged to have accepted as a bribe? And I think that’s the question that people in basketball are asking and that they wonder if the federal authorities will ask as well.

SIEGEL: Mike DeCourcy, college basketball columnist for The Sporting News, thanks for talking with us.

DECOURCY: Thank you very much.

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