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Today in Movie Culture: 'Beauty and the Beast' Music Video, Marvel's Near Crossover With Pixar and More

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

Music Video of the Day:

Check out the beautiful official music video for Ariana Grande and John Legend’s new version of “Beauty and the Beast” from the live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast directed by Dave Meyers:

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Behind the Scenes Video of the Day:

Hugh Jackman shared a look at his very physical post-production ADR work for Logan on Twitter:

Hi. @WolverineMovie@20thcenturyfoxpic.twitter.com/dr95Zx1Nmg

— Hugh Jackman (@RealHughJackman) March 7, 2017

Audition Tape of the Day:

Now go back almost two decades to see Jackman as he auditions for the part of Wolverine in the first X-Men in 1999:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Here’s hoping Wonder Woman is as good as these women’s cosplay inspired by the upcoming movie. See more pics at Fashionably Geek.

Vintage Poster of the Day:

With Kong: Skull Island out this week, let’s take a look at one of the original posters for the 1933 King Kong:

Toy Tribute of the Day:

TCM’s Robert Osborne, who died yesterday, was paid tribute in Lego form by Jim Henson Legacy president Craig Shemin:

A tribute to Robert Osborne. @LEGO_Group@tcm#lego#RobertOsbornepic.twitter.com/dCypCn70CF

— Craig Shemin (@CraigShemin) March 6, 2017

Trailer Remake of the Day:

Speaking of homemade things, here’s a shot-for-shot sweded version of the new Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 trailer:

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Concept Art of the Day:

Speaking of the MCU, Marvel almost had some synergy with Pixar, as evidenced by this Ant-Man concept art by Andrew Kim showing an enlarged Cars toy instead of the Thomas train used in the movie (via Heroic Hollywood):

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of Disney animated movies, Honest Trailers sinks Moana and its catchy soundtrack:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of Private Parts. Watch the original trailer for the Howard Stern biopic, which stars Howard Stern as himself, below.

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and

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Public Clinics Fear Federal Cuts To Planned Parenthood Would Strand Patients

About 35 percent of the patients at this clinic in York, Pa., receive Medicaid. The clinic offers STD testing, cancer screening and contraception services as well as abortion services.

Sarah McCammon/NPR

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Sarah McCammon/NPR

Opponents of abortion rights have long argued that public funds for services like cancer screenings and contraception should go solely to health clinics that don’t provide abortions. They’ve made “defunding Planned Parenthood” — or, to be more precise — blocking the organization from receiving funding through federal programs like Medicaid — a major goal.

Now, Republicans in Congress have proposed an Affordable Care Act repeal that would, for one year, prevent Planned Parenthood from receiving Medicaid reimbursements for providing services like contraception and cancer screenings to low-income patients.

Dawn States, 26, says she wouldn’t be able to safely carry a pregnancy because of spinal problems that required two surgeries. She has turned to Planned Parenthood for years to obtain contraceptives and gynecological care.

Sarah McCammon/NPR

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Sarah McCammon/NPR

Worry about just that kind of action under a Trump administration and Republican-controlled Congress is what brought Dawn States of Lancaster City, Pa., back into her local Planned Parenthood recently.

“I wasn’t sure what was going to happen in the next foreseeable future — and I actually physically can’t have kids,” States says, after having two spinal surgeries as a teenager.

She’s now 26 and has come to the Planned Parenthood clinic in York, Pa., to get a long-acting intrauterine device, or IUD.

“My spine is fused, and I have two rods. So it’s just not really set up for carrying around an infant,” she says.

States says she worries what will happen to women like her who receive Medicaid and depend on Planned Parenthood for this kind of care.

The organization has been a focus of anti-abortion activism because it provides about a third of the nation’s abortions, according to data gathered by the Guttmacher Institute — though, under current law, the clinics can’t and don’t use federal money to pay for the procedure, in most cases.

For other services, like screening for sexually transmitted diseases, Planned Parenthood gets more than $500 million in public funds — much of it from Medicaid — according to the organization’s most recent annual report.

