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At South By Southwest, The Sounds Of Cuba Come To Texas

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When Cuban singer Dayme Arocena performed at SXSW, “everybody in the place fell in love with her,” says NPR Music’s Felix Contreras. Casey Moore/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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As President Obama touched down in Cuba over the weekend, Cuban artists were making waves at the SXSW music festival in Austin.

Organizers of the so-called SXAmericas — or South By Americas — series held a “Sounds of Cuba” showcase. Record label reps, music press and Latin music fans got to see rappers, Afro-Latin jazz singers and more from the Cuban music scene. The show was the first of its kind, given the difficulty these artists have getting clearance to go abroad. Many of these Cuban musicians had never performed on a U.S. stage.

NPR Music’s Felix Contreras, host of the podcast Alt.Latino, was at South By Southwest and said to remember one name: Dayme Arocena.

“She’s like a mix of Aretha Franklin and Celia Cruz in the same breath,” he says. “She is working a part of the music scene that is far from the pop world but very artistically complex and compelling. And she’s got this wonderful warmth and personality that comes across, even on record. But live, everybody in the place fell in love with her.”

Contreras says Arocena’s music blends many different aspects of the current music scene in Cuba.

“What she is doing is drawing on all this contemporary music that’s happening in Cuba,” he says. “A mixture of salsa, a mixture of jazz, a mixture of hip-hop, neo-soul — that nice little combination. And then adding elements of Afro-Cuban rumba with music, with vocals, with dancing styles — all of that, and put in this really wonderful package.”

Contreras says Arocena’s song “Madres” is a perfect example of her Santeria and soul influences. The powerful singing in the song might make you think Arocena would be a diva — broad and imposing. But when NPR’s Audie Cornish met up with Arocena, she was surprised by the small, full cheeked young woman with an infectious laugh.

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Arocena is only 24 years old, but already well-known in Cuba, where she has been performing in bands and choirs publicly for a decade.

She says, laughing, that one of the first songs she learned in English, at age 5, was Whitney Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You.” She says she was a kid with a loud voice with a huge range.

“I used to get high notes so high,” she says. “Now I have a low voice — really low. But everyone in my neighborhood knew when I was singing because the voice was going everywhere, always.”

Arocena is Afro-Cuban. At SXSW, her head was crowned with a tightly wound white turban. The color is a symbol of her Santeria faith, which encompasses West African and Roman Catholic elements.

People often point to her faith when describing her music, which has been performed in church venues abroad. But she has a harder time when asked to describe her own sound.

“That is always a good question, because I don’t know yet,” she says. “It always has like a jazzy taste. But I am so Cuban, in the Cuban mood. And I think everything is so honest. I try to be honest, always, with myself, and that is why my music sounds like me. When the people get my music, people can get my soul, too.”

She grew up singing in a youth choir whose director taught jazz along with songs from Queen and the Beatles. Her father loved the singing of Ella Fitzgerald.

Arocena also reflects a new generation of Cuban musicians who grew up listening to pirated CDs. She was in the audience of the nearly half-million Cubans who, a few weeks ago, turned out to see EDM superproducer Diplo in Havana.

And finally, Arocena is the product of Cuba’s highly selective music education system. That’s where she learned classic composition and choral arrangements. But, she says, that education had its limits.

“The music school in Cuba is classical stuff; that’s all you get in the school,” she says. “And we don’t have enough money in the country to give instruments to all the kids to study music, or to try music.”

She says this lack of funding means that 20 students per province are selected, via a test, to study music.

“But [the schools] are focused on the music you cannot get in the street,” she says. “Because in Cuba you can get any kind of music in the street. You learn to play to rumba, to play salsa, to play — everything! But to play Bach, to play Mozart, you have to go to the musical school.”

Arocena is hopeful about the future for Cuban musicians. Now that the relationship between the United States and her home country is changing, Arocena says her main hope for Cuban performers is simple: information.

“In Cuba we don’t get enough information from the world,” she says. “Everyone outside — what they are doing, what they are playing, how the people are producing. We need to exchange blood. We need to see the people outside Cuba — how they produce, how they work. And they have to see what we are doing in Cuba, and what we are playing, what we are creating — that we are not still in the ’50s playing songs or Latin jazz. I am not the star; I am not a god — I am just a person. Cuba is a country with 11 million of persons! Come on, we need to be out, the people have to see us!”

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Anthem Sues Express Scripts For A Bigger Slice Of Drug Savings

Indianapolis-based Anthem wants Express Scripts to cough up more of the rebates it gets from drugmakers.

Indianapolis-based Anthem wants Express Scripts to cough up more of the rebates it gets from drugmakers. Michael Conroy/AP hide caption

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The battle over drug prices escalated Monday when health insurance giant Anthem Inc. sued Express Scripts, a manager of drug benefits, to get a bigger share of savings on prescription medicines.

