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Surge In Use Of 'Synthetic Marijuana' Still One Step Ahead Of The Law

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The drug sold as K2, spike, spice or “synthetic marijuana” may look like dried marijuana leaves. But it’s really any of a combination of chemicals created in a lab that are then sprayed on dried plant material. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Spencer Platt/Getty Images

A street drug made of various chemicals sprayed on tea leaves, grass clippings and other plant material continues to send thousands of people suffering from psychotic episodes and seizures to emergency rooms around the country.

In 2015, calls to poison control regarding the drug already have almost doubled, compared to last year’s total, and health professionals and lawmakers are struggling to keep up with the problem.

Some call the drug K2, or spice. It’s also widely known as “synthetic marijuana,” because the key chemicals in the spray are often man-made versions of cannabinoids, a family of psychoactive substances found in marijuana.

But the ingredients and concentrations used in this street drug vary widely, and it can be very different from marijuana in its effects.

Edwin Santana, 52, entered a detox program at Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare to help break his heroin addiction and daily habit of smoking the synthetic drug known as spike.

Edwin Santana, 52, entered a detox program at Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare to help break his heroin addiction and daily habit of smoking the synthetic drug known as spike. Hansi Lo Wang/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Hansi Lo Wang/NPR

At a drug rehabilitation center a short drive north of Syracuse University, where 52-year-old Edwin Santana has come for treatment, they call the drug “spike.”

Santana, who was born in the Bronx, is a few weeks into his detox program at Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare. A longtime heroin user, he became homeless after multiple run-ins with the law. Then, he says, a couple years ago he developed a problem with spike.

“It was getting out of hand,” Santana says. “I was starting to smoke every day. And you know, spike is a drug I respect, because you don’t know what you’re getting.”

The drug also inspires fear in him.

“Not a little bit of fear. A lot of fear,” he adds.

It’s hard to guess what will happen after you smoke or ingest spike, users and drug enforcement officials say, because the chemists who make it are constantly changing the main ingredients — tweaking a cannabinoid’s chemical structure, or mixing it with other substances entirely, which can change its effects.

“You get stuck when you’re on spike,” Santana says. “And it makes you do all kinds of crazy things, man. I’ve seen people roll around on the floor and stuff like that.” Smoking the drug landed him in the hospital.

Angel Stanley, a psychiatric nurse at the rehab center, ticks off the symptoms she’s seen in patients who have smoked spike: “Auditory hallucinations, visual hallucinations, disorganized thinking, delusional thinking. Paranoia is a big one.”

Many of these patients, she says, expected that smoking spike would be just like smoking regular pot, because the drug was sold as “synthetic marijuana.” The drug first became popular with teens, who were looking for a new way to get high for just a few dollars.

But now, Stanley says, she’s seeing older users, too.

“They’ve gone from using some marijuana in the past, a little bit of alcohol use over the years, and now all of a sudden, they’re in their 50s and they’re addicted to spike,” she says.

Often users are also homeless.

“A lot of people who use it, their reality is pretty bleak, so they use spike to escape that reality,” explains Matthew, who asked that we not use his last name. He just finished an inpatient program at Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare to help him stop using spike and cocaine, and doesn’t want future employers to find out about his past.

“The main thing with spike,” Matthew explains, “is this: It is the cheapest, most effective high in Syracuse right now. Is it the most enjoyable high? Probably not. But it’s the cheapest, hands down.”

The question facing workers at rehab centers and emergency rooms is how to effectively treat users of a drug that’s essentially an unknown mixture.

“We know how to treat an alcoholic,” says Jeremy Klemanski, who heads Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare. “We know how to treat an opiate patient. We know how to treat somebody’s who’s using cocaine. But, when we say we know how to treat somebody who is using synthetics — to a certain extent we do.”

Health professionals faced with such a patient are usually flying blind, Klemanski says. Some types of spike can be detected in drug tests, but not all.

“Until we get to a point where the treatment system has as sophisticated testing as the labs that are inventing and creating these things, we’ll struggle,” he says.

Lawmakers are paying attention. The federal government has permanently banned more than a dozen types of synthetic cannabinoids.

But packets of “spike” and “K2” and “spice” are still sold in many mom-and-pop convenience stores, because they contain versions of cannabinoids not covered by the ban, says Matt Strait of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

“They are in a legal grey area,” Strait explains, “because they’re not specifically named in the statute.”

