February 13, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: What You Need to Know About 'Black Panther,' Deleted 'Coco' Musical Number and More

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

Movie Set Up of the Day:

Black Panther hits theaters in just a few days, so Slate shows us what we need to know before going to see it:

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Character History of the Day:

Speaking of back story on Black Panther, here’s Screen Rant with the character’s evolution from comics to the big screen:

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Music Video Parody of the Day:

Nerdist parodies Jaden Smith’s “Icon” and its music video themed to the plot of Black Panther:

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Truthful Marketing of the Day:

In anticipation of Black Panther, Honest Trailers reminds us of the ups and downs of the Blade trilogy:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Kim Novak, who turns 85 today, receives direction from Alfred Hitchcock on the set of Vertigo in 1957:

Deleted Scene of the Day:

Coco directors Lee Unkrich and Adrian Molina introduce a rough-cut deleted scene from the movie showing how it used to be more of a musical:

Dream Casting of the Day:

Tommy Wiseau dreams of playing The Joker instead of Joaquin Phoenix after a fan showed us all what he would look like in the role (via Heroic Hollywood):

Yes ! I want to be THE JOKER !

Fan art by @aitesamfarooq02 pic.twitter.com/dteVXDikgm

— Tommy Wiseau (@TommyWiseau) February 11, 2018

Filming Locations of the Day:

In honor of this week’s 25th anniversary of Groundhog Day, Moon Film showcases the real locations from the movie and what they look like now:

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Cosplay of the Day:

What if there was a cartoon depicting horror movie icons as babies? Here’s a cosplaying infant to show what Pennywise would look like:

Baby Pennywise pic.twitter.com/3Lji7rUGu3

— Club Stephen King ?? (@ClubSTEPHENKING) February 13, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Sphere. Watch the original trailer for the sci-fi classic below.

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and

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Shaun White Wins Gold In Halfpipe At The Winter Olympics

Shaun White of the U.S. warms up ahead of the men’s final in the snowboard halfpipe at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

David Ramos/Getty Images

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David Ramos/Getty Images

Updated at 10:15 p.m. ET

Shaun White pulled off a gold-medal comeback in the halfpipe, and Japan’s Ayumu Hirano won silver on the strength of a phenomenal second run.

CORRECTION: An early version of this story reported that White had won silver — that was reported after the second run had completed. On his third run, White won gold.

White missed out on a medal back in 2014, when he was hurt at the Sochi Games. He’s now the only snowboarder ever to win three gold medals at the Olympics. And he did it by winning the 100th gold medal for the U.S.

Held one day after American Chloe Kim dominated the women’s halfpipe, the men’s final was a contest between White, Hirano, and Australia’s Scotty James — who came out strong on his first run, scoring a 92.

SHAUN WHITE IS NOT HUMAN. #BestOfUS#WinterOlympicshttps://t.co/r5PfUbeROrpic.twitter.com/6MmQiSZGRh

— NBC Olympics (@NBCOlympics) February 14, 2018

White stepped up next with an incredible array of tricks, height and precision, soaring above the halfpipe and landing cleanly. The judges rewarded him with a 94.25 — and that was nearly his best score of the day, after a stumble marred his second run.

White began celebrating immediately, ripping his helmet off and throwing it, his arms raised above his head. But he would need another strong run to claim gold.

Back-to-back 1440s from Ayumu Hirano gave him the lead in men’s snowboard halfpipe in Run 2. #WinterOlympicshttps://t.co/r5PfUbwsFZpic.twitter.com/NyYWHWfPXo

— NBC Olympics (@NBCOlympics) February 14, 2018

He managed that in the third run, landing a score of 97.75 points.

Hirano, who’s just 19, turned in a fantastic second run for his best score of 95.25, getting 18 feet above the rim of the halfpipe and landing his tricks cleanly — including back-to-back tricks with 1440-degree spins.

White set a high bar in qualifying, posting a high score of 98.5. It turned out he needed that score to go into the finals on top – he beat James by less than two points.

That gave White the advantage of dropping in last, knowing what he had to do to match his rivals. In the end, he pulled off a gold-medal performance to complete his strong comeback from the Sochi Games.

Hirano had placed third in qualifying. With his second run, he staked a claim to the podium. It was an impressive comeback for Hirano, who had fallen on his first run and earned only 35.25 points — leaving him in 10th place.

