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Today in Movie Culture: 'Justice League' Easter Eggs, 'Deadpool 2' Theories and More

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

Easter Eggs of the Day:

Now that Justice League is in theaters, ScreenCrush spotlights all the Easter eggs in the superhero team-up movie:

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Fan Theories of the Day:

ScreenRant highlights the best fan theories about Deadpool 2 based on what little footage we see in the new teaser for the solo:

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Recasting Idea of the Day:

We need a new Wolverine anyway, so how about Dacre Montgomery? BossLogic shows what that could look like as part of his Stranger Things cast as X-Men series:

Stranger X-men – @dacremontgomery Wolverine – now I think I may make one poster featuring them all together @netflix@Stranger_Thingspic.twitter.com/41fJBp8uKk

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) November 17, 2017

Movie Fix of the Day:

Cracked explains how just one minor fix could have made the 2014 Godzilla reboot a truly great movie:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Martin Scorsese, who turns 75 today, contemplates a scene with Robert De Niro on the set of Goodfellas in 1989:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Also in honor of Scorsese’s birthday, IMDB compiled the filmmaker’s most iconic scenes:

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Actor in the Spotlight:

It’s also Rachel McAdams’s birthday, so IMDb also presents a supercut of her most memorable roles:

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Movie Influences of the Day:

For Fandor, Philip Brubaker shows how Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead influenced his friends the Coen Brothers in the making of Raising Arizona:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Cosplay on the move is always fun, especially when it involves a Harry Potter chasing a golden snitch through the streets of London:

Incredible “Harry Potter” cosplay allows London man to chase a golden snitch—across Westminster Bridge. https://t.co/EqdSiUsvxfpic.twitter.com/G4OtYZFSRT

— Good Morning America (@GMA) November 17, 2017

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 25th anniversary of the release of Spike Lee’s Malcolm X. Watch the original trailer for the classic biopic below.

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FCC Rule Rollback Makes It Easier To Buy And Sell Media Outlets

NPR’s Kelly McEvers talks with University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor Lewis Friedland about the FCC’s decision to roll back rules that aim to curb single media companies’ control of local news.

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Speaking of corporations, major media companies have gotten some good news. On Thursday, the FCC voted to roll back decades-old rules that will make it easier for media outlets to be bought and sold. Media conglomerates can now own both newspapers and TV stations in a single market. The change also makes it easier for companies to own more TV stations in those markets, like Sinclair Broadcast Group which could soon merge with Tribune Media, something critics say could lead to a conservative media consolidation across the U.S.

to talk about this, we are joined by Lewis Friedland, who directs the Center for Communication and Democracy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Welcome.

LEWIS FRIEDLAND: Thank you.

MCEVERS: These rules have been on the books, you know, since the mid-’70s. Quickly just explain why they were there in the first place.

FRIEDLAND: Well, they were there in the first place to prevent one company from monopolizing the flow of news in any given market. The FCC, going all the way back to the 1934 rules, has placed an emphasis on localism, that local communities should get their news from local sources. And that was what this media consolidation rule was designed to encourage.

MCEVERS: So why are these rules being thrown out now?

FRIEDLAND: The short answer might be that the new commissioner of the FCC, Ajit Pai, has decided that the old media consolidation limits no longer apply to Sinclair or other broadcast companies. And so they need to be able to own as many outlets in a given market as they can afford.

MCEVERS: Let’s say I live in Petersburg, Ill., and every night I sit down and watch my news on my local channel. How will things be different now?

FRIEDLAND: Well, Kelly, Petersburg is a small town outside of Springfield, Ill., which is its primary media market. And Sinclair actually does own channel 20. Right now channel 20 receives nightly must-runs from Sinclair Broadcasting out of Baltimore. Much of that is conservative commentary. But that’s one station among, right now, three major news stations in that market. But if these new rules pass, for example, Sinclair could buy the local newspaper, the Illinois Journal-Register. Then Sinclair would have a dominant position to control the flow of news in that market.

MCEVERS: What other companies could benefit from these new rules?

FRIEDLAND: Well, essentially any large media company could benefit from these new rules. In fact Fox News is very well-positioned to benefit from these new rules ’cause it does own newspapers in some major cities. And it in the past has been slowed down from owning major television outlets because of these rules.

MCEVERS: I mean, the FCC says that this move will inject new life into struggling local journalism. Is there any evidence that that’s worked in the past?

