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Suing A Nursing Home Could Get Easier Under Proposed Federal Rules

Proponents of arbitration say the system is more efficient than going to court for both sides, but arbitration can be costly, too. And a 2009 study showed the typical awards in nursing home cases are about 35 percent lower than the plaintiff would get if the case went to court.
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Proponents of arbitration say the system is more efficient than going to court for both sides, but arbitration can be costly, too. And a 2009 study showed the typical awards in nursing home cases are about 35 percent lower than the plaintiff would get if the case went to court. Heinz Linke/Westend61/Corbis hide caption

itoggle caption Heinz Linke/Westend61/Corbis

As Dean Cole’s dementia worsened, he began wandering at night. He’d even forgotten how to drink water. His wife, Virginia, could no longer manage him at home. So after much agonizing, his family checked him into a Minnesota nursing home.

“Within a little over two weeks he’d lost 20 pounds and went into a coma,” says Mark Kosieradzki, who was the Cole family’s attorney. Dean Cole was rushed to the hospital, says Kosieradzki, “and what was discovered was that he’d become totally dehydrated. They did get his fluid level up, but he was never, ever able to recover from it and died within the month.”

Kosieradzki says that Virginia Cole had signed a stack of papers when her husband was admitted to the nursing home. As is often the case, one of the forms was a binding agreement to go to arbitration if she ever had a claim against the facility. So instead of taking the nursing home to court, her claim for wrongful death was heard by three private arbitrators. They charge for their services.

“The arbitration bill for the judges was $60,750. That was split in half between the two parties,” says Kosieradzki.

Virginia Cole won her claim, but after paying the arbitrators, expert witnesses and attorney’s fees, she was left with less than $20,000.

The federal government is now considering safeguards that would regulate the way nursing homes present arbitration agreements when residents are admitted.

But more than 50 labor, legal, medical and consumer organizations have told the government that’s not enough. They want these pre-dispute arbitration agreements banned entirely. Thirty-four U.S. senators and attorneys general from 15 states and the District of Columbia also have called for banning the agreements.

“No one should be forced to accept denial of justice as a price for the care their loved ones deserve,” says Henry Waxman, a former congressman from California. Arbitration agreements keep the neglect and abuse of nursing home residents secret, Waxman says, because the cases aren’t tried in open court and resolutions sometimes have gag rules.

“None of the systemic health and safety problems that cause the harm will ever see the light of day,” he says.

The proposed federal regulation would require nursing homes to explain these arbitration agreements so that residents or their families understand what they’re signing. It would also make sure that agreeing to arbitration is not a requirement for nursing home admission.

The American Health Care Association, which represents most nursing homes, is against this proposed change in the rules. Clifton Porter II, the AHCA’s senior vice president for government relations, says that’s because “they’re prescribing us to do things that we, frankly, already do.” Porter acknowledges, however, that practices vary from facility to facility, depending on state law.

Arbitration agreements, he says, are common throughout the health care industry — in hospitals, surgery centers and doctors’ offices. “Why aren’t rules being promulgated to eliminate arbitration in those settings?” he asks.

In any case, Porter says arbitration is more efficient for both sides than going to court would be.

“It actually allows consumers to get an expedited award,” he says. “And you have the benefit of not having to use the courts and go through the entire process.”

But that expedited award is about 35 percent lower than if the plaintiff had gone to court. That’s one conclusion of a study commissioned by Porter’s organization in 2009.

If the federal government does regulate or ban the signing of arbitration agreements for new nursing home residents, Porter says the American Health Care Association will probably fight the move in court.

