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Today in Movie Culture: Why Heath Ledger's Joker Is the Best, How 'Mad Max: Fury Road' Really Ends and More

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

Movie Praise of the Day:

It’s a big honor to get an Honest Trailer that is actually positive, and the latest rarity is for The Jungle Book, which is new to home video today:

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Screenwriting Lesson of the Day:

With a new, unpopular portrayal of The Joker currently in theaters, Michael Tucker looks at why the character works so well, as written, in The Dark Knight:

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Alternate Ending of the Day:

See what happens to Imperator Furiosa after the end of Mad Max: Fury Road in this animated parody:

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Redone Movie of the Day:

Watch The Revenant remade in animated 8-bit video game form:

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Fan Theories of the Day:

Cracked presents five movie villains with argument for why they’re really the good guys:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

River Phoenix, who was born on this date in 1970, gets direction from Rob Reiner on the set of Stand By Me, which turned 30 this month:

Cosplay of the Day:

Learn how to cosplay with your friends as the Silent Hill nurse care of this tutorial by AWE me:

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Genre Studies of the Day:

Jack Nugent of Now You See It illustrates why jump scares are not a good cinematic device:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

The following video essay by Joost Broeren and Sander Spies focuses on how Steven Spielberg features dinner table scenes in all his movies (via The Playlist):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the release of John Frankenheimer’s The Island of Dr. Moreau. Watch the original trailer for the movie, which stars Marlon Brando and Val Kilmer, below.

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NLRB Rules Student Assistants At Private Universities Are Employees

The National Labor Relations Board on Tuesday ruled in favor of students at private universities who argue their work as researchers and teaching assistants makes them employees in the eyes of the law. For decades, the board has flip-flopped on this issue.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Students working as research or teaching assistants at private colleges and universities are now considered employees under the law, this according to a ruling today by the National Labor Relations Board. NPR’s Yuki Noguchi reports the decision went further than expected and includes undergraduate workers, too.

YUKI NOGUCHI, BYLINE: For years, students working in labs and classrooms argued their work contributes to their universities and therefore, they should be treated as employees who are eligible to unionize. Private universities argued that work was, in fact, part of the students’ training. Peter McDonough is general counsel for the American Council on Education, which represents university presidents. He says he was shocked that the board included undergraduates in its ruling.

PETER MCDONOUGH: It sweeps away any concern about whether an individual is primarily a student.

NOGUCHI: For decades, the law agreed with universities. But in 2000, it sided with students and has since gone back and forth, sometimes agreeing with the students and sometimes with the universities. This latest ruling came after the United Auto Workers, which is working with students, petitioned the labor board for yet another change. In issuing its 3-1 decision, the board said not recognizing the students as legal employees deprived an entire category of workers of the protections of the National Labor Relations Act without a convincing justification. Bennett Carpenter is a literature Ph.D. candidate and student organizer at Duke.

BENNETT CARPENTER: Oh man (laughter), it’s going to mean so much that the NLRB is going to recognize what we know as graduate students already, that we are workers and we deserve the same rights and opportunities as other workers.

NOGUCHI: Carpenter says students around the country are poised to form unions. That would enable the students to collectively bargain for dental care, worker’s compensation and other benefits they currently lack. If universities do not recognize student unions, the board’s latest ruling could end up challenged in court. Yuki Noguchi, NPR News, Washington.

Copyright © 2016 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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Health Officials Struggle To Fight Deadly Sepsis Infections

Four days after Rory Staunton cut himself in gym class, he died from septic shock. Courtesy of Rory Staunton Foundation hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Rory Staunton Foundation

After Rory Staunton fell at the gym and cut his arm in March of 2012, the 12-year-old became feverish. He vomited during the night and complained of a sharp pain in his leg. When his parents called his pediatrician the next day, she said there was a stomach virus going around New York City, and his leg pain was likely due to his fall.

But she did advise his parents, Orlaith and Ciaran Staunton, to take Rory to the emergency department because of possible dehydration. The hospital workers did some blood work, gave him fluids and sent him home.

The next day, Rory’s pain and fever were worse. His skin was mottled and the tip of his nose had turned blue. The Stauntons raced back to the hospital, where he was admitted to intensive care. The diagnosis: septic shock. Rory was fighting an infection that was turning his skin black and shutting down his organs.

On Sunday, four days after he dove for the ball in gym class, Rory died.

Sepsis, which is a body’s overwhelming response to infection, kills more than 250,000 people in the U.S. every year. People at highest risk are those with weakened immune systems, the very young and elderly, and patients with chronic conditions such as diabetes, cancer or kidney disease. It is also risky for people with pneumonia or those who use catheters that can cause infections. But it can strike anyone, even a healthy child like Rory.

