November 21, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Wonder Woman Meets Captain America, 'Justice League' vs. 'The Avengers' and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

If you need more of Wonder Woman after Justice League, here’s a fun mashup of her remembering Steve Rogers, aka Captain America:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Speaking of DC and Marvel movies, ScreenCrush looks at all the similarities between Justice League and The Avengers:

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Cosplay of the Day:

After those two items, we might as well share some fantastic Wonder Woman cosplay:

Love our Cosplay & Disney expert Joanna Bert here as Wonder Woman #malibu#WonderWomanpic.twitter.com/GalEcTzYtK

— Barcelona (@BCLONA) November 21, 2017

Movie Primer of the Day:

With Coco out this week, Oh My Disney informs us on everything we need to know before seeing the new Pixar movie:

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Franchise History of the Day:

Also in anticipation of Coco, Burger Fiction presents a chronological evolution of Pixar from the early shorts to the new feature:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Goldie Hawn and Jena Malone, who share a birthday today, on the set of the Hawn-helmed movie Hope in 1997:

Actor in the Spotlight:

With Michelle Pfeiffer garnering raves for her performance in Murder on the Orient Express, Fandor celebrates her career and her return:

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VFX Breakdown of the Day:

One of the more curious creatures in the Star Wars: The Last Jedi trailer is the Vulptex, aka “crystal fox.” Here’s a look at the animatronics involved in bringing the animal to life (via Geek Tyrant):

Franchise Remix of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars?, here’s the latest from Eclectic Method remixing sounds and dialogue from the Dark Side of the movies:

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Classic Clip of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Don Bluth and Gary Goldman’s Anastasia. Watch a memorable clip from the classic animated feature below.

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Uber Data On 57 Million People Stolen In Massive Hack

Uber headquarters in San Francisco. The company acknowledged that the personal information of 57 million customers and drivers was hacked last year.

Eric Risberg/AP

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Eric Risberg/AP

The ride-hailing service Uber revealed that the personal information of 57 million people, customers and drivers, was hacked last year and that the company kept the massive theft secret for more than a year.

Uber also paid the hackers $100,000 to delete the stolen data and stay silent about it.

The hack, first reported by Bloomberg, was confirmed in a blog post by Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi. He said in 2016 the hackers obtained the names, email addresses and mobile phone numbers of 57 million Uber users. The driver’s licenses of about 600,000 Uber drivers in the US also were stolen.

Khosrowshahi said the company’s outside forensics experts see no evidence that the hackers got access to Uber users’ trip location history, credit card numbers, bank accounts, Social Security numbers or dates of birth.

The CEO said that he had “recently learned” of the massive hack, but he wasn’t more specific about what he knew and when.

A source close to the company confirmed to NPR that Uber officials paid hackers $100,000 to delete the data and keep the breach secret. The source also said that chief security officer Joe Sullivan and one of his lieutenants were terminated this week.

However, Uber declined to confirm how they knew that the data was, in fact, deleted by the hackers.

As NPR’s Aarti Shahani reported on All Things Considered, the out-going chief security officer Sullivan is the apparent mastermind of the cover up.

“He’s a former federal prosecutor — a former public servant — and he had an interesting approach to his job. For example, he felt it was OK for Uber to start using the sensors on drivers’ smartphones to track how they drive, how they perform on the job — even though many drivers were not aware of this practice and didn’t like it. Turns out he didn’t feel an obligation to disclose to them their data was taken either.”

In his post, Khosroshahi said that Uber is contacting all of the drivers whose drivers’ license numbers were downloaded and providing them with free credit monitoring and identity theft protection.

He also concluded with a contrite tone:

“None of this should have happened, and I will not make excuses for it. While I can’t erase the past, I can commit on behalf of every Uber employee that we will learn from our mistakes. We are changing the way we do business, putting integrity at the core of every decision we make and working hard to earn the trust of our customers.”

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Health Care System Fails Many Transgender Americans

Ruby Corado (left) with her friend and Casa Ruby board member Consuella Lopez on the porch of one of the transitional group homes Corado runs in Washington, D.C., in 2015.

Lexey Swall/GRAIN for NPR

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Lexey Swall/GRAIN for NPR

On a recent weekday afternoon, Ruby Corado let herself into the drop-in center at the homeless shelter she founded for LGBTQ youth to make the rounds with new clients.

In the basement of Casa Ruby in Washington, D.C., transgender men and women in their late teens and 20s, mostly brown or black, shared snacks, watched TV, chatted or played games on their phones. Many of them, said Corado, are part of the 31 percent.

That’s 31 percent of transgender Americans who lack regular access to health care. The finding comes from a new poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of public health.

“I’m not surprised, because 31 percent — it’s a lot,” Corado said quietly. Her own experiences with homelessness, rape, assault have left her all too familiar with the vulnerabilities faced by many transgender people.

