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Check out a sneak-peek of 'Bill & Ted Face the Music', and a most excellent 360-degree movie experience

No Comments Entertainment News

Patti Perret/Orion Pictures(LOS ANGELES) — Orion Pictures has just released a clip from its upcoming threequel Bill & Ted Face the Music, and has announced the creation of an immersive, 360 experience that lets you step into their well-worn Vans to explore their world.

The clip features Alex Winter’s Bill and Keanu Reeves’ Ted meeting up in Hell with their old pal Death, again played by William Sadler. However, despite their most excellent time together in Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey, Death isn’t too happy to see them this time. “Talk to the hand!” he tells the pair, after apparently wrapping up his 75,000th game of hopscotch with himself.

Available through your smartphone or VR gear, Bill & Ted’s Most Triumphant, Non-Heinous 360 Adventure Through Space and Time As We Know It lets you explore Wyld Stallyns’ garage band setup, before you set off through the Circuits of Time to visit some of the far-flung locations the pair go on in their new big screen adventure. 

Bill & Ted Face the Music has the now middle-aged high school pals trying to come to terms with their not having fulfilled their destiny as the writers of the song that will save the universe. Their daughters, played by Bridgette Lundy-Paine and Samara Weaving, tag along on their dads’ inter-dimensional adventure.

Also starring Kristen Schaal, Jayma Mays, Holland Taylor, Kid Cudi, Jillian Bell and SNL‘s Beck Bennett, Bill & Ted Face the Music will be released on demand and in theaters this Friday, August 28.


By Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dierks Bentley, Morgan Wallen sign on to Tito’s Made to Order Music Festival

No Comments Country Music News

ABC/Chris HolloDierks Bentley, Morgan Wallen and rapper Bun B are joining the “South” quadrant of Tito’s virtual Made to Order Music Festival, an event taking place across four dates throughout the fall with names corresponding to the four directional points.

The “South” section of the event takes place on September 10 at 8PM ET. All the festivities will be livestreamed via First Tube Media.

In addition to the featured performers, each date of the Made to Order Music Festival will include DJs, chefs and bartenders offering a jam-packed schedule of entertainment. Each of the artists on the bill will offer a set of music from their own catalogue, as well as covers from artists who hail from the region their section of the event represents.

That means that Dierks, Morgan and Bun B will likely choose to spotlight southern artists in their performances. The “South” night will also include a showcase of regionally-inspired cocktails. The first section of the festival, “West,” kicks off this Thursday.

As part of their first-ever virtual festival, Tito’s Vodka plans to donate $100,000 to the World Kitchen Central, a non-profit dedicated to providing fresh meals across the country.

To learn more about how to tune in, visit Tito’s social channels and website.

By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Mitchell Tenpenny tells a cinematic story of heartbreak in “Broken Up” video

No Comments Country Music News

Riser House Entertainment/Columbia NashvilleMitchell Tenpenny distills the storyline of his “Broken Up” song into a three-minute mini-movie in the music video for the tune. It’s a high-drama clip that features a real-life couple as the actors living out the song.

The action starts with a striking scene of a man lying face down on concrete, his nose and mouth bleeding. Interspersed with shots of broken glass, the video leads us into an intense fight between a couple. Meanwhile, we see snippets of Mitchell singing the words to the song through an obscure, fractured lens.

The video was directed by Justin Key, who’s also the mastermind behind the video for Mitchell’s hit, “Drunk Me.”

“I think Justin nailed the raw emotions between the characters in the video,” the singer explained. “The tension in the fight scene is fierce, just like breakups can be. It’s a great three-minute film.”

“Broken Up” is Mitchell’s latest single, following his duet with Australian duo Seaforth, “Anything She Says.”

