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Today in Movie Culture: Honest 'Mission: Impossible' Trailer, Homemade 'Ant-Man' Trailer and More

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

Movie Takedown of the Day:

With Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation out this week, of course Honest Trailers has to drop a bomb on the whole M:I movie franchise:

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Comic Strip of the Day:

Here’s a funny look at how Ant-Man will fit in with the rest of the team in the Avengers movies. Wait until he finds out they only like schawarma (via Neatorama).

Trailer Remake of the Day:

Watch a homemade redo of the Ant-Man trailer from CineFix. In another video they show you how to make the awesome homemade Ant-Man costume, too.

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Movie Mash-Up of the Day:

More Ant-Man! This time the Marvel superhero movie is crossed with Zoolander for a funny joke:

Fan Art of the Day:

It’s still a long time before we see Ezra Miller star in DC’s The Flash movie, so here’s a fan’s rendition of the actor in action (via Heroic Hollywood):

Filmmaker in Focus:

In the second installment of his four-part video series on Paul Thomas Anderson, editor Jacob T. Swinney compiles the extreme close-up shots from the director’s movies:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Sandra Bullock orders pizza online in The Net, which opened 20 years ago today. It’s not that old an image, but in internet terms everything in this movie is ancient. Well, the idea of ordering pizza online is actually kind of modern.

Supercut of the Day:

Don’t watch this video compiling the most memorable food moments in film on an empty stomach (via Montage Creators):

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Cosplay of the Day:

With the Jurassic World toys erring with the gender of the Velociraptors, it’s great to see some people respecting the fact that they’re supposed to be females (via Ink 361).

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Watch the original trailer for Waterworld, which opened in theaters 20 years ago today, and you may wonder why it wasn’t actually as big a bomb as people think it was.

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Mexico's Soccer Coach Loses Job After Allegedly Punching Reporter

The Guardian describes Mexico’s fired coach, Miguel Herrera, as “combustible.” Matt Rourke/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Matt Rourke/AP

Mexico’s soccer coach, Miguel Herrera, has been fired after allegations that he punched a TV reporter.

According to The Guardian, Herrera allegedly punched TV reporter Christian Martinoli while waiting in the TSA line at the Philadelphia airport on Monday.

The altercation came just two days after Mexico’s soccer team won the Gold Cup over Jamaica. The paper reports that incoming president Decio de Maria confirmed the coach’s termination at a press conference on Tuesday:

“De Maria said: ‘After listening to all my colleagues, I have made the decision to take Miguel Herrera out of the national team. It is not a simple decision, but it is the correct one.

” ‘Matches never finish, and as public figures we have to keep that in mind. Everyone has had an opinion, but our values have to be kept, and no one can be above the type of situation we saw on Monday at the Philadelphia airport.’ “

Herrera — whose nickname is El Piojo or “the louse” — has not commented on the punch, or his termination.

Herrera was hired in 2013 — the team’s fourth coach hired within two months at that point, according to The New York Times.

If you didn’t watch the World Cup last year, here’s a Vine of Herrera celebrating a Mexico win:

You can’t help but be happy for him when you see someone celebrating like this… http://t.co/anV35snUM9 #MiguelHerrera #NEDMEX #WorldCup

— Sabine Lisicki (@sabinelisicki) June 29, 2014

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Oceans Called A 'Wild West' Where Lawlessness And Impunity Rule

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There are about 140 million square miles of open ocean, and according to New York Times reporter Ian Urbina, much of it is essentially lawless. As Mark Young, a retired U.S. Coast Guard commander and former chief of enforcement for the Pacific Ocean, told Urbina, the maritime realm is “like the Wild West. Weak rules, few sheriffs, lots of outlaws.”

All Things Considered‘s Audie Cornish spoke to reporter Urbina about his four-part investigation, which wrapped up Tuesday. Urbina described his time on a Thai fishing ship — a purse seiner targeting mostly jack mackerel and herring — featured in Part 3 of the series.

