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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Move over,
"Avatar," there's a new force in town. In just 20 days in theaters,
"Star Wars: The Force Awakens" has unseated the James Cameron pic as the
No. 1 North American movie of all time.
(1 of 2) Peter Mayhew as Chewbacca and Harrison Ford as Han Solo in "Star Wars: The Force Awakens." (Film Frame/Lucasfilm via AP)
According to Disney, J.J. Abrams' "Star Wars"
earned enough on Wednesday to pass "Avatar's" $760.5 million lifetime
gross. As of Tuesday, the film was just shy of the record at $758.2
million. The worldwide record still belongs to "Avatar," though, and
that may continue. "The Force Awakens" has earned $1.6 billion to date,
as compared to "Avatar's" $2.8 billion.
MASHIKI, Japan (AP) — The
latest on the earthquakes in Japan (all times local): 9:50 p.m. Japanese
media say the death toll from the two earthquakes in southern Japan has
risen to 39. Kyodo News agency, citing officials in Kumamoto
prefecture, says 30 people died in the magnitude-7.3 quake that struck
early Saturday morning. The other victims died in the magnitude-6.5
quake on Thursday night.
(1 of 11)
The stonewall of Kumamoto Castle is seen damaged by earthquakes in
Kumamoto city, Japan, Saturday, April 16, 2016. Powerful earthquakes
shook southwestern Japan, trapping many others beneath flattened homes
and sending thousands of residents to seek refuge in gymnasiums and
hotel lobbies. (Kyodo News via AP) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT
Officials had said earlier Saturday that 10 had
died in Thursday's quake and 22 in Saturday's. Kyodo says four people
remain missing in Minamiaso. The village near Mount Aso volcano appears
to have been the hardest hit by the second earthquake.
7:05 p.m.
Hundreds of people have lined up for
rations at shelters before nightfall, bracing for rainfall and strong
winds that may set off more devastating mudslides in Japan's
earthquake-struck southern region.
Local stores quickly ran out of stock
and shuttered their doors Saturday, and people said they were worried
about running out of food.
Ayuko Sakamoto, who was among those in
line for the food, said: "I could hear the noise of all my dishes come
crashing down, the rattling, and I was shocked and sad, now I've lost
all my dishes."
Elsewhere on the southwestern island
of Kyushu, the military also cooked rice and soup outdoors for those who
had evacuated or were not able to cook in their homes.
Back-to-back deadly earthquakes on
successive nights near the city of Kumamoto toppled buildings, triggered
landslides and killed at least 32 people.
4 p.m.
Among the buildings destroyed in
Japan's twin earthquakes are parts of the historic Aso Shrine, a
picturesque complex with a number of buildings with curved tiled roofs,
some of which were flattened on the ground.
A towering gate, known as the "cherry
blossom gate" because of its grandeur especially during spring, when
cherry trees bloom, had collapsed and is totally damaged.
The shrine, more than 1,700 years old,
is designated an "important cultural property" by the Japanese
government, and has been a popular tourist spot in Kyushu.
3:30 p.m.
One massive landslide from Japan's
deadly earthquakes tore open a mountainside in Minamiaso village in
Kunamato Prefecture all the way from the top to a highway below,
destroying a key bridge that could cut off food and other relief
transport to the worst hit area.
A trail of brown earth streamed down the hillside like a muddy river.
Another landslide gnawed at a highway,
collapsing a house that fell down a ravine and smashed at the bottom.
In another part of the village, houses were left hanging precariously at
the edge of a huge hole cut open in the earth.
2:50 p.m.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has
expressed concerns about secondary disasters as the weather forecast
for southwestern Kyushu is showing rain and strong winds later Saturday.
Rainfall can set off mudslides because the soil has already been loosened by quake jitters.
Abe say "daytime today is the big test," for rescue efforts.
Landslides have already cut off roads and destroyed bridges, imperiling rescue and relief efforts.
At least 29 people have been confirmed
dead in two powerful earthquakes that struck southern Kyushu island on
Thursday evening and early Saturday, and many more are trapped
underneath fallen homes.
12:40 p.m.
Japanese government spokesman
Yoshihide Suga says 1,500 people have been injured, 80 of them
seriously, in twin earthquakes on southern Kyushu island.
Suga did not mention the death toll, which local officials put at 29, saying the numbers are likely to rise.
He says the military will be boosted
to 20,000 for rescue efforts. Police and firefighters are also being
ordered to the southwestern region.
In a nationally televised news conference, Suga asked people not to panic.
He says: "Please let's help each other and stay calm."