“Whether this funding goes directly for abortion or indirectly allows them to have access to a large population of potential abortion clients, and to keep the lights on and man their call centers and do all their political activity, they should not be receiving taxpayer dollars,” says Eric Scheidler, executive director of the Pro-Life Action League, one of the groups pushing to cut off federal funding to Planned Parenthood.

Instead, Scheidler says, those patients should go to community health centers that specialize in treating low-income patients.

Other anti-abortion-rights groups, like Students for Life, also have been promoting the idea of redirecting those funds to federally qualified health centers, known as FQHCs — which perform a range of primary care services, often with a large share of Medicaid dollars.

The locations, hours and availability of services at these public health clinics vary from place to place. For patients in York, there’s a center less than a mile from Planned Parenthood — but it’s busy.

Ever wonder where pregnant women and their families would go when Planned Parenthood is defunded? #prolife#prolifegenpic.twitter.com/VpdgxaR4Zr

— Students for Life (@Students4LifeHQ) March 3, 2017

“There are more patients who seek our care than we’re able to provide care for,” says Jenny Englerth, CEO of Family First Health, which offers primary medical care and dental care at several clinics in the area. More than half of the patients at these clinics receive Medicaid.

Englerth says her patient loads keep growing, and the organization frequently has to turn away patients — sometimes daily, depending on the time of year.

“Sometimes in the height of the cold and flu season there just isn’t enough capacity to go around,” she says.

What’s more, doctors here can decline to provide birth control if it violates their religious beliefs. Englerth says she tries to hire a good mix of providers so that patients are able to get the care they need. But some, like Dr. Luis Garcia, choose not to offer birth control options like implants and IUDs. Garcia says he does screenings for sexually transmitted diseases and talks with patients about a technique called fertility awareness that can reduce unwanted pregnancies.

“But if a patient comes in and they want to get a Nexplanon or IUD or other birth control, then they can go to another provider,” Garcia says.

Heavy patient loads are common at these clinics, says Sara Rosenbaum, a health policy professor at George Washington University. Rosenbaum says these community health centers provide important services but aren’t as equipped to provide the reproductive services that Planned Parenthood is known for.

“There are all kinds of reasons why it’s not just a simple substitution of X for Y,” she says.

Rosenbaum points to Texas, where state lawmakers in 2011 reduced Planned Parenthood’s funding. Dozens of family planning clinics closed and the birthrate for low-income women went up.

Some patients, Rosenbaum says, are unwilling to use a clinic that, by design, serves the whole family.

“There may be people who were younger users who were uncomfortable where they might run into their aunt sitting in the waiting room,” Rosenbaum says.

Sally Gambill, a certified nurse midwife at the Planned Parenthood in York, says she has seen too many patients over the years who became pregnant because they weren’t able to obtain birth control efficiently.

“The sperm and egg really, really want to meet; they just do. That’s why we’re all here,” Gambill says. “And if we don’t help people, if they want to be on contraception [and] we don’t help people when they want to be helped — that day, that hour — then sperm and egg find each other.”

If Planned Parenthood were no longer an option for some patients, Englerth says, her network of health clinics would try to meet the need.

“But I also understand the reality of what we try to do every day and the pressures that we feel every day with our existing demand,” she adds, “so there are going to be gaps and shortfalls. And I can only project the stories of those individual women that will fall in between.”

If there are major changes to federal funding for low-income patients’ reproductive health services, Englerth says, she hopes they don’t happen too quickly, so centers like hers have time to try to close those gaps.

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'The New Yorker' Uncovers Trump Hotel's Ties To Corrupt Oligarch Family

Business reporter Adam Davidson spent months investigating the Trump Hotel Baku deal, which the Trump Organization cut its ties with a month after Trump’s election. In his detailed story for The New Yorker, Davidson writes that Trump did business with corrupt partners who also did business with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. This would be in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

The Trump Organization’s overseas properties have raised questions about conflicts of interest. In the latest issue of The New Yorker, Adam Davidson writes about one that he calls Donald Trump’s worst deal.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

It’s a hotel in Azerbaijan, one of the most corrupt countries in the world. And the deal links a chain of people from Ivanka Trump to shady officials in Azerbaijan and possibly to members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, which has been accused of sponsoring terrorism.