Anthem is looking for a change in its contract with Express Scripts, which handles drug benefits for 80 million people. The insurer says it’s overpaying for pharmaceuticals and not benefiting from rebates the pharmacy benefit manager has negotiated with drugmakers.

Anthem’s CEO Joseph Swedish said in January that the company could save as much at $3 billion in drug costs by reworking the deal with the PBM, according to several news reports at the time. Anthem is now threatening to end its contract with the country’s largest pharmacy benefit manager if it doesn’t get the price breaks it wants.

Express Scripts contests Anthem’s assessment. “We do not believe they are entitled to $3 billion,” Express Scripts spokesman Brian Henry tells Shots via email.

Drug prices are among the most opaque aspects of the muddled health care industry. Almost nobody pays the retail price for prescription medications.

Here’s how it works.

Pharmacy benefit managers like Express Scripts contract with health insurers or directly with employers to administer the prescription portion of employees’ health care plans. The PBMs then negotiate prices with drug companies for medications.

When patients go to a drugstore, they usually pay a set copayment for their medicine and the PBM pays the remainder of the discounted price — which shows up on insurance records.

But those discounts are often supplemented with rebates from the pharmaceutical manufacturer to the PBM that are often invisible to patients and to insurers or employers.

Express Scripts boasts about the discounts that it has extracted from drug companies that it passes along, in part, to its clients, such as Anthem. In recent years, Express Scripts has been driving harder bargains, sometimes refusing to pay at all for popular brand-name medicines and steering patients to rival drugs from companies that offer the PBM better deals.

Prices of brand name prescription drugs have climbed 164 percent since 2008 while generic drug prices have fallen 70 percent over the same period, according to Express Scripts’ own report.

Anthem used to run its own PBM but sold it to Express Scripts in 2009. As part of the deal, Anthem agreed to use Express Scripts for 10 years. The contract, however, called for the companies to renegotiate prices last December.

In its lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of new York, Anthem says Express Scripts has refused to negotiate in good faith. Anthem is asking for damages to compensate the insurer for overpaying for prescription drugs.

“We believe that Anthem’s lawsuit is without merit,” Express Scripts said in an emailed statement, adding that the company “has consistently acted in good faith and in accordance with the terms of its agreement with Anthem.”

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DraftKings, FanDuel Will Shut Down Paid Contests In New York — For Now

DraftKings and its rival FanDuel have agreed to suspend paid contests in New York temporarily.

DraftKings and its rival FanDuel have agreed to suspend paid contests in New York temporarily. Scott Olson/Getty Images hide caption

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Daily fantasy sports sites DraftKings and FanDuel have agreed to suspend paid contests in New York until an appellate court hearing in September on whether the sites violate state gambling laws.

The agreement, struck with New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, comes as the companies are lobbying state lawmakers to pass legislation that would explicitly legalize the industry.

As NPR’s Joel Rose reports, New York is the second-biggest market for daily fantasy sports, after California.

Schneiderman “sued the two companies last year, arguing that they’re essentially gambling operations and therefore illegal under state law,” as Joel reports. “The fantasy sports companies deny that. They say they’re offering games of skill, not chance.”

On Dec. 11, a New York district court — acting on an enforcement action from Schneiderman — barred the companies from accepting bets. Later that day, a state appeals court overruled the decision and said the companies could continue operations until the case had been fully considered. Monday’s deal to accept the terms of the preliminary injunction is a victory, albeit a temporary one, for Schneiderman.

“I’m pleased to announce that both FanDuel and DraftKings will stop taking bets in New York State, consistent with New York State law and the cease-and-desist orders my office issued at the outset of this matter,” Schneiderman said in a statement. “As I’ve said from the start, my job is to enforce the law, and starting today, DraftKings and FanDuel will abide by it.”

Should the state Legislature not legalize daily fantasy sports contests before June 30, then the appellate court’s September ruling will stand. According to the agreement, if the court rules against the companies, the two sites will not make any further appeals. If the court rules in favor of the companies, the attorney general’s office must drop the crux of its case against the companies.

In his statement Monday, Schneiderman also said that regardless of the agreements, the state’s claims of false advertising and consumer fraud will continue.

A statement from DraftKings read, in part, “We will continue to work with state lawmakers to enact fantasy sports legislation so that New Yorkers can play the fantasy games they love.”

FanDuel also released a statement:

“New York is a critical state for FanDuel. FanDuel is headquartered in Manhattan, where we employ more than 170 young, smart, passionate fans who are committed to innovating and providing the best fantasy experience possible. We are proud to be one of New York’s largest startup companies, and while it is disheartening for us to restrict access to paid contests in our home state, we believe this is in the best interest of our company, the fantasy industry and our players while we continue to pursue legal clarity in New York.”

