January 12, 2018

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The Week in Movie News: Golden Globes Winners, Black Widow and Kitty Pryde Go Solo and More

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

BIG NEWS

Marvel’s Black Widow movie is moving forward: Fans wishing for a Black Widow solo movie are in luck, as Marvel has put the wheels further in motion and hired TiMER filmmaker Jac Schaeffer to write the screenplay. Read more here.

GREAT NEWS

X-Men’s Kitty Pryde is getting a solo movie: Another female superhero based on Marvel Comics is getting her own solo movie, too, as Deadpool director Tim Miller was revealed to be developing a project for X-Men character Kitty Pryde. Read more here.

SURPRISING NEWS

Insidious could cross over with Sinister: Maybe crossovers aren’t that shocking anymore, especially if they involve horror franchises from the same producer, but the news that Insidious and Sinister might be put together is still a pleasant surprise. Read more here.

AWARDS BUZZ

Lady Bird and Three Billboards win big at Golden Globes: One of the biggest awards ceremonies of the season happened this week, as the Golden Globes celebrated Lady Bird and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri with Best Picture honors. Find the rest of the winners here and our highlights from the show here.

EXCLUSIVE BUZZ

The influence of James Bond on Black Panther: We talked to Black Panther director Ryan Coogler, who discussed the movie’s 007 influences, its ’70s thriller tone, representation and of course post-credits stinger. Read the conversation here.

COOL CULTURE

The ABCs of Black Panther: Speaking of Marvel’s upcoming superhero movie, tickets for which are now on sale, Screen Rant put together a handy alphabetical guide to Black Panther. Watch it below and see more cool culture inspired by the movie here.

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MUST-WATCH TRAILERS

Teen Titans Go! To the Movies puts cartoon superheroes on the big screen: DC superheroes come in many forms, including the amusing animated versions of the Teen Titans from Cartoon Network, now heading to theaters. Watch its first trailer here:

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Blockers promises a raunchy night out: The first trailer for Blockers shows John Cena, Leslie Mann and Ike Barinholtz doing everything they can, including some very raunchy comedy bits, to keep their daughters from having sex. Watch it here:

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Basmati Blues brings Brie Larson to India: The first trailer for the long-delayed musical rom-com Basmati Blues features Brie Larson as a singing scientist in India. Check it out here:

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Fitness Superstar Shaun T: Keys To Workout Motivation Include Fun — And Selfishness

Shaun T attends the Sweat USA America’s All-Star Fitness Festival at the Miami Beach Convention Center in 2013. At some live events, thousands of people turn out to work out with the fitness superstar.

Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images for Vital Sports & Entertainment

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Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images for Vital Sports & Entertainment

In the world of streaming workout videos, Shawn T is like Jay-Z or Mick Jagger. He’s a superstar. Millions of people have done his workout programs. One is called “Insanity.” Another, “Focus T25,” aims to get you in shape in just 25 minutes a day without leaving your house.

In our ever more digital world there are all kinds of apps and other quick ways to fit fitness into your life. But you still have to do the exercise. And in his new book, T is for Transformation, Shaun T tells the story of his life and the lessons he’s learned about finding that motivation.

With his sculpted muscles and abs, Shaun T is the picture of fitness. In his workout videos he’s funny and happy. But it wasn’t always like this.

“The first thing I remember as a kid was being washed in the sink of our west Philadelphia apartment,” Shaun T says. Back then, 40 years ago, he was a toddler named Shaun Thompson. “I was so small, but I soon began to realize that where we lived wasn’t necessarily the best place in the world.”

Shaun T grew up poor and had a rough childhood in a violent neighborhood. The family was on food stamps. And they had so little food he’d sneak bread into his underwear and eat it at night in bed.

Being hungry stays with you. And when he got a scholarship to a state college, that came with a dining hall meal plan card, which meant free food.

“When you give someone who grew up on food stamps a meal card, I could just go and eat and eat. And then when I found out that you can use this food card at Domino’s, late night cravings became a whole new thing. I was like, ‘Whhhhaaat?’ ”

Shaun T gained 50 pounds his freshman year. He didn’t like that. But he says he was too embarrassed to go to the gym, even though he ran track in high school. “I was extremely unhappy with the way that I looked and the way that I felt,” he says.

But he finally got on the treadmill. And he took some dance fitness classes. And as soon as he’d lost just a few pounds, he says he loved how that made him feel. So much so that he switched his major to sports science. And then he went to the manager of the school rec center and told her, “I want to teach a class.”

Shaun T had no experience. But his fellow students liked him. And 90 of them signed up for his first class in the rec center. He turned on the hip-hop song “Space Jam,” from the 1996 movie with Michael Jordan, put it on repeat, and got everyone doing his halfway-thought-out hip hop aerobics routine. The students loved it.

“I was like are you kidding me? This is the most amazing thing. I could teach and have fun, and all of these people are not only doing what I’m doing but most of them were afraid to dance and they’re actually doing it and they’re stepping outside their comfort zone. And I’m looking at these people and I’m like, ‘This is it. I want to do this for the rest of my life.’ ”

And that’s what Shaun T has done. First classes, at small workout studios. He taught a class for workers at a nuclear power plant in New Jersey. He’d teach anywhere he could. Later he moved to LA and started doing videos. Today, the company that distributes his workouts, Beachbody LLC, says Shaun T has sold more than $1 billion worth of fitness videos.

Shaun T attends the 20th Annual Arthur Ashe Kids’ Day at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in 2015 in the Queens borough of New York City.

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Shaun T says to stay motivated, it can help to mix it up. For example, sign up for a dance class or a basketball league. He does his own workouts, “but I also play tennis. But I also get my friends I’m like, ‘Yo, let’s play volleyball today.’ It doesn’t always have to be the same thing. Like create it for yourself and it will be so much fun.”