Sepsis typically occurs when germs from an infection get into the bloodstream and spread throughout the body. To fight the infection, the body mounts an immune response that may trigger inflammation that damages tissues and interferes with blood flow. That can lead to a drop in blood pressure, potentially causing organ failure and death.

“It was frightening to think that something could kill my son so fast and it would be something that I had never heard of,” said Orlaith Staunton.

She’s not alone. Many people don’t know about sepsis. Health care providers struggle to identify it early, but there’s no simple diagnostic test. Many symptoms — elevated heart and respiratory rates, fever or chills, pain — are common ones that are present in many conditions.

A growing number of doctors, hospitals, patient advocates and policymakers are pushing to educate consumers and clinicians about sepsis. The goal is to ensure that procedures that focus on prevention and early detection are followed.

The Stauntons established a foundation to raise awareness about the deadly infection, and in 2013 New York became the first state to require all hospitals to implement procedures for early recognition and treatment. This month, Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner signed a law requiring similar actions by hospitals in that state.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a study Tuesday about sepsis as part of an effort to draw attention to the importance of prevention and early detection.

“Early treatment is vital,” says Dr. Anthony Fiore, chief of the epidemiology research and innovations branch at the CDC’s Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion. “It’s an emergency that you need to deal with, like heart attack and stroke.”

When sepsis advances to septic shock, characterized by severely low blood pressure, each hour of delay in administering antibiotics decreases the odds of survival by an average 7.6 percent, one study found.

In 2013, sepsis (sometimes called septicemia) accounted for nearly $24 billion in hospital costs, the most expensive condition treated. Up to half of people who get it die. Many cases are related to health care, such as catheter use or an infection acquired in the hospital. But contrary to the common perception, approximately 80 percent of cases develop outside the hospital or at a nursing home, according to the CDC.

As the front line in identifying these cases, emergency departments typically have sepsis protocols in place to screen for it.

“The work you do in those first three to six hours in the emergency department makes more difference in cost than the whole next several weeks in the ICU,” said Dr. Todd L. Slesinger, who co-chairs a task force on sepsis at the American College of Emergency Physicians, which has developed a tool to help emergency department staff screen and treat the condition.

Last fall, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services started requiring hospitals to measure and report on screening and treatment efforts. In addition, Medicare sets penalties for a variety of hospital-acquired conditions, including high rates of post-operative sepsis.

Patient advocates and policymakers agree that patients themselves are key to improving prevention and early detection. Good hygiene can help prevent sepsis, including cleaning wounds. If someone gets injured, look for signs of sepsis, including rapid breathing or heart rate, confusion, fever or chills and pale or discolored skin.

Don’t assume health care providers have it covered, experts advise. If you or someone you’re caring for has these symptoms, ask the health care provider directly: “Do you think it might be sepsis?”

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent news service that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Michelle Andrews is on Twitter:@mandrews110.

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NBC Declares Rio A 'Media' Success, Though TV Ratings Were Down

NBC’s Bob Costas interviews the gold-medal winning U.S. gymnastics team in Rio on Aug. 9: Madison Kocian (from left), Laurie Hernandez, Gabby Douglas, Aly Raisman, Simone Biles. NBC broadcast more than 6,000 hours from the games on various platforms, but TV ratings were down from the 2012 London Games. NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

NBC had decidedly mixed results when it comes to ratings for its 17 days of coverage from the Summer Olympics in Rio.

According to figures released Monday, NBC drew an average total audience of 25.4 million viewers on its broadcast network in prime time, or 198 million people overall on TV.

Combine figures from broadcast, cable and online and the tally jumps to 27.5 million; enough to boost viewership for NBC programs like the Today show and NBC Nightly News while also bringing victories over network and cable TV competitors.

But those numbers weren’t nearly as good as the ratings four years ago from the London Games, which drew an average 31.1 million viewers in prime time, according to an NBC release. Back then, the 2012 games were touted as the most watched TV event in U.S. history.

In fact, the average 27.5 million viewers drawn by the Rio Games were the first time the total audience went down from a previous Olympics since the contests in Sydney back in 2000, according to figures provided by NBC.

NBC tried to put a better spin on the ratings in its press release for the Rio Games, calling the Rio Olympics the most successful media event in history. That’s because NBC this year broadcast 6,755 hours of programming on broadcast networks, online and over its NBC Sports app.

“Our planning production and presentation of the Rio games … is the most impressive undertaking I’ve seen in the media world,” NBC Sports Group Chairman Mark Lazarus said in the release. “This is the most ambitious task in the media business, and our team … all deserve a gold medal.”

Multiple platforms

The NBC release is careful to note that the 2012 Olympics didn’t feature live events online and on cable channels at the same time as the network’s prime-time coverage. That situation was a first for this year’s games, which meant NBC might have been competing with itself for viewers of live events on its many different platforms.