SHAPIRO: The property is in Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital. New Yorker writer Adam Davidson went to visit.

ADAM DAVIDSON: There’s about a 2-mile-by-half-a-mile stretch along the Caspian Sea that’s about as luxurious as any city in the world, just the most beautiful shops and hotels. There’s luxury restaurants, etc.

SHAPIRO: But that’s not the site of the Trump property.

DAVIDSON: There’s this neighborhood quite far away that’s more like strip malls and kind of down-on-your-luck hookah bars, and that is where that luxury Trump Hotel and residence was supposed to be.

SHAPIRO: The hotel has never opened, but the name at the top is still there, Trump. The Trump Organization says that branding was the only involvement they had. In other words, they were just a licensor. Adam Davidson of The New Yorker says that’s not entirely accurate.

DAVIDSON: They were intimately involved in this building. They had a profit share. They weren’t owners, but Trump staff were flying over for quite a while every month to oversee every aspect of the building…

SHAPIRO: Including Trump’s daughter Ivanka.

DAVIDSON: Ivanka, she went once, but from New York, I’m told she was involved in every decision. She was – she was intimately involved. And that’s really important for legal reasons that they were so involved.

SHAPIRO: This Azerbaijani official you write about who is at the center of this project, Ziya Mammadov, seems like a shady character. What did you learn about him?

DAVIDSON: So Ziya Mammadov is the transportation – was, until a couple of weeks ago, the transportation minister of Azerbaijan. And he’s been called by American officials notoriously corrupt, even for Azerbaijan.

He is a man whose salary was something around $12,000 a year, yet he became a billionaire with the most ridiculous, luxurious homes. There’s a bunch of companies – one is technically owned by his son; the other is technically owned by his brother; another is technically owned by his former driver – but everyone believes are front companies for Ziya Mammadov, this very corrupt official. And it was this group of companies that the Trump Organization signed their deal with.

SHAPIRO: And then what is Mammadov’s possible connection to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard?

DAVIDSON: We believe, American officials believe, that Ziya Mammadov has a close business relationship with a company called Azarpassillo. And the more I learned about Azarpassillo, the clearer it seemed to be that they are likely a front company for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. Many believe – the president himself has made it clear he believes – that the Revolutionary Guard funds terrorism around the world and does a lot of other nefarious things through front companies, front companies that technically have no relationship but work for the Revolutionary Guard.

SHAPIRO: So you’ve got this thread from the Trumps to the Azerbaijanis to the Iranians. And the question is, did the Trump Organization break a law? And it boils down to something called the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which basically prohibits American companies from doing business with corrupt officials overseas. You talked to a lot of lawyers who said even a passing glance at this deal would have raised a lot of red flags. What evidence is there that the Trump Organization may have violated this law?

DAVIDSON: The way these rules work is you need to follow red flags. So if you are buying some office furniture from Norway, you probably don’t see a lot of red flags. You’re not too worried. But once you are doing business in Azerbaijan at all, because it’s such a corrupt country, that’s a red flag. When you’re doing business with a government official of any country, that’s a red flag. When you’re doing business with a government official who is known to be perhaps the most corrupt man in one of the most corrupt countries in the world, that’s considered a huge red flag.

SHAPIRO: Adam, we should note that the Trump Organization canceled this deal after the election in December.

DAVIDSON: Yeah.

SHAPIRO: This law, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, is clearest when an American bribes a foreign official. And the Trump Organization told you the money is going the other way, that they’re actually profiting from this. So what could actually be illegal here?

DAVIDSON: So this is actually a debate. I’d say nearly every expert in the FCPA said it’s very possible there was a violation here. But several said it would be tricky to prove it because you would need to show that the Trump Organization profited through the corruption that they enabled through giving something of value to a foreign corrupt official.