That keeps makers and dealers of spike one step ahead of state and federal laws. Congress is weighing how to streamline the process of regulating new versions. Meanwhile, the Drug Enforcement Administration has been investigating and temporarily banning some new forms of the drug.

But back in Syracuse, some health professionals and spike users say the government can’t move fast enough to keep up with new varieties hitting the streets.

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Ohio Plane Crash Victims Included 7 Employees Of A Florida Real Estate Firm

A firefighter walks up a driveway as an apartment building burns after being struck by a small business jet Tuesday. The crash killed nine people.

A firefighter walks up a driveway as an apartment building burns after being struck by a small business jet Tuesday. The crash killed nine people. Scott Ferrell/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Scott Ferrell/AP

Seven employees of a Florida real estate firm were among those who died when their small plane crashed into an Ohio apartment building Tuesday, the firm said today.

The plane, a 10-passenger Hawker business jet, was approaching Akron Fulton International Airport when it slammed into a four-unit apartment building at about 3:00 p.m., killing nine people including the crew.

Weather conditions at the time were poor, with low visibility and fog, Quincy Vagell, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel, told NBC News.

Pebb Enterprises, a Boca Raton, Fla., commercial real estate firm that scouts locations for malls, said seven of its employees were killed in the crash, in addition to the pilot and co-pilot:

“Our hearts are broken this morning with the news of the tragic accident that took the lives of two principals and five employees of Pebb Enterprises. We are shocked and deeply saddened for the families, colleagues and friends of those who perished. Our first priority is to give our fullest support to the family members and loved ones of our co-workers. We ask for the media’s understanding and cooperation at this time of unimaginable loss and mourning and are not responding to media requests at this time.”

The company did not name the victims, but The Cleveland Plain-Dealer reported that Diane Smoot, 50, Pebb’s director of lease administration and property accounting, died in the crash.

No one was in the apartment building at the time. One resident, Jason Bartley, a 38-year-old factory worker, narrowly missed being there.

Bartley told The Akron Beacon-Journal he had left his apartment shortly before the crash to go to the bank. He was heading home at about 2:45 p.m. but decided to stop to buy food, the newspaper reported:

“As he was driving back to his apartment, he saw the smoke and flames and knew they would be very near his residence. Because the roads were closed, he parked his car and ran in that direction. When he saw that his apartment was the one ablaze, he immediately thought: ‘Oh my God. What did I do?’

“Eventually a bystander told him about the plane.”

The plane had left Fort Lauderdale Monday and then stopped at several cities in the Midwest, including St. Paul, Minn.; St. Louis, and Moline, Ill., according to the website Flightaware.com. It left Cincinnati Tuesday morning and flew to Dayton, before heading for Akron.

Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA are at the scene, attempting to discover what caused the crash.

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Jose Reyes' Arrest For Domestic Violence Puts MLB In The Spotlight

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NPR’s Audie Cornish talks with SB Nation writer Mike Bates about the recent news of domestic abuse by professional athletes. Deadspin released a set of police photos from star Dallas Cowboys player Greg Hardy’s abuse incident, while Colorado Rockies shortstop Jose Reyes was arrested in Hawaii.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Major League Baseball doesn’t have much of a track record in dealing with players who’ve been involved in domestic violence cases, but that track record is about to start. A shortstop with the Colorado Rockies, Jose Reyes, was arrested in Hawaii on Halloween night after a fight with his wife turned physical. Police of Maui said yesterday she’d been taken to hospital for her injuries. It was only this past August that the MLB agreed to a new policy concerning domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse, and that happened after the league watched the NFL struggle with these issues. Mike Bates writes for the MLB Daily Dish. He joins us now to talk about this case and, actually, a new development in the NFL. Welcome to the program, Mike.

MIKE BATES: Hi, Audie.

CORNISH: I want to talk to you first about the MLB’s new policy. We know this was hammered out with the players union. What does it say, and what could this mean for Jose Reyes?

BATES: Well, I think we don’t really know what it means for Jose Reyes yet. This is really the first time this policy has been tested. The commissioner is allowed to put him on administrative leave while the investigation is ongoing. The punishment that the commissioner decides on is not subject to any kind of president. You know, I do think that this is something teams are going to be considering as they’re deciding whether or not to acquire him in the future.