FRIEDLAND: No, there’s zero evidence that that’s worked in the past. Wherever there’s been consolidation, there have been layoffs of local journalists. Sometimes newscasts have expanded, but usually those expansions take place by hiring another producer. So you’re adding newscasts, but you’re not adding reporters on the the streets. So you’re not actually adding local news. The thing is that most Americans get their news from local television news. That’s the single most powerful source of news for most Americans. So if you want to control how Americans think about the world, local news is the best medium to do that.

MCEVERS: Lewis Friedland of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, thank you.

FRIEDLAND: Thank you very much.

(SOUNDBITE OF ICARUS HIMSELF SONG, “DIGGING HOLES”)

Copyright © 2017 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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Ferdie Pacheco, Muhammad Ali's Ringside 'Fight Doctor,' Dies At 89

Ferdie Pacheco, ringside physician to Muhammad Ali, died on Thursday at 89.

Ron Galella/WireImage/Getty Images

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Ferdie Pacheco, the ringside physician to Muhammad Ali and TV commentator known in the boxing world as the “fight doctor,” died Thursday, his daughter announced on Facebook. He was 89.

“It’s with a heavy heart that I have to announce to the world the passing of my wonderful Dad, Ferdie Pacheco,” Tina Louise Pacheco wrote. “He was a pharmacist, a doctor, a boxing commentator, a painter and a writer. But to me he was just Papa. It’s a heartbreak to lose a parent, but I know he’ll always be with me.”

Pacheco worked in Ali’s corner from 1962 to 1977, which included three of the boxer’s successful title matches.

“The President, the Executive Committee, and all the World Boxing Association family regret the death of Mr. Ferdie Pacheco, who was legendary Muhammad Ali’s physician,” the association said in a statement on Friday. “Pacheco … was key in Ali’s career, he was in his corner since 1960 and accompanied him for great part of his career.”

Fernando Pacheco was born in Tampa, Fla., and earned a medical degree from the University of Miami in 1959. He first met Ali, known then as Cassius Clay, in 1960 when he was training with legendary boxing coach Angelo Dundee in Miami Beach.

Ali, who later developed a reputation for brash talk and social criticism, would often entertain the crowd between bouts at the 5th Street Gym in Miami Beach, Pacheco told NPR’s Scott Simon in 2010.

“He was the most energetic, entertaining young man you ever saw,” Pacheco said. “He just had a buoyant sort of happiness with him. To him boxing was fun. Entertaining the public was fun.”

After Ali successfully defended the world heavyweight title against Alfredo Evangelista in May 1977, Pacheco suggested the champ retire. “Ali is now at the dangerous mental point where his heart and mind are no longer in it,” he was quoted as saying by The New York Times.

Pacheco left Ali’s camp later that year, after the fighter signed on to challenge Earnie Shavers, who “was about the strongest guy in boxing,” he toldUSA Today in 2016.

After the bloody fight, Pacheco sent Ali’s medical exam results “to Angelo, (manager) Herbert Muhammad, Ali and his wife (Veronica),” he told the newspaper. “I wrote, ‘This is what’s happening to you. If you want to continue, you have no shot at a normal life.’ I never heard a word — a word. Because they knew I was right.”

Ali fought four more matches, losing three, before he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, according to ESPN.

The physical damage inflicted on boxers became increasingly apparent to Pacheco after the fighter Davey Moore died in the ring in 1963.

Moore died “in my arms and in the dressing room,” Pacheco said in the NPR interview. “He said, ‘I have a headache.’ That was the end of that.”

Pacheco went on to serve as a boxing commentator for network TV fights in the 1980s. He won two Emmy Awards for his work as a boxing analyst for Showtime, NBC and Univision.

In 2010, he wrote the book Tales from the 5th St. Gym: Ali, the Dundees, and Miami’s Golden Age of Boxing, which tells the story of the Miami gym where famous fighters such as Ali, George Foreman, Sugar Ray Leonard and others trained.

After he left boxing, Pacheco decried the dangers of the sport and worked to implement new safety procedures. He told NPR in 2010 that it should be banned.

“Boxing is a savage sport. It’s predicated on hurting one another,” Pacheco said. “As long as that’s the case and people are going to the fights to see one person hurt another, then you don’t have much chance to stop it when it gets tough.”

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Mileha Soneji: Can Simple Innovations Improve The Lives of Parkinson's Patients?

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Part 1 of the TED Radio Hour episode Simple Solutions

About Mileha Soneji’s TED Talk

When designer Mileha Soneji’s uncle got Parkinson’s, his quality of life deteriorated rapidly. Mileha couldn’t cure her uncle’s disease, so she designed simple ways to improve his everyday life.