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Songs We Love: Jus Now Feat. Bunji Garlin & Ms. Dynamite, 'Cyah Help It'

Jus Now's Cyah Help It EP is out Oct. 23.
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Jus Now’s Cyah Help It EP is out Oct. 23. Elliot Francois/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption Elliot Francois/Courtesy of the artist

Jus Now, Cyah Help It (Feel Up Records)

Jus Now, Cyah Help It (Feel Up Records) Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of the artist

Jus Now is a production duo split between the UK and Trinidad & Tobago, 4500 miles apart but with a long legacy of musical exchange. The credit for modern dance music defined as “multicultural” often goes to the communicative power of digital media, but the Jus Now link-up speaks to an older tradition. As far back as 1948, the fresh-off-the-boat Lord Kitchener — Aldwyn Roberts, at the time one of Trinidad’s top calypsonians — was voicing “London Is the Place For Me” on the quayside of Tilbury Docks. Fast forward through decades of Notting Hill Carnivals, punks making roots-reggae records, plus the 2 tone ’80s, and we arrive at the Caribbean’s biggest influence on contemporary British music: the cross-pollination of acid-house raves, West Indian shebeens and sound-system dances which begat jungle (aka drum & bass). This music’s early ’90s birth marked the beginnings of a wild lineage that would morph into a continuum of British street-rave sounds of the coming decades — garage, grime, dubstep —leading to today’s constantly mutating “bass music” tag. Which brings us back to Jus Now.

Sam Interface, the English half of the duo, is a drum & bass producer from Bristol, a place known for its long line of junglists, with heavy hitters like Roni Size, Krust and Die all hailing from the city. (Interface has worked with the latter.) LAZAbeam (born: Keshav Chandradath Singh), a Port of Spain-based soca producer, makes up the Trini part of the team. And on “Cyah Help It,” each brings top-drawer vocal talents from their respective scenes, with Ms. Dynamite repping for the UK and Bunji Garlin for Trinidad.

The track opens with dramatic filtered chants, expectant percussion and stabs, the intro peaking with overdriven power chords and a lick of almost operatic synth pomp that begs the question, “What if Phantom Of The Opera had been re-imagined with autotune and daggering?” Yet before that debatable idea can settle in, the drums drop, and Ms. Dynamite and Bunji Garlin take turns riding a rhythm that switches up between low-end badman stagger and UK Funky-inflected syncopation. A mixture of soundbwoy killing and party starting, it’s a combination of style and pattern that keeps things unexpected, an uninhibited bruk-out destined to shell down bashment parties that are not limited by tempo or genre. If a carnival parade was to trample across the Atlantic, all the way from St. Pauls to Independence Square, this could be its 2015 anthem.

Cyah Help It EP is out on Oct 23 on Feel Up.

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Opinion: Finding A Good Financial Adviser Without Paying Too Much

Kent Smetters is an economics professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. To educate people about how to save and invest more successfully he hosts a radio show, “Your Money,” on Sirius XM which, along with his website KentOnMoney.com, he does pro bono. As part of NPR’s “Your Money and Your Life” series, we asked Smetters for tips on finding a financial adviser:

Finding a good adviser involves two key steps:

First, only choose a “fee-only adviser.” Don’t be fooled by the expression “fee based” — that’s a wolf in a sheep’s clothing. The word “only” is critical. By law, a “fee-only” adviser must place your interests first and not accept hidden commissions from mutual funds, insurance companies, or anyone else. Such commissions create incentives for advisers to steer you into higher-cost investments that can radically reduce your account balances over time. If you find a fee-only adviser who charges by the hour, a reasonable fee is $250-$400 per hour. You might need just a few hours so this is often the best way to go. Other fee-only advisers take a percentage of your total assets that you’re investing. In that case, a reasonable annual fee is between 0.25 percent (for $1 million or more) and 0.75 percent (if less). But if you pay as a percentage of your assets, then do the following: convert the percentage paid to actual dollars; discuss openly how much work they are doing; and, if you think the amount being paid is unreasonable, shop around for other quotes.

Second, you want an adviser who believes in “low-cost passive-indexed diversification.” That’s fancy language but important. All it means is that your adviser is using low-cost investments (often index funds) while not trying to “beat the market.” Keeping costs low is critical for creating wealth over time. And by buying an index of stocks, say the S&P 500, you can very cheaply just “ride the market” up over time. The evidence is very clear that even skilled investment managers who try to “beat the market” generally can’t do it. In other words, paying people to pick stocks for you usually means you pay higher fees and make less money.

