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Today in Movie Culture: 'Suicide Squad' With Dogs, Jake Gyllenhaal Stars in Marvel's 'Moon Knight' and More

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

Fake Marvel Show of the Day:

Jake Gyllenhaal stars in a fan-made teaser for the nonexistent Netflix Marvel series Moon Knight (via Live for Films):

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Cosplay of the Day:

See a poodle named Mitzy made up to look like Harley Quinn and then inserted into Suicide Squad scenes:

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Musical Mashup of the Day:

Watch the characters from 230 different movies cut together to sing The Offspring’s “Pretty Fly (for a White Guy)”:

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Concert Performance of the Day:

Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem played a live set, including “Can You Picture That” from The Muppet Movie, at the Outside Lands 2016 concert in San Francisco over the weekend (via Neatorama):

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Custom Build of the Day:

Vintage Works turned a motorcycle into a (non-flying) Return of the Jedi style Speeder Bike, as seen in the video below. You can see the test drive video at /Film.

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Perspective of the Day:

See how small Godzilla really was in his original movie with these photos illustrating how he’d look next to the Tokyo buildings of today (via Geekologie):

Movie Trivia of the Day:

CineFix randomly presents seven obscure bits of trivia about the 1990 Tim Burton classic Edward Scissorhands:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Jean-Pierre Jeunet directs Audrey Tautou, who turns 40 today, and Mathieu Kassovitz for a scene in 2001’s Amelie:

Genre Study of the Day:

Frame by Frame looks at the action sub-subgenre known as Gun Fu, highlighting movies by John Woo and those filmmakers he influenced:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 25th anniversary of the release of Double Impact. Watch the original trailer for the action movie, which stars Jean Claude Van Damme as twins, below.

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and

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U.S. Women's Gymnastics Team Wins Gold Medal

The U.S. women’s gymnastics team won a gold medal on Tuesday in Rio. The team won convincingly by posting the highest combined score in vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor exercise.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Today the world’s best women gymnasts competed in team finals at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Going in, the Americans were ranked No. 1 in everything – vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor exercise. And here is where we will offer a spoiler alert. Those of you who want to wait for the tape delay tonight on NBC should turn the volume down for the next few minutes. For the rest of you, we are joined by NPR’s Russell Lewis, who is at the vent. Hi, Russell.

RUSSELL LEWIS, BYLINE: Hey there.

SHAPIRO: OK, so spoil this for us. How did the U.S. team do?

LEWIS: Well, is it any surprise if I tell you that they won gold, and they won gold convincingly. It was the largest margin of victory in an Olympic women’s team final since the Soviet Union – remember when we used to call it that?

SHAPIRO: (Laughter) Right.

LEWIS: …Defeated Czechoslovakia – remember when we used to call it that?

SHAPIRO: Oh, that used to be a country.

LEWIS: …Back in 1960. This is how good the U.S. was tonight – the U.S. team. And really, let’s name all of the gymnasts on the team – so Simone Biles, Gabby Douglas, Aly Raisman, Laurie Hernandez and Madison Kocian.

The U.S. posted the highest combined score on each of the four apparatuses. So that’s the vault, the uneven bars, the balance beam and the floor exercise. When you do that, Ari, you’re going to win.

SHAPIRO: We know that seven other teams competed in the team finals. Traditionally Russia and China are gymnastics powerhouses. You said the U.S. win was convincingly. How close were these other teams?

LEWIS: Well, in a word – no, not even close. I mean Russia did end up winning the silver, and China took the bronze. But let’s do some math here. The U.S. scored just shy of 185 points. Russia took the silver eight points behind. China took the bronze.

Eight points behind – Ari, this is a sport that is routinely measured in tenths of a point, in hundredths of a point. And the U.S. won the finals by eight points. That’s how good the U.S. was tonight.

SHAPIRO: Let’s talk about one member of the team specifically – 19-year-old Simon Biles. This is her first Olympics, and before it even started, commentators were calling her the best ever. Did she fulfill expectations?

LEWIS: You know, there are no shortage of superlatives when it comes to Simone Biles. I mean at 19, she’s already a superstar. And there are some who argue that she might be the best gymnast of all time. She’s the reigning three-time world champion. She – you know, she could win five golds this Olympics – five golds. I mean that just sort of says something about, you know, who she is and how good that she is.

