November 30, 2017

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Today in Movie Culture: Justice League Vs. X-Men, 'Star Wars' Saga Recap and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

See Wolverine go up against Wonder Woman and The Flash racing Quicksilver in the Stryder HD’s fan-made trailer for Justice League vs. X-Men:

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Trailer Reaction of the Day:

Speaking of Justice League, watch DC’s superheroes concernedly watch the Avengers: Infinity War trailer:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Infinity War, here’s a woman cosplayer as Star-Lord who is excited about the new trailer:

Star-Lord…waiting to be in the #AvengersInfinityWar film… #Cosplay (Photography by HubsterPhotography) pic.twitter.com/71i2yuU2Uz

— Dee Ellie (@DeeGuardia) November 29, 2017

Easter Eggs of the Day:

We shared one Easter egg showcase for the Avengers: Infinity War trailer yesterday, but here’s another from ScreenCrush:

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Actor in the Spotlight:

We shared a supercut of Tom Hanks screaming yesterday, and here’s a counterpart of him laughing in his movies:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Ridley Scott, who turns 80 today, with actress Sigourney Weaver on the set of Alien in 1978:

Franchise Recap of the Day:

With a few weeks left ahead of the release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, here’s a recap of the Saga so far (via /Film):

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Trailer Parody of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, ArtSpear Entertainment sends up The Last Jedi in this animated spoof of its trailer:

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Fan Build of the Day:

Also speaking of Star Wars, the guy who built an AT-AT in his yard has now build a life-size replica of Kyle Ren’s TIE Fighter (via Geekologie):

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Classic Movie Clip of the Day:

Today is the 35th anniversary of the premiere of Gandhi, which was held in New Delhi, India. Watch a scene from the classic biopic starring Ben Kingsley below.

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A Promise Of $1,200 Not Enough To Buy Wide Support For Republican Tax Plan

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady, left, pauses while speaking during a press event with Republican leaders to discuss their tax plans on Sept. 27 in Washington, D.C.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

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Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Republicans say their tax legislation will be great for the middle class. So why is it so unpopular?

Depending on the poll, only 25 percent to 33 percent of Americans approve of the tax plan. And that means even many people who would get a tax break aren’t won over.

In pitching their tax plan to the country, Republicans say it would save the typical middle class American family between $1,200 and $1,400.

But that may not be enough to buy widespread support for this plan because not everybody gets that amount, and the House and Senate bills contain some unpopular provisions.

Dave Lewandowski, a resident of Grand Rapids, Mich., is married and has three children. He works for a company selling vitamins, water filters and other health-related products.

The family’s household income is about $90,000 and he estimates he’ll save $600 under the House plan and about $1,800 under the Senate version.

And he’d definitely be happy to get a tax cut.

“We’re receiving a bit of a benefit at a time where it really helps,” Lewandowski says. “We’re trying to pay down some debt. We’re looking forward to taking a vacation next year. This is a welcome benefit for me and my family.”

Still, when it comes to the design of the overall tax plan itself, he’s conflicted.

Lewandowski says he votes for Republicans more often than Democrats, so it’s not politics. But he says he’s not sure the balance is right with the GOP plan’s huge tax cut for corporations.

“Many people in the middle class will receive a benefit, but that benefit is going to be muted or small,” he says, “whereas the bulk of the benefit is going to be felt by corporations and the wealthy.”

According to numbers from Congress’s nonpartisan Joint Committee On Taxation, the wealthy and corporations do get a much bigger share of the benefits from the tax bills.

And Lewandowski doesn’t like something else about the Republican plans.

“It’s not equally applied across it,” he says. “And when you look at the fact that this is a federal, national tax reform, some people are going to be impacted a lot more than others. So I would rather it be more that all people are impacted in the same way.”

For example, the plans don’t allow people to deduct state and local income taxes — and that can make a big difference for people in higher-tax states like California, New York and New Jersey.

Ani McHugh, a high school English teacher in Delran, N.J., says the plan “essentially punishes taxpayers who are already paying more in taxes. I don’t see how that’s a fair approach or a reasonable approach.”

Ani McHugh, a high school English teacher, and her husband Patrick McHugh, a police officer, live in Delran, N.J. “I don’t see how they can say this helps middle class people in New Jersey,” Ani McHugh says of the Republican tax plan.

Courtesy of Ani McHugh

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Courtesy of Ani McHugh

McHugh’s husband is a police officer in the town where they live and they have two children. After checking with their tax adviser, she estimates the couple would end up paying between $3,000 and $5,000 more under the plan.

“I don’t see how they can say this helps middle class people in New Jersey,” she says.

Something else bothers her about the legislation. As a teacher, McHugh buys books for her students and other school supplies. And under at least the House tax plan, she would no longer be allowed to write those off her taxes.