As far as fees, the fees in this type of a diversified investment portfolio should be no more than 0.15 percent, not including the advisory fees noted above. In other words, the total cost of managing your money should be less than 1.0 percent if you are using an adviser, and around 0.15 percent if you go at it alone.

For small business owners offering a retirement plan like a 401(k), it is highly likely that you and your employees are paying way too much for it. Even a small 401(k) with less than $5 million should have a “total all-in fee” (or “total expense ratio”) of less than 0.75 percent. Larger plans should have even smaller expense ratios. Shop around. I recommend the following firms: Vanguard, Ubiquity and Employee Fiduciary. Ask for the simplest 401(k) program without too many bells and whistles.

If you are an individual investor, the chances are even greater that you are overpaying. To find a fee-only adviser, I generally recommend the websites provided by NAPFA and the Garrett Planning Network. However, even some fee-only advisers are too expensive and not using low-cost passive indexing. So, I screen fee-only advisers that I really like on my website. It has a smaller list but it is quickly growing. If you find an adviser who is not on my list, tell them to contact me via the website and I’ll add them to my list of advisers to screen.

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The Awesome New 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Poster Is Here, Plus: Watch Multiple Teasers

Here we go — the next wave of Star Wars: The Force Awakens madness has officially begun with the release of the film’s new poster, as well as information on when the next trailer will arrive online — to coincide with tickets going on sale.

First, check out the poster in all its glory.

Click image to enlarge

A quick look at the poster reveals new looks at Han Solo and Leia, as well as other characters (we spy Chewbacca, Kylo Ren, Rey, Finn, the Falcon, C-3PO, R2D2, Poe Dameron, Captain Phasma and Stormtroopers), not to mention what looks to be a new super weapon. Is the First Order trying to finish what the Empire never completed? Also, no Luke Skywalker reveal — perhaps they’re waiting for the trailer, or they’re waiting till the film hits theaters.

We expect more info on that new Death Star-lookin’ battle weapon to possibly be revealed in the next trailer for the film, due during halftime of tomorrow’s Monday Night Football game. Disney and Lucasfilm have also announced that right after the trailer debuts, tickets will officially go on sale. Make sure you head to Fandango tomorrow night to get full details on how to snag yours asap.

What do you think of the poster? Spot anything else cool?

UPDATE: Watch multiple teasers for tomorrow’s trailer debut below.

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For One Colts Fan, Deflategate Has Been A Great Way To Pump Merchandise

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Long after the New England Patriots beat the Indianapolis Colts, in a game known best for its deflated footballs, a Colts fan is still getting his sweet revenge: by selling novelty foam hats.

Transcript

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Tomorrow, the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots play the Indianapolis Colts. The last time these teams met, the Colts blew the whistle on Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his, allegedly, underinflated footballs. That’s how the whole deflate-gate saga got started. In the latest chapter, the NFL suspended Brady only to have a federal judge toss the suspension out. The league is appealing that decision, but for teams, it’s time to let bygones be bygones, right? Not for one guy. New England Public Radio’s Jill Kaufman reports.

JILL KAUFMAN, BYLINE: Revenge is often a dish best served cold. That’s Mike Lieber’s take. More than 20 years ago, he was an Indiana native at a small New England college when this happened.

MIKE LIEBER: The Boston Celtics swept my Indiana Pacers out of the playoffs in three games.

KAUFMAN: That was bad enough. After the game, he walked back to his dorm to find all his possessions in the student lounge. His friends, laughing all the way, followed him back to his room.

LIEBER: The only thing in my completely empty room were three brooms on the floor.

KAUFMAN: Signifying the three-game sweep by the Celtics of Lieber’s beloved Indiana Pacers – powerful memories. This past May, when the NFL announced the deflate-gate penalties against Tom Brady and his team, Lieber – now living in Chicago and a Colts fan – was watching TV, and he says he saw the future. It is payback time. The tenacious Lieber and a buddy came up with a design for novelty foam hats in the shape of deflated footballs. One satisfying size fits all.

LIEBER: As soon as you see them, you kind of get what the message is whether you’re right up close or 20 or 50 feet away and particularly with the kind of oversized air-needle valve.