CORNISH: So help us understand what’s different now.

BATES: Prior to this, the league didn’t even have a policy in regards to domestic violence. Players were subject to discipline by their teams. But Major League Baseball essentially gave those teams a free hand, didn’t interfere.

Under the current policy, the commissioner investigates and has broad powers in terms of how long a player is suspended. He is given time to investigate, during which time that player is on unpaid administrative leave. He’s not on the field. Then that punishment is subject to review by a three-arbitrator panel.

CORNISH: Is this all that much different from what goes on, say, in the NFL? Is there any sense that baseball looked to the troubles football was having in crafting this policy?

BATES: I think Major League Baseball realized the NFL had a real problem last year and took affirmative steps to get out in front of the problem to give the commissioner powers that he didn’t have previously. The commissioner did not involve himself in disciplining players or behavior off the field that didn’t involve gambling.

CORNISH: Meanwhile, I do want to turn to an issue that has come up in the NFL, and that is with a Dallas Cowboys player, Greg Hardy. Over the weekend, the website Deadspin released photos of Greg Hardy’s former girlfriend with bruises, and he was accused last year of beating and strangling her. He was convicted, and then that case was thrown out after he appealed and his ex wouldn’t testify. Now, as far as the sport, he was suspended for four games, but he’s now playing again. And do you think these photos – the kind of reintroduction of this new story – is going to force the NFL to revisit his case?

BATES: I don’t know if the NFL is going to revisit his case, but I do think that, you know, the Cowboys are certainly embarrassed by Hardy’s conduct of him abusing someone he supposedly cared about. I think one of the important things about Major League Baseball’s policy is that it’s not beholden to any kind of conviction or trial at all. The commissioner, Rob Manfred, has the power to make his determination outside of the legal system. And given what we know about the prosecution rates for domestic abusers, that’s probably a good thing.

CORNISH: Mike Bates is a contributing editor with MLB Daily Dish. Mike, thanks so much.

BATES: Thank you very much, Audie.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Today in Movie Culture: Honest 'Terminator Genisys' Trailer, 'Rocky IV' Gets a '30 for 30' Documentary and More

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

Movie Takedown of the Day:

It’s judgment day for Terminator Genisys in the latest hilarious Honest Trailer:

[embedded content]

Movie Mashup of the Day:

Speaking of The Terminator, here he is finding an easier way to travel in time with his very own pedal-car Delorean from Back to the Future. See more cute prints by Chet Phillips of movie characters in little kid vehicles at Geek Tyrant.

Abridged Movies of the Day:

Don’t have time to watch the entire Matrix trilogy? Burger Fiction sums it all up in just 90 seconds:

[embedded content]

If Movies Were Real:

College Humor has another 30 for 30 parody, this one focused on the fictional events from Rocky IV:

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Cosplay of the Day:

This one comes once again from Jamie Lee Curtis, who didn’t dress up as a movie character but who is a movie star at least (via Fashionably Geek):

Went incognito 2 BlizzCon 2015.@Warcraft It was E P I C! What a wonderful World of Warcraft this is.#BlizzCon2015 pic.twitter.com/wjVWznqwpb

— Jamie Lee Curtis (@jamieleecurtis) November 8, 2015

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 70th anniverary of the theatrical release of the classic Looney Tunes animated short Hare Tonic, directed by Chuck Jones and starring Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd. Watch it below.

Bugs Bunny Ep 46 Hare Tonic by TinishaLorenzo

Movie Posters of the Day:

These really are becoming almost a daily thing. Here is the latest Poster Fever animated short featuring movie posters in motion:

[embedded content]

Toys of the Day:

You can now preorder limited edition action figures for Quentin Tarantino‘s upcoming Western The Hateful 8, which were recently teased on the movie’s Twitter account:

Movie Trivia of the Day:

Speaking of Quentin Tarantion movies, here are a bunch of things you may not know about Reservoir Dogs:

[embedded content]

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 20th anniversary of the theatrical release of Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls. Watch the original trailer for the comedy sequel starring Jim Carrey below.

[embedded content]

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Heading Is On The Way Out For The Youngest U.S. Soccer Players

A father teaches his son heading at a park in Taiwan in 2010.