In fact when she was on the floor exercise, she was the final competitor tonight. Other athletes from other countries were watching her compete, were standing up, clapping and cheering because that’s how well she did tonight.

SHAPIRO: And many opportunities yet ahead to medal. What’s coming up?

LEWIS: Well, the all-around competition – the individual all-around competition is on Thursday. Simon Biles will be competing along with teammate Aly Raisman. There are individual event finals also for several days this week. Simon will be competing in the individual event finals on vault, on balance beam and on floor exercise.

Biles won’t be alone in the event finals. On the uneven bars – Madison Kocian and Gabby Douglas. On the balance beam – Laurie Hernandez. And on the floor exercise with Simon Biles – Aly Raisman. So, Ari, there is lots more gymnastics to go here in Rio.

SHAPIRO: NPR’s Russell Lewis, who is at the women’s gymnastics team final at the Summer Olympics in Rio – thank you, Russell.

LEWIS: You’re welcome.

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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Utility Giant PG&E Convicted of Violating Gas Pipeline Safety Laws

A natural gas line lies broken in San Bruno, Calif., after a massive explosion on September 9, 2010. A federal jury found Pacific Gas & Electric Co., California's largest utility, guilty of misleading investigators about how it was identifying high-risk pipelines.

A natural gas line lies broken in San Bruno, Calif., after a massive explosion on September 9, 2010. A federal jury found Pacific Gas & Electric Co., California’s largest utility, guilty of misleading investigators about how it was identifying high-risk pipelines. Noah Berger/AP hide caption

toggle caption Noah Berger/AP

A federal jury found Pacific Gas and Electric Company guilty on five felony counts of failing to adequately inspect its gas pipelines before the blast that incinerated a neighborhood in San Bruno, Calif., in September 2010. The utility was also found guilty of one count of misleading federal investigators about the standard it used to identify high-risk pipelines.

PG&E was acquitted on six other charges of violating pipeline safety laws.

The blast came without warning in the early evening. It killed eight people, seriously injured 38 others and destroyed 58 homes in the suburb just south of San Francisco.

The explosion was caused by a bad internal seam weld in a pipeline installed in the 1950s. According to PG&E records, that weld didn’t exist.

Government prosecutors argued during the trial that PG&E maintained shoddy records and failed to monitor aging pipelines. They said PG&E managers knew that their records were unreliable. One company memo described the database as containing “a ton of errors.

The utility was acquitted on charges of knowingly failing to maintain proper records. But it was found guilty of the most serious charges: failing to identify high-risk pipelines, not prioritizing the most serious hazards, and not using the most accurate means for inspecting pipelines.

The company defense was to portray itself as a collection of hard-working employees who performed to the best of their abilities in the face of ambiguous regulations.

The trial lasted for more than a month and the jury deliberated for over seven days.

The utility faces a maximum penalty of $3 million, or $500,000 for each count. The government originally sought $562 million in potential penalties. That would have been twice the amount of money prosecutors argued that PG&E saved by cutting safety programs. But last week prosecutors shocked many court-watchers by slashing the potential fines.

Prosecutors had no immediate comment following the verdict.

In a statement, PG&E said: “We have made unprecedented progress in the nearly six years since the tragic San Bruno accident and we are committed to maintaining our focus on safety. We want our customers and their families to know that we are committed to re-earning their trust.”

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Young Inventors Work On Secret Proteins To Thwart Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

Christian Choe, Zach Rosenthal, and Maria Filsinger Interrante, who call themselves Team Lyseia, strategize about experiments to test their new antibiotics.

Christian Choe, Zach Rosenthal, and Maria Filsinger Interrante, who call themselves Team Lyseia, strategize about experiments to test their new antibiotics. Linda A. Cicero/Stanford News /Courtesy of Stanford University hide caption

toggle caption Linda A. Cicero/Stanford News /Courtesy of Stanford University

Three college-age scientists think they know how to solve a huge problem facing medicine. They think they’ve found a way to overcome antibiotic resistance.

Many of the most powerful antibiotics have lost their efficacy against dangerous bacteria, so finding new antibiotics is a priority.