KAUFMAN: And he’s selling T-shirts with the word Deflatriots on the front, written in the familiar Patriots font, in all the team colors of AFC opponents – blue for Indianapolis and Dallas for instance. It’s funny, right? Not to Lieber’s Boston-based family. Meet Mike Lieber’s brother-in-law, Mike Cooperman, a big Pats fan. Cooperman says he admires his brother-in-law’s entrepreneurial spirit but says Lieber is wrong about the Pats.

MIKE COOPERMAN: He wants to believe that this whole thing was a big conspiracy and that the Patriots cheated and they deflated some footballs and it caused the Patriots to win that game and then ultimately win the Super Bowl. I think there’s just nothing there.

KAUFMAN: Their wives are standing by their men – or at least their men’s teams. In four months, Lieber’s sold some 600 hats and T-shirts in person at games to mostly non-Pats fans in dozens of states. And online, even some Massachusetts residents are buying, like Bob Kenney. He says he agrees with Pats fans about deflate-gate, and he says the Pats would’ve defeated the Colts that fateful day even if they played with a tire tube.

BOB KENNEY: I can’t say that I’m not a Patriots fan because I love to watch people that have that level of talent.

KAUFMAN: But Kenney’s true love – the Pittsburgh Steelers.

KENNEY: When Terry Bradshaw was playing, I was hooked.

KAUFMAN: And that’s why in Kenney’s wardrobe, a Steelers black Deflatriots shirt. And for a couple of friends who are bartenders at a casino in Connecticut, he bought them Miami and Buffalo colors.

KENNEY: I walked in with mine on, and the place erupted. It was just hilarious. And the conversation about the Patriots fans versus the non-Patriots fans – it just kept going for hours.

KAUFMAN: Kenney’s had so much fun with the shirt, he does plan to get a deflate-gate hat. And when the Pats play the Colts in Indianapolis tomorrow, Mike Lieber will be there selling gear. And he says you can almost be sure, up on the Jumbotron, you’ll see someone wearing a flat football on their head.

For NPR News, I’m Jill Kaufman.

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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For One Colts Fan, Deflategate Has Been A Great Way To Pump Merchandise

3:29

Download

Long after the New England Patriots beat the Indianapolis Colts, in a game known best for its deflated footballs, a Colts fan is still getting his sweet revenge: by selling novelty foam hats.

Transcript

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Tomorrow, the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots play the Indianapolis Colts. The last time these teams met, the Colts blew the whistle on Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his, allegedly, underinflated footballs. That’s how the whole deflate-gate saga got started. In the latest chapter, the NFL suspended Brady only to have a federal judge toss the suspension out. The league is appealing that decision, but for teams, it’s time to let bygones be bygones, right? Not for one guy. New England Public Radio’s Jill Kaufman reports.

JILL KAUFMAN, BYLINE: Revenge is often a dish best served cold. That’s Mike Lieber’s take. More than 20 years ago, he was an Indiana native at a small New England college when this happened.

MIKE LIEBER: The Boston Celtics swept my Indiana Pacers out of the playoffs in three games.

KAUFMAN: That was bad enough. After the game, he walked back to his dorm to find all his possessions in the student lounge. His friends, laughing all the way, followed him back to his room.

LIEBER: The only thing in my completely empty room were three brooms on the floor.

KAUFMAN: Signifying the three-game sweep by the Celtics of Lieber’s beloved Indiana Pacers – powerful memories. This past May, when the NFL announced the deflate-gate penalties against Tom Brady and his team, Lieber – now living in Chicago and a Colts fan – was watching TV, and he says he saw the future. It is payback time. The tenacious Lieber and a buddy came up with a design for novelty foam hats in the shape of deflated footballs. One satisfying size fits all.

LIEBER: As soon as you see them, you kind of get what the message is whether you’re right up close or 20 or 50 feet away and particularly with the kind of oversized air-needle valve.