“The ship we spent time on had about 40 Cambodian boys, mostly, and some young men, all migrants, most of them indentured,” Urbina says. “The conditions on board are extremely dangerous. This was a rat-infested, roach-infested boat. And most of these boys had been on it for more than a year.”

They get little sleep, Urbina adds — just two hours at a time. The rest of the time they are fishing. There’s no sanitation on board, and discipline is severe and often violent, Urbina says.

“There is a sort of cultural line that runs through the sea as a place where people have always gone to escape the law, to escape governments. It is truly the last frontier,” Urbina tells Cornish. “And in some way we all benefit from the lack of rules on the high seas in that 90 percent of products we consume come to us by way of ships. And one of the reasons maritime commerce is so efficient is that there are very few rules out there. At the same time, the lack of rules I think is partly what contributes to the dire state that the seas are in: the obliteration of the fishing population, levels of pollution and now the growing levels of violence on the high seas are somewhat a result of that same concept.”

For more from Urbina’s harrowing reporting, listen to the interview, and read The Outlaw Ocean series here.

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Happy 50th Birthday, Medicare. Your Patients Are Getting Healthier

A Yale University study analyzed the experience of 60 million Americans covered by traditional Medicare between 1999 and 2013, and found "jaw-dropping improvements in almost every area," the lead author says.
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A Yale University study analyzed the experience of 60 million Americans covered by traditional Medicare between 1999 and 2013, and found “jaw-dropping improvements in almost every area,” the lead author says. Ann Cutting/Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption Ann Cutting/Getty Images

Here’s a bit of good news for Medicare, the popular government program that’s turning 50 this week. Older Americans on Medicare are spending less time in the hospital; they’re living longer; and the cost of a typical hospital stay has actually come down over the past 15 years, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Doctors, hospitals and government administrators have put a lot of effort into making Medicare more efficient in the past 15 years. Dr. Harlan Krumholz and colleagues at Yale University took on a study to see whether that effort has paid off.

“The results were rather remarkable,” says Krumholz, a cardiologist and leading health care researcher. “We found jaw-dropping improvements in almost every area that we looked at.”

The researchers looked at the experience of 60 million older Americans covered by traditional Medicare between 1999 and 2013. They found that mortality rates dropped steadily during that time, and people were much less likely to end up in the hospital.

“If the rates had stayed the same in 2013 as they had been in 1999, we would have seen almost 3.5 million more hospitalizations in 2013,” Krumholz says.

“People who were being hospitalized were having much better outcomes after the hospitalization,” he says. “They had a much better chance of survival.”

And the average cost of a hospital stay dropped too, he says, from $3,290 to $2,801 in inflation-adjusted dollars over the 15-year period for patients in the traditional Medicare program. (Researchers couldn’t quantify the experience in Medicare Advantage, the managed-care alternative to Medicare).

Krumholz attributes the improvement to a wide variety of measures designed to boost patients’ health, from prevention programs to advances in medical care. He says some of the savings also came about because medical care shifted from hospitals to less expensive outpatient clinics.

“They’re pointing out a very good thing in the medical system,” says economist Craig Garthwaite at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. He says the recession, which helped slow rising health care costs overall, apparently played a minor role in this story of Medicare.

Costs really are being contained, Garthwaite says. One other reason that’s happening is that the federal government is reimbursing hospitals and doctors less for treating Medicare patients.

“That’s an easy way to get control of medical spending in Medicare,” Garthwaite says, but “it’s just not something we can do in the private market, and we have to worry about how sustainable it is for the Medicare program overall.”

With the post-World War II baby boom now reaching retirement age, more and more people are turning 65 and becoming eligible for Medicare. That growth continues to drive up the overall cost of the program, even as that average cost per illness or hospitalization comes down. And as older Americans live longer lives, they use Medicare for more years than previous generations did.

Medicare is still running a bit of a deficit, but the situation is improving. The program’s trustees say its trust fund will be solvent through 2030. Some adjustments would be needed to keep the program in good financial health beyond that date.