It also urged players to contact their government representatives about daily fantasy sports.

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Ivory Coast Struggles To Keep Economy Afloat After Terror Attack

An Ivorian soldier stands guard on March 18, 2016 at the site of a jihadist shooting rampage at the beach resort of Grand Bassam.
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An Ivorian soldier stands guard on March 18, 2016 at the site of a jihadist shooting rampage at the beach resort of Grand Bassam. STR/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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It’s exactly a week since al-Qaida gunmen opened fire indiscriminately on swimmers and diners last Sunday at a popular beachfront weekend getaway in Grand Bassam, the historic former capital of Ivory Coast.

Bassam, as the sleepy, pretty town is known, is a short 25-mile ride from the economic capital and main city, Abidjan. Bassam is much favored by local families and visitors, including children of all ages.

March 13 was a lazy, sweltering Sunday, as swimmers frolicked in the warm Atlantic Ocean waters, sunbathers enjoyed a day outdoors, and visitors and tourists sat down for lunch at hotels and restaurants overlooking the sea.

That’s when al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, by its own admission, claims its black balaclava-clad militants, toting heavy weapons, first sprayed the palm-fringed beach. They fired in and out of the water before turning their weapons from the beach to the diners.

At least 19 Ivorians and foreigners were killed in the carnage. One body, with a bullet to the head, washed up midweek, fueling concern that others may follow.

The deadly assault on Grand Bassam was the third in five months in West Africa on a former French colony. Mali’s capital Bamako was first in November, with a siege on the Radisson Blu Hotel, favored by foreigners. Then the January siege in Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso, on the Splendid Hotel and Cappuccino cafe. Foreigners were among the 20 people killed in Bamako and 30 killed in Ouagadougou.

Analysts argue that Ivory Coast could have become the latest target of al-Qaida’s regional franchise, in retaliation for the country’s close relations with Paris. France intervened militarily in neighboring Mali in 2013, leading an offensive to dislodge extremist fighters who had occupied the north for about a year.

France retains a military presence in all three countries, with an army and air force base on the outskirts of Abidjan.

Officials Seek Stability

Now Grand Bassam’s Etoile du Sud hotel and other beachside establishments have become the targets and Ivory Coast is reeling. This country, once an oasis of peace, security, stability and prosperity, is emerging from a devastating decade of political violence and a civil war. The economy was on the rebound.

The tourist industry is worried.

Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara chairs an extraordinary cabinet meeting in the resort town of Grand Bassam on March 16, 2016.

Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara chairs an extraordinary cabinet meeting in the resort town of Grand Bassam on March 16, 2016. Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images

President Alassane Ouattara hastened to reassure his compatriots, expatriates and Ivory Coast’s international partners and investors. On Wednesday, he took his entire team to Grand Bassam for their weekly cabinet meeting — in solidarity, the president told NPR.

“We came to show our sympathy, our compassion to the victims. To their memory, to the families of the victims,” Ouattara said.

“To show that Côte d’Ivoire will never forget them and that it’s important for life to continue.” Though he added, “Although we are mourning, we want everyone to know that Côte d’Ivoire is united and that Côte d’Ivoire remains a land of hospitality.”

Earlier, Ouattara said Ivorians should not be intimidated by the attacks perpetrated by “cowardly terrorists” and that such actions would not be tolerated. After laying a wreath outside the Etoile du Sud hotel Wednesday, he said Ivory Coast would not allow terrorists to sabotage the country’s economic recovery.

Over the past five years, Ivory Coast — the world’s top cocoa producer — has seen record growth and foreign investment. Tourism was also picking up.

Commerce minister Jean-Louis Billon says he doesn’t want to overstate the threat to the tourist industry posed by the militant attack.

“Of course we’re worried,” he says. “But, if you look at countries like Kenya or Tanzania, they have been affected in the past and investors didn’t leave the country because of terrorism.”

Billon says it’s a collective battle. “No one is safe against terrorism. But we need our growth to develop our country and we won’t stop our development because of terrorism.” He says Ivory Coast refuses to give ground “to those who want the economy to collapse, because that’s what they’re looking for.”

Investors Remain Confident

As if to bolster that confidence, potential investors from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce happened to be on a scheduled visit to Ivory Coast just when al-Qaida struck in the deadly assault.

The chamber’s executive vice president, Myron Brilliant, said the attacks have not put them off. “In no way will that deter our investment and trade relations here in Côte d’Ivoire,” he said.

“If anything, we feel very close to Côte d’Ivoire,” he said, “because we have suffered our own attacks in our country, in the United States. And so we understand what’s going on here, we understand the significance of it.”

