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Today in Movie Culture: Imagining Jake Gyllenhaal as Mysterio, Designing the 'Annihilation' Creature and More

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

Casting Rendering of the Day:

Jake Gyllenhaal is in talks to play Mysterio in the next Spider-Man movie, so BossLogic shows us what that might look like:

Wanted to make a quick one today for the post. #mysterio Personally I’m still not too sure on this role for him, he is a dope actor and would love to see Jake in a role he could dive deep into. That being said, if they do the character justice writing wise then I’m all for it. pic.twitter.com/5H7jwSy3iM

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) May 22, 2018

Creature Design Breakdown of the Day:

See how the terrifying bear creature from Annihilation came to be, from design to effects work, in this video from /Film:

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Remade Trailer of the Day:

Brick Force Studios redid the final Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom in Lego:

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Easter Eggs of the Day:

Here’s another look at all the Easter eggs and references in Deadpool 2, this one from ScreenCrush:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Richard Benjamin, who turns 80 today, directs Peter O’Toole in his Oscar-nominated performance on the set of the 1982 movie My Favorite Year:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Fandor looks at the career of Spike Lee in honor of his success with BlacKkKlansman at the Cannes Film Festival:

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

For the 10th anniversary of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, CineFix shares a bunch of trivia about the Indiana Jones franchise:

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Truthful Marketing of the Day:

In honor of this week’s release of Solo: A Star Wars Story, Honest Trailers takes down the Star Wars Holiday Special and other spin-offs:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Wallace Shawn was at Motor City Comic Con over the weekend and found his old friends from The Princess Bride:

INCONCEIVABLE !

Photo : https://t.co/6sfUmGd5SB #MotorCityComicCon #PrincessBride pic.twitter.com/Oz6lowUhA6

— Ejen @ Fanime 2018 (@cosplayamerica) May 22, 2018

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Terry Gilliam’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Watch the original trailer for the classic movie below.

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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.”

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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.

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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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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.”

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U.S., China Step Back From Trade Dispute

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says the U.S. has put a trade war with China on hold, even as the administration races to renegotiate NAFTA. Mnuchin says the U.S., Mexico and Canada remain far apart.



DON GONYEA, HOST:

To policymaking now, where President Trump is hoping to fundamentally alter U.S. trade relationships. Trump met last week with one of China’s top economic officials, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says they made, quote, “very meaningful progress” towards heading off a trade war. Trump had threatened to impose steep tariffs on Chinese goods, and Beijing warned of retaliation with tariffs on U.S. exports. But now it looks like those tensions might be easing. Mnuchin told Fox News Sunday the two countries are working on a framework of a broader economic deal.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

STEVEN MNUCHIN: We’re putting the trade war on hold. So right now, we are – we have agreed to put the tariffs on hold while we try to execute the framework.

GONYEA: NPR’s Scott Horsley joins us now. Scott, welcome.

SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: Good to be with you, Don.

GONYEA: Scott, this news follows two days of intense trade negotiations between the U.S. and China here in Washington. What did those talks produce?

HORSLEY: There is a tentative agreement, Don, to boost China’s imports of U.S. ag products and energy products, but there was no firm commitment from China. There’s no specified dollar amount. And while there was some discussion of greater intellectual property protection, there was no firm agreement from China to change its ways and stop forcing U.S. companies to share their technological know-how as the price of doing business in China. Now, that was the issue, not the trade deficit that was ostensibly the rationale behind the U.S. threat to hit China with those steep tariffs.

GONYEA: So if we have this cease-fire, is that a victory for the Trump administration at this point?

HORSLEY: Well, the White House will certainly try to spin it that way. And it is good for energy exporters and for U.S. farmers – the farmers who had been bearing the brunt of the trade skirmish thus far. But it doesn’t really make a meaningful dent in that trade deficit that the president’s always complaining about.

Just to give you some perspective, Don, the U.S. exports just over $20 billion a year in farm products to China. Oil and gas exports might add another $10 billion a year. So if you doubled energy exports, and if you boosted farm exports by 40 percent, as Secretary Mnuchin has talked about doing, you’d be shaving maybe $15, $20 billion a year off the trade deficit – nowhere near the $200 billion reduction that the president says he wants.

