April 11, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: 'A Quiet Place' Meets 'The Office,' DC's Red Hood Meets Pennywise and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

This perfect crossover between A Quiet Place and The Office turns Dwight’s cousin Mose from the latter into the monster:

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Fan Film of the Day:

Speaking of crossovers, the DC universe meets the world of Stephen King in the fan film Red Hood: IT:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Speaking of It, Couch Tomato shows 24 reasons why the Stephen King adaptation is basically the same movie as Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle:

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Lego-fied Movie of the Day:

While we wait for someone to make a Lego version of the MEG trailer, here’s at least a quick shot of what that could look like:

“Pleased to eat you.” #TheMeg#LEGOpic.twitter.com/dhLrZpynkM

— Just Kim (@kimfaul) April 10, 2018

Movie References of the Day:

Screen Rant highlights homages to the Harry Potter movies in 10 different animated features:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

John Milius, who turns 74 today, directs a group of the young stars on the set of his 1984 movie Red Dawn:

Filmmaker in Focus:

George Romero’s first three zombie movies are the focus of this video essay by Matt Draper:

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Actor in the Spotlight:

In honor or her birthday this week, Kristen Stewart’s career is showcased in this Fandor video by Jacob T. Swinney:

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Cosplay of the Day:

If you wondered what Toothless from How to Train Your Dragon would look like magically turned into a man:

Finally a decent picture of my Toothless cosplay! Hope you like it ?? #HowToTrainYourDragonpic.twitter.com/X8StVFYsdN

— Gehe @HeroesManga Madrid (@geheichou) April 9, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 50th anniversary of the release of Tony Richardson’s The Charge of the Light Brigade. Watch the original trailer for the classic war movie below.

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Episode 661: The Less Deadly Catch

Alaskan fisherman David Fry and his baited hooks.

Jess Jiang/NPR

Note: This episode originally ran in 2015.

What kind of person would go out in a tiny boat in dangerous weather to catch fish for 24 hours straight? Everyone. Well, everyone in Homer, Alaska.

Halibut fishermen in Alaska used to defy storms, exhaustion and good judgment. That’s because they could only fish in these handful of 24-hour periods. It was called the derby, and the derby made fishing the deadliest job in America. But then the government totally changed the system.

Today on the show, the economic fix that made fishing safer. And why a lot of people hate it.

Music: “Everything.”

Find us: Twitter/ Facebook / Instagram

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

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32-Year-Old NBA Rookie Steps Off Bench And Floors Crowd In 'Helluva Opening Night'

Andre Ingram celebrates after draining a 3-pointer during the second half Tuesday night.

Mark J. Terrill/AP

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Mark J. Terrill/AP

Andre Ingram didn’t know why his exit interview had been bumped up a day. But he had his bags packed anyway. A longtime veteran of the NBA’s minor league, he knew there was no need to dawdle after his season wrapped with the South Bay Lakers in El Segundo, Calif., especially with his wife and their daughters waiting for him in Virginia.

By the end of the meeting Monday, though, it was clear they would need to be coming west instead: For the first time in more than a decade spent grinding in the minors, Ingram, 32, was getting called up to play with the Los Angeles Lakers through season’s end.

Then, the NBA rookie with the gray-speckled hair just went ahead and dropped 19 points on the league’s top-ranked team.

On Tuesday night, playing at LA’s Staples Center before his family and nearly 20,000 strangers, Ingram came off the bench against the Houston Rockets to drain four 3-pointers on his way to one of the best debuts in Lakers history. Only franchise superstars Magic Johnson, Nick Van Exel and Jerry West — “You may have heard of them,” deadpans ESPN Stats & Info — scored more in their rookie openers with the Lakers.

Before the game’s end, the crowd had erupted in chants of “MVP!” — and they weren’t referring the Rockets’ James Harden, this year’s presumptive most valuable player. They were cheering for Ingram.

“From the team warm-ups, the atmosphere — it was electric,” Ingram told reporters in the locker room after the game. “You could feel something in there, and you know, people are going crazy. MVP chants — that’s crazy, man.”

He was at the free throw line when he heard them.

“I’m just glad the free throws went in, to be honest,” he said, laughing.

Andre Ingram heard “MVP” chants at Staples Center. pic.twitter.com/mumjaIGrlG

— ESPN (@espn) April 11, 2018

Now, Ingram may be a rookie by one measure — but by another, he is a grizzled veteran: He has been in the NBA’s developmental league since 2007, when he went undrafted after graduating from American University with a physics degree.

But as he told his local Richmond Times-Dispatch more than a decade ago, his eyes have always been on the NBA: “You get more NBA exposure in the D-League — that’s why I chose it ahead of going overseas,” he said at the time.

Since then, ESPN Stats & Info notes, Ingram went on to rack up the most 3-pointers in the history of the minor league, which has at times gone by the names D-League and G-League, and played in the second-most games in league history. But all the while, he just kept waiting on that call from the majors.

As NPR’s Tom Goldman reported in 2016, the life of a minor league basketball player is not a glamorous one. Average pay for a season is about $20,000; players get from city to city by bus and sometimes play in front of crowds numbering in the dozens, not thousands. It’s not an easy road for a father of two like Ingram — and certainly not for his wife, Marilee.

