3:56 p.m. — Emergency physician expects rise in suicide rate, urges safe firearms storage

As we noted in yesterday’s live blog, gun sales are up significantly in Colorado. That worries Dr. Emmy Betz, an emergency physician at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and the co-founder of the Colorado Firearm Safety Coalition.

The combination of fear, financial stress and newly purchased guns all under the same roof is not a good one, Betz said.

"This is not about gun control; this is about safety when people are going through tough times,” she told Colorado Matters host Ryan Warner. “Which, I think we all are right now."

While some deaths could be mistakes, Betz said, she’s particularly worried about teenagers. Some 40 percent of suicides among that population are by firearm, she said.

"As parents we don't want to think our kids would ever do that, but kids do,” she said. “They're grappling with big emotions just being teenagers, and then the added stresses we are going through right now -- I really worry about how that's going to weigh on these youth who might feel more isolated."

She’s worried about an increase in the overall suicide rate, and urges gun owners to take steps to secure them in a lockbox or offsite. And she urged would-be first-time gun owners to think twice and not buy one.

“Especially if you don't know how to use it,” she said.

— Nathaniel Minor

3:32 p.m. — 39 Grand Princess cruise passengers return to Colorado

After waiting in quarantine on military bases after their cruise ship docked in California weeks ago, 39 Coloradans are coming back home — with an abundance of precaution.

The Grand Princess cruise passengers will be landing at DIA shortly on private charter planes. They'll hop straight into private vehicles and will not enter the terminal.

Only asymptomatic passengers are allowed to return home. There are two other Coloradans from the ship who are still symptomatic and in federal quarantine.

— Alex Scoville

2:41 p.m. — Already stumped on what to stream? Here are some recommendations by celebrity birthdays

There are a couple of famous birthdays coming up tomorrow, March 21. Here's what two members of CPR's digital team think you should watch from their filmography — though we didn't always agree.

Matthew Broderick (58)

Jim Hill: It might seem obvious, but the only Broderick you need is the escapism of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (duh)

Alex Scoville: Ok, but "Election" ...

Rosie O'Donnell (58)

JH: Will baseball start-up on time? In its absence there's no shortage of baseball movies and "A League Of Their Own" is a classic

AS: Meg Ryan rom-coms always have the best actors livening things up on the sidelines. Carrie Fisher in "When Harry Met Sally," Parker Posey in "You've Got Mail" and Rosie in "Sleepless In Seattle"

Gary Oldman (62)

JH: Oldman is delicious, and so, so, quotable as the villainous Zorg in the "The Fifth Element"

AS: Yeah, no objections here. Let the blue lady sing!

Jim's Pick: Timothy Dalton (74)

What if a famous golden age swashbuckling actor was also a Nazi? What if Timothy Dalton was playing up such a rumor in as the bad guy in "The Rocketeer"?

Alex's Pick: Santino Fontana (38)

No movies I can recommend from this Broadway star (though parents will recognize his voice behind Hans from "Frozen"), but he is so frickin' good (though not little kid-friendly) in the first season of "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend." And he won a Tony for leading the musical adaptation of "Tootsie" for a reason.

1:19 p.m. — A-Basin lays off all 430 seasonal employees

Hart Van Denburg/CPR News The view looking into Montezuma Bowl at Arapahoe Basin.

Arapahoe Basin ski resort announced Friday that it would lay off all 430 of its season employees, both full- and part-time, effective April 1.

"There is no clear indication of when the ski area will re-open. It seems likely that we are still weeks away. While we have every intention of re-opening The Basin, we have no idea when that will be," COO Alan Henceroth wrote in a statement.

Also starting April 1, full-time year-round workers will go down to 3/4 of their time.

Employees who are laid off will receive two-weeks pay and their accrued PTO. Workers who had health insurance through A-Basin will have their premiums paid through June.

— Alex Scoville

12:31 p.m. — You've got a date with a baby rhino

Just look at the face! Join the Denver Zoo online at 2 p.m. MDT for what is sure to be your moment of joy today. Go to facebook.com/DenverZoo.