Now, China would be happy to spend a little extra money rather than making more fundamental changes in its economic model. Critics worry that China’s getting off too easily. Scott Paul is one of those critics. He represents a consortium of steel companies and the steelworkers union.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

SCOTT PAUL: I don’t think that achieving some sort of a one-off agreement where China agrees to buy more U.S. products in sensitive industries like agriculture or aerospace is a substitute for getting lasting, binding commitments for China to end its myriad unfair trade practices.

HORSLEY: Paul and other trade skeptics would like to see the administration drive a harder bargain here.

GONYEA: Does China have some extra leverage because the U.S. needs them to help out on the whole North Korea nuclear talks?

HORSLEY: Oh, absolutely. You know, China is North Korea’s No. 1 trading partner, and they’ve been a key player in putting maximum pressure on Kim Jong Un, bringing him to the bargaining table. Trump needs China’s help to keep the heat on Kim, and the president’s acknowledged he’s willing to give China more favorable trade terms in exchange for that cooperation.

GONYEA: Let’s switch gears to this continent – NAFTA – the North American Free Trade Agreement. There are talks going on there driven by White House discontent with the existing trade relationship with Mexico and Canada. They’re trying to negotiate a new NAFTA. They missed a deadline last week. What’s going on?

HORSLEY: This was a deadline set by House Speaker Paul Ryan, who says the administration needs to put something on paper quickly if they want a vote this year. Both Mexico and Canada have said they think it’s possible to strike a deal in the near future. But Trump’s trade representative says the parties are still nowhere near striking an agreement. That means any NAFTA agreement, if it happens, might float off into 2019. And, depending on what happens in the midterm elections, we could be looking at a very different Congress that’s set to review that.

GONYEA: That is NPR’s White House correspondent Scott Horsley.

Thanks, Scott.

HORSLEY: You’re welcome.

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Justify Wins Preakness, Keeping Triple Crown Hopes Alive

Justify, ridden by Mike Smith, wins the 143rd Preakness Stakes in the mud and fog Saturday to capture the second leg of the Triple Crown in Baltimore.

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Dense fog and a soggy track blurred ideal viewing conditions, but there was no mistaking Justify’s run to victory in the 143rd running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore.

Entering the race with overwhelming odds, the undefeated favorite, ridden by jockey Mike Smith, shot out of Post 7 with a clean start as he had in Kentucky. Smith takes his second Preakness win.

While Justify’s victory hardly came as a shock, don’t call it an easy win. The favorite, who had been recovering from a bruised hind foot, stayed nose-to-nose with trailing Derby runner-up Good Magic for the majority of the race.

In the end, though, Bravazo placed second and long shot Tenfold finished third, reports The Associated Press:

“Justify went the 1 3/16th-mile race in 1 minute, 55.93 seconds as the 2-5 favorite, beating Bravazo by a half-length, with Tenfold in third by a neck and Good Magic fading to fourth another neck back.”

“It was a nail-biter,” Justify’s trainer Bob Baffert told NBC Sports. “They put it to us. It was like they had their own private match race (but I’m) so happy we got it done. Such a great horse to handle all that pressure and get it done.”

Baffert is now one race closer to taking his second Triple Crown. Baffert led American Pharoah to Triple Crown victory in 2015, ending a 37-year-drought in series champions.

Justify’s next stop: the final jewel of the Triple Crown at Belmont Stakes in New York on June 9.

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Proposed Abortion Restrictions Would Hit Young Patients Hardest

Don Gonyea talks to Kaiser Health News’ Julie Rovner about the Trump administration’s decision to revive a rule that cuts off federal family planning money from organizations that provide abortions.



DON GONYEA, HOST:

A new proposal on abortion from the Trump administration has health care providers and patients looking for answers on what it means for them. The proposal would ban Title X federal funds from going to any organization that provides abortions. It also stops those federal dollars from going to places that refer patients to abortion providers. Abortion rights groups are calling it a gag order. Other people see it as a campaign promise from the president being fulfilled, particularly because it would affect funding for Planned Parenthood. It’s another example of health care and politics coming together, which is why we have called Julie Rovner. She’s the chief Washington correspondent for Kaiser Health News. Julie, thanks for joining us.

JULIE ROVNER: Thanks for having me.

GONYEA: So, what exactly are these Title X funds, and why are they so controversial?