Garthwaite says other recent trends could make matters worse, with one especially worrisome example being sharply rising drug prices.

“Some of these [new cancer] products are providing only a few months of life for several hundred thousand dollars,” he says. And the system doesn’t do a good job of making difficult judgments in situations like that.

Joseph Antos, an economist in health policy at the American Enterprise Institute, agrees that the good news from the Yale study doesn’t assure a rosy future. He’s concerned about the financial health of Medicare if, for example, an effective drug for Alzheimer’s disease is developed.

“I would argue that if anybody came up with an effective treatment for Alzheimer’s today, that treatment would be hailed as a major breakthrough and we wouldn’t be looking at the cost,” Antos says.

And that would almost certainly break the pattern that’s been documented over the past 15 years, where improving health has actually helped drive down the cost of medical care.

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Tired Of The Big City? Consider Telecommuting From Montana

Greg Gianforte is distributing a brochure urging workers to "come home to Montana" and telework from there.

Greg Gianforte is distributing a brochure urging workers to “come home to Montana” and telework from there. Marianne Wiest/BetterMontanaJobs.com hide caption

itoggle caption Marianne Wiest/BetterMontanaJobs.com

Most local economic development schemes focus on creating jobs. Many offer incentives to startup companies, or try to lure existing companies to re-locate.

But a campaign in Montana is turning that on its head. It’s not trying to recruit companies, but rather employees to come to the sparsely populated state, and telecommute.

David Blackburn works for a financial services firm in Jersey City, N.J. He and his wife both have six-figure incomes, but real estate in the New York City area is so expensive, that they have to live kind of far from their jobs.

“Every day I get up and put on a suit and get on a train, and it takes about an hour door to door, in the crush of people, in the hot, in the cold,” he says. “It wears on you a little bit.”

And, once he gets to the office, it’s not like he really even has to be there at all.

“Every day I’m working with people in multiple time zones, in multiple countries,” Blackburn says. “So, even though I’m physically in the office, I’m essentially telecommuting to where they are.”

Blackburn has considered asking if he could do his job from someplace less urban — someplace like Montana.

Greg Gianforte started a software company in Montana that created hundreds of high-paying jobs. But now he’s trying to entice thousands of people who already have good jobs to bring them to the state, and telecommute.

“Montana is perfect for telecommuting because of the quality of life, because our housing prices in most communities are below the national average,” he says.

Gianforte adds, “If a small, rural town in Montana had just five or 10 people move back home, that would be five or 10 homes that either had to be purchased or built, that creates construction jobs.”

He’s just sent 18,000 glossy brochures to the alums of two universities here, inviting them to “come home to Montana.”

“It’s five or 10 additional families that would enroll in the local schools, making the schools more vibrant. [It would be] five or 10 more families that are buying downtown.”

Gianforte’s brochures are a naked come-on to overstressed urbanites. There are pictures of mountain lakes and wildlife, and Gianforte holding a fat trout he just caught. It includes a guide to getting your boss to say yes to letting you work remotely. There’s even a list of telecommuting-friendly employers. Yahoo may have famously cracked down on working from home, but health insurance giant Anthem has fully a third of its employees working remotely. The company says that helps it attract top talent, and productivity hasn’t suffered.

That kind of corporate attitude is getting people excited in towns like Conrad, Mont., population 2,600.

Gianforte went there as part of a tour to pitch his campaign to local chambers of commerce. Vanessa Bucklin, an insurance broker, left with a big stack of Gianforte’s brochures.

“I just had a 20-year class reunion, and I’m going to mail them out with a handwritten note saying, we’d love to have you back in Conrad,” she says.

The “come home to Montana” tour isn’t being warmly received by everyone. Montana’s Democratic Party says it’s just a thinly veiled publicity stunt before Republican Gianforte announces his candidacy in the 2016 race for governor.

Gianforte says it’s not, but says he is considering a run for governor.

Regardless of the politics, stressed out New Jersey commuter David Blackburn says there’s more to pulling up stakes than just convincing his boss to let him do it.

