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Will the "populist wave" reach France?

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NewsHubFrance’s presidential elections next April and May are being carefully watched for signs of a “populist wave” reaching the home of the Enlightenment. After the surprise result of Britain’s Brexit referendum and the election of Donald Trump in the US, what are the roots and the limits of populism in France?
In 1956, the far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen won a seat in France’s National Assembly. Not under the banner of the Front National – the party he would later launch – but as a young MP for an earlier populist movement, the Poujadists.
The Poujadists described themselves as defenders of “the little people; the beaten-down; the robbed, the humiliated”. Small, local and anti-establishment, they surprised everyone by winning 52 seats in the country’s parliament.
Within a few years, they’d withered away into political obscurity. And when the far-right Front National appeared two decades later, says Jean-Yves Camus, an expert in far-right politics, many people expected it to follow the same fate.
“Back then,” he told me, “most of my colleagues said ‘this is just a temporary phenomenon, like we had in the 1950s – in a few years, the party won’t exist’. ”
Instead, the Front National – with its modern-day mantra of defending “France’s forgotten ones” – is now one of Europe’s most successful populist parties, winning 28% of the popular vote in last year’s regional elections. The question for all France’s politicians, as the country approaches presidential elections next year, is why populism has become so popular.
“There’s been a rise in France of the populist vote,” says Olivier Costa, an expert in European politics from the National Centre of Scientific Research, “and it’s based on a fear of decline – economic decline, social, cultural. The world is changing fast and people feel anxious. They think the traditional parties can’t fix it, and that it’s worth trying something new. ”
“It’s immigration, always immigration,” says the pollster Jerome Fourquet, who runs the Ifop agency here, “when we ask voters, that’s their main motivation [for voting FN]. ”
“Thirty years ago,” he explained, “the slogan of the FN was ‘one million immigrants – one million unemployed.’ That’s an economic argument. Today’s it’s ‘France for the French’ (‘On est chez nous’), which means it’s the French who [should] decide whether women can wear the veil, whether you can serve pork in school meals, if France stays French. ”
This argument over who is – and is not – French has played strongly into Marine Le Pen’s anti-globalisation message, boosting support for her proposals to end immigration and pull France out of the EU.
What’s striking is that France has not experienced the recent immigration levels of Germany, Hungary, Austria or Scandinavia. But it does have existing sensitivities over how to incorporate different cultures into French society, particularly those from its former colonies in North Africa.
“We have this funny concept of laicite,” says Jean-Yves Camus from the French Institute for International and Strategic Affairs, “which is not really secularism. What it means is that when you come from abroad, or at least from a non-European country, you need to assimilate to the extent that you forget about your roots.
“In the US, if you want to say ‘I’m Italian-American’, or ‘I’m Chinese-American,’ you can. In France, you can’t. ”
That concept of laicite has been something to latch onto, for those fearful about rapid global change. It’s also provided the backdrop for a campaign by the party’s current leader Marine Le Pen to draw in new groups of voters, in the aftermath of terrorist attacks by self-proclaimed Islamists.
The Front National now has strong support among the under-25s and gay couples, and is making efforts to attract women and Jewish voters, urging them all to come together against what it calls the “threat” of Islam in France.