It’s too soon to say for sure if the young researchers are right, but if gumption and enthusiasm count for anything, they stand a fighting chance.

I met Zach Rosenthal, Christian Choe and Maria Filsinger Interrante in the lower level of the Shriram Center for Bioengineering & Chemical Engineering on the campus of Stanford University.

Filsinger Interrante just graduated from Stanford and is now in an M.D./Ph.D. program. Rosenthal and Choe are rising seniors.

Last October, Stanford launched a competition for students interested in developing solutions for big problems in health care. Not just theoretical solutions, but practical, patentable solutions that could lead to real products.

The three young scientists thought they had figured out a way to make a set of proteins that would kill antibiotic resistant bacteria.

They convinced a jury of Stanford faculty, biotech types and investors that they were onto something, and got $10,000 to develop their idea.

“And we want to see if our proteins are more effective at killing these resistant bacteria than what’s currently available,” says Filsinger Interrante.

Choe says there’s a reason industry hasn’t solved the antibiotic crisis.

Christian Choe seals a plate with E. coli bacteria that contain a ring of genetic material to produce the antibiotic protein.

Christian Choe seals a plate with E. coli bacteria that contain a ring of genetic material to produce the antibiotic protein. Linda A. Cicero/Stanford News /Courtesy of Stanford University hide caption

toggle caption Linda A. Cicero/Stanford News /Courtesy of Stanford University

“Big pharmaceutical companies aren’t that interested in pursuing antibiotics,” he says, “largely because the market size is small, and because bacteria develop resistance relatively quickly.”

But these young entrepreneurs think they’ve licked the resistance problem.

“The way that our proteins operate, that if the bacteria evolve resistance to them, actually the bacteria can no longer live anymore,” says Rosenthal. “We target something that’s essential to bacterial survival.”

Bacteria have managed to evolve a way around even the most sophisticated attempts to kill them, so I was curious to know more about how the proteins these young inventors say they’ve found worked.

“We’re not able to disclose, unfortunately,” says Filsinger Interrante. It’s their intellectual property, she explains, that they hope will attract investors. “We think that our protein has the potential to target very dangerous, multidrug-resistant bacteria.”

“I’ve been working in the field of antibiotics for the past 25 years and this is as good as any an idea as I’ve heard,” says Chaitan Khosla, a professor of chemical engineering and chemistry at Stanford. He’s also the director of a new program called ChEM-H, for Chemistry, Engineering & Medicine for Human Health, that’s supporting the students’ hunt for a new antibiotic.

But Khosla warns that many good ideas fall by the wayside, and even if the team’s proteins clear the initial hurdles, it would be years or decades before there’s a product ready to bring to market.

The trio are aware of the long odds. But for now, Rosenthal says they’re going to give it all they’ve got, even it means working late into the night, after classes and other commitments are finished.

“I lose some sleep, but I love what I’m doing, so it’s worth it,” he says.

The team reports preliminary results for their new antibiotic proteins are looking good, so all that work may be paying off.

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Songs We Love: Slavic Soul Party!, 'Bluebird Of Delhi'

Slavic Soul Party!

Slavic Soul Party! Courtesy of the artist hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of the artist

The central equation behind Slavic Soul Party! is self-explanatory: an American black-music spin on the Balkan brass band. The net product is akin to a New-Orleans-style brass band, but with different percussion timbres, horn trills and glissandi. (Also, accordion, because Europe.) It’s the sort of multiculti collision you see forged in major population centers; you may be interested to know the band has a standing Tuesday night gig at a Brooklyn bar which specializes in international music.

The band’s upcoming release adds more stamps to its passport, by proxy — it’s a full re-arrangement of Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn‘s late-career masterpiece The Far East Suite, an LP inspired by a trip to the Middle East and South Asia. (“Far East” is a bit of a misnomer.) The cry of an Indian mynah bird birthed the clarinet melody you hear on “Bluebird Of Delhi.” Ellington and Strayhorn then filled in the brooding bass line, the secondary theme and a relaxed swing beat.

Slavic Soul Party!, Plays Duke Ellington's Far East Suite.