It is possible that online viewing had an impact on TV ratings. NBC says a total of 100 million unique users accessed the digital coverage for the Rio Games, a 29 percent increase from the London Games.

The NBC Sports app even provided notification messages to smartphones and tablets alerting users when important games were about to start. But NBC’s release also says 95 percent of prime-time viewers watched the games on the network, indicating online use still had a tiny impact on the most important viewership.

As usual, NBC racked up lots of complaints for its coverage, including barbs about the number of commercials. Social media ensured that even casual viewers knew how many events turned out before they were broadcast.

And the dominance of superstar athletes like Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt and American swimmer Michael Phelps created a string of near-certain victories that could have removed some of the suspense.

Whatever the reason, this year’s Olympics failed to deliver ratings in the way NBC had hoped, raising questions about whether viewers still see the games as appointment television.

Given that NBC has paid billions to air the games through to 2032, this might be a serious problem indeed over time.

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Today in Movie Culture: Hugh Jackman Says Bye to the Wolverine Beard and More

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

Grooming Video of the Day:

Watch Hugh Jackman possibly shave off his Logan beard for the last time as Wolverine 3 wraps shooting (via Screen Crush):

My wife is going to be very happy. #GoodbyeChops #thedebs

A video posted by Hugh Jackman (@thehughjackman) on Aug 22, 2016 at 4:25am PDT

Custom Build of the Day:

In Star Wars: The Force Awakens, BB-8 had a memorable moment with a little torch. Now you can have memorable moments during cooler nights with a BB-8 fire pit that has a big eternal flame (via Geek Tyrant):

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Alternative Poster of the Day:

In case the official poster for the Netflix series Stranger Things wasn’t ’80s-influenced enough, here’s one by Daniel Nash that directly relates to the show’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial influence (via Twitter):

Fan Theory of the Day:

Is the Queen really the true villain in Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs? Cracked makes the case that it’s someone else in this live-action parody:

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Bad Film Analysis of the Day:

Find out the hidden meaning of How to Train a Dragon 2 according to an alien watching the DreamWorks Animation feature in the future:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Never mind the kind of allergies it’ll trigger on the convention floor, every Ellen Ripley Aliens cosplay now requires a real cat as part of the getup. See more images and a video at Fashionably Geek.

Supercut of the Day:

Burger Fiction collected the most awkward scenes in movies (many involving Ben Stiller, of course) in this supercut that’s hard to watch and also hard to look away from:

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Fan Art of the Day:

For Popzilla’s John Hughes tribute art show, below is a work by Sam Carter honoring The Breakfast Club from a series of character silhouette prints. See more from that series and others at Geek Tyrant.

Vintage Image of the Day:

Speaking of The Breakfast Club, one of the first great parodies of its poster pose came from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, which turns 30 today.

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is also the 30th anniversary of the release of Night of the Creeps. Watch the original trailer for the cult classic below.

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Miami Schools Take Steps To Protect Returning Students From Zika

A Miami-Dade County mosquito control worker sprays around a school in the Wynwood area of Miami earlier this month.

A Miami-Dade County mosquito control worker sprays around a school in the Wynwood area of Miami earlier this month. Alan Diaz/AP hide caption

toggle caption Alan Diaz/AP

Students returned to school on Monday in Miami amid a new concern: the threat of Zika. Nine schools in Miami-Dade County are in or near a zone where nearly a month ago health officials confirmed that mosquitoes are spreading the virus.

One of them, Jose de Diego Middle School, is in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood, an area known for its restaurants, cafes and street art. It’s also home to middle-class and low-income families, many newly arrived from Venezuela, Cuba and Haiti.

Over the weekend, school officials distributed cans of mosquito repellent to parents and made long-sleeved shirts and pants available to students. For the past month, the county has conducted intensive spraying and outreach. While health officials are optimistic about their efforts to control mosquitoes in this neighborhood, on Friday they said that Zika has now spread to another neighborhood several miles away, on Miami Beach.

The start of the school year is always hectic. The principal of Jose de Diego Middle School, April Thompson-Williams, says Zika leaves parents with even more questions. “They just want to know how to protect their children and to ensure that they’re safe when they come to school,” she says.

Kenyanna Darden brought her daughter, Jaynela, to school today. She says the school district seems to have a good plan in place to protect students. “They sent text messages, emails, voicemail, all that, all day, every day,” she says. The message? “Protect yourself, wear ‘Off’ spray.”

Another parent, Nicole Pugh, still has some worries after dropping her daughter off at school. “Yeah, I worry about it,” she says. “But I made sure she was sprayed and everything. So hopefully, they’ll take care of the situation.”