That’s a mouthful. But the Trump Organization’s assertion is, hey, we didn’t give them anything of value. It doesn’t have to be money, just anything of value. And they gave their name, their reputation, their brand value. And as we know, the president values his – the brand value of his name very highly. And – and that put a sheen, a kind of American-safe sheen to an otherwise corrupt operation.

SHAPIRO: So it sounds like a tough case.

DAVIDSON: I think it’s a very tough case. And, you know, the Department of Justice tends to like home runs. They like – they tend to like 100 percent cases, 98 percent cases. They don’t like tough cases. But I think when it’s the president of the United States, it’s very different than if it’s a case against, you know, just some generic real estate developer.

And we, the American people, need to know, is our president in business with really shady people? Do really shady people have information about him? That’s a different kind of need than the decision-making process that normally goes into one of these prosecutions.

SHAPIRO: Adam Davidson’s article in The New Yorker is called “Donald Trump’s Worst Deal.” Great to talk to you, Adam.

DAVIDSON: Ari, such a pleasure.

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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Oops! Minnesota Wild Hockey Player Hits Teammate By Mistake

Minnesota’s Chris Stewart, a real brawler, threw the first punch against a member of the San Jose Sharks. Instead, he connected with the nose of his teammate Zach Parise.

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

Good morning, I’m David Greene. There’s a hockey joke – I went to a fight and a hockey game broke out. And Chris Stewart of the NHL’s Minnesota Wild is old school. He’s a real brawler.

Last night, things got chippy against the San Jose Sharks. Stewart threw the first punch, which missed his opponent and landed on the nose of Zach Parise, his teammate. Parise was fine. The team was laughing, especially after winning. Asked if he would hit Stewart back, Parise said, nope – you seen how big he is? It’s MORNING EDITION.

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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Waffle House Co-Founder Joe Rogers Sr. Dies At 97

Waffle House founders Joe Rogers Sr., left, and Tom Forkner, pose in front of a Waffle House restaurant in Norcross, Ga., after eating lunch there 2005.

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RIC FELD/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Joe Rogers Sr. and Tom Forkner opened their first Waffle House in Avondale Estates, Ga., on Labor Day in 1955.

Rogers died on Friday at the age of 97. Forkner is 99 years old.

When the two met, Rogers worked for the Toddle House restaurant chain and Forkner worked in real estate.

Forkner was the businessman in the partnership that produced the all-night diner chain, and Rogers was the people person — a champion for customers and employees.

The yellow Waffle House sign has become a familiar landmark along roadways in the Southeast.

Rogers was often heard to say, “We’re not in the restaurant business, we’re in the people business.”

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports:

“Rogers and Forkner phased themselves out of the day-to-day operations in the late 1970s.

“They still spent time at the corporate headquarters in Norcross even in their mid-80s.

“Rogers went in up until a few years ago.”

There are now 1,900 restaurants in the chain and approximately 40,000 employees.

Joe Rogers Jr. said in a statement, “They never envisioned the financial success shared by so many of their associates 61 years later.”

In an interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Rogers Sr. said, “I’m not an executive, I’m a waffle cook.”

In his autobiography — Who’s Looking Out for the Poor Old Cash Customer? — Joe Rogers Sr. wrote, “”My daddy had taught me always to smile at people and always to make people happy to see me.”

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Batman v Superman' VFX Breakdown, David Harbour as Cable in 'Deadpool 2' and More

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

VFX Reel of the Day:

The Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice script could have used some extra work, but as you can see in this visual effects breakdown, they sure put a lot of work into making it look good (via /Film):

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Casting Interpretation of the Day:

Last week, Stranger Things star David Harbour was rumored to be in the running to play Cable in Deadpool 2. Here’s BossLogic’s interpretation of what that might look like:

Weekend PS fun – @DavidKHarbour Cable, hopefully they reveal who is going to play him soon, I think I have done enough cables XD pic.twitter.com/2kiDZIF80Q

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) March 4, 2017

Trailer Mashup of the Day:

All the humor and awesomeness of Star Wars: The Force Awakens is brought to the forefront in this fun Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2-inspired trailer from The Unusual Suspect:

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Cosplay of the Day:

With Beauty and the Beast opening soon, we’re sure to see a lot of cosplay inspired by both the animated and live-action versions, like the couple below. See more of their pics at Fashionably Geek.

