February 15, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: How Black Panther's Suit Works, Taika Waititi's Superhero Rom-Com Idea and More

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

Movie Science of the Day:

For Nerdist, Kyle Hill scientifically explains how Black Panther’s vibranium suit works:

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Custom Build of the Day:

Speaking of Black Panther, see the guys from Baltimore Knife and Sword forge a replica of Zuri’s spear from the movie:

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Movie Pitch of the Day:

Watch Taika Waititi on Entertainment Tonight pitching a mockumentary romantic comedy about Marvel’s Vision and Scarlet Witch:

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Movie Comparisons of the Day:

Couch Tomato shows 24 ways that all “hood” movies follow the same formula:

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Awards Criticism of the Day:

In this video essay, The Nerdwriter argues that The Florida Project should have been nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Milos Forman, who turns 86 this weekend, takes a rest with stars Colin Firth and Meg Tilly on the set of his 1989 movie Valmont:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Fandor looks at Alfonso Cuaron’s use of long takes in their latest “Found in Translation” video:

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Video Essay of the Day:

In his latest video essay, Matt Draper shows how Sleeping Beauty is the pinnacle of classic Disney animated features:

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Cosplay of the Day:

In honor of the new Incredibles 2 trailer, here’s some awesome Edna Mode cosplay:

Edna Mode- Box Turtle Cosplay pic.twitter.com/NNA7fEo316

— Cosplay (@CosplayHeaven) February 15, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 40th anniversary of the release of Coming Home. Watch the original trailer for the classic Oscar-winning drama below.

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Canada Hosts A Pride House At The Winter Olympics In South Korea

A rainbow button for Pride House Pyeongchang is seen at a display inside Canada House at the Winter Olympics in South Korea.

Bill Chappell/NPR

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Bill Chappell/NPR

It’s not the only Pride House in South Korea, but it’s the first in the world to be embraced by a national Olympic committee: Alongside poutine and beer, Canada Olympic House offers a message of inclusion and gender diversity by hosting a space for LGBTQ fans, athletes and friends.

The idea for this Pride House, organized in collaboration with South Korean activists, is based on the tradition of Olympic delegations opening hospitality houses to showcase their home nations’ culture and history and welcome fans. Rather than focusing on a particular nationality or team, the Pride House welcomes all.

In the Olympic Village, Canada House is hosting a Pride House.

Bill Chappell/NPR

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Bill Chappell/NPR

“The mission of Pride House,” says Keph Senett, a trustee with Scottish-based Pride House International, is to create a “place where people can go and watch games, and hang out and eat food and all that — sort of experience the games in a safe and welcoming way.”

As for Team Canada, Senett said, “They are saying very clearly, ‘We support this mission.’ “

Canada’s hospitality house — created out of a gateball clubhouse (a game similar to cricket) — has a ski-lodge vibe. It offers lounge chairs, fire pits and table hockey games outside. When we visited, a capacity crowd had gathered in a pub-like area inside to watch Team Canada play (and defeat) the U.S. women’s hockey team.

The Pride House team and activists from the Korean Sexual-Minority Culture and Rights Center created the welcome message that greets visitors:

“This is your house no matter who you are or where you come from.

You are at home, regardless of your sex, sexual orientation, race, marital or family status, gender identity or expression, sex characteristics, creed, age, color, disability, political or religious belief.”

The message concludes, “Be proud. Be you. Be Olympic!”

The Korean Sexual-Minority Culture and Rights Center started preparing to open a Pride House three years ago. The group is staffing a section of Canada House, with a representative on hand to talk with visitors — and a cutout rainbow house for people to pose with for selfies. The group is also operating a separate Pride House in Seoul, hosting Olympic watch parties and other events in the capital.

Senett’s group has helped local activists form a Pride House at all but one Olympics since 2010, when the first Pride House opened at the Vancouver Winter Games as an inclusive spot for sports fans to gather. Since then, there have been 13 Pride Houses at big sporting events from the World Cup to the Pan American Games.

Pride House International is a Scottish charity, formed by a coalition of LGBT sports and human rights groups. Senett says local groups normally do their own fundraising that includes donations and some grants.

