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En décembre dernier, l’animateur Tex était viré du poste d’animateur de l’émission Les Z’amours qu’il occupait depuis 17 ans pour une blague misogyne se moquant des violences faites aux femmes. Il revient avec un recueil de 300 blagues.

Sa tentative d’humour sur la chaîne C8 avait fait polémique. Invité par Julien Courbet dans l’émission C’est que de la télé, Tex, animateur des Z’amours et humoriste a choqué les téléspectateurs en partageant une blague misogyne se moquant des violences faites aux femmes : “Les gars, vous savez ce qu’on dit à une femme qui a déjà les deux yeux au beurre noir ? On ne lui dit plus rien ! On vient déjà de lui expliquer deux fois !”. Il a depuis été viré de son poste d’animateur sur France 2 et remplacé par Bruno Guillon malgré le soutien de ses confrères humoristes.

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Il sort désormais aux éditions Sand, le 12 avril prochain, un recueil de 300 blagues. Sur la quatrième de couverture, l’humoriste défend son droit à l’humour : “Comme j’en ai toujours raconté et que je tiens à ma liberté, je ne vais pas m’arrêter là: voisins, voisines, cousins, cousines, beaufs en tout genre, corps constitués, bagnoles, hôpital, faits et défaits, pleins et déliés… allons-y pour une nouvelle salve! Oui, on a le droit de tout dire et à tout le monde. Un livre, comme la télé, l’avantage c’est qu’on peut le fermer! Moi, en tout cas, je ne suis pas près de la fermer”. Il continue également de se produire sur scène, dans son one man show État des lieux.

Crédits photos : CEDRIC PERRIN / BESTIMAGE

Présent au festival pour le film The Lobster, l’acteur Ben Wishaw a déclaré au Hollywood Reporter qu’une suite aux aventures de l’ours Paddington était dans les tuyaux.

A l’occasion d’un entretien avec le Hollywood Reporter, l’acteur Ben Whishaw a déclaré, à propos d’une suite à Paddington, l’ours so british qu’il a déjà doublé :

J’ai entendu que ça allait arriver cette année”.

Avant de relativiser son propos : “ce sont juste des murmures pour le moment, rien n’a été confirmé”.

Ben Whishaw est actuellement au Festival de Cannes pour présenter The Lobster, réalisé par le grec Yorgos Lanthimos avec également Rachel Weisz, Colin Farrell et Lea Seydoux. Le film raconte comment dans un futur proche, toute personne célibataire est arrêtée, transférée à l’Hôtel et a 45 jours pour trouver l’âme soeur. Passé ce délai, il sera transformé en l’animal de son choix. Pour échapper à ce destin, un homme s’enfuit et rejoint dans les bois un groupe de résistants ; les Solitaires.

 

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Pour le mariage de Meghan Markle et du prince Markle, Pippa Middleton a failli à sa réputation glamour. La soeur de la duchesse de Cambridge est, en effet, apparue dans une robe verte fleurie mi-longue. Une tenue somme toute classique moquée par les internautes.

Si l’arrivée à l’église de Kate Middleton est encore dans toutes les mémoires, difficile d’oublier celle de sa soeur Pippa, dont le fessier impeccablement moulé dans sa robe blanche Alexander McQueen a fait forte impression. Propulsée sous le feu des projecteurs, la jeune femme est devenue une véritable icône.

Sept ans plus tard, en ce jour de mariage princier, tout le monde attendait donc presque autant de découvrir la robe de Meghan Markle que celle de la soeur de Kate. Si la première, signée Givenchy, n’a pas déçu, avec sa sobriété et son élégance, en revanche, la seconde a suscité bien des moqueries sur internet.

Pippa Middleton est, en effet, arrivée au bras de son époux James Matthews, dans une robe verte menthe à l’eau ornée de branches fleuries. Si celle-ci dissimulait son petit baby bump naissant, sa coupe très classique et ses imprimés n’ont pas fait l’unanimité. Les internautes n’ont pas épargné ce choix vestimentaire, allant jusqu’à comparer sa tenue à une célèbre bouteille de thé glacé.