12:30 p.m.
Japanese media are reporting the
eruption of Mount Aso, the largest active volcano in Japan located on
Kyushu island where twin earthquakes killed at least 29 people, buried
houses and set off landslides.
That's the first eruption in a month.
Smoke is rising about 100 meters (328 feet) in the air, but no damage has been reported.
It's not immediately clear if there's a link the seismic activity and the eruption.
Aso is 1,592 meters (5,223 feet) high
and consists of five peaks. It's about 1 ½ hour drive from Kumamoto
Prefecture, the epicenter of the quakes.
Noon
A Japanese official says the death toll in the second earthquake to hit southern Kyushu island early Saturday has risen to 19.
That's in addition to 10 people killed in Thursday's magnitude-6.5 quake.
10:10 a.m.
A fresh earthquake measuring 5.4 has
hit southern Kyushu island on Saturday morning, following a
7.3-magnitude quake that killed at least six people overnight.
Kumamoto Prefectural official Tomoyuki
Tanaka says the death toll is still unclear, with the fire department
reporting a higher number of at least seven.
More than 400 people are reported injured.
Japanese TV news footage showed collapsed and flattened houses, and said people are trapped in buildings.
The Japan Meteorological Agency gave a
preliminary reading of magnitude-7.3 for the temblor that struck early
Saturday. A magnitude-6.5 quake struck late Thursday, killing 10 people.
Aftershocks are rattling various areas in Kyushu, one of Japan's main
four islands.
9:50 a.m.
Police in southern Japan say the second earthquake that struck the same region in 24 hours has killed at least six people.
The magnitude-7.3 quake shook the
Kumamoto region at 1:25 a.m. Saturday. On Thursday night, the area was
hit by a magnitude-6.5 quake that left 10 dead and more than 800
injured.
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The
spotlight was on Sean Parker and the Screening Room at CinemaCon in Las
Vegas this past week, but while the nation's theater owners and studio
executives mulled the implications of the proposed at-home viewing
service, Parker played coy.
(1 of 3)
Alexandra Parker, left, and Sean Parker arrive at Sean Parker and the
Parker Foundation's Gala Celebrating a Milestone in Medical Research on
Wednesday, April 13, 2016, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Rich
Fury/Invision/AP)
When The Associated Press asked Parker about his
latest venture at the Wednesday launch of the Parker Institute for
Cancer Immunotherapy in Los Angeles, the Napster co-founder said with a
laugh: "I don't even know what that is."
His glibness about the revolutionary service, which
would stream first-run films to the home at $50 a pop, thus blowing up
Hollywood's traditional model of theatrical exclusivity, came at an
interesting time. It was the middle of CinemaCon, where the overriding
message was that Hollywood is still very committed to the idea of the
theatrical experience.
CinemaCon, a gathering of theater owners,
exhibitors and industry types whose livelihoods depend on box office,
has always been a brazen celebration of the movie theater. During the
week-long conference each year, major studios typically trot out big
stars and exclusive footage of upcoming films, and technology providers
roll out their latest and greatest innovations in sound, screen and
immersive experiences.
The death of the cinema comes up every so often,
too, whether it's television, VHS, smart phones or streaming services.
This year, Screening Room was the threat du jour. Most studio heads and
filmmakers at CinemaCon spoke about the Screening Room in broad, vaguely
hostile strokes. "Avatar" director James Cameron was one of the few to
address the initiative by name.
"Regardless of what the folks associated with the
Screening Room say, I think it's absolutely essential for movies to be
offered exclusively in theaters upon initial release," Cameron said on
Thursday. "My producing partner Jon Landau and I are committed to the
sanctity of the in-theater experience. And that's creatively and from a
business standpoint."
Yet most chose to address the proposal indirectly,
like Warner Bros. Chairman and CEO Kevin Tsujihara, who told exhibitors
"we are not going to let a third party or middle man come between us."
"When there are new technologies," he added, "we will explore them with
each of you. We know the status quo is not an option."
"Hangover" director Todd Phillips spoke more
sentimentally about the preservation of theatrical exclusivity. "Why are
we in such a rush to turn movies into television? It doesn't make sense
to me. Movies are special," Phillips said. "We need to do everything we
can to protect that part of the experience."
Even execs for Amazon Studios, an emerging producer
of digital content and a newcomer at the conference this year, stressed
that traditional theatrical releases were planned for most of their
feature-length films.
But there was hardly a consensus at CinemaCon, even
among some of cinema's most influential voices. "Star Wars: The Force
Awakens" director J.J. Abrams and veteran producer Frank Marshall
("Jurassic World," ''Indiana Jones") both urged theater owners to be
open minded about the technology.