And he says, focus on the fun, not about how much you weigh. “My goal for people out there is just just do things that make you feel good. ‘Cause the weight will come off but the happiness is what’s most important.”

Of course, it can often be more complicated than that for people, including Shaun T. Growing up in that violent neighborhood, he says he suffered abuse from his stepfather and went through things that, later in life, it took him years of therapy to really work through and understand. He encourages others to consider doing the same if they think they might have unresolved baggage holding them back from their health and fitness goals, or other goals for that matter.

“You get stronger by unpacking the baggage, not by packing it into the closet,” he says. But he adds, “It’s just really important for people to understand that your biggest struggles are also the motivators to your biggest strengths.”

Shaun T’s struggles back then got him to do something that took courage when he was 14 years old and about to start high school. He decided to leave his family and go live with his grandparents in New Jersey. His grandfather was a former boxer and a minister and this family was stable and loving. It was a big change and it made a big difference. “I didn’t start living until I was 14 years old,” Shaun T says. “From that point forward my grandparents were my angels, they were just like the best ever.”

In his book, Shaun T says even if it’s in a less dramatic way, changing the people around you can make a difference. If most of your friends are couch potatoes, he recommends spending more time with people who exercise and who will support you and encourage you to live a healthier life.

On a more counterintuitive note, he says, “selfishness gets a bad rap.” He says some people spend so much time doing things for other people — their family, their friends — and they feel guilty taking any time at all just to take care of themselves. He says obviously don’t abandon your loved ones, but you’ll be a happier person if you take time the time you need. He says it’s usually OK to take 25 minutes to do that workout. “Be selfish, because all the people in your life will benefit if you are,” he says.

Of course when it comes to health and fitness, what you eat is important too. Shaun T says one of those giant sugar-frosted cinnamon buns has so many calories you’d have to work out like a maniac for two hours to burn it off. But there too he says, enjoy yourself. Eat healthy 85 percent of the time and enjoy some pizza or a doughnut the rest of the time. But, he says, cut the doughnut in half.

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New Rules May Make Getting And Staying On Medicaid More Difficult

Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, at a White House press conference in May. More people moving off Medicaid, she says, would be a good outcome.

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Kentucky got the green light from the federal government Friday to require people who get Medicaid to work. It’s a big change from the Obama administration, which rejected overtures from states that wanted to add a work requirement.

Medicaid’s chief federal officer is Seema Verma; her home state of Indiana submitted plans for a work requirement last year, and the approval letter could come any day now. Under the proposal, people would have to average 20 hours a week of work or another qualifying activity — such as volunteering or getting an education — to get Medicaid.

The goal is to increase employment among Medicaid recipients. But Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University, says there’s a problem with that — most people on Medicaid are already working, or looking for work. Or they’re caring for a child or family member, or they’re sick or disabled.

Many of those people would be exempt from a work requirement, and states could also make some allowances for people battling addiction. When you consider all those exemptions, says Rosenbaum, “There is this very, very tiny slice of [of the population] who can work and simply choose not to work and apply for public assistance.”

And even if states create programs that help people find jobs, and provide things like childcare and transportation, Rosenbaum says, there’s no evidence that they would lead to more employment. And those programs are expensive.

“If you do a work program, it costs real money,” she says, “and the federal government has said, ‘we won’t pay any of those costs.’ “

What’s more likely, Rosenbaum says, is that states will basically say, ‘Get a job on your own, or get off Medicaid.’ “

And what that does, she says, is create a hurdle for everybody on Medicaid. People who are working are going to have to prove they are employed, so even people with jobs could stand to lose their insurance because of red tape. In fact, the state of Indiana’s own projections show that with a work requirement, Medicaid will cover fewer people and cost more.

Adam Mueller is an attorney at Indiana Legal Services, which helps people navigate that state’s Medicaid program. He says people already lose coverage because the program can be confusing, and there are administrative errors.

“Somewhere along the way, paperwork gets lost; there’s a miscommunication,” he says, “Folks have sometimes had difficulty proving something as easy as residency.”

And people on Medicaid often deal with crises – they may move a lot, or change phone numbers, which makes it hard to keep track of paperwork. Adding a work requirement on top of all that, Mueller says, would make staying enrolled even harder.

“There are a lot of things that can trip folks up, and that could lead to falling through the cracks,” he says.

Judith Solomon, of the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, points out that expanded Medicaid helps some employers, too.

“We have an economic structure where there are people whose employment doesn’t provide health care,” she says.

If employees lose Medicaid, get sick and can’t make it to work, she says that’s bad for business.

Verma told reporters during a conference call Thursday that the requirement is supposed to help people.

“People moving off of Medicaid is a good outcome,” she said, “because we hope that that means they do not need the program anymore, that they have transitioned to a job that provides health insurance or that they can afford insurance on their own. This policy helps people achieve the American dream.”

But advocates say the main purpose of Medicaid is to provide health insurance, not increase employment. And until now, the federal government agreed.

Susan Jo Thomas heads Covering Kids and Families of Indiana, which advocates for health coverage in the state. Under Medicaid’s new management, she says, the philosophy surrounding work requirements has changed.

“I don’t know if it jibes with my view of Medicaid, but my view of Medicaid now is irrelevant,” she says. “It’s what Seema Verma and the administration and the folks who are at CMS decide.”

Thomas says she is taking more of a wait and see approach — the details of the work requirement have yet to be ironed out. She says if too many people lose insurance, she’ll be raising concerns with the state.

This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with Side Effects Public Media, WFYI and Kaiser Health News.

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