Brilliant addressed journalists after talks this past week with the Ivorian president and cabinet ministers on his organisation’s wish to promote deeper investment and commercial ties between the U.S. and Ivory Coast.

He talked about expanding in areas such as energy, agrifood business, education, healthcare, travel and tourism. “There is a great need, a great opportunity for U.S. companies here in Côte d’Ivoire,” Brilliant said.

Fighting talk.

The same has come from Ivory Coast’s government, which has shifted up a gear and is full speed ahead after last Sunday’s al-Qaida onslaught. The government has announced almost $1 million in immediate assistance to the hotel and transport industries in Grand Bassam, as well as craftsmen and other local businesses hard hit by the attacks.

The authorities have also promised to beef up security, with patrols already in place up and down the 10-mile stretch of Bassam’s beachfront and beyond.

Security reinforcements were trucked in as VIP visitors, including presidents and top officials from neighboring West African countries and from the former colonial power, France, drove to Grand Bassam to lay wreaths in memory of those who perished.

Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy lays a wreath of flowers on March 18, 2016 in homage to the victims of a jihadist attack. Sarkozy was among several dignitaries to visit.

Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy lays a wreath of flowers on March 18, 2016 in homage to the victims of a jihadist attack. Sarkozy was among several dignitaries to visit. Stringer/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Stringer/AFP/Getty Images

An Economy Driven By Tourism

The charming town of coconut palms swaying in the Atlantic ocean breeze and elegant, wooden colonial houses, relies heavily on tourism – local and international. UNESCO, the U.N.’s education, scientific and cultural agency, has designated Grand Bassam a world heritage site.

The government’s new security measures and assistance are cold comfort for Sylvie Kouao, although she thanked the president. Her beach restaurant — right by where the gunmen indiscriminately opened fire on adults and children — remains shut.

Kouao, 40, says they had to take cover, as terrified civilians were fleeing and dodging bullets. She has nightmares and is still trying to come to terms with the shock. What’s most troubling, says Kouao, is that a male cousin is still missing. They haven’t found him in or out of the water.

Clutching the hand of her 9-year-old son, Amadou, and stretching her other hand toward the almost-deserted beach, Kouao tells NPR that “life in Bassam is paralyzed. It has come to a standstill.”

“But we can’t just give up,” she adds. “We have to stand up. We must not be fearful. We must have courage that life will return to normal.”

Security forces camp in plastic chairs in front of Kouao’s restaurant. Opposite is a makeshift memorial, covered in wreaths. Young men stand around in the shade by the beach, under a marquee erected for VIPs and other visitors who continue to pay their respects.

Among the locals with little to do is Abou Lavisse Decky, leader of the local Bassamois musical group, Akanzou. Decky and his fellow singers strike up, a cappella, as mourners approach a growing collection of wreaths.

Just a week ago, the singers were serenading diners and entertaining tourists up and down the stretch of seaside restaurants and hotels. Such activities came to an abrupt end during the attacks.

Now they’re singing lyrics denouncing terrorism. “Non au terrorisme” — “no to terrorism” and “the attacks have robbed us of our jobs.” Decky says, “I come here to sing today for the memory of the people who died. I sing for them, because terrorism is a bad thing.”

As the group sings, “yako!” which simultaneously means “sorry” and “courage,” Decky implores Ivorians and foreigners to take heart, have courage and return to Grand Bassam.

Pointing to the empty beachfront, Decky tells NPR, “If the beach is closed, the economy of Grand Bassam is closed. I will come back to sing with my group. It’s my job, it’s my job,” he repeats in desperation. “I haven’t another job. So if I don’t come to sing, how can I have money to eat?”

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After Surviving Aegean Sea, Syrian Swimmer Hopes For Spot In Olympics

Yusra Mardini visits the Olympiapark Berlin on March 9. The 18-year-old Syrian refugee hopes to qualify for the Rio Olympics as a swimmer on the refugee team.

Yusra Mardini visits the Olympiapark Berlin on March 9. The 18-year-old Syrian refugee hopes to qualify for the Rio Olympics as a swimmer on the refugee team. Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images for IOC hide caption

toggle caption Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images for IOC

Last summer, Yusra Mardini was swimming through the Aegean ocean in a last-ditch attempt to survive a perilous sea crossing from Turkey to Greece.

This summer, she hopes to swim in the Olympics.

Mardini is one of 43 refugees who are vying for the opportunity to compete at Rio as a part of the first-ever “Refugee Olympic Athletes” team.

In a video released by the International Olympic Committee, the 18-year-old Syrian refugee says it was difficult maintaining her athletic training during Syria’s war. Trainings were canceled — or held at pools that were then struck by explosives. She describes looking up at the roof over a pool and seeing the sky through holes blown by bombs.