Back in Los Angeles, at Parker's event Wednesday,
"Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson, a Screening Room backer,
stressed that the service is not meant to detract people from going to
theaters, but to add audiences.
"The idea of screening room is to try to make
movies exist for the people who don't go to the cinema," Jackson said.
"If we can try to get that added to the box office of films, that means
the films are more successful, which means more films get made and a
wider variety of films get made."
"Theater owners should not be concerned and I don't
think filmmakers should be," he added. "Honestly, I've kicked the tires
of this for so long now, trying to find any fault in it, and I think
it's sound. I think it's going to be a very, very positive thing for the
industry in a time that we need it."
The big question now is whether or not these two
factions will ever see eye-to-eye, and many at CinemaCon were already
off-put by the idea of an outsider's business proposal disrupting their
industry.
"More sophisticated window modeling may be needed
for the growing success of a modern movie industry," said John Fithian,
Chairman and CEO of the National Association of Theater Owners. "But
those models will be developed by distributors and exhibitors in
company-to-company discussions."
CHICAGO (AP) — A 76-year-old
man who a prosecutor says was wrongly convicted in the 1957 killing of
an Illinois schoolgirl was released Friday shortly after a judge vacated
his conviction, meaning one of the oldest cold cases to be tried in
U.S. history has officially gone cold again.
(1 of 8)
Jack McCullough, left, smiles from the backseat of his stepdaughter
Janey O'Connor's rental car after he was released from the DeKalb County
Jail in Sycamore, Ill., Friday, April 15, 2016. An Illinois judge
vacated the conviction of the 76-year-old man in a 1957 killing and
ordered his immediate release from prison Friday, meaning that one of
the oldest cold cases to be tried in U.S. history has officially gone
cold again. (Danielle Guerra/Daily Chronicle via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT;
CHICAGO TRIBUNE OUT
Jack McCullough was sentenced to life in prison in
2012 in the death of 7-year-old Maria Ridulph in Sycamore, about 70
miles west of Chicago. In a review of documents last year, a prosecutor
found evidence that supported the former policeman's long-held alibi
that he had been 40 miles away in Rockford at the time of Maria's
disappearance.
Judge William P. Brady said Friday that Maria's
abduction and slaying had haunted the small town of Sycamore for
decades, and that he had also lost sleep over the case. "I'm not blind
to the importance of this proceeding to many people," he said, minutes
before ordering McCullough's release.
McCullough, in handcuffs, appeared shaken by the
decision, rocking back and forth, then taking a deep breath. Family
members behind him hugged and cried. Moments later, McCullough, of
Washington state, looked back, winked and smiled broadly.
On the other side of the room, Maria's brother and
sister displayed little emotion. Hours later, McCullough's stepdaughter,
Janey O'Connor, drove him from a jail near the courthouse. McCullough,
wearing street clothes, grinned at reporters from the back seat. His
request for a first meal out of prison, she said in a phone interview
later, was for pepperoni pizza.
O'Connor said she'd been convinced of her
stepfather's innocence from the start. "Jack was just a normal person
doing his grandpa thing, and this happened to him," she said. She said
he told her he's looking forward to shopping for his children and
grandchildren, because he has "a lot of birthdays and Christmases to
catch up on." She said he has been studying Japanese while in prison and
wants to travel to Japan.
DeKalb County State's Attorney Richard Schmack, who
pushed hard for McCullough's release, told Brady earlier that his
office wouldn't retry McCullough if a retrial was ordered. He said
prosecutors were fully convinced of McCullough's innocence.
Schmack, elected as state's attorney as
McCullough's 2012 trial was coming to an end, filed a scathing report
with the court last month. He had conducted a six-month review of
evidence, including newly discovered phone records, and his report
picked the case apart, point by point.
He said in an email that he was reviewing the
judge's ruling and would not be commenting Friday. Maria's brother,
70-year-old Charles Ridulph, said at the hearing that he would continue
to push for a special prosecutor to take over the case. Brady will
consider that motion April 22.
McCullough, who was living in the Seattle area when
he was arrested, was released on a recognizance bond and isn't allowed
to leave Illinois until the state attorney announces a formal decision
on a retrial.
Maria's disappearance made headlines nationwide in
the 1950s, when reports of child abductions were rare. She had been
playing outside in the snow with a friend on Dec. 3, 1957, when a young
man approached, introduced himself as "Johnny" and offered them
piggyback rides. Maria's friend dashed home to grab mittens, and when
she came back, Maria and the man were gone.
