October 13, 2017

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Syracuse Field Goal Disrupts Clemson's Aim For A Perfect Season

Syracuse quarterback Eric Dungey celebrates with fans after his win over Clemson Friday night in Syracuse, N.Y. The Orange upset the Tigers 27-24.

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Adrian Kraus/AP

The Clemson Tigers went into the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y., Friday night undefeated, but they left crushed after their hopes for a perfect season were dashed. The Syracuse Orange beat the No. 2-ranked Tigers 27-24.

Clemson had won 12 consecutive games on the opponent’s home field — the longest streak in Clemson history. It also ties for the second longest active streak in the nation.

Syracuse Quarterback Eric Dungey threw for 278 yards and three touchdowns. But it was Cole Murphy who put the Orange ahead on the scoreboard when he kicked a tie-breaking field goal in the fourth quarter.

Dungey got the team off to a good start, he threw a 23-yard touchdown pass on the opening drive of the game.

Afterward, Syracuse coach Dino Babers told reporters, “This is truly one of the moments that you coach for. This is really special.” Babers is in his second year with the Orange.

“It wasn’t our night tonight,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney told reporters. “We’re not going to be 12-0, that’s for sure. That’s not going to happen. This is going to hurt, but you move forward.”

Adding to Clemson’s problems, quarterback Kelly Bryant suffered a likely concussion in the final minutes of the first half. No word yet if he’ll have to sit out any games.

But Clemson had other issues as ESPN reports:

“Clemson, too, was a mess, a shell of the team that held the nation’s longest active winning streak. On defense, the Tigers were flummoxed by Syracuse’s up-tempo attack. On offense, aside from two big runs — a 37-yard touchdown by Tavien Feaster and a 52-yard score by Travis Etienne — there was no consistency. On special teams, it was a nightmare, with two missed field goal attempts and a disastrous fake punt that proved to be the last play Clemson would run.

“The same team that so thoroughly dominated Louisville and Virginia Tech on the road seemed overwhelmed inside the Carrier Dome.”

The loss — while ruining Clemson’s chance at a perfect season — also hurts the Tigers’ chances as repeating as national champions.

The bright spot is that Clemson won the national championship last year despite a loss during the season to Pittsburgh.

The Tigers will have a chance to regroup next weekend — the team has a bye. Syracuse travels to Florida to face No. 11 Miami.

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The Week in Movie News: Here's What You Need to Know

Need a quick recap on the past week in movie news? Here are the highlights:

BIG NEWS

Thor Ragnarok kicks off a big narrative arc for the Hulk: Hulk can’t have a solo feature in the currrent MCU, but that’s not stopping Marvel from giving him his own trilogy within non-exclusive installments, starting with Thor: Ragnarok and continuing in the next two Avengers sequels. Read more here and here and see more on the MCU below.

TERRIFIC NEWS

Gambit is finally truly on track again: The X-Men spin-off Gambit was originally supposed to come out a while ago, but the movie hit some hurdles and Fox wound up taking it off the calendar. Now it’s back on with a new release date and a new director plus hung-in-there star Channing Tatum. Read more here and see a trailer for another X-Men spin-off down below.

GREAT NEWS

Star Wars: The Last Jedi tickets are now on sale: After this week, we have exactly two months until the release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, but fans were able to buy advance tickets this week, making the wait seem much shorter. Read more here and see the trailer down below.

COOL CULTURE

Star Wars: The Last Jedi brings Porg mania and more excitement: Speaking of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, the new trailer has exploded Porgs into the mainstream and the meme stream, while the new spot and the new poster have been subject to more fun movie culture around the web. See one of the most popular examples of how Porg mania is being spread by movie fans below, and see more cool Photoshops and videos here and here and here.

Oh, the porg images being shared in our team Slack channel right now are glorious… pic.twitter.com/l3NDbtSO2N

— ErikDavis (@ErikDavis) October 11, 2017

EXCLUSIVE BUZZ

Kevin Feige on the possibility of a Marvel convention: We talked to Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige in anticipation of the release of Thor: Ragnarok plus the chance of Marvel having its own equivalent of Star Wars Celebration. Read what he had to say here.

MUST-WATCH TRAILERS

Star Wars: The Last Jedi teases a darker episode: In conjuction with tickets going on sale, Star Wars: The Last Jedi got a new trailer, which is filled with apparent doom for the good guys, plus teases of major character deaths and other disruptions in the Force. Also Porgs! Watch the new trailer below and see our highlights of the best moments here.