Mardini fled her home in Damascus with her sister Sarah. The Associated Press describes their journey:

“The sisters left Damascus in early August, joining a wave of Syrian refugees who lost hope of the conflict ending soon. They made their way to Lebanon and then Turkey, where they paid smugglers to take them to Greece.

“Their first attempt was thwarted when Turkish coastguards drove their boat back so they tried again, boarding a small inflatable dinghy at dusk. There were 20 people crowded onto the boat, all but three of whom couldn’t swim. Within half an hour, the boat was taking on water.

“All the passengers’ bags were thrown overboard in an effort to stay afloat as wind churned up the Aegean Sea. But it wasn’t enough. As a last resort, Yusra, Sarah and another strong swimmer jumped into the water to give the boat more buoyancy.”

They spent 3 1/2 hours in the water before reaching Lesbos. It was awful, Yusra Mardini says, and left her with a hatred for the open sea.

But it didn’t destroy her love of swimming.

Yusra Mardini trains with the Wasserfreunde Spandau 04 swimming club in Berlin on March 9.

Yusra Mardini trains with the Wasserfreunde Spandau 04 swimming club in Berlin on March 9. Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images for IOC hide caption

toggle caption Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images for IOC

Mardini and her sister traveled through Macedonia, Serbia, Hungary and Austria before reaching Germany. There, the two of them were connected with a local swimming club.

Mardini has been training for the last five months, hoping to qualify for the Olympics.

In the video released by the IOC, Mardini says she didn’t want to sit around and cry.

“It’s tough. It was really hard, for everyone, and I don’t blame anyone if they cried. But sometimes you just have to move on,” she says.

She’s proud to be a refugee, she says: “My sister, when she wants to encourage me, says, ‘Show them the refugee, what she will do.’ “

But she’s more focused on being an athlete.

“In the water,” she says, “there is no difference if you are a refugee or a Syrian or German.”

All told, 43 athletes are aiming for a spot on the refugee team. The IOC has identified Mardini and two others: Raheleh Asemani, an Iranian taekwondo fighter living in Belgium, and Popole Misenga, a judo competitor from Congo training in Brazil. You can read about all three in The Guardian.

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South X Lullaby: A-WA

Updated March 20, 20162:59 PM ET Published March 20, 201612:57 PM ET

We first fell in love with A-WA in a badass video for their party song “Habib Galbi,” complete with tasseled snapbacks on track-suited dancers. But at midnight during the SXSW music festival, the Israeli sister trio sang us a quiet lullaby in All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen’s hotel room.

Accompanied by an electric guitarist and seated on the side of the bed, “Ya Shaifin Al Malih” is a Yemeni folk song about a love that hurts. The sisters, who pull from their Yemeni Jewish roots, told us that it wasn’t originally written as a ballad, but after explaining its meaning, how could it not be?

“There’s an enjoyable love and there’s a love that gives you heartache,” they said. “There’s a strong love that no doctor can cure.” You can hear that heartache in the gorgeous and haunting three-part harmony that ties a yearning soul in knots, as they sing (translated from Yemeni Arabic), “Have you seen my love / Tell him that he’s my heart and my soul / Because I’ve been looking for him day and night.”

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Ta-Nehisi Coates On The Fight Over 'Nina Simone's Face'

This still is from the first trailer for Nina, starring Zoe Saldana as singer Nina Simone. This image of Saldana in dark makeup and with a prosthetic nose helped reignite a controversy over skin color and casting.

This still is from the first trailer for Nina, starring Zoe Saldana as singer Nina Simone. This image of Saldana in dark makeup and with a prosthetic nose helped reignite a controversy over skin color and casting. Nina (2016) Trailer, IMDb hide caption

toggle caption Nina (2016) Trailer, IMDb

Lots of people are fuming about Nina, an upcoming biopic about legendary singer Nina Simone. According to its critics, the filmmakers butcher important parts of Simone’s biography (in part, by attributing much of her success to the men in her life), but that their larger sin was casting actress Zoe Saldana, who plays the lead role with the help of skin-darkening makeup and a prosthetic nose.

Many argue that casting the lighter skinned Afro-Latina actress, rather than someone who better resembled Simone, was an attempt to make the film more marketable instead of staying true to the singer and the life that inspired her art. The makeup and prosthetic nose, they also charge, were sloppy and poorly executed. In one of the more gentle critiques, singer India.Arie called the casting move “tone deaf.” Others went with “disrespectful,” “deplorable,” and “embarrassing.”

In this composite image, a comparison has been made between Nina Simone and actress Zoe Saldana.