Ce n’est pas la première fois que la belle-soeur du prince William est la cible des quolibets. En février dernier, Pippa, qui soutient l’association Magic Breakfast, venant en aide aux familles défavorisées, a imaginé un repas censé lutter contre les carences des enfants à base d’avocats frais et d’huile d’olive. Des produits alimentaires bien trop chers qui ont fait d’elle la risée de la toile.

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Crédits photos : AGENCE / BESTIMAGE

Des nouveaux prétendants pour Spider-Man, Mark Wahlberg parle de Transformers 5, Michelle McLaren de Wonder Woman à Star Wars, un fan trailer de Spider-Man…

Bienvenue dans l’émission geek et héroïque d’AlloCiné. Au sommaire de cet épisode 428, des nouveaux prétendants pour Spider-Man, Mark Wahlberg parle de Transformers 5, Michelle McLaren de Wonder Woman à Star Wars, un fan trailer de Spider-Man…

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SEATTLE — 

Scientific experts warned Congress more than a decade ago that just four teaspoons of radioactive cesium-137 — if spread by a terrorist’s “dirty bomb” — could contaminate up to 10 square miles of Manhattan.

The material is commonly found across the United States. Hospitals, blood banks and medical research centers use it in devices called irradiators, which sterilize blood and tissue. Hundreds of the devices are licensed for use, including at least 50 in Southern California.

Each typically contains about twice as much radioactive material as the scientific panel warned could disrupt much of the nation’s largest city.

The panel’s warning in 2008 came with blunt recommendations: The government should stop licensing new cesium-based blood irradiators, and existing ones should be withdrawn from use. Safer devices that use X-ray technology worked just as well, the panel found.

But after protests from hospitals, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission declined to crack down. Instead, the number of licensed irradiators used for blood — and the risk they pose — has grown, a Los Angeles Times investigation shows.

Recent emergencies highlight the danger.

Pennsylvania authorities in 2015 intervened after an improperly secured irradiator was found inside a downtown Philadelphia office building near the planned motorcade route for a visit by Pope Francis.

In May of this year, the accidental release of a small amount of cesium from an irradiator in Seattle contaminated 13 people and caused a seven-story medical research building to be shuttered indefinitely.

The cesium used for irradiators is a dry, talc-like material derived from atomic fuel left over from nuclear power production.

The material is particularly feared by experts on radiological threats because its fine particles disperse easily and can migrate through air ducts and bind tightly to porous surfaces, including concrete. The potential danger is long-lasting: Cesium can keep emitting radiation for nearly 300 years.

“The amount of cesium in one of these irradiators is enough to contaminate and create widespread panic over an extremely large area if dispersed by a terrorist,” said Leonard W. Connell, a nuclear engineer who was among the scientific experts who issued the 2008 recommendations.

Leonard W. Connell, nuclear engineer

Since those recommendations, several developed countries have converted away from cesium. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, by contrast, has not only continued to license new irradiators, it has also declined to require users to post financial bonds that would guarantee proper handling and eventual disposal of the material. Such performance bonds are mandatory for utilities licensed to operate nuclear power plants.

In a memo to the commissioners on April 7, 2016, the commission’s top staff official, Executive Director for Operations Victor M. McCree, wrote that financial assurance requirements “should be expanded” to include cesium irradiators and other similarly significant sources of radiation.

The commissioners have not acted.

The Times interviewed more than 50 current and former government officials, along with medical industry specialists and other technical experts and examined thousands of pages of state and federal records to study the risk posed by cesium irradiators.

A dirty bomb packed with cesium would not kill large numbers of people. Instead, it would be a weapon of “mass disruption” — leaving areas uninhabitable for months or even decades and increasing long-term cancer risks for people who come in contact with it, atomic experts say.

Though a dirty bomb has not been successfully detonated, terrorists have voiced keen interest in doing so. For instance, in 2011 an extremist named Anders Breivik, who killed 77 Norwegians with a fertilizer bomb and firearms, released a manifesto in which he called for followers to help him acquire cesium and other components “to construct and detonate a radiological bomb.”

Federal law gives the NRC broad authority to restrict the use of cesium and other radioactive materials to safeguard national security “or to protect health or to minimize danger to life or property.”

