World
Barbara Walters, news pioneer and ‘The View’ creator, dies
NEW YORK (AP) — Barbara Walters, the intrepid interviewer, anchor and program host who led the way in which as the primary lady to turn into a TV information celebrity throughout a community profession outstanding for its period and selection, has died. She was 93.
Walters’ demise was introduced by ABC on air Friday night time.
“Barbara Walters handed away peacefully in her dwelling surrounded by family members. She lived her life with no regrets. She was a trailblazer not just for feminine journalists, however for all girls,” her publicist Cindi Berger additionally mentioned in an announcement.
An ABC spokesperson didn’t have a direct remark Friday night time past sharing an announcement from Bob Iger, the CEO of The Walt Disney Firm, which owns ABC.
Throughout practically 4 a long time at ABC, and earlier than that at NBC, Walters’ unique interviews with rulers, royalty and entertainers introduced her superstar standing that ranked with theirs, whereas putting her on the forefront of the pattern in broadcast journalism that made stars of TV reporters and introduced information applications into the race for increased rankings.
Walters made headlines in 1976 as the primary feminine community information anchor, with an unprecedented $1 million annual wage that drew gasps. Her drive was legendary as she competed — not simply with rival networks, however with colleagues at her personal community — for every massive “get” in a world jammed with increasingly interviewers, together with feminine journalists who adopted the path she blazed.
“I by no means anticipated this!” Walters mentioned in 2004, taking measure of her success. “I all the time thought I’d be a author for tv. I by no means even thought I’d be in entrance of a digicam.”
However she was a pure on digicam, particularly when plying notables with questions.
“I’m not afraid after I’m interviewing, I’ve no worry!” Walters informed The Related Press in 2008.
In a voice that by no means misplaced its hint of her native Boston accent or its substitution of Ws-for-Rs, Walters lobbed blunt and generally giddy questions at every topic, usually sugarcoating them with a hushed, reverential supply.
“Offscreen, do you such as you?” she as soon as requested actor John Wayne, whereas Woman Chook Johnson was requested whether or not she was jealous of her late husband’s fame as a girls’ man.
Late in her profession, in 1997, she gave infotainment a brand new twist with “The View,” a reside ABC weekday kaffee klatsch with an all-female panel for whom any matter was on the desk and who welcomed friends starting from world leaders to teen idols. A aspect enterprise and surprising hit, Walters thought of “The View” the “dessert” of her profession.
In Might 2014, she taped her closing episode of “The View” amid a lot ceremony and a gathering of scores of luminaries to finish a five-decade profession in tv (though she continued to make occasional TV appearances after that). Throughout a industrial break, a throng of TV newswomen she had paved the way in which for — together with Diane Sawyer, Katie Couric, Robin Roberts and Connie Chung — posed along with her for a bunch portrait.
“I’ve to recollect this on the dangerous days,” Walters mentioned quietly, “as a result of that is the perfect.”
Her profession started with no such indicators of splendor.
In 1961 NBC employed her for a short-term writing challenge on the “Right now” present. Shortly after that, what was seen because the token lady’s slot among the many employees’s eight writers opened, and Walters bought the job. Then she started to make occasional on-air appearances with offbeat tales akin to “A Day within the Lifetime of a Nun” or the tribulations of a Playboy bunny. For the latter, she donned bunny ears and excessive heels to work on the Playboy Membership.
As she appeared extra often, she was spared the title of “Right now” Lady that had been hooked up to her token feminine predecessors. However she needed to pay her dues, generally sprinting throughout the “Right now” set between interviews to do pet food commercials.
She had the primary interview with Rose Kennedy after the assassination of her son, Robert, in addition to with Princess Grace of Monaco, President Richard Nixon and plenty of others. She traveled to India with Jacqueline Kennedy, to China with Nixon and to Iran to cowl the shah’s gala celebration. However she confronted a setback in 1971 with the arrival of a brand new host, Frank McGee. Though they might share the desk, he insisted she look forward to him to ask three questions earlier than she may open her mouth throughout joint interviews with “highly effective individuals.”
Sensing better freedom and alternatives awaited her outdoors the studio, she hit the highway and produced extra unique interviews for this system, together with Nixon chief of employees H.R. Haldeman.
By 1976, she had been granted the title of “Right now” co-host and was incomes $700,000 a 12 months. However when ABC signed her to a $5 million, five-year contract, the wage determine branded her “the million-dollar child.”
Reviews of her deal failed to notice that her job duties could be cut up between the community’s leisure division (for which she was anticipated to do interview specials) and ABC Information, then mired in third place. In the meantime, Harry Reasoner, her seasoned “ABC Night Information” co-anchor, was mentioned to resent her excessive wage and superstar orientation.
“Harry didn’t need a companion,” Walters summed up. “Though he was terrible to me, I don’t assume he disliked me.”
