Month: January 2020

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The Samples were a black Chicago family, with six children and few resources. The priest helped them with tuition, clothes, bills. He offered the promise of opportunities — a better life.

He also abused all the children.

They told no one. They were afraid of not being believed and of losing what little they had, said one son, Terrence Sample. And nobody asked, until a lawyer investigating alleged abuses by the same priest prompted him to break his then-33-year silence.

“Somebody had to make the effort,” Sample said. “Why wasn’t it the church?”

Even as it has pledged to go after predators in its ranks and provide support to those harmed by clergy, the church has done little to identify and reach sexual abuse victims. For survivors of color, who often face additional social and cultural barriers to coming forward on their own, the lack of concerted outreach on behalf of the church means less public exposure — and potentially, more opportunities for abuse to go on, undetected.

Of 88 dioceses that responded to an Associated Press inquiry, seven knew the ethnicities of victims. While it was clear at least three had records of some sort, only one stated it purposely collected such data as part of the reporting process. Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, Asians, Pacific Islanders and Hawaiians make up nearly 46% of the faithful in the U.S., according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, an authoritative source of Catholic-related data. But the Catholic Church has made almost no effort to track the victims among them.

“The church has to come into the shadows, into the trenches to find the people who were victimized, especially the people of color,” Sample said. “There are other people like me and my family, who won’t come forward unless someone comes to them.”

Brian Clites, a leading scholar on clergy sexual abuse and professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, said the church has demonstrated a pattern of funneling predator priests to economically disadvantaged communities of color, where victims have much more to lose if they report their abuse.

“They are less likely to know where to get help, less likely to have money for a lawyer to pursue that help, and they are more vulnerable to counterattacks” from the church, which will hire investigators against the survivors, said Clites.

Alaska leads the nation in rates of sexual violence, and Florence Kenney said the Catholic Church has played a role in perpetuating the abuse of Natives there.

Kenney, now 85, said she was abused at the Holy Cross Mission in Holy Cross, Alaska. Kenney is indigenous, and she described the relationship between the Catholic Church and Native Alaskan families as both predatory and symbiotic: The church provided food, money and resources to the village, Kenney said, in exchange for labor and silence.

“The church needed those people, and the people needed the church,” Kenney said. “A family might sacrifice one or two children, look the other way, to preserve their relationship with the church for the others.”

There is no accurate count of clergy abuse survivors. A special report commissioned by the Colorado attorney general’s office examining abuse within state dioceses and released in October determined that “victims of child sex abuse and particularly those abused by clergy are less likely to report their abuse than other crime victims.”

As for minority survivors, dioceses rarely collect demographic data.

The Associated Press contacted 178 dioceses to ask whether they collect such data. Few who responded knew the race or ethnicity of claimants. Some said demographics aren’t relevant, while others cited privacy concerns.

One diocese — Alexandria, La. — shared a spreadsheet of survivors, including demographics, and without names.

The diocese began keeping such data in 2015, when Lee Kneipp, the victim assistance coordinator, took the job. Kneipp said knowing the race and ethnicity of victims helps investigative efforts and enables a deeper examination of records and the potential ability to find others who have not been acknowledged.

In looking into one African American survivor’s abuse claim, Kneipp was able to locate two more survivors of color from the same parish; the priest, he said, abused only boys in low-income black communities.

Levi Monagle, an Albuquerque lawyer whose firm has close to 200 clients, including Native Americans and Latinos, said there can be cultural and logistical impediments to contacting survivors who have not come forward.

“We don’t go cold-calling people, knocking on doors, even if you have a serial perpetrator and a survivor who says we know there were other altar boys who traveled with this guy,” he said.

The firm puts out press releases, but some of the Native American population and communities are in “extreme geographic isolation” compared with other places and often don’t have access to media.

Richard King, 70, was sexually abused on the Assiniboine reservation in Fort Belknap, Mont., where he grew up. He said taboos and shame kept him silent. Instead he abused alcohol and drugs. That, he believes, is how tribal members dealt with the abuses they faced, rather than speaking out.

His mother’s tribe was devoutly Catholic, and he doubted he would be believed.

“If children tell their parents that the clerics abused you, I would probably have gotten a whipping. I would have gotten one at church and one at home,” King said. “They’d say, ‘Shut up, that doesn’t happen.’”