Promotional Appearance of the Day:

As part of her promotion of Beauty and the Beast, here’s Emma Watson charmingly giving strangers advice for a fee:

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Supercut of the Day:

Everybody loves silhouetted character shots in movies, so everybody should love this supercut collecting the best of them:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Rob Reiner, who turns 70 today, dances with Meg Ryan during the making of When Harry Met Sally in 1988:

Meg Ryan and director Rob Reiner on the set of When Harry Met Sally. pic.twitter.com/qHtxfQgdh8

— This Is Not Porn (@thisisnotp0rn) August 27, 2014

Movie Parody of the Day:

Forrest Gump is mashed with The Help in this topical Saturday Night Live parody starring Kate McKinnon and Octavia Spencer:

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Acting Parody of the Day:

College Humor pokes fun at performances by actors under tons of special effects makeup in this sci-fi movie parody:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of Lethal Weapon. Watch the original trailer for the classic action movie below.

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and

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House Republicans Release Affordable Care Act Replacement Bill

House Republicans released their plan on Monday to redo the Affordable Care Act. Congressional Republicans have voted several times to repeal the law, but President Obama vetoed those attempts.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

House Republicans have released the text of a bill that’s designed to remake the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. Congressional Republicans have voted dozens of times in the past to repeal the ACA. But that was when President Obama was in office, and he vetoed those attempts. That is expected to change under President Trump.

And joining us now with more on the changes being proposed in Congress is NPR health policy correspondent Alison Kodjak. And Alison, give us the main points here. I assume the Republicans are getting rid of the requirement that everyone have health insurance, the individual mandate.

ALISON KODJAK, BYLINE: Yeah. They’re getting rid of that by repealing the penalty that people would have to pay if they don’t have insurance. And that they’re doing that retroactively, meaning people who didn’t have insurance even last year, if this bill goes through, would not have to pay that tax penalty.

And what they’re going to do is change that – what they call the stick approach to a carrot by offering refundable tax credits to people to allow them to use that money to buy a health plan in hopes that more and more people will actually buy in voluntarily, rather than have to do it under a mandate.

SIEGEL: Refundable in this case means it could actually be in excess of what somebody owes in income taxes?

KODJAK: Yeah. It does. The tax credits that they have put forth are $2,000 for individuals under the age of 30. And they go up to about $4,000 if you’re over 50 years old. They’re per person, so a family could, you know, accumulate a lot of those tax credits up to $14,000.

But that refundable part is actually a point of contention. There are some of the most conservative Republicans who don’t appreciate the refundable tax credit because that means people, like you said, who don’t even pay federal income tax could get that money back. They see that as an additional entitlement.

SIEGEL: What about Medicaid? More than 10 million low-income Americans have gotten coverage under the Obamacare expansion of Medicaid. Does that survive in this House bill?

KODJAK: It survived in a way. The bill proposes that they freeze the program in 2020. And all of those people who are covered under Medicaid can stay covered. But if they leave Medicaid because they get a job or something, they can’t then re-enroll if they are over the regular Medicaid limit, which was much lower – the poverty line, rather than 130 percent of the poverty line, which is what the expansion allowed.

So it’s sort of a compromise between those who are afraid of throwing people off Medicaid and those people who don’t want to see that expansion stay in place.

SIEGEL: This is a House bill. As you’ve mentioned, there are some conservatives who object to provisions of it. I assume the Democrats object to it very broadly. What are its chances?