Jose De Diego Middle School teacher Cyd Browne challenged her 7th-grade engineering class to design a plan to protect an area from the mosquitoes that carry Zika.

Jose De Diego Middle School teacher Cyd Browne challenged her 7th-grade engineering class to design a plan to protect an area from the mosquitoes that carry Zika. Greg Allen/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Greg Allen/NPR

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho was visiting schools in both of Miami’s Zika transmission zones today, spreading the message that students should wear repellent, long-sleeved shirts, long pants — and that they should be in school. “Every single school is air-conditioned. Every single bus is air-conditioned,” he says. “There is no contact with areas that have standing water. And kids are well-protected in air-conditioned areas. They’re going to be fine.” Carvalho says recess and sports will go on as usual.

Cyd Browne began her 7th-grade engineering class today with a challenge. She asked her students to design a plan to protect an area from mosquitoes that carry Zika. “We’re going to look to see the science behind this, do our research and then come up with a solution to make sure everyone knows to spill the water wherever there’s standing water and to drain and cover,” she says. Every teacher at Jose de Diego Middle school started today with a Zika information session.

For children and anyone who’s not pregnant, the symptoms associated with Zika are usually mild. Most people don’t even know they’ve had the disease. But the chief of Emergency Medicine at Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital, Bobby Kapur, says that from a public health standpoint it’s crucial that students be protected. “We have hundreds, maybe thousands of students clustered in one area,” he says, adding that any student infected through a mosquito bite could bring that infection back into their homes and communities.

Controlling the spread of Zika is a major challenge. Along with the two zones already identified, health officials say they’re investigating possible cases of Zika transmission in several other areas in South Florida.

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Craft Distillers Tap Pure Sugar Cane For A Southern Rum Renaissance

Richland Single Estate Old Georgia Rum is made from cane grown, cut, distilled and rested on the premises of a 100-acre plantation in Richland, Ga. International awards and gold medals have poured in for this field-to-glass rum.

Richland Single Estate Old Georgia Rum is made from cane grown, cut, distilled and rested on the premises of a 100-acre plantation in Richland, Ga. International awards and gold medals have poured in for this field-to-glass rum. Courtesy of Richland Rum hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Richland Rum

Ah, rum, with its legendary pirates bellowing for grog, tiki umbrellas peeking up from neon-colored cocktails, tequila-spiked punch at college parties. Rum, universally imbibed and yet often scorned. Most rum is “the distilled essence of industrial waste,” in the words of Wayne Curtis, author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. That waste is molasses, the byproduct of sugar production. After the molasses has been fermented, flavorings, colorings and sugar are often added in.

But craft rum — that is an entirely different and savory spirit, says Curtis: “I’ve judged three spirit competitions in the past year, and I’m very bullish on rum.”

Not surprisingly, the South — once a hub for sugar plantations — is spearheading a craft rum renaissance, as small distilleries turn away from molasses and cull fresh sugar cane itself to create smooth liquors with grassy, warm, woody or floral flavors.

High Wire Distilling sources its flavor-intense, blue-ribbon variety of cane, with its signature blue-hued stalk, from three local farms. The differences in soil lend taste distinctions to each batch — the coastal cane has more salinity; the inland, a brighter, banana-like flavor.

High Wire Distilling sources its flavor-intense, blue-ribbon variety of cane, with its signature blue-hued stalk, from three local farms. The differences in soil lend taste distinctions to each batch — the coastal cane has more salinity; the inland, a brighter, banana-like flavor. Courtesy of High Wire Distilling hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of High Wire Distilling

“Adventurous drinkers are starting to see rum as a terroir spirit,” says Ann Marshall, who, along with her husband, Scott Blackmore, founded the award-winning High Wire Distilling in Charleston, S.C.

High Wire makes a traditional-style cane rum, inspired by the rhum agricole invented in the West Indies and strictly regulated by the French government there.

“The beautiful thing about agricoles,” says Blackmore, “is that you cannot add flavoring, coloring or sugar. It has to be distilled from raw sugar cane juice. We follow those rules, although since we are not located in the French West Indies, we call ours a Low Country agricole.”

To make its signature agricole, High Wire ferments fresh cane juice from locally grown cane that is distilled and rested in wooden barrels for a year. Says Marshall, “We are taking this crop out of the ground and juicing it in its entirety — with bits of dirt, organic matter, all that delicious cellulose, those natural yeasts. That’s why it tastes so unique.”

High Wire sources its flavor-intense, blue-ribbon variety of cane, with its signature blue-hued stalk, from three local farms. The differences in soil lend taste distinctions to each batch — the coastal cane has more salinity; the inland, a brighter, banana-like flavor. The bottles are appropriately labeled according to the farm the cane came from. “I was talking to Wayne Curtis,” recalls Blackmore, “and he told me that in Martinique, the taste distinctions are so marked that they label each tank by the field or hill it came from, and then create a special blend. I find it more interesting, however, to keep them separate.”