He began speaking to small groups he counseled, sharing some of his story. But it was nearly 50 years before he met with an attorney, Andrew Chasan; he was ready to share what happened to him, and sit down with Montana news media.

When the Society of Jesus, Oregon Province, faced scores of suits accusing its priests of abuse, it filed for bankruptcy. King filed a claim and received a settlement, though in a statement to the AP the province said King’s abuser was not a Jesuit priest.

Phillip Aaron, a Seattle-based attorney who represented the Sample family, said his client base, which includes hundreds of African American survivors of clergy abuse, stayed silent because they feared ridicule, or worse.

“It was such a stigma,” Aaron said. “That is still present now. We haven’t touched the top of the barrel of black victims. There are so many black victims who have not come forward who are suffering in silence because of the stigma.”

Some survivors, like Sample, kept quiet because they did not want the resources their abusers provided to dry up, Aaron said.

Sample, now 58, was a middle school student at St. Procopius School, when his abuser, a priest there, took an interest in him. He was groomed, isolated and assaulted for several years, he said.

“I was thinking I have to keep this secret,” Sample said. “One, we have to eat, and two, we have to stay in school, and this would kill my mom if she knew.”

Jacob Olivas’ secrecy emanated from another source. He was raised in California, the son of two Mexican immigrants. His father, he said, was the embodiment of machismo: strong, silent, stoic. Olivas was abused by a priest at age 6, and when his father found out he instructed Jacob to stay quiet. It was never discussed, he said. He had no therapy, no opportunity to process what had happened.

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“I was supposed to keep quiet, to forget about it,” Olivas said.

“That’s just the way the Hispanic community is. They have a reverence for the church; there’s no ands, there’s no buts, there’s no questions: You respect the church, you respect the father,” he said. “I think it was something that made my father feel more proud: This priest is taking an interest in my son.”

Such reluctance to come forward, whether fueled by social or cultural barriers, shame or fear, means some victims will stay silent unless they are drawn out.

“How big is the iceberg that’s under the water still, when you’re talking about survivors?” Monagle asked. “Every culture carries the weight of its own taboos.”


FT. BRAGG, N.C. — 

Hundreds of U.S. soldiers deployed Saturday from Ft. Bragg, N.C., to Kuwait to serve as reinforcements in the Middle East amid rising tensions following the U.S. killing of a top Iranian general.

Lt. Col. Mike Burns, a spokesman for the 82nd Airborne Division, told the Associated Press 3,500 members of the division’s quick-deployment brigade, known officially as its Immediate Response Force, will have deployed within a few days. The most recent group of service members to deploy will join about 700 who left earlier in the week, Burns said.

A loading ramp at Ft. Bragg was filled Saturday morning with combat gear and restless soldiers. Some tried to grab a last-minute nap on wooden benches. Reporters saw others filing onto buses.

The additional troop deployments reflect concerns about potential Iranian retaliatory action in the volatile aftermath of Friday’s drone strike that killed Gen. Qassem Suleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds Force who has been blamed for attacks on U.S. troops and American allies going back decades.

President Trump ordered the airstrike near Baghdad’s international airport. Iran has vowed retribution, raising fears of an all-out war, but it’s unclear how or when a response might come.

Reporters weren’t able to interview the soldiers leaving Ft. Bragg on Saturday, but an airman loading one of the cargo planes told an Army cameraman he was making New Year’s plans when he got a call to help load up the soldiers, according to video released by the military.

“We’re responsible for loading the cargo. Almost our whole squadron got alerted. Like a bunch of planes are coming over here,” the unnamed airman said. “I was getting ready to go out for New Year’s when they called me.”

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In the gray early morning light Saturday, Army video showed soldiers dressed in camouflage fatigues filing into planes, carrying rucksacks and rifles. Humvees were rolled onto another cargo plane and chained in place for the flight to the Middle East.

Burns said the soldiers within the Immediate Response Force train constantly to be ready to respond quickly to crises abroad. When called by their superiors, they have two hours to get to base with their gear and must maintain a state of readiness so that they can be in the air headed to their next location within 18 hours.

“So whether they were on leave, whether they were home drinking a beer, whether they were, you know, hanging out, throwing the kids up in the yard, you get the call and it’s time to go,” he said.

He said that soldiers typically keep individual “go-bags” of their personal gear with them at their living quarters.

