January 29, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: The Ideal 'Star Wars IX' Opening Crawl, the Philosophy of 'Blade Runner 2049' and More

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

Fandom Parody of the Day:

Nerdist has created the ideal (spoiler filled) opening crawl for Star Wars: Episode IX to appease all the fans disappointed with The Last Jedi:

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Video Essay of the Day:

The latest video from Like Stories of Old looks at the philosophy of Blade Runner 2049:

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Movie Influencer of the Day:

Netflix celebrates the subject of its new biopic A Futile and Stupid Gesture with this look at the incredible influence of writer Doug Kenney:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Speaking of A Futile and Stupid Gesture, Dimitreze presents scenes from the new Netflix movie side by side with clips from Saturday Night Live, Animal House, and Caddyshack that it re-creates:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

W.C. Fields, who was born on this day in 1880, sits with Mae West on the set of their iconic pairing, My Little Chickadee, in 1939:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Screen Rant explores the fan theory that all of Tim Burton’s movies exist in the same universe:

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Song Cover of the Day:

You know “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” thanks to one movie, Benny & Joon. Now watch it sung by characters from 127 movies in this video from Unusual Suspects:

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DIY Fan Build of the Day:

Jake from Indy Mogul’s Backyard FX shows how to make a cheap and easy Jurassic Park-inspired velociraptor:

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Cosplay of the Day:

This Spirited Away fan cosplaying as Yubaba has created a perfect wig:

Cosplay that made me scream: THIS pic.twitter.com/xV3EPu8rOK

— Diana “Hanyaan” Soreil @ ALA (@silencedrowns) January 29, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of the release of Joe Dante’s Matinee. Watch the original trailer for the classic tribute to shlocky horror below.

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and

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All The Rules, None Of The Voting Rights: EU Lays Out Plan For Brexit Transition

Britain must accept all EU laws during a post-Brexit transition period, including those made after it leaves, says European Union Chief Negotiator Michel Barnier, under rules issued to him by the other European Union countries.

John Thys/AFP/Getty Images

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John Thys/AFP/Getty Images

Ever since the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, the big question has been what departure will actually look like in March 2019, when the breakup kicks in.

Hard Brexit? Soft Brexit? Delayed Brexit?

Now, Britain has asked for an extension of sorts, a “transition period” to ease out of the EU without an abrupt impact on businesses. And the European Union has agreed to a temporary plan that you might sum up as:

Brexit? What Brexit?

Under instructions for the EU negotiator just approved by the other member countries, the United Kingdom would spend March 2019 through December 2020 acting just like an EU member … minus the voting power.

All existing EU laws and policies would still apply. Any newEU laws would also apply (a provision the U.K. is objecting to). The U.K. would still answer to some European courts.

In short, the status quo would be enforced, except that the U.K. wouldn’t have any say in EU decisions.

“The U.K. must know these rules of the game and accept them in the first place,” EU negotiator Michel Barnier said on Monday, according to Politico Europe.

The instructions for the negotiator are not a final deal, but they seem likely to stick. The countries in the European Union voted to approve those guidelines in just two minutes, Reuters reports.

The British government has largely welcomed the plan, with a spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May saying the proposal was well-aligned with the British position, the wire service reports. After all, a “transition period” was requested by the British in the first place.

Needless to say, though, fans of Brexit are not exactly pleased by the thought of giving up all power in the EU while remaining subject to all laws and limitations.

The Associated Press has more:

“In London, Brexit Secretary David Davis played down the impact on Britain’s status during the 21-month transition, saying that it’s ‘not exactly the same as membership — but it’s very, very similar.’

” ‘The existing regulatory structure will exist, the existing court structure will exist,’ Davis told a British parliamentary committee.

“He underlined that Britain would, however, be free during the bridging period to negotiate new trade deals with the wider world, which it is barred from doing while it is an EU member. …

“Britain is impatient to launch talks on future ties with the EU and in particular on trade, but more guidelines will have to be adopted at a summit of European leaders in March for that to happen, based on progress made by then.”