Until now, every Pride House has been held outside of the official bubble that surrounds mammoth events such as the Olympics, World Cup and other events. But this time, Team Canada offered to host it within its Canada House in Gangneung, site of the flat-ice events at the Pyeongchang Games.

In a statement, Chris Overholt of Canada’s Olympic Committee said that Canada “stands behind its commitment of inclusion and diversity in the global sport landscape. We recognize that diversity is our greatest strength… Team Canada is proud to embrace its diversity at Canada House … as a team, we are stronger when we celebrate our differences.”

“It’s super-exciting, because it’s the first time that a national Olympic committee has officially affiliated themselves,” Senett said, “so people are really excited about that, because it’s the organization and so forth.”

When it comes to social and cultural attitudes about LGBTQ issues in South Korea, a report by Gallup Korea last year found mixed results – including greater tolerance among people under 30 than among those who are older.

A wall in the foyer of Canada House greets visitors: “This is your house no matter who you are or where you come from.”

Bill Chappell/NPR

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In that survey, 34 percent of South Korean respondents said they support same-sex marriages, while 58 percent said they oppose it. Among people younger than 30, the number in favor rose to 66 percent.

“As far as the laws go, there’s no same-sex marriage here. You just don’t live out of the closet. There are no protections for losing your job or losing your housing, based on either sexual orientation or gender identity,” Senett said.

But, Senett says, things may be changing.

In 2017, Gallup also reported broad and strong support in South Korea for workplace protections, with 90 percent of the survey’s respondents — regardless of how they viewed homosexuality — saying sexual minorities should have the same chances to work.

As for the sporting environment around gender issues in South Korea, an ugly episode made international headlines a few years ago, when a female soccer player’s gender was questioned by rival coaches in her pro league. At the time, the player, Park Eun-seon, had competed for the national women’s team for more than a decade. She had also undergone a gender test before playing in the 2004 Athens Olympics.

The only time since 2010 that Senett’s group has been unable to create an Olympics Pride House was at Sochi in 2014, when their request to open a space was denied because of Russia’s anti-homosexuality laws.

Faced with that setback, the group responded by hosting smaller events elsewhere. And, Senett said, Pride House International sent letters to Russian authorities and to the International Olympic Committee that are now part of the record.

?”Things change little by little,” Senett said. “But we want to see sort of the entire sporting environment become friendlier in those ways, more open, more accepting — and not in a touchy-feely way, but in the sense of organizations taking steps to have some teeth when there is discrimination.”

She added, “These are these are groups that have such an incredible amount of money and influence and power in the world. And we want to see them using it for good.”

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Overshooting, Tipping Points, and ABBA

The Indicator from Planet Money

We’re trying a new thing (for us): We ask guests to tell us about something they read that changed how they see the world.

Today, Diane Coyle — an economist who writes a blog about economics books — tells us about Micromotives and Macrobehavior by Thomas Schelling.

Coyle says it’s helped her understand everything from why it’s so hard to get the water temperature in the shower just right to why ABBA wore such ostentatious costumes on stage.

Music by Drop Electric. Find us: Twitter/ Facebook.

Subscribe to our show on Apple Podcasts, PocketCasts and NPR One.

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Idaho Insurer Moves Ahead With Health Plans That Flout Federal Rules

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar faced questions Wednesday from the House Ways and Means Committee about Idaho’s move.

Jacquelyn Martin/AP

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Jacquelyn Martin/AP

It’s barely been two weeks since Idaho regulators said they would allow the sale of health insurance that doesn’t meet all of the Affordable Care Act’s requirements — a controversial step some experts said would likely draw legal scrutiny and, potentially, federal fines for any insurer that jumped in.

And on Wednesday, Blue Cross of Idaho unveiled a menu of new health plans that break with federal health law rules in several ways, including setting premiums based on applicants’ health.

“We’re trying to offer a choice that allows the middle class to get back into insurance coverage,” said Dave Jeppesen, the insurer’s executive vice president for consumer health care.

The insurer filed five plans to the state for approval and hopes to start selling them as soon as next month.

The Blue Cross decision ups the ante for Alex Azar, the Trump administration’s new Health and Human Services secretary. Will he use his authority under federal law to compel Idaho to follow the ACA and reject the Blues plans? Or will he allow state regulators to move forward, perhaps prompting other states to take more sweeping actions?