About Mileha Soneji

Mileha Soneji is a strategic product designer from Pune, India. She studied design at MIT and earned a master’s degree in strategic product design from Delft University in the Netherlands.

Her experience working as a designer in India and the Netherlands has taught her the importance of thorough research to find innovations that will best serve the user.

Her work includes designs for people with disabilities, from the No Spill Cup to a staircase illusion that helps Parkinson’s patients walk more easily.

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Today in Movie Culture: Superman's Most Dangerous Power, How 'The Incredibles' Should Have Ended and More

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

Movie Science of the Day:

In honor of the release of Justice League, Kyle Hill scientifically explains why Superman turning back time would be catastrophic:

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Alternate Ending of the Day:

Speaking of superhero movies, here’s a different way Pixar’s The Incredibles could have ended:

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Fan Surprise of the Day:

Speaking of Pixar, watch the stars of Coco surprise fans at Dowtown Disney with a musical performance promoting the upcoming movie:

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VFX Breakdown of the Day:

Netflix presents a look at the exceptional visual effects that went into creating the creature for Bong Joon Ho’s Okja:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Maggie Gyllenhaal, who turns 40 today, in a publicity photo for the 2000 John Waters movie Cecil B. Demented:

Filmmakers in Focus:

Editor Alessandro Tranchini showcases the “stillness of life” as depicted in the movies of the Coen Brothers:

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Film History of the Day:

In anticipation of The Disaster Artist, here’s a look at the marketing of Tommy Wiseau’s The Room that helped turn it into a cult classic:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Back to the subject of superhero movies, here’s a great Rocket Racoon with Baby Groot from Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2:

One of the best pictures I have of my Rocket Raccoon suit! My mom did that little Groot for me <3 #GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2#Cosplay#Rocket_Raccoon@JamesGunnpic.twitter.com/Df4WatYVlG

— Cecilia Hernandez (@Zhiibe) November 16, 2017

Movie Trivia of the Day:

In honor of this week being the 15th anniversary of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, here’s IMDb with some trivia about the movie:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 40th anniversary of the release of Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Watch the original trailer for the sci-fi classic below.

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What To Make Of A Head-To-Head Test Of Addiction Treatments

Greg Miller shows the Suboxone medication in 2016 that he has taken daily for his addiction to painkillers.

Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post/Getty Images

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Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Addiction specialists caution against reading too much into a new study released this week that compares two popular medications for opioid addiction. This much-anticipated research is the largest study so far to directly compare the widely used treatment Suboxone with relative newcomer Vivitrol.

Researchers who compared the two drugs found them equally effective once treatment started. But there are fundamental differences in the way treatment begins, which makes these findings difficult to interpret.

Vivitrol, an injection of naltrexone that lasts 28 days, has gained a foothold among treatment providers, especially those working with the criminal justice system.

Until recently, no major study had compared it to Suboxone, a combination of buprenorphine and naloxone that is taken by mouth daily.

Now researchers have found the two medications to be equally effective at preventing relapse once patients start treatment, according to a study published Tuesday in The Lancet. A smaller, shorter study out of Norway that was published in October came to a similar conclusion.

But the Lancet study highlights a limitation for patients starting on extended-release naltrexone: Patients have to detox before receiving their first dose of Vivitrol. That requirement creates a significant barrier to beginning treatment, says Dr. Joshua Lee, associate professor at the NYU School of Medicine and lead author of the report.

“It’s going to take a few days or a week or more to get them on naltrexone in the first place,” he says. “And that detox hurdle does not exist for buprenorphine.”

Still, the research indicates that it would be advisable for treatment providers to offer both medications, he said. “Relapse rates are extremely high if you don’t get onto and continue a medication,” said Lee.

The two medications work in very different ways. Buprenorphine (like another addiction medication, methadone) is a long-acting opioid that’s taken daily. There are decades of research showing that it helps reduce cravings and prevent withdrawal symptoms.

The Lancet study looked at a combination of buprenorphine and naloxone, which reverses the effects of opioids and is designed to prevent users from injecting or snorting the medication. Naltrexone is an antagonist — it blocks receptors in the brain and prevents opioids from having any effect. Vivitrol, which is delivered as a monthly injection, was approved to treat opioid use disorder in 2010 and until recently, no studies comparing buprenorphine and Vivitrol had been published.