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Justice League looks explosive: The latest trailer for Justice League debuted during New York Comic Con, and it’s making DC superhero fans very excited for next month’s release. Also, Aquaman? More like awesomeman. Check out the third spot below:

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The New Mutants shows us what an X-Men horror movie looks like: The first trailer for X-Men spin-off The New Mutants arrived in the middle of the night on Friday the 13th because it’s an eerie entry for the franchise, a kind of teen superhero haunted house flick. Check it out here:

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New York District Attorney On The Defense Over Handling Of Weinstein Allegations

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. faces criticism of his handling of sexual assault allegations against Harvey Weinstein and a case involving the Trump SoHo development in New York City.

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If only because of its venue, the office of New York district attorney has long been among the highest-profile prosecutorial jobs in the country. The men who have served in it, legal legends such as Thomas Dewey, Frank Hogan and Robert Morgenthau, have often held the job for years, gaining enormous stature and political capital along the way.

Until recently, it seemed the current DA, 63-year-old Cyrus Vance Jr., might enjoy the same long tenure.

But controversies over the Trump SoHo development and the sexual assault allegations against Harvey Weinstein have raised new questions about Vance’s prosecutorial discretion and even his ethics. Both cases involved wealthy, powerful individuals who had contributed to his election campaigns.

This week, as numerous actresses stepped forward to say they had been assaulted by Weinstein, Vance had to explain why he declined to prosecute the movie mogul, despite graphic audiotape of Weinstein harassing an Italian model in a Manhattan hotel. The tape was collected in 2015 as part of an undercover sting operation by New York police.

Despite the audiotape, Vance said prosecutors in his office had determined the evidence against Weinstein wasn’t strong enough to pursue a case.

“I understand that folks are outraged by his behavior,” Vance told reporters. “I understand that there are many other allegations that have surfaced, but in our case, we really did what I think the law obligates us to do.”

“If we could have prosecuted Harvey Weinstein for the conduct that occurred in 2015, we would have,” said Karen Friedman Agnifilo, chief assistant district attorney.

But criminal attorney Matthew Galluzzo, who once worked in the DA’s sex crimes unit, told The Associated Press he believed the audiotape, in which Weinstein acknowledges touching Gutierrez on the breast, could have been used to pursue a case.

“She can testify about what happened, and you’ve got him acknowledging he did something wrong,” Galluzzo said.

Before this week, questions were also being raised about Vance’s handling of a fraud investigation involving the Trump SoHo, a condo hotel built by the Bayrock Group. Some early buyers of units at the hotel sued Bayrock, arguing that they had been misled about the hotel’s sales records.

The Manhattan DA’s office had considered pursuing fraud charges against Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., who played a big role in promoting the hotel. An investigation by The New Yorker, WNYC and ProPublica said prosecutors wanted to pursue a criminal case, but Vance said evidence to do so was lacking.

The report also noted that Vance had received a $32,000 campaign contribution from one of Trump’s lawyers shortly after dropping the case. Vance had also received an earlier donation, which he had returned.

“It was improper for him to accept it in the first place. He responded by returning those donations and then apparently accepted them again after the fact,” noted Jim Cohen, a professor at Fordham University School of Law.

Before these controversies, Vance, who was first elected in 2009, enjoyed a solid if somewhat low-profile reputation in the New York legal world.

“He is in general viewed with great respect. He’s considered to be a straight shooter. But recent news events may ultimately end up changing that,” Cohen says.

The son of Cyrus Vance, secretary of state in the Carter administration, Vance attended Georgetown University Law Center before taking a job in the Manhattan DA’s office.

Although he moved to Seattle to work in private practice, he later returned to New York, where he was long seen as a potential successor to Morgenthau.

After Morgenthau chose not to run for re-election, Vance was elected as a Democrat to replace him. He was re-elected in 2013.

While Vance hasn’t yet achieved the prominence of his predecessors, his office has handled major investigations such as the sexual assault case against former International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

The Weinstein case has exploded just as Vance is preparing to run for a third term. He is running unopposed, which makes his re-election almost inevitable, says longtime Democratic consultant Jerry Skurnik.

But the controversies have definitely hurt Vance’s reputation and make him more vulnerable should he choose to run again in 2021, Skurnik says.

“His name recognition has probably gone up. But most of this new name recognition is not positive,” he says.