By Carena Liptak
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

More scrutiny needed of Florida coronavirus isolation centers, seniors' advocates say

No Comments National News

ABC NewsBY: LAURA ROMERO and MATTHEW MOSK

(MIAMI) — Advocates for nursing home residents have raised concerns that some facilities being used by Florida officials as isolation units for those who test positive for the coronavirus have a checkered history of citations. Despite official assurances that the facilities have been fully vetted, it’s a move they say could further endanger those who are already highly vulnerable.

“Some of these centers are nursing homes that have been repeatedly fined or sued for negligent acts, including failing to institute adequate infection and disease control precautions,” said David Brevda, an attorney at the Boca Raton-based Senior Justice Law Firm. “We are dealing with numerous COVID-19 cases, and we have seen clients put into these amorphous ‘isolation’ centers. The rules and regulations governing these facilities are fast and ever-changing.”

Four of the 23 Florida facilities set aside to serve as isolation centers for elderly coronavirus patients are on the American Health Care Association’s watch list for either failing to comply with the state’s minimum standards or operating under bankruptcy protection during the past 30 months. They are among the seven isolation facilities being used that currently hold ratings of “below average” by Medicare. One of the nursing homes, Avante at Boca Raton, was fined for more than $76,000 for various infractions in 2019.

Florida has been a hot spot for the virus in recent weeks, averaging more than 3,000 new positive cases a day, though the figure has been falling since a peak last month. More than 4,000 of the state’s 10,500 coronavirus-related deaths have occurred at long-term care facilities.

As the outbreak worsened, Florida Gov. Ron De Santis adopted a different approach to nursing homes infections than the one used by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has faced criticism for directing nursing homes in the state to let residents return after being hospitalized for COVID-19. New York has reported more than 6,600 deaths at long-term care facilities, out of a total of 32,000 fatalities.

In Florida, DeSantis called for the establishment of special COVID-19 isolation centers to serve people in need of long-term care services who have contracted the virus. Some isolation centers have been set apart in dedicated wings within a larger facility, while others are now in standalone facilities. All are supposed to provide clinical monitoring and isolation to patients from hospitals, long-term care facilities or local communities until they can safely return to their assisted living facility and nursing home.

Kristen Knapp, a spokesperson for the Florida Health Care Association, which has partnered with the Florida government agency that oversees the centers, said that facilities receive a reimbursement for serving as an isolation center, but she did not specify the amount.

“These dedicated recovery buildings and units are a proven model that Florida has pioneered across our state,” said Patrick Manderfield, the Deputy Communications Director for the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA), the state oversight agency. “These facilities serve to protect our elderly and most vulnerable in our state’s emergency response.”

Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital, said that conceptually the idea of isolation centers makes sense.

“We need to ensure the virus doesn’t spread through vulnerable populations,” said Brownstein, also an ABC News contributor. “Nursing homes and assisted living facilities represent some of the most concerning environments for disease transmission so isolated infected individuals is a key part of that. However, clearly there needs to be a standard of care and transparency around infection control procedures.”

Manderfield dismissed concerns about the use of facilities that had subpar ratings, saying the state carefully vetted isolation locations and made certain all were “in full compliance” with state and federal nursing home regulations. He said the state reviewed every facility “to ensure they are capable of maintaining safe and separate spaces for COVID-positive patients.”

Several of those who are running isolation units also defended the locations. Kimberly Biegasiewicz, Vice President of Clinical Services at Avante Group, the company that owns four COVID-19 isolation centers, said that the company had been working with the health care advocates since the pandemic began. In July, they opened Miami Care Center as a COVID-19-only skilled nursing facility.

When asked if the three facilities the Avante group owns that are on the AHCA watch list and have scored below average ratings are qualified to serve as COVID-19 isolation centers, Biegasiewicz said the company responded with strict infection control policies “to ensure that our residents are getting the most up-to-date and most important infection control practices provided to them.”

“We really felt that it was an opportunity to assist the state of Florida and definitely assist our most vulnerable populations, which we know is our elderly population,” Biegasiewicz said.

Biegasiewicz said the state agency did not outline any specific requirements for the isolation facilities.

