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Today in Movie Culture: NASA's Real TIE Fighters and Droids, 'Zootopia' Does 'Star Wars' and More

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

Star Wars in Real Life Episode I:

Kyle Hill of Nerdist’s Because Science explains how NASA already sort of has TIE Fighters and had them long before the first Star Wars movie opened:

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Star Wars in Real Life Episode II:

Speaking of NASA, they also have real droids that are comparable to — but better than — R2-D2 and C-3PO. But BB-8 from Star Wars: The Force Awakens is not viewed as something they’d want (via Geekologie):

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Star Wars Cosplay of the Day:

Laurie Foster’s gender-swapped Darth Maul is evidence that not everyone hates the Star Wars prequels (via KamiKame):

Star Wars Fan of the Day:

Watch a fan play all the instrument parts for the Star Wars theme on his guitar at the same time (via Geek Tyrant):

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Alternate Dimension Poster of the Day:

Here’s the poster for Star Wars: The Furce Awakens, which is the new Star Wars movie in the world of Disney‘s Zootopia. See more posters for Ex Yakina, Fifty Shades of Prey, Giraffic World, Cinderelephant and Straight Otter Zootopia at ComingSoon.net.

Alternate Dimension Movie Trailer of the Day:

Speaking of animal versions of things, here’s a redo of A Charlie Brown Christmas, which turned 50 this week, starring kittens:

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Year-End Recap of the Day:

Here’s another great supercut of the movies of 2015, which plays like a trailer for the whole year, edited by Clark Zhu (via Film School Rejects):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice gets a Silence of the Lambs style poster care of MessyPandas:

Filmmaker in Focus:

The Film Society of Lincoln Center celebrates Douglas Sirk with this trailer for their upcoming retrospective of his movies (via The Playlist):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 35th anniversary of Robert Altman‘s Popeye, which was an undeserved flop upon release. Watch the original trailer for the comic strip adaptation starring Robin Williams below.

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Limits Urged On The Use Of Codeine To Stop Kids' Coughs And Pain

Cessation of breathing is a rare, but serious risk for some children who take cough syrup or painkillers that contain codeine, research shows. Advisers to the FDA say no one under 18 should take the drug.
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Cessation of breathing is a rare, but serious risk for some children who take cough syrup or painkillers that contain codeine, research shows. Advisers to the FDA say no one under 18 should take the drug. iStockphoto hide caption

toggle caption iStockphoto

Medical advisers to the Food and Drug Administration say that prescription drugs containing codeine should not be used to treat children or the majority of teens suffering from pain or a cough.

In their meeting Thursday, the advisers also voted overwhelmingly against the over-the-counter sales of codeine-containing cough syrup for children. Selling such products without a prescription is currently permitted in 28 states and the District of Columbia.

The votes to restrict codeine’s use among children came at the end of a daylong joint meeting of the FDA’s Pulmonary-Allergy Drugs Advisory Committee and Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee, in Silver Spring, Md. The FDA does not have to follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, but it usually does.

“My concern, were I to be prescribing codeine in children, would be that I would, frankly, kill them,” said pharmacist Maria Pruchnicki, of the Ohio State University College of Pharmacy.

Several committee members noted that there are questions about whether codeine is even effective for alleviating children’s coughs, and whether there are potentially safer alternatives for alleviating pain.

Although the administration of products containing codeine to children has dropped sharply over the past decade, doctors often still prescribe medicines that contain the drug, and parents can buy cough remedies that include codeine without a prescription in many parts of the country.

Codeine combined with other painkillers, such as acetaminophen, is also commonly used to alleviate kids’ pain in a variety of situations, such as when they’re recovering from surgery.

But the FDA has been increasingly concerned because codeine has been found to trigger life-threatening breathing problems in some children.

Such complications seem to be fairly rare, but they do occur — especially among children whose bodies are genetically predisposed to quickly convert codeine into morphine.

The FDA convened the panel of outside experts to advise the agency on what action to take, if any, in restricting the drug’s use.

During the daylong hearing, FDA scientists made presentations on dozens of frightening cases in which children stopped breathing after getting codeine, including at least two dozen deaths in the last decade.

Also, representatives from the American Academy of Pediatrics , and the National Center for Health Research, an advocacy group in Washington, D.C., urged the FDA to follow the lead of regulators in Europe, Australia and Canada, who have sharply restricted the drug’s use.