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Week In Politics: Trump Announces End To Obamacare Subsidy Payments

Ana Kasparian, host for The Young Turks network, and John Phillips of The Orange County Register, CNN, and KABC discuss the end of cost-sharing reduction subsidies by the government.

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

To talk more about the politics of health care, I am joined here in the studio by Ana Kasparian. She’s co-host and producer for the online news network The Young Turks. Welcome.

ANA KASPARIAN: Thank you for having me.

MCEVERS: And John Phillips, political commentator for CNN and a columnist for the Orange County Register, welcome to you.

JOHN PHILLIPS: Thank you so much.

MCEVERS: So as we just heard, President Trump says one by one, his administration is dismantling the Affordable Care Act. But there is lots of polling to suggest that people do not want these insurance markets to fall apart. Some senators led by Republican Lamar Alexander of Tennessee had been working on a bipartisan bill to stabilize the markets, and now this. John, I’ll start with you. I mean, how is this move going to affect the president’s relationship with members of his own party?

PHILLIPS: Well, I think if you’re talking about voters who you first mentioned, people first vote with their feet before they vote at the ballot box. And one of the things the critics have been saying is if you allow people to leave the health exchange, if you allow people to leave Obamacare, anyone who can leave will leave. Well, what does that tell you about the product? I mean, that’s like the same argument that the teachers unions make about school vouchers and charter schools.

So I think that him making this move – and look; I’m a process guy, and I’d rather have Congress do it. But John McCain’s feelings are hurt, and he doesn’t have the votes right now. So he’s got to wait until Joe Manchin switches teams or Bob Menendez goes to prison. This was the best of a lot of bad options that he had, and kicking it to Congress is the long-term solution that I think is best for the Republicans and for Donald Trump.

MCEVERS: But is it going to work? I mean, Ana, these are – you know, as we just heard in Tam’s piece, President Trump needs votes on other things – the Iran deal, immigration, a tax bill among other things. Is, you know – are they going to be able to handle this stuff?

KASPARIAN: Well, whether or not Congress is going to be able to handle it is an interesting question. But what I do disagree with is the notion that Trump will allow Congress to do what it needs to do. I mean, he has already shown, and he is continuing to threaten Congress with unilateral action if they don’t give him exactly what he wants, which I think is fascinating given the fact that someone like Obama was criticized pretty aggressively by Republicans for signing executive orders and doing things unilaterally. So I do agree in our system of government and the need for checks and balances, especially when you have an individual which in my belief is as unhinged as Trump and doesn’t really understand the ramifications of these issues.

And just to quickly, you know, respond to your answer about voters, you know, when you do look at polling and you refer to the Affordable Care Act as the Affordable Care Act rather than Obamacare, even Republican voters like it, and it’s because it has provided certain protections for them that they don’t want to lose.

And I will not sit here and say that the Affordable Care Act is perfect. It was deeply flawed, and it did not have the proper cost controls in place to prevent higher premiums. But what Trump just did will increase premiums so much that, you know, Americans are really going to suffer. And I’m concerned about that.

MCEVERS: I mean, Republicans ran on promises to repeal Obamacare, and they didn’t have the votes to do it, as we know, in Congress. And now the president is acting on his own to hollow it out. Will this hurt Republican members of Congress in re-election races in 2018, John?

PHILLIPS: In the long term, getting a bill done is more important for Republicans in Congress than it is for Donald Trump. Donald Trump’s signature issue in the campaign was immigration. It was building the wall. If he doesn’t build the wall, his re-election chances have, you know, gone down to zero.

Republicans have won – what? – three different national elections based on repealing and replacing Obamacare. If Trump doesn’t get it done, it’s like going to Red Lobster and saying the chicken stinks. No one goes to Red Lobster for the chicken. They go there for the lobster. He’s selling immigration. They’re selling health care. If they don’t get it done, that’s a big blow to the Republicans in Congress.

MCEVERS: It sounds like he knows that, right?

PHILLIPS: Yes.

MCEVERS: (Laughter) I want to talk about the Democrats, too. I mean, this morning the president tweeted that now the Democrats have to call him to fix health care. I mean, is that true? Do they need to come to him at this point, Ana?

KASPARIAN: I don’t think they need to come to him. I think that that is a mistake because one thing that Donald Trump claims is that he’s a good negotiator. He has no interest in negotiations. He has all the interest in coercing or being coercive and threatening and bullying people into giving him what he wants. That is not a good negotiator.