A big challenge with fresh raw cane juice is to get it into the still as quickly as possible — within hours, says Blackwell. Otherwise it will start to ferment on its own. A sip of High Wire’s agricole is indeed astonishing — fruity, earthy, pungent — and lingers on the tongue.

Georgia-based Richland Rum ages its product in white oak barrels for 32 to 48 months, with the barrel number printed on the label.

Georgia-based Richland Rum ages its product in white oak barrels for 32 to 48 months, with the barrel number printed on the label. Hector Manuel Sanchez/Courtesy of Richland Rum hide caption

toggle caption Hector Manuel Sanchez/Courtesy of Richland Rum

About 350 miles southwest of High Wire, in Richland, Ga., Erik and Karin Vonk of Richland Rum are crafting Richland Single Estate Old South Georgia Rum — the only single estate rum in the country, made from cane grown, cut, distilled and rested on the premises. They grow cane on their 100-acre plantation, cut and juice it, then boil it into a syrup that retains the bright vegetal and floral notes of the original plant. It is that syrup they ferment and distill, in copper, gas-fired stills hand-forged in Portugal. The rum is aged in white oak barrels for 32 to 48 months, with the barrel number printed on the label. (Used barrels go to Terrapin Beer in Athens, Ga., where the rum-infused oak lends a special flavor to aged beer.) International awards and gold medals have poured in for this field-to-glass rum, from the 2014 International SIP Awards to the 2016 Good Foods Award.

A Holland-born transplant, Erik Vonk says his grandfather’s house in Rotterdam “had high ceilings and paneled walls lined with bookshelves and bottles of fine rum. On holidays we’d end our meals with a rum-drenched plum pudding brought in flambé. Fast-forward decades later, and I decided to become a rum-maker.”

The soil in Richland is a loamy sand that grows an aromatic cane. The Vonks have experimented with 17 cane varieties, but their favorite thus far is an heirloom Georgia Red, which they learned to grow with the help of the University of Georgia. The couple plans to craft fresh — rather than aged — rum as well, a silkier, sweeter spirit they will call Virgin Coastal Georgia Rum. They will be opening a second distillery in Brunswick, Ga., a popular tourist destination on the coast, in 2017.

“You make what you grow,” says Kelly Railean, the owner of Railean Distillers in San Leon, Texas, along the Gulf Coast. Rum has a long history in the region, and tiki bars abound. She opened her own rum distillery in 2007, and though many of her craft rums rely on molasses, she, too, makes a cane juice rum, which she calls Grand Cuvee Sugarcane Juice Rum and sells at her distillery only. “I wanted to call mine an agricole,” she remarks, “because it truly is, but the U.S. agency that regulates liquor refused.”

“Rums made from sugar cane are grassy, fresh and herbaceous,” she says. “For those who are regular wine drinkers, I compare this kind of rum to a sauvignon blanc, as opposed to rum from molasses, which might be compared to a chardonnay.”

Nick Detrich, owner of the rum-focused New Orleans cocktail bar Cane and Table, says that “for sheer variety, no spirit holds a candle to rum.”

If the rum you know and spurn is that sticky-sweet schlock, mass produced from molasses, it may be time to taste some Southern sipping-style rums.

“There’s an artistry to rum,” says Railean. “A good rum can be savored just like craft bourbon.”


Jill Neimark is an Atlanta-based writer whose work has been featured in Discover, Scientific American, Science, Nautilus, Aeon, Psychology Today and The New York Times.

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After Second Gold, Boxer Claressa Shields Looks Ahead To What's Next

Boxer Claressa Shields holds her gold medals from the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games during the medal ceremony on Sunday. She is the first U.S. boxer to win consecutive Olympic gold medals.

Boxer Claressa Shields holds her gold medals from the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games during the medal ceremony on Sunday. She is the first U.S. boxer to win consecutive Olympic gold medals. Alex Livesey/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Alex Livesey/Getty Images

One of the last medals awarded at the Rio Olympics went to a 21-year-old middleweight boxer from Flint, Mich.: Claressa Shields.

It was gold. With that Sunday victory, Shields became the first U.S. boxer ever to win back-to-back gold medals.

On the podium, after the medal was slipped around her neck, she reached into her pocket, pulled out her gold medal from the 2012 London Games and draped that one over her head, too.

Later, she explained, “People didn’t give me my recognition for doing it one time. So I was like, you know what? When I get on the podium, I’m gonna put on both, so people will always remember and never forget that I’m the first American boxer to win two Olympic gold medals” in consecutive games.