“The use of codeine or any other opioid cannot be recommended for the treatment of cough in children,” said Dr. Constance Houck, an anesthesiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital, speaking on behalf of the academy. The pediatricians’ group recommended against using codeine for pain, and urged the FDA to bar the sale of products containing the drug without a prescription.

The Consumer Healthcare Products Association, which represents companies that make over-the-counter codeine products, urged the FDA to base any decision “on sound scientific evidence.”

The manufacturers’ association reminded the agency that codeine had been deemed earlier “to be generally recognized as safe and effective,” and any decision to remove codeine from over-the-counter sales should go “thorough a multi-step process.”

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Wal-Mart To Launch New Mobile Pay System In 2016

Wal-Mart employee Adriana Cajuso takes payment from customer Yoalmi Matias at a store in Miami. By mid-2016, Wal-Mart says, customers will have the option of paying via their smartphones.

Wal-Mart employee Adriana Cajuso takes payment from customer Yoalmi Matias at a store in Miami. By mid-2016, Wal-Mart says, customers will have the option of paying via their smartphones. Joe Raedle/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Wal-Mart is launching a new mobile pay system, allowing customers to use their smartphones to pay for purchases with credit, debit, prepaid or gift cards.

The service will be available in select stores this month, and across the country next year, the retail giant says.

With Wal-Mart Pay, the company is entering a crowded field of mobile payment providers — including Apple Pay, Android Pay and Samsung Pay. None of them has achieved widespread use. Changing consumer behavior has proven to be a challenge, as The New York Times reports:

“Both Apple and Google have found that persuading shoppers to switch from using physical credit cards or cash is tough. A survey released by the consumer data firm InfoScout found Apple Pay use to be at its lowest rate since the firm started tracking its usage. Shoppers used it this past Black Friday for only 2.7 percent of eligible transactions.”

Apple Pay and Android Pay both rely on near-field communication, or NFC, a wireless technology that many cash registers aren’t equipped with.

Samsung’s system uses NFC as well but also has a backup system, The Associated Press reports: ” The phone can mimic the old-school magnetic signals produced by card swipes and work with most existing equipment.”

Wal-Mart Pay will go a different route. To check out, a user will call up the app, open the camera and scan a code that’s presented on the credit card terminal.

The service will be built into Wal-Mart’s existing app, which the company says has 22 million users each month.

While the Apple, Android and Samsung pay systems are limited to specific devices — by operating system for Apple and Android, and by manufacturer for Samsung — the Wal-Mart service will work on any smartphone that can download Wal-Mart’s app.

Wal-Mart also notes that Wal-Mart Pay will “accept almost any payment type” — including prepaid debit cards, which have limited or no support on most mobile pay systems.

That continues a decade-long trend: As Wal-Mart has expanded its financial services, including bill pay, check cashing, a prepaid debit card called the MoneyCard, low-cost checking accounts and money transfers, it has often targeted low-income shoppers who may not have access to a debit card, a credit card or other conventional banking services.

The retailer has also indicated it might eventually integrate apps like Apple Pay or Android Pay directly into the Wal-Mart Pay system.

But the newly announced program might be bad news for another system, the AP reports. A consortium of retailers and restaurants — including Wal-Mart — has been trying to create a mobile payment system that works at all participating vendors. “CurrentC” has been in the works for three years but still hasn’t been rolled out to consumers, and now Wal-Mart is going it alone. (Executives tell AP that they are still “excited” about the prospect of CurrentC.)

Security is always a concern for new payment methods, but the AP notes that all forms of mobile payment offer at least one security benefit:

“They store and transmit an alternate card number that’s generated by the card issuer. The merchant never gets the real card number, so it remains safe even if the store’s system gets hacked. With Wal-Mart Pay, the company says no card information is stored on the phone, but the real card number is still stored at what it says is a secure data center.”

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MLB Commissioner To Decide Whether To Reinstate Pete Rose

Former Cincinnati Reds player and manager Pete Rose has been banned from the game since 1989. But he could be reinstated.
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Former Cincinnati Reds player and manager Pete Rose has been banned from the game since 1989. But he could be reinstated. Gary Landers/AP hide caption

toggle caption Gary Landers/AP

It’s the offseason for Major League Baseball, but big news is coming soon. Commissioner Rob Manfred says he will decide by the end of the month whether to reinstate Pete Rose.

