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Das gab’s noch nie! | Nastassja Kinski schmeißt schon vor dem Dschungel hin

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NewsHubIch bin ein Star, ich geh hier nicht rein!
Nastassja Kinski (55) hat ihre Teilnahme am Dschungelcamp abgesagt. Die Tochter von Klaus Kinski (†65) ist damit die größte Dschungel-Memme aller Zeiten.
► BILD weiß schon jetzt, welche Trash-Kandidatin nachrückt und wie hoch Kinskis Strafe ausfallen könnte!
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-Abo

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Faraday Future will erstes Elektroauto ab 2018 ausliefern

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NewsHubLas Vegas – Die US-Autofirma Faraday Future, die Anbietern von Elektrofahrzeugen wie Tesla Konkurrenz machen will, hat ihr erstes Produktionsmodell vorgestellt. Das Auto mit der Bezeichnung FF91 soll ab 2018 ausgeliefert werden, wie Entwicklungschef Nick Sampson am Dienstag vor Beginn der Technik-Messe CES in Las Vegas ankündigte.
Faraday Future hatte schon bei der vorherigen Auflage der Technik-Show vor einem Jahr große Erwartungen geschürt – dann aber nur ein realitätsfernes Sportwagen-Konzept gezeigt.
Zuletzt war über Geldprobleme angesichts finanzieller Schwierigkeiten des wichtigsten chinesischen Investors spekuliert worden. Mit Blick darauf beteuerte Sampson, Faraday Future werde allen Skeptikern zum Trotz weitermachen. Die Firma wolle eine Führungsrolle in einer „neuen Ära der Mobilität“ übernehmen.
FF91 könne schneller von 0 auf 100 Stundenkilometer beschleunigen als jedes andere Auto weltweit, betont Faraday Future. Bei einem Live-Vergleich in der Halle in Las Vegas war das Fahrzeug 0,01 Sekunden schneller als der bisherige Rekordhalter, Teslas Model S.
Faraday Future will den FF91 mit über 30 Sensoren für autonomes Fahren ausstatten und demonstrierte eine automatische Einparkfunktion, bei der sich der Wagen selbst eine freie Stelle auf einem Parkplatz sucht. Auch andere Hersteller entwickeln solche Systeme. Einen Preis nannte Faraday Future nicht, Vorbesteller werden aber zunächst 5.000 Dollar (4.815 Euro) hinterlegen müssen. (APA, dpa)

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180 Mio. Dollar für Exxon-Chef Rex Tillerson | Donald Trumps Außenminister kassiert Mega-Abfindung

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NewsHubDonald Trumps nominierter Außenminister Rex Tillerson (64) hat mit seinem Ex-Arbeitgeber ExxonMobil ein millionenschweres Rücktrittspaket ausgehandelt.
Die astronomische Summe dient nicht zuletzt dem Zweck, Interessenkonflikte zu vermeiden. Alle finanziellen Verbindungen zu Tillerson sollen gekappt werden, teilte das Unternehmen mit.
Tillerson verzichtet laut ExxonMobil auf Bonuszahlungen von 4,1 Millionen Dollar, die ihm in den kommenden drei Jahren zugestanden hätten, sowie auf andere Bezüge.

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President Xi’s Great Chinese Soccer Dream

