May 7, 2018

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Today in Movie Culture: Donald Glover Spoofs 'Star Wars' Race Problem, Imagining Jamie Foxx as Spawn and More

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

Casting Rendering of the Day:

Jamie Foxx is wanted for the lead in Todd McFarlane’s Spawn movie, so BossLogic shows us what that could look like:

Trying out @iamjamiefoxx as #Spawn today pic.twitter.com/odZcyrlgHX

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) May 7, 2018

Star Wars Parody of the Day:

Solo: A Star Wars Story‘s Donald Glover hosted Saturday Night Live and led a sketch spoofing how few black people are in the Star Wars galaxy:

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Remade Trailer of the Day:

Speaking of Solo, Huxley Berg Studios has redone the movie’s trailer in Lego:

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Supercut of the Day:

For Fandor, Luis Azevedo highlights the sounds of the three recent Star Wars installments ahead of Solo:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Amy Heckerling, who turns 64 today, directs Alicia Silverstone on the very colorful set of their 1995 comedy Clueless:

Mashup of the Day:

Classic Western heroes join forces against the “Bug” aliens from Starship Troopers in this terrific mashup by Fabrice Mathieu (via The Movie Waffler):

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Video Essay of the Day:

The latest video essay from Renegade Cut looks at white privilege and fragility and the references to slavery in Jordan Peele’s Get Out:

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VFX Breakdown of the Day:

Insider shows us how makeup effects artist Joel Harlow created Killmonger’s hashmarked skin for Black Panther:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Marvel characters, here’s professional cosplayer Pepper Monster with instructions on making your own replica of Thor’s Stormbreaker axe from Avengers: Infinity War. Click on the link to watch the video on io9.

Watch: This talented cosplayer shows how to make Thor’s new weapon from Avengers: Infinity War.https://t.co/lgTIEHYZkkpic.twitter.com/Wh6N2qTOcV

— io9 (@io9) May 7, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of the release of Dave. Watch the original trailer for the classic political comedy below.

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Reports: Intel Firm Was Hired To Discredit Former Obama Iran Deal Negotiators

An Israeli intelligence firm was reportedly hired last year to compile background dossiers on several former Obama administration officials, including Colin Kahl, seen here in 2012.

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An Israeli intelligence firm was hired last year to do “dirty ops” research on former Obama administration officials who worked on the Iran nuclear deal, according to reports in the U.K.’s Observer and The New Yorker.

The firm is Black Cube, according toThe New Yorker: the same company reportedly hired by Harvey Weinstein in 2016 to investigate the women and journalists he thought might come forward with allegations against him. Black Cube touts that the company is run by “a select group of veterans from the Israeli elite intelligence units.”

The reports differ on who hired Black Cube.

The Observerreports that an Israeli intelligence firm was hired by aides to President Trump, “who contacted private investigators in May last year to ‘get dirt’ on Ben Rhodes, who had been one of Barack Obama’s top national security advisers, and Colin Kahl, deputy assistant to Obama, as part of an elaborate attempt to discredit the deal.”

Sources told the Observer that Trump’s team had contacted the firm just days after he visited Israel last May. “The idea was that people acting for Trump would discredit those who were pivotal in selling the deal, making it easier to pull out of it,” a source told the newspaper.

A Black Cube spokesman told NPR that the firm was never hired by anyone within the Trump administration and said Black Cube’s clients have business rather than political interests. But the company would neither confirm nor deny that a business client had hired the firm to do the work described in the New Yorker and Observer reports.

The White House did not respond to NPR’s request for comment.

In the New Yorker, Ronan Farrow writes that a source told him “it was, in fact, part of Black Cube’s work for a private-sector client pursuing commercial interests related to sanctions on Iran.”

The documents he reviewed, Farrow says,

“show that Black Cube compiled detailed background profiles of several individuals, including Rhodes and Kahl, that featured their addresses, information on their family members, and even the makes of their cars. Black Cube agents were instructed to try to find damaging information about them, including unsubstantiated claims that Rhodes and Kahl had worked closely with Iran lobbyists and were personally enriched through their policy work on Iran (they denied those claims); rumors that Rhodes was one of the Obama staffers responsible for “unmasking” Trump transition officials who were named in intelligence documents (Rhodes denied the claim); and an allegation that one of the individuals targeted by the campaign had an affair.