“It’s just hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that corporations are getting huge tax cuts and the wealthy tax breaks, and I’m a teacher and I’m spending my own money on things that will help me teach and things that will help my students learn and I can’t write that off,” she says.

McHugh says she’s also worried that after they graduate, her students couldn’t write off student loan interest — the House bill would repeal that deduction. That would make college more expensive. Many graduate students actually see a huge tax increase under the House version.

Meanwhile she says that among the middle class people she sees around New Jersey, “everybody seems to be struggling and working harder and a lot of people have second jobs. And so when corporations get a permanent tax break and the wealthy get tax breaks and we’re paying more, yeah, that’s frustrating. … It’s infuriating.”

Multiple polls show that most Americans do not want a tax cut for the rich. That may be the biggest reason this tax overhaul is so unpopular.

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States Sound Warning That Kids' Health Insurance Is At Risk

Alejandra Borunda, sits with her two children, Natalia, 11, and Raul, 8, holding the family dog at their home in Aurora, Colo. Borunda’s children are among those who would lose out if the CHIP program isn’t funded.

Helen H. Richardson/Denver Post via Getty Images

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Helen H. Richardson/Denver Post via Getty Images

This week, Colorado became the first state to notify families that children who receive health insurance through the Children’s Health Insurance Program are in danger of losing their coverage.

Nearly 9 million children are insured through CHIP, which covers mostly working-class families. The program has bipartisan support in both the House and Senate, but Congress let federal funding for CHIP expire in September.

The National Governor’s Association weighed in Wednesday, urging Congress to reauthorize the program this year because states are starting to run out of money.

In Virginia, Linda Nablo, an official with the Department of Medical Assistance Services, is drafting a letter for parents of the 66,000 Virginia children enrolled in CHIP.

“We’ve never had to do this before,” she says. “How do you write the very best letter saying, ‘Your child might lose coverage, but it’s not certain yet. But in the meantime, these are some things you need to think about.’ “

Children may be able to enroll in Medicaid, get added to a family plan on the Affordable Care Act’s health exchange, or be put on an employer health plan. But the options vary by state and could turn out to be very expensive.

If Congress reauthorizes CHIP funding, states are in the clear. But they can’t bank on it yet, and states have to prepare to shut down if the funding doesn’t come through. Virginia would have to do so on January 31, 2018.

“We’re essentially doing everything we would need to shut down the program at the end of January,” Nablo says. “We’ve got a work group going with all the different components of this agency, and there are many.”

For example, they will need to reprogram their enrollment systems, inform pediatricians and hospitals, and train staff to deal with an onslaught of confused families.

Joan Alker, who runs the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, says most states need to give families 30 days’ notice.

“But [state officials] are hearing rumors that Congress might get this done in the next couple of weeks and they don’t want to scare families,” she says. “States are really in a bind here, it’s very tough to know what to do.”

Colorado was the first to send out a notice and other states are close behind. There are a handful that are starting to run out of money in December, Alker says, such as Oregon, Minnesota and the District of Columbia.

The exact deadline for when CHIP funding runs out in each in each state is tricky to calculate, because the amount of money they have depends on how fast states spend it — and how much stopgap help the federal government gives them.

Some states are getting creative. Oregon just announced it will spend state money to keep CHIP running, says Alker, “And they’re assuming that Congress will pass it and they’re get reimbursed retroactively. That’s what they’re hoping.”

Texas is set to run out of CHIP funds a lot sooner than was expected just a few months ago. And there’s a big reason for that: Hurricane Harvey, says Laura Guerra-Cardus with the Children’s Defense Fund in Austin.

“Natural disasters are often a way that individuals that never had to rely on programs like Medicaid and CHIP need them for the first time,” she says.

Guerra-Cardus says after Harvey, a lot of new families enrolled in CHIP and there was also a higher demand for services. “When there is such a traumatic event, health care needs also rise. There’s been a lot of post-traumatic stress in children,” she says.

And to help those families out, Texas officials also waived fees they usually have to pay to join CHIP. So, lately there’s been less money coming in and more money going out. Like Virginia, without reauthorization, Texas would have to shutter CHIP by the end of January.

For Amy Ellis in Alpine, Texas, that’s something she’s dreading. “Losing a lot of sleep,” she says. “Still losing a lot of sleep.”

Ellis has an 8-year-old daughter who has been on CHIP since she was born.

She has asthma and allergies. Ellis says health insurance is really important because her family doesn’t make a lot of money. Her daughter’s allergy medicine is expensive.

Ellis lives in rural West Texas, nearly four hours southeast of El Paso and “three hours from the closest city,” she says.

The isolation means that Ellis doesn’t have a lot of options other than CHIP, she says. One would be enrolling her daughter in the insurance plan she and her husband have through the Affordable Care Act marketplace, but Ellis says that would be expensive.