“Obviously,” Ingram said after the game Tuesday, “it’s not a cash cow — so, I mean, if at any point she was like, ‘OK now, you’ve chased long enough, we need to do better,’ what can I say. But she never said that, never even thought it. She kept encouraging me.”

You stay on the grind and at the end of your 10th year, you finally get the call.

Andre Ingram never stopped persevering and now his @NBA dream is a reality. #ThisIsWhyWePlay#LakeShowpic.twitter.com/1SZhc5SW7k

— Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) April 10, 2018

When he called Monday, “I thought he was calling to tell me when he was coming home,” Marilee Ingram said during the broadcast, voice breaking with emotion. “But when he said he was being called up to the Lakers, I literally lost it and started screaming.”

“As soon as he was done signing,” she added, “he called me back and was like, ‘OK, you have to pack because you are coming out here to see these last two games.’ “

She and their daughters came right out. They were on hand to watch him play — and to hear those MVP chants ripple through the arena, even in the Lakers’ 105-99 loss to the Rockets.

In the locker room after the game, Lakers coach Luke Walton presented Ingram with the game ball. And he summed it all up pretty succinctly.

“Ten years,” Walton said, shaking his head. “Helluva opening night.”

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Can You Hear Me Now? Senate Bill May Make The Answer 'Yes'

Under current law, Medicare generally reimburses audiologists for diagnosing hearing loss in older adults but not for providing assistance to fit, adjust and teach the best way to use them.

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Last December, Deb Wiese bought hearing aids for her parents, one for each of them. She ordered them online from a big-box retailer and paid $719 for the pair. But her parents, in their 80s and retired from farming in central Minnesota, couldn’t figure out how to adjust the volume or change the batteries. They soon set them aside.

“Technology is not only unfamiliar, but unwelcome” to her parents, Wiese says. “I don’t know what the answer is for people like that.”

A bill introduced by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) in March could make it easier for her parents and millions like them to get assistance. It would allow Medicare to pay audiologists to teach beneficiaries how to adjust to and use their hearing aids effectively in different settings such as a crowded room, for example.

Under current law, Medicare generally reimburses audiologists for diagnosing hearing loss in older adults but not for providing assistance to fit, adjust and learn to make the most of hearing aids.

Not being able to afford hearing aid services is one of many challenges older adults who are hard of hearing face. Even if they can afford hearing aids, Medicare doesn’t usually cover the services to fit and service them so many people go without.

The proposed bill comes on the heels of an effort to increase the chances that people who need hearing aids get them. A law signed last summer by President Donald Trump directs the Food and Drug Administration to establish and regulate a new category of hearing aid to be sold over the counter for people with mild to moderate hearing loss.People will be able to buy products off the shelf without consulting an audiologist or hearing aid dispenser, and standards for online sales will be tightened. The agency has three years to develop safety and other consumer protection standards.

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine recommended that the FDA take that step in a 2016 report.

Although it should improve access, the new law doesn’t address one of the biggest barriers faced by the nearly 50 million people with age-related hearing loss: insurance coverage.

Neither traditional Medicare nor most private insurers typically cover hearing aids. (Some Medicare Advantage plans provide some coverage, and some insurers may offer a discount if members use certain suppliers.)

“Cost has for many years been the Number 1 problem in the calls, emails and letters we get,” says Barbara Kelley, executive director and CEO of the Hearing Loss Association of America, a patient advocacy group. “People say, ‘I need hearing aids and I can’t afford them.’ It’s really heartbreaking.”

Only 10 to 20 percent of people with hearing loss have ever used hearing aids, according to studies. In addition to cost, lack of access to care and the stigma associated with wearing a hearing aid discourages people, Kelley says.

But losing the ability to hear well doesn’t just mean people have to turn the volume way up on their favorite TV shows. Hearing loss is associated with depression, social isolation and an increased risk for cognitive decline and dementia in older adults.

Hearing aid prices vary widely, ranging from an average $900 to $3,100 apiece, according to a survey of hearing care professionals by the Hearing Review, a trade magazine. On the high end, devices may be Bluetooth-enabled to stream wirelessly from people’s cellphones to their hearing aids, among other perks.

But not everyone needs or wants that much help. “Some people are very mildly impaired,” says Kim Cavitt, a billing and reimbursement consultant and former president of the Academy of Doctors of Audiology who supports over-the-counter sales. “They don’t have a $3,000 problem, they have a $300 problem.”

Experts say they hope the over-the-counter hearing aid law will spur competition and product innovation and bring down prices.

One of the reasons hearing aid prices are often high is because the devices are typically bundled with a service package to fit, troubleshoot and maintain them.

Disentangling the service from the devices would benefit consumers, says Nicholas Reed, a faculty member at the Cochlear Center for Hearing and Public Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who has studied over-the-counter hearing devices that provide results comparable to hearing aids.

People may still need some help using their hearing aids. In addition to basic hearing-aid fitting and maintenance, hearing care professionals can help people learn strategies to hear better, Reed says. For example, people learn to sit with their back to a wall at a restaurant to eliminate the sound behind them so they can focus on listening to the person in front of them.

“The over-the-counter law will lower the cost and make hearing aids more accessible,” Reed says. “But if the services aren’t covered, people, especially older adults with health literacy issues, will stop using them.”

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