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Idaho 'Pushing Envelope' With Health Insurance Plan: How Far Can It Go?

Critics say Idaho’s insurance department can’t unilaterally ignore federal law, including some of the Affordable Care Act’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

Otto Kitsinger/AP

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Otto Kitsinger/AP

For the past year, the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress have led a charge to roll back the Affordable Care Act, signaling an openness to changes at the state level.

Now, Idaho has jumped in, with the insurance department saying Wednesday it will allow insurers to ignore some ACA rules on plans not sold on the marketplace. The department aims to make these state-based plans less costly. Several of the changes are viewed by the health law’s supporters as hits to its core consumer protections.

Critics say Idaho can’t unilaterally skip provisions of federal law, including some of the ACA’s protections for pre-existing conditions and its limits on how much more insurers can charge older or sick people.

Idaho’s approach has national implications because of a key underlying question: Will the administration compel Idaho to follow the ACA or offer a green light that could prompt other states to take even more sweeping action?

Idaho argues its aim is to bring people back into the market, particularly the young, the healthy and those who can’t afford an ACA plan.

“Our goal is not to take away from the ACA, but to add to it or complement it,” said Dean Cameron, director of the state’s Department of Insurance. For instance, insurers could veer from the ACA rules in creating the new plans, so long as they offer other ACA-compliant policies.

Premiums for marketplace policies have risen sharply amid continuing GOP efforts to undermine the ACA. Middle-income Americans who don’t get subsidies are struggling to afford coverage.

“States are trying to figure out what they can do,” said Ed Haislmaier, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “How do you provide them with cheaper insurance?”

Idaho says the answer is to skip some of the ACA rules.

Here is a quick look at some of the questions that approach raises:

1. Can Idaho do this?

Many experts say no. Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of Michigan and former attorney with the civil division of the U.S. Department of Justice, tweeted early Thursday that the move was “crazypants illegal.”

These Idaho guidelines for health insurers are crazypants illegal. It’s not even close. Does Idaho think the Supremacy Clause doesn’t apply to it? https://t.co/zexBGLAxQ3

— Nicholas Bagley (@nicholas_bagley) January 25, 2018

In a follow-up call, he explained that the ACA created rules that — among other things — prevent insurers from discriminating against people based on their health or excluding coverage for those conditions.

“I’m completely flummoxed,” he said. “Idaho appears to be claiming they do not have to adhere to federal law.”

But Idaho officials believe there’s precedent for what they are doing, pointing to actions taken by President Obama when he promised people that if they liked their health plans, they could keep them. Obama issued an executive order directing his agencies to allow the continuance of some plans purchased before the marketplaces opened— even though they fell short of ACA rules, Cameron noted.

Additionally, Cameron pointed to state laws that allow insurers to sell short-term policies that don’t meet all the ACA rules.

“We have tried to do everything we can to adhere to and follow the requirements,” said Cameron, who added that the state consulted with administration officials as it developed its plan.

“I recognize we are pushing the envelope a bit,” he said. “We think this is what is needed.”

2. What might happen?

A lawsuit challenging Idaho’s move seems likely, perhaps on behalf of someone with a pre-existing condition alleging harm because the state-based plans will cost the sick more or limit coverage in other ways.

Secondly, some experts say the argument might include concerns that the state-based plans could pull healthy people out of the ACA market and drive up premiums there.

Cameron expects the effect will be the opposite, helping stabilize those premiums by bringing more healthy people into insurers’ risk pools through the state-based plans. Insurers would have to pool their claims from both ACA and state-based plans.

3. How different are these plans from ACA coverage?

Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms, said they are “in the middle in terms of the consumer protections they provide, but they’re not as good as the ACA.”

