October 18, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: 'La La Land' Meets 'Blade Runner 2049,' 'Black Panther' Easter Eggs and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

This fan-made trailer for La La Land 2049 mashes two Ryan Gosling movies perfectly (via ScreenCrush):

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Easter Eggs of the Day:

We got a new Black Panther trailer, so here’s Mr. Sunday Movies with a funny look at its Easter eggs and other things you might have missed:

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High School Assembly of the Day:

An Arizona high school’s dance team performs the greatest homecoming assembly routines ever. Following last year’s Pixar-themed pep rally comes this year’s The Wizard of Oz extravaganza (via Geekologies):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

George C. Scott, who was born on this day in 1927, with co-star Tracy Reed and director Stanley Kubrick on the set of Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb in 1963:

Filmmaking Lesson of the Day:

For Filmmaker IQ, John P. Hess discusses the math and science behind forced perspective shots:

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Filmmakers in Focus:

For Fandor, Philip Brubaker looks at the Joel and Ethan Coen and Sam Raimi’s use of the shaky cam for traveling POV shots:

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Alternate Poster of the Day:

Speaking of Raimi, one of Matt Talbot’s new horror movie posters for his Halloween-themed month-long project is of Evil Dead:

My #31DaysOfHorror poster for day is Evil Dead, which premiered on this day in 1981! #31daysofhalloweenpic.twitter.com/98b7i9AExD

— Matt Talbot (@mattrobot) October 16, 2017

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Also speaking of Raimi, with Spider-Man: Homecoming out in theaters, Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons why it’s better than the Spider-Man trilogy:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Check out the Extreme Costumes Bumblebee from Transformers cosplay at this year’s New York Comic Con via mineralblu:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This week is the 20th anniversary of the release of The Devil’s Advocate. Watch the original trailer for the classic thriller below.

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and

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Emoluments Hearing Hints At What May Be At Stake: Trump's Tax Returns

A lawsuit against President Trump alleges he is violating the Foreign and Domestic Emoluments clauses of the Constitution. Plaintiffs’ lawyer Deepak Gupta says Trump’s Washington hotel (above) is “an emoluments magnet.”

Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

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Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

If there’s one thing President Trump’s critics want from him, and he refuses to give up, it’s his tax returns.

The returns didn’t come up during Wednesday’s hearing in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan. But the hearing was the first step in a process that could loosen Trump’s grip on them.

If the next step goes the plaintiffs’ way, the case could make the president’s tax returns surface.

Trump is being sued by four plaintiffs who allege he is violating anti-corruption provisions in the Constitution, namely, its Foreign and Domestic Emoluments clauses.

If Judge George Daniels says the plaintiffs have legal standing to proceed with the suit, they then can seek internal financial documents, including those tax returns.

“We will be looking for detailed financial records, foreign and domestic transactions, in the president’s businesses,” plaintiffs’ lawyer Joseph Sellers told reporters after the hearing. “If the tax returns turn out to be relevant we may seek them.”

Trump is the only president since 1977 to withhold his tax returns from voluntary disclosure. Unlike recent presidents, he has also refused to comply voluntarily with the federal conflict-of-interest law. Doing so would have forced him to separate himself from the Trump business empire.

The lawsuit comes from three plaintiffs in the hotel and restaurant industry, and one watchdog group, called Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

The Constitution’s clauses banning emoluments — that is, money and other favors — are meant to keep federal officials out of conflicts of interest.

Plaintiffs’ lawyer Deepak Gupta told Daniels that Trump’s Washington hotel is “an emoluments magnet.” Its international business has been burgeoning, according to news reports.

Justice Department lawyer Brett Shumate said the plaintiffs failed to show they have been injured by Trump hotels and restaurants, so they wouldn’t have legal standing.

As the hearing wrapped up, Shumate opened a possible argument that presidents aren’t even covered by the Foreign Emoluments Clause.

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Olympic Gymnast McKayla Maroney Says She Was Molested For Years By Team Doctor

McKayla Maroney stands on the podium at the 2012 Olympic Games in London. She says a team doctor molested her for years, including during the Olympics.

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Editor’s note: This story contains graphic language.

As women around the world tell their stories of sexual harassment and assault using the phrase “#MeToo,” one prominent voice added her own harrowing account.

McKayla Maroney, a member of the U.S. women’s gymnastics team that won gold at the 2012 Olympics in London, says she was abused for years by former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar.

“I had a dream to go to the Olympics,” she writes in a statement posted to Twitter, “and the things that I had to endure to get there, were unnecessary, and disgusting.”

#MeToopic.twitter.com/lYXaDTuOsS

— mckayla (@McKaylaMaroney) October 18, 2017

“Dr. Nassar told me that I was receiving ‘medically necessary treatment that he had been performing on patients for over 30 years,’ ” she writes. “It started when I was 13 years old, at one of my first National Team training camps, in Texas, and it didn’t end until I left the sport.” She says the abuse continued in London during the 2012 games.

Former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar.

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Michigan Attorney General/AP

Maroney says the scariest night of her life happened when she was 15 years old, when the team traveled to Tokyo. She says Nassar gave her a sleeping pill to help her sleep on the flight, and when she awoke she was alone with him in his hotel room, “getting a ‘treatment.’ ” She does not describe his specific actions.

“I thought I was going to die that night,” she writes.

