I N T E R N A T I O N A L
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
16 Pages Number 86 5th year
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Thursday, April 25, 2013
Thereâs room for the 2 Jimmys in late-night TV Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK â The longtime feud between late-night TV talk show hosts Jay Leno and David Letterman is the stuff of legend and, apparently, so yesterday. The two Jimmys: Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon, agree thereâs no rivalry between them. Both were among the honorees in New York Tuesday at a gala recognizing Time magazineâs annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World. âI feel good about it. Weâre very friendly. I know people expect us to dislike each other and say bad things about each other but that will never happen,â said the 45-year-old Kimmel. He agreed that making nice is a good thing. âIt is nice. Weâre like (vocalist duo)
Peaches & Herb. Iâm Peaches,â he laughed. Theyâll face-off in the ratings next year when Fallon leaves NBCâs â L a t e Night with Jimmy Fallonâ and replaces Leno as host of âThe Tonight Show.â The 38year-old Fallon said, as of now, things wonât
Beijing festival honors âBack to 1942â as top film
change much when he switches to âThe Tonight Show.â âWe do a great show now. I think weâre ready. I thank Jay Leno for being awesome and still being number one because without him I wouldnât have a job,â he laughed. âItâs just like they call you up from the minor league so Iâm ready to go for the majors and Iâm gonna swing for the fences.â In January, ABCâs âJimmy Kimmel Live!â moved to the 11:35 p.m. EST time slot, putting it in direct competition with âThe Tonight Showâ a n d âLate S h o w w i t h David Letterman.â
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Thursday, April 25, 2013 WHO says new bird strain is âone of most lethalâ flu viruses
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Venezuelaâs Maduro sends conciliatory message to U.S.
Bayern beats Barcelona 4-0 in Champions League
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Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Talk show host Jimmy Kimmel and fiancee Molly McNearney attend the TIME 100 Gala celebrating the â100 Most Influential People in the Worldâ at Jazz at Lincoln Center on Tuesday April 23, 2013 in New York.
Associated Press Writer
BEIJING â The Beijing International Film Festival has honored âBack to 1942â with its top prize. The film set during a 1942 famine in Chinaâs Hunan province stars Adrien Brody, Tim Robbins and Chen Daoming. Yan Bingyan was named best actress for âFeng Shui,â and Terence Stamp was named best actor for âSong for Marion.â The festivalâs closing night Tuesday had a somber note with remembrances given for victims of the Sichuan earthquake. Stars wore dark dresses and suits as they walked a carpet that was changed from red to dark blue as a sign of respect. Hong Kong actress Christy Chung said she was glad to be attending the event. But she felt âsorry for the Yaâan earthquake victims at the same time. I think we need to show our respect.â Jackie Chan, Andy Lau, Aaron Kwok, Nicholas Tse, Keanu Reeves and John Woo were among the attendees.
AP Photo/Charles Dharapak
President Barack Obama gets ready to speak in the Brady Press Briefing at the White House in Washington, Friday, April 19, 2013.
Hackers cause panic with âObama injuredâ AP tweet
Agence France-Presse
WASHINGTON - Hackers spooked markets Tuesday after breaking into the Associated Pressâs Twitter account and falsely reporting President Barack Obama had been injured after two blasts at the White House. A brief alert on the news agencyâs @AP account read: âBreaking: Two explosions in the White House and Barack Obama is injured.â Almost immediately the wire service posted via its corporate com-
munications feed that its @AP Twitter account had been hacked, before promptly suspending the service. âAdvisory: @AP Twitter account has been hacked. Tweet about an attack at the White House is false.
We will advise more as soon as possible,â @AP_CorpComm posted. AP spokesman Paul Colford later said the wire service had disabled other Twitter accounts following the attack and was working with the micro-blogging site to investigate the breach. The FBI also said it was investigating the incident. White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters the president was unharmed. âI can say that
the president is fine,â Carney said shortly after the fake tweet. âI was just with him.â Stock markets plunged just as the report came out, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average losing 130 points, or 0.9 percent, and the S&P 500 dropping 12 points, or 0.8 percent. Just as quickly they rebounded to where they were before the tweet, all within three or four minutes. Online activists backing the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-
Assad later claimed responsibility for the hack -- the latest in a series they have orchestrated against highprofile news organizations. The group -- the so-called Syrian Electronic Army -- also successfully hacked the Twitter feeds of AFP and CBS News earlier this year. âOps! @AP get owned by Syrian Electronic Army! #SEA #Syria #ByeByeObama,â the group posted after Tuesdayâs hack.
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