April 16, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: Gabriel Luna as the Terminator, A Quiet Place' Scene Break Down and More

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

Casting Rendering of the Day:

With Gabriel Luna cast as the Terminator in the reboot, BossLogic shows us what he could look like as a T-800:

Congratulations to my boy @IamGabrielLuna#Terminatorpic.twitter.com/zYO7C0V9p2

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) April 14, 2018

Director Commentary of the Day:

For Vanity Fair, John Krasinski breaks down one of the most memorable scenes in his horror hit A Quiet Place:

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Movie Parody of the Day:

Speaking of A Quiet Place, here’s a perfect parody of the movie from The Late Late Show With James Corden:

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

With Super Troopers 2 out in theaters this Friday, CineFix shares nine things you probably don’t know about the original:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Charlie Chaplin, who was born on this day in 1889, eats lunch on the set of The Gold Rush in 1924:

Actor in the Spotlight:

IMDb’s No Small Parts highlights the movie and TV career of The Walking Dead star Lennie James:

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Remade Trailer of the Day:

Huxley Berg Studios re-created the latest Deadpool 2 trailer in Lego and announced they’re trying to redo the whole first movie in the same style:

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Fan Build of the Day:

The most impressive Star Wars fan of the day is the guy who build this drivable TIE Fighter (via Geekologie):

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Cosplay of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the Japanese release of My Neighbor Totoro, so this video of Adam Savage repairing a Totoro cosplayer’s outfit is pefectly timed:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Christopher Guest’s A Mighty Wind. Watch the original trailer for the classic comedy below.

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Young People More Likely To Shift Toward Supporting Abortion Rights, Poll Finds

A new national poll finds a growing divide between younger and older Americans on abortion and reproductive health care — a shift that may be driven in large part by changing attitudes toward religion.

In the survey from the Public Religion Research Institute, or PRRI, respondents between the ages of 18 and 29 were more likely to report that their views on abortion had changedin recent years – and when they moved, they tended to move in favor of abortion rights. Of those young people whose opinions had changed, 25 percent said they became more supportive of legalized abortion compared to 9 percent who became less supportive.

Older respondents, meanwhile, were less likely to report they had changed their opinions; those who had changed their minds were more likely to have shifted towardopposing abortion rights.

“This moving in opposite directions has led us to a greater polarization between the generations on this issue,” said PRRI CEO Robert Jones.

The poll also looked at personal beliefs about abortion – in other words, opinions on the morality or ethics of abortion apart from the legal or political status of the procedure. More than half of Americans, 54 percent, said abortion “goes against my personal beliefs,” while 44 percent said it did not.

A substantial number of respondents appeared to separate their personal views from their public policy position; 34 percent said that while abortion violates their personal beliefs, they believe it should be legal in most or all cases.

Here, too, a generational divide was apparent: 60 percent of older respondents said abortion violates their personal beliefs, compared with 44 percent of younger people.

Jones said he believes the generational divide on abortion is explained at least in part by a larger shift among young people away from religion, particularly among white evangelical Protestants.

While some religious traditions support abortion rights, Jones notes that white evangelicals have consistently opposed abortion in larger numbers than other religious groups. In the PRRI poll, 78 percent of white evangelical Protestants said abortion goes against their personal religious beliefs compared with 59 percent of Catholics, 56 percent of black Protestants and 54 percent of white mainline Protestants.

But while white evangelicals remain a dominant religious group in American, the tradition is losing younger members.

Taken together, Jones said that may help to account for generational shifts in attitudes toward abortion.

Americans under 30 also were more likely than their elders to say that health insurance should cover abortion services and that the procedure should be available in their local communities.

“I think part of that is a clue to how younger people are seeing this, I think, less as a culture war, political issue, and more really as a health care issue,” Jones said. “And that I think puts it in different political terrain for younger people today.”

Overall, more than half of respondents, 54 percent, said abortion should be legal in “all or most cases,” while 43 percent said it should usually or always be illegal. A majority, 51 percent, said publicly funded health insurance programs, such as Medicaid, should not cover abortion.

The survey found one point of broad agreement: nearly two-thirds of Republicans and three-fourths of Democrats said elected officials are spending too much time talking about abortion rather than focusing on other issues.

The survey was conducted in March 2018 among 2,020 adults ages 18 and older living in the United States. Respondents were contacted by telephone, including cellphones, and the interviews took place in English and Spanish. The margin of error is 2.6 percentage points.

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Facebook Faces Class Action Lawsuit Challenging Its Use Of Facial Recognition Data

Cardboard cutouts of Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg stand outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington as he testified before a Senate panel last week.

Kevin Wolf/AP

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Kevin Wolf/AP

A federal judge in California has ruled that Facebook can be sued in a class-action lawsuit brought by users in Illinois who say the social network improperly used facial recognition technology on their uploaded photographs.

The plaintiffs are three Illinois Facebook users who sued under a state law that says a private entity such as Facebook can’t collect and store a person’s biometric facial information without their written consent. The law, known as the Biometric Information Privacy Act, also says that information that uniquely identifies an individual is, in essence, their property. The law prohibits a private entity from selling, leasing, trading or otherwise profiting from a person’s biometric information.

U.S. District Judge James Donato ruled that the lawsuit can proceed as a class action representing potentially millions of Facebook users in Illinois. The judge is based in San Francisco where the case had been moved at Facebook’s request.

The suit seeks penalties of up to $5,000 for every time a user’s facial image is used without his or her permission. The judge said the potential damages could amount to billions of dollars.

Facebook issued a statement saying it continued to believe that the lawsuit has no merit. It argued in court that individual plaintiffs should have to pursue their legal claims proving that they were “aggrieved” and suffered an actual injury beyond an invasion of privacy.

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WATCH: How To Give A Tiny Superfan A Souvenir — A Drama In 3 Acts

Brett Connolly’s idea had to have seemed simple at the outset.

The little girl had been banging away on the glass during warm-ups before the Washington Capitals’ first round playoff matchup with the Columbus Blue Jackets. What she lacked in age and stature, she clearly made up for in enthusiasm — so why not give the budding superfan a souvenir she could cherish?

So, the Caps winger plucked an extra puck from the corner and glided back, ready to play his part in a grand athletic tradition dating back at least to Mean Joe Greene: Hey, kid — catch!

But the world is not a Coke commercial. Sometimes, it’s got drama all its own.

If at first you don’t succeed… try, try, try again! #CapsJackets#ALLCAPSpic.twitter.com/6S3b5cfXNW

— Washington Capitals (@Capitals) April 15, 2018

In case you haven’t yet, just go ahead and watch the video above. This humble reporter’s words won’t capture the laughter, the tears, the sheer three-act off-Broadway opus that unfolded in the span of a minute in Washington, D.C., on Sunday.

Twice she watched as the puck intended for her went to the taller boys beside her instead, courtesy of some subtle intervention from the men behind her. Those near-misses earned a light reprimand from Connolly, who in a moment turned from benefactor to stern coach, clearly confident his little protege could muster a little more hustle.

Then, he missed twice himself, failing to clear the glass with the third puck.

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Forget for the moment that the game later that night would end in overtime heartbreak for Caps players and fans. Forget for the moment — and here your humble reporter sadly speaks from experience — that the repeated disappointment may actually be fitting training for a lifetime of rooting for the Capitals.

Forget all that. In the story we’re talking about here, at least, the third act promises a happy ending: After one last loft, an adult catches the puck and promptly passes it to the mini-megafan.

And, well, sometimes smiles say more than a thousand scoreboards ever could.

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