The former perennial All-Star for the Cincinnati Reds is one of the greatest players ever; many consider his record for most hits in a career — 4,256 — untouchable.

Rose, of course, has also been baseball’s most celebrated pariah. He was banned in 1989 for betting on the game. Rose has campaigned for reinstatement in the past, and lost. He’s hoping a new commissioner — Manfred’s been in office since January — means a different outcome.

Legislative Help

Rose has many supporters, certainly in Ohio. Among them, Democratic state Sen. Cecil Thomas turned his support into legislation. In April, Thomas introduced Senate Concurrent Resolution 4.

It asks Manfred to “remove Peter Edward ‘Pete’ Rose from Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list as soon as possible, and to urge the Baseball Writers’ Association of America and the National Baseball Hall of Fame to include Rose on the Hall of Fame ballot.”

The bill, which had bipartisan support, stalled in committee after a June revelation by ESPN’s Outside the Lines that Rose bet on baseball when he was a player. Rose’s admission up until then was that he had bet only when he managed the Reds in the late 1980s. The report, and the bill’s holdup in the Ohio Legislature, haven’t dimmed Thomas’ support, which the 63-year-old state senator traces back to his baseball-playing days as a little leaguer in Cincinnati.

“I didn’t get to be a senator just by kind of dragging along,” he says. “I put in 110 percent of my effort to get to where I am today. And it goes back to the foundation that my baseball coach instilled in me. He’d always say, ‘Watch how Pete Rose does it — head-first slides and runnin’ and all of that.’ “

Like many of Rose’s supporters, Thomas points to the fact that Rose’s baseball betting was always on his own team — to win. Rose always maintained he never bet against the Reds.

“I guess that’s the difference in this whole scenario,” Thomas says, adding, “If he had gambled against his team then, yes, that should be banned — period — since you’ve done something to impact the outcome in a very negative way. However, his efforts were that his team would win. We want [players and managers] to be winners and to have enthusiasm to win.”

Impact Of Not Betting

It’s the same rationale Ryan Rodenberg has heard for years from his college students, and it’s a rationale with which he’s never agreed.

Rodenberg is an assistant professor of sport management at Florida State University. Every semester, Rodenberg holds lectures on sports gambling in his graduate sports law classes. Pete Rose always comes up, and so does the argument that Rose is innocent, or at least less guilty, because he bet on his own team to win.

Rodenberg cites several problems with the argument, all outlined, he says, by John Dowd, the lawyer whose investigation and subsequent report led to Rose’s lifetime ban.

One problem, says Rodenberg, is that while Rose admitted to betting on Reds games, there’s fairly substantial evidence he didn’t bet on every game. “If someone who normally bets on games for differing amounts suddenly decides not to wager, that’s a signal,” says Rodenberg, “to the bookies, to other insiders who may be privy to that information, that someone who normally bets on the team to win just doesn’t have that much confidence in that night’s game.”

Rodenberg says there’s also evidence that Rose didn’t always bet the same amount of money. “Certainly if someone were to bet 100 bucks on a team to win versus $5,000, that’s a pretty strong signal on differing levels of confidence in terms of how the team would do.”

Changing Times

While Rodenberg contends there’s plenty of evidence to implicate Rose, he also acknowledges that Manfred is mulling over his decision in a different climate.

The traditionally hard attitudes by sports leagues toward sports gambling seem to be softening. In what Rodenberg calls “a game changer,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver wrote a New York Times op-ed piece last year in support of expanded legalized sports gambling. Leagues, including Major League Baseball, are partnering with Daily Fantasy sports companies — companies that are currently fighting allegations that they constitute illegal sports gambling.

And then Manfred is also dealing with the human element: Rose is 74, and his supporters say he’s been punished long enough.

All of these factors, says Rodenberg, could prompt a possible split decision by the commissioner, who has promised to take a “fresh look” at the Rose case.

“If Rob Manfred is inclined to be sympathetic and offer an olive branch,” Rodenberg says, “he certainly could confirm the fact that Rose is banned for life in terms of being a manager, coach or instructor during spring training.”