A father teaches his son heading at a park in Taiwan in 2010. PATRICK LIN/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption PATRICK LIN/AFP/Getty Images

There are new safety rules this week targeting concussions in youth soccer. As part of a lawsuit settlement, the United States Soccer Federation has announced new restrictions on striking the ball with the head.

The new rules eliminate heading for players 10 and under, and limit heading in practice for 11-to-13-year-olds. The restrictions go into effect next month and they apply to players on U.S. Soccer’s youth national teams and Development Academy.

That’s only a small percentage of the more than three million kids who played soccer in the U.S. last year.

For all those players not directly controlled by U.S. Soccer, the new rules are recommendations. Still, U.S. Soccer says it strongly urges all youth leagues around the country to follow the guidelines.

The group also has agreed to modify substitution rules in games to allow players who may have suffered a concussion to be evaluated without penalty.

The new guidelines are part of a settlement of a lawsuit filed last year. A group of parents and players filed a class-action suit against U.S. Soccer and others, claiming the defendants had been negligent when dealing with player concussions.

The plaintiffs weren’t after monetary damages but instead wanted the kind of rules changes that were announced this week.

Steve Berman, lead attorney for the plaintiffs, said, “This is a tremendous victory that will affect millions of young soccer players across the country.” He added, “We believe this decision sends a strong message to coaches and lays down paramount regulations to finally bring safety management to soccer.”

Questions remain about how the regulations will be enforced, and about whether headers truly are the key culprit when it comes to soccer concussions. One recent scientific study acknowledges headers play a role in head injuries. But it finds that rough play — “athlete-athlete contact” — is a significant contributing factor.

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Push For $15 Minimum Wage Becoming Part Of Presidential Politics

Low-wage workers and supporters protest for a $15 an hour minimum wage Tuesday in New York City as part of what organizers called a National Day of Action.

Low-wage workers and supporters protest for a $15 an hour minimum wage Tuesday in New York City as part of what organizers called a National Day of Action. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Some economic matters are stunningly complex. Take the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The trade deal’s details cover more than 6,000 pages.

Others are simple, like the federal minimum wage. A bill to raise the $7.25 hourly wage covers a few paragraphs.

The congressional response is simple, too: Democrats are for it; Republicans against.

Tonight, that political contrast will be highlighted by fast-food workers who plan to protest at the Republican presidential debate in Milwaukee. They want the federal minimum wage boosted to $15.

Spurred on by the Service Employees International Union, the Milwaukee demonstrators will wrap up a day of protests held around the country. Over the past three years, fast-food workers have held walkouts and rallies, directing their wage demands at employers. This time, much of the focus was on city halls and other political sites, such as the Republican debate.

“Candidates gearing up for the 2016 elections across the country should take note,” Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project, said in a statement supporting the “Fight for $15” protests.

Backers of a higher minimum wage say they are planning a yearlong push, intended to get 64 million low-wage workers engaged politically. In major cities, protesters held pre-printed signs saying: “We demand $15 and union rights.”

In response to the protests, the Employment Policies Institute, backed by the restaurant industry, ran a full-page ad in the New York Post. The ad highlighted results from a survey, conducted for the group by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, which showed that three-fourths of the surveyed economists say a $15 minimum wage would reduce the number of jobs available, particularly for younger and less experienced workers.

Congress last raised the federal minimum wage in 2009. Since then, 29 states, plus the District of Columbia, have approved minimums above $7.25. State laws have typically pushed up wages to between $8 and $9 an hour. But some cities have gone much further. For example, Seattle and San Francisco have put wages on track to hit $15 an hour.

For years, President Obama has been calling for a phased-in higher federal minimum, but congressional Republicans have been fiercely opposed to such a move.

Now, as the fight moves into the presidential election cycle, candidates generally have been falling into line with their party’s position.

For example, Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton tweeted Tuesday:

Fast-food, home care, child care workers: Your advocacy is changing our country for the better. #Fightfor15 -H

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) November 10, 2015

Her opponent Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., tweeted:

I stand with the thousands of workers on strike today to demand $15 and a union. #FightFor15

— Bernie Sanders (@SenSanders) November 10, 2015

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, is pushing the matter, with plans to use his executive authority to raise the minimum wage to $15 by the end of 2018 for all state workers. That would mark the first time a state has set such a high wage for so many public employees.

In Congress, Republicans have presented a nearly solid wall of opposition to federal involvement in wage hikes. Overwhelmingly, Republican presidential candidates have agreed.

GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, when asked recently on MSNBC’s Morning Joe if he supported a higher minimum wage, said: “It’s such a nasty question, because the answer has to be nasty.”

Trump said that because the United States must compete with low-wage countries, “I think having a low minimum wage is not a bad thing for this country.”

Perhaps the greatest divergence from the party line has come from Ben Carson, a retired neurosurgeon who has led in recent polls. In a CNBC interview last spring, he said of the minimum wage, “I think, probably, it should be higher than now.”

Justin Murden, 20, a low-wage worker in Philadelphia, said in a phone interview that he is protesting at a McDonald’s restaurant Tuesday evening — and planning to pay more attention to politics in the coming year.

He makes less than $9 an hour as a cleaner and a security guard — and got involved with the demonstrations after a canvasser told him about it.

“This motivates me to actually listen to who is saying what when they run for mayor or city council or president,” he said. “Now, I understand more.”

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Pitching Health Care In Baltimore's Red Light District

Nathan Fields talks to passersby about how to use a naloxone auto-injector to treat an opioid overdose.
11:18

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Nathan Fields talks to passersby about how to use a naloxone auto-injector to treat an opioid overdose. Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Every Thursday night you can find Nathan Fields making the rounds of Baltimore’s red light district, known to locals as The Block.

An outreach worker with the Baltimore City Health Department, Fields, 55, is a welcome sight outside strip clubs like Circus, Club Harem and Jewel Box.

In the early evening before the clubs get busy, he talks with dancers, bouncers and anyone else passing by about preventing drug overdoses and how to stop the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.

Later on, he’ll drop into the clubs to check on the dancers who aren’t able to come outside, finding out what they might need.

Fields has credibility on The Block that people higher up in the health department don’t. “I watch him walk down any street in Baltimore city, and people come up to him, and they know that he is there to serve them,” says his boss, Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen.

The needle exchange van parks on the corner of a block that is home to numerous strip clubs.

The needle exchange van parks on the corner of a block that is home to numerous strip clubs. Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

It wasn’t always so easy.

Seven years ago, Fields was working with the city’s needle exchange program. After a spate of drug overdoses at the strip clubs, the health department brought its needle exchange van to The Block one night a week.

There were hardly any takers at first. People were skeptical.

“They were under the impression that we were giving their information to the police,” Fields says. “So that’s when I came on board. You know, I’m a great negotiator. Donald Trump can’t beat me out.”

Fields started with the bouncers. Though a Baltimore native, Fields is a huge fan of the New England Patriots and would often show up in head-to-toe Pats gear. The Baltimore Ravens-loving bouncers hated his get-up, and the football rivalry broke the ice.

Seven years ago, Fields began outreach work with Baltimore's needle exchange program on The Block.

Seven years ago, Fields began outreach work with Baltimore’s needle exchange program on The Block. Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Eventually, the sports talk turned more personal. Fields learned that some of the men had girlfriends dancing in the clubs who needed help – everything from condoms to drug treatment. Some women needed copies of birth certificates and other forms of ID in order to get into treatment.

Fields leaned on colleagues in the health department to get the problems solved.

Soon, the clubs doors opened for him. Once inside, Fields saw people needed even more.

“We went into one club, and there were three girls in different stages of pregnancy that were still dancing,” he recalls. “We started running it up the chain: ‘Hey, we need health care down here — reproductive health care.’ “

So in addition to the needle exchange van, the city brought a second van to The Block, one with an exam table and a nurse. Now, every Thursday night, health workers offer needles for exchange, training in the anti-overdose drug naloxone, HIV tests, reproductive health exams, pregnancy tests, flu shots and more other basic health care services.

(Left) A Baltimore City health worker demonstrates how to use a naloxone auto-injector. (Right) Inside the needle exchange van, bundles of used needles are held in a container for disposal.

(Left) A Baltimore City health worker demonstrates how to use a naloxone auto-injector. (Right) Inside the needle exchange van, bundles of used needles are held in a container for disposal. Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Fields treats each person coming into the vans like family. He remembers babies and boyfriends and other small details of people’s lives.

“The Block is like living,” he says. “These relationships, you’ve got to keep them flourishing.”

Quietly, Fields also hands out pamphlets with information about drug treatment. Every so often, he’ll mention a new option and encourage someone to check it out. But, it’s a soft sell. He doesn’t want to drive people away.