In a sometimes febrile debate, politicians from the mainstream parties have also toughened their rhetoric on immigration, and the role of Islam in France. But how much of the FN’s appeal is based on its policies, and how much on its populist promise of revamping what it calls France’s “broken” political system?
When it comes to the populist message, says Olivier Costa, “France is very polarised, as are Britain and the US; there’s a limit to how much of the electorate the FN will be able to win over. ”
Oddly, that’s both a strength and a weakness for the party.
It’s certainly true that France’s two-round voting system has made it difficult for the party to translate votes into power. Few of those who vote against the FN in the first round are prepared to switch their support to it in the second.
But its polarising effect is striking in a country where many people say that politicians “are all the same” and that there’s no point voting at all.
Both mainstream parties here – the Socialists and the Republicans – have inched towards the centre in recent years, which has left parts of France’s electorate without a natural political home. Many others feel that the old political debate between Left and Right is tired and predictable.
And what’s interesting about the centre-right primary race here last month is that it wasn’t the centrist who won.
Francois Fillon’s campaign focused heavily on social issues, immigration and French identity, alongside hard-line proposals to reform France’s economy. He won a resounding 66% of the primary run-off against Alain Juppe, who offered voters a more moderate, liberal and inclusive agenda.
“Fillon’s playing on the Catholic vote is new in France today,” says Olivier Costa. “No politician has talked about religion here for a long time. You have to go back to de Gaulle or Pompidou to see social conservatism like this in a major party. It’s a smart move by Fillon – he saw there was an electorate to be wooed there. ”
The Socialist Party, which holds its primary contest in January, is split between the traditional left and reformers like former Prime Minister Manuel Valls, who supports extending the ban on the Muslim headscarf, and liberalising France’s economy.
The question is who voters will choose, and whether a red-blooded ideological battle between the two main parties will re-energise politics here, and lessen populism’s appeal.
Jean-Yves Camus believes it will take more than that.
“We really need to have fresh faces in parliament and government,” he says. “The overwhelming majority come from the civil service, because it’s easier than if you’re a lawyer or have your own business.
“We need to bring more people from civil society into politics, people who do not want to stay on for decades. We’ve had people standing for parliament – and sitting in parliament – for 40 years. ”
There’s always been a divide between the political class and the “real people”, says Olivier Costa, but France’s leaders don’t seem to understand that it could reach a tipping point.
“Everyone says about the primaries ‘What a great success, what a wonderful exercise in democracy’, but it’s a joke,” he says. “Fillon has won [a cumulative total of] 107 years of electoral mandates. There’s no one new. Even Marine Le Pen has been elected for 20 years. ”
The Front National isn’t the only party with an anti-establishment message in this election. The 38-year-old former economy minister, Emmanuel Macron, left the Socialist government earlier this year to run as an independent candidate “from neither the Left nor the Right”. Having never been elected to office, he presented himself as a fresh face, not part of the political establishment.
“I’ve seen from the inside the emptiness of our system,” he said when announcing his candidacy. “[It] stops ideas because they weaken the system – political parties and vested interests that no longer work for the people but for themselves. ”
“Populism is a style, not an ideology,” explains Jean-Yves Camus. “It can go along with any kind of ideology, whether it is left wing, or on the right, or even mainstream. ”
The presidential election taking place in a few months’ time is being seen as a test – not just for what politician France chooses – but what kind of politics.

