February 27, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' Supreme Leader Snoke VFX Breakdown, Best Picture Tributes and More

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

VFX Breakdown of the Day:

ILM shared another breakdown of their Oscar-nominated effects work for Star Wars: The Last Jedi, this one focused on the creation of Supreme Leader Snoke:

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Alternate Posters of the Day:

Designer Eileen Steinbach created alternate posters for all nine of this year’s Oscar nominees for Best Picture:

Here’s my complete #Oscars2018 poster series featuring all the #BestPicture nominees. I hope you like it! pic.twitter.com/0ettUfT2JT

— SG Posters (@SG_Posters) February 27, 2018

Awards Summary of the Day:

Speaking of the Best Picture nominees, Honest Trailers showcases how each one of them should have been marketed:

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Mashup of the Day:

Also speaking of Best Picture contenders, here are a bunch of shots from Call Me By Your Name combined with Claude Monet paintings:

Call me by your name + Monet paintings pic.twitter.com/wUhzsh4RCN

— fofi (@Stockhovlm) February 24, 2018

Film History of the Day:

In honor of Black Panther, Birth.Movies.Death. pays tribute to almost 100 years of black action stars, divided into two videos:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Elizabeth Taylor, who was born on this day in 1932, tests for her breakthrough role in National Velvet in 1944:

Actor in the Spotlight:

The late Robin Williams gets a special tribute honoring the joy he brought moviegoers in this video by Katrin Depp:

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Movie Food of the Day:

In the latest edition of Binging With Babish, learn how to make the tamales from the Oscar-nominated Pixar animated feature Coco:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Most Ghostbusters cosplayers stick to the uniforms and proton packs so it’s cool to see this duo still recognizable as Holtzmann and Gilbert:

Ok but Ghostbusters 2016 is such a fun film & tbh I’m still in love with Holtz.. #tbt the time we threw these cosplays together in like a week because we were so pumped after seeing the film that we just HAD to cosplay asap!! ????#Ghostbusters@GhostbustersNet@paulfeigpic.twitter.com/eI6Fdfm7Fw

— ?jimmy?(seamripper cosplay) (@the_seamripper) February 26, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Dark City. Watch the original trailer of the sci-fi cult classic below.

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and

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Amazon Acquires Ring, Expanding Reach Into Home Security

Amazon acquired Ring, a video doorbell maker, on Tuesday, marking another foothold in the home security and surveillance business for the company.

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Paul Sakuma/AP

Amazon really wants to come over to your house. Or at least make it to the front door.

The Seattle-based tech giant announced Tuesday it’s made another move into the home security and surveillance business, acquiring Ring, a smart-doorbell maker that streams audio and video to cellphones.

Neither company has released details about the deal but Reuters reported that it cost over $1 billion.

Amazon may have just officially put a ring on Ring, but the relationship between the two started through its Alexa Fund, which funnels money into companies that create new ways to integrate Amazon’s voice technology into their products. In June, Ring announced they’d figured out how to connect select devices to work with Alexa on Echo Show and Fire TV.

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Two months ago Amazon also snapped up Blink, another maker of Wi-Fi-connected security cameras that has recently ventured into the video doorbell industry, according to TechCrunch.

But Amazon is not just leaving it up to other companies to watch what’s going on at your front door. In November, it debuted a new home security camera called Cloud Cam that comes with Amazon Key, an app that lets some Amazon Prime members grant service providers — including dog walkers, house cleaners and delivery companies — keyless entry into homes.

The Key app was supposed to be the online retailer’s solution to widespread theft of delivery packages that online shoppers have been complaining about. Instead, GeekWire reported customers are creeped out by the technology, worrying that it might be vulnerable to hacking.

I call this the “Break & Enter dropbox” and it pairs well with my Amazon Key (smartlock & smartcam combo).

It’s all current software. Amazon downplayed the last attack on this product because it needed an evil delivery driver to execute. This doesn’t. pic.twitter.com/35krz46Kab

— MG (@_MG_) February 4, 2018

Just last week, ZDNet reported Amazon implemented a second fix to a bug that let intruders with fairly simple technology bypass the smart lock.

Still, at $119 the Cloud Cam is much cheaper than Amazon’s leading competition, the $199 Google Nest Cam.

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NFL To Demand Cowboys Owner Reimburse Legal Fees, Reports Say

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell (left) walks with Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones during the NFL owners winter meeting in Irving, Texas, on Dec. 13, 2017.

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NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell is expected to try to recover the money spent on a seven-figure legal bill after recent battles with Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.

The story was first reported by The New York Times, and since then, other publications have had sources speak off the record. NPR has not independently confirmed the reports.

It all began several months ago when Jones tried to derail negotiations for Goodell’s contract extension. At the same time, Jones tried to get a six-game suspension reversed for Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott.

The New York Times, which talked to five league officials with direct knowledge of the situation, reports the punishment against Jones will be issued in the coming weeks:

“Goodell will declare that Jones’s actions were detrimental to the league … and the commissioner’s office. Goodell has been reluctant to be seen as exacting retribution for the way Jones tried to sabotage his contract talks, but he was urged to bring the penalties by several owners who believed that Jones had crossed an unspoken boundary by threatening his colleagues.

In November, Jones hired the high-profile lawyer David Boies and said he was prepared to sue the six owners on the league’s compensation committee, which had been working for months on extending Goodell’s contract. Jones also lobbied loudly for running back Ezekiel Elliott not to be penalized, and reportedly tried to influence league officials deciding his case. Elliott had been suspended by the league for six games before the season after the N.F.L. investigated domestic-assault allegations.