In this composite image, a comparison has been made between Nina Simone and actress Zoe Saldana. David Redfern/Frazer Harrison/Redferns/Getty Images for Relativity Media hide caption

toggle caption David Redfern/Frazer Harrison/Redferns/Getty Images for Relativity Media

Buzzfeed rounded up some of the Twitter reactions to the film’s trailer. Jezebel highlighted the overwhelmingly white team behind the production. Time magazine talked to Simone’s daughter, Lisa Simone Kelly, about the movie’s narrative flaws, and the Guardian chronicled some of the offensive backlash to people’s complaints about the film. Vox also voxsplained the whole controversy, from pre-production to the release of the first trailer.

But more than any other, Ta-Nehisi Coates’ recently published essay seems to capture the full emotional depth of all this frustration. He suggests this wasn’t just another questionable casting choice involving a person of color in a long line of such casting choices. To explain, Coates gets personal:

“When I was kid, I knew what the worst parts of me were—my hair and my mouth. My hair was nappy. My lips were big. Nearly every kid around me knew something similar of themselves because nearly every one of us had some sort of physical defect—dark skin, nappy hair, broad nose, full lips—that opened us up to ridicule from one another. That each of these “defects” were representative of all the Africa that ran through us was never lost on anyone. “Africa” was an insult—African bush-boogie, African bootie-scratcher etc. Ethiopian famine jokes were all the rage back then…

…[Nina] Simone was in possession of nearly every feature that we denigrated as children. And yet somehow she willed herself into a goddess.”

Coates goes on to explain how Simone’s appearance, as well as her music, helped him view his childhood musings on race in a larger context:

“Simone is something more than a female Bob Marley. It is not simply the voice: It is the world that made that voice, all the hurt and pain of denigration, forged into something otherworldly. That voice, inevitably, calls us to look at Nina Simone’s face, and for a brief moment, understand that the hate we felt, that the mockery we dispensed, was unnatural, was the fruit of conjurations and the shadow of plunder. We look at Nina Simone’s face and the lie is exposed and we are shamed. We look at Nina Simone’s face and a terrible truth comes into view—there was nothing wrong with her. But there is something deeply wrong with us.”

Finally, Coates takes us through what all of this means, both for the potential audience and Nina‘s creators:

“It’s here that the term ‘appropriation’ bears some usage. We’re not talking about someone inspired by the deeper lessons of Simone’s life and her music. We are talking about people who think it’s fine to profit off her music while heedlessly contributing to the kind of pain that brought that music into being. To acknowledge that pain, to consider it in casting, would be inconvenient—as anti-racist action always is. It would mean giving an opportunity to someone who’s actively experienced the kind of pain that plagued Simone. That would doubtlessly mean a diminished chance at garnering funds for such a film. And that, in turn, would court years of delays and the possibility of the film never coming into being. That would be unfortunate—but less so for Nina Simone than for the agents who feel themselves entitled to profit her story.”

The whole piece is worth reading and thinking about. You can check it out over at The Atlantic.

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Sports Chatter: Let The 'Madness' Begin

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It’s time for the NCAA basketball playoffs, and they’ve earned their name, providing some genuine surprises. NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman stops by to tell us what’s worth our watch.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Let’s go to sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

BLOCK: Get your brackets out, for all will be revealed over the next few minutes. That’s right. It’s March Madness. Among today’s games, Yale plays last year’s champion Duke this afternoon. Connecticut takes on Kansas this evening. And here this morning is NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman to tell us all about it.

Tom, good morning.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: Hi.

BLOCK: And a great first round for bracket busters.

GOLDMAN: (Laughter) I don’t think all the poor souls who had their office pool brackets obliterated by the craziness would use the word great, Melissa.

BLOCK: Yeah, I know. Well, it’s a figure of speech.

GOLDMAN: But – you know – yeah, glad I don’t know any of those souls personally.

BLOCK: Uh-uh, not at all.

GOLDMAN: OK. So how crazy was it? You had teams seeded 13th, 14th and 15th – three of the lowest seeds in the field – all winning on the same day, never happened before. You had two buzzer-beating shots courtesy of the state of Iowa. A game-winner by the University of Iowa in overtime beat Temple. An amazing half-court heave by Northern Iowa’s Paul Jesperson beat Texas at the buzzer. Of course, the biggest stunner – Middle Tennessee’s 90-81 win over Michigan State, only the eighth time a 15th seed beat a two seed in the first round. The result was shocking, but so was Middle Tennessee’s dominance. I mean, the Blue Raiders jumped out to a 15-2 lead, never trailed in the game – made big play after big play at the end to foil one Michigan State come back after the next.

BLOCK: And explain how that happens. How can so many people be wrong, maybe even you Tom – the selection committee all down to everybody else who bet on Michigan State.