The agency, however, has declined to take action to limit the irradiators, citing a low likelihood of immediate deaths or other physical harm. In doing so, the commission has looked past the mass evacuations, business closures and other economic losses that a dirty bomb could cause.

Last year, a federal task force headed by the chair of the NRC concluded that no basis existed for more than voluntary incentives to encourage users to switch away from cesium irradiators.

As Chair Kristine L. Svinicki wrote in an Oct. 17, 2018, letter to President Trump, “the Task Force concluded that there are no significant gaps in … radioactive source protection and security that are not already being addressed.”

Svinicki declined through a spokesman to answer questions for this article, as did each of the other three sitting NRC commissioners, all of whom are appointed by the president.

Stephen G. Burns, a former commissioner whose tenure ended on April 30, said the NRC had sought to balance public safety with the interests of the facilities using the devices, notably hospitals wary of the commission “regulating the practice of medicine.”

The NRC’s stance toward regulating cesium contrasts with public warnings about radiological-weapon threats issued by every presidential administration since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Trump, in his own 2017 National Security Strategy report, warned that the threat of a dirty bomb “is increasing.”

In a series of investigative reports, the U.S. Government Accountability Office has challenged the commission’s assurances that no meaningful “gaps” exist in how cesium and other radioactive materials are secured.

In 2012, a GAO report described finding a cesium irradiator on an unsecured wheeled pallet near a hospital’s loading dock. At a second facility, investigators found the combination to a lock — intended to secure a cesium irradiator — “clearly written on the door frame.”

The GAO’s most recent report, issued in April, implored the regulatory commission to act more forcefully. David C. Trimble, the analyst who supervised the GAO’s work, recalled that each time his staff has examined uses of cesium and other radioactive materials, “we have identified a vulnerability.”

“We hope that [the] NRC will recognize the significance of the Seattle incident, and reassesses its position to not consider socioeconomic costs,” Trimble told The Times.

The U.S. Department of Energy has also diverged from the NRC’s hands-off stance. The department has worked with users and manufacturers to harden the devices against theft.

In 2015, the department started giving incentives to convert to safer technologies, offering to pay 100% of the expense to remove and dispose of any cesium irradiator, which typically cost up to $200,000 per unit. The department says 108 of the devices have been replaced. Its announced goal is to “permanently eliminate” cesium irradiators by 2028.

“Every irradiator that is replaced represents one fewer opportunity for a terrorist,” the department said in a report to Congress in April.

U.S. Department of Energy April 2019 report to Congress

But, the report added, the “voluntary nature” of the conversions “remains a challenge” to hitting the 2028 goal.

In February 2018, University of California Chancellor Janet Napolitano called for the 10-campus system to begin converting away from its cesium irradiators.

Yet despite those steps, the number of licenses that the NRC has issued for operating cesium irradiators for sterilizing human blood has actually grown: The 370 nationwide represent an increase of 4% since 2011, according to statistics provided to The Times by the commission.

“We were surprised,” Margaret Cervera, a health physicist at the NRC, said of the increased numbers. “We expected them to be going down.”

The total may be larger. Cervera and a commission spokesman, David McIntyre, said the 370 leaves out irradiators that the commission suspected were being used for animal experiments or other research, rather than sterilizing human blood. In April, the Department of Energy reported to Congress that an additional 315 cesium irradiators were being “used primarily for research irradiation.”

A strange glowing material

Evidence of the damage cesium could cause emerged tragically in 1987 in Goiania, Brazil, an interior city about 800 miles northwest of Rio de Janeiro.

In September of that year, two people entered an abandoned site that had once housed a radiation-therapy clinic that utilized cesium. After prying loose some of the metal equipment, they loaded it into a wheelbarrow, hoping to sell pieces as scrap.

That evening, both men began to vomit. It wasn’t until two weeks later — after the equipment and the strangely glowing material inside it had changed hands through two scrap yards and become a source of fascination for adults and children — that a local physicist persuaded authorities to take action.

A monitoring station set up in a local stadium screened more than 112,000 people for possible cesium contamination. Forty-nine houses were demolished or decontaminated and about 4,500 tons of soil were hauled away, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

In the end, four people died and hundreds had to be decontaminated.

Soon thereafter, the breakup of the Soviet Union increased the availability of radioactive materials at military facilities that had become neglected.