KODJAK: Well, that’s a bit of a question because yes, there are several conservatives in the House who object to it. All Democrats don’t want to see this – the Obamacare repealed at all. And in the Senate it’s even more complicated because there are already several conservative senators who’ve come out against this whole plan calling it, quote, “Obamacare-lite” and several senators who have said they’re concerned that it is not generous enough and people will be thrown off their health insurance.

The Republicans only have a small majority in the Senate. So it’ll be hard for them to lose any Republican senators and still be able to get this bill through.

SIEGEL: What happens next?

KODJAK: Well, this week, two House committees will mark up the bill, which means they’ll vote it out to the House. And then we’ll see where it goes from there.

SIEGEL: OK. That’s Alison Kodjak. Thank you.

KODJAK: Thanks, Robert.

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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Does Nintendo's New Console Signal A 'Switch' For The Video Game Market?

There’s hype surrounding Nintendo’s first home-to-handheld hybrid console, Switch. Wall Street Journal technology reporter Nathan Olivarez-Giles says this could be a make or break moment for Nintendo.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Moving on to technology…

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “SUPER MARIO THEME”)

MARTIN: “Super Mario” and “The Legend Of Zelda” are all part of the Nintendo legacy. But now, beloved games from 30 years ago are getting a facelift to compete against Xbox and PlayStation, not to mention the hundreds of mobile apps that have frankly put Nintendo a bit on the back foot.

Nintendo has unveiled what many game reviewers are calling a game-changer. It’s called Switch, but let’s see if the Nintendo Switch is worth all the hype. To find out more about it, we called Wall Street Journal technology reporter Nathan Olivarez-Giles. He’s with us now from San Francisco. Nathan, thanks so much for joining us.

NATHAN OLIVAREZ-GILES: Yeah. My pleasure.

MARTIN: So why is this Switch such a big deal?

OLIVAREZ-GILES: Well, the Switch is the first home console to really balance being a system that you can play on your television in high definition, but then something you can take on the road with you as well. The Switch also reintroduces motion-sensing controllers that were made popular by the Wii, Nintendo’s last big hit in a new way. And they’re smaller, they’re lighter, they’re untethered. And it’s a bit of a nostalgia play, but it also really looks towards the future with a console unlike anything we’ve seen before.

MARTIN: How much does it cost?

OLIVAREZ-GILES: Just the console itself costs $299, and what you get is the tablet with its 6.2-inch touch screen. You get the two joy-con motion controllers which allow you to play with a friend easily. But if you slide them onto either side of the tablet, it creates one solid on-the-go console. And then you get a dock that you put the tablet into when you want to play on a television set. So that’s a pretty fair price. And that’s what videogame systems are going for these days.

MARTIN: So you’ve played it. What do you think?

OLIVAREZ-GILES: Well, at this point, the hardware is the best that Nintendo has ever made. And I’ve had a total blast playing it. The standout game for me was “The Legend Of Zelda: Breath Of The Wild.” If you’re a “Zelda” fan, this is one of the best “Zelda” games ever made. But at this point, there’s just not enough to play on it. So the hardware has massive potential, but I think a lot of people should wait until the games get better.

MARTIN: They have to because what I’m reading in the business press – yours included – is that it’s already sold out almost everywhere. Why is that?

OLIVAREZ-GILES: Well, you know, the hype is really strong. And Nintendo has a lot of hearts and minds because of decades worth of games and relationships they’ve built with gamers. You know, people hear “Mario,” and they hear “Zelda” and there’s a almost romantic and fun idea of what’s going to be happening there. So the Wii U, which was the previous Nintendo console fell flat on its face. I think they sold about 13 million units worldwide where the Wii before that sold about 100 million units. So Nintendo needs a big hit, and this is one of those make-or-break moments for the company.

MARTIN: Before we let you go, do we expect competitors like Sony and Microsoft to – makers of the PlayStation the Xbox – to follow suit?