“But you could allow for a vote to take place about whether Rose should be in the Hall of Fame,” adds Rodenberg. “That would be a bronze bust in a museum — far different than being on a coaching staff for a team. It’s a possibility, but the baseball writers [who vote for Hall members], working in conjunction with Major League Baseball, would have to revise the voting rules.”

In 1991, in response to the Rose case, the Hall of Fame voted to ban players on the permanently ineligible list.

Certainly Thomas would endorse such a compromise. “We tell our children all the time — you walk with integrity, you be honest and tell the truth,” says Thomas. “The moment you don’t, you’re sanctioned for that. But do you give them a life sentence for that? I’d say no.”

Asked whether he’ll keep pushing his bill if Manfred decides not to reinstate Rose, Thomas says, “Absolutely.”

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Today in Movie Culture: Bill Nye on 'Star Trek' vs. 'Star Wars,' BB-8 Cake Recipe and More

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

Star Wars vs. Star Trek:

Shockingly, not everyone is super excited for Star Wars: The Force Awakens. We’ve already heard from Neil deGrasse Tyson on why he favors Star Trek to Star Wars, but now Bill Nye chimes in, as well (via Geek Tyrant):

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Dessert of the Day:

If you are excited about the new Star Wars and want another way to celebrate next week’s opening, here’s how to make a tasty BB-8 droid cake (via Neatorama):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

We know so little about Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) from Star Wars: The Force Awakens, so maybe he actually will turn out to be a folk singer on the side (via Jason Gorber):

Movie Comparison of the Day:

Couch Tomato and the Honest Trailers guy offer 30 reasons that Ant-Man is the same movie as Honey I Blew Up the Kid. Not Honey I Shrunk the Kids. Or Iron Man.

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Ang Lee directs Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in Brokeback Mountain, which opened in limited release 10 years ago today.

Documentary Parody of the Day:

Edward Snowden is an elf at the North Pole leaking Santa’s nice and naughty list in this Lego animation Citizenfour parody — or maybe it’s a premature parody of Oliver Stone’s Snowden (via Indiewire):

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Cosplay of the Day:

Gender-swapped cosplay is always interesting, and here’s a female Star-Lord from Guardians of the Galaxy to prove it (via Fashionably Geek):

Filmmaker in Focus:

Here’s a clever short film starring Alfred Hitchcock made with his many cameos in his own films and introductions in their trailers (via One Perfect Shot):

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Meme of the Day:

Feeling confused and way behind on your movie viewing this time of year while everyone else is all excited about awards season? This entry in the Confused John Travolta meme illustrates what you’re going through:

I love this one #VincentVega pic.twitter.com/XufllctTxf

— Phil Edwards (@Live_for_Films) December 9, 2015

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 50th anniversary of the premiere broadcast of A Charlie Brown Christmas. Watch the original ad for the CBS animated holiday special below.

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Accused Planned Parenthood Shooter Shouts 'I'm Guilty' In Court

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Robert Dear, the man accused in the mass shooting at a Planned Parenthood office at Colorado Springs, blurted he was guilty Wednesday in court, one of several outbursts during his arraignment.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

In Colorado Springs, the man accused in the mass shooting at a Planned Parenthood office there was arraigned. Robert Dear faces multiple charges, including first-degree murder. Dear’s legs and arms were cuffed, and he frequently interrupted the court proceedings, yelling several times. Colorado public radio’s Ben Markus was in the courtroom, and he joins us now. And Ben Markus, to start, this was the first time that Dear appeared in person in court since his arrest. Can you describe the proceedings? What happened?

BEN MARKUS, BYLINE: Sure. While his lawyers were discussing pretty routine matters related to future media coverage, Dear suddenly shouted that he was guilty and that he’s, quote, “a warrior for the babies.” Dear had more than a dozen outbursts in the hour-long hearing, including, quote, “kill the babies; that’s what Planned Parenthood does,” unquote. He ranted that he saw atrocities in the clinic and lots of blood. He accused his public defenders, at one point, of conspiring with Planned Parenthood against him. He said he wouldn’t submit to a mental health evaluation, fearing that his attorneys would try to drug him up.

CORNISH: What was the reaction in court to all of this?

MARKUS: It sent a jolt through the courtroom at first, but the judge pretty much let him rant throughout the hearing. Dear’s public defenders seemed to be shaken by the outbursts, especially when he accused them of trying to drug him up. When Dear wouldn’t let the judge talk near the end of the hearing, a deputy sheriff touched him on the shoulder, whispered something into his ear. And after that, he was pretty quiet.