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© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38393663
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The Definitive List Of 2016’s Best ‘Leader’ Interviews

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NewsHubThere were 50 exclusive “leader” video interviews for The Daily Caller News Foundation in 2016, and here are the stories readers shared the most on social media, as well as the most subjectively important articles.
Six Most Popular Articles Shared On Social Media
(Photo: REUTERS/Jim Young)
(Photo: REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)
Here are the 2016 most important videos that should have received even greater traffic if you ask this special correspondent:
Seven Most Important, By Totally Subjective Criteria
(Photo: REUTERS/Francois Lenoir)
(Photo: REUTERS/Craig Lassig)
(Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Barria)
Mrs. Thomas does not necessarily support or endorse the products, services or positions promoted in any advertisement contained herein, and does not have control over or receive compensation from any advertiser.

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© Source: http://dailycaller.com/2016/12/31/the-definitive-list-of-2016s-best-leader-interviews/
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Comment: 2016, Obama’s hope to Putin’s reality

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NewsHubOn Christmas, Syrian President Bashar Assad enjoyed a respite at a monastery in Saidnaya, an ancient Christian city in Syria.
He ascended the steps with his wife, Asma. In 2011, she had been profiled in Vogue as a “rose in the desert.” Some 600,000 bloody bodies later, the Assads are still trying to portray themselves as a normal couple, having driven half the country from their home.
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As Assad was touring the monastery and meeting orphans, dozens of members of Russia’s Alexandrov Ensemble army choir were killed after their plane crashed in the Black Sea on the way to Syria.
The tragedy of Syria is emblematic of 2016 in general.
The year began with the Iranian nuclear deal taking effect January 16. One of the world’s most brutal regimes, run by religious fanatics more suited to inquisitions than Twitter, were counting business contracts in Tehran as European companies rushed to sign deals.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram killed 58 people at a refugee camp on February 11, adding to the thousands it had murdered in the years before.
China deployed rockets to disputed islands. North Korea launched a missile.
In Brazil, former presidents Dilma Rousseff and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva were impeached and arrested, respectively. Islamic State struck Brussels, and terrorists hit Turkey and Pakistan and numerous other places in the world, including a Christmas market in Berlin.
But it wasn’t all bad. President Barack Obama visited Cuba, the first US president to do so for almost a century, and Aung San Suu Kyi became prime minister of Myanmar.
Rome got it’s first female mayor and Romania was considering nominating a Muslim woman as prime minister.
Columbia signed a cease-fire with the Communist FARC after a half century of war.
And Cuban president Fidel Castro died.
There’s a palpable feeling that many 20th century figures, standard-bearers and elder statesmen are passing on. Elie Wiesel, Leonard Cohen and Shimon Peres were among them – the living embodiments of history.
In their place were the new icons of iconoclasm: Donald Trump, Nigel Farage and Rodrigo Duterte. Each triumphed in a democratic contest.
In June, Duterte became president of the Philippines and the UK voted to leave the European Union. In November, the US elected Republican candidate Trump.
Each is significant in their own way. Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has said the public faces a “less predictable and certain future” that is “awash with division and fear.”
First lady Michelle Obama told Oprah, “We are feeling what not having hope feels like.” But Marine Le Pen, the National Front leader in France, doesn’t see it that way. “The people must have the opportunity to vote for the liberation from slavery and blackmail imposed by technocrats in Brussels to return sovereignty to the country.”
This was the legacy of this year. Call it “populism” or a revolt against the unelected elites by those “left behind by globalization and multiculturalism,” but this was the year that many people in the West said fear of being called racists was not enough to get them to vote against something. They were saying no to safe spaces and micro-agressions and saying they will not be scolded.
They’re not ashamed of “mansplaining” or white privilege. It was a “screw you” to what they saw as media elites.
The libertarian magazine Reason claimed the rebellious current in the West is against political correctness, which has caused a “terrifying backlash.”
That’s also the feeling in other parts of the EU where open borders and a mismanaged migration policy has led not only to Islamist extremism but the rise of the Right.
The liberal order appears to be breaking down because the freedoms provided by the Schengen Area have been taken advantage of, and citizens are saying, if politicians won’t listen to us, we can at least protest at the ballot box. What Trump and Farage promise is not some nostalgia – neither is a patrician of the old era – but a new robust nationalism based on saying no to the status quo. “No” to listening to the CIA briefings, “no” to not offending China.
In this brave new world, or nightmare, depending on who you ask, Russian President Vladimir Putin is the rational model. He knows what he wants. He’s proud of his country. His admirers see a manly man. He’s not ashamed. He supports his allies and kills his enemies.
First appointed prime minister in 1999 it took him almost two decades but his view of the future is being increasingly embraced.
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© Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Comment-2016-Obamas-hope-to-Putins-reality-477077
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Trump re-ups criticism of United Nations, saying it’s causing problems, not solving them