KAUFMAN: And he’s selling T-shirts with the word Deflatriots on the front, written in the familiar Patriots font, in all the team colors of AFC opponents – blue for Indianapolis and Dallas for instance. It’s funny, right? Not to Lieber’s Boston-based family. Meet Mike Lieber’s brother-in-law, Mike Cooperman, a big Pats fan. Cooperman says he admires his brother-in-law’s entrepreneurial spirit but says Lieber is wrong about the Pats.

MIKE COOPERMAN: He wants to believe that this whole thing was a big conspiracy and that the Patriots cheated and they deflated some footballs and it caused the Patriots to win that game and then ultimately win the Super Bowl. I think there’s just nothing there.

KAUFMAN: Their wives are standing by their men – or at least their men’s teams. In four months, Lieber’s sold some 600 hats and T-shirts in person at games to mostly non-Pats fans in dozens of states. And online, even some Massachusetts residents are buying, like Bob Kenney. He says he agrees with Pats fans about deflate-gate, and he says the Pats would’ve defeated the Colts that fateful day even if they played with a tire tube.

BOB KENNEY: I can’t say that I’m not a Patriots fan because I love to watch people that have that level of talent.

KAUFMAN: But Kenney’s true love – the Pittsburgh Steelers.

KENNEY: When Terry Bradshaw was playing, I was hooked.

KAUFMAN: And that’s why in Kenney’s wardrobe, a Steelers black Deflatriots shirt. And for a couple of friends who are bartenders at a casino in Connecticut, he bought them Miami and Buffalo colors.

KENNEY: I walked in with mine on, and the place erupted. It was just hilarious. And the conversation about the Patriots fans versus the non-Patriots fans – it just kept going for hours.

KAUFMAN: Kenney’s had so much fun with the shirt, he does plan to get a deflate-gate hat. And when the Pats play the Colts in Indianapolis tomorrow, Mike Lieber will be there selling gear. And he says you can almost be sure, up on the Jumbotron, you’ll see someone wearing a flat football on their head.

For NPR News, I’m Jill Kaufman.

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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Can A Cancer Drug Reverse Parkinson's Disease And Dementia?

Alan Hoffman, shown with his wife Nancy at their home in Dumfries, Va., found that his Parkinson's symptom improved when he took a cancer drug.

Alan Hoffman, shown with his wife Nancy at their home in Dumfries, Va., found that his Parkinson’s symptom improved when he took a cancer drug. Claire Harbage for NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Claire Harbage for NPR

A drug that’s already approved for treating leukemia appears to dramatically reduce symptoms in people who have Parkinson’s disease with dementia, or a related condition called Lewy body dementia.

A pilot study of 12 patients given small doses of nilotinib found that movement and mental function improved in all of the 11 people who completed the six-month trial, researchers reported Saturday at the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Chicago.

And for several patients the improvements were dramatic, says Fernando Pagan, an author of the study and director of the Movement Disorders Program at Georgetown University Medical Center. One woman regained the ability to feed herself, one man was able to stop using a walker, and three previously nonverbal patients began speaking again, Pagan says.

“After 25 years in Parkinson’s disease research, this is the most excited I’ve ever been,” Pagan says.

If the drug’s effectiveness is confirmed in larger, placebo-controlled studies, nilotinib could become the first treatment to interrupt a process that kills brain cells in Parkinson’s and other neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s.

One of the patients in the pilot study was Alan Hoffman, 74, who lives with his wife, Nancy, in Northern Virginia.

Mary Leigh has had Parkinson’s Disease for almost 20 years. Here she is before the treatment and after five months of being on the drug.

Credit: Courtesy of Georgetown University

Credit: Courtesy of Georgetown University

Hoffman was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 1997. At first, he had trouble moving his arms. Over time, walking became more difficult and his speech became slurred. And by 2007, the disease had begun to affect his thinking.

“I knew I’d dropped off in my ability to read,” Hoffman says. “People would keep giving me books and I’d have read the first chapter of about 10 of them. I had no ability to focus on it.”

“He had more and more difficulty making sense,” Nancy Hoffman says. He also became less active, less able to have conversations, and eventually stopped doing even household chores, she says.

But after a few weeks on nilotinib, Hoffman “improved in every way,” his wife says. “He began loading the dishwasher, loading the clothes in the dryer, things he had not done in a long time.”