At a congressional hearing Wednesday, even as Blue Cross rolled out its plans, Azar faced such questions. “There are rules,” Azar said. “There is a rule of law that we need to enforce.”

However, he didn’t specifically indicate whether the federal government would step in.

Robert Laszewski, a consultant and former insurance industry executive, says it should. “If Idaho is able to do this, it will mean other … states will do the same thing,” he said. “If a state can ignore federal law on this, it can ignore federal law on everything.”

Idaho’s move stirs up more issues about the stability of individual insurance markets.

Policy analysts say that allowing lower-cost plans that don’t meet the ACA’s standards to become more widespread will pull younger and healthier people out of Obamacare, raising prices for those who remain. Supporters say that is already happening, so the lower-cost plans provide more choices for people who earn too much to qualify for subsidies to help them purchase ACA coverage.

Idaho’s move to allow such plans, announced in January, drew harsh and swift criticism.

“Crazypants illegal,” tweeted Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of Michigan and former attorney with the civil division of the U.S. Department of Justice, who said that states can’t pick and choose which parts of federal law to follow. Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms, pointed out that health insurers could be liable for sharp fines if they are found to be in violation of the ACA.

But both Idaho regulators and Blue Cross officials say they aren’t worried.

Jeppesen said the ACA gives states regulatory authority “to make sure the market works and is stable,” and the insurer is simply “following what the state has given us guidance” to do.

Other insurers in Idaho are taking a much more cautious approach, telling The Wall Street Journal they aren’t stepping up immediately to offer their own plans.

Laszewski said they are likely waiting to see what legal challenges develop. “If I were running an insurance company, there’s no way I would stick my neck out until the high court has ruled in favor of this — and they’re not going to,” he said.

Jeppesen said his company has consulted with legal experts and is moving ahead with confidence. The aim is to bring people back into the market, particularly the young, the healthy and those who don’t get a tax credit subsidy and can’t afford an ACA plan.

For some people — especially younger or healthier applicants — the new plans, which the insurer has named Freedom Blue, cost less per month than policies that meet all ACA rules.

They accomplish that by limiting coverage. If they are allowed to be sold, consumers will need to weigh the lower premiums against some of the coverage restrictions and variable premiums and deductibles, policy experts say.

The plans, for example, will include a “waiting period” of up to 12 months for any pre-existing conditions if the applicant has been without coverage for more than 63 days, Jeppesen said.

Additionally, they cap total medical care coverage at $1 million annually. And premiums are based, in part, on a person’s health: The healthiest consumers get rates 50 percent below standard levels, while those deemed unhealthy would be charged 50 percent more.

All those conditions violate ACA rules, which forbid insurers from rejecting coverage of preexisting conditions or setting dollar caps on benefits or higher premiums for people with health problems.

But the rates may prove attractive to some.

Premiums for a healthy 45-year-old, for example, could be as low as $195 a month, according to a comparison issued by the insurer, while a 45-year-old with health problems could be charged $526. In that case, the 45-year old would find a lower price tag — $343 a month — for an ACA-compliant bronze plan.

While Freedom Blues plans cover many of the “essential health benefits” required under the ACA, such as hospitalization, emergency care and mental health treatment, they do not include pediatric dental or vision coverage. One of the five plans doesn’t include maternity coverage.

When compared with one of the Blues’ ACA-compliant plans — called the Bronze 5500 — the new standard Freedom Blue plan’s annual deductibles are a mixed bag.

That’s because it has two separate deductibles — one for medical care and one for drugs. If a consumer took only generic drugs, the new plan would be less expensive, according to details provided by the plan. But with a $4,000 deductible for brand-name drugs, the Freedom Blue plan requires more upfront money before full coverage kicks in than the ACA-compliant plan it was compared with.

Jeppesen said the insurer hopes to attract many of the “110,000 uninsured state residents who cannot afford [ACA] coverage.”

That’s the total number of uninsured people who earn more than 100 percent of the federal poverty level in the state, he said.

Sarah Lueck, senior policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, cautioned that some of those residents might actually be eligible for subsidies under the ACA, which are available to people earning up to four times as much.

“Many … could be getting subsidies for more comprehensive coverage through the [ACA-compliant state exchange] and would be better off,” Lueck said.


Kaiser Health Newsis 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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