Forest hikers found her remains five months later.
At his trial four years ago, prosecutors said McCullough was the man who
called himself Johnny in 1957, noting that he went by the name John
Tessier in his youth. They said McCullough, then 18, dragged Maria away,
choked and stabbed her to death.
McCullough has maintained his innocence throughout,
saying he had "an iron-clad alibi" that he had been in Rockford,
attempting to enlist with the U.S. Air Force at a military recruiting
station, on the night Maria disappeared.
New phone records, Schmack said, helped to prove
McCullough had made a collect call to his parents at 6:57 p.m. from a
phone booth in downtown Rockford, which is 40 miles northwest of where
Maria was abducted between 6:45 p.m. and 6:55 p.m.
Schmack reviewed police reports and hundreds of
other documents, which he said had been improperly barred at trial and
contained "a wealth of information pointing to McCullough's innocence,
and absolutely nothing showing guilt."
He also noted that Maria's friend had identified
McCullough as the killer five decades later from an array of six
photographs; McCullough's picture stood out, partially because everyone
but him wore suitcoats and their photos were professional yearbook
photos.
McCullough, who was born in Belfast, Ireland, came
to the U.S. with his mother in 1946 and settled in Sycamore, where he
lived until he was 18, he said in a 2011 interview after his arrest. He
said the town had the wholesome feel of the fictional town in the
television show "Happy Days." He served four years in the Air Force and
10 years in the Army, including a stint in Vietnam.
There are plenty of mysteries in Star Wars: The Force Awakens
and one of them involved iconic droid C-3PO. In case you didn’t notice,
C-3PO had a red left arm instead of his usual gold-colored arm. This
mysterious change was totally unexplained in the movie itself and we’ve
never had any answer for it… until now. Per iO9, the first issue of the new Marvel comic Star Wars: C-3PO #1offers details about how C-3PO got his not-so-shiny new red arm. Spoilers obviously follow below.
10 secrets you missed while watching ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’
The story starts off when C-3PO and a group of allied droids land on
an unidentified planet to rescue Admiral Ackbar, who has been kidnapped
by the First Order. As you might have guessed with anything involving
Admiral Ackbar, the droids’ plan to rescue him is… well… “It’s a trap!”
In the ensuing fights with a number of different monsters on the
planet, all of C-3PO’s droid companions are killed and C-3PO himself has
his arm ripped off. The final droid to die in his crew just happened to
have a red arm that C-3PO attached to his own body and decided to keep
there as a reminder of his fellow droids’ sacrifices.
Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour stopped by Late Night with Seth Meyers to
chat about her experience at Kanye West’s massive fashion show/record
release party back in February — which involved her sitting alone for a
large amount of time while waiting for the Kardashians to arrive, before
getting lost in the basement of Madison Square Garden and crying by
herself.
Ah, being fashion’s most powerful person is such sweet sorrow
The Nigerian Security and Civil Defence
Corps in Bayelsa says it has destroyed more than 400 illegal mini
refineries operated by oil thieves in state.
The NSCDC Commandant, Mr. Desmond Agu, told the News Agency of Nigeria in Yenagoa that the illegal refineries were destroyed between January and March.
Agu said that the command now had a
gunboat to fortify its operational capacity and had intensified patrols
in the coastal settlements and waterways in the state.
He said that the intensified patrols by
the command had led to the arrest of ex-militant leader and his gang,
whom he said, were being prosecuted.
Agu said that the corps had deployed its
personnel to provide security to critical national assets and oil
facilities across the state.
He said, “We are on ground to ensure safety and protection of vital oil infrastructure and property within the command.
“The command is determined to deal with the oil thieves and end their illegal businesses.
“We have made some arrests concerning
the recent cases of vandalism at Agip’s oil fields in Southern Ijaw
Local Government Area of the state.”
He added, “The corps recovered the
bodies of the three oil workers that died in the explosion in one of the
fields on March 26. We have handed over the bodies to Agip.
“The case has also been handed over to
the Bayelsa State Police Command because it involves death and falls
outside our mandate.”
The Director-General, National Oil
Spills Detection and Response Agency, Dr. Peter Idabor, had earlier
attributed the death of the oil workers to poor safety procedures at the
oil field.
Meanwhile, officials of Nigeria Agip Oil
Company in Bayelsa and its parent company, Eni, have declined comment
on the Easter Sunday’s explosion.
Media Relations Manager, Eni , Mr.
Fillippo Cotalini, has yet to respond to the request sent to him through
e-mail for a reaction on the explosion.