In the final match in Rio, Shields faced Nouchka Fontijn of the Netherlands. They’d met in the ring before: Just a few months ago, Shields had beaten Fontijn to win her second straight world championship in Astana, Kazakhstan.

In Rio, just before the fight, Shields paced in her corner, coiled with energy, staring Fontijn down. She wore knee socks that said “Superman,” with the superhero’s shield peeking out over the top of her boxing shoes.

And Shields proved invincible. Fontijn is taller, but Shields was faster and stronger. She slipped artfully under Fontijn’s swings, bobbing her head and feinting.

She pummeled Fontijn with sharp jabs and punches, taunting her at one point to bring it on.

USA's Claressa Shields (left) fights against Netherlands' Nouchka Fontijn at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.

USA’s Claressa Shields (left) fights against Netherlands’ Nouchka Fontijn at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images

After the match, she recalled, “Coach Billy [Walsh] yelled out, ‘Fake to the right, hit her with the right,’ so fake right-right. Soon as he said it, not even a second later, I threw it and I knocked her across the ring!”

In the end, after four rounds, the judges were unanimous and Shields knew it. She danced joyfully even before the referee raised her hand in victory. She dropped down on one knee in thanks and turned a cartwheel in the ring.

Then she grabbed an American flag from her father, Clarence Shields, who was sitting ringside, and ran a victory lap around the arena, the flag flying behind her like a superhero’s cape.

Shields has come a long way from her tough childhood in Flint, and boxing has been her salvation. Her father was in prison until she was 9. Her mother was an alcoholic, and the kids would often go hungry. Shields has spoken about being sexually abused as a child.

She reflected on that troubled past in a news conference right after her Olympic medal ceremony. “I have been through a lot in my life,” she said, “but I want to inspire people, and I want to give people just a little bit of hope. Because I remember when I was one of those kids who didn’t have any hope. And just when I got just a little bit, look how far I’ve been able to come!”

When I spoke with Shields later, she admitted that the night before the final, she had a moment of panic. “I was like, ‘Can you actually do this?'” she said. “It had me questioning myself for a minute, and then I was like, ‘Of course you can.’ I had to make that decision last night: if I had to out-bang her, had to out-box her, had to out-think her, I can do all three. So what’s the problem?”

No problem.

Shields’ record is now an astounding 77 wins, one loss. She will leave Rio with a $25,000 gold medal bonus from the U.S. Olympic Committee, and she has a plan: She won’t be going back to live in the city of Flint, where crime rates are high and the economy is a shambles.

“I still love my hometown, and I’m still gonna be involved in my hometown,” she told me, “but I just can’t live there.”

Instead, she said, “Florida will be where I live. Every time I go to Florida, I have this overwhelming feeling that I’m happy every day. I wake up in the morning wanting to train and run at 3, 4 o’clock in the morning, every day. I can get out and do that and be safe doing it.”

When Shields went home from the London Olympics four years ago, even though she was a gold medal champion, endorsements didn’t follow.

There was no Wheaties box. No deal with Nike. She was advised to stop boasting about how she likes to beat people up.

Claressa Shields of the United States (right) celebrates victory over Nouchka Fontijn of the Netherlands on Sunday.

Claressa Shields of the United States (right) celebrates victory over Nouchka Fontijn of the Netherlands on Sunday. Alex Livesey/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Alex Livesey/Getty Images

“They had this weird definition of what a strong woman was. For some reason, that definition was pretty, non-sweaty and not as muscular. And one, I’m very pretty. I think I’m fine! I’m gorgeous!” she told me with a grin.

“But the fact of it is,” she continued, “when [I’m] boxing, I look so strong and I’m punching so hard and I’m punching so fast, and [I] make people feel intimidated. I think that now people are starting to embrace that. The definition of a strong woman is Laila Ali. Lucia Rijker. Serena Williams. Claressa Shields.”

She’s not worried about getting endorsements this time around, “cause everybody wants a tough, strong woman in their life!”

Boxing promoters were watching this strong woman here in Rio. It’s possible they’ll make her an offer to turn pro. Universal Pictures has bought the rights to make a feature film based on her life story.

“Hopefully, I’m a household name now,” Shields said, “which I don’t doubt!”

Right now, the two-time Olympic champion wants to go home to Flint to see her family. Then she’ll get back in the ring to start training for whatever comes next.

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Rio Dances: Closing Ceremony For The 2016 Summer Olympics

Athletes walk during the "Heroes of the Games" segment during the Closing Ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at Maracana Stadium on Sunday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Athletes walk during the “Heroes of the Games” segment during the Closing Ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at Maracana Stadium on Sunday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Ezra Shaw/Getty Images hide caption

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Rio 2016 organizers are dropping the curtain on the Summer Games, Sunday after hosting the world’s elite athletes who’ve competed for 306 medals over the past 19 days here in Rio de Janeiro.