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NewsHubPresident-elect Donald Trump continued to berate the United Nations on Wednesday, saying the organization is causing problems rather than solving them and that it will be “a waste of time and money” if it doesn’t start living up to its potential.
Trump was asked by a reporter if he wants the United States to leave the 71-year-old institution. The president-elected stopped short of endorsing such a move but heaped additional criticism on an organization that two days earlier he said had become “ just a club for people to get together, talk and have a good time.”
[ Trump calls U. N. ‘just a club for people’ to ‘have a good time’ ]
“There is such tremendous potential, but it is not living up,” Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla. “When do you see the United Nations solving problems? They don’t. They cause problems.”
“So, if it lives up to the potential, it’s a great thing,” Trump added. “And if it doesn’t, it’s a waste of time and money.”
Trump has been harshly critical of the U. N. in the wake of last week’s adoption of a Security Council resolution condemning Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Trump had advocated for the United States to block the move.
[ Trump accuses Obama of putting up ‘roadblocks’ to a smooth transition ]
Instead, President Obama instructed U. N. Ambassador Samantha Power to abstain from voting, on the grounds that the Israeli government’s continued support for expanding Jewish settlements in Palestinian territory could undermine any prospect of eventually reaching a two-state solution to the simmering conflict.
Secretary of State John F. Kerry elaborated on the Obama administration’s position during a speech on Wednesday.

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© Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-politics/wp/2016/12/28/trump-re-ups-criticism-of-united-nations-saying-its-causing-problems-not-solving-them/
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Tyrus Wong, pioneer 'Bambi' artist, dies at 106

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NewsHubWong’s death was announced on his Facebook page.
“With heavy hearts, we announce the passing of Tyrus Wong,” the post read. “Tyrus died peacefully at his home surrounded by his loving daughters Kim, Kay and Tai-Ling. He was 106 years old. ”
Wong was born in China before immigrating to the Bay Area at age 9. From there he went to art school on a scholarship followed by accepting a low-level animation job in 1938. After hearing about Walt Disney’s “Bambi” project he put together some paintings of deer in a forest, which impressed Disney enough to use them as inspiration for the film. The animated classic isn’t all Wong is known for though, he’s also worked on film’s like “Rebel Without a Cause, “The Green Berets,” and “The Wild Bunch. ”
In 2001, Wong was named a Disney Legend, and in 2013 he had his artwork featured in the Walt Disney Family Museum. In October of this year Wong received two honors at the Asian World Film Festival. He was awarded with a lifetime achievement award on the opening day with the following day (his 106th birthday) being the screening of the documentary about him titled “Tyrus” directed by Pam Tom.
Nelson Coates, the president of the Art Directors Guild commented, “On behalf of the Art Directors Guild, I am very saddened to share news of the loss of our highly talented friend, Tyrus Wong. His work and life inspired so many of us with his passion, originality, and creativity. Deepest condolences are extended to his family and many friends at this time. ”
According to the statement, the Art Directors Guild will present a tribute to Mr. Wong at its awards ceremony on Feb 11.
Wong is survived by his daughters Kim, Kay and Tai-Ling.

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New Year's Day will be busiest for online dating in 2017, eHarmony forecasts

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NewsHubToday will be the busiest of the year for online dating, with predictions of a surge in the number of people seeking a new partner.
The number of people logging on to look for a partner is expected to double on New Year’s Day, said eHarmony, which describes itself as “relationship experts”.
The company said many people want to change their lives at the start of a new year – or decide to split up.

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© Source: http://www.independent.ie/world-news/and-finally/new-years-day-will-be-busiest-for-online-dating-in-2017-eharmony-forecasts-35333412.html
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The World Rings In 2017