“We’ve had trials of each one, but not together,” said Lee. The latest study followed 570 patients from inpatient detoxification centers. They were randomly assigned to one of the drugs for six months. “Once people were on either one, they did reasonably well over time,” said Lee.

But because extended-release naltrexone can throw people into withdrawal if administered too soon after opioid use, patients must first go through detox — abstaining from drug use — which often causes debilitating flu-like symptoms for several days. More than a quarter of patients assigned to naltrexone didn’t complete detox, and most of them relapsed.

Buprenorphine treatment doesn’t require patients to go through detox. “So up front there’s a clear clinical advantage,” said Lee. “Buprenorphine products are clearly easier to use.”

Alkermes, the company that manufactures Vivitrol, has heavily marketed its flagship product to nonmedical professionals. As NPR and Side Effects reported earlier this year, the company has targeted lawmakers, judges and other criminal justice officials — people who may be ideologically opposed to using opioids to treat opioid addiction — in order to boost sales of its drug.

Given the tendency for criminal justice officials to favor non-opioid treatment options, Dr. Camila Arnaudo, an addiction psychiatrist who teaches at the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, said she worries people will oversimplify the results of the study. “I’m a little bit concerned about headlines that I’ve already seen,” she said, many of which have indicated that the products are equally effective, leaving out the caveat that many people initially failed out of treatment with extended-release naltrexone. “I’m concerned that it’s going to lead to policies where patients are shunted into treatment with extended-release naltrexone, which is more acceptable to the criminal justice system.”

She cautions people against reading too much into any one study, and pointed again to the detox hurdle. “You’re weeding out the less committed people,” she said, potentially skewing the results in favor of extended-release naltrexone. She said some patients will do better on one drug or the other depending on the case.

“I think we can say that both are viable options for patients and they prevent opioid use,” she said. “I think what we cannot say, though, is that they’re equivalent based on this study.”

She added that some of the study authors reported receiving financial support and consulting fees from Alkermes.

Vivitrol treatment is more expensive. Each Vivitrol shot costs more than $1,200, according to Medicaid data, while a monthly supply of Suboxone can cost a few hundred dollars, depending on the dose.

Some inpatient treatment centers may also be ideologically opposed to starting someone on buprenorphine, particularly after detox, said Lee, but his study shows that it can be an effective option even starting in an inpatient setting. And in any event, relapse rates are higher among people who don’t use medications for their opioid addiction.

“Detox episodes are brief,” he said. “They don’t generally last in terms of how you look a week later.”

He added that if patients enter treatment with hopes of getting on Vivitrol but can’t make it through detox, they should be offered buprenorphine. The bottom line, he said, is that both medications should be widely available and offered to patients suffering from opioid addiction.

“We’re not doing a good enough job in this country of getting people into treatment and offering them these types of medications,” said Lee. “So were just going around undertreating the opiate epidemic.”

This story was produced in partnership with WFYI and Side Effects Public Media, a news collaborative focused on public health.

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Seattle Defends Its New High-Earner Income Tax In Court

A view of the Port of Seattle and the city’s stadium district nearing dusk. On Friday, a trial court judge is scheduled to hear legal challenges to the city’s new income tax on the wealthy.

Anna Boiko-Weyrauch for NPR

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Anna Boiko-Weyrauch for NPR

Documentary filmmaker Christopher Rufo doesn’t make enough money to have to pay Seattle’s new high-earners tax, but he still wants to keep Seattle income-tax-free. So much so, he joined around 30 plaintiffs suing the city.

On Friday, a trial court judge is scheduled to hear legal challenges to the city’s new income tax on the wealthy, approved this summer by the Seattle City Council to raise revenue for services in a state that does not have an income tax.

Under the new law, the city taxes income over $250,000 a year for individuals and over $500,000 for couples at 2.25 percent. The tax is approved but isn’t being collected yet.

Rufo does not want Seattle to end up like Youngstown, Ohio, one of the cities in his upcoming PBS film on economically depressed American cities. His footage of Youngstown, playing on the screen in front of him, shows a backhoe chewing through a white two-story house, reducing it to shards within minutes.

“Pretty much the only economic activity that you’ll see in some of these neighborhoods is the demolition industry,” he says.

The message of his research is this: “We can’t take the prosperity for granted. Eventually the tech industry will either slow down, or shrink, or as we’re seeing with Amazon, move somewhere else,” Rufo says.

Amazon is considering proposals right now for a second headquarters.