The campaign is strikingly similar to an operation that Black Cube ran on behalf of Harvey Weinstein, which was reported in The New Yorker last fall. One of Weinstein’s attorneys, David Boies, hired Black Cube to halt the publication of sexual-misconduct allegations against Weinstein. Black Cube operatives used false identities to track women with allegations, and also reporters seeking to expose the story.”

Kahl tells NPR that he first heard he had been a target of the firm’s smear campaign about a week ago, “when reporters who were working on the story for The Observer and Guardian just sent me an email out of the blue, saying that in the course of their previous investigation on Cambridge Analytica, they had uncovered information suggesting that Ben Rhodes and I had been targeted by some firm. … They asked if I had any information about it or ever heard about it, and I hadn’t.”

After reading the Observer story on Saturday, Kahl’s wife remembered suspicious emails she had received in late May or early June last year, from someone who claimed to be with a finance company in the U.K. and wanted information about the Washington, D.C., school their daughter attended.

After a conversation with Farrow on Sunday, “it became clear that the fake company that had reached out to my wife was actually the same fake company that this Israeli firm, Black Cube, had used to try to discredit some of the accusers of Harvey Weinstein,” Kahl says.

Farrow tells NPR that when he was reporting on the allegations against Weinstein, agents using false identities reached out to him, too, at Weinstein’s behest — “in some cases using the same front companies used in the Iran operation.”

Kahl, now a senior fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University, called the targeting “outrageous.”

“There’s the outrage that anybody would target former government officials and try to dig up dirt on them in their personal capacity to try to discredit the policy positions they had in government — that’s just that just awful, period. It’s especially awful that they not only went after me, but that they went after my family,” he says. “So it’s just creepy on a bunch of levels. And then you know even the mere possibility that it might somehow be tied to the current administration, of course, takes it to a stratospheric level of authoritarian creepiness.”

Kahl says he doesn’t know who hired Black Cube or why he and Rhodes were its targets. But he notes that during the same period when the firm was reportedly hired, he and Rhodes were repeatedly the subject of attacks by senior Trump aides.

Last May, former White House aide Sebastian Gorka referred on Fox News to “the Ben Rhodes/Colin Kahl nexus.” A month later, a senior Trump official toldThe Washington Free Beacon that Rhodes and Kahl “provide marching orders to a broader group of people that are associated with the broader [Democratic Party] Podesta-Clinton network.”

And Kahl notes one thing that makes him an odd target for spies: He is no longer working in government.

“I mean it happens in the intel world,” he says. “Intelligence communities spy on foreign officials. It’s, I think, rarer for them to spy on former government officials. And so one of the weird things about this is not that there would be intelligence collected on officials of the Obama administration, but why that intelligence would be collected on them after we left the Obama administration.”

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Decorated Taekwondo Athlete Steven Lopez Temporarily Barred Amid Assault Claims

Steven Lopez represents the United States at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

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Editor’s note: This story includes a description of a sexual act.

Steven Lopez, the most decorated taekwondo athlete in history, has been temporarily barred from representing the United States on the international stage.

The 39-year-old has won three Olympic medals — including two golds — and five World Championships. At least five women have accused him and his brother Jean Lopez of sexual misconduct.

The U.S. Center for SafeSport, a nonprofit tasked with investigating abuse across Olympic sports, has suspended him pending further investigation. Lopez was unavailable for comment.

In a statement to NPR, USA Taekwondo says it will “fully enforce this immediate suspension” and that it “fully supports the important work of the U.S. Center for SafeSport and respects its exclusive jurisdiction over sexual misconduct matters.”

Lopez’s brother Jean, a renowned coach, was permanently banned by the organization in April. He is appealing the decision.

The decisions by U.S. SafeSport affect only the brothers’ eligibility to participate in the sport under the U.S. banner. They do not amount to a criminal indictment.