The closing ceremony starts at 8 p.m. local time, which is one hour ahead of Eastern Time. Because of NBC’s time delay, it’s airing at 8 p.m. ET and progressively later across the U.S.

We’re updating this post with scenes from the event, so please refresh to see what’s happening in Rio. We got a late start due to technical issues, so we’re filling in some blanks from the official guide to the ceremony.

The opening ceremony began with a countdown, similar to the one we saw in the opening ceremony. After that, performers evoked the colors we’ve seen all during these games — inflections on Brazil’s blue, green, and yellow flag — to form a welcoming array of Rio landmarks.

The Games have been criticized for empty seats, but the stadium is packed on Sunday night.

The Games have been criticized for empty seats, but the stadium is packed on Sunday night. Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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Later in the show, a segment evoked the expanse of time that the opening show also got at, with cave-paintings displayed on Maracana Stadium’s floor in a a meditation on archeology.

The effect was very pretty — but the crowd loved what came in the show’s second half. One segment, cartoon characters such as Mario ran around — and then, inexplicably and yet wondrously, shot a drill bit through the Earth and out the other side. They created a tunnel that links Tokyo (hosts of the 2020 Games) and Rio, with a green pipe-like entrance protruding from Rio.

And here in Rio, the tunnel’s green entrance the magically appeared on the floor of Maracana — and out popped Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Or at least that’s what we’re told. It’s one of those “Wait, what… I love it!” moments that Olympic ceremonies pull off at their best.

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appears during the closing ceremony.

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appears during the closing ceremony. David Ramos/Getty Images hide caption

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Another winning segment came earlier, when Grupo Corpo, a contemporary dance troupe from the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, put on part of “Parabelo,” one of its shows, at the ceremony. But then the dancers gave way to “clay people,” and the performance drew roars of approval as the crowd bopped along to Luiz Gonzaga’s forró song “Asa Branca.”

The closing ceremonies must always include speeches, and that happened often tonight. There were also national anthems — of Brazil, of Greece, of Japan, and of Kenya (during a medal ceremony for marathon).

Dancers wave flags ushering in excitement for the 2020 Summer Olympics which will be held in Tokyo.

Dancers wave flags ushering in excitement for the 2020 Summer Olympics which will be held in Tokyo. Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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At the end of the show came a tribute to a personal favorite of ours: the genius landscape designer and artist Roberto Burle Marx, famous for his organic, wavy shapes (he created Copacabana’s iconic sidewalk tile pattern). Trained in Europe, Marx was a champion of Brazil’s native plants and its rainforests. In this segment, the music is “Chovendo na Roseira,” in a version by Tom Jobim.

The flame was then extinguished, in a graceful official end to these games.

And then, after a thoughtful pause — and because Rio knows how to party — the drums kicked in, and six six samba singers belted out “Cidade Maravilhosa” (Marvelous City) — a Carnival march that is Rio’s anthem. In the stadium, row upon row of people stood and danced, singing along.

Dancers pay tribute to landscape designer and artist Roberto Burle Marx, who created Copacabana's iconic sidewalk tile pattern.

Dancers pay tribute to landscape designer and artist Roberto Burle Marx, who created Copacabana’s iconic sidewalk tile pattern. Cameron Spencer/Getty Images hide caption

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Was it then over? Not yet: A sound truck appeared, along with 12 carnival queens, and athletes who competed in these games poured out of

While these games have been criticized for not having full seats, Maracana was packed last night with people who watched Brazil’s men’s soccer team win gold. And tonight, it’s full of people who came out to enjoy the unique spectacle the Olympics brings.

Music — seen by many as the backbone of Brazil’s culture — is woven throughout this ceremony, from old classics and traditional music to new pop sounds from around the country. The audience clearly agrees with the choices the show’s music programmers have made. Brazilian music has many anthems, standards that everyone can sing, and tonight we’re hearing strains of familiar music reworked in new ways.

Singer Mariene de Castro performs in front of the Olympic flame before it was extinguished.

Singer Mariene de Castro performs in front of the Olympic flame before it was extinguished. Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

At the start of the show, a choir of 27 children entered, looking like little twinkling stars. With singers representing Brazil’s 26 states (and the Federal District), they performed Brazil’s national anthem.

We’ll note that after a travel delay, we arrived at Maracana Stadium later than we wanted — it’s a rainy, dreary evening in Rio. But the show must go on — even in an open-air stadium. Tonight, Maracana’s halls are darkened to highlight the light show and the Olympic flame.

Confetti falls as singers and dancers perform during the closing ceremony on Sunday.