“The other part of it is that my wife also works full time, and I think we have a hard time imagining running a two-career family fully telecommuting or fully remote,” he says.

And Blackburn says, there are things he’d miss about urban life, like arts and culture opportunities for himself and his kids.

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Today in Movie Culture: Everything To Know About the 'Mission: Impossible' Movies, Bugs Bunny Turns 75 and More

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

Movie Trivia of the Day:

Think you know all about the Mission: Impossible franchise? Mr. Sunday Movies humorously lists 50 facts about these movies:

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Trailer Remake of the Day:

Vulture has redone the trailer for the new Fantastic Four movie with footage from Roger Corman‘s cheap 1994 version:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Since Mad Max: Fury Road is all about the women characters, why not turn Immortan Joe female, too? Well, here you go (via Fashionably Geek):

Supercut of the Day:

In honor of Paper Towns, editor Jacob T. Swinney compiled scenes of teens climbing through others’ windows for Slate. Movies featured include Heathers, Scream and Scary Movie, and there are TV shows like Clarissa Explains It All, too.

Movie Analysis of the Day:

Barry Lyndon isn’t quite a forgotten masterpiece, but it’s not the most widely discussed of Stanley Kubrick‘s classics. Must See Films wants that to change:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Remember when Matthew Broderick was in The Godfather? Wait, no, just kidding, this is an image of Broderick and Marlon Brando from The Freshman, a movie completely built and sold around its making Brando look like Don Corleone again. The movie opened in theaters 25 years ago today.

Movie History of the Day:

This is more of a supercut than a history lesson, but Digg offers up a nice video tour of aliens in the movies:

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Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Today is the 75th anniversary of the theatrical release of Tex Avery‘s Oscar-nominated Merrie Melodies animated short A Wild Hare, which is considered the first official Bugs Bunny cartoon. Watch it below.

Comic Strip of the Day:

Did we find out all of the components of the Indominus Rex DNA in Jurassic World? Here’s a funny comic that shares a few more ingredients (via Geek Tyrant):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Yesterday was the 30th anniversary of the limited-release opening of Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. Honor the occasion by viewing the movie’s original trailer below.

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California Health Insurance Exchange Keeps Rate Hikes Low — Again

At sign-up events like this one in Los Angeles in 2013, Covered California pledged "affordability" in health insurance as one of its main selling points.

At sign-up events like this one in Los Angeles in 2013, Covered California pledged “affordability” in health insurance as one of its main selling points. Lucy Nicholson/Reuters/Landov hide caption

itoggle caption Lucy Nicholson/Reuters/Landov

Monthly premiums for California’s 1.3 million Covered California customers will rise a modest 4 percent, on average, officials with the agency said Monday. This increase is slightly less than last year’s increase of 4.2 percent for consumers who bought policies on the state’s health insurance marketplace.

Some consumers could even achieve a reduction in their premium, of an average of 4.5 percent, if they choose to shop around.

“This is another year of good news for California’s consumers and further evidence that the Affordable Care Act is working,” said Peter Lee, Covered California’s executive director.

Consumers who live in different parts of the state will see varying rates. In Southern California, consumers who stay in their plan will see an increase of just 1.8 percent, or an average of $296 per month. But in Northern California, where health care costs are typically higher, because of greater consolidation among doctors and hospitals, the increase is an average of 7 percent monthly, or $384.

Lee stressed that shopping around could help consumers save money.

“Health care is also local,” he said. “Where you live frames what your options are. If you live in Los Angeles and you shop around, you could see your premiums go down 11 percent.”

Betsy Imholz, an attorney and advocate with Consumers Union, called the average increase “terrific,” and also encouraged people to shop on price. “Often you can get a lower rate by moving to another carrier,” she said.

Lee said Covered California spent weeks negotiating with insurers.

“We’ve created a market where the consumer drives what’s working in California,” he said. “Throughout our negotiations, consumers in California saved more than $200 million.”