Corado pointed to one crucial word in the study that deserves extra emphasis. “What does regular health care mean?” she asked, then answered the question herself: “Preventable.”

Preventable problems, including HIV infection and some cancers, kill many people in this community. It’s harder for transgender people to find health care coverage, because it’s harder for them to find jobs. Social stigmas aside, consider the difficulty of getting hired if your gender does not appear to match the one on your legal ID. According to the 2015 U.S. Transgender Study, transgender people face an unemployment rate three times as high as the national average — 15 percent versus 5 percent.

Then there’s what might happen when seeking medical attention. In the NPR poll, 22 percent of transgender people said they’d avoided doctors or health care for fear of being discriminated against.

“Your trans status is on display and on parade for people to make fun of you,” Corado said, reflecting on insensitive medical professionals who have asked her such questions as, “What are you?”

“Right now, it’s very hard for a lot of people to even find a primary care provider who’s willing to work with them,” said Kellan Baker, a doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins University who studies how health policies affect gay, lesbian, queer and transgender Americans. He said even if you regularly see a physician, a number of insurance companies will not cover care related to gender transition, such as hormones or surgery.

“Which, as you can imagine, is a huge barrier for transgender people in terms of mental health,” he said. “So you’re looking at yourself in the mirror, you’re not able to get health insurance coverage [and] you can’t get health care that you need to make sure that how you look aligns with who you are.”

Surgery on reproductive organs is expensive, so many people leave them alone. That means a trans man with a uterus — or a trans woman with a prostate — might have to endure embarrassing, awkward questions from health care providers when getting regular care, such as an annual physical.

Baker had no trouble providing examples.”What do you mean you need a cervical Pap test for a man or a prostate exam for a woman?” he asked. “How do we compute that? You shouldn’t have that part, so we don’t know what to do with you.”

Yee Won Chong (left) was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer, and in a strange coincidence his roommate, Brooks Nelson (right), discovered he had ovarian cancer.

Courtesy of Yee Won Chong

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Courtesy of Yee Won Chong

Those were the kinds of questions Yee Won Chong had to face when he was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. He had undergone what’s known as top surgery, where breast tissue is removed and the chest is reconstructed to a more masculine appearance. However, he later developed cancer in the remaining breast tissue. His doctor didn’t know how to code him into the medical records system.

“I’m her first transgender patient,” Chong explained. But he was lucky. His oncologist, Dr. Tammy De La Melana, committed herself and her office team to the best possible care for Chong. And in a coincidence that Chong described as freaky, his roommate, who is also transmasculine, discovered he had ovarian cancer. They’re working now on a documentary about their experiences, called Trans Dudes with Lady Cancer.

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Yee Won ChongYouTube

It’s worth noting that Southern Comfort, an earlier documentary about a transgender man with ovarian cancer, won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2001. Back then, transgender people were even more likely to slip through the cracks of the health care system, but insurance companies and many medical professionals still treat them as though their bodies don’t make any sense.

All that said, there is a place for transgender people looking for high-quality and low-cost health care to go: Planned Parenthood.

Planned Parenthood trains its staff to be sensitive to transgender people. Many of its health centers offer trans people a wide array of services, including primary care, annual exams and STD screenings. Currently, Planned Parenthood offers hormone replacement therapy at health centers in 17 states, and its national headquarters reports an 80 percent increase in centers offering hormones to transgender patients from 2013 to 2015.

At the Virginia League for Planned Parenthood in Richmond, Va., a number of services for transgender people are available.

Afton Bradley, the center’s program manager for transgender health, ran through some questions he thinks about when providing care to trans patients. “Does our front desk know how to be affirming?” he asked. “Is our electronic health record affirming? Does it ask about pronouns and gender ID in addition to whatever legal sex is on their insurance or ID?”

Ryan Brazell (top left) has his vitals checked by Afton Bradley at the Virginia League for Planned Parenthood in Richmond, Va. Bradley makes sure the clinic is sensitive to the needs of trans patients.

Pat Jarrett for NPR

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Pat Jarrett for NPR

Bradley said this Planned Parenthood can handle trans-specific problems. What happens when a trans woman injects herself with building-grade silicone to get feminine curves? Or a trans man buys black market testosterone, or injures himself by binding his chest with duct tape?

Ryan Brazell, a trans man who gets his care here, remembered his first visit. “I went out to my car and was like, ‘I felt really weird,’ ” he said. “And it took me a few days to figure out why. It was the first time I had a health care experience I was happy with. And I didn’t know what that felt like until I had that experience at Planned Parenthood.”

That experience is wholly unfamiliar to many clients at the Casa Ruby LGBTQ shelter. “I’ve seen a lot of people die,” said its founder, Corado. “I’ve been to a lot of hospitals to recognize bodies that were dead from HIV or violence, or shot and stabbed and wounded.”

Dozens of trans people have been violently killed just this year across the country. Another tragic public health issue: Almost 20 percent of black transgender women are HIV-positive, compared with only 3 percent in the general population.

“It is very likely, if you are a transgender woman of color, that you will die from HIV,” Corado said, underscoring again the number of deaths suffered by transgender women of color that are potentially preventable. “That you will die from AIDS. That you die stabbed or killed. You’ll die from some kind of cancer, or suicide.”

The U.S. Transgender Survey found that 40 percent of transgender people have attempted suicide in their lifetimes. But that too, is potentially preventable, said Bradley at the Virginia League for Planned Parenthood.

“What we see is a dramatic reduction in those attempts when people have access to affirmative care,” he said. Affirmative care means treating trans people like people, Bradley says, adding that it’s not that hard.

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NPRYouTube

Our ongoing series “You, Me and Them: Experiencing Discrimination in America” is based in part on a poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. We have previously released results for African-Americans, Latinos, Native Americans and whites so far. In coming weeks, we will release results for Asian-Americans and women.

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LADAMA On Mountain Stage

A blend of rhythms and styles from their varying backgrounds, the music of LADAMA crosses musical boundaries and cultural borders. Here they perform songs from their self-titled debut record, including the bombastic “Porro Maracatu” and a cover of the protest song “Compared To What,” most famously recorded by Les McCann and Roberta Flack.

LADAMA’s members — Lara Klaus, Daniela Serna, Mafer Bandola and Sara Lucas, along with bassist Pat Swoboda — hail from Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela and the United States. The four young women first collaborated through a U.S. State Department fellowship called OneBeat, where they decided to couple their musical passions with their desires to empower youth and women globally.

Recorded on the campus of Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, you’ll hear the group using traditional instruments like the stringed bandola, popular in Columbia and Venezuela, and hand drums such as the Brazilian pandeiro and the Colombian tambor alegre.

SET LIST

  • “Porro Maracatu”
  • “Night Traveler”
  • “Confesión”
  • “Compared To What”
  • “Sin Ataduras”

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America's Cup Race Gets A Radical New Single-Hulled Boat

This undated concept drawing shows a radical fully foiling monohull, the AC75, for the 2021 America’s Cup, created by Emirates Team New Zealand.

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Virtual Eye/AP

Emirates Team New Zealand, which took home the America’s Cup after swiping it from Larry Ellison’s Oracle Team USA in a duel of foiling catamarans off Bermuda this summer, has reinvented the boat that will next compete for the trophy.

After its win in June, Team New Zealand announced three months later that the 166-year-old competition — dominated by monohull boats until a switch to giant multihulls seven years ago — would return to single-hull designs.

On Monday, the kiwi syndicate and rivals Luna Rossa from Italy unveiled the broad outlines of the boats they will be racing in Auckland in 2021. They are unlike any monohull familiar to the weekend sailor.

Looking bow-to-stern, the new AC75 resembles as much the ancient creature that first ploddingly crawled from the sea as it does a high-tech craft that scoots over the water at 50 mph.

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Emirates Team New ZealandYouTube

Like its multihull predecessors, the 75-foot-long craft is designed to “foil” on underwater skis that raise the hull clear of the surface, greatly reducing drag. The AC75 features twin foil-tipped articulating keels. On a given tack, one is underwater providing lift while the other juts to the side to provide balance.

Since monohulls are better turning through the wind, race organizers say the new boats are set to bring back the “tacking duels” of yore that have largely given way to flat-out drag-racing in recent years. “[Given] the speed and the ease at which the boats can turn the classic pre-starts of the America’s Cup are set to make an exciting comeback,” Team New Zealand said in the statement.

While the multihulls have their many advocates, they have also drawn scorn from some quarters — especially over safety concerns.

The new boats could mitigate one of the major complaints about the AC50 catamarans: their propensity to capsize or go end-over-end, Team New Zealand CEO Grant Dalton said in a statement released in Auckland.

That’s precisely what has happened several times in America’s Cup catamarans, both in training and in match racing. In 2013, during training, a sailor drowned in one such capsize in San Francisco. The new design is safer because it can “right itself,” he says.

Patrick Bertelli, chairman of Luna Rossa, says the decision to return to single-hulled boats “was a fundamental condition” for his team to participate in another America’s Cup.

“Our analysis of the performance of the foiling monohulls tells us that once the boat is up and foiling, the boat has the potential to be faster than an AC50 both upwind and downwind,” Dalton says.

For many sailors, used to seeing the superior speed of multihulls, that’s a claim likely to be hotly debated in harbor pubs until a working prototype – still months or years away – settles the question.

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