The wife of a member of the 82nd Airborne who deployed earlier this week said his departure was so abrupt she didn’t have the chance to say goodbye in person or by phone.

April Shumard said she was at work on New Year’s Eve and he was watching their five children when he texted her that he had to rush to base. He wasn’t sure if it was a drill or a deployment. She said her husband has been in the military since 2010 and has already deployed twice to Afghanistan. But with those prior deployments, the family had much more time to prepare and say goodbye. This time, she got a second message confirming he was leaving, and he departed in a plane on the afternoon of New Year’s Day.

“The kids kept going, ‘When’s Dad going to be home?’” said Shumard, 42. “It’s literally thrown me for a loop. And him as well. He’s still in disbelief of where he’s gone. Our heads are spun.”

She said that Fayetteville is a tight-knit community, and she expects people to work together to support families who are suddenly missing a parent.

“This was so last-minute,” she said, urging people to reach out to 82nd Airborne families. “Just try to help out whoever you know who might need some babysitting or help or just get some groceries and bring it to their house.”


For Joanne White, the mother of an American citizen from San Diego who is imprisoned in Iran, the last year and a half already felt like an unceasing nightmare. But things just got worse.

With tensions rising between the U.S. and Iran after President Trump’s targeted slaying of Gen. Qassem Suleimani — one of Iran’s highest-ranking officials — White’s concerns over the safety of her son, Michael, a U.S. Navy veteran, have intensified.

“I’m totally depressed. With all this stuff with Iran and the U.S., I don’t know if [the U.S. government] is able to negotiate his release,” she said in a phone interview with The Times. “Tensions have already been bad.”

There are currently five Americans believed to be in Iranian custody. Since the Suleimani killing Friday in Iraq, several family members said in interviews that the new developments place an increased focus on securing the release of their loved ones. They have issued calls for Trump to find a way to bring their relatives home.

“I urge both American and Iranian leaders to engage in discussions on further exchanges that would benefit both countries and at the same time bring my family home,” said Babak Namazi, whose dual-national brother and father have been imprisoned in Iran for four years.

Namazi’s brother was arrested in Tehran in October 2015 on espionage charges that Babak says were trumped up. Their father was arrested after he traveled to Tehran in February 2016 to try to secure his son’s release. Both have been sentenced to 10 years in prison.

White, convicted of mocking Iran’s supreme leader, was the first of two U.S. citizens arrested in Iran after Trump won the 2016 presidential election. Trump has on numerous occasions said that freeing Americans detained abroad is a top priority in his administration.

During the last few months of 2019, Tehran suggested that it was open to prisoner swap negotiations. With the help of the Swiss government, the last prisoner exchange took place in December.

In that exchange, the second person arrested after Trump took office, Chinese American scholar/researcher Xique Wang, was returned home, in a swap for Massoud Soleimani, an Iranian scientist jailed on charges of violating trade sanctions.

Left in limbo were both Namazis and White, as well as Morad Tahbaz, an Iranian American environmental activist; and Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent. And now, prospects for additional prisoner swaps are up in the air, said Jon Franks, a spokesman for the White family.

“At the moment, we are unaware of any meaningful steps the U.S. government is taking to secure his release,” he said, adding that there could be actions Washington is taking that he is not aware of.

Tensions between U.S. and Iran have been ratcheting up since May 2018, when Trump withdrew America from the 2015 landmark nuclear deal with seven world powers. Harsh rhetoric has been exchanged by officials and lawmakers from both countries since.

In late December, after a missile attack targeting an Iraqi military base killed an American contractor, U.S. officials blamed Iranian-backed militia groups.

That prompted the U.S. to carry out airstrikes that killed 25 people. Last week, pro-Iranian militia members stormed the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad.

Then came the U.S. airstrike near the Baghdad airport that killed Suleimani.

On Saturday, as Trump used Twitter to warn Iran of additional strikes if Tehran struck back, Namazi called on Trump to prioritize the release of his brother, Siamak, and ailing 83-year-old father, Baquer.

“There is never a bad time for humanitarian gestures,” he said.

Jason Poblete, a Washington-based lawyer who represented two former American prisoners in Iran, Nizar Zakkar and Wang, said Saturday that an exchange of prisoners could help deescalate tensions.

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“As policymakers continue to defend U.S. national security interests, in light of the targeted of killing of IRGC Quds Force commander Suleimani, they must not forget the American and other hostages held in Iran and should redouble efforts to bring them home,” Poblete said. “Our fellow Americans need their nation now more than ever.”