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NewsHubCologne Celebrates New Year’s Eve Under Heightened Security Visitors are seen in front of the Cologne Cathedral during the light installation by the artist Philipp Geist in Cologne, where on New Year’s Eve one year ago hundreds of apparently coordinated sexual assaults were perpetrated against women, prior to New Year’s Eve celebrations on December 31, 2016 in Cologne, Germany. City authorities have deployed around 1,500 police officers – more than 10 times last year’s number, to maintain security during this year’s festivities. Security across Germany is high due also to the recent Berlin terror attack, in which suspect Anis Amri drove a truck into a Christmas market and killed 12 people. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)
Cologne Celebrates New Year’s Eve Under Heightened Security Visitors celebrate New Year’s Eve in front of Hauptbahnhof main railway station, not far from where on New Year’s Eve one year ago hundreds of apparently coordinated sexual assaults were perpetrated against women, prior to New Year’s Eve celebrations on December 31, 2016 in Cologne, Germany. City authorities have deployed around 1,500 police officers – more than 10 times last year’s number, to maintain security during this year’s festivities. Security across Germany is high due also to the recent Berlin terror attack, in which suspect Anis Amri drove a truck into a Christmas market and killed 12 people. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)
Cologne Celebrates New Year’s Eve Under Heightened Security Visitors celebrate New Year’s Eve in front of Cologne Cathedral, not far from where on New Year’s Eve one year ago hundreds of apparently coordinated sexual assaults were perpetrated against women, on January 1, 2017 in Cologne, Germany. City authorities have deployed around 1,500 police officers – more than 10 times last year’s number, to maintain security during this year’s festivities. Security across Germany is high due also to the recent Berlin terror attack, in which suspect Anis Amri drove a truck into a Christmas market and killed 12 people. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)
Cologne Celebrates New Year’s Eve Under Heightened Security Visitors celebrate New Year’s Eve in front of Hauptbahnhof main railway station not far from where on New Year’s Eve one year ago hundreds of apparently coordinated sexual assaults were perpetrated against women, on January 1, 2017 in Cologne, Germany. City authorities have deployed around 1,500 police officers – more than 10 times last year’s number, to maintain security during this year’s festivities. Security across Germany is high due also to the recent Berlin terror attack, in which suspect Anis Amri drove a truck into a Christmas market and killed 12 people. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

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Alabama DE Allen: Washington players were 'soft'

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NewsHubATLANTA — After Alabama ‘s dominating 24-7 victory against Washington on Saturday in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl, Crimson Tide defensive end Jonathan Allen called the Huskies “soft. ” That was actually an improvement over what he called them walking off the field at halftime.
“They were soft,” Allen told ESPN after the game. “No disrespect, but we could have played better. ”
Editor’s Picks Pick-six helps propel Bama past Washington
Another non-offensive score–that’s 15 on the year–pushed the Tide to a lead that Washington couldn’t overcome. Next up: the CFP title game on Jan. 9. Police officials test powder thrown at Peach Bowl
A powdery substance thrown at a Peach Bowl staffer tested negative for biological, chemical, radiological and nuclear entities.
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Another non-offensive score–that’s 15 on the year–pushed the Tide to a lead that Washington couldn’t overcome. Next up: the CFP title game on Jan. 9.
A powdery substance thrown at a Peach Bowl staffer tested negative for biological, chemical, radiological and nuclear entities.
Allen had six tackles, including a sack, as the No. 1-ranked Crimson Tide advanced to the College Football Playoff title game against either Clemson or Ohio State Jan. 9 in Tampa, Florida. Alabama held Washington to 194 yards.
At halftime, when Allen was walking off the field to the locker room, he shook his head, and said to the Crimson Tide fans in the northeast corner of the Georgia Dome “they’re sorry, they’re sorry” before entering the tunnel.
Later Saturday, Allen tweeted that he had not called the Huskies soft. He wrote: “To all the reports saying I called Washington soft that is not true I never said that, at Alabama were taught to win and lose with class… I have nothing but the up most respect for Washington and how they came out there and competed today. ”
Allen, a senior, is expected to be among the first players taken in the 2017 NFL draft.
Huskies quarterback Jake Browning acknowledged after the game Alabama’s dominating defense.
“It’s a good defense,” he said. “They can get in a quarterback’s head. I don’t think they did that necessarily but they make you get rid of the ball quickly. They have elite pass-rush guys. We did a pretty good job with that overall, but you’ve got to make a couple more plays when you’re playing a good team like that. ”
The Huskies managed only 44 yards rushing on 29 carries — an average of 1.5 yards.
“They kind of are what we thought they were, a really, really elite championship defense with real good players across the board,” Washington coach Chris Peterson said.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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© Source: http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/18385158/alabama-crimson-tide-defensive-end-jonathan-allen-calls-washington-huskies-soft
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NBCUniversal extends deadline, averting a Charter-Spectrum blackout, for now