As a nuclear engineer and former CIA intelligence officer, Warren Stern had traveled to the former Soviet republics, seeking to secure loose materials that could have fallen into the hands of terrorists. By Sept. 11, 2001, he was uniquely positioned to warn the U.S. government about the potential of a dirty bomb.

That night, after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Stern and a colleague began composing an urgent memo to their boss, Secretary of State Colin Powell, describing this new terrorist threat.

In 2002, Stern joined the staff of then-U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) as a nuclear advisor and persuaded her to try to force the NRC to phase cesium out of circulation and to seek tighter controls on other radioactive materials.

The effort was quickly scaled back in the face of opposition from other senators. But that year, Clinton introduced a bill calling for the National Academy of Sciences to study whether any uses of radioactive materials — including cesium — could be replaced with effective and safer alternatives.

In 2005, the call for a study became law, and in 2008, the National Academy’s appointed experts sent their report to the NRC and Congress. They ranked cesium as their top concern.

Cesium irradiators “should be replaced,” the 219-page report said, adding that effective and safer X-ray irradiators “are already commercially available as substitutes.”

The experts directed an additional message to the NRC, saying it “should discontinue all new licensing and importation of these [cesium] sources and devices.”

Users objected, citing concerns about the costs of switching and questioning whether the X-ray technology would be as effective.

Among those who spoke out was Thomas M. Priselac, president and chief executive of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. Without its cesium irradiator, Priselac said in an Oct. 14, 2008, letter to the NRC, Cedars might be unable to reliably irradiate high volumes of blood, possibly compromising patient safety. A Cedars spokesman declined to say whether the cesium irradiator remains in use.

“What I can say is that Cedars-Sinai has strict policies and procedures in place governing the use and management of irradiation technology,” the spokesman, Duke Helfand, wrote in an email. “This oversight has been reviewed and approved regularly by state and federal regulators.”

The NRC deferred the National Academy panel’s recommendations and called for further study.

In an interview, Theodore L. Phillips, the chairman of the panel, said he and his colleagues — including a senior American Red Cross blood-transfusion specialist — found the evidence for converting away from cesium to be overwhelming.

“There are X-ray irradiators that do blood irradiation with no problem,” said Phillips, a physician who for 29 years headed the radiation oncology department at UC San Francisco.

The committee’s conclusions, Phillips said, were influenced by studies showing the severe impact that small amounts of cesium could cause.

Cesium irradiators typically contain material amounting to about 2,000 curies, a measure of radioactivity. Scientific “vulnerability assessments” performed by the Sandia National Laboratories and provided to the committee showed that a bomb with 1,000 curies, about four teaspoons of cesium, could contaminate up to 10 square miles of Manhattan if dispersed uniformly. Just 40 curies could contaminate an urban area of up to 267 acres. Members of Congress and their staffs were briefed on the details.

The committee’s report also cited a 2005 study of theoretical dirty bomb attacks on the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. The study, paid for by the Department of Homeland Security, estimated cleanup costs and business losses ranging to more than $100 billion.

Reached recently, Connell, the nuclear engineer who was a member of the committee and who had led Sandia’s studies, said any inconveniences of switching away from cesium irradiators should be weighed against the potential for harm.

“We simply cannot permit a large, successful dirty bomb attack involving cesium to occur,” Connell said in an email. “There is no longer any reason to keep cesium irradiators in our hospitals and universities right in the middle of our major cities.”

‘A risk to public health’

From its offices in downtown Philadelphia, Avax Technologies, Inc. was aiming to develop treatments for cancer — work that utilized a cesium irradiator.

But Avax fell into financial distress and as of 2014 had “essentially ceased operation,” said Terry J. Derstine, a radiation program manager for the Pennsylvania Environmental Protection Department. By May 2015, the company had stopped paying its rent, according to state government records.

On the afternoon of May 27, Derstine’s colleagues inspected the site after learning the landlord had shut off power to Avax’s offices, which disabled door alarms intended to buttress 24-hour security for the irradiator, kept inside its own room.

The irradiator “was no longer being maintained in a secure manner … and was liable to theft, removal or improper usage, consequently posing a risk to public health and safety through radiation exposure,” according to a formal summary of facts, signed by Avax’s director of regulatory affairs and by Derstine and another state official.

