Disney+ Streaming Service Coming this Fall

Disney will produce Disney+ this November. Which will be their own streaming service.

Price sets will be at 6.99 per month or 69.99 a year. In addition, it will be free of ads.

It will include Star Wars, Marvel, National Geographic, Fox originals, and other Disney trademarks.

Bob Iger the head of Disney, believes this is a crucial transition for Disney to succeed within the future.

During the first year Disney+ will include various TV episodes, series, movies, and library titles.

Kevin Mayer, a Disney executive, commented that the company will probably bundle the three streaming services of: ESPN+, Disney+, and Hulu together at a discount price.

Furthermore, the new service will begin in North America and later it will become global.

The new transition will have money loss at first. Especially with removing from Netflix and switching to their own service.

Although, higher profits are estimated to be within 2022-2024.

Downloads will be enabled. Along with multiple accounts for one subscription.

Elderly woman lived with organs in opposite places of her body

Rose Marie Bentley lived a full life up to the age of 99 with a rare condition.

Other than her heart, all her other organs were in different places than where they should have been.

It’s so rare in fact, that it mostly occurs once in every 22,000 births. However, those previously documented with the condition, did not surpass the age of seventy-three.

“People with the condition known as situs inversus with levocardia often have life-threatening cardiac ailments and other abnormalities, according to Oregon Health & Science University.”

Bentley had three organ removal surgeries within her life. Yet only one surgeon had documented that her appendix was in a different place.

Louise Allee is the daughter of Rose. She expressed her surprise that Bentley’s doctors hadn’t mentioned the off details.

Consequently, a learning experience is being gained from Rose’s body being donated to Oregon Health and Science University.

Cameron Walker is an OHSU assistant professor of anatomy. In short, he commented: “This is an important case that really gave us an opportunity to talk about the importance of future clinicians paying attention to subtle anatomic variations, not just large anatomic variations, in terms of addressing their future patients as individuals.”

Transplants for Infected Organs

To solve the shortage of organs for the long list of patients that are waiting to be saved. There’s a new option for them to speed up the wait time.

Doctors have started using infected organs with Hepatitis C, that would normally go to waste. It’s a possiblity for researchers to prevent patients that are receiving the hearts and lungs from obtaining the virus to begin with.

People that received a transplant last year equaled to 36, 529, while over 113,000 people had been on the waiting list. However, after a newly released drug came to light in 2016, surgeons started doing infected transplants on patients. If the virus showed, then they would use the treatment of medicine for three months to clear it. Prior to this new method, they would only use infected organs on patients  already infected with Hepatits C.

Johns Hopkins University and the University of Pennsylvania had trials done. The outcomes of the transplanted kidneys resulted in functional and the virus became extinct. Similarly, hearts and lungs was tested next. At Penn, 9 out of 10 patients survived with treatment.

A new method was done with Brigham researchers. As mentioned in the Associated Press, “Within hours of either a heart or lung transplant, participants started taking medicine for a month in hopes of blocking hepatitis C infection rather than having to treat it.”

Patients six months post surgery had uninfected working hearts and lungs. After that, only one had died of causes unrelated to the virus.

Dr. David Klassen who is the chief medical officer for the United Network for Organ Sharing commented. “It’s not established that cure rates are 100 percent. To believe they would be, would be a little naive.”

The I Like Scary Movies Experience

For the horror fans, there’s a new art exhibit in Los Angeles called, the I Like Scary Movies Experience. There was a grand opening on April 4th, and it will be open until June 16th. It showcases some of Hollywood’s favored horror films.

Warner Bros Consumer Products and Ultra Productions have recreated the realms of: The Lost Boys, A Nightmare on Elm Street, IT, The Shining, and Beetlejuice. The exhibit is around a half size of a football field and attendees might spend 90 minutes walking around and taking pictures throughout the experience with the art instillations.

The artist that helped create the exhibit is Maximillian, who is with Ultra Productions. He has had twenty years of behind the scenes instillation experience within Hollywood and Comic Con.

He commented: “I want fans to be able to take a deep imaginative dive into some of their favorite movies in a way that is fun and gives them time to really explore and enjoy the thrill of it all. The Warner Bros. Consumer Products team has been incredibly supportive of our vision and we can’t wait for fans to experience it.”

Visitors can expect to walk through life like scenes of Pennywise’s sharp teeth and sewer lair. There’s Beetlejuice’s graveyard and the after life waiting room. In addition, there’s the carpet and redrum hedges from The Shining. People can go through Freddy Krueger’s boiler room and sit on his throne. Lastly, there’s a recreation of the Lost Boys train tracks of Santa Clara and a noodle dinner.

Tickets can be bought at ILikeScaryMoviesExperience.com.

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ilikescarymoviesexperience/

The Popppypalooza Shutdown

Post rainfall in socal. Poppy’s flourished along the hillsides.

Therefore, in the last few weeks. Tourism inflated in Lake Elsinore, CA.

Flowers blooming along the hillsides of the Inland Empire. Picture taken from Times of SD.

Thousands arrived for scenic overlooks.

People favored social media pictures.

Parking and walking instructions were neglected as a result.

On the other hand, traffic befell on the freeweays.

Staff extended wait times to hillsides.

Visitors destroyed poppy’s.

In addition, there was a brief shutdown at Walker Canyon.

City Hall posted a statement to clarify.

“The situation has escalated beyond our available resources. No additional shuttles or visitors will be allowed into Walker Canyon.

This weekend has been unbearable Lake Elsinore. Lake Street and Nichols ramps completely closed. We have to get traffic moving.”

Whether the bloomings are a positive or negative impact. That’s all a matter of perspective.

In short. There must be consciousness for nature preservation.

The city is not equipped to handle the amount of people but tries to adapt.

Close up view of poppy’s in Lake Elsinore, CA. Picture from ABC7.com