“I don’t beat a person over the head,” he says. “I never badger anybody for fear of them looking at me like, ‘Oh, he’s an elitist. He forgot where he came from.’ I could never forget where I come from.”

Nathan Fields (center) with his sons Hassan Fields (left) and Malik Fields on Friday, May 22. Hassan was shot and killed that weekend.

Nathan Fields (center) with his sons Hassan Fields (left) and Malik Fields on Friday, May 22. Hassan was shot and killed that weekend. Courtesy of Nathan Fields hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Nathan Fields

For nearly 20 years, Fields was a heroin addict. He sold drugs to support his habit and did time in the Baltimore City jail. “I was a predator to my community,” he says.

After getting clean in the mid-1990s, he got a job as a recovery counselor. In 2004, he went to work with the Baltimore City Health Department. “The job just gives me a sense that I’m helping to build back what I tore down,” he says. “You know, every time I can get somebody to even thinking different or even consider going into treatment, I feel as though I had a successful day.”

In spite of those small victories, it’s been a particularly difficult year for Baltimore and for Nathan Fields.

Over Memorial Day weekend, the outbreak of violence following the death of Freddie Gray claimed the life of his youngest child, 20-year-old Hassan Fields. He was shot and killed on the west side of Baltimore. His death remains an open case.

Nathan Fields struggles to understand how this could happen to him, given all he’s done for the community. He had thoughts of reverting to the person he once was. Then, he came to a quieter place.

“The Block is like living,” outreach worker Nathan Fields says. “These relationships, you’ve got to keep them flourishing.” Meredith Rizzo/NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Meredith Rizzo/NPR

“I’m sorry. I can’t let this destroy me,” he says. “I can’t let this turn what my thoughts are about human nature — some good people with some bad people. I believe the bad people have a little bit of good in them too. It’s just got to come out.”

Thinking about Hassan’s death has led him to reflect on his own past.

“I just have to look back on myself and say, I’ve caused pain. No, I’ve never done anything as violent as that, but I’ve got to keep working. I can cherish his memory, I sit down, I look at his picture and think about it, and it just makes me work harder.”

NPR and All Things Considered will continue reporting from Baltimore in the coming months, checking in with Leana Wen and her team. Stay tuned for future stories.

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Today in Movie Culture: Anna Kendrick's 'Star Wars: Battlefront' Commercial, 'Rocky Horror Picture Show' Toys and More

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

Video Game Commercial of the Day:

Anna Kendrick stars as one of the many who’ll be disappearing from the world to immerse themselves in the new Star Wars Battlefront video game, according to this new ad:

[embedded content]

Cosplay of the Day:

Speaking of Star Wars, Star Wars: The Force Awakens star John Boyega tries on another character’s shoes — or mask:

Alternate Credits Sequence of the Day:

With a new James Bond movie in theaters, here’s a fan-made alternate credits sequence for Skyfall (via Press Play):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

Speaking of James Bond movies, if you’re going to see SPECTRE in the theater, don’t be mislead by this 007-inspired poster for The Peanuts Movie. See others at Design Taxi.

Fake Commercials of the Day:

Couch Tomato makes fun of all the product placement in Man of Steel by making fake commercials for each brand:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Bette Davis and her mother at the Los Angeles premiere of All About Eve on November 9, 1950:

Toys of the Day:

The latest toys you always wanted and now can have thanks to Funko’s ReAction Figures line are of the gang from The Rocky Horror Picture Show (via Dangerous Minds):

Easter Eggs of the Day:

Screen Rant shows us how eight movies unintentionally predicted other movies to come in the future:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

George Miller has made some very dissimilar movies, so this supercut tribute to his work is very impressive for tying them all together (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

[embedded content]

Classic Trailer of the Day:

25 years ago, Kevin Costner‘s Dances With Wolves opened in theaters in limited release. Watch the original trailer for the film, which went on to win Best Picture at the Oscars, below.

[embedded content]

Send tips or follow us via Twitter:

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More Women Opt For IUD, Contraceptive Implant For Birth Control

Birth control pills are 99 percent effective in preventing pregnancy, research shows — but only if you remember to take them as prescribed. Rod-shaped implants, T-shaped IUDs and vaginal rings are other options.