Even more surprising, Hoffman’s scores on cognitive tests began to improve. At home, Nancy Hoffman says her husband was making sense again and regained his ability to focus. “He actually read the David McCullough book on the Wright Brothers and started reading the paper from beginning to end,” she says.

The idea of using nilotinib to treat people like Alan Hoffman came from Charbel Moussa, an assistant professor of neurology at Georgetown University and an author of the study.

Moussa knew that in people who have Parkinson’s disease with dementia or a related condition called Lewy body dementia, toxic proteins build up in certain brain cells, eventually killing them. Moussa thought nilotinib might be able to reverse this process.

His reasoning was that nilotinib activates a system in cells that works like a garbage disposal — it clears out unwanted proteins. Also, Moussa had shown that while cancer cells tend to die when exposed to nilotinib, brain cells actually become healthier.

So Moussa had his lab try the drug on brain cells in a Petri dish. “And we found that, surprisingly, with a very little amount of the drug we can clear all these proteins that are supposed to be neurotoxic,” he says.

Next, Moussa had his team give the drug to transgenic mice that were almost completely paralyzed from Parkinson’s disease. The treatment “rescued” the animals, he says, allowing them to move almost as well as healthy mice.

Moussa’s mice got the attention of Pagan from Georgetown’s Movement Disorders Program. “When Dr. Moussa showed them to me,” Pagan says, “it looked like, hey, this is type of drug that we’ve been looking for because it goes to the root of the problem.”

The pilot study was designed to determine whether nilotinib was safe for Parkinson’s patients and to determine how much drug from the capsules they were taking was reaching their brains. “But we also saw efficacy, which is really unheard of in a safety study,” Pagan says.

The study found that levels of toxic proteins in blood and spinal fluid decreased once patients began taking nilotinib. Also, tests showed that the symptoms of Parkinson’s including tremor and “freezing” decreased. And during the study patients were able to use lower doses of Parkinson’s drugs, suggesting that the brain cells that produce dopamine were working better.

But there are some caveats, Pagan says. For one thing, the study was small, not designed to measure effectiveness, and included no patients taking a placebo.

Also, nilotinib is very expensive. The cost of providing it to leukemia patients is thousands of dollars a month.

Hoffman says his symptoms have gotten worse since he stopped taking the medication as part of a study.

Hoffman says his symptoms have gotten worse since he stopped taking the medication as part of a study. Claire Harbage for NPR hide caption

itoggle caption Claire Harbage for NPR

And finally, Parkinson’s and dementia patients would have to keep taking nilotinib indefinitely or their symptoms would continue to get worse.

Alan Hoffman was okay for about three weeks after the study ended and he stopped taking the drug. Since then, “There’s (been) a pretty big change,” his wife says. “He does have more problems with his speech, and he has more problems with cognition and more problems with mobility.”

The Hoffmans hope to get more nilotinib from the drug’s maker, Novartis, through a special program for people who improve during experiments like this one.

Meanwhile, the Georgetown team plans to try nilotinib in patients with another brain disease that involves toxic proteins: Alzheimer’s.

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Best of the Week: Hulk to Join Thor, Godzilla to Battle King Kong, Die Hard Gets a Prequel and More

The Important News

Marvel Madness: Hulk will be in Thor: Ragnarok. Ryan Coogler might direct Black Panther.

Franchise Fever: Godzilla vs. King Kong has been confirmed for 2020. D.J. Caruso will direct xXx 3. Steven Spielberg still says he’s making Indiana Jones 5 with Harrison Ford. Steve Zahn will play an ape in War of the Planet of the Apes. R.L. Stine’s Fear Street books are going to be a movie series. Kathleen Kennedy wants a woman to direct a Star Wars movie.

Prequelitis: Len Wiseman is directing the prequel Die Hard: Year One. Rebecca Ferguson might star in Alien: Paradise Lost.

Remake Report: Nick Cassavetes will direct the Road House remake. John Sayles is writing a new Django (non Tarantino version) movie. Lockout has officially been deemed a remake of Escape from New York.