They’re better than some non-ACA compliant alternatives already on the market, such as limited-benefit plans, which can be really skimpy — paying paltry amounts or nothing at all toward hospital care or drugs, for example.

By contrast, Idaho’s directive says the new plans must cover outpatient services, emergency care, hospitalization, mental health and substance abuse treatment, drugs, rehabilitation, lab services and preventive care. Insurers must include maternity coverage in at least one state-based plan.

“Setting aside the question of whether a state can do this, it would not be a radical change,” said Haislmaier at Heritage.

But, unlike ACA plans, the state plans could cap coverage at $1 million annually. They could charge older people up to five times more than younger ones (the ACA limits the ratio to 3-to-1) and sick people could be charged up to 50 percent more for premiums than standard rates. On the flip side, very healthy people could have rates of up to 50 percent below standard rates.

On pre-existing conditions — which is among the ACA’s most popular provisions — the Idaho rules would require insurers to accept people with medical problems, but they could exclude coverage for those specific conditions if the person were uninsured within 63 days of the new plan taking effect.

Still, Cameron argues that the rules of the Idaho plan — in practice — would not be much different than what people face now.

Those who fail to sign up during the annual open enrollment period for the ACA then find out they have a health problem have few other options and would have to wait until the next ACA open enrollment, he noted.

Under Idaho’s plan, such consumers could buy a state-based plan and “have coverage on everything else, except for the ‘pre-ex’ [pre-existing condition], until the next open enrollment period,” Cameron said.

4. What could happen legally?

At a minimum, states must follow federal law, although they generally can set more stringent standards. Some states, for example, are considering putting in place their own “individual mandate” to replace the ACA tax penalty for those who are uninsured. The tax bill Congress passed in December removes that federal penalty as of 2019.

But states cannot create rules that fall short of federal law. If the state doesn’t enforce federal rules, the ACA grants the federal government authority to step in.

Idaho may be “banking on … the Trump administration [not enforcing] the ACA,” said Bagley.

This could be one of the first tests for new Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar.

“If HHS does not go in and enforce the federal floor… then Idaho can do whatever it wants. Any other state can do whatever it wants,” said benefits attorney Christopher Condeluci,who formerly served as the tax and benefits counsel to the Senate Finance Committee.

“If HHS declines to step in to enforce the law, the executive branch headed by the president is responsible for enforcing the law,” Bagley said. “Trump’s job is to make sure his agencies enforce federal law.”

5. Insurers have not said if they will offer such plans. What are their liabilities?

The ACA set fines of $100 per day, per enrollee, for violating provisions of the law. Multiplied by thousands of enrollees across several violations, that could quickly add up. The state may allow the plans, but “it’s not clear that a future administration could be prevented from looking back at past violations and imposing pretty significant penalties,” said Georgetown’s Corlette.

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Cleveland Indians Will Remove 'Chief Wahoo' From Uniforms In 2019

The Cleveland Indians have agreed to remove the Chief Wahoo logo, which for decades has been publicly protested as racist and offensive “[T]he logo is no longer appropriate for on-field use in Major League Baseball,” said Commissioner Rob Manfred.

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Patrick Semansky/AP

The Cleveland Indians will be removing “Chief Wahoo,” the bright red caricature of a Native American the team uses as a logo, from players’ caps and uniforms starting in 2019.

The divisive logo, which has been publicly protested as a racist and offensive image for decades, will remain on official merchandise available for purchase by fans.

“The team must maintain a retail presence so that MLB and the Indians can keep ownership of the trademark,” The Associated Press reports.

The Indians announced the change on Monday. The team name — which has also been criticized as offensive — will not be changing.

“Major League Baseball is committed to building a culture of diversity and inclusion throughout the game,” MLB’s commissioner, Rob Manfred, said in a statement. “Over the past year, we encouraged dialogue with the Indians organization about the Club’s use of the Chief Wahoo logo. During our constructive conversations, [Indians CEO] Paul Dolan made clear that there are fans who have a longstanding attachment to the logo and its place in the history of the team.