Larry Levitt, senior vice president of the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation, was positive about what he called “modest” increases. “This shows what a stable, competitive individual insurance market can look like,” he said, via email.

In part, Levitt credited the cost-containment to Covered California’s “substantial enrollment so far.” It’s a sign, he said, that the marketplace is likely attracting healthy people to help spread the risk of the sicker people.

Levitt also said the state agency’s active role has helped keep premium increases down. “I think a key element of California’s success is the standardization of insurance policies,” he said, “which simplifies the choices for consumers and focuses competition squarely on premiums.”

Covered California also announced that two new insurers will join the marketplace. UnitedHealthcare, the largest health insurer in the nation, will now offer plans in parts of the state, including the group of counties that start north of Sacramento and stretch to the Oregon and Nevada borders. Where some people had a choice of only one plan, now they will have two or three.

“Covered California did the right thing by targeting the new additions to the places where more choice is needed,” Imholz said.

Under the UnitedHealthcare plan, people who live near the Oregon and Nevada borders will also be able to cross state lines to see a doctor, a practice that was often prohibited in other plans.

“Sometimes people were driving many hours in order to get care,” said Beth Capell, who is with the advocacy group Health Access. People who live in Susanville, for example, were accustomed to getting care in nearby Reno, Nevada. But through Covered California intially, they had to drive several hours to Sacramento.

“They will now have the choice of another carrier that will be offering them coverage beyond the borders of California.”

Parts of Los Angeles County and Orange County will see a new insurer — Oscar Health Plan of California, which currently sells insurance only in the two states of New York and New Jersey.

Lee said that the new additions to the marketplace were chosen because they have good networks and are good for consumers.

“Covered California does not think more plans are always better,” he said. “In 2014 and 2015 we turned plans away. We’re not adding plans just because they knock on our door.”

In addition to the two new plans, all plans from last year were renewed for 2016: Anthem Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Chinese Community Health Plan, Health Net, Kaiser, Molina Healthcare, Sharp Health Plan, Valley Health Plan, LA Care Health Plan and Western Health Advantage.

The rates announced Monday are preliminary and will be reviewed by state regulators over the next 60 days.

This story was produced by State of Health, KQED’s health blog.

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Boston's 2024 Olympic Bid Is Over

Boston Mayor Martin Walsh speaks at a news conference last month. He and the USOC announced Monday that his city is no longer in the running to host the 2024 Olympics.

Boston Mayor Martin Walsh speaks at a news conference last month. He and the USOC announced Monday that his city is no longer in the running to host the 2024 Olympics. Elise Amendola/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Elise Amendola/AP

It’s official. The 2024 Olympic Games will not take place in Boston.

The Associated Press reports that the U.S. Olympic Committee “severed ties” with Boston on Monday. In a statement, Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh said, “I strongly believe that bringing the Olympic Games back to the United States would be good for our country and would have brought long-term benefits to Boston.” He continued, “However, no benefit is so great that it is worth handing over the financial future of our City and our citizens were rightly hesitant to be supportive as a result.”

Walsh had previously said the U.S. Olympic Committee had been pressuring him to commit to having local taxpayers pick up the tab if the operation went over budget, according to Curt Nickisch of WBUR. And as we previously reported, almost half of Bostonians polled by WBUR opposed taking on the responsibility of the Olympics.

In a statement, U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Scott Blackmun said the USOC has “not been able to get a majority of the citizens of Boston to support hosting the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.” The statement continued, “Therefore, the USOC does not think that the level of support enjoyed by Boston’s bid would allow it to prevail over great bids from Paris, Rome, Hamburg, Budapest or Toronto.”

The statement also said that while the USOC “would very much like to see an American city host the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2024,” and will begin exploring opportunities for another bid city, they “understand the reality of the timeline,” which suggests another city might not be selected soon enough to make a bid.

The Boston Globe reports that experts believe two-time Olympic host Los Angeles could be an alternate bid city, and quotes Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti saying, “I continue to believe that Los Angeles is the ideal Olympic city and we have always supported the USOC in their effort to return the Games to the United States. … I would be happy to engage in discussions with the USOC about how to present the strongest and most fiscally responsible bid on behalf of our city and nation.”