Slavic Soul Party!, Plays Duke Ellington’s Far East Suite. Courtesy of the artist hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of the artist

It’s great source material to start with, but what Slavic Soul Party! does with it is the neato trick to watch out for. The bass line becomes an ominous brass blast over which a trumpet blares and folky percussion rumbles (Chris Stromquist on snare, bandleader Matt Moran on a bass-drum-like instrument). Instead of classic big-band swing, parade funk switches on instantly, the high of a lithe clarinet (Peter Hess) against the low of active tuba bass (Ron Caswell). The climax and denouement are almost the same — so as not to mess with a good thing — though the act of reimagination in multiple dialects at once ensures a much different path to its arrival.

In spite of all that’s going on, it totally works. Alternatively, because of everything that goes on, the total package works.

Slavic Soul Party! Plays Duke Ellington’s Far East Suite comes out Sept. 16 via Ropeadope.

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Lilly King Puts Exclamation Mark On Big Day For U.S. Swimming

Gold medal winner Lilly King, right, seen here celebrating with her U.S. teammate and bronze medalist Katie Meili, won the 100m breaststroke over her rival, Russia's Yuliya Efimova.

Gold medal winner Lilly King, right, seen here celebrating with her U.S. teammate and bronze medalist Katie Meili, won the 100m breaststroke over her rival, Russia’s Yuliya Efimova. Adam Pretty/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Adam Pretty/Getty Images

The meeting was highly anticipated, and it didn’t disappoint — particularly from Lilly King’s point of view. One day after King spoke bluntly about rival Yuliya Efimova’s doping offenses, she beat Efimova to win a gold medal in the women’s 100m breaststroke at Rio’s Summer Olympics.

“I’m proud to be competing clean and doing what is right,” King said after the race. “But I need to respect the IOC’s decision” — referring to the announcement over the weekend that Efimova would be allowed to compete.

King’s time of 1:04.93 set an Olympic record, as she gave the U.S. its first gold medal in the past 16 years in women’s breaststroke. She won just after teammate Ryan Murphy had netted his own gold medal and Olympic record in the men’s backstroke.

Efimova, the Russian who has been sanctioned for cheating, trailed just behind King at the finishing line and narrowly edged King’s teammate, Katie Meili, who won bronze.

The win set off a new round of questions for King concerning her feelings about athletes who’ve been caught doping. When asked if she felt track star Justin Gatlin should be on Team USA in Rio, King didn’t mince words, saying “Do I think somebody who has been caught for doping should be on the team? No, I don’t.”

When it was time for Efimove to address the media, she said she had paid a price for her actions.

“I made mistakes and I was banned for six months,” she said. “The second time was not my mistake.”

For King and Meilli, the result set off a celebration that King would later cite as part of the reason she didn’t make a point to congratulate Efimova.

“If I’d been in Yulia’s position, I’d not want to be congratulated by someone not speaking highly of me,” ,” King said, adding, “If she was wishing to be congratulated, I apologize. She had a fantastic swim and I always look forward to racing her. I was just in the moment with Katie.”

Efimova was asked whether she regrets competing in the Olympics, given the boos that greeted her name in Rio.

“I am just happy to be here. For me it was very hard to swim today and this is three weeks it’s been like crazy,” she said. “Now I feel really happy as after everything it is a good time and it’s the best I can do right now.”

King’s win came moments after the U.S. had just earned another gold medal, this one courtesy of Ryan Murphy’s win in the backstroke at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium in Rio’s Barra da Tijuca district. And like King, Murphy also shared his moment with a teammate: bronze winner David Plummer.

For all of the American swimmer’s we’ve mentioned above, this is their first Olympics – just as it was for Kathleen Baker, who won the silver medal Monday in the women’s 100-meter backstroke.

