Obamas Sign Content Deal With Netlfix, Form 'Higher Ground Productions'

President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama wait to greet Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and his wife Agnese Landini for a State Dinner at the White House in Washington in 2016. Netflix says that it has reached a deal with Barack and Michelle Obama to produce material for the streaming service.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
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Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
Former President Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama have signed a multi-year deal to form their own production company and provide content to Netflix.
Netflix in a statement said the Obamas would “produce a diverse mix of content – including docu-series, documentaries and features” under their imprint, Higher Ground Productions.
“Michelle and I are so excited to partner with Netflix – we hope to cultivate and curate the talented, inspiring, creative voices who are able to promote greater empathy and understanding between peoples, and help them share their stories with the entire world,” the former president said in the Netflix statement.
“Barack and I have always believed in the power of storytelling to inspire us, to make us think differently about the world around us, and to help us open our minds and hearts to others,” Michelle Obama said. “Netflix’s unparalleled service is a natural fit for the kinds of stories we want to share, and we look forward to starting this exciting new partnership.”
Worldwide, Netflix has 125 million subscribers.
According to Variety, “It is unknown how much the Obamas’ Netflix agreement … is worth. In March, Penguin Random House signed the couple to a joint book deal that pays them a reported $65 million for their respective memoirs.”
Rumors of the deal first surfaced in March in The New York Times. At the time, the newspaper reported that the former president did not intend to use the shows produced “to directly respond to President Trump or conservative critics,” but instead to produce “shows that highlight inspirational stories.”
The Associated Press reports:
“The Obamas can be expected to participate in some of the programming onscreen, said a person familiar with the deal, not authorized to talk publicly about it, on condition of anonymity.
… The type of people that Obama – like other presidents – brought forward as guests at his State of the Union addresses would likely provide fodder for the kinds of stories they want to tell.”
Today in Movie Culture: Hundreds of 'Deadpool 2' Easter Eggs, 'Solo: A Star Wars' Musical Spoof and More
Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:
Easter Eggs of the Day:
Now that you’ve seen Deadpool 2, it’s time to see all the 600 Easter eggs, cameos and other goodies humorously tracked by Mr. Sunday Movies:
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Director Commentary of the Day:
Speaking of Deadpool 2, here’s a scene from the movie with commentary from David Leitch for the New York Times:
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Poster Parody of the Day:
With Deadpool 2 involving time travel, BossLogic created a new poster paying parodic homage to Back to the Future Part II:
Let’s do dis time ting! @VancityReynolds @deadpoolmovie @TheRealStanLee #Deadpool2 pic.twitter.com/jiGizxHy2m
— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) May 21, 2018
Movie and Music Parody of the Day:
Nerdist parodies both Donald Glover’s part in Solo: A Star Wars Story and his Childish Gambino tunes “Freaks and Geeks,” “3005” and “Redbone”:
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Musical Parody of the Day:
Tina Fey, writer and co-star of Mean Girls, starred in a new Saturday Night Live sketch where she tries to insert herself into the Mean Girls Broadway adaptation:
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Vintage Poster of the Day:
Legendary movie poster designer Bill Gold died yesterday, and since today is the 30th anniversary of the Cannes premiere of Bird, here’s Gold’s iconic poster for the movie:
Actor in the Spotlight:
IMDb’s No Small Parts chronicles the TV and movie career of Fahrenheit 451 and Black Panther star Michael B. Jordan:
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Supercut of the Day:
Disney honored Prince Harry and Meghan Markle with this supercut of weddings and fancy dance scenes from their animated classics:
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Cosplay of the Day:
Speaking of Disney animated classics, here’s some exceptional Ariel from The Little Mermaid cosplay:
Some more Ariel for you today ??????? #disney #cosplay pic.twitter.com/H6mKj0CJC6
— Samantha (@SamHModel) May 18, 2018
Classic Trailer of the Day:
This week is the 30th anniversary of the release of Ron Howard’s Willow. Watch the original trailer for the classic fantasy movie below.
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Another Cause of Doctor Burnout? Being Forced To Give Immigrants Unequal Care

Undocumented immigrants often can’t get routine dialysis care and have to wait until their condition worsens to get emergency care.
Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media
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Jake Harper/Side Effects Public Media
One patient’s death changed the course of Dr. Lilia Cervantes’ career. The patient, Cervantes says, was a woman from Mexico with kidney failure who repeatedly visited the emergency room for more than three years. In that time, her heart had stopped more than once, and her ribs were fractured from CPR. The woman finally decided to stop treatment because the stress was too much for her and her two young children. Cervantes says she died soon after.
Kidney failure, or end-stage renal disease, is treatable with routine dialysis every two to three days. Without regular dialysis, which removes toxins from the blood, the condition is life threatening: Patients’ lungs can fill up with fluid, and they’re at risk of cardiac arrest if their potassium level gets too high.
But Cervantes’ patient was undocumented. She didn’t have access to government insurance, so she had to show up at the hospital in a state of emergency to receive dialysis.
Cervantes, an internal medicine specialist and a professor medicine at University of Colorado in Denver, says the woman’s death inspired her to focus more on research. “I decided to transition so I could begin to put the evidence together to change access to care throughout the country,” she says.
Cervantes says emergency-only dialysis is harmful to patients: The risk of death for someone receiving dialysis on an emergency basis is 14 times higher than someone getting standard care, she found in research published in February. Cervantes’ newest study, published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, shows these cyclical emergencies harm health care providers, too. “It’s very, very distressing,” she says. “We not only see the suffering in patients, but also in their families.”
There are an estimated 6,500 undocumented immigrants in the U.S. with end-stage kidney disease. Many of them can’t afford treatment or private insurance, and are barred from Medicare or Medicaid. This means the only way they can get dialysis is in the emergency room.
Cervantes and her colleagues interviewed 50 healthcare providers in Denver and Houston and identified common concerns among them. The researchers found that providing undocumented patients with suboptimal care because of their immigration status contributes to professional burnout and moral distress.
“Clinicians are physically and emotionally exhausted from this type of care,” she says.
Cervantes says the relationships clinicians build with their regular patients conflicts with the treatment they have to provide, which might include denying care to a visibly ill patient, because their condition was not critical enough to warrant emergency treatment.
“You may get to know a patient and their family really well,” she says. Providers may go to a patient’s restaurant, or to family gatherings such as barbacoas or quinceañeras.
“Then the following week, you might be doing CPR on this same patient because they maybe didn’t come in soon enough, or maybe ate something that was too high in potassium,” she says.
Other providers, Cervantes says, report detaching from their patients because of the suffering they witness. “I’ve known people that have transitioned to different parts of the hospital because this is difficult,” she says.
Melissa Anderson, a nephrologist and assistant professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis who was not involved in Cervantes’ study, says Cervantes research matches her own experience. She says that when she worked at a safety net hospital in Indianapolis, patients would come to the ER when they felt sick. But some hospitals would not provide dialysis until their potassium was dangerously high.
To avoid being turned away when their potassium level was too low, she says, patients in the waiting room would drink orange juice, which contains potassium, putting themselves at risk of cardiac arrest.
“That’s Russian roulette,” Anderson says. “That was hard for all of us to watch.”
Anderson eventually stopped working at that hospital, and like Cervantes, has also worked on research and advocacy efforts to change how undocumented immigrants with kidney failure are treated. “I practically had to take a class in immigration to understand what’s going on,” she says. “Physicians just don’t understand it, and we shouldn’t have to.”
Providers in Cervantes’ study also worried that these avoidable emergencies strain hospital resources — clogging emergency departments when undocumented patients could simply receive dialysis outside the hospital — and about the cost: Emergency-only hemodialysis costs nearly four times as much as standard dialysis, according to a 2007 study from researchers at Baylor College of Medicine.
Those costs are often covered by taxpayers through emergency Medicaid, which pays for emergency treatment for low-income individuals without insurance. In a study published in Clinical Nephrology last year, Anderson and her colleagues found that at one hospital in Indianapolis, the state paid significantly more for emergency-only dialysis than it did for more routine care.
Areeba Jawed, a nephrologist in Detroit who has performed her own survey research into this issue, said many providers don’t understand how much undocumented immigrants actually contribute to society, while receiving few of the societal benefits. “A lot of people don’t know that undocumented immigrants do pay taxes,” she says. “There’s a lot of misinformation.”
“I think there are better options,” says Jawed, who has treated undocumented patients there and in Indianapolis.