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Hot Pants, Glitter And Alan Lomax: How A Rising Singer Found Folk Music

British singer and "song collector" Sam Lee.
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British singer and “song collector” Sam Lee. Frederic Aranda /Courtesy of the artist hide caption

itoggle caption Frederic Aranda /Courtesy of the artist

Sam Lee wants to scour away people’s preconceptions about folk music. Like his predecessors from the 1960s — Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and Pentangle — Lee takes traditional folk songs and updates them in unexpected ways. This British singer’s path to folk music was even more unexpected.

Lee delights in making surprising connections in his music. He mixes conch, percussion and trumpet with an old Scottish Travellers song called “Johnny O’ The Brine.”

Lee does this partly because he didn’t have any notions about what folk music was supposed to be. “I didn’t know what it sounded like,” he says. “I didn’t know it had to be with guitars and twiddly-dee fiddles.”

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The 34-year-old London native, who grew up in a Jewish family, doesn’t try to force beats or electronics onto a folk song. Instead, he mostly uses acoustic instruments — like strings and brass — and other sounds.

He uses a Serbian recording from the 1950s to set the tone for a 19th century tale of war called “Bonny Bunch of Roses.”

“He does it in a way that really challenges the whole stuffy image of perhaps song collectors,” says Jo Frost, editor of Songlines magazine in London. She says that Lee’s approach has brought in a different audience for folk music. “Sam Lee himself, offstage and onstage, is a very engaging person,” she says. “He’s not your stereotypical folkie, let’s put it that way.”

That’s for sure. After art school, he became a wilderness survival expert. And then he launched into another career.

“I then went into dance, I became a dancer,” Lee says. “I went professional doing that, which I loved. I was actually a burlesque dancer, I used to do — it was kind of titillatery, comical striptease, in a way. I wasn’t like, a Chippendale, as your radio listeners must be reassured. But I was kind of comical dancing. But I went professional — I ended up in the West End in London — quite by accident. There was no ambition for that whatsoever. “

And somehow along the way, he fell completely in love with very old music.

“I remember being, like, in my rubber hot pants, about to go onstage, all kind of glittered up,” he recalls. “And I was there with my headphones, listening to old field recordings by Alan Lomax of farmers and Gypsies and Travellers, and writing them in my notebook and practicing them, and then having to go on and kind of do the razzle-dazzle, and then come back and learn more folk songs. It was so absurd!”

Lee says each song he’s learned is kind of a stamp in a secret passport, leading him into an unknown world.

“It’s alive,” he says. “Suddenly, I didn’t ever want to learn a song off a record again. I wanted to learn it off people, and honor those people through the singing of the song.”

So he hit the road, traveling all over the U.K. and Ireland, becoming a not-so-stuffy song collector. His obvious passion got him into communities that most Britons never brush up against: nomadic groups, including the Scottish and Irish Travellers, and the Roma, often called Gypsies by outsiders.

“I didn’t go into this thinking I was going to be an activist,” Lee says. “I didn’t know anything about Gypsies and Travellers beforehand. I went out looking for songs. And what I met was people.”

One of them was 86-year-old Freda Black, a Romani woman who became one of Lee’s teachers. He now calls her his adopted grandmother.

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Lee is quick to tell you the history of the songs he performs. And it’s important to him to acknowledge those from whom he’s learned them because, he says, “I think we have about five to eight years left of the old singers still being alive, so it is a race against time.” His work includes the Song Collectors Collective, a digital archive of both traditional songs and the individuals and families for whom they are a cultural birthright.

And even as he reshapes these folk songs into a 21st century form, Lee is still honoring the individuals and communities that have welcomed him in.

“I respect these people, and I love these people,” Lee says. “I mean, some of them have become like my grandparents — I’ve adopted them. So I feel a need to be speaking up for them, because they don’t have a voice. And I do. I’ve been given a voice, and I’ve been given a platform on which to use it.”