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NewsHubQINGYUAN, China — The 48 soccer fields of the vast Evergrande Football School in south China seem barely enough for its 2,800 students. Against a backdrop of school spires that seem modeled on Hogwarts, the young athletes swarm onto the fields nearly every day, kicking, dribbling and passing in the hope of soccer glory and riches.
“Soccer will be my career after I grow up,” Wang Kai, a gangly 13-year-old who has studied at the boarding school for over three years, said after a morning session under the supervision of a Spanish coach. “I want to be the Chinese Cristiano Ronaldo,” he said, referring to the Portuguese superstar.
Grooming the next Ronaldo or Messi has become a national project in China, where the country’s No. 1 fan, President Xi Jinping, is bent on transforming the country into a great soccer power.
It is a moonshot for China, whose teams have ranked poor to middling in recent international competition. But the effort has already unleashed a surge of spending and support for the game that has stunned fans and players around the world.
In the past two weeks, the main Chinese league has plucked foreign stars from Europe and South America with contracts reported to be worth as much as $40 million a year, the highest pay for any soccer player in the world. A Chinese club offered the real Ronaldo $105 million a year, but he declined, his agent said last week.
These giddying sums are shaking the landscape of pro soccer. Antonio Conte , the manager of England’s fabled Chelsea team, denounced the Chinese spending spree last month as a “danger for all teams in the world.”
The drive to match China’s economic ascent with success on the soccer field has become emblematic of Mr. Xi’s ambition to transform China into a great and confident power. “My biggest hope for Chinese soccer is that its teams become among the world’s best,” he announced last year.
In the last two years, the government has poured the kind of concentrated effort into soccer that it has previously devoted to winning Olympic medals in individual sports like diving and gymnastics.
It has promised to clean up and reorganize professional soccer and build a new generation of players by creating tens of thousands of soccer fields and adding soccer programs in tens of thousands of schools. The aim is to establish a flow of top players eventually capable of winning the coveted men’s World Cup and returning the women’s team to its former glory.
That effort has emboldened Chinese clubs to spend lavishly. As well as paying tens of millions for foreign players, Chinese team owners have spent hundreds of millions of dollars buying into European clubs, hoping to tap their coaching and marketing expertise.
“Current spending has created massive expectations,” said Simon Chadwick , a professor of sports enterprise at the University of Salford in Britain. “Spending big on players is also about acquiring heroes and icons.”
But if soccer distills Mr. Xi’s national ambitions, it also illustrates how his plans could falter, as they have in other arenas, in a muddle of rushed and distorted enforcement, especially at the local level. There has been resistance by parents, worried about their children taking precious time away from academics, as well as fear that splurging on foreign stars diverts money and attention from fostering homegrown talent.
The pitfalls in fixing soccer, it turns out, are a bit like those in fixing the economy, with a desire for quick, flashy success putting long-term goals at risk.
People’s Daily, the main newspaper of the Communist Party, warned last month of a “bubble” of reckless spending in Chinese professional soccer that could burst and badly damage the sport. Too many investors had feverish expectations, while some clubs, officials and schools were only going through the motions of developing young players, the newspaper said.
“One of the biggest problems is short-termism,” said Cameron Wilson, a Scottish resident of Shanghai who edits Wild East Football , a website that follows the sport in China. “There are these great plans and ideas. But when it gets down to the grass-roots level in the provinces, it’s like people doing their own thing.”
China’s passionate soccer fans would be thrilled to have competitive national teams instead of the lackluster ones they have now. The national men’s team recently placed 83rd in FIFA rankings , just ahead of the Faroe Islands, a remote outcrop of Denmark with fewer than 50,000 inhabitants, and it is unlikely to win a spot in the 2018 World Cup.
The women’s team — the pride of Chinese soccer in past decades — has stumbled. They were runners-up for the Women’s World Cup in 1999 but slipped to 13th in the latest rankings.
“The national team is a joke,” said Xu Yun, 16, who had come to Workers’ Stadium in Beijing to watch his favorite Beijing team clobber a listless opponent from Henan Province. “I think it will need decades to get it right. It’s not just a question of spending money, it’s attitude.”