“Nonetheless, the club ultimately agreed with my position that the logo is no longer appropriate for on-field use in Major League Baseball, and I appreciate Mr. Dolan’s acknowledgement that removing it from the on-field uniform by the start of the 2019 season is the right course,” Manfred said.

Ray Halbritter, a member of Oneida Nation and the leader of the “Change the Mascot” protest campaign, celebrated the change.

The Cleveland baseball team has rightly recognized that Native Americans do not deserve to be denigrated as cartoon mascots, and the team’s move is a reflection of a grassroots movement that has pressed sports franchises to respect Native people,” Halbritter said in a statement.

Other Native activists expressed more skepticism.

“It’s a small step in the right direction, but it is just that — a small step,” Cleveland activist Sundance told NPR.

Sundance, a member of the Muskogee Creek Nation and the executive director of the Cleveland American Indian Movement, has been a long-standing critic of Chief Wahoo.

“The team is still going to be able to license Wahoo and make money off of that racist image,” he says. “The environment down at the stadium is not going to change for the better. … People are still going to wear Wahoo to the stadium, they are still going to dress in red face, they are still going to give war whoops, all under the rubric of being Indian.”

Sundance was involved in a lawsuit back in 1972, attempting to force the team to drop the logo.

As Indian Country Todayreports, Native resistance to the logo has continued ever since, including at annual opening day protests:

“Those Native American protesters who gather at the ironically named Progressive Field—some of them members of the Cleveland American Indian Movement (AIM) and the Committee of 500 Years of Dignity and Resistance—have not been met with open arms or friendly words. Cleveland’s baseball fans have hurled beer cans and spat on them. The protesters have been called stupid and ‘Custer-killers.’ Cleveland AIM calls the use of the Chief Wahoo mascot ‘bigoted, racist and shameful,’ and the Committee of 500 complains that the logo is a negative stereotype against indigenous people.”

Protesters have objected to the Cleveland Indians’ name as well as to the Chief Wahoo image.

And those protests will continue, Sundance says. “We’re still going to be out there on opening day, until that name is changed,” he says.

The National Congress of American Indians praised MLB for “setting the example for how professional sports leagues can and should respect Native peoples.”

Other sports teams — most conspicuously, Washington’s football team — have also faced decades of protest and criticism for their use of offensive racial stereotypes, caricatures or slurs as official names or mascots. But notably, the debate over the Cleveland Indians logo has resulted in visible changes, as The Associated Press notes:

“Under growing pressure to eliminate Chief Wahoo, the club has been transitioning away from the logo in recent years. The Indians introduced a block ‘C’ insignia on some of their caps and have removed signs with the Wahoo logo in and around Progressive Field, the team’s downtown ballpark.

“National criticism and scrutiny about the Indians’ allegiance to Chief Wahoo grew in 2016, when the Indians made the World Series and Manfred expressed his desire to have the team eradicate the symbol. Earlier in that postseason, a lawsuit was filed while the club was playing in Toronto to have the logo and team name banned from appearing on Canadian TV. That court case was dismissed by a judge.

“The Indians’ bid to host the 2019 All-Star Game, which it was ultimately awarded, further heightened debate over Wahoo.”

Supporters of the logo have expressed frustration and sorrow to see it go — and promised that it’s not disappearing from stands.

“Sadly, the Indians caved to the politically correct society that we are now all forced to live in,” Zach Sharon of Cleveland Sports Talk wrote. He said the logo is a representation of the team — one that reminds fans of the glory years of the ’90s, when “those great teams all sported the Chief Wahoo on their jerseys and those memories give myself and other fans goosebumps.”

“Thankfully, fans will continue to wear their Chief Wahoo apparel, probably even more now,” Sharon wrote. “I know I will. You’ll see it in the stands and around the city every Indians game. It’ll never truly go away.”