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NewsHubMedia giant NBCUniversal has granted an extension in its carriage talks with cable television provider Charter Communications, averting a New Year’s Eve blackout of NBC-owned channels in nearly 16 million homes in the U. S. with Spectrum service.
NBCUniversal announced the extension late Saturday afternoon.
“Negotiations with Charter Spectrum for the NBCUniversal portfolio of networks have been extended,” NBCUniversal said in a statement. “We will continue to negotiate in good faith so that Charter Spectrum customers can continue to receive NBCUniversal’s valuable networks and we hope to be able to reach a deal.”
The current pact was set to expire at midnight Eastern time. The truce suggests that the two companies are making progress in their efforts to strike a comprehensive carriage deal for more than a dozen NBC channels.
NBC declined to specify the length of the extension.
NBCUniversal declared an impasse in the contract talks Thursday, but negotiations resumed Friday and continued Saturday.
Both companies appear motivated to resolve their differences and hammer out a new deal without an outage of popular TV networks during a long holiday weekend during which millions of people are at home watching television.
Such a blackout would have affected more than 1.6 million homes with Spectrum service in the Los Angeles region. Those customers would have lost coverage of KNBC-TV Channel 4, which is scheduled to televise Sunday’s high-profile NFL match-up between the Green Bay Packers and the Detroit Lions on “Sunday Night Football.”
In addition to KNBC, NBCUniversal owns the Spanish-language Telemundo network and cable channels USA, Syfy, Bravo, E!, NBC Sports, Golf Channel, MSNBC and CNBC.
Connecticut-based Charter, which declined to comment, acquired Time Warner Cable in May, and rebranded its cable TV, phone and broadband Internet service as Spectrum.
Contentious carriage contract negotiations have become more common in the media industry. Pay-TV operators face an increasingly fraught environment as more consumers cut the cable cord in favor of lower-cost alternatives, such as SlingTV, Netflix and Hulu. Distributors do not want to risk alienating more customers by continuously raising their rates.
At the same time, media companies such as NBCUniversal have been shelling out more money for programming, particularly for sports. NBC, for example, pays the NFL more than $1 billion annually for rights to televise “Sunday Night Football” and a handful of Thursday night games.
Media companies have demanded higher fees from distributors to help pay for the programming – prompting a more tenacious tug of war between the two sides.
NBC executives also have been laboring for years to raise their programming fees, which are below industry averages. When the previous round of deals was struck about six years ago, NBC was owned by General Electric Co. The NBC broadcast network was in the ratings cellar – in fourth place among the big broadcast networks. NBC had less bargaining power than rivals such as Walt Disney Co., which owns ABC, ESPN and the Disney Channel.
Philadelphia cable giant Comcast Corp. bought NBCUniversal in 2011. NBC now is a top network and has more leverage in negotiations with pay-TV companies, such as Charter.

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© Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/nation-world/national/article124025769.html
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‘M*A*S*H’ Actor William Christopher Dies At 84

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NewsHubPASADENA, Calif. (CBSNewYork/CBSLA.com) — William Christopher, the actor best known for playing Father Francis Mulcahy on the smash sitcom “M*A*S*H,” has died.
Christopher, a native of Evanston, Illinois just north of Chicago, was 84. His death was reported by his son.
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His other acting credits included “Hogan’s Heroes,” “Gomer Pyle,” “That Girl” and “Columbo.”
But it was “M*A*S*H” that made Christopher famous. He appeared in more than 200 episodes of the acclaimed series.
A Methodist off-camera, he played the kindly and gentle Catholic priest on the CBS sitcom from 1972 until 1983. He also appeared in the spinoff “After M*A*S*H” (1983-1985.) He also played Father Tobias on “Days of Our Lives” in 2012.
Christopher married his wife Barbara in 1957. They had two sons.
He reportedly died at his home in Pasadena, California.

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