OLIVAREZ-GILES: Microsoft and Sony so far don’t have anything like this in the works that we know of or that they’ve spoken publicly about. What they’re doing is they’re beefing up their consoles with even more processing power, and then they’re making them compatible with virtual reality headsets. Nintendo hasn’t gone the VR route yet. They say they’re open to it in the future, but they’re kind of steering clear of it.

Nintendo’s always really been more about fun game play with other people around you, rather than teraflops worth of processing power inside of a VCR-like box. And that’s really the route that Microsoft and Sony are battling in right now.

MARTIN: That was Wall Street Journal tech reporter Nathan Olivarez-Giles joining us from San Francisco. Nathan, thanks so much.

OLIVAREZ-GILES: My pleasure.

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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Thomas Starzl, Trailblazer In Organ Transplantation, Dies At 90

In this 1989 photograph, Thomas Starzl oversees a liver transplant operation at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Starzl won a National Medal of Science in 2004.

Gene J. Puskar/AP

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Gene J. Puskar/AP

Thomas Starzl, the doctor who pioneered liver transplant surgery, has died at the age of 90. In an announcement on its website, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center said Starzl died peacefully at his home on Saturday.

“His work in neuroscience, metabolism, transplantation and immunology has brought life and hope to countless patients, and his teaching in these areas has spread that capacity for good to countless practitioners and researchers everywhere,” his family wrote in a statement issued Sunday by UPMC and the University of Pittsburgh.

“With determination and irresistible resolve, Thomas Starzl advanced medicine through his intuition and uncanny insight into both the technical and human aspects of even the most challenging problems.”

Chancellor Emeritus Nordenberg on the passing of Dr. Starzl: “He became a hero to countless patients.” pic.twitter.com/DJVuC02Gng

— Pitt (@PittTweet) March 5, 2017

By the time he died, Starzl widely enjoyed a towering reputation in the medical profession — but this was not always the case. The doctor, who eventually became known as the “father of transplantation,” drew his fair share of criticism when he began experimenting with transplants.

“Transplanting was hardly even thought of as a possibility then,” Starzl once said. “I was working blind.”

In 1963, Starzl led the team of surgeons that performed the world’s first liver transplant. The patient, a child who had been born with half a liver, did not survive that operation due to excessive blood loss.

Undeterred, Starzl attempted the operation again just two months later on another patient who suffered from liver cancer. This time, it appeared to be a success — until the man died three weeks afterward, this time from blood clotting.

Still, Starzl kept working, also researching drugs to block the human immune system from rejecting its newly implanted organ. And by the late 1970s, the survival rate for patients undergoing liver transplantation had risen to roughly 40 percent.

When in the early ’80s he left the University of Colorado for the University of Pittsburgh, where we would go on to spend more than three decades, Starzl and his surgical team had already transplanted more than 1,000 livers. Under his leadership, UPMC would go on to become one of the world’s foremost transplant centers.

During his time there, he became known as a prolific publisher. In fact, as UPMC notes, the Institute for Scientific Information identified Starzl in 1999 as “the most cited scientist in the field of clinical medicine.” The ISI estimated that for a time he was averaging the publication of one paper every 7.3 days, according to UPMC.

For his achievements, the school renamed its transplant institute after Starzl in 1996.

By that point, however, Starzl had retired from performing surgery. Following his own coronary bypass surgery in 1990, he decided it was time to give up the scalpel — much to his personal relief, as it turns out.

“I was not emotionally equipped to be a surgeon or to deal with its brutality,” Starzl acknowledged in his 1992 memoir, The Puzzle People.

Despite Starzl’s achievements at the operating table, his family says he should perhaps be best remembered as a teacher and a friend.

“Even more extraordinary [than his medical advances] was his ability to gift that capacity to those around him, allowing his students and colleagues to discover the right stuff within themselves,” the family said in its statement.

“Nobody who spent time with Thomas Starzl could remain unaffected.”

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Out Of Bounds: The National Women's Hockey League

NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly talks to Ashley Johnston, captain of the New York Riveters hockey team about sustaining passion for the sport in a league that barely pays any money.