Cleveland lawyer and sportswriter Peter Pattakos, who opposes the logo, also predicted that the change will lead to more Chief Wahoo in stands, not less. For him, that was a cause for frustration, not celebration.

Here’s one of those times when the phrase “Only in Cleveland” is actually an understatement. #Cleveland#Indianspic.twitter.com/rFlzrqNz4q

— Peter Pattakos (@peterpattakos) April 4, 2014

Pattakos spoke to NPR in 2014, after he tweeted out a viral photo of a Native man confronting an Indians fan in red face. He described how he grew from a kid who “didn’t think of a Native American at all” when he saw the logo to an adult fan who says “the impact is so obviously racist and demeaning.”

Now he is frustrated with how MLB decided to implement this change.

“If they acknowledge that ‘the logo is no longer appropriate for on-field use in Major League Baseball,’ what’s the excuse for waiting until 2019?” he tweeted. And the name hasn’t changed, he noted, writing, “Cowardly half-measures won’t do.”

Adrienne King, a Cherokee writer who runs a blog about the appropriation of Native cultures, met the news with a celebratory word — “FINALLY!!!”

FINALLY!!! (This is not a culture jam, btw. The real deal.) ?? “The logo is no longer appropriate for on-field use in Major League Baseball” https://t.co/0z10JEd1SO

— Dr. Adrienne Keene (@NativeApprops) January 29, 2018

She celebrated the fact that instead of just quietly changing the logo, MLB said it was inappropriate to use.

“Important to note: Even with this decision, you can still buy Chief Wahoo merch in Ohio and at the stadium, and the name is still the Indians,” she wrote on Twitter. “Not done fighting, but BIG step.”

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globalFEST: Highlights From A Concert Without Borders

Jupiter & Okwess

Courtesy of the artist

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Courtesy of the artist

  • Jarlath Henderson, “Courting Is A Pleasure”
  • La Dame Blanche, “Yo Quiero Trabajar”
  • Delgres, “Lanme La”
  • Jupiter & Okwess, “Hello”

globalFEST has been a staple of the New York City music scene for the last 15 years. The one-night global music showcase spotlights a dozen artists from around the world that even die-hard music fans likely haven’t seen with their own two eyes.

This year, globalFEST took place across two venues — BB King’s and the Liberty Theater in midtown Manhattan — and three stages. And to my ears, the most exciting artists were those who re-imagined traditional styles in stunning new ways. Two bands that brought this creative energy played consecutively — and could not have represented more of a sonic whiplash.

The Jarlath Henderson Band are from Glasgow. Henderson, the band’s singer, relocated there from Northern Ireland and found the musicians he needed to complete his vision. He sings traditional Celtic ballads — love and murder are major plot points, usually connected. He plays guitar and pipes, including wheezing bagpipes. But it was the band’s keyboard and electronics that brought something new and otherworldly, often quieting the crowd.

Meanwhile, across the street, Jupiter and Okwess, a seven-piece band from The Congo, took the stage in multi-colored ragamuffin style. Their take on subverting the traditional was much more in-your-face. Jupiter Bokondji led his band through a set that combined funk and rock with chiming soukous guitar and four-part harmonies. This was the freshest set of the night. It wasn’t surprising to learn after the fact that Bokondji’s latest album, Kin Sonic, featured Damon Albarn on keyboards.

Another highlight included Parisian band Delgres, which combined music from the Caribbean island Guadeloupe with New Orleans sousaphone and drums. The trio had the sweaty drive of a up-all-night Crescent City dance hall.

As straight-ahead as Delgres were, La Dame Blanche brought things back to the theatrical. Cuban singer and flautist Yaite Ramos Rodriguez took the stage in all white (and a cigar) and began the set with a somewhat-classical moment on her flute before steering the show toward dancehall and hip-hop.

Listen to clips from these four acts in the audio player at the top of this story.

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