Lee says that his most pressing concern right now is to continue to collect this music — as quickly as he can.

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Senior Senate Republicans Rebuke Cruz After He Criticizes McConnell

Senior Senate Republicans lined up Sunday to rebuke Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz for harshly criticizing Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, an extraordinary display of intraparty division played out live on the Senate floor.

As the Senate met for a rare Sunday session, Sens. Orrin Hatch of Utah, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and John Cornyn of Texas each rose to counter a stunning floor speech Cruz gave on Friday accusing McConnell, R-Ky., of lying.

None of them mentioned Cruz by name but the target of their remarks could not have been clearer. The drama came as the Senate defeated a procedural vote to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care law and took a step toward reviving the federal Export-Import Bank, both amendments on a must-pass highway bill.

“Squabbling and sanctimony may be tolerated in other venues and perhaps on the campaign trail, but they have no place among colleagues in the United States Senate,” said Hatch, the Senate’s president pro tempore. Cruz is running for president.

“The Senate floor has even become a place where senators have singled out colleagues by name to attack them in personal terms, to impugn their character, in blatant disregard for Senate rules,” Hatch said. “Such misuses of the Senate floor must not be tolerated.”

After Hatch spoke, Cruz rose to defend himself for making the accusation that McConnell had lied when he denied striking a deal to allow the vote to revive the Export-Import Bank.

He said he agreed with Hatch’s calls for civility but declared, “Speaking the truth about actions is entirely consistent with civility.”

And far from backing down, Cruz reiterated his complaint about McConnell. “My saying so may be uncomfortable but it is a simple fact, entirely consistent with decorum, and no member of this body has disputed that promise was made and that promise was broken.”

Around 20 senators of both parties were on the floor watching some of the speeches. Cruz’s floor speech Friday had brought nearly unheard-of drama and discord to the Senate floor. But the responses to it were just as remarkable, as senior Republicans united to take down a junior colleague of their own party who poses a growing threat to their attempts to show voters that Republicans can govern.

No senator rose to Cruz’s defense. And by voice vote, the Senate defeated an attempt by Cruz to overturn a ruling made Friday that blocked him from offering an amendment related to Iran, with senators refusing even to agree to his routine request for a roll-call vote.

Cruz’s behavior was the latest example of a Republican presidential candidate causing problems for McConnell. In May, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., infuriated fellow Republicans when he forced the temporary expiration of the Patriot Act when it was up for renewal. Some of Hatch’s remarks seemed to apply to him as well.

For his part, McConnell said that given support for the Export-Import Bank, despite his own opposition no “special deal” was needed to bring it to a vote.

The little-known bank is a federal agency that helps foreign customers to buy U.S. goods. Conservatives oppose it as corporate welfare and are trying to end it. They won an early round, when congressional inaction allowed the bank to expire June 30 for the first time in 81 years.

But on Sunday, senators voted, 67-26, to advance legislation to revive the bank across a procedural hurdle, making it likely that it will be added to the highway bill.

On a separate vote, legislation to repeal Obama’s health care law failed to advance over a procedural hurdle. Sixty votes were needed but the total was 49-43.

The action came as the Senate tries to complete work on the highway bill ahead of a July 31 deadline. If Congress doesn’t act by then, states will lose money for highway and transit projects in the middle of the summer construction season.

With the Export-Import Bank likely added, the highway legislation faces an uncertain future in the House, where there’s strong opposition to the bank as well as to the underlying highway measure.

The Senate’s version of the highway bill, which is on track to pass later in the week, sets policy and authorizes transportation programs for six years, though with funding for only three of those years.

The House has passed a five-month extension of transportation programs without the Export-Import Bank included, and House leaders of both parties are reluctant to take up the Senate’s version.

Complicating matters, Congress is entering its final days of legislative work before its annual August vacation, raising the prospect of unpredictable last-minute maneuvers to resolve the disputes on the highway bill and the Export-Import Bank.

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