Steven Lopez’s suspension comes just days after four former elite taekwondo athletes filed suit in the U.S. District Court for Colorado alleging that the Lopez brothers had sexually assaulted them. They are not the only people accusing the Lopezes of misconduct. As NPR reported last Friday, Nina Zampetti — who started training with Steven Lopez when she was 8 years old — says that when she was 14, and Lopez 22, he had her perform oral sex on him.

The four plaintiffs in the lawsuit are suing not just the Lopezes but also USA Taekwondo and the U.S. Olympic Committee. They allege that the organizations knew about the Lopezes’ behavior and failed to protect them. Moreover, because some of the alleged assaults happened abroad, they argue the organizations are guilty of sex trafficking.

Women who had leveled allegations against Lopez were gratified by the news. “I’m glad for this,” said Gabby Joslin, who trained with Steven and Jean Lopez and alleges she was assaulted by both men. “Steven needs to be away from potential victims.” Joslin says in the lawsuit that she was first assaulted by Steven Lopez while being coached by him at a tournament in Germany.

Mandy Meloon, who originally made a formal complaint against the Lopezes to the USA Taekwondo in 2006 and is also a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said she was pleased with the suspension but wishes it had come earlier. “Both of the brothers need to be charged with crimes,” Meloon adds.

Ronda Sweet, who served on the board of USA Taekwondo from 2006-2010 and has long argued that the organization needs to take a tougher line on sexual assault, was ebullient about the decision. “This is a historic day,” she says. “But it’s just a start.” She says other coaches need to be investigated as well.

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Thomas Mapfumo, 'Lion Of Zimbabwe,' Returns From Exile With Triumphant Homecoming

Thomas Mapfumo, holding a copy of a July 1984 edition of a magazine featuring his cover story. After 18 years in self-imposed exile, one of Zimbabwe’s most popular and outspoken musicians, has returned home.

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After a 14-year absence, Thomas Mapfumo and The Blacks Unlimited rocked until dawn at Glamis Arena, an open-air stadium packed with some 20,000 fans of three generations. Mapfumo — Mukanya to his fans, a reference to his totem, the baboon — moved his family out of the country in 2000, to escape turmoil and harassment under the regime of Robert Mugabe. Mugabe and members of his ZANU-PF party were frequent targets in Mapfumo’s barbed songs and public statements. But since Mugabe’s military-enabled ouster last November, efforts have been underway to get Mapfumo back to the country and in front of the audience that loves him most.

In Harare, Zimbabwe, on Saturday, April 28, it happened.

“I thought maybe I wasn’t going to be able to come back here while I was still alive,” mused Mapfumo the day before the big show. “But by the grace of God, I’m here.”

Mapfumo last performed in Zimbabwe in April, 2004. For fans of an artist who once prowled the stages of Harare four or five nights a week, it’s been a long dry spell. In the meantime, a whole generation of Zimbabweans has come of age knowing his music mostly from their parents’ CD players and in public transport vans, or kombies. But it was clear from advance ticket sales that the interest in this historic concert was intense.

Mapfumo pulled together an all-Zimbabwean ensemble of 17 musicians and dancers, coming from Zimbabwe, South Africa, U.K. and his current home in Oregon. Over two days, the band rehearsed songs from throughout Mapfumo’s 40-year repertoire. During his self-exile, Mapfumo has performed in the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Mozambique and South Africa, working with a skeleton crew from Oregon and musicians he knows in these locations. Bands have rarely exceeded eight musicians. So this virtual orchestra felt like a return to The Blacks Unlimited glory days of the late ’80s and ’90s. There were a few old-timers in the lineup for this show, but mostly the band was made up of much younger musicians.

Thomas Mapfumo performing in Harare, Zimbabwe for the first time since 2004 on April 28, 2018.

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“It’s so weird,” Mapfumo notes with a laugh. “You start thinking of the old guys and now you see all these new faces. Those are our daughters. But they know the music.”

A return show for Mapfumo has been rumored so many times that it had become hard to believe it would actually happen — and there were hitches that might have derailed even this one. Late advance payments from the promoters, rumors that Mugabe money was behind the show (unfounded) and squabbles over filming rights — as the band took the stage for sound check, it felt a bit dream-like, even to its members.

