November 22, 2017

No Image

Today in Movie Culture: 'Pitch Perfect 3' Music Video, Thanksgiving With Batman and More

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

Music Video of the Day:

One month out from the release of Pitch Perfect 3, here’s a music video for a mashup of “Freedom” and “90 x Cup” featuring the stars of the movie and TV’s The Voice:

[embedded content]

Trailer Redo of the Day:

Would Justice League have done better if it was sold as being more like the old Super Friends cartoon? Darth Blender shows us how it could have looked:

[embedded content]

Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of DC superheroes, here’s more great Wonder Woman cosplay inspired by the new movie:

Wonder Woman #cosplay done by @KristyLeonie1pic.twitter.com/Fi8jOXBJX7

— Cosplay Girls (@CosplayGirIs) November 21, 2017

Holiday Sketch of the Day:

Also speaking of DC supeheroes, here’s a recent Saturday Night Live sketch depicting Thanksgiving with Bruce Wayne/Batman:

[embedded content]

Holiday Guide of the Day:

In honor of tomorrow’s holiday, here’s IMDb with a look at the dos and don’ts of Thanksgiving, according to movies and TV:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Mark Ruffalo, who turns 50 today, with co-stars Rachel Weisz and Adrien Brody and filmmaker Rian Johnson on the set of The Brothers Bloom in 2007:

Actor in the Spotlight:

Why is Charlie Chaplin still revelant? Darren Foley of Must See Films explores the silent comedy icon’s life and legacy in this new video essay:

[embedded content]

Bad Movie Analysis of the Day:

Learn “the hidden meaning” of Christopher Nolan’s The Prestige from an alien in the future in the latest edition of Earthling Cinema:

[embedded content]

Alternative Poster of the Day:

Here’s a fantastic Ferrari logo-inspired print for Ferris Bueller’s Day Off by artist Matt Chase for Gallery 1988’s new Crazy4Cult series:

Here’s 1 of @doble_entendre 3 prints for CRAZY4CULT. They’re all so good. See the exhibit and pick up one his pieces online here: https://t.co/ECaAkXjvNp pic.twitter.com/UlaalwqcHa

— Gallery1988 (@Galleries1988) November 21, 2017

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Die Another Day. Watch the original trailer for the James Bond movie below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Retailers To Online Shoppers: Be Patient With Delivery, Get Perks

Rewarding customers when they choose slower shipping options is one way online retailers are reacting to a recent decision by UPS to add a holiday surcharge during peak delivery days.

David Goldman/AP

hide caption

toggle caption

David Goldman/AP

After UPS announced that it would enact surcharges during peak holiday delivery times, online retailers have been considering their options carefully.

Now a few have arrived on a solution: Give that gift a few more days to arrive, and we’ll reward you!

As the Wall Street Journal reports, at least a few large purveyors are doling out perks to customers who can handle the idea of it taking a day or two extra for their package to arrive.

Macy’s Inc. offers shoppers “Macy’s Money,” if they choose the “no hurry shipping” option at check out, according to the Journal’s report. And the online coupon community is already talking about how to make hay.

One blogger instructs shoppers to choose a small clearance item or two totaling $5, choose the “no hurry shipping.” The result, the blogger claims, $5 in Macy’s Money, amounting to a free transaction. NPR could not verify this saver’s strategy.

Amazon has also committed to a similar “no rush” option and benefits, the Journal also reports.

As NPR’s Doreen McCallister reported at the time of UPS’s June 19 announcement, the surcharge won’t hit retailers every day of the holiday shopping season.

“Between Nov. 19 and Dec. 2 this year, UPS says it will add a 27-cent charge on all ground packages sent to homes. Those dates include Black Friday, which is Nov. 24, and Cyber Monday, which is Nov. 27.

“Consumers then get a two-week reprieve from the additional charge, but the fee makes a comeback to usher in the final holiday rush.”

Dawn Wotapka, a public relations manager at UPS, told NPR, the decision to increase cost during peak delivery season is not necessarily a money-making move for the company.

“This is designed to help smooth out the network,” Wotapka said. “What’s happened in the past, there’s been this surge of packages all at once. It isn’t the best thing for our customers, and it isn’t the best for our network.”

UPS’s chart displays the surcharges by date.


With permission of UPS
hide caption

toggle caption


With permission of UPS

UPS says it plans to deliver an estimated 750 million packages between Thanksgiving and New Years Eve this year – 30 million a day on the busiest shipping days. Wotapka notes that’s an expected 5 percent increase in total packages shipped this holiday season compared to last year’s.