Sharing similar sentiments is former U.S. hostage Barry Rosen.

Rosen was a 23-year-old press attache when he was taken hostage in Tehran following the U.S. Embassy takeover by Iranian protesters.

Rosen was among 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days. Even though it’s been 40 years since he was taken captive, Rosen empathizes with current American prisoners being held in Iran.

“For me it’s part and parcel of my own body; spiritually I’m with these people,” Rosen, who is now 72 and lives in New York City, said. “For me their lives are profoundly important, because I can see myself in them, and I feel that they will go on suffering more now.”

For White, securing the release of her son, Michael, is of paramount importance. The 46-year-old Navy veteran’s health has apparently been deteriorating in recent months as he sits behind bars at Vakilabad Prison in Mashhad, eastern Iran.

In March, White was sentenced to 10 years in prison on charges of insulting Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and for sharing the private information of a woman he was visiting at the time. White had served 13 years in the U.S. Navy, working in aviation maintenance administration and later attended San Diego State, where he studied political science.

Her son has been in and out of the hospital in Iran and recently underwent surgery to have a cancerous melanoma removed, White said.

Recently she raised $1,000 in donations and sent it to the prison via the Swiss Embassy in December, but she said her son hasn’t been able to use it.

(Switzerland has represented U.S. interests in Tehran since the U.S. broke off formal diplomatic relations with the Islamic Republic due to the 1979 hostage crisis.)

“I ask him to call me more to make sure he is alive. His health was already bad and now it’s even worse,” White said, adding that it’s been over four months since the Swiss have been able to see him.

Getting hold of him by phone has also proven difficult, and discomforting. When she last spoke to him on Monday, she said, he told her he was nearly starving.

“I asked him to go to the warden and he said, ‘No I can’t do that, Mom. They put restrictions on me,’” White recalled her son saying. “‘I’m starving to death.’”


Daniel Ricciardo knows he’s worth better that the modest 9th place position he achieved in the 2019 championship, but the Renault driver won’t use that as an excuse to remain stranded down the pecking order.

Ricciardo knew that he wouldn’t be fighting for race wins when he joined Renault from Red Bull racing for 2019, but the Aussie’s results still fell short of team and driver’s expectations.

There are obviously mitigating circumstances to Ricciardo’s underperformance, not least Renault’s inability to hold up its end of the bargain, both in terms of reliability and performance.

    Ricciardo keen on ‘team building’ away from the track with Renault

But the 30-year-old isn’t content with just putting things into perspective.

“Relatively speaking not great, I don’t see myself as the ninth best driver on the grid,” Ricciardo said, quoted by Crash.net.

“I don’t look into it too much because I believe I am better.

“Do I want to be ninth for the next few years and have the excuse that I am better than ninth but it is what it is? No. I don’t like seeing myself in ninth.

“Relatively speaking I am okay with this season. It was always going to be difficult. Coming into a new team, people have done it before so it is not impossible to do.”

Ricciardo admitted that he underestimated the task of downsizing from Red to Renault, although the Aussie was happy with his personal development in 2019.

“I’m having to adapt more than, I’d say Charles [Leclerc],” he said. “But also for me going from Toro Rosso to Red Bull, and him from Alfa to Ferrari, coming into a car with more grip is normally easier.

“There are more expectations, but it does more things that you wanted it to do. That is easier than going from Red Bull to here.

“How I adapted to that, I was quite happy, but in a few races, I was not happy with myself, I expected more, but I developed well.”

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

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Los Blancos beat out several rivals in La Liga for the signature of the highly-rated teenager, who follows in the footsteps of Vinicius Junior

Flamengo attacker Reinier will officially join Real Madrid later this month for a sum worth around €35 million (£29m/$39m), sources close to the situation have confirmed to  Goal .

Los Blancos beat off competition from La Liga rivals Barcelona and Atletico Madrid to land the signature of the highly-rated teenager, who turns 18 later this month on January 19.

Both Madrid and Flamengo will wait until that date in order to announce the deal, which will take the Brazil under-23 star to Spain on an unspecified, though likely lengthy contract.

Zinedine Zidane’s side will likely feel proud with themselves after being able to bring Reinier to Santiago Bernabeu for half of his club’s asking price of €70m (£59.7m/$78.1m).