Casting Net: Eve Hewson will play Maid Marian in Robin Hood: Origins. Warwick Davis will star in the crowdfunding project ShortFellas.

Ways of Seeing: The Hateful Eight will be longer for its first two weeks of release.

New Directors, New Films: Wes Anderson is making another stop-motion movie. Robert Rodriguez will direct Battle Angels Alita.

New Producers, New Films: Leonardo DiCaprio is making a movie about the Volkwagen emissions scandal.

Merchandising: A new Friday the 13th video game lets you play as Jason.

Box Office: More moviegoers went to Mars and Transylvania than Neverland last weekend.

T.V. Time: Two X-Men series are headed to television.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension, Love the Coopers, The Boy, Burnt and Race.

See: How Pixar created “abstract thought” in Inside Out.

Watch: A fake commercial for the Back to the Future Part II hoverboard. And the stars of Back to the Future reunited for a Honda commercial. And an analysis of the climactic scene of Back to the Future.

See: What the real people in Steve Jobs think of the movie.

Watch: The first three Indiana Jones movies in 90 seconds.

See: Prank production signs for fake movie sequels.

Watch: The version of Steve Jobs that Steve Jobs would have made.

See: How to find the edits in Birdman.

Watch: Deleted animated sequences from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

See: IMDb’s ranking of the top 25 movies of the last 25 years.

Watch: A surreal mashup of Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick movies.

See: A Thor hammer that only one fan can lift.

Watch: What Jurassic World would have looked like in the 1970s.

See: This week’s best new movie posters. And our premiere of the Dangerous Men poster.

Our Features

Comic Con Coverage: Highlights of New York Comic Con. And the best cosplay at New York Comic Con.

Movie Recommendations: 8 great seafaring movie explorers.

Movie Genre Guide: What you need to know about Gothic romance before seeing Crimson Peak.

Horror Movie Guide: Everything horror fans need to see this month.

Horror Movie Guide: Scary movies to show your kids.

Comic Book Movie Guide: http://www.movies.com/movie-news/best-movie-based-comics/193755 must-read movie-based comic books.

Spy Movie Guide: 6 fascinating facts about Bridge of Spies.

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

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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U.S. Backs Away From Offshore Arctic Drilling

A Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay, Seattle, in May. Three weeks after Royal Dutch Shell announced it was walking away from exploratory drilling in U.S. Arctic waters, the Obama administration has taken steps to keep drill rigs out of Alaska's northern ocean for a decade or more.

A Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay, Seattle, in May. Three weeks after Royal Dutch Shell announced it was walking away from exploratory drilling in U.S. Arctic waters, the Obama administration has taken steps to keep drill rigs out of Alaska’s northern ocean for a decade or more. Elaine Thompson/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Elaine Thompson/AP

The U.S. government is backing away from Arctic offshore oil and gas drilling on two fronts.

On Friday, the Department of the Interior announced the cancellation of two potential lease sales off the Alaskan coast in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement also denied lease extension requests from two companies, Shell and Statoil, that were exploring the seas for fossil fuels.

The decisions to nix the lease sales, which the statement attributed to “current market conditions and low industry interest,” follows Shell’s announcement that it will stop exploration in the Chukchi Sea for “the foreseeable future.”

“In light of Shell’s announcement, the amount of acreage already under lease and current market conditions, it does not make sense to prepare for lease sales in the Arctic in the next year and a half,” said Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell.

Lois Epstein, an engineer for the environmental group The Wilderness Society, characterized the government’s decision as reasonable, according to a statement.

“Because of Shell’s failure to find significant oil in the Chukchi Sea, new Arctic Ocean lease sales — which require extensive government preparation and costs — would likely be unsuccessful,” Epstein said.

In explaining why Shell and Statoil were not given permission to retain their leases beyond 10 years, the Interior Department statement said that the companies “did not demonstrate a reasonable schedule of work for exploration and development.”

Epstein praised the move, saying, “We applaud Interior’s decision not to continue discussing extensions of their existing leases with Shell and other Arctic Ocean leaseholders.”

The existing leases in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas will expire in 2017 and 2020, respectively.

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