May 3, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: Celine Dion's 'Deadpool 2' Music Video, Ron Howard Narrates 'Star Wars' and More

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

Music Video of the Day:

Celine Dion goes all the way to 11 in this amusing music video for “Ashes” off the Deadpool 2 soundtrack:

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Movie Recap of the Day:

Ron Howard, director of Solo: A Star Wars Story, narrates the plot of the first Star Wars as if it were an episode of Arrested Development:

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Franchise Recap of the Day:

Now that you’re upset by all the deaths in Avengers: Infinity War, Dimitreze spotlights all the times a character seemed to die but didn’t through the Marvel Cinematic Universe:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Bing Crosby, who was born on this day in 1903, and a friend on the set of the 1936 musical Western Rhythm on the Range:

Movie Comparison of the Day:

If you think Kingsman: The Golden Circle is just a rehash of Kingsman: The Secret Service, Couch Tomato shows 24 ways they’re different:

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Video Essay of the Day:

The latest video essay from Matt Draper explores the art of paranoia in Carol Reed’s classic film noir The Third Man:

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Cosplay of the Day:

The Greatest Showman had made superhero movie level money, so why wouldn’t there be P.T. Barnum and Phillip Carlysle cosplay to got with it:

?cosplay

The Greatest Showman ??
P.T.Barnum/rocca
Phillp carlyle/??
photo by and pic.twitter.com/m5w3VtbZQO

— and(??)?SCC5/4?2Y50b (@n_and_you05) May 3, 2018

Movie Science of the Day:

Tomorrow is May the Fourth, so here’s another Star Wars item: Kyle Hill scientifically explains how proton torpedoes destroyed the Death Star:

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Fan Art of the Day:

And here we might as well get ready for the occasion with one more Star Wars item: fans using 28,800 push pins to create a Stormtrooper mural (via Geekologie):

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Classic Movie Clip of the Day:

This week is the 50th anniversary of The Odd Couple, so here’s a classic moment illustrating the mismatched dynamic of Oscar and Felix:

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and

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North, South Korea Skip Table Tennis Match Against Each Other And Vow To Become One

The South Korean and North Korean teams receive an ovation Thursday at the World Team Table Tennis Championships in Halmstad, Sweden. The players elected to form a unified Korean team for the tournament’s semifinal round.

TT News Agency/Reuters

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TT News Agency/Reuters

More than four decades after pingpong diplomacy forged ties between the U.S. and China, thawing a relationship had been frozen in hostility, two long-time opponents have again reached across the net for a historic handshake.

Women’s table tennis teams from South Korea and North Korea announced Thursday that they would not compete against each other, as scheduled, in the quarterfinals of the World Team Table Tennis Championships. They told umpires on the court in Halmstad, Sweden, they would skip the match entirely and instead form a unified team to play in the semifinal round.

“This is a big historical decision for both our countries.” Ryu Seung-min, vice president of the Korea Table Tennis Association, said in a statement released by the International Table Tennis Federation, or ITTF.

“This is an important statement to promote peace between our countries through Table Tennis,” he added.

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ITTF President Thomas Weikert said in the statement that the federation’s board of directors did not simply approve the unusual agreement: “The unified team received a standing ovation from the delegates who showed their sign of support to this historic move.”

“It’s a bit of a risk of course as this is not 100 percent according to the rules,” Weikert told Reuters on Thursday, “We all feel happy that we have a small sign in the process of the reunion of Korea.”

Hopeful signs of reunification can be found not just on the pingpong table, but the negotiating table as well.

Late last month North Korean leader Kim Jong Un crossed the border to meet with his South Korean counterpart, Moon Jae-in — the first time a Kim dictator has done so since the 1953 armistice that brought an end to fighting in the Korean War.

Both countries have agreed to stop blaring propaganda at each other across the border through loudspeakers. North Korea has even declared its intention to sync clocks with its southern neighbor, which has operated on a different time zone for decades.

It is also not the first time this year that athletes from the longtime foes have joined up to compete in a unified team: Women’s ice hockey players from North and South took the ice together at the Olympic Games in Pyeongchang.

Still, it has been quite a while since the neighbors have taken up paddles together. The ITTF notes that not since 1991 has a unified Korean team competed in the World Table Tennis Championships, when that team actually won the world title.

Weikert acknowledged that the ITTF had to bend regulations to allow the creation of the new unified Korean team mid- tournament, but he said they had other considerations in mind than just the rulebook.