CORNISH: Remind us what’s going on with this investigation, what’s known about this shooting which took place the day after Thanksgiving.

MARKUS: Right. The attack happened at a Planned Parenthood clinic which offers abortion services among many other things. Many of the details of the shooting are still not known. What is known is prosecutors allege that Robert Dear killed three people, one police officer and two civilians that day. He wounded at least nine more in what was a tense five-hour standoff with police until he surrendered.

CORNISH: So happens next for Robert Dear?

MARKUS: He’ll be back in court in two weeks for a status hearing. His public defender told the judge, obviously, in light of Dear’s repeated outbursts today, that there are mental health issues and issues of competency to work out before a preliminary hearing or any other hearings can be held in this case. After the preliminary hearing, if that happens, Dear can enter a plea in the case. And then at that point, the district attorney will have to decide if they seek the death penalty or not.

CORNISH: This is a closely watched case in Colorado Springs. What was the scene in and around the courtroom? I don’t know what kind of bystanders were there and what they were saying.

MARKUS: Victims and their family were here. There were many people milling about out front. You know, it is – as soon as somebody says the Planned Parenthood shooting, people know exactly what it is. It is – has been front-page news, headline news. It’s been in, you know, most newscasts every single day. So people know right away when you say Planned Parenthood down here what they’re talking about.

CORNISH: And you mentioned victims’ families being in the courtroom. What was their reaction to Robert Dear yelling out?

MARKUS: They seemed shocked, just as shocked as the public defenders were. Some gasped, clearly did not expect him to outburst like that in the middle of court proceedings.

CORNISH: That’s Colorado Public Radio’s Ben Markus. He’s following the mass shooting case at a Planned Parenthood office in Colorado Springs where there was a court appearance of the defendant in that case today, Robert Dear. Ben, thanks so much for talking with us.

MARKUS: Thanks for having me.

Copyright © 2015 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 a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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Yahoo Takes Reverse Spin To Boost Investment Image

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It sounds like a dance move — the reverse spin. But it’s actually a financial engineering maneuver Yahoo is using to make the company more attractive to investors.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

The tech giant Yahoo is forming a new company, a company made up of Yahoo. The move, announced this morning, is mainly meant to help Yahoo avoid paying taxes, but the company says it will also spruce up Yahoo’s image. NPR’s Aarti Shahani explains.

AARTI SHAHANI, BYLINE: Yahoo has a 15 percent stake in the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba. Yahoo wants to get rid of that stake to give cash to hungry investors and because, arguably, the Alibaba shares are overshadowing the rest of the business, making investors undervalue what Yahoo itself brings to the table – stuff like its search engine, mail, Yahoo! News, Tumblr.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MARISSA MAYER: A separation of our Alibaba stake will further enhance our ability to attract and incentivize talent to grow both revenue and user engagement.

SHAHANI: CEO Marissa Mayer on a conference call with analysts this morning.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MAYER: We believe that focusing specifically on a reverse spin will help realize these benefits.

SHAHANI: A reverse spin – sounds like a dance move, but this will take another kind of feat – a feat in financial engineering. At first, Yahoo was trying to spin off Alibaba. Problem is, the Internal Revenue Service would not agree in advance to let them do it tax free. So Yahoo’s board decided they’ll spin off Yahoo – take all its assets, except for those Alibaba shares, and make a new publicly traded company. Another option would have been to just give the shares, worth about $32 billion, to shareholders. But, CEO Mayer explains, then Yahoo and shareholders would both get dinged with a tax bill.

MAYER: So it’d actually result in double taxation.

SHAHANI: Last week, rumors surfaced that Yahoo was in such dire straits, it was going to start selling off the core business, the products we know. Yahoo Chairman Maynard Webb sort of dispelled that.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MAYNARD WEBB: We have made no determination to sell the company or any part of it.

SHAHANI: The reverse spinoff strategy is experimental – not guaranteed to work. It’ll require third-party consent from Yahoo business partners and regulators. Aarti Shahani, NPR News, Silicon Valley.

Copyright © 2015 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 a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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New England Fans Treat Eagles Linebacker To A Beer

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Connor Barwin tells CBS in Philadelphia that when he came onto the field in New England, some Patriots fans taunted him. Barwin told them to have a beer ready for him when the Eagle won.