“It would cost $300 to $400 a month for us to add her to our plan, which would be a huge chunk of our income,” she says. “That’s our grocery money and our gas money.”

A lot of families in Texas could find themselves in the same situation if Congress doesn’t act soon, says Guerra-Cardus. “Kids with chronic or special health care needs, this is going to turn their lives absolutely upside down.”

Roughly 450,000 children are covered by CHIP in Texas. Officials say they are asking the federal government to give them money that will keep CHIP alive through February.

But because officials must give families 30 days’ notice if the program will end, families in Texas could get letters right around Christmas that say their children are losing their health insurance.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, local member stations and Kaiser Health News. Selena Simmons-Duffin is a producer at NPR’s All Things Considered, currently on an exchange with Washington, D.C. member station WAMU.

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Hermeto Pascoal's Music Reaches Far Into The Stratosphere

No Mundo Dos Sons, the latest album from Hermeto Pascoal and his group, is available now.

Gabriel Quintão/Courtesy of the artist

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Gabriel Quintão/Courtesy of the artist

Brazil’s Hermeto Pascoal is a legend among musicians and fans for his ability to conjure beautiful sounds out of just about anything — from tea kettles to PVC pipes to traditional woodwinds.

Earlier this May, the New England Conservatory awarded Pascoal an honorary Doctorate of Music degree and in July, the 81-year-old released No Mundo Dos Sons, the first album from him and his group in 15 years.

Pascoal can come up with a melody at the drop of a hat. He says he’s written 9,000 compositions and most, if not all, were created on the spot.

“It’s because I’m 100 percent intuitive,” he says. “I don’t premeditate anything. I feel it. When something happens, I don’t say, ‘Now I’m going to do that.’ No. If I want to write the music, I start creating. Every piece of my music, even the one I write on a piece of paper, I consider an improvisation.”

Pianist Jovino Santos Neto is a professor of music at Seattle’s Cornish College of the Arts and agrees with the impromptu nature of Pascoal’s work. Santos Neto was also a member of Pascoal’s band for 15 years and is now the archivist of his work.

“Hermeto is music,” Santos Neto says. “He is the current. He’s like a source or a spring that’s just gushing that water, and that water is music. … There’s a saying, I think it’s a John Cage thing that said, ‘Music is playing all the time. Music continues, we just kind of dip into it once in a while.’ Well, Hermeto is fully immersed in it. So because of that, whenever you are close to him, you just see [that] the music is just coming out.”

Pascoal was born in a small farming town in the northeastern Brazilian state of Alagoas. He dropped out of school in the fourth grade — there was no such thing as special education back then for a child with the vision problems that come with albinism. His father taught him to play the accordion and in the early 1960s, Pascoal moved to Rio de Janeiro. By then, he’d picked up piano and flute and began recording with some of the new generation of Brazilian musicians, including Quarteto Novo.

Quarteto Novo’s percussionist was Airto Moreira, who went on to play with Chick Corea and Miles Davis. Moreira recommended Pascoal to Davis and together, the trumpeter recorded with the Brazilian on the album Live-Evil.

Santos Neto says one of Pascoal’s compositions for Miles, titled “Little Church,” was inspired by the Brazilian’s childhood memory of hearing his mother and her friends singing novenas to the Virgin Mary.

“[Pascoal] would hear these voices wafting through the walls of the church,” Santos Neto says. “He was scared to go inside, so he’d sit outside and listen as his mother was singing. So he wrote this gorgeous melody.”

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Pascoal recalls an interview Davis gave in which the trumpeter was asked how he’d like to return from the afterlife.

“‘I would like to be a musician like that ‘crazy albino,'” he says, recalling Davis’ response to the question. “[Miles] used to call me ‘crazy Brazilian albino.’ And to make music like that of Hermeto Pascoal, the ‘crazy albino.’ I was very happy when I heard that.”

That’s typical of Pascoal’s personality says Santos Neto. In the more than 40 years Santos Neto has known the older musician, Pascoal has never changed.

“He never aged and he’s at the same time…a very complex personality,” Santos Neto says. “He’s both the wise old man, because of the white hair, but he’s also the prankster, the 16-year-old who’s really crazy to play a prank on somebody and to laugh and to make jokes.”

Pascoal doesn’t make jokes about his honorary Doctor of Music degree from the New England Conservatory. He says it’s one of the greatest recognitions of his life. But this acknowledgement reinforces something he’s believed for a long time.

“Hermeto doesn’t make Brazilian music, he makes music in Brazil,” Pascoal says. “Therefore, Hermeto is a Brazilian citizen only on a piece of paper. But in my music, I’m universal.”

And, as the title of his new album says, Pascoal will always be No Mundo Dos Sons — in the world of sounds.

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