For years, the domestic professional game was riddled with corruption , brazen even by China’s hard-boiled standards. Since match-fixing revelations grew into a national scandal in 2009, the worst cheating has been cleaned up. “It still exists,” Mr. Wilson said. “Just not so blatantly.”
For Mr. Xi, soccer has been a passion since childhood.
His trips abroad have included photographs with David Beckham and other soccer celebrities. In Ireland in 2012, he famously had an enthusiastic but seemingly rusty go at kicking a ball.
In September, he revisited his old school in Beijing, where he learned to kick and became a fan of the game, according to memoirs of his former teacher.
“Look how healthy I am,” Mr. Xi told young soccer players at the school. “I laid the basis for that through sports when I was young.”
Private investors have piled into professional soccer, encouraged by Mr. Xi’s backing for the game and apparently eager to curry favor with his government.
In the main pro trading season last year, the 16 Chinese Super League teams spent about $300 million hiring away promising foreign players, outstripping player spending by the English Premier League by nearly $120 million, according to FIFA TMS , a player transfer data company. Prices in 2017 are likely to go even higher.
But Mr. Xi’s focus is on the long game and the next generation of players. His plan calls for 50,000 schools to have a strong emphasis on soccer by 2025, a leap from 5,000 in 2015. The number of soccer fields across the country will grow to over 70,000 by the end of 2020, from under 11,000. By then, the plan says, 50 million Chinese, including 30 million students, will regularly play soccer.
“Now principals at every school are paying quite a bit more attention to soccer,” said Dai Wei, the athletic director at Mr. Xi’s old school, the Bayi School. “That was unthinkable before.”
Yet there is deep cultural resistance, even at Bayi.
Some parents discourage their children from committing time to sports, Mr. Dai said, because they have so much homework and face stiff competition on academic exams.
While China has excelled at individual sports that demand intense discipline from an early age, the country has not done as well at fostering group sports, where skills like teamwork and improvisation count as much as personal virtuosity.
The privately run Evergrande school, the world’s biggest soccer boarding school, says its formula of intense training combined with a solid education could show the way for developing young players.
“As more soccer schools are built, there’ll be more and more kids playing, and the stars will multiply, too,” said Liu Jiangnan, the principal of the school, which opened in 2012. “I’d guess that in seven or eight years, half the members of the Chinese national squad will come from this school.”
Drawn by such hopes, parents pay up to about $8,700 a year to send children here, where 24 Spanish coaches oversee training. Students spend 90 minutes a day on drills and also play on weekends. Promising players get scholarships, and children from poorer families get discounts, school officials said.
But even here, the children come to the game later than their European and South American counterparts, and they often lack solid grounding in teamwork and tactics, said Sergio Zarco Diaz, a Spanish coach.
“The kids are getting better, year by year,” he said hopefully.
But the Evergrande approach is too expensive to be widely copied.
Some schools, facing a shortage of coaches and space for fields, have devised their own drills, like soccer gymnastics , in which children stand in lines tossing a ball up, down and around. It may impress visiting officials , but it is scant preparation for the free flow of the game, said Zhang Lu, a widely respected soccer commentator.
“Chinese soccer has failed before through rushing for instant success,” Mr. Zhang said in an interview in Beijing, recalling previous failed efforts to build up the game in the 1980s and 1990s. “The problem is that everyone’s thinking is still deeply set in traditional ideas. Everyone thinks soccer is just about getting results, competition, training, creating stars.”
Mr. Zhang has instead been encouraging schools to focus on fun and broad participation. That approach gives more children a break from the monotony of the classroom and will eventually bring out more future champions than an elitist, top-down approach, he argues.
Some schools are trying his way. On a recent afternoon, the smog that often covers Beijing lifted and the children of Caoqiao Elementary School rushed onto the fields, shouting and squealing with delight.
“This morning soccer had been be canceled because of the smog,” said the principal, Lin Yanling. “But at midday I notified the kids that it was back on, and they all went crazy with relief.”