Maroney retired from gymnastics in 2016, at age 20. She sprang to fame with strong routines at the 2012 Olympics, and her look of dissatisfaction at her silver medal performance in the vault final gave rise to the “McKayla is not impressed” meme.

Her story of molestation by Nassar echoes the accounts of many others. More than 125 women have sued the former team doctor, alleging abuse.

Attorneys representing Nassar had no comment on Maroney’s accusations.

In July, Nassar pleaded guilty in federal court to three counts related to child pornography, for which he could be sentenced to 22 to 27 years in prison. Sentencing in that case is scheduled for Dec. 7, the same week as jury selection in his trial on state charges in Michigan.

Nassar faces almost two dozen charges of sexual assault in two different Michigan counties, the Lansing State Journalreports. From 1997 until he was fired last September, Nassar was a sports medicine doctor and faculty member at Michigan State University.

He has pleaded not guilty to the assault charges; many of the civil charges are in mediation, according to The Associated Press.

In court, Nassar’s attorneys have defended his actions — including breast massages and digital vaginal and anal penetration for up to 20 minutes as a time — as helpful medical treatments, according to the Journal.

Maroney’s accusation against Nassar comes amid sweeping allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct by film executive Harvey Weinstein and others. She says she wants people to know that the problems are not only in Hollywood.

“Things have to change,” Maroney writes, and she has some suggestions for how to make that happen:

“One: Speaking out, and bringing awareness to the abuse that is happening.

“Two: People, Institutions, Organizations, especially those in positions of power, etc. need to be held accountable for their inappropriate actions and behavior.

“Three: Educate, and prevent, no matter the cost.

“Four: Have zero tolerance for abusers and those who protect them.”

She ends with one more piece of advice: “remember, it’s never too late to speak up.”

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President Trump Pivots On Bipartisan Health Care Bill

President Trump said he supports a bipartisan effort that would effectively shore up the Affordable Care Act. But he’s also distanced himself from it. What’s behind the complicated politics at play?

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

For more on President Trump’s role in all of this, NPR’s Geoff Bennett joins us now from the White House. Hi, Geoff.

GEOFF BENNETT, BYLINE: Hey, Ari.

SHAPIRO: So as we’ve just heard, this morning the president distanced himself from the bipartisan Alexander-Murray health care deal, saying he can never support bailing out insurance companies. But Geoff, yesterday he seemed to embrace the bill. Walk us through this.

BENNETT: Well, he did. Early yesterday, the president was holding a news conference in the White House Rose Garden with the prime minister of Greece just as news broke on the Hill about this tentative agreement. And when asked about it, the president praised the two senators involved and said he was aware of what they were working on. And he appeared to take partial credit for it.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Yes, we have been involved. And this is a short-term deal because we think ultimately block grants going to the states is going to be the answer. That’s a very good solution.

BENNETT: So you hear him call it a very good solution. But then hours after that yesterday in a speech before the conservative Heritage Foundation, President Trump changed his tone, saying the bill provides, as he put it, bailouts to insurance companies. And then this afternoon, Ari, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the Alexander-Murray bill, while it’s a worthy pursuit, doesn’t go quite far enough.

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SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS: We think that this is a good step in the right direction. This president certainly supports Republicans and Democrats coming to work together. But it’s not a full approach, and we need something to go a little bit further to get on board.

SHAPIRO: Geoff, that’s a quick pivot from hot to cold. What’s going on here?

BENNETT: I think what accounts for this is a Republican Party that doesn’t want to be in what they view as an untenable political position of having to vote to prop up the Affordable Care Act after pledging for seven years to scrap it. So you have groups like FreedomWorks, Heritage Action, the Club for Growth all casting this bill as a betrayal of the Republican promise to repeal and replace Obamacare.

But I’ll tell you. Democrats are really infuriated by what they view as the president’s shifting stance. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer today while speaking with reporters called the president the obstructionist-in-chief for not being able to stick to a position, as Schumer put it. Here he is on the floor of the Senate earlier today.

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CHUCK SCHUMER: He’s totally inconsistent – for it one day, against it the next day. You can’t govern. Mr. President, you cannot govern a country. You cannot keep America great if you don’t know what’s in the bills and don’t have a consistent policy about them.

SHAPIRO: Does this mean it’s the end of the road for this bipartisan health care proposal?

BENNETT: Well, Lamar Alexander told my colleague Sue Davis, who covers the Hill, that he sees the White House pushback as part of the overall legislative process. But I think it’s impossible for Republican lawmakers to support this deal without President Trump’s stated endorsement. There’s just not enough political cover for Republicans to vote for it. And then over in the House, you have House Speaker Paul Ryan saying he wouldn’t even bring such a stabilization bill to the House floor for a vote. So right now, it seems that there aren’t enough votes for it. And without the president’s support, it looks like this bill doesn’t really go very far.

SHAPIRO: So if this bill doesn’t go very far and congressional efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act have failed, where do things stand?

BENNETT: Well, there are other options facing lawmakers. But again, there’s just – the incentive structure, particularly on the Republican side, just does not exist for the – for Republicans to stand up and to give yes votes for this bill on the floor either in the House or the Senate. So right now we’re really at an impasse.

SHAPIRO: That’s NPR White House correspondent Geoff Bennett telling us about the latest developments on the health care debate. Thanks, Geoff.

BENNETT: You’re welcome.

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