It has also been reported that Flamengo will receive 80 per cent of the fee, while the rest will go to the player and his agent.

Born in Brazil in 2002, the 17-year-old made his senior debut last July for the club in their Copa Libertadores clash with Emelec, before going on to net six goals in just over a dozen appearances in the Campeonato Brasileiro Serie A, helping them to their title.

He only signed a new contract with the club in November, a long-term deal that took him through until 2024.

However, the lure of European football has ultimately won out and he follows in the footsteps of fellow Flamengo product Vinicius Junior in making the move to the Spanish capital.

The latter has earned full international honours since his arrival despite still being a teenager, arguably justifying his decision to head for the bright lights of La Liga.

Discussions remain underway about whether Reinier will remain in his home country until June before making the move, or if he will spend the rest of the current campaign with Madrid’s Castilla reserve squad.

He is expected to be in action later this month with Brazil’s U23 side as they look to seal one of two berths for the Men’s tournament at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo in July.

They will face Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru and Uruguay in the opening round, held in Colombia.

For more on Reinier, check out our in-depth NXGN profile on a player who wants to emulate Kaka.  

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Meghan Markle fait tout son possible pour se faire intégrer à Buckingham Palace. Pour acquérir le savoir-vivre royal, l’actrice en couple avec le prince Harry est suivie de près par un responsable en communication et un secrétaire privée.

Depuis un an déjà, Meghan Markle vit une belle romance avec le prince Harry. Pourtant, elle peine à trouver sa place au sein de la famille royale. L’actrice de la série Suits a déjà fait beaucoup de concessions. Elle a fermé son blog, The Tig, elle ne poste plus de photos sur Instagram, et n’étale pas son histoire d’amour dans les journaux. Meghan Markle a également ajusté son style vestimentaire, préférant les jupes longues élégantes aux mini jupes courtes. De quoi faire plaisir à la reine, toujours très soucieuse de la longueur des ourlets…

Pour l’aider dans son admission au sein des du clan Windsor, son prince charmant, Harry, lui a mis à disposition deux coachs : Jason Knauf, un responsable communication, et Edward Lane Foxe, un secrétaire privé. Au programme : tout savoir sur les attitudes à adopter, les façons de saluer et de s’exprimer comme une vraie Lady. La Californienne sexy est prête à changer ses habitudes pour vivre avec le prince Harry. Elle s’apprête à s’installer à Londres avant le grand saut : le mariage.

En attendant, elle se tient à carreaux pour ne pas provoquer l’ire de la reine Elizabeth II. Le 26 mars dernier, celle-ci a donné sa bénédiction aux amoureux. Mais le moindre bisou volé publié par les tabloïds britanniques peut froisser la souveraine.

L’intégralité de l’article est à découvrir dans le nouveau Gala en kiosque cette semaine.

Crédits photos : MediaPunch/Shutterstock/SIPA

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Juan Arbelaez était invité à l’Elysée à l’occasion de la venue du président colombien et de sa femme. Le cuisiner qui a fait ses preuves dans Top Chef a rencontré le président de la République autour d’un dîner, et n’a pas manqué l’occasion d’immortaliser l’instant sur son compte Instagram.

A l’occasion de la fête de la musique le 21 juin dernier, Emmanuel et Brigitte Macron recevaient le président colombien Juan Manuel Santos, et sa femme Maria Clemencia. Un concert dans la cour de l’Elysée avait été organisé pour l’occasion. Plusieurs invités de marque avaient également fait le déplacement. C’est notamment le cas du compagnon de Laury Thilleman, Juan Arbelaez, ancien candidat de Top chef d’origine colombienne. Visiblement ravi d’avoir passé sa soirée à l’Elysée, le jeune homme a publié sur Instagram, une photo de lui, tout sourire, en compagnie du président de la République. En légende, le jeune cuisinier confie avoir du mal à trouver les mots pour décrire sa soirée. Il a par la suite tenu à remercier la France, son pays d’accueil, qui a cru en son travail et à ses efforts. Il s’est montré « très fier d’avoir partagé ce diner qui représente l’union de deux pays qui se battent pour être meilleur, qui se battent contre la guerre et pour la paix ».