It’s worth noting that theJournalalso reports that neither Fedex nor the United States Postal Service have added peak delivery surcharges this season.

And while the Two-Way can’t officially endorse any holiday shopping strategy, it can offer this warning: Those annoyingly early shoppers in your family might be a bit more smug around the Thanksgiving dinner table this year.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

What Kind Of Future Should America's Favorite Spectator Sport Expect?

Tomorrow a holiday tradition — Thanksgiving and the NFL. Fans have three different games they can devour, but TV ratings are down as controversy has dogged America’s number one spectator sport. Is the future of the NFL at risk?

ELISE HU, HOST:

There are three NFL games on the schedule for tomorrow, a Thanksgiving tradition that millions of people will watch. And try as they might, fans can’t hide from the fact that the NFL is in the midst of a season filled with more controversy than usual. President Trump continues to assail players protesting during the national anthem. The inherent violence of the game has left key players injured. And as NPR’s Tom Goldman reports, it’s all raising new questions about the future of America’s favorite spectator sport.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: NFL waters are never calm. It’s the nature of a volatile game played by men at risk every play. But this season is roiling the waters even more. For every highlight…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED COMMENTATOR #1: Now he throws downfield, reaching up – Baldwin makes a catch. It’s on the 40, 30…

GOLDMAN: …There have been players protesting and hearing about it.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: (Booing).

GOLDMAN: For every moment of violent ballet…

(SOUNDBITE OF NFL PLAYERS COLLIDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: (Unintelligible).

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: There we go. There we go. There we go. There we go. There we go.

(SOUNDBITE OF WHISTLE BLOWING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Whew. There we go.

GOLDMAN: …There’s been just violence.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED COMMENTATOR #2: Would have been a first down, and Rodgers is hurt.

GOLDMAN: Star players like Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers and New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. have been carted off the field with broken bones. Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott was suspended because of domestic violence allegations. And of course concussion is recognized as a constant, part of the game every season. It is, in the words of veteran sportscaster Bob Costas, football’s existential issue.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BOB COSTAS: This game destroys people’s brains – not everyone but a substantial number.

GOLDMAN: Speaking this month at the same symposium, sports journalist Tony Kornheiser added to what Costas said with a bleak forecast for the future. The NFL, he said, may go the way of horse racing and boxing. They once dominated the American sports landscape.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

TONY KORNHEISER: It’s not going to happen this year. It’s not going to happen in five years or 10 years. But if they don’t find a way to make it safe – and we don’t see how they will – as great as it is, as much fun as it is, the game’s not going to be around.

GOLDMAN: Is a slow exit beginning with a second straight year of declining TV ratings? On a conference call this week, NFL spokesman Joe Lockhart said ratings are down 5 to 6 percent from last season. Ticket sales are down, too.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

JOE LOCKHART: We’re not looking at a precipitous drop here that has a particular reason around it. But you know, it is something that we watch very closely.

GOLDMAN: I asked the NFL if there was someone I could talk to about strategy going forward, strategy to ensure the NFL’s future viability now being called into question. The league didn’t respond. But there are indications of forward thinking. For the past six years, the NFL has been partners with Whistle Sports. It’s a company that creates and distributes sports content and targets 13- to 34-year-olds, a next generation of sports consumers already consuming differently. They watch sports on multiple screens at the same time – TV, phones, laptops. And, says Whistle Sports creator Jeff Urban, they don’t care as much about sports news and scores.

JEFF URBAN: But we care about, how do you bring great stories to life or bring personalities from the NFL or take the helmet off and really bring a sense of humor and accessibility in a way that we can do it?

GOLDMAN: Dwindling TV ratings may tell one story about the NFL. But a joint survey by Whistle and The Nielsen Company tells another. The survey found for younger fans the favorite sport to follow is American football.

URBAN: The passion for the sport maybe isn’t wavering. I think that the kinds of passion that people are demonstrating for the sport just might be different.

GOLDMAN: That paints a bright future for the game. Of course evolving concussion research may spell a different, darker outcome. But for now, the NFL chugs along, hoping another Thanksgiving feast of football leaves fans full but still wanting more. Tom Goldman, NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF CINNAMON CHASERS’ “LUV DELUXE”)

Copyright © 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Questioning A Doctor's Prescription For A Sore Knee: 90 Percocets

Doctors often prescribe more opioid painkillers than necessary following surgery, for a variety of reasons.

Education Images/UIG via Getty Images

hide caption

toggle caption

Education Images/UIG via Getty Images

I recently hobbled to the drugstore to pick up painkillers after minor outpatient knee surgery, only to discover that the pharmacist hadn’t yet filled the prescription. My doctor’s order of 90 generic Percocet exceeded the number my insurer would approve, he said. I left a short time later with a bottle containing a smaller number.