Cranes poke out of the ground in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood, the heart of Amazon’s headquarters.

Anna Boiko-Weyrauch for NPR

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Anna Boiko-Weyrauch for NPR

In enacting the income tax Seattle is going against a state Supreme Court precedent from the 1930s when the state Constitution was amended to include an extremely broad definition of property, says Republican Rob McKenna. He served two terms as Washington’s attorney general and now represents the plaintiffs in this lawsuit.

The new definition included “anything tangible or intangible, subject to ownership,” McKenna says. “The Supreme Court ruled that that definition being as broad as it is, encompasses income.”

Another clause in the state Constitution mandates all property be taxed the same, so all income must also be taxed uniformly, he says. And because state law doesn’t allow for an income tax, cities can’t impose one.

On the other side is Paul Lawrence, an attorney litigating the case on behalf of the city of Seattle.

“There’s no provision in the state Constitution that says you can’t have an income tax,” he said.

Instead, what’s preventing a state income tax is an interpretation — a wrong interpretation, Lawrence says. Because, he says, income is not property.

“It comes to you; you then take it and turn it into property — whether it’s a stock or bond or a piece of property — but it’s a very different type of thing,” he says.

And income, he says, should be allowed to be taxed under Washington state law.

Some business owners support the tax. Molly Moon’s Homemade Ice Cream chain founder and CEO, Molly Moon Neitzel, is in favor of it to fund the city’s pressing needs, like affordable housing, she says. She doesn’t earn enough to be taxed, but hopes one day to be taxed more on future high income, “so that [her] employees can have a better quality of life in the city of Seattle.”

Washington state is often said to have one of the most regressive tax structures in the nation, because of its reliance on property and sales taxes. Ideas for new taxes come out of Seattle city hall all the time.

It’s not the tax structure that keeps her business in town, Neitzel says, but rather “the community, the kinds of things people want to buy here, how beautiful it is.”

Downhill from her shop, near the shore of Lake Union, is the heart of Amazon headquarters. New office buildings and high-end condos are everywhere. And so is a question: how to respond to all this growth and all this money?

Whichever side loses initial volleys over the new tax will probably appeal it to the state’s highest court.

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Russia Still Not Compliant With Sports Doping Regulations

Russia is reacting angrily after the World Anti-Doping Agency said the country is still not in compliance with its regulations. The announcement could affect Russia’s participation in the Winter Olympics next February.

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Russia’s sports programs have come under international scrutiny for illegal doping since the country hosted the Winter Olympics in Sochi in 2014, and today the World Anti-Doping Agency said Russia was still not in compliance with its regulations. NPR’s Lucian Kim reports from Moscow the ruling puts the country’s participation in the next Winter Olympics in doubt.

LUCIAN KIM, BYLINE: The president of the World Anti-Doping Agency, Sir Craig Reedie, announced the decision in Seoul, South Korea, today. He said RUSADA, as Russia’s Anti-Doping Agency is known, had failed to meet international code.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

CRAIG REEDIE: We regret that RUSADA is not yet compliant. It would be better, from our point of view, that they were.

KIM: Reedie said Russia had made huge technical improvements, but was still denying access to blood and urine samples and refusing to admit that the government had sponsored a doping program in the past. The ruling was top news in Russia, where the country’s international sporting status is an object of national pride.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: (Speaking Russian).

KIM: A well-choreographed show with a predictable ending – that’s how Russian state television described the decision. The TV news said Russia was being unfairly targeted and the victim of behind-the-scenes intrigue. Alexander Zhukov, the head of Russia’s Olympic Committee, called the ruling politicized.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

ALEXANDER ZHUKOV: (Speaking Russian).

KIM: Zhukov said it looked like artificial conditions were being invented to prevent Russia from coming into line with anti-doping rules. He denied the Russian government had ever run a doping program. The issue will dominate a meeting by the International Olympic Committee in December. That’s when the IOC will decide whether Russia should be allowed to participate in the upcoming Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea. The World Anti-Doping Agency tried to get all Russian athletes kicked out of last summer’s Rio Olympics, but the IOC left it up to individual sports federations. Last week, President Vladimir Putin suggested the United States is trying to block Russia from taking part in the Olympics.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN: (Speaking Russian).

KIM: Talking to workers during a visit to a factory in Chelyabinsk, Putin said he suspected the U.S. was using the doping scandal to create problems before Russia’s presidential election in March. Putin said, the Americans imagine that Russia interfered in the U.S. presidential election last year, and this is their response. Lucian Kim, NPR News, Moscow.