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© Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/04/world/asia/china-soccer-xi-jinping.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
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'Thousands' of pilgrims return to China before Dalai Lama event

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NewsHubThousands of mostly Tibetan pilgrims who travelled to India for a rare Buddhist ceremony held by the Dalai Lama have returned to China under pressure from Beijing, organisers said Wednesday.
The 81-year-old Tibetan spiritual leader will this month preside over the Kalachakra teachings at Bodhgaya in eastern India, where the Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment more than 2,000 years ago.
Tens of thousands of pilgrims from all over the world are expected to attend the event, which is held only once every few years.
But as preparations got under way on Wednesday, the chairman of the organising committee Karma Gelek Yuthok said almost 7,000 pilgrims had returned to China, citing pressure from authorities there.
„It is unfortunate, they have returned after Chinese pressure. They are nearly 7,000,“ he told journalists in Bodhgaya.
„They planned to end their pilgrimage in Bodhgaya (but) just because of this they have gone back. “
Yuthok, who is a member of the Tibetan government-in-exile based in the north Indian town of Dharamsala, said some pilgrims had reported receiving threats to relatives in China if they did not return.
In 2012 China detained hundreds of Tibetans after they returned from the Kalachakra in Bodhgaya.
Last month Radio Free Asia reported that many Tibetan pilgrims who travelled to Dharamsala ahead of the Kalachakra had been ordered to return home before the end of the year, preventing them from heading on to Bodhgaya.
It said the Dalai Lama had held a special audience for them in Dharamsala last month.
The Chinese embassy in Delhi declined to comment when contacted by AFP.
The Dalai Lama fled to India after a failed uprising in 1959 but is still deeply revered by many Tibetans.
Beijing says its troops „peacefully liberated“ Tibet in 1951 and accuses the Nobel Peace laureate of seeking Tibetan independence through „spiritual terrorism“.
He says he merely wants greater autonomy for his homeland, where many accuse the central government of religious repression and eroding the Tibetan culture.
The Kalachakra opened in Bodhgaya on Tuesday, although the main teaching section will only begin next week.
A spokesman for the Indian government said it was unaware of the issue.

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Chinese official shoots 2 cadres, then kills himself

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NewsHubBEIJING (AP) — An official allegedly shot and injured two leaders of a city in southwestern China on Wednesday as the pair held a meeting in a conference center, and later killed himself, local authorities said.
The suspect entered the venue where the Communist Party chief and mayor of Panzhihua city in Sichuan province were meeting and shot continuously before running off, according to a statement from the city’s information office.
The statement said that the suspect, identified as the city’s land and resources chief, Chen Zhongshu, was found dead on a basement floor in the conference center. It said he had committed suicide. The statement gave no possible motive for the attack.
The injuries of the city’s party chief, Zhang Yan, and mayor, Li Jianqin, were not life-threatening, the statement said.
Shootings are rare in China, where gun ownership is heavily regulated and private ownership of firearms is generally illegal.
Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Man Knifes 11 Kindergarten Kids In China

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NewsHubA knife-wielding man entered a kindergarten in China and attacked 11 children Wednesday, Chinese media revealed.
The middle-aged man climbed over the wall around 3:30 in the afternoon and began stabbing children at a kindergarten in Pingxiang, Guangxi Province. The motives behind the attack are currently unknown.
None of the children sustained life-threatening injuries during the course of the attack.
The suspect is in police custody and an investigation is underway.
Such attacks are surprisingly common in China.
A man stabbed 10 Chinese children at a school in Hainan Province before taking his own life in February of 2016. Two years earlier, a man stabbed three elementary school kids before jumping off a building, and in 2012, a man stabbed 23 children and an elderly woman in a village in Henan Province.
In one of the worst cases, three serious attacks occurred in one month in 2010. In one incident, a man killed eight and wounded several others. In another, the attacker stabbed 31 people, including 28 students. In the final attack, the man struck children with a hammer causing severe injuries before setting himself on fire.
China has since stepped up security at its schools, but incidents like the one Wednesday continue to occur.
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'Passengers' Secures Last-Minute China Release Date

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NewsHub9:09 PM PST 1/3/2017
by
Patrick Brzeski
Sony’s sci-fi romance Passengers finally has a confirmed release date in China, the world’s no. 2 movie market.
The film, which stars Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt, will open in the Middle Kingdom on Friday, Jan. 13 — just one week after the China release of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
The confirmed date came uncommonly late. China usually announces official release dates for Hollywood studio titles at least four to six weeks in advance. But Sony was confident enough in eventually landing a January date that it sent Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt to Beijing for a promotional event on Dec. 17.
Sony will be hoping that China can help make up for the film’s less-than-stellar performance stateside, where it has earned $66.2 million. Overseas, the film’s total stands at $56.8 million. It had a production budget of $110 million to $120 million after tax incentives and rebates. Critics were not kind.
Passengers has a strong local backer in Beijing, however, thanks to a strategic marketing partnership Sony signed in September with Chinese entertainment and real estate conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, which controls an estimated 16 percent of Chinese movie screens.
Sony had an especially tough 2016 in China, where it was the weakest earner of the six Hollywood studios, with none of its titles cracking the country’s list of top 50 releases.