“I keep on pinching myself. ‘Is this real?,'” says lead guitarist Gilbert Zvamaida, who has spent years in exile with Mapfumo in Oregon. “I was excited at the rehearsal, now this is the real thing, I’m kind of nervous. I’m a perfectionist by nature.” That shows. Zvamaida’s entrancing interplay with former Blacks Unlimited guitarist Zivai Guveya, now based in the U.K., was a treat to behold throughout the rehearsals and the concert.

The music began soon after dark, with sets by four opening acts, including another veteran of Zimbabwe music, Oliver Mtukudzi, and Winky D, one of the top acts in Zim-Dancehall, the country’s dominant youth genre these days. Just after 2 a.m., The Blacks Unlimited took the stage. The mood was electric.

Mapfumo appeared in a black suit, orange-tinted glasses, and a quasi-top hat, behind which his three-foot dreadlocks trailed down his back. “Zimbabwe!” he crowed to roars of adulation. The artist hardly spoke as he led the band through a no-nonsense set, full of lengthy renditions of classic and new songs. At times the crowd sang along, ecstatic.

Mapfumo sourced Zimbabwean musicians from all over the world, young and old, to perform with him.

Banning Eyre/NPR

At one point, Oliver Mtukudzi came on stage and danced with the band, to Mapfumo’s evident delight. Fans had often cast these two as rivals. But in fact, they have long been good friends, and this public showing of mutual admiration went down well with the crowd, perhaps a sign of what they’d like to see from their squabbling politicians.

The show ended only when the sky began to lighten. Some had wondered whether 72-year-old Mukanya still had that kind of stamina. But this and all other doubts were put to rest. The Monday morning papers contained raves, summarized in the headline “Mukanya Delivers.”

A newspaper's front page proclaimed Mapfumo's return a success.

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“It was magnificent,” noted longtime Zimbabwean music writer Fred Zindi. “We had not seen Thomas in Zimbabwe for almost 15 years, and suddenly he comes with the same bang he had in the ’80s and the ’90s. That was really cool. The biggest show I’ve seen compared to last night’s one was Paul Simon and before that, Bob Marley. Bob Marley was a free show, and the crowd was almost the same as last night — and last night, people were paying $20 minimum.”

Particularly encouraging was the preponderance of young fans in the crowd. These are the people Mapfumo wants to see lead the country, and the sooner the better. “For 37 years, we have failed,” said Mapfumo referring to his generation writ large. “When we started, I was a young man, but now I’m seventy years old, and we haven’t done anything to improve our situation. So I’m asking them politely: Give the youth of today the chance to run the country.”

The young crowd that showed up in numbers for this show included many who had never experienced a live Mapfumo show. During the past 14 years, state-supervised radio stations have played his music only selectively, and state press has gone out of its way to paint the artist as a misguided has-been. So why this big youth turnout?

Attendees during Mapfumo’s concert. The beloved singer took the stage at 2 a.m.

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One of Mapfumo’s former managers, Cuthbert Chiromo, has an answer. “When you’re growing up, you’ve got your brother or your uncle or whoever, and you’re exposed to what they are listening to. At home, obviously, the king in the house, he’s playing Thomas Mapfumo,” Chiromo says. Indeed, many young fans in the crowd told stories of being influenced by their Mapfumo-obsessed older relatives. It seems that the songs themselves, with their rich blend of tradition and modernity, and their trenchant lyrics, are central to Mapfumo’s staying power over his extended absence from the country.

One of the organizers, Blessing Evanvavas, seemed awed by what he and the young promoters of the show had achieved. “Just him coming to Zimbabwe, it was a very big political statement. It silenced a lot of critics, and it changed a lot of dynamics in the political circles in this country.”

Mapfumo himself was deeply gratified to sing again in his homeland.

“All I would like to say is I would like to thank everyone who supported me yesterday and those who are still supporting me today,” he told the crowd, “I’m not fighting to be a leader of this country, but I want to stand with the poor people. That’s where I belong. My message is still the same. It hasn’t changed.”

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Reversing An Overdose Isn't Complicated, But Getting The Antidote Can Be

The Surgeon General recommends more Americans carry naloxone, the opioid overdose antidote.