Transcript

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

Good morning. I’m David Green. We now know why Connor Barwin had a beer in his hand as he left the field Sunday. Barwin plays linebacker for the Philadelphia Eagles. He tells CBS in Philly that when he came onto the field in New England, some patriots fans taunted him, saying you won’t win. Barwin said, have a beer ready for me when we do. The Eagles won. The fans were waiting to hand him a Bud Light. I wonder what it would take to have a beverage waiting for me when I walk out of this studio – maybe coffee instead of beer. It’s MORNING EDITION.

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Today in Movie Culture: Secret 'Star Wars' Jedi Knights, 'Spaceballs: The Schwartz Awakens' Posters and More

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

Star Wars Supercut of the Day:

In anticipation of Star Wars: The Force Awakens and the mystery of what new characters are Jedi, here’s a guide to all of the canon Jedi Knights in the franchise so far (via Geek Tyrant):

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Movie Theory of the Day:

Speaking of Jedi Knights, here’s a video theorizing who else in the Star Wars movies are masters of the Force, including Jar Jar Binks, Han Solo, R2-D2 and E.T.:

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Movie Poster Parody of the Day:

It’s a shame we’re not getting a new Spaceballs movie alongside the new Star Wars movie, but this will do for now: artist Joshua Budich created a triptych of Spaceballs “The Schwartz Awakens” posters parodying Olly Moss’s very popular Star Wars trilogy designs for Mondo from 2010. See the other two at /Film.

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Honest Trailers squashes Ant-Man by pointing out that it’s really just “Tiny Iron Man”:

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Cosplayer of the Day:

Speaking of Iron Man, this cosplayer made an awesome Mark I that apparently shoots flames (via Fashionably Geek):

Vintage Image of the Day:

Legendary screenwriter Ernest Lehman, who was born on this day 100 years ago, with Alfred Hitchcock on the set of North by Northwest, which he wrote.

Filmmaker in Focus:

The following video spotlights Brian DePalma‘s signature use of split diopter shots (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Christmas Card of the Day:

Get in the holiday spirit with a new series of movie geek Christmas cards by artist PJ McQuade, including the below design based on Mad Max: Fury Road. Inside it says “What a Lovely Holiday.” See others for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Jaws, Aliens, Ghostbusters and more at Geek Tyrant.

Movie Supercut of the Day:

Continue your good cheer with this video that mashes Christmas movies together, remixing them to gift us a new holiday carol (via Devour):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 30th anniversary of Clue. Watch the original trailer for the hilarious ensemble mystery comedy below.

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Veggies Under Glass: Greenhouses Could Bring Us Better Winter Produce

Paul Lightfoot, CEO of BrightFarms, in his company's greenhouse in Lower Makefield Township, Penn.
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Paul Lightfoot, CEO of BrightFarms, in his company’s greenhouse in Lower Makefield Township, Penn. Dan Charles/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

In America, our food options are remarkably unaffected by the changing seasons. We just keep eating salad greens and tomatoes without regard to the onset of winter.

In most of the country, there’s little chance that the greens we eat in the late fall and winter are locally grown.

But if there were greenhouses nearby, they could be. And in a small but growing number of places, local greenhouses are there.

Take Lower Makefield Township, Penn., right across the Delaware River from Trenton, N.J.

It’s a gray, chilly, fall day when I visit. But when I step inside the greenhouse, I feel the warmth of sunlight that’s been trapped by its glass walls and ceilings.

In front of me, there’s a sea of green: more than an acre of baby salad greens.

“It looks like a field of lettuce. It’s actually a field of boards, with lettuce growing on them,” says Paul Lightfoot, founder and CEO of the company BrightFarms, which owns the greenhouse.

The plants and the boards are all floating on ponds of water. The green plants grow out of slits in the boards, while roots extend down below, into the water.

In the BrightFarms greenhouse, salad greens grow on floating boards. Their roots extend into the water, where they get nutrients.

In the BrightFarms greenhouse, salad greens grow on floating boards. Their roots extend into the water, where they get nutrients. Dan Charles/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

The plants are fed a precisely balanced diet of nutrients through the water. They get energy from the sun, and that’s supplemented this time of year with overhead lights.