Murphy won in 51.97 seconds, setting a new Olympic standard and updating a mark that had last been set by Matt Grevers at the 2012 London 2012 Summer Olympics. He also continued a streak of U.S. dominance in the backstroke, which Americans have won in the past six summer Olympics.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Star Wars' vs. 'Star Trek,' An Alien Reviews 'Batman v Superman' and More

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

Mashup of the Day:

Darth Vader and Kylo Ren get together to fight Kirk and Spock in ScreenRant’s fan trailer for Star Wars vs. Star Trek:

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Bad Film Analysis of the Day:

See what an alien from the future thinks of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice in the latest Earthling Cinema:

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Movie Parody of the Day:

Bobby Canavale, Rose Byrne and Jason Sudeikis star in Stoplight, Last Week Tonight‘s fake trailer for a Spotlight parody about the death of journalism (via Screen Crush)

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Cosplay of the Day:

A group cosplaying as the Suicide Squad characters maybe looking at some reviews of the movie and getting ideas for their next mission? See more pics of the group at Fashionably Geek.

Short Film of the Day:

If you like the Netflix series Stranger Things, you’ll want to check out this 2007 horror short from its creators, the Duffer Brothers, titled Eater (via The Playlist):

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Collaboration of the Day:

Here’s another must-see short film, this one from the minds of Walt Disney and Salvador Dali called Destino (via Nameless.tv):

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Dustin Hoffman, who turns 79 today, takes a leap on the set of Lenny with director Bob Fosse looking on in 1974:

Actors in the Spotlight:

Vanity Fair got the next generation of stars, including Douglas Booth, Lily Collins, Kieth Stanfield and Elizabeth Debicki, to share what inspired them to become actors:

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Genre Study of the Day:

Now You See It uses clips from Lights Out (and the short it’s based on), Poltergeist and other movies to show what makes a movie scary:

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 30th anniversary of the release of One Crazy Summer. Watch the original trailer, presented by Bobcat Goldthwait, below.

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and

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Vail Resorts To Buy Canada's Whistler Blackcomb For $1.06 Billion

Norwegian skiers compete in the 2010 Olympics in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. The Whistler Blackcomb resort is being acquired by Vail Resorts of the U.S.

Norwegian skiers compete in the 2010 Olympics in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. The Whistler Blackcomb resort is being acquired by Vail Resorts of the U.S. Matthias Schrader/AP hide caption

toggle caption Matthias Schrader/AP

Colorado-based ski-industry giant Vail Resorts has inked a $1.06 billion deal to acquire Whistler Blackcomb in Canada, one of the largest and most visited ski area in North America.

Vail operates ski areas and mountain resort properties in five states and Australia and has long eyed an expansion into Canada. A competitor and site of the 2010 Winter Olympics, Whistler has been a perennial profit winner too. In the last fiscal year, an estimated two million skiers visited the resort generating a record $241 million in revenue, according to the resort.

Beyond the bookkeeping, for skiers and snowboarders, Whistler is considered to be one of the choicest destinations in the world. It’s massive: more than 8,000 acres of terrain including three glaciers. Top to bottom, the two combined mountains of Whistler and Blackcomb also boast more than a mile long vertical drop, the altitude giving the resort some of the longest ski seasons in the business.

“Whistler Blackcomb is one of the most iconic mountain resorts in the world with an incredible history, passionate employees and a strong community,” said Rob Katz, Vail’s CEO, in a written statement.

Whistler CEO Dave Brownlie predicted the merger would make both resorts stronger and more appealing to skiers and guests, calling it “the most exciting and transformative investment in Whistler Blackcomb’s history.”

Facing declining snowfall and season pass sales in recent years, ski resorts have sought to partner and share revenue from ticket sales and other promotions, as well as merge in some cases, to cope. Vail acquiring one of its long-time competitors is significant, yet not all that surprising to industry analysts.

The company’s expansions have been particularly aggressive of late and not without controversy.

In 2014, Vail’s purchase of Park City Mountain Resort in Utah prompted opposition from local skier advocacy groups. In Colorado, the company is a frequent target of environmentalists, who criticize Vail’s terrain expansions into what they consider critical wildlife habitat, notably a 2012 dust-up over Breckenridge ski area’s “Peak 6” expansion.

If they get government approval, the companies hope to finalize the deal this fall.

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In Boston's 'Safe Space,' Surprising Insights Into Drug Highs

Tommy, a repeat patient at the Supportive Place for Observation and Treatment in Boston, says the room has saved lives.