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Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media

A few months ago, Kourtnaye Sturgeon helped save someone’s life. She was driving in downtown Indianapolis when she saw people gathered around a car on the side of the road. Sturgeon pulled over and a man told her there was nothing she could do: Two men had overdosed on opioids and appeared to be dead.

“I kind of recall saying, ‘No man, I’ve got Narcan,’ ” she says, referring to the brand- name version of the opioid overdose antidote, naloxone. “Which sounds so silly, but I’m pretty sure that’s what came out.”

Sturgeon sprayed a dose of the drug up the driver’s nose, and waited for it to take effect. About a minute later, she says, the paramedics showed up.

“As they were walking towards us, the driver started slowly moving,” she says. Both people survived.

Sturgeon had the drug with her because she works for Overdose Lifeline, a non-profit devoted to distributing naloxone, but many bystanders would be unprepared to help.

Last month, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams issued an advisory urging more Americans to learn to use naloxone, and carry it with them in case they encounter someone who has overdosed.

With the increase in overdoses nationwide, the advisory suggests that lay responders — people who may witness an overdose before police or EMS arrive — can play a critical role in saving lives.

But if you’re not a medical professional, getting a dose of naloxone can be difficult. It is a prescription drug and normally a doctor or nurse would have to directly prescribe it for the person at risk of overdosing. Corey Davis, an attorney for the National Health Law Program, says that creates a barrier for people with addiction.

“A lot of people at risk of an overdose don’t have contact with a medical provider or they’re afraid because of stigma,” he says.

To broaden access, every state and Washington, D.C., have passed laws making it easier for friends and family members or bystanders to get and use naloxone. Just how easy it is still depends on your state, or even the pharmacy you go to.

Davis says most states allow something called third-party prescribing, which lets doctors prescribe naloxone to someone who knows the person at risk of an overdose. And most states have also passed some kind of Good Samaritan law providing legal immunity for people who administer the drug or call 911.

Davis says another type of law allows a kind of prescription called a standing order.

“But instead of having a person’s name on it, it has a group of people,” says Davis.

A standing order could apply, for example, to anyone who takes opioid painkillers, or suffers from addiction. Or, Davis says, “Anybody who might be in a position to assist someone, which unfortunately, today means essentially everybody.”

In his home state of Indiana, Jerome Adams signed a statewide standing order in 2016, while serving as the state’s health commissioner. It allows pharmacies, local health departments or nonprofits that register with the state and follow certain requirements to dispense the drug to anyone who requests it.

But two years later, only about half of Indiana pharmacies are registered, and local advocates say many people, even some pharmacists, are still unaware of the law.

Even if you understand the laws regulating naloxone in your state — and you feel comfortable asking for it at the pharmacy counter — there’s still the cost, which has gone up in recent years. Two pharmacies near WFYI in Indianapolis, stock naloxone. One charged $80 for two doses of the generic form of the drug. The other charged $95 for two doses of Narcan, the brand-name version.

“It’s expensive,” says Brad Ray, a researcher at Indiana University’s School of Public and Environmental Affairs. “People who are users are scraping money together to buy drugs. They’re not prepared to buy naloxone with that money.”

Several U.S. Senators have signed on to a letter urging Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar to negotiate with drug companies to lower the price of naloxone.

For people who can’t afford the drug, Ray says health departments and nonprofits can help. Laws in many states allow these organizations to dispense naloxone to lay responders.

Indiana’s health department used federal and state funds to purchase nearly 14,000 naloxone kits since 2016, the state reports. The state distributes those free doses through county health departments. But nearly half of Indiana counties didn’t request kits. And the majority of the kits went to first responders.

Local health departments, Ray says, need to work harder to get naloxone to people who might use it. People who use drugs, after all, may not feel comfortable going to the government for naloxone.

“Getting it in the hands of users — that’s the trick we need to figure out,” Ray says.

Corey Davis says there is one change that could really help. The Food and Drug Administration or Congress could make naloxone an over-the-counter medication to make it easier to access, and maybe cheaper. FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb has the authority to do so, Davis says, but so far he has not.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, WFYI, Side Effects Public Media and Kaiser Health News.

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