After the Japanese snowboarder’s rousing run, the pressure shifted to James and White. James seemed to take a very deep breath before he set off on his second run. The first section was great — but he couldn’t get a clean landing on one of his final tricks. White came out with energy and speed — but he fell midway through, and mustered only 55 points.

The situation reversed in the third and final run, when White earned a 97.75 and both of his top rivals fell during their attempts.

A scary moment came early in the second run, when Japanese snowboarder Yuto Totsuka fell badly. For several minutes, the crowd looked on as a medical crew attended to him. Totsuka was taken from the course on a stretcher sled and taken to the medical center.

This is the second Olympic medal for Hirano; he won silver in Sochi. He is also the reigning X Games champion in the halfpipe, having won that title last month, in a competition that White skipped.

White led a group of four American snowboarders who qualified for the finals of the men’s halfpipe at Phoenix Snow Park in Pyeongchang; joining him were Ben Ferguson, Chase Josey, and Jake Pates.

Ferguson cleaned up his second run after a fall in the first. And after a strong final run earned him a 90.75, he finished 4th; Josey was 6th and Pates was 8th.

Josey was in third place after the first run, when he earned an 87.75. He fell toward the end of his second run. On that same run, Japan’s Raibu Katayama, cut his run short after landing awkwardly. Katayama had been flying: he soared more than 17 feet above the halfpipe’s rim on one trick.

Pates put down a strong second run, rebounding from a fall in his first attempt. He anxiously awaited the scoring, eyes glued on the board that would tell him if he had earned a shot at the podium. Pates got an 82.25 — not enough for a medal, but a result that made him smile, all the same.

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Latino Business Group Leader Steps Down Amid Sexual Harassment Allegations

Javier Palomarez, shown here at an event in 2014, resigned amid allegations of sexual and financial misconduct.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

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Carolyn Kaster/AP

The head of a major Hispanic business association is stepping aside after allegations of improperly increasing his salary and sexual misconduct.

The United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce said president and CEO Javier Palomarez and its board of directors “have mutually agreed to undergo a leadership transition for the organization effective immediately,” the organization said in a statement to NPR.

The statement did not refer to the allegations surrounding Palomarez, which were reported Monday by The New York Times:

“Mr. Palomarez, who has run the organization for close to a decade, was accused by a longtime board member last fall of paying himself hundreds of thousands of dollars more than he was entitled to under his contract, according to minutes from the board’s charitable foundation and a Texas court filing.

“In the Texas filing, Mr. Palomarez denied any financial impropriety. He said in a statement Friday that the claims against him sprang from a ‘retaliatory effort’ by Nina Vaca, the board member who flagged them first. Ms. Vaca declined to comment.

“Mr. Palomarez was also accused of sexually harassing his former chief of staff, Gissel Gazek Nicholas. In an interview with The New York Times, Ms. Nicholas said that at the end of a group meeting in a Chicago hotel suite in 2013, he asked her to stay behind after the others left, then asked if she had ever thought about ‘being’ with him and tried to kiss her. Her account was corroborated by an email she sent to a friend within hours of the incident and another friend in whom she confided afterward.”

Nicholas was fired from her job at the organization in November, the Times reports.

Palomerez did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NPR. He told the Times on Friday that, “I categorically deny these troubling allegations.”

In the announcement from the USHCC, Palomerez said he was extremely proud of his tenure as president and CEO of the organization.

Representing Hispanic businesses “is a mission too important for distractions and internal division and so I look forward to working with the Board and staff over the coming weeks to put in place a leadership team that can inspire more in our community to build businesses and achieve the American dream,” he said.

According to NBC News, Nicholas applauded the move by saying that the business organization had taken a “bold step forward and away from the leadership of Javier Palomarez.” She added: “While the USHCC accomplished a great deal under his leadership, it came at a high cost to me personally, and, I believe, to the organization as well.”

USHCC says it promotes 4.4 million Hispanic-owned businesses that contribute at least $700 billion annually to the U.S. economy. Palomerez previously worked at Sprint and Bank of America.

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Doctors In Maine Say Halt In OxyContin Marketing Comes '20 Years Late'

Bottles of Purdue Pharma L.P. OxyContin medication sit on a pharmacy shelf in Provo, Utah, in 2016.

George Frey/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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George Frey/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The maker of OxyContin, one of the most prescribed and aggressively marketed opioid painkillers, will no longer tout the drug or any other opioids to doctors.