ROVNER: Well, Title X is Title X of the Public Health Service Act. It is the federal family planning program, and it provides money to organizations to provide not just family planning birth control but also screening for cancer and sexually transmitted diseases to both men and women. It’s been around since 1970. That was three years before abortion was made legal nationwide. So none of the funds from the family planning program have ever been allowed to be used to provide abortions.

GONYEA: OK, so the Reagan administration – and this is back in the 1980s – it proposed a similar rule that the Supreme Court did uphold. Why is this rule, today, being proposed again, and what does the previous decision mean for this particular moment?

ROVNER: Well, the rule that was proposed in the late 1980s was fought in court. As you mentioned, the Supreme Court upheld it. It went through the first Bush administration. By the time all of the court fights were finished, President Clinton had taken office and he canceled it, so it went away. And this is the first time that there is an effort to bring back this rule. And the goal, of course, is to to separate Planned Parenthood, the organization, from the Title X family planning program because Planned Parenthood uses nonfederal funds to refer for abortion and to promote abortion and to provide abortions. And that makes anti-abortion groups see red.

GONYEA: OK. So will this make it harder to get an abortion?

ROVNER: It is already hard to get an abortion. There are fewer and fewer abortion providers. The big question with these regulations is, will it make it harder to get family planning? The administration says that these rules, which we haven’t seen yet, would not take any money away from the program. But the question is, if Planned Parenthood can no longer participate, are there enough other providers to fill in the gaps in areas – particularly more remote, rural areas. Sometimes, Planned Parenthood is the only provider of these types of services, so it’s not clear what would happen as a result of that.

GONYEA: This is still a proposed rule change – proposed. When does it become official? What’s the process there?

ROVNER: We haven’t even seen the proposal. They’ve only sent it to the Office of Management and Budget. So when we see it, it will be a proposed rule. There will be a time for taking comments, and then we’ll see a final rule. That can take a couple of months or several months. So this is not a done deal.

GONYEA: I’m breaking no news here when I say abortion has been a huge political issue for decades now, but this seems like it guarantees it will be a bigger issue than it might have otherwise been in the midterms.

ROVNER: And I think that was the idea. This is the – anti-abortion group said this would be a way to sort of motivate the base, but I think it might motivate the other side as well. People who don’t like this rule think it will make it harder for Planned Parenthood to get funding. So, it might end up, as you mentioned, making this whole question a bigger issue in the campaign than it otherwise might have been. But at least it might turn out some more anti-abortion forces who otherwise could have stayed home.

GONYEA: That was Julie Rovner, Chief Washington Correspondent for Kaiser Health News. She joins us from our studio here in D.C. Thanks, Julie.

ROVNER: You’re welcome.

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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N.H. Liquor Stores Are At The Center Of Cross-Border Bootlegging Stings

New Hampshire’s state-run tax free liquor stores draw in customers from across the region. They also draw in modern-day bootleggers, prompting a wave of recent arrests.



SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

New Hampshire may proudly have a libertarian streak, but the Live Free or Die state also boasts about its state-run liquor stores. Alcohol’s a big revenue generator for the government – low prices in stores located near the state’s borders draw in customers from across the region. As New Hampshire Public Radio’s Todd Bookman reports, that convenience is also attracting modern-day bootleggers and prompts a wave of recent arrests.

TODD BOOKMAN, BYLINE: Right around noon on November 9 of last year, a black Chevy Suburban pulled up to a New Hampshire liquor store. The driver was a guy named Juncheng Chen – 46 years old, from Queens, N.Y. Chen bought some booze, then headed off to another liquor store to make another purchase, then another, then another. In total, he bought liquor at six different New Hampshire stores that afternoon.

Chen didn’t know it, but he was being watched. A criminal investigator with the New York State Department of Taxation was trailing him from store to store, and then southbound on the highway. When Chen crossed the border back into New York, he was pulled over with more than a thousand bottles of alcohol in his trunk, including more than 500 bottles of Hennessy cognac. He was arrested on felony charges for violating New York state law regarding importation of liquor. Mingli Chen – no relation – is his attorney.

MINGLI CHEN: He was buying the alcohol for personal use – for parties at home or parties somewhere.

BOOKMAN: Five-hundred bottles of Hennessy for personal use. Anyways, New York officials declined to answer questions, so it’s hard to know how frequently they’re conducting these types of stings. But what’s clear is this. New Hampshire is a known source of cheap alcohol for bootleggers, who likely resell the product in other states. And law enforcement from other states are paying attention.