The landlord restored power to the room on the afternoon of the inspection. In August 2015, state officials agreed to allow Avax to keep the device on condition that the company post a $200,000 bond to cover expenses if more trouble arose. Derstine and his colleagues also alerted city police and the FBI’s Philadelphia field office.

The irradiator was a matter of high concern, Derstine said, because the city was preparing for the visit of Pope Francis, whose motorcade would travel along Benjamin Franklin Parkway, just two blocks from Avax’s offices.

Earlier this year, Derstine told NRC commissioners that if a terrorist had set loose the cesium, “many people could have easily been exposed.”

The pope’s visit went uninterrupted. But on May 3, 2016, state officials learned that Avax “was no longer capable of continuing operations,” regulatory documents show.

“Several of the security measures that were in place to protect the irradiator were in jeopardy of being terminated by the supplier for lack of payment,” Derstine told the NRC.

This time, Philadelphia was preparing for a second major event — the Democratic National Convention. Soon afterward, state officials forced the removal of the irradiator.

In an interview, Henry E. Schea III, who was Avax’s regulatory affairs director and its radiation safety officer, acknowledged the company had been in “arrears in paying its rent” but said the irradiator had not been jeopardized.

In interviews with The Times, Derstine recalled the ordeal, which has not previously been publicized.

“Over the last 30 years,” the incident “was probably the No. 1 thing we’ve had to deal with,” he said.

Tiny spill, huge disruption

Technicians confirmed the accidental release of cesium from the irradiator in central Seattle at about 9:30 p.m. on May 2.

A company had been hired to remove the device, used for years in experiments on animals performed by University of Washington researchers. But while the technicians were preparing the irradiator to be loaded for transport, they nicked its protective metal shielding, causing a breach.

Thirteen people were contaminated with non-life-threatening levels of cesium: eight technicians who’d been trying to remove the irradiator, a building custodian and a radiation safety officer assigned to oversee the removal, two inspectors with the state health department and an FBI agent who wound up with cesium in his hair.

What unfolded that night — and over the months that followed — demonstrates the disruption caused by even a tiny, unintentional release of cesium, according to interviews with those involved and The Times’ review of local, state and federal documents.

City fire department specialists at first struggled to figure out how to decontaminate those who’d been inside the seven-story research and training building.

Across the street, at the university’s Harborview Medical Center, emergency room managers — fearing that cesium could be tracked into the hospital — initially denied entry to those needing treatment.

A supervising state health physicist, Mark Henry, along with officials from the Seattle Fire Department and the National Guard, persuaded the hospital to relent. A barrier could be made from thick sheets of plastic, heavy paper and plenty of tape to protect staff and other patients, they explained.

“Hospitals aren’t used to dealing with radioactive contamination,” said Mikel J. Elsen, the Washington health department’s director of radiation protection, who commented alongside Henry and other state officials in Tumwater, Wash.

The testing of all 13 individuals found their contamination levels “did not pose a health risk to any of those individuals or the general public,” according to a university medical school spokeswoman, Susan Gregg.

But more than seven months later, sections of six of the seven floors of the building remain off limits because of lingering cesium.

Officials believed an elevator near the breached irradiator spread the cesium with “piston-like” effect. Once it entered the main ventilation system, they said, it scattered more widely.

Hand-held instruments found cesium within the drywall and in other difficult-to-reach nooks and crannies.

The heaviest concentrations were around the loading dock where the irradiator had been positioned; officials pointed to a portion of the concrete surface of an adjacent parking area that also was contaminated.

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The Energy Department is investigating to assess “the root cause of the accident,” according to a spokesman, Gregory A. Wolf, who said the department spent about $8.6 million for the cleanup through Sept. 30.

No date has been set for when the building might be restored to its previous uses.

“This has been the worst contamination event we’ve had in this state in the public domain,” said Elsen, the state health official. “And it could have been much worse, because that’s a lot of cesium if it all got out.”

Henry, the state health physicist, called the event a foreshadowing of what a dirty bomb could do.

“If you think that somebody couldn’t get ahold of material like this and make a weapon of mass disruption, then I think you need to review that again,” Henry said. “You can see the consequences right now. You’ve got a dead building.”