It wasn’t simply the shaky relationship along with her co-anchor that introduced Walters issues.
Comic Gilda Radner satirized her on the brand new “Saturday Evening Stay” as a rhotacistic commentator named “Baba Wawa.” And after her interview with a newly elected President Jimmy Carter through which Walters informed Carter “be smart with us,” CBS correspondent Morley Safer publicly derided her as “the primary feminine pope blessing the brand new cardinal.”
It was a interval that appeared to mark the top of all the pieces she’d labored for, she later recalled.
“I believed it was throughout: ‘How silly of me ever to have left NBC!’”
However salvation arrived within the type of a brand new boss, ABC Information president Roone Arledge, who moved her out of the co-anchor slot and into particular initiatives for ABC Information. In the meantime, she discovered success along with her quarterly prime-time interview specials. She turned a frequent contributor to ABC’s newsmagazine “20/20,” becoming a member of forces with then-host Hugh Downs, and in 1984, turned co-host. A perennial favourite was her overview of the 12 months’s “10 Most Fascinating Individuals.”
Walters is survived by her solely daughter, Jacqueline Danforth.
___
Moore, a longtime Related Press tv author who retired in 2017, was the principal author of this obituary. Related Press journalist Stefanie Dazio contributed to this report from Los Angeles.
World
Rental home investors poised to benefit as mortgage rates, high home prices sideline buyers in 2025
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rental homes will remain an attractive option next year to would-be homebuyers sidelined by high mortgage rates and rising home prices, analysts say.
American Homes 4 Rent and Invitation Homes are two big real estate investment trusts poised to benefit from the trend, say analysts at Mizuho Securities USA and Raymond James & Associates.
Their outlooks boil down to a simple thesis: Many Americans will continue to have a difficult time finding a single-family home that they can afford to buy, which will make renting a house an attractive alternative.
It starts with mortgage rates. While the average rate on a 30-year mortgage fell to a two-year low of 6.08% in late September, it’s been mostly rising since then, echoing moves in the 10-year Treasury yield, which lenders use as a guide to pricing home loans.
The yield, which has hovered around 4.4% this week, surged after the presidential election, reflecting expectations among investors that President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed economic policies may widen the federal deficit and crank up inflation.
Analysts at Raymond James and Associates say they see mortgage rates remaining “higher for longer,” given the outcome of the election. Last week, they reiterated their “Outperform” ratings on American Homes 4 Rent and Invitation Homes, noting “we are increasingly confident in the longer-term outlook for single-family rental fundamentals and the industry’s growth prospects.”
They also believe the two companies will continue to benefit from “outsized demographic demand for suburban homes,” and the monthly payment gap between renting and owning a home, which they estimate can be as much as 30% less to rent.
Analysts at Mizuho also expect that homeownership affordability hurdles will maintain “a supportive backdrop” and stoke demand for rental houses, helping American Homes 4 Rent and Invitation Homes to maintain their tenant retention rates.
The companies are averaging higher new and renewal tenant lease rates when compared to several of the largest U.S. apartment owners, including AvalonBay, Equity Residential and Camden Property Trust, according to Mizuho. It has an “Outperform” rating on American Homes 4 Rent and a “Neutral” rating on Invitation Homes.
Shares in Invitation Homes are down 1.2% so far this year, while American Homes 4 Rent is up 4.4%. That’s well below the S&P 500’s 24% gain in the same period.
While individual homeowners and mom-and-pop investors still account for the vast majority of single-family rental homes, homebuilders have stepped up construction of new houses planned for rental communities.
In the third quarter, builders broke ground on about 24,000 single-family homes slated to become rentals. That’s up from 17,000 a year earlier. In the second quarter, single-family rental starts climbed to 25,000, the highest quarterly total going back to at least 1990, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data by the National Association of Home Builders.
World
US briefed Ukraine ahead of Putin's 'experimental Intermediate-range ballistic' attack
A U.S. official on Thursday confirmed to Fox News Digital that Ukrainian authorities were briefed ahead of Russia’s “experimental Intermediate-range ballistic missile” attack that this type of weapon may be used against Ukraine in order to help it prepare.
Russian President Vladimir Putin confirmed the attack Thursday evening local time in an address to the nation and said it was in direct response to the U.S. and the U.K. jointly approving Ukraine’s use of Western-supplied long-range missiles to target Russia.
It remains unclear if there were any casualties in the attack on the city of Dnipro, which was originally reported as an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) strike, and which would have marked the first time such a weapon had been used during a time of war, sending panic across the globe.
1,000 DAYS OF WAR IN UKRAINE AS ZELENSKYY DOUBLES DOWN ON AERIAL OPTIONS WITH ATACMS, DRONES AND MISSILES
Putin and U.S. sources have since confirmed the strike was not an ICBM, but the Kremlin chief also claimed that the weapon used poses a significant challenge for Western nations.