GARY KESSLER: From our perspective, this is an organized criminal activity.

BOOKMAN: Gary Kessler is Deputy Commissioner at the Vermont Department of Liquor Control. Court records show his agency is also staking out New Hampshire liquor store parking lots. When the customers cross back into Vermont, they’re arrested for violating that state’s liquor laws regarding importation. Defendants have been caught with tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of booze in their vehicles.

KESSLER: Clearly, these guys aren’t just randomly deciding that they’re going to come up and buy some cases of alcohol.

BOOKMAN: These operations by other states are happening without the assistance of New Hampshire officials – officials who quickly point out that, A, these customers aren’t violating any New Hampshire laws, and B, that the state-run liquor stores have always made attracting customers from other states a priority.

JOSEPH MOLLICA: Fifty percent of our business comes from cross-border sales.

BOOKMAN: This is New Hampshire Liquor Commission Chairman Joseph Mollica, speaking recently at the grand opening of a new state store.

MOLLICA: So contrary to what some people may feel, people coming to our outlets from cross-border and purchasing is extremely important to us.

BOOKMAN: These bootlegging stings come at an awkward time for the Liquor Commission. Earlier this year, New Hampshire politician Andru Volinsky called for an investigation into how the commission handles large, all-cash transactions. He says it may be violating federal financial laws. The IRS has also been questioning state employees about bootleggers in recent weeks.

Volinsky says the lack of communication between the states and the wave of recent arrests raises additional concerns.

ANDRU VOLINSKY: I think it’s a sad state of affairs that we, as New Hampshire, are not setting an ethical example.

BOOKMAN: Ethics and booze, however, rarely go hand in hand. For NPR News, I’m Todd Bookman in Concord, N.H.

(SOUNDBITE OF WHISKEY N’ RYE’S “BOOTLEGGER”)

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The Week in Movie News: 'Lando: A Star Wars Story' Is a Possibility, 'Deadpool 2' Is Reviewed and More

Need a quick recap on the past week in movie news? Here are the highlights:

BIG NEWS

Lando Calrissian could get his own movie: Although the news broke first via mistranslated scoop, Lucasfilm has confirmed they’re considering doing a Lando Calrissian Star Wars Story, just not next. Read more here.

Lincoln

GREAT NEWS

A Catch Me If You Can reunion: Steven Spielberg may direct Leonardo DiCaprio for the first time since their 2002 collaboration Catch Me If You Can. This time they’d be teaming up for a Ulysses S. Grant biopic. Read more here.

Lincoln

SURPRISING NEWS

Howard the Duck lives: Not that we necessarily thought Howard the Duck had perished at the end of Avengers: Infinity War, but the Russo brothers have surprisingly confirmed he survived Thanos’s snap of doom. Find out who else from the MCU died off screen or survived unseen here.

Lincoln

EXCLUSIVE BUZZ

Deadpool 2 writers on Deadpool 3, X-Force and deleted scenes: We talked to Deadpool 2 writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick about when we’ll get a third outing with the Merc with a Mouth and what to expect from the spin-off movie X-Force. We also had a spoiler-filled discussion about the cameos, ending and deleted scenes. Read the whole two-part interview here and here. And also check out our review of Deadpool 2 here.

COOL CULTURE

Harrison Ford in Solo: A Star Wars Story: What if they could have had younger Harrison Ford star in Solo: A Star War Story back in the day, or maybe de-aged Ford now to play the character again as a younger man? Watch this version of theSolo trailer with Ford’s face superimposed over Alden Ehrenreich’s to find out:

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MUST-WATCH TRAILERS

Bohemian Rhapsody teases a smashing musical biopic: The first trailer for the Queen and Freddie Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody is the champion of the world as far as making us excited to get right out and watch the movie. Watch it below.

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BlacKkKlansman looks electrifying: The first trailer for BlacKkKlansman, which is wowing audiences at the Cannes Film Festival this week, showcases another powerful Spike Lee joint. And it looks pretty funny, too. Watch it below.

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Mission: Impossile – Fallout promises more intense action: The first full trailer for Mission: Impossible – Fallout is heavy on plot and spectacular action set pieces, two things we can always depend on with this franchise. Watch it here:

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