Tommy, a repeat patient at the Supportive Place for Observation and Treatment in Boston, says the room has saved lives. Jesse Costa/WBUR hide caption

toggle caption Jesse Costa/WBUR

Some arrive on their own, worried about what was really in that bag of heroin. Some are carried in, slumped between two friends. Others are lifted off the sidewalk or asphalt of a nearby alley and rolled in a wheelchair to what’s known as SPOT, or the Supportive Place for Observation and Treatment, at the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program.

Nine reclining chairs have been full most days, especially during peak midday hours. It may be the only room in the country when patients can ride out a heroin or other high under medical supervision.

“It’s a safe place to be,” says Tommy, 39, who’s been using heroin for at least 21 years. “It’s a lot safer than being out on the street, possibly walking into traffic. I might OD if I was alone out there.”

Tommy is looking for a job and housing, and we’ve agreed not to use his full name. He’s one of 180 people who’ve come to this former conference room to ride out an opioid or other drug high since SPOT opened in late April. Nurses have logged almost 900 visits. At least half of the patients have come more than once.

If the person can speak, a nurse will ask what they took before settling them in a chair, wrapping a blood pressure cuff around one arm and placing an oxygen monitor over a finger.

“The monitors are really convenient,” Dr. Jessie Gaeta, chief medical officer for BHCHP, says as she pulls the Velcro edges of a blood pressure cuff apart. “It takes a lot of the guessing out of understanding how far someone is into an overdose syndrome.”

Gaeta coined the term “overdose syndrome” to describe what’s happening to patients in this room. In many cases, she is surprised by what she’s seeing.

“A classic opiate overdose is characterized by a person who stops breathing,” Gaeta says. “They have central nervous system depression. So it’s mostly respiratory depression and respiratory arrest.”

But Gaeta says about 75 percent of her SPOT room patients show something different. “What we’re seeing in this room is more depression of heart rates and blood pressures as actually the primary — sometimes the only — abnormalities,” Gaeta says. So the patient may be unconscious with low blood pressure, but have nearly normal breathing.

Dr. Jessie Gaeta, chief medical officer of the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, stands at a setup where heroin users would be monitored while riding out a high.

Dr. Jessie Gaeta, chief medical officer of the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, stands at a setup where heroin users would be monitored while riding out a high. Jesse Costa/WBUR hide caption

toggle caption Jesse Costa/WBUR

Patients tell Gaeta they may start the day with heroin or another opioid and then, a few hours later, take pills that will enhance the high.

“People are talking about that a lot here,” Gaeta says, “about the layering of this cocktail of medications and that’s really reflected in the vital signs that we’re seeing, which is not indicative of pure opiate overdoses. I’m not sure that we’d have seen that without doing this kind of monitoring.”

Gaeta describes a typical combination or cocktail of four drugs: heroin or another opioid, clonidine (which lowers blood pressure), Klonopin (to control for anxiety) and gabapentin (used to treat seizures or nausea).

The observations are just a snapshot based on a small number of addiction patients in one area of Boston. But what Gaeta is seeing in is reflected in overdose death reports and is changing the way she and her staff respond to these patients who look like they are falling into a deep sleep. To boost sinking blood pressures, for example, they’ve brought IV fluid equipment into the room. They are going through many more tanks of oxygen than expected.

Dr. Barbara Herbert, president of the Massachusetts chapter of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, says she’s never heard anyone use the term overdose syndrome. “But I think it’s a great phrase, and I suspect it will move into more conversations. Because we created a safe space, can now think about what’s in front of us with more science than we could before we had this,” she says. “So while all of us knew this cocktail could produce overdose, few of us have ever had the opportunity of seeing people after they use and monitoring their blood pressure or their heart rate. So, this is an unexpected positive for us, coming to understand the disease better from that safe space.”

SPOT nurse April Donahue says some patients in the room appear so sedated that they don’t respond when she speaks loudly in their ear or raps on their sternum. But, she says, some of those people, “have rock solid vital signs, better than mine.” So, she says, “What you see subjectively looking at someone and what their vital signs are, don’t always match up.”

If Donahue weren’t monitoring the vital signs, she says she’d be racing to inject naloxone, the drug that reverses the effects of opioids. But Donahue found she can sometimes avoid using naloxone, which is very harsh on the body, by giving patients oxygen or fluids to keep patients alive.