To work around this problem, some hospitals simply provide charity care to cover regular dialysis for undocumented patients. But Cervantes argues that a better solution is a policy fix. States are allowed by the federal government to define what qualifies as an emergency.
“Several states, like Arizona, New York and Washington, have modified their emergency Medicaid programs to include standard dialysis for undocumented immigrants,” she says.
Illinois covers routine dialysis and even passed a law allowing undocumented immigrants to receive kidney transplants, she points out.
“Ideally, we could come up with federal language and make this the national treatment strategy for undocumented immigrants,” Cervantes says.
Ultimately, Cervantes says providers don’t want to treat undocumented patients differently. “At the end of the day, clinicians become providers because they want to provide care for all patients,” she says.
This story was produced in partnership with Side Effects Public Media, a news collaborative covering public health.
For Vegas Oddsmakers, Home Team's Fairy Tale Season Becomes A Frightfest

Marc-Andre Fleury, winner of multiple Stanley Cups with the Pittsburgh Penguins, had been cast off to Vegas when a younger player took his spot as starting goalie. Now in goal for the Golden Knights, he’s four wins away from adding his name yet again to the Cup.
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Jason Halstead/Getty Images
Updated at 1:30 a.m. ET
“How good can they be? Spoiler alert: Not Very Good.”
That was one hockey writer’s analysis of the Vegas Golden Knights back in July, not long after the expansion draft in which the brand-new franchise picked its roster from the dregs of other NHL teams. In other words, roughly 10 months before this Not Very Good ™ team (spoiler alert!) made the Stanley Cup final on Sunday.
But we don’t mean to single out one unfortunate prediction here. In the days immediately following the draft, the unfortunate predictions came hot and heavy.
There was this one, which, after the draft, opened with what it called “the obvious”: “We knew the Knights would be bad, but no one believed the Knights would be this bad.” Then this one — headlined “Wow The Golden Knights Are Going To Be Bad” — which predicted “this team isn’t going to have more than a dozen regulation wins.” (They won 51 games in the regular season, by the way, 37 in regulation.)
There were so many, in fact, here are some tweets to save us all a little time.
Remember when we all thought the Golden Knights were going to be better than expected? Yeah, nope.
— Scott Wheeler (@scottcwheeler) June 22, 2017
Wow the Golden Knights are gonna be so, so bad.
— Andrew Berkshire (@AndrewBerkshire) June 22, 2017
Now, there’s no shame in getting the future wrong. Goodness knows your humble reporter would have, if asked for an opinion on the Golden Knights at the time.
The point is just that, with some rare exceptions, virtually no one was bullish on this team coming into the season. And frankly, they would have been a little mad if they were: Before the Golden Knights — or, as their sometimes known, the #GoldenMisfits — the past four expansion teams to join the NHL all finished comfortably seated in the basement of their division.
Made sense, then, that the odds of Vegas winning the Cup at the start of the season hovered around 200-to-1. Jeff Sherman, an oddsmaker at Westgate, noted that at one point his Las Vegas casino had the team’s odds at 500-to-1.
Highest Stanley Cup odds on @GoldenKnights we had was 500/1 during preseason and before game 1 of the regular season … 13 tickets ranging from $10 to $60
— Jeff Sherman (@golfodds) May 20, 2018
Of course, those odds don’t make a whole lot less sense months later, when seen in the harsh light of May — and when, with Vegas four wins away from the Cup, a bettor’s $60 last year stands a decent chance of turning into $30,000 next week. Some bets reportedly stand to pay out at $120,000.
What was once an act of faith (or madness) by an overeager fan could now be a nice car paid in cash. Or, if the bettor happened to be a fan of the Washington Capitals, which still has a chance to beat Vegas for the Cup, that preseason Hail Mary ticket could now seem like a divinely ordained test of loyalty.
Either way, Forbes points out that while casinos stand the chance of staggering losses, perhaps we shouldn’t be weeping too much for their plight.
“Hockey betting has long been at the bottom of the barrel for major sports in Nevada. This year, however, hockey betting is up 35% or so across the board,” Jim Murphy of sportsbettingexperts.com told the publication. “The Golden Knights have also created a lot more traffic in casinos which not only helps betting revenue in other sports but in other areas of casino operations—slot play, food and beverage.”