Times research librarian Scott Wilson in Los Angeles contributed to this report.


WASHINGTON — 

Joe Biden sought Saturday to clarify his assertion that if the Senate subpoenas him to testify in President Trump’s impeachment trial, he will defy the order. But he did not clear up what he would do.

A day earlier, the Democratic presidential contender told the Des Moines Register he stood by his position that he would defy the Republican-controlled Senate if it ordered him to be a witness in the proceedings.

“Correct,” he said when asked if that was still his intent. “And the reason I wouldn’t [testify] is because it’s all designed to deal with Trump doing what he’s done his whole life — trying to take the focus off of him.”

In a tweet Saturday, Biden said: “I want to clarify something I said yesterday. In my 40 years in public life, I have always complied with a lawful order and in my eight years as VP, my office — unlike Donald Trump and Mike Pence — cooperated with legitimate congressional oversight requests.”

Yet he followed with another tweet suggesting that he would consider any subpoena from the Senate Republicans for the impeachment trial to be illegitimate.

“I am just not going to pretend that there is any legal basis for Republican subpoenas for my testimony in the impeachment trial,” he tweeted. “That is the point I was making yesterday and I reiterate: this impeachment is about Trump’s conduct, not mine.”

It has not been established that any witnesses will testify when the Senate takes up the articles of impeachment passed by the House, accusing Trump of abusing office and obstructing Congress.

Democrats want to hear from certain officials close to Trump who did not testify in the House impeachment inquiry. Trump and some of his allies have threatened in response to seek testimony from Biden, his son Hunter, and the anonymous whistleblower whose complaint about Trump’s July phone call with Ukraine’s leader set off the impeachment inquiry.

On the call, Trump asked the Ukrainian president to open an investigation into the Bidens while holding up military aid for Ukraine. A Ukrainian gas company had hired Hunter Biden when his father was vice president and the Obama administration’s point man on Ukraine. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either Biden.


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Journey Brown ran for 202 yards with two long touchdowns, Garrett Taylor returned an interception 15 yards for a score after another big play by All-American linebacker Micah Parsons, and No. 13 Penn State beat No. 15 Memphis 53-39 on Saturday in Arlington, Texas, in the highest-scoring Cotton Bowl ever.

While Penn State (11-2, No. 10 College Football Playoff rankings) gave up its most points and yards all season against the big-play Group of Five Tigers, Parsons was pulling down quarterback Brady White, who flipped the ball right into the hands of Taylor. That put the Nittany Lions up 45-36 in the final minute of the third quarter, only three plays after Brown had been stopped short on a fourth and one.

“For our defense to come back and what you probably consider a sudden-change situation, and be able to get that play, I think it was a huge momentum play,” coach James Franklin said.

American Athletic Conference champion Memphis (12-2, No. 17 CFP) played its first game under coach Ryan Silverfield. The offensive line coach was promoted when Mike Norvell left after four seasons to become Florida State’s coach this month.

“It just didn’t end the way we wanted to,” Silverfield said. “I have to do a better job as a head coach to make sure all three phases are prepared. That’s 100% on me. That won’t happen moving forward.”

White was 32-for-51 passing for 454 yards with two interceptions and no touchdowns. Patrick Taylor Jr. and Kenneth Gainwell both had rushing touchdowns for the Tigers, but the rest of their points came on a Cotton Bowl-record six field goals by Riley Patterson, including a record-long 51-yarder.

The Tigers finished with 542 total yards, but White was sacked a season-high six times and didn’t throw a touchdown pass for the first time since the season opener. Two of those sacks were by Parsons, who finished with 14 tackles.

“We go against him all the time. Nobody prepares and prepares for those opportunities and those moments more than this guy does,” Brown said of Parsons, who was sitting right by him.

Freshman running back Noah Cain added 92 yards and two touchdowns rushing for Penn State, which won for the 30th time in its 50 bowl appearances.

The Nittany Lions had 529 total yards. Brown got his 202 rushing yards in 16 carries, including a tackle-shredding 32-yard touchdown early and a 56-yard score when he went up the middle virtually untouched.

No. 14 Notre Dame 33, Iowa State 9

A year removed from an