“It’s more than a sport, it’s more for the peace,” Weikert said. “I think it’s worth it.”

The announcer at the arena in Sweden, when revealing the decision to fans, put the matter more simply.

“It’s not North Korea, it’s not South Korea,” he said as both teams linked arms and beamed for the fans. “It’s just Korea.”

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British Health Services Failed To Send Mammogram Notices And Some Women May Have Died

Britain’s Health and Social Care Secretary Jeremy Hunt arrives at 10 Downing Street in central London on March 13.

Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

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Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

A “computer algorithm failure” in the U.K. kept hundreds of thousands of women from getting notified it was time for a mammogram, potentially shortening the lives of up to 270 women, the National Health Service says.

The U.K. sends letters to women who are due for breast screening, according to British national guidelines, which call for exams every 3 years for women age 50-70. Because of the computer glitch, an estimated 450,000 women in England around the age of 70 did not receive their mammogram invitation.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt announced the “serious failure” on Wednesday, apologizing to the women affected.

My thoughts today with the thousands of women and families affected by failures in our breast cancer screening programme. We will get to the bottom of this so we can stop it happening again.

— Jeremy Hunt (@Jeremy_Hunt) May 2, 2018

“At this stage it is unclear whether any delay in diagnosis will have resulted in any avoidable harm or death,” Hunt said.

An independent review will work to answer that question, but in the meantime, preliminary statistical models show that as many as 270 women may have “had their lives shortened as a result” because of the glitch, Hunt said.

David Spiegelhalter, a British statistician, notes that Hunt’s announcement could be misinterpreted to mean hundreds of women died because of missed mammograms. But the total number likely includes women who have not yet died.

None of that takes away from the fact that the government made a painful mistake, Spiegelhalter said.

“There is no doubting that Jeremy Hunt needed to make a strong apology,” he wrote.

The government says new screening notifications will be sent English women 70-72 who missed their notifications. For older women, for whom the benefit of such screenings is less clear, optional screenings will be available.

The Times reports that the NHS and Public Health England, which administers the screening problem, are pointing fingers at each other, with each group suggesting the other body is to blame for the glitch.

Meanwhile, the Royal College of General Practitioners says “the priority should not be to establish blame” but rather to address the demand for mammograms and prevent such a problem in the future.

In the United States, which does not have a universal health care system like the U.K., there is no equivalent centralized process for notifying women they are due to have a mammogram.

Otis Brawley, the chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, tells NPR that some HMOs and mammogram facilities will send out reminders, but it’s not typical.

“The overwhelming majority of women in the United States, it’s expected they or their physician will remember when it’s time to get a mammogram,” Brawley says.

And the need for screenings in older women, like those affected by the U.K. debacle, is not widely discussed, Brawley says — even though 50 percent of breast cancers are diagnosed in women age 67 or above.

However, as a woman gets older, a breast cancer detected by a mammogram is also less likely to end her life, Brawley notes. Meanwhile, unneeded treatment of such cancers could have serious side effects, as NPR’s Rob Stein reported last year.

That’s why the U.K. stops testing women in their 70s, and why the ACS doesn’t recommend mammograms for women with a life expectancy of 10 years or less.

Brawley also emphasizes that many women diagnosed with cancer find the cancer themselves, and encouraged all women to be aware of any changes in their breasts.

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More Employers Avoid Legal Minefield By Not Asking About Pay History

Asking questions about prior salary can be used by employers to discriminate against women and minorities who earn less, critics say.

Neil Webb/Getty Images/Ikon Images

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Neil Webb/Getty Images/Ikon Images

How much did you make in your previous job?

This dreaded interview question can sound like a trap. Your answer could be used to set your salary below someone else who is doing the same job.

And, critics say, the question can be used by employers to discriminate against women and minorities who earn less.

Employers are allowed to ask this salary question in most parts of the country. But, hoping to narrow racial and gender pay gaps, seven states and several cities and counties have banned employers from asking about prior pay.

Making matters more complex, courts have issued varying interpretations of what’s legal.

This week, for example, a federal district court struck down a Philadelphia law banning questions about prior pay, saying it impinged on free speech. But last month, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Aileen Rizo, who sued her employer for paying her less than her male colleague because of her previous salary. (Still other circuits have ruled in different ways, allowing employers to ask the question.)

Some companies aren’t waiting for the legal questions to settle: Amazon, Wells Fargo, American Express, Cisco, Google and Bank of America all recently changed hiring policies to eliminate questions about pay history.