Birth control pills are 99 percent effective in preventing pregnancy, research shows — but only if you remember to take them as prescribed. Rod-shaped implants, T-shaped IUDs and vaginal rings are other options. BSIP/Science Source hide caption

itoggle caption BSIP/Science Source

Contraceptive implants and IUDs are very effective in preventing pregnancy — nearly 100 percent, statistics show. A new federal survey finds many more women are making this choice than did a decade ago.

Federal researchers analyzed data from a national health survey which included birth control practices among women of childbearing age. The survey found that while use of the pill, condoms, and female sterilization all dipped between 2002 and 2013, the number of women using long-acting contraception more than quadrupled. These days, 11.6 percent of U.S. women — 4.4 million — rely on either an intrauterine device or a contraceptive implant to prevent pregnancy.

The IUD is a small coil inserted into the uterus to block contraception, either by disrupting sperm mobility or releasing a hormone that inhibits ovulation. The implant works by releasing the same hormone, this time delivered via a small, flexible tube inserted under the skin, usually in the woman’s upper arm.

Both methods are reliable for years without intervention or replacement, doctors say, and that’s key to their efficacy and popularity. The implant prevents pregnancy for 3 years and the IUD for 3 to 12 years, depending on the type, says Megan Kavanaugh, Senior Research Scientist at the Guttmacher Institute. The pill is also highly effective, when taken as prescribed every day, she says, but you have to remember to take it.

Kavanaugh says the methods are endorsed as good options by medical associations, and more and more providers are being trained in how to insert them, which may have contributed to the uptick in use. Also, in plans established under the Affordable Care Act, insurance companies are required to cover birth control methods, including inserting IUDs and implants, she says. And that could increase their popularity.

As part of her own research on why women choose one method of birth control over another, Kavanaugh interviewed teenagers and young 20-somethings. Many, she says, told her, “I have so much on my plate — and I can’t remember to take a pill every day.” For this age group in particular, Kavanaugh says, these long-lasting methods are very reasonable options. They’re the most effective methods available, she adds, “similar to sterilization” in effectiveness.

Unlike sterilization, the IUD and implant are both reversible and can be stopped at any time — also an important consideration for many people.

“We just want to have as broad a mix as possible for all women,” Kavanaugh says, “so they can choose the birth control method that works best for them.”

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SeaWorld To Change Its Criticized Orca Show After Next Year

Visitors watch a killer whale swim in a tank at SeaWorld in San Diego in 2006. A SeaWorld executive says orca shows at the San Diego park will be replaced with a more natural presentation by 2017.

Visitors watch a killer whale swim in a tank at SeaWorld in San Diego in 2006. A SeaWorld executive says orca shows at the San Diego park will be replaced with a more natural presentation by 2017. Chris Park/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Chris Park/AP

SeaWorld has been deluged by negative publicity over how its parks treat killer whales, or orcas. The 2013 documentary Blackfish — which delved into the death of marine-mammal trainer Dawn Brancheau — highlighted the alleged toll years of captivity can take on the animals.

The company’s market value has plummeted since the documentary was shown on CNN. And some lawmakers began taking up the animal-rights activists’ cause. Last year, California state lawmakers pushed legislation that would prohibit SeaWorld from using orcas in its shows. And this past Friday, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., introduced a bill in Congress that would “prohibit the breeding, the taking (wild capture), and the import or export of orcas for the purposes of public display.”

On Monday during a webcast, SeaWorld CEO Joel Manby announced changes to the orca shows. Manby said the new show would be “informative” and take place in a more “natural” setting. Manby did not specify whether the changes would apply only to its San Diego park or if they would be extended to its two other parks, in Orlando and San Antonio.

Some animal rights activists were skeptical that the changes would be more than cosmetic. Jared Goodman, foundation director of animal law at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA, said in a statement:

“An end to SeaWorld’s tawdry circus-style shows is inevitable and necessary, but it’s captivity that denies these far-ranging orcas everything that is natural and important to them. This move is like no longer whipping lions in a circus act but keeping them locked inside cages for life or no longer beating dogs but never letting them out of crates.”

Last month, the California Coastal Commission approved a SeaWorld proposal to build a $100 million expansion to its orca enclosure at its San Diego park. But the commission also stipulated it would ban captive whale breeding at the park. SeaWorld Entertainment said it would sue the commission, saying it had gone “way beyond” its authority.

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