The facility is going through many more tanks of oxygen than expected because of what medical staff are learning about what's going on in the body while people are high.

The facility is going through many more tanks of oxygen than expected because of what medical staff are learning about what’s going on in the body while people are high. Jesse Costa/WBUR hide caption

toggle caption Jesse Costa/WBUR

The nurses speak to each patient about addiction treatment. Getting patients into treatment is their top priority after keeping people safe while high.

“I think what’s struck me the most is the gratitude — just to get out of that environment, even for a little while, to get off the street and be cared for,” Donahue says. “I mean, so many of our participants don’t have anyone who’s caring for them.”

It’s one reason Tommy is becoming a repeat client. “This is just a great start,” Tommy says. “I think it will slow down a lot of overdoses and could save a lot of lives. It will save a lot of lives in the long run.”

And Tommy knows. He went into respiratory failure a few weeks ago while at SPOT and was brought back with naloxone.

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, WBUR and Kaiser Health News.

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Congealed Paint Forces Cancellation Of NFL's Hall Of Fame Game

The damage at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio, is inspected after Sunday's preseason NFL game was canceled due to unsafe field conditions caused by painted logos.

The damage at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio, is inspected after Sunday’s preseason NFL game was canceled due to unsafe field conditions caused by painted logos. Gene J. Puskar/AP hide caption

toggle caption Gene J. Puskar/AP

An emotional and invigorating Hall of Fame weekend came to a grinding halt Sunday night when the Green Bay Packers-Indianapolis Colts game was canceled because of poor field conditions.

One day after Brett Favre led the eight-member class of 2016 into the hall, its president, David Baker announced the cancellation after discussing problems with the turf with both teams. He said it was a safety issue and that all fans would be fully refunded for ticket purchases, which will cost the hall several million dollars.

“This is a hard decision, but we know it is the right decision,” Baker said. “In some respects a hard decision because of the impact it has. This is an important game to the people in Canton.”

The NFL and NFL Players Association said in a statement: “We are very disappointed for our fans, but player safety is our primary concern, and as a result, we could not play an NFL game on this field tonight.”

Baker noted that the field was new and had been approved when inspected after its first installation. But paint congealed at midfield and in the end zone, hardening those areas. Workers used a variety of equipment to smooth the artificial surface. Rubber pellets used in the turf came loose and were scattered in several spots and needed to be removed, as well.

“We know a lot of you came a long way,” Baker told the crowd, which booed when his name was announced. “Here at the Pro Football Hall of Fame, we have the greatest respect for players and for player safety. As a result of some painting on the field today, some questions arose.”

Team physicians also were consulted.

“We thought we would be able to remediate it by delaying the game for as much as an hour,” Baker added. “But in the end, if it’s remotely close to unsafe, we conferred with the league, we think the best thing to do is respect the safety of the players. It’s the only thing to do.

“I can tell you, I had a son who played in this league. If it happened with him on the field, I would have wanted someone to make the same decision.”

This was not the first cancellation of an NFL exhibition game – the Hall of Game contest was not played in 2011 because of the lockout – but it was the most high-profile preseason match to be called off.

In 2001, a new artificial surface at Philadelphia’s Veterans Stadium was deemed too dangerous for the Eagles to play the Ravens.

Both teams walked onto the field at 8 p.m., moments before the game would have kicked off, and the players saluted the crowd. When the hall’s class of 2016 was introduced the stands remained relatively full for that. But then many fans departed the stadium even though the halftime show featuring Lee Greenwood was held.

Colts coach Chuck Pagano said he was disappointed but understood the cancellation. He was looking to “find out about a lot of these young players.”

Packers coach Mike McCarthy saluted the many Packers fans who came to Canton to see Favre inducted into the hall.

“We really were looking forward to performing tonight,” McCarthy said. “You get tired of practicing against yourself and you get to play a real game.”

Many of the thousands of Packers fans in Canton returned Sunday to Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium. They sat watching highlights of Favre’s speech and of Friday night’s concert featuring Tim McGraw before they were told about the game’s cancellation.

Also inducted were Tony Dungy, Marvin Harrison, Orlando Pace, Kevin Greene, Ken Stabler, Dick Stanfel and Ed DeBartolo Jr.

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