Jones will be ordered to pay the legal fees that the committee incurred defending itself, as well as the legal expenses the N.F.L. spent defending its decision to suspend Elliott.”

The Cowboys declined to comment to news organizations, as did the NFL.

In December at a league meeting in Irving, Texas, Goodell received a five-year contract extension. Most of the owners supported the terms, which provide Goodell the possibility of earning as much as $200 million.

Also at that meeting, Goodell and Jones tried to make nice in front of the cameras — they were shown walking together. At a news conference, with the Cowboys owner in the room, Goodell said he didn’t take Jones’ objections to the extension personally.

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Your 2018 Health Plan Must Comply With ACA Rules Or You Risk Tax Penalties

Confused about whether your health plan is ACA-compliant? To be sure you’re using your state’s official marketplace, start with HealthCare.gov, and click on “see if I can change.”

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Health plans that don’t meet the standards of the Affordable Care Act; work requirements for Medicaid coverage; changes to Medicare’s approved drug lists: As the ground continues to shift on health care coverage, I’m answering readers’ queries this week about these three different types of plans:

I lost my job last year and my employer coverage ended in January. I bought a new plan through the marketplace that went into effect last month. I just received policy information, and it states that because the plan does not cover major medical services, I may have to pay additional taxes to the government. I was told that the plan didn’t cover major medical, but wasn’t told about any taxes. Will I be fined next year?

It sounds like you bought a plan that doesn’t comply with the Affordable Care Act’s requirements, and if that’s the case you may indeed have to pay a penalty for not having comprehensive coverage when you file your taxes next year.

The tax reform law repealed the individual penalty for not having health insurance, but that provision doesn’t take effect until 2019. So for 2018 you may be charged the greater of $695 or 2.5 percent of your household income.

The federal- and state-run marketplaces established by the ACA sell only comprehensive plans that cover 10 essential health benefits, including “major medical” services like hospitalization and prescription drugs.

But some insurance broker websites call themselves marketplaces too, says Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms. And that can be confusing. These companies may sell other insurance products — like short-term or accident coverage — alongside comprehensive plans that comply with the law.

Ever since the health law was passed, “There have been opportunistic companies trying to take advantage of consumer confusion to make money,” Corlette says.

If you aren’t happy with your plan, you may still be able to switch. Losing your employer coverage qualifies you for a 60-day special enrollment period to pick a new plan. Since it appears you’re still in that window, you may be able to choose a comprehensive plan.

To ensure you’re using your state’s official marketplace, go to healthcare.gov and click on “see if I can change.” That will take you to your state marketplace, even if you live in one of the dozen or so states that run their own exchanges.

I’m in a state that is looking into work requirements for Medicaid. At sign-up time, can I simply tell the exchange that I intend to be ineligible for Medicaid by refusing to work and get the premium tax credit to buy a private plan on the insurance marketplace?

Federal health law regulations don’t clearly address the situation you describe, but the short answer is probably not, according to policy analysts.

In general, people who are eligible for employer coverage or Medicaid — the federal-state health program for people with little income — can’t qualify for federal tax credits that help pay for premiums on plans sold on the health insurance exchanges.

This year, Kentucky and Indiana became the first states to receive federal approval to require some Medicaid recipients to put in 80 hours each month at a paid job, school or volunteer work (among other activities), to receive benefits. Nearly a dozen other states have made similar requests.

If you refuse to work, does that make you ineligible for Medicaid? The rules aren’t clear, says Judith Solomon, vice president for health policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

States might argue that someone in your situation is eligible for Medicaid — you just have to fulfill the work requirements, says Timothy Jost, a professor emeritus of law at Washington and Lee University in Virginia, who is an expert on the health law.

There are other actions people could take — or fail to take — where this issue might come up. “You could argue that someone is not eligible because they haven’t completed the Medicaid application or provided the required documentation,” Jost says. “There are any number of requirements, but I can’t imagine someone saying they didn’t do those things and so they’re not eligible for Medicaid.”

Whatever the rules, it’s unlikely that many people will be in a position to consider taking this stance. To qualify for premium tax credits, your income must be between 100 and 400 percent of the federal poverty level (about $12,000 to $48,500 for an individual in 2018). But you’d also have to be eligible for Medicaid, generally with an income limit of 138 percent of poverty (about $16,750) in states that expanded coverage to adults. In addition, the Medicaid work requirements in your state would have to apply to you.

I picked a Medicare Part D drug plan that covered all the drugs I take. But as soon as I got my first Novolin R prescription filled, they notified me that they don’t cover it anymore. Can they just switch it like that?

Medicare drug plans can change their list of covered drugs, called formularies. If they’re doing so at the start of the new calendar year, as appears to have happened in your case, the plan may notify you of the change when you fill the prescription for the first time in the new year. At that time, the plan would typically give you a 30-day transition refill so you can switch to another drug that’s on the formulary or start the appeals process to continue taking your current insulin drug, Novolin R.

If you and your doctor think it’s important that you have Novolin R and not another drug that is similar, you can ask your plan to make an exception to allow you to continue to take the drug.

To go that route, you would need to get your doctor to “make the case for why that formulary drug is not the right drug” for you, says Casey Schwarz, senior counsel for education and federal policy at the Medicare Rights Center, an advocacy group.

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