Confetti falls as singers and dancers perform during the closing ceremony on Sunday. David Ramos/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption David Ramos/Getty Images

At the end of an Olympics, talk always turns to their legacy – and instead of one, these games could be said to have many: First and foremost, there’s the drama, grace, and excellence displayed by more than 11,000 athletes.

Then there are the games’ effects on Rio – its people, its infrastructure, and it standing. What will become of the buildings erected to host this global event? And will the Paralympic Games, which have faced huge budget problems here in Rio, go smoothly?

Spectators dance as fireworks light up the sky during the closing ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games on Sunday.

Spectators dance as fireworks light up the sky during the closing ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games on Sunday. Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

The impact of the Olympics on the city’s future is tied to its impact on Brazil – whose economy was bustling when Rio won the right to host these games eight years ago but which was continually forced to rebalance its budget for the Olympics and Paralympics, making cuts that sometimes gave a ramshackle air to the proceedings.

And then, we come to the members of the U.S. swim team who failed to distinguish themselves repeatedly in an episode that eventually led U.S. Olympic Committee President Scott Blackmun to apologize “to our hosts in Rio and the people of Brazil for this distracting ordeal.”

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The 'Young Invincibles': A Huge Hurdle For Obamacare

Young, healthy people referred to as “young invincibles” pose a serious challenge to the success of President Obama’s expanded health care coverage, the Affordable Care Act. Kaiser Health’s Julie Rovner explains more about this group of uninsured Americans.

Transcript

FARAI CHIDEYA, HOST:

Now it’s time for our regular segment Words You’ll Hear, where we try to understand what’s happening in the news by parsing some of the words associated with it. This week, our words are young invincibles. We’re talking about healthy young people who don’t have health insurance. They’re not being covered at work, and they’re choosing to bypass health care coverage available through the Affordable Care Act. They could be the downfall of the long-term success of President Obama’s legacy expanded health care coverage.

Joining us to help explain more about them is Julie Rovner from Kaiser Health News. Hi, Julie.

JULIE ROVNER: Hi. How are you?

CHIDEYA: I’m great. So first of all what are the characteristics of young invincibles? How young are we talking about and what’s keeping them from buying health insurance?

ROVNER: Well, originally young invincibles were males in their 20s. That was how they were always thought of, you know – young guys who felt like they were invincible, so they didn’t need health insurance. They would never get sick. They would never have an accident. More recently, the term has come to describe, I think, what most of us think of as millennials, both young men and young women. But the idea is still the same. They feel like they don’t need health insurance because they’re not going to get sick.

CHIDEYA: So why is it a problem for insurers and especially for the Affordable Care Act if these folks don’t buy insurance?

ROVNER: Well, the Affordable Care Act made individual insurance available to people who were older and sicker, and they jumped at the chance to buy it. The hope was that younger people would buy it because they were required to and their lower expenses would help balance out the risk pool, helping them basically subsidize older, sicker people on the theory that someday they’ll become older, sicker people and young people will subsidize them.

CHIDEYA: Last week, Aetna at first said that they would be pulling back on coverage in the Affordable Care Act exchanges, saying they were losing money in large part due to these young invincibles, but then another story emerged. So can you walk us through Aetna’s move?

ROVNER: They’re pulling out of most of the places where they are – have been selling insurance. And, you know, they said it was due to losses, and I don’t think anybody doubts they have been losing money. But what came out shortly after that announcement was a letter from Aetna to the Justice Department saying that if the Justice Department didn’t approve Aetna’s merger with Humana, they would therefore have to start pulling out, which is exactly what they did.

So some people saw that as kind of a threat that, you know, if you don’t do what we want, then we’re not going to participate anymore, but others point out that, you know, Aetna has an obligation to its shareholders. And even though it makes lots and lots and lots of money in general, it was, in fact, losing money in the exchange markets. Pretty much every insurer is complaining that this has not worked exactly as they had wanted, and it’s not just the lack of young people. There are unhealthy young people, and there are healthy older people. But basically they don’t have the mix that they had hoped for.

CHIDEYA: So what can policymakers and/or insurers do to convince the young invincibles to actually buy into the coverage?

ROVNER: Well, one problem that a lot of insurers have talked about – it’s been too easy to buy insurance outside the open enrollment period, which means that you can wait until you get sick to buy insurance. And that’s been a problem.

This year is the first year that the penalty actually goes up to its full amount for not having insurance. So now depending on how much they earn, young people could be responsible for fines that go up to about $2,500. So that could convince some of them that maybe they would like to spend that money on insurance instead. And then, of course, depending on who’s elected president and who’s elected to control Congress next year, there could be some more changes to try to smooth out some of the bumps that have been seen in the implementation of the law.

CHIDEYA: Julie Rovner covers health policy issues for Kaiser Health News. Thanks for joining us, Julie.

ROVNER: Thank you.

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