GOLDMAN: This is, of course, the beauty of the tournament on any given day. Certainly, Michigan State earned its No. 2 seed. Many said the Spartans actually deserved a one seed going into the tournament. But they picked a horrible time to play a bad game. And never underestimate the potential of a lower-seeded mid-major school with so much to prove. Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo said afterwards, Middle Tennessee made shots he’d never seen on film. And he acknowledged scouting film doesn’t always capture how these so-called lesser teams crank it up three notches in the tournament.

BLOCK: Well, I love me an underdog, so I have nothing bad to say about that. Are you seeing any trends overall, Tom, in the playoffs this year?

GOLDMAN: We were told going into the tournament that it’s wide open. With all the upsets of the first two days – 13 lower-seeded teams won – that seems to be playing out. We were told the tournament would celebrate upperclassmen who were supposed to play a more mature brand of basketball and not the so-called one-and-done players, guys who make a one-year pit stop in college before going off to the NBA. You look at some of the heroes of the first two days. The Iowa buzzer-beaters, both players who scored those baskets, are seniors. The high-point man for Middle Tennessee, in that school’s monster upset, is a junior Reggie Upshaw. And then senior Thomas Walkup scored a game-high 33 points in Stephen F. Austin’s upset of No. 3 seed West Virginia. So the old guys are doing pretty well.

BLOCK: And you figure the madness will continue – more surprises to come?

GOLDMAN: Predictions are very risky at this point. You could see the madness continuing with lower seeds having success. After all, there’s no one dominant favorite in the field. But important to note – the four No. 1 seeds won their first-round games by an average of 29 points. Seven of the past nine champions have been No. 1-seeded teams.

BLOCK: And very briefly, Tom, want to ask you about the women’s game.

GOLDMAN: You know, this talent pool’s still not deep enough to have a truly mad March Madness. I mean, really, there are good teams like South Carolina and Baylor who both won yesterday. And then there’s the top, top, top, top, top seed UConn. Really, it’s the Huskies versus the world. They came into the tournament 32-0 with an average margin of victory, during the regular season, 39.7 points – hard to beat that.

BLOCK: NPR sports correspondent Tom Goldman. Tom, thanks so much.

GOLDMAN: You’re welcome.

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Best of the Week: New 'Indiana Jones' Confirmed, SXSW Reviews and More

The Important News

Sequelitis: Indiana Jones 5 was scheduled for July 2019. Anne Hathaway might star in The Princess Diaries 3.

Star Wars Mania: The casting for young Han Solo is down to just a few actors.

Trekkie Time: Shohreh Aghdashloo joined Star Trek Beyond.

DC Delierium: A Lobo is back in development. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice R-rated cut will be three hours.

Marvel Madness: Captain America: Civil War might have three post-credits scenes. Iron Man might be retired after the next Avengers.

New Ways of Seeing: Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackson, Martin Scorsese, J.J. Abrams, Ron Howard and others are endorsing a controversial new VOD service.

Casting Net: John Goodman joined Patriots Day. Ellar Coltrane and Jason Mitchell joined the young Barack Obama biopic Barry. Julia Roberts will star in Train Man. Simon Pegg joined Ready Player One.

Remake Report: Etan J. Cohen is remaking The Cannonball Run. Zack Snyder wants to make a new movie of The Fountainhead.

Adaptation Station: Belinda joined the Baywatch movie. Michael Mann’s Heat is getting a prequel novel.

New Directors, New Films: Danny Boyle might direct the Miss Saigon movie. Eduardo Sanchez is helming Sevenfold.

Box Office: 10 Cloverfield Lane was a success for its brand.

Festival Seasoning: The Arbalest and Tower won the big awards at SXSW.

Theme Parking: Chocolate factories are the new trend in amusement parks.

Incidents and Accidents: Dylan O’Brien was hospitalized from an accident on the set of The Maze Runner: The Death Cure.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: X-Men: Apocalypse, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Ben-Hur, The Legend of Tarzan, A Hologram for the King, Now You See Me 2, Green Room, Criminal, The Shallows, Storks, Dead 7, High-Rise and Central Intelligence.

Clip: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows.

Interview Featurette: Henry Cavill on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. And Ben Affleck on Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.

Watch: Batman v Superman v Captain America v Iron Man mashup trailer. And Batman v Superman redone with kittens.

See: Why Batman could win against Superman.

Watch: The Stay Puft Marshmallow Man responds to the Ghostbusters reboot trailer.

Learn: How a cat was employed in the portrayal of Kylo Ren in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Watch: A tribute to Adam Sandler’s dramatic performances.

See: Why all movies are better by ending with “Walk of Life.”

Watch: A breakdown of Deadpool visual effects.

See: Spider-Man dies in a parody of the Captain America: Civil War trailer.

Watch: A short documentary on one of Yoda’s puppetteers.

See: This week’s new movie posters.