Le jeune chef cuisinier qui accumule les succès depuis Top Chef, pourrait bien avoir tapé dans l’œil du président de la République. Lors de sa visite au Palais, le jeune homme a visité les cuisines et a rencontré Guillaume Gomez, l’actuel chef des cuisines de l’Elysée, également meilleur ouvrier de France. L’occasion pour les deux hommes de poser pour une photo mais aussi peut-être pour Juan Arbelaez de glisser un CV dans les mains du chef ? Chef des cuisines de l’Elysée, une place de choix que l’ancien candidat de Top Chef pourrait bien un jour convoiter.

Difficile de décrire le diner auquel j'ai assisté mercredi soir. Voilà maintenant 10 ans que je vis dans ce magnifique pays qui m a accueilli, qui a cru en mon travail et mes efforts. Je suis très fier d avoir partagé ce diner qui représente l union de deux pays ????qui se battent pour être meilleur, qui se battent contre la guerre et pour la paix. Merci @emmanuelmacron et @juanmanuelsantos l union fais la force !! —————————————-Difícil describir la cena a la asistí la noche del miércoles. Ya hace 10 años que estoy en este país mágico que me acogió y que creyó en nuestro trabajo y nuestro esfuerzo. Me enorgullece estar compartiendo esta cena que representa la unión de dos países que están luchando por ser mejores cada día, que están luchando contra la guerra y sobretodo por la paz. Gracias @emmanuelmacron @juanmanuelsantos l unión hace la fuerza. #colombia #france @colombiafrancia2017 #president #paris

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Merci aux Chefs Thierry Marx et Juan Arbelaez d'être passés nous saluer à l'occasion du dîner en l'honneur de la Colombie. #ilovemyjob #chefs #chefelysee #chefconnected #palaisdelelysee #presidencedelarepublique #paris #parismonamour #parisforever #parisforeverever #france #monde

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Invitée du festival Des Livres, Des Stars qui s’est déroulé à Marseille les 24 et 25 juin, la chef des Miss nous a raconté ses vacances idéales… plus ou moins loin de ses reines de beauté !

Miss un jour, Miss toujours. Les 24 et 25 juin derniers, invitée de la 3eme édition du festival Des Livres, Des Stars, à Marseille, elle ne concourrait à aucune élection, mais elle a assurément remporté tous les suffrages.

Une dédicace par ci, une photo par là. Venue présenter sa collection d’ouvrages illustrés pour enfants Les voyages d’Oscar et Margaux (Ed. Calligram), Sylvie Tellier, Miss France 2002 et actuelle directrice générale de la Société Miss France, s’est pliée non-stop à toutes les requêtes, dans l’enceinte de La Vieille Charité. Nul besoin de solliciter une plaidoirie auprès de son voisin de table, l’avocat Eric Dupond-Moretti !

On la croyait distante, un peu froide ? « C’est ma fonction qui l’impose, et ce n’est pas plus mal, nous a-t-elle répondu. Quand j’entre dans les coulisses d’une élection régionale, j’entends et vois les filles se mettre soudainement au garde-à-vous, ce que je trouve plutôt amusant en mon for intérieur. On ne prétend à rien d’autre qu’à divertir les gens, mais Miss France, c’est quand même une certaine idée de l’élégance ! Et regardez où cela a mené Iris Mittenaere, Miss Univers ! Chez nous, pas de chirurgie esthétique, seules les opérations reconstructrices sont tolérées. Quant aux amours, je préviens toujours les filles en couple que leur relation a peu de chance de tenir, en raison des engagements qui les attendent. »

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Les siens sont nombreux. Sylvie travaille déjà au séjour réunissant toutes les prétendantes à la succession d’Alicia Aylies, alias Miss France 2017. Il se déroulera à Los Angeles, quelques semaines avant l’élection organisée à Châteauroux le 16 décembre prochain. Contrainte d’abandonner ses études après son sacre, mais exerçant son regard bleu azur sur les contrats signés par les Miss depuis plus de 8 ans, cette titulaire d’une maîtrise en droit des affaires espère également pouvoir prêter serment et enfiler la robe d’avocat, grâce au jeu des équivalences. Rejointe à Marseille par son compagnon Laurent, leur fille Margaux et son aîné Oscar, né d’un premier mariage, elle espère surtout pouvoir leur consacrer du temps cet été… quand bien même elle se déclare toujours joignable pour ses Miss et prête à trinquer avec Valérie Damidot !

Découvrez « la summer list » de Sylvie Tellier.