Part of the appeal is ease and uniformity, says Tom McMullen, a partner at executive advisory firm Korn Ferry. Last year, a survey by his firm found 46 percent of employers said they would adopt policies to comply with the strictest laws in their region.

“We’re seeing a tipping point with more and more of these states and cities coming on board with the ban … ” McMullen says.

He argues the question isn’t necessary; an employer can always ask what a candidate expects to earn, for example. In fact companies eliminating the question can adapt by improving their internal processes and doing more research before making an offer, he says.

That is exactly what has happened at CareHere, a Nashville-based health care provider with 1,000 employees.

Jeremy Tolley, CareHere’s chief people officer, says he hated probing someone’s salary history, because it always felt intrusive and awkward. Ten months ago, the company eliminated that question in response to some of the regulatory changes. Now it sets salary ranges for each job, then shares that information with candidates up front.

“Our recruiters say that it’s easier now because we’re showing our hand to the candidate,” Tolley says. “We’re telling them what our pay range is, right out of the gate. And it’s really improved candidate relations, that’s for sure.”

He says there is another benefit: A bigger, more diverse pool of candidates. For example, job candidates aren’t automatically turned down just because they earn more than the salary range.

“They’re interested in the company’s culture and they’re more interested in flexibility and remote work — all of those things factor in and not just straight compensation,” Tolley says. “So when you eliminate someone just based on simply what they expect to make then you could be eliminating a candidate without good reason.”

Tracey Diamond, a Philadelphia employment attorney, says many of her clients are taking prior pay questions out of their hiring process. But some are sticking to the practice, even as the law changes around them.

“It was important for them to know their applicant salary history coming in,” Diamond says. So those employers have taken the position that until it’s illegal in their jurisdiction, they will continue using it as a tool in assessing their candidates, she says.

It’s a risky policy, she says, and one that may have to change soon.

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Sting And Shaggy On The 'Wonderful Luxury' Of Making Reggae

“I think surprise is always the most important element in all music,” Sting says of his and Shaggy’s new album 44/876.

Salvador Ochoa/Courtesy of the artist

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Salvador Ochoa/Courtesy of the artist

It’s one of this year’s most unlikely collaborations. Shaggy is a Jamaican dance hall star with an unmistakable voice and raunchy hits like 1995’s “Boombastic” and 2000’s “It Wasn’t Me.” Rock star Sting, his partner, is a little more buttoned-up in comparison. But despite being from two different corners of the music world, the pair’s first collaboration album 44/876, out now, is a meeting of the minds — one that’s so unexpected, it works in their favor.

“I think surprise is always the most important element in all music,” Sting says. “You don’t want to just go with people’s expectations. You always want to surprise them … I listen to music expecting a surprise within eight measures.”

“We’re both allergic to boredom,” adds Shaggy.

At first, this team-up was unexpected even to them. Shaggy sent Sting a demo of the track “Don’t Make Me Wait” and they worked on it together in the studio. After enjoying the experience so much, they decided to repeat the process for a full-length album. Together, they knocked out 20 songs in six weeks. But in order to make it happen, Shaggy had to change the way he records.

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“He does music on regular office hours,” the dance hall star says of Sting. “My creative process starts at 2 a.m. with a whole lot of weed.” But Shaggy admits the change to his schedule kept his mind fresh.

The guys have more in common than meets the eye. Sting’s band The Police pulled from reggae and dance hall influences for tracks like “Message in a Bottle.” Both musicians are U.S. immigrants: Shaggy moved from Jamaica to Brooklyn in the 1985 and fought in the first Gulf War in 1991 while Sting moved to the U.S. from his native England more than three decades ago. Though the record is filled with mostly sunny reggae songs, some tracks like “Dreaming in the U.S.A.” voice the artists’ concerns about life in the country today. The men believe that the idea of America, no matter how paradoxical, “is a pure one that needs to be protected.”

“The America of which I fought for, the America of which we fell in love with, the liberties [are threatened],” Shaggy says.

“We’re both allergic to boredom,” Shaggy says.

Salvador Ochoa/Courtesy of the artist

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Salvador Ochoa/Courtesy of the artist

On the 12 songs that made the final cut of the album, it’s obvious that the two worked off each other’s strengths, Sting’s measured reflection balancing out Shaggy’s spontaneous and moral parables.

“Sharing a load on an album is a wonderful luxury,” Sting explains. “I think there’s something in there, although there are serious issues within the music but we’ve chosen to present them in a way that is attractive and optimistic.”

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