Watch: Scenes from The Thing re-scored with new John Carpenter music.

Our Features

Film Festival Guide: The SXSW movies people are talking about.

SXSW Reviews: Sausage Party and Don’t Think Twice.

Interview: Timur Bekmambetov on the origins of Hardcore Harry.

New Movie Review: Pee-wee’s Big Holiday.

Comic Book Movie Guide: The Punisher in movies and TV.

List: Leprechaun movies ranked.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

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Jury Awards Hulk Hogan $115 Million In Sex Tape Lawsuit Against Gawker

Former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan stands with one of his lawyers just after his civil suit against Gawker Media went to the jury. The panel awarded him $115 million in damages on Friday.

Former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan stands with one of his lawyers just after his civil suit against Gawker Media went to the jury. The panel awarded him $115 million in damages on Friday. Boyzell Hosey/AP hide caption

toggle caption Boyzell Hosey/AP

A Florida jury sided with wrestler Hulk Hogan Friday in his sex tape lawsuit against Gawker Media, and awarded him $115 million for invasion of privacy. Gawker is appealing the ruling.

The celebrity wrestler, whose legal name is Terry Bollea, filed suit accusing the website of invading his privacy when it published a portion of a video showing him having sex with the wife of a former friend, along with 1,400 words describing the video.

Bollea, 62, sought $100 million in damages from Gawker. He was awarded $55 million in economic injuries and $60 million for emotional distress, Reuters reports. The jury returns on Monday to consider punitive damages.

In a statement, Gawker founder Nick Denton said, “Given key evidence and the most important witness were both improperly withheld from the jury, we all knew the appeals court will need to resolve this case.”

The witness to which Denton alludes, is reportedly the husband of the woman in the sex tape, Bubba Clem, who Gawker lawyers wanted to question in order to show that that one or both of the parties knew about the taping. Their thinking is that if the defense could establish that the tape was made as a publicity stunt, then it was fair game to be covered as news.

As the Two-Way previously reported, the issue of whether the video is newsworthy was a point of focus in much of the case. Gawker argued that Bollea’s “frequent public discussion of his sex life made the clip newsworthy and thus protected by the First Amendment.”

Bollea’s lawyers argued that distinguishing between the character of Hulk Hogan and Bollea’s real life was crucial.

“I’m kind of concerned about Hulk Hogan’s privacy, but you kind of give it away,” Bollea testified in court, according to The New York Times. “But in the privacy of your own home, no one invades my privacy.”

According to the Guardian, Bollea’s lawyers also called Gawker’s “common decency” into question during closing argument on Friday:

“Kenneth Turkel, a lawyer for Hogan, told jurors Gawker editors had not even had the ‘common decency’ to call Hogan for comment before they posted the video.

“Turkel walked jurors through Hogan’s case: that his right to privacy was gratuitously compromised by Gawker, that his reputation was materially compromised, and that he suffered emotional distress of ‘outrageous intensity and duration.’ “

The jury agreed.

Gawker, however, has “warned that if Hogan wins the case, the decision could not only destroy the company – a loss could cost the site up to $50 [million],” the Guardian writes.

Denton’s statement also said, “I … am confident that we would have prevailed at trial if we had been allowed to present the full case the the jury. That’s why we have already begun preparing, as we expect to win this case ultimately.”

Gawker Media president and general counsel Heather Dietrick said in October that she wouldn’t be surprised if Gawker lost the case, but didn’t think that the jury would award Bollea $100 million, Politico Media reported at the time.

“It’s quite possible that Hogan just gets a very small judgment against us, and then we have to make the decision: do we appeal that and incur further fees to vindicate the First Amendment rights that we know we’re on the right side of,” she said. “Or do we simply say, OK this very small judgment is a win and makes it very difficult for Hulk Hogan, who’s spent a lot of time on pursuing this case and could walk away with something very small.”

Apart from the statement released by Denton, Gawker Media writers and editors, who had been weighing in on the case — sometimes gleefully — for months on social media, did not offer any opinions on the ruling. And Gawker itself, which had been covering the case, (once publishing a story entitled, “A Judge Told Us to Take Down Our Hulk Hogan Sex Tape Post. We Won’t.“) also had not published a post on the website hours after the ruling.

Advocates for free speech, however, spoke up, saying that ruinous media fines were in contradiction with the First Amendment and that Gawker was well within its rights as a news site to publish interesting stories pertaining to celebrities. An attorney for Gawker, Michael Sullivan, said in court Friday that while jurors may find the publication of the tape “unpleasant,” the post was still free speech under the Constitution.

“We ask you to protect something that some of you may find unpleasant,” he said, according to The Associated Press. “To write, to speak, to think about all topics, to hold public figures accountable. It is right in the long run for our freedoms.”

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