Brian Pollet is the administrator of the Ybor City Center for Rehabilitation, another one of the state’s 23 isolation centers and one rated above average by Medicare. He said the Florida Department of Health made multiple visits to the facility before being asked to serve as a landing spot for infected patients. It now has 24 beds dedicated to the effort.

“I guess the agencies were impressed by the way we engineered our units,” Pollet said.

Currently, nursing homes that fail to test residents and staff for coronavirus after hints of an infection could face fines under new measures by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But advocates for the elderly said they would like to see Florida and other states establish clear standards specifically for COVID-19 isolation facilities, beyond the usual standards for long-term care facilities.

Toby Edelman, a senior policy attorney for the Center for Medicare Advocacy, a nonprofit that provides legal assistance for the elderly, told ABC News that isolation centers should have a full time infection preventionist on top of the federal regulations that are required for all nursing homes.

“There are currently no federal standards,” Edelman said of the COVID-19 isolation facilities.

Edelman added that he believed “facilities with poor records in staffing and infection prevention should not be eligible for designation as COVID-only facilities.”

Eric Carlson, a long-term care expert with the advocacy group Justice in Aging, said facilities may be motivated to serve as a COVID-19 isolation center because of the “higher Medicaid rates paid by the state for COVID-specific care, or simply by a desire to fill empty rooms.”

Carlson said that the lack of COVID-specific standards puts residents at coronavirus isolation facilities in danger.

The lack of specific standards, he said, “leaves the door open for mediocre or bad facilities to put themselves out for COVID-specific care, in an effort to bring in more residents, in situations where the residents may have few options.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Everything you need to know about hurricanes

No Comments National News

iStock/Darwin BrandisBY: JOYEETA BISWAS and MEGHAN KENEALLY, ABC News

(NEW ORLEANS) — Hurricane Laura is roaring toward the Texas-Louisiana border as a Category 4 storm and is expected to make landfall Wednesday or early Thursday, bringing with it dangerous storm surge and heavy rain.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said an “unsurvivable storm surge with large and destructive waves” is expected to cause “catastrophic damage from Sea Rim State Park, Texas, to Intracoastal City, Louisiana, including Calcasieu and Sabine Lakes.”

“Only a few hours remain to protect life and property and all actions should be rushed to completion,” the NWS warned.

Here are some of your questions on hurricanes, answered by ABC News meteorologists Max Golembo, Samantha Wnek and Melissa Griffin.

How are hurricanes formed?

Hurricanes are formed by feeding off the warmth and moisture of the ocean. Air then rises and is replaced constantly by the surrounding air. Below all this rising air, low pressure develops.

How long does a hurricane usually last?

If you are in the hurricane, conditions could last 12 to 18 hours. In a slow-moving hurricane, conditions could last up to 24 hours.

The hurricane itself, from its formation to its deterioration, can last in the ocean for weeks.

How long do hurricanes take to form?

It can take up to a week for hurricanes to form and some tropical cyclones never make it to hurricane status.

One of the fastest hurricanes to form was Humberto in 2007, which developed in less than 19 hours from a tropical depression to a hurricane.

How do you know when a hurricane is coming?

If you’re relying on the weather to know when a hurricane is coming, often you won’t get any indication at all. The day before a hurricane could have sunny skies with calm winds.

That’s why you should listen to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather radio or pay attention to warnings from authorities.

What is a storm surge and why is it so dangerous?

As pressure falls in the hurricane’s center, water levels rise. The water accumulates while the storm is still over the open ocean.

When the hurricane closes in on land, its strong winds push that water toward the coast and up onto land, creating walls of water sometimes as high as 20 feet.

The danger to people inside houses on the coast is the vicious deluge of water that can flood homes and climb up walls rapidly. When Hurricane Sandy hit New York and New Jersey in 2012, many homes filled quickly with water.

The risks can be even greater if storm surge combines with high tide, creating a devastating, rapid rise in water levels.

ABC News’ Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.