Crédits photos Sipa

Crédits photos : Non renseigné

Toujours très proche de ses « fanzouzes », Cyril Hanouna a souhaité mettre les choses au clair sur les réseaux sociaux après les rumeurs sur la fin de l’émission Touche pas à mon poste.

Après les récentes polémiques autour de l’émission Touche pas à mon poste, la chaîne C8 pourrait ne pas reprogrammer le talk-show. C’est en tout cas la rumeur lancée par le média LesJours.fr qui évoque l’arrêt de l’émission après la trêve estivale. Une information qui semble agacer le trublion du PAF comme en témoignent ses dernières déclarations sur les réseaux sociaux : « Mes amours, TPMP sera de retour et l’émission sera plus forte que jamais ! Le 1er talk de France sera de retour, n’écoutez pas les abrutis », a-t-il écrit sur son compte Twitter, avant d’ajouter : « Et les chéris, j’ai bien appuyé sur ‘1er talk de France’ parce que ça vénere les abrutis qui écrivent des conneries ». Un message qui a visiblement rassuré les adeptes de l’émission : « T’inquiète pas Baba, ça fait longtemps qu’on n’écoute plus certains journalistes qui cherchent seulement à faire du clic », peut-on lire.

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Selon les informations du Parisien, des décisions auraient déjà été prises au sein de la direction pour relancer la machine. Agatha Rouland, assistante de production, devrait être en charge de renouveler le programme en y intégrant des nouveaux chroniqueurs. Cyril Hanouna pourrait aussi s’effacer peu à peu en laissant sa place le vendredi à un autre animateur tel que Julien Courbet ou Camille Combal. Pour rappel, depuis plusieurs mois, l’émission Touche pas à mon poste est la cible du Conseil Supérieur de l’Audiovisuel ainsi que des internautes après plusieurs polémiques dont notamment un sketch jugé homophobe. Et avant la fin de la saison, certains chroniqueurs avaient aussi annoncé leur départ : Thierry Moreau, Enora Malagré, Capucine Anav ou encore Matthieu Delormeau.

Crédit photo – SIPA PRESS

Crédits photos : EREZ LICHTFELD/SIPA

William Leymergie, qui quitte France 2 pour C8 dès la rentrée, pourrait emmener dans ses bagages l’une de ses illustres complices de Télématin : une figure historique du programme qui aura sa place dans La Nouvelle Edition.

Un saut vers l’inconnu… Mais pas tout seul? William Leymergie quitte Télématin sur France 2 après plus de 30 ans, pour animer La Nouvelle Edition, tous les jours à 12h sur C8, case laissée libre après l’éviction de Daphné Bürki. Autant dire qu’il s’agit d’une vraie révolution pour l’animateur de 70 ans. Vendredi 30 juin, ses équipes lui ont rendu un bel hommage, en diffusant un best of de ses meilleurs moments dans l’émission du service public… Mais, d’après Puremédias, William Leymergie ne dit pas exactement adieu à tous ses collaborateurs. C’est même l’un des visages les plus connus de Télématin qu’il emmènerait avec lui sur C8 : Laura Tenoudji, alias Laura du Web.

Le site Puremédias a révélé l’information mercredi 5 juillet. Si elle est avérée, ce serait une bonne nouvelle pour la chroniqueuse. L’épouse de Christian Estrosi, en ce moment enceinte de sept mois, avait rejoint l’équipe de Télématin en 2000. Visiblement, elle s’entendait à merveille avec William Leymergie, puisqu’elle a même versé quelques larmes lors de la dernière de l’émission. Rejoindre ensemble le groupe Canal + serait donc non seulement une belle aventure professionnelle pour le duo, mais aussi une nouvelle page de leur amitié qui s’écrit.

L’intéressée a réagi ce jeudi dans une interview à L’Express. Elle explique que pour l’instant, « rejoindre William Leymergie sur C8 n’est pas d’actualité ». Brouille-t-elle les pistes pour garder le secret un peu plus longtemps, ou a-t-elle déjà d’autres plans? Une chose est sûre, en ce moment, Laura Tenoudji pense plutôt à sa famille. Elle devrait partir en congé maternité dès le vendredi 7 juillet, et le bébé est attendu pour le mois d’août. La future maman de 41 ans n’a pas encore précisé si elle serait de retour à l’antenne dès la rentrée, ou si elle comptait s’accorder un peu plus de temps…

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