(SOUNDBITE OF THE XX SONG, “ISLANDS”)

Copyright © 2017 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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Da Vinci Portrait Of Christ Sells For Record-Shattering $450 Million

Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi on display at Christie’s auction rooms, in London, last month.

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Bidding representatives react after Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi sold for $400 million at Christie’s, on Wednesday.

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Julie Jacobson/AP

A portrait of Christ by Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci has shattered all previous records for artworks sold at auction or privately, fetching a whopping $450.3 million on Wednesday at Christie’s in New York.

Salvator Mundi (Savior of the World), is one of only a score of da Vinci’s still in existence and the only one held privately.

The bidding opened at $75 million and ran for 19 minutes.

The New York Times reports:

“There were gasps throughout the sale, as the bids climbed by tens of millions up to $225 million, by fives up to $260 million, and then by twos. As the bidding slowed, and a buyer pondered the next multi-million-dollar increment, Jussi Pylkkanen, the auctioneer, said, ‘It’s an historic moment; we’ll wait.’

Toward the end, Alex Rotter, Christie’s co-chairman of postwar and contemporary art, who represented a buyer on the phone, made two big jumps to shake off one last rival bid from Francis de Poortere, Christie’s head of old master paintings.”

The name of the buyer was not immediately released. The final bid was $400 million, but the sale price includes a premium paid to Christie’s.

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Salvator Mundi is a painting of the most iconic figure in the world by the most important artist of all time,” said Loic Gouzer, co-chairman of post-war and contemporary art at Christie’s was quoted by The Associated Press as saying. “The opportunity to bring this masterpiece to the market is an honor that comes around once in a lifetime.”

The 26-inch-tall painting has had an intriguing history. It dates to about 1500 and depicts a figure of Christ dressed in Renaissance-style attire, with the right hand raised in benediction and the left holding a crystal orb.

It was recorded in the collection of King Charles I of England in 1649 but was auctioned to the Duke of Buckingham in 1763. It then disappeared until 1900, over which time it was assumed to have been lost or destroyed.

When it finally resurfaced, it was damaged from restoration attempts and was purchased by British collector Sir Frederick Cook. At the time it wasn’t seen as an authentic da Vinci, but instead attributed to one of his disciples.

In 2011, Salvator Mundi went on public display. At the time, the BBC wrote:

“Cook’s descendants sold it at auction in 1958 for £45 and it was acquired by a US consortium of art dealers in 2005.

“After undergoing extensive conservation treatment [completed in 2011], it was determined to be an original Da Vinci work.”

It was put on the block for Wednesday’s auction by Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, who had purchased it for $127.5 million in a private sale in 2013.

The previous record for a painting sold at auction was set in 2015 when Pablo Picasso’s Women of Algiers (Version O)went for $179 million to an anonymous buyer. A private sale of Willem de Koonig’s Interchange, also in 2015, fetched $300 million.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Justice League' Sweded Trailer, the Clues to Rey's Parents in 'Star Wars' and More

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

Trailer Remake of the Day:

Get excited for the real deal by watching this sweded the trailer for Justice League from CineFix:

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Franchise Recap of the Day:

Now continue to get ready with this recap of the DC movies that lead to Justice League:

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

More Justice League prep can be done by watching this IMDb video on things to know about the movie:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of DC movie characters, here’s one of the less-common Harley Quinn cosplay looks:

I got a new Harley cosplay!! pic.twitter.com/q5N3R69EiX

— jess (@skyjuu) November 15, 2017

Fan Theory of the Day:

The Film Theory’s MatPat makes another attempt at a Star Wars prediction by deducing who Rey’s parents are:

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Fan Surprise of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, Mark Hamill surprised fans at Disneyland on the Star Tours ride:

The Force is strong with @HamillHimself he surprised guests on Star Tours @Disneyland. #TheLastJedipic.twitter.com/0uG9qVFAqu

— Star Wars (@starwars) November 15, 2017

Vintage Image of the Day:

In honor of this week’s 25th anniversary of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, here’s Winona Ryder on set with director Francis Ford Coppola:

Filmmaker in Focus:

Fandor looks at the colorful aesthetic of Michel Gondry in this video featuring Eternal Sunshind of the Spotless Mind and more:

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Actor in the Spotlight:

IMDb chronicles the movie career of Leonardo DiCaprio, who had a birthday last weekend:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 15th anniversary of the release of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Watch the original trailer for the classic fantasy movie below.

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