What’s most remarkable is how fast they can grow under such conditions, with optimal temperatures and lighting. These plants go into the pond as pale seedlings, so tiny you can hardly see them. Thirteen days later, they will be baby kale, ready for harvest.

In fact, 10 or 20 times more lettuce will come out of this greenhouse in a year, per acre, than from an outdoor field. That’s partly because the greens grow faster in ideal conditions, and partly because those ideal conditions continue year-round; there’s no winter.

Some countries grow a lot of their vegetables in greenhouses. In the Netherlands or Canada, you can find vegetable greenhouses that cover 100 acres.

But they’re rare in the U.S. And the reason for this is simple.

We have easy access to such fields in the temperate-climate states of California and Arizona. Mexico, with its vast and expanding fields of fresh tomatoes, is right next door, and farms in Central and South America aren’t far away, either. It’s easier and cheaper to ship vegetables across the country than to grow them in local greenhouses.

Lightfoot, though, is betting that the future of vegetables, starting with salad greens and fresh tomatoes, lies indoors.

To show me why, he drives me to a nearby supermarket, McCaffrey’s, in the borough of Yardley, Penn. It’s selling his products.

Salad greens grown in a BrightFarms greenhouse in Lower Makefield Township, Penn., on sale at a nearby McCaffrey's grocery store.

Salad greens grown in a BrightFarms greenhouse in Lower Makefield Township, Penn., on sale at a nearby McCaffrey’s grocery store. Dan Charles/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

Lightfoot pulls a package of BrightFarms arugula off the shelf and checks the expiration data. “This has about nine days left,” he says. These greens came from his greenhouse just a few days ago. Printed on the package, in big letters, are the words “Locally Grown.”

Next to them is the competition: organic salad greens that almost certainly came from California or Arizona.

There’s no difference in price. But some of that long-distance arugula and spinach looks a little wilted from that trip across the country.

This is part one of Lightfoot’s sales pitch. “You can see the difference in freshness. So it’s going to taste better. It’s going to last longer in the refrigerator,” he says.

The second part of Lightfoot’s pitch for local greenhouses is environmental.

Those fields in California and Arizona are in deserts, he says. The water they need is increasingly scarce. Most greens, for instance, come from the Salinas Valley in California, and farms there rely primarily on irrigation water from underground aquifers. Up to now, farmers have been able to pump an unlimited amount of water from their wells.

“In the United States, we just realized that we didn’t have endless land and water a few weeks ago, almost,” Lightfoot says.

Modern greenhouses require much less water — as little as 5 percent as much water as open-air field production.

Yet outside experts say that the case for greenhouses isn’t quite so convincing in all respects.

They say that greenhouses do take less water, but require extra heat and light during cold and dark parts of the year. And that usually comes from burning coal or gas. This adds to that global greenhouse effect.

Neil Mattson, a greenhouse expert at Cornell University, has calculated that growing lettuce in greenhouses in New York state can release twice the amount of climate-warming gases as growing lettuce in California — even when you consider the fuel burned to ship it across the country. “It’s not so good, and that’s the status quo,” says Mattson.

But he says those numbers may improve, as better lighting and heating technologies come online. And even though growing vegetables in greenhouses is usually a bit more expensive than open-air production, Mattson does agree that indoor farming’s key advantage — the freshness of its produce — may outweigh cost for many consumers.

That’s why the number of vegetable acres under glass in the U.S. is rising. From 2007 to 2012, the amount of land devoted to greenhouse production of vegetables in the U.S. increased by more than 50 percent. Mattson regularly hears from entrepreneurs who are interested in getting into this business, and are looking for advice.

“I think it really has legs,” Mattson says. “Ultimately it will depend on how robust consumer demand is for fresh, local, food.”

According to Lightfoot, that demand is booming.

“The demand is way higher for this product than our capacity right now,” he says. “There’s no limit right now. We’re raising the capital, and we’re building two other greenhouses that are much bigger than this.”

Those greenhouses are outside Washington, D.C., and Chicago. The one near Chicago will take advantage of waste heat from a nearby ethanol plant, cutting its energy consumption drastically.

Right now, BrightFarms is growing salad greens, basil, and tomatoes. Down the road, Lightfoot says, his greenhouses could diversify into other cucumbers, peppers, and strawberries — anything, he says, in which a local product looks and tastes a lot better than one trucked in from far away.

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