(SOUNDBITE OF TRIBECA SONG, “GET LARGE”)

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

The New York Riveters did not live up to their name last night. They lost to the Boston Pride 4-3.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #1: Kessel beats her player down the side and she scores. What a shot by Amanda Kessel.

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #1: That will do it. The Boston Pride come from behind and shock the New York Riveters.

KELLY: The Riveters and the Pride are two of the four teams that make up the NWHL. That’s the National Women’s Hockey League, which is now in its second season. On today’s edition of Out of Bounds, we’re going to talk with the captain of the New York Riveters. That’s 24-year-old Ashley Johnston. She’s at our member station WAMC in Albany, N.Y. Hey there.

ASHLEY JOHNSTON: Hey.

KELLY: Great to have you on. I am told you have played hockey since you were 8 years old. Is that right?

JOHNSTON: That is correct.

KELLY: Did you ever dream you would grow up and be able to play it professionally?

JOHNSTON: Definitely not. When I was younger, I always thought that I’d be the first female playing in the NHL. That was my dream, especially, you know, obviously playing with a bunch of guys. And then, once I got older, I realized that that wasn’t exactly going to be feasible. So then it became a dream of playing in the Olympics.

KELLY: What’s it like to play now, finally, in front of an audience that had to buy tickets?

JOHNSTON: I mean, it’s so different. Our fans are absolutely amazing. There’s nothing better than playing and then midway through a game hearing a let’s go, Riveters chant. It kind of sends chills down your back. We have some – Rivs superfans, are what they call themselves, and they’re some of the best people I’ve ever met and they are die-hard fans.

KELLY: And I should mention, you also have a day job to help pay the bills. You’re an industrial engineer. You work at a robotics company. Is that typical? Do most of the players on your team have other jobs?

JOHNSTON: Most of the girls have some sort of work, whether it be part time or full time. And then you kind of have the other half where they’re just solely playing hockey.

KELLY: And it’s pro hockey, meaning you should be able to earn a living from this, but we should note that the pay is, for lack of a better word, crummy. You make $260 a game, is that right?

JOHNSTON: That is correct.

KELLY: How does that compare to what the guys make?

JOHNSTON: One of the girls was telling me that some of the NHL players, that their signing bonus would cover one team’s entire salary.

KELLY: Wow.

JOHNSTON: It’s an entirely different world. There’s a lot of extra zeros on their paychecks.

KELLY: What’s that like, having grown up playing these guys, competing against them to a certain age and then you see them go on to these astronomical NHL salaries and you’re making $260 a game?

JOHNSTON: I mean, it’s definitely – it’s – in some sense, it’s a tough pill to swallow. But really, prior to the NWHL, there wasn’t even a league for you to compete in. So that was almost harder because you’d see your college friends graduating, going and signing pro contracts, and you’re like, oh, there’s literally nothing else for me. Like, this is the end of the road.

And I know for me, I felt like my last year of college, I was still getting better. So I was almost worse because I wasn’t at my peak yet. So even having the opportunity to play is now a great first step.

KELLY: I have to ask just the basic question of, why is this worth it? I mean, what is it about hockey that makes you get out there for this terrible pay, your – have a long commute to get there? Why get out there on the ice every day?

JOHNSTON: Obviously, over time, that kind of – that dream, that desire has changed. When I was younger, you know, obviously you have the love of the game. And then when I was in high school, it was – an opportunity to go to college was a huge drive and huge reason for my passion. And now I help out with a U12 team.

One of the girls came up to me and she just goes, I want to be just like you when I’m older. And right there is just so much – that adds fuel. That just adds drive because now she’s saying – she walks around with her little Riveters T-shirt, wants to be on the Riveters, and that’s what she wants to do. She wants to be a professional women’s hockey player.

KELLY: That is the captain of the New York Riveters, Ashley Johnston. Ashley, thanks so much for coming by. Good luck with the season.

JOHNSTON: Thank you and thank you very much for having me.

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