“The missiles attack targets at a speed of MACH 10. That’s 2.5 miles per second,” Putin said according to a translation. “The world’s current air defense systems and the missile defense systems developed by the Americans in Europe do not intercept such missiles.”
Fox News Digital could not immediately verify whether the U.S. or its NATO allies are capable of defending against this latest missile, dubbed the Oreshnik.
But according to one U.S. official, Putin may be playing up his abilities in a move to intimidate the West and Ukraine.
“While we take all threats against Ukraine seriously, it is important to keep a few key facts in mind: Russia likely possesses only a handful of these experimental missiles,” the official told Fox News Digital. “Ukraine has withstood countless attacks from Russia, including from missiles with significantly larger warheads than this weapon.
“Let me be clear: Russia may be seeking to use this capability to try to intimidate Ukraine and its supporters, or generate attention in the information space, but it will not be a game-changer in this conflict,” the official added.
US EMBASSY IN KYIV CLOSED AS ‘POTENTIAL SIGNIFICANT AIR ATTACK’ LOOMS
Following President Biden’s position reversal this week to allow Ukraine to use U.S.-supplied long-range Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) against the Russian homeland, Kyiv immediately levied strikes against a military arsenal in the Russian region of Bryansk, more than 70 miles from Ukraine’s border.
While Ukrainian troops are the ones to officially fire the sophisticated missiles, the weapons system still relies on U.S. satellites to hit its target — an issue Putin touched on in his unannounced speech Thursday.
“We are testing the Oreshnik missile systems in combat conditions in response to NATO countries’ aggressive actions against Russia. We will decide on the further deployment of intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles depending on the actions of the U.S. and its satellites,” he said.
CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Putin claimed Russia will alert Ukrainian citizens of an impending attack like the strike he carried out on Thursday, though it remains unclear if he issued a warning to the Ukrainians living in Dnipro.
The Kremlin chief said the “defense industry” was targeted, though images released by the Ukrainian ministry of defense showed what appeared to be civilian infrastructure was also caught in the fray.
The Pentagon on Thursday confirmed that Russia informed the U.S. of the impending attack, which corresponds with information obtained by Fox News Digital, but it is unclear if Moscow clarified which Ukrainian city was the intended target.
A U.S. official told Fox News Digital that the U.S. is committed to helping Ukraine bolster its air defense systems and has done so already by supplying Ukraine with hundreds of additional Patriot and Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles.
World
South Korea says Russia sent North Korea missiles in exchange for troops
South Korea’s national security adviser says North plans to use the weapons to defend its airspace over the capital.
Russia has provided North Korea with anti-air missiles and air defence equipment in return for sending soldiers to support its war against Ukraine, according to a top South Korean official.
Asked what the North stood to gain from dispatching an estimated 10,000 troops to Russia, South Korea’s national security adviser Shin Won-sik said Moscow had given Pyongyang economic and military technology support.
“It is understood that North Korea has been provided with related equipment and anti-aircraft missiles to strengthen Pyongyang’s weak air defence system,” Shin told South Korean broadcaster SBS in an interview aired on Friday.
At a military exhibition in the capital, Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Friday called for developing and upgrading “ultra-modern” versions of weaponry, and pledged to keep advancing defence capabilities, state media reported.
Russia this month ratified a landmark mutual defence pact with North Korea as Ukrainian officials reported clashes with Pyongyang’s soldiers on the front lines.
The treaty was signed in Pyongyang in June during a state visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin. It obligates both states to provide military assistance “without delay” in the case of an attack on the other and to cooperate internationally to oppose Western sanctions.
South Korea’s National Intelligence Service told lawmakers this week that the troops deployed to Russia are believed to have been assigned to an airborne brigade and marine corps on the ground, with some of the soldiers having already entered combat, the Yonhap news agency reported.
The intelligence agency also said recently that North Korea had sent more than 13,000 containers of artillery, missiles and other conventional arms to Russia since August 2023 to replenish its dwindling weapons stockpiles.
Experts say Pyongyang could be using Ukraine as a means of realigning foreign policy.
By sending soldiers, North Korea is positioning itself within the Russian war economy as a supplier of weapons, military support and labour – potentially bypassing its traditional ally, neighbour and main trading partner, China, according to analysts.
Russia can also provide North Korea access to its vast natural resources, such as oil and gas, they say.
North Korean Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui recently visited Moscow and said her country would “stand firmly by our Russian comrades until victory day“.
North Korea said last month that any troop deployment to Russia would be “an act conforming with the regulations of international law”, but stopped short of confirming that it had sent soldiers.
The deployment has led to a shift in tone from Seoul, which had so far resisted calls to send weapons to Kyiv. However, President Yoon Suk-yeol indicated South Korea might change its longstanding policy of not providing arms to countries in conflict.
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