The announcement, made Saturday, came as drugmaker Purdue Pharma faces lawsuits for deceptive marketing brought by cities and counties across the U.S., including several in Maine. The company said it’s cutting its U.S. sales force by more than half.

Just how important are these steps against the backdrop of a raging opioid epidemic that took the lives of more than 300 Maine residents in 2016, and accounted for more than 42,000 deaths nationwide?

“They’re 20 years late to the game,” says Dr. Noah Nesin, a family physician and vice president of medical affairs at Penobscot Community Health Care.

Nesin says even after Purdue Pharma paid $600 million in fines about a decade ago for misleading doctors and regulators about the risks opioids posed for addiction and abuse, it continued marketing them.

“I think it’s similar to the tobacco industry learning they could sell tobacco without spending a lot of money on advertising. My guess is this decision is in their self-interest,” he says.

A nationwide lawsuit against Purdue Pharma for deceptive marketing continues to grow. Seven cities in Maine have joined, including Portland, Lewiston and Bangor, along with five counties, to recoup some of the costs of addressing the addiction crisis.

A spokesman for Purdue Pharma said in an email that the decision to stop marketing to prescribers is voluntary and independent of any litigation.

Nesin says that at the very least, the company’s decision to refrain from promoting opioids to doctors reinforces the need for caution when prescribing the drugs.

Maine Medical Association President Dr. Robert Schlager agrees that Purdue Phama’s move is a good, if small, step to fight the opioid epidemic. “I wouldn’t expect it to have a very large role in limiting opioids further,” he says. “Because most of us, as prescribers, do limit our information exchange with the drug representatives who have been marketing opioids.”

Since 2016, doctors in Maine have also adhered to prescribing limits enacted by the Legislature. As of December 2017, legislatures in 17 states had enacted prescribing limits and nine others had authorized other state entities to enact them.

Schlager says Purdue Pharma should go further and suspend opioid marketing worldwide. “It seems a little bit not honest to just limit it here in the United States,” he says.

In an email, Purdue Pharma’s spokesman says that the company operates only in the United States, and that an associated company, Mundipharma, has not marketed opioids in Europe since 2013.

A Los Angeles Timesinvestigation in 2016 found that the family that owns Purdue Pharma has a network of international companies that employ the same kinds of marketing practices that made OxyContin a blockbuster seller in the U.S.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, Maine Public Radio and Kaiser Health News.

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Movie News: New 'Willy Wonka' on Its Way; Michael Fassbender to Star in 'Kung Fury'

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

Willy Wonka: A “re-imagining” of Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is on its way. Paul King (Paddington, Paddington 2) is in final negotiations to direct Willy Wonka, based on a screenplay by Simon Rich (Inside Out). Reportedly, the hope is to launch “a new franchise that will stand out artistically.” First published in 1964, Dahl’s novel served as the basis for the beloved musical fantasy Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971, above), starring Gene Wilder, as well as Tim Burton’s 2005 version, starring Johnny Depp. [THR]

The Snowman

Kung Fury: Michael Fassbender (above in The Snowman) will star in the action-comedy Kung Fury. It’s a sequel to the same-titled, outlandishly funny and entertaining short film, written and directed by David Sandberg, that paid homage to martial arts action and cop thrillers of the 1980s. Sandberg will costar in the feature version alongside Fassbender and David Hasselhoff, who also appeared in the original short. [Variety]

Mr. Columbus, are you ready for Freddy? #FiveNightsatFreddyspic.twitter.com/4F7QEnw16x

— Blumhouse (@blumhouse) February 12, 2018

Five Nights at Freddy’s: Chris Columbus, known for writing Gremlins and The Goonies, as well as directing Home Alone and the first two installments in the Harry Potter series, will write and direct Five Nights at Freddy’s for Blumhouse Productions (Get Out, Split). It’s based on Scott Cawthon’s popular video game featuring a security guard in combat against “animatronic robots that come to life in a Chuck E. Cheese-like venue.” [Deadline]

A Quiet Place

A Quiet Place Trailer: In the first trailer for A Quiet Place, something terrible has happened, leaving a desperate family alone in a world where they must stay quiet if they hope to survive. Emily Blunt and John Krasinski star; Krasinski directed. The thriller will open in theaters on April 6. [Movieclips]

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