What I would argue is that Democrats need to focus on their messaging because they are devastatingly weak in explaining and expressing how disastrous this will be for the American people. I mean, Republicans will latch onto something, and they will not let it go – Hillary Clinton with Benghazi. I mean, we’re still hearing about Benghazi. But Democrats – they – they’re soft, and they need to toughen up. And they need to really work on their messaging.

PHILLIPS: And for Democrats, it’s weird because Hillary Clinton won the nomination. She won the election over Bernie Sanders. But if you look Democratic voters are on issues like health care, Democratic voters are closer to Bernie Sanders…

KASPARIAN: Absolutely.

PHILLIPS: …Than they are to Hillary Clinton. So with all the problems that you see right now in Congress with Republicans, Democrats are facing the same issue. You saw Bernie Sanders standing up on stage with any number of Democrats who could be candidates for president next time around who signed on for single payer. Well, what is Nancy Pelosi going to do? What is Chuck Schumer going to do? What’s going to happen in Democratic primaries in the midterm elections, and what does that mean for compromise? It means compromise is probably not an option between the parties.

MCEVERS: Right. That leads to my next question. I mean, do you – either of you see any chance of some bipartisan solution to health care right now?

KASPARIAN: Quite honestly, I don’t because what I’m seeing is, you know, two or three senators – Republican senators that seem reasonable, and they’re looking out for the best interest of their constituents – Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins and John McCain. But at the same time, you have some like Rand Paul that think, no, no, I want to get rid of everything. I don’t want to help Americans out at all.

And so there’s a disagreement within the Republican Party. There’s a lot of disagreement among Democrats. I feel like, you know, we need to figure out what’s going on in these two teams and kind of come to some sort of agreement before this negotiation could even happen.

MCEVERS: Likely?

PHILLIPS: I don’t think there’s any negotiation that can be done with the leadership with the Democratic Party. I think you could potentially pick off one or two votes. He could get a Joe Manchin to sign on. He could get a Heidi Heitkamp to sign on. And that way, you can lose a John McCain. You can lose a Susan Collins. But if you largely keep that Republican caucus together, one or two Democrats could put you over the top.

MCEVERS: Some people say that this fight could go to the states. Attorneys general in, you know, majority Democratic states here in California and New York have said they will sue the Trump administration to continue making these subsidy payments. Does that seem like a viable option going forward in the short term for the ACA?

KASPARIAN: I think it’s a viable option. I would like them to be more aggressive. Lawmakers in California squashed any and all efforts to provide universal health care to Californians, something that polls as very popular. And it kind of shows you where their heart is. And I just don’t agree with it.

MCEVERS: Ana Kasparian of The Young Turks and John Phillips, commentator for CNN and columnist for the Orange County Register, thanks to both of you.

PHILLIPS: Thank you.

KASPARIAN: Thank you.

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Watch: 'The New Mutants' Trailer Shows What an 'X-Men' Horror Movie Looks Like

We heard The New Mutants was aiming for a horror vibe, but debuting its first trailer in the middle of the night on Friday the 13th pretty much confirms the idea (it also opens on a Friday the 13th). The movie, a spin-off from the X-Men franchise, is based on the 1980s Marvel comic book series of the same name, particularly its darker run written by co-creator Chris Claremont and illustrated by Bill Sienkiewicz.

Described as “a haunted house movie with a bunch of hormonal teenagers” and a cross between The Breakfast Club and’ One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by 20th Century Fox chairman and CEO Stacey Snider, New Mutants stars a hot young cast as mutant heroes Cannonball, Magik, Wolfsbane, Sunspot and Mirage. They’re overseen by a mutant doctor named Cecilia Reyes while locked in a secret facility.

Watch the first trailer below.

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Directed by:

Josh Boone, whose last movie was the teen romance drama The Fault in Our Stars.

Written by:

Boone, Scott Neustadter (The Fault In Our Stars), Michael H. Weber (The Fault in Our Stars) and Knate Lee (Kidnap).

Starring:

Anya Taylor-Joy (Split), Maisie Williams (Game of Thrones), Charlie Heaton (Stranger Things), Alice Braga (Queen of the South), Blu Hunt (The Originals) and Henry Zaga (Teen Wolf).

Official Synopsis:

“Five young mutants, just discovering their abilities while held in a secret facility against their will, fight to escape their past sins and save themselves.” (via 20th Century Fox)

Release Date:

April 13, 2018.

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