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The Consumer Electronics Show opens Thursday in Las Vegas

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NewsHubThe Consumer Electronics Show was first time organized 50 years ago, in New York, with 117 exhibitors and 17,500 visitors, at that time as a trade show for transistor radios and black-and-white television. But the interest increased for many industries. More than 170,000 people are expected to attend CES 2017 in Las Vegas this week.
There are about 3,800 exhibitors on over 2.5 million square feet. CES 2017 will showcase technology to all attendees from Thursday through Sunday. About 138 automotive-related companies will be at the show, most of them offering test drive. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV plans to reveal a new vehicle at CES this year. Autonomous driving becomes a trend and artificial intelligence developers for autos will be there to expose the latest news. The Web-connected gadgets have become a central part of the show in the last years and now it will be the same. Cujo LLC and eBlocker each are scheduled to promote devices that block hackers and provide privacy to people using devices on a home-internet connection. Health related products made using advanced research and special technologies will be also presented on the show. Humanoid robots with voice command, drones, VR devices, special displays. hardware and software for special needs are prepared to meet consumers at CES.

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The Latest: Obama argues for preserving health care law

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NewsHubThe Latest on Congress (all times EST):
10:30 a.m.
Democrats say President Barack Obama is making the case for keeping his health care law.
Obama made a rare trip to the Capitol on Wednesday to meet with House and Senate Democrats.
New York Rep. Louise Slaughter says Obama focused on how well the law is working, and on how many letters he’s gotten in support of it.
She calls it „a very nostalgic speech. “
Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin says Obama’s message is that the individual parts of the law are popular, and that repealing it would affect all Americans.
„We need to personalize this,“ Cardin says — echoing the president.
Republicans promise to move quickly to repeal the law, but they’ve failed to coalesce around a replacement.

10 a.m.
Once he’s sworn in, President-elect Donald Trump will move swiftly to undo Democratic President Barack Obama’s policies.
That’s the message from Vice President-elect Mike Pence to House Republicans at a Capitol Hill strategy session Wednesday.
On Jan. 20, Trump will use his power through executive orders to target the health care law and other policies.
New York Rep. Chris Collins and Missouri Rep. Ann Wagner specifically mentioned health care, though it’s unclear what changes could be made through executive order on the nearly 7-year-old law.
Texas Rep. Blake Farenthold says Pence told the GOP: „What can be done with a pen and a phone can be undone with a pen and a phone. “

9:40 a.m.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is holding a closed-door briefing Thursday for members to learn more about the Obama administration’s response to suspected Russian interference in the 2016 election and harassment of U. S. diplomats.
Also, U. S. intelligence officials, including national intelligence director James Clapper, are set to testify Thursday in an open session by the Senate Armed Services Committee.
President Barack Obama struck back at Moscow last week with a set of punishments targeting Russia’s leading spy agencies that the U. S. has accused of meddling in the presidential campaign. The U. S. also kicked out 35 Russian diplomats in response to what the White House says has been Russia’s harassment of American envoys.

9:30 a.m.
President Barack Obama is at the Capitol to give congressional Democrats advice on how to combat the Republican drive to dismantle his health care overhaul.
Vice President-elect Mike Pence is meeting with GOP lawmakers to discuss the best way to send Obama’s cherished law to its graveyard and replace it with — well, something.
The separate strategy sessions come on the second day of the new GOP-led Congress.
In 16 days, Republican Donald Trump replaces Obama at the White House, putting the party’s longtime goal of annulling much of the 2010 health care overhaul within reach.

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