When I got home and opened the package to take a pill, I discovered that there were 42 inside.

Talk about using a shotgun to kill a mosquito. I was stiff and sore after the orthopedist fished out a couple of loose pieces of bone and cartilage from my left knee. But on a pain scale of 0 to 10, I was a 4, tops. I probably could have gotten by with a much less potent drug than a painkiller like Percocet, which contains a combination of the opioid oxycodone and the pain reliever acetaminophen, the active ingredient found in over-the-counter Tylenol.

When I went in for my follow-up appointment a week after surgery, I asked my orthopedist about those 90 pills.

“If you had real surgery, like a knee replacement, you wouldn’t think it was so many,” he said. He told me the electronic prescribing system sets the default at 90. So when he types in a prescription for Percocet, that is the quantity the system orders.

Such standard orders can be overridden, but that is an extra step for a busy physician and takes time.

As public health officials grapple with how to slow the growing opioid epidemic — which claims 91 lives each day, according to federal statistics — the over-prescription of narcotics after even minor surgery is coming under new scrutiny.

While patients today are often given opioids to manage postoperative pain, a large supply of pills may open the door to opioid misuse, either by the patients themselves or others in the family or community who can access the leftovers.

Post-surgical prescriptions for 45, 60 or 90 pills are “incredibly common,” says Dr. Chad Brummett, an anesthesiologist and pain physician at the University of Michigan Medical School.

Last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a general guideline saying that clinicians who prescribe opioids to treat acute pain should use the lowest effective dose and limit the duration to no longer than seven days.

But more detailed guidance is necessary, clinicians say.

“There really aren’t clear guidelines, especially for surgery and dentistry,” Brummett says. “It’s often based on what their chief resident taught them along the way or an event in their career that made them prescribe a certain amount.”

Or, as in my case, an automated program that makes prescribing more pills simpler than prescribing fewer.

Brummett is co-director of a Michigan program that has released recommendations for post-surgical opioid prescribing for a growing list of procedures.

To determine the extent to which surgery may lead to longer-term opioid use, Brummett and his colleagues examined the insurance claims of more than 36,000 adults who had surgery in 2013 or 2014 for which they received an opioid prescription. None of the patients had prescriptions for opioids during the prior year.

The study, published online in JAMA Surgery in June, found that three to six months after surgery, roughly 6 percent of patients were still using opioids, having filled at least one new prescription for the drug. The figures were similar whether they had major or minor surgery. By comparison, the rate of opioid use for a control group that did not have surgery was just 0.4 percent.

Some insurers and state regulators have stepped in to limit opioid prescriptions. Insurers routinely monitor doctors’ prescribing patterns and limit the quantity of pills or the dosage of opioid prescriptions.

At least two dozen states have passed laws or rules in just the past few years aimed at regulating the use of opioids.

Last year in my state of New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed legislation that reduced the initial opioid prescription limit for acute pain from 30 days to no more than a seven-day supply.

As my experience demonstrated, however, a seven-day limit (those 42 pills in my case) can still result in patients receiving many more pills than they need. (For those who find themselves in a similar situation with excess pills, there is a safe and proper way to dispose of them.)

Still, some worry that all this focus on overprescribing may scare physicians away from prescribing opioids at all, even when appropriate.

“That’s my concern, that people are so afraid of things and taking it to such an extreme that patient care suffers,” says Dr. Edward Michna, an anesthesiologist and pain management physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Michna is on the board of the American Pain Society, a research and education group for pain management professionals. Michna has been a paid consultant to numerous pharmaceutical companies, some of which manufacture narcotics.

But other doctors say that one of the reasons doctors call in orders for lots of pills is convenience.

“When you land on the front lines, you hear, ‘I like to write for 30 or 60 pills because that way they won’t call in the middle of the night’ ” for a refill, says Dr. Martin Makary, a professor of surgery and health policy at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

Makary is spearheading a consortium of Hopkins clinicians and patients that provides specific guidelines for post-surgical opioid use. The program, part of a larger effort to identify areas of overtreatment in health care, also identifies outlier prescribers nationwide to encourage them to change their prescribing habits.

The Hopkins group doesn’t have an opioid recommendation for my surgery. The closest procedure on their website is arthroscopic surgery to partially remove a torn piece of cartilage in the knee called the meniscus. The post-surgical opioid recommendation following that surgery: 12 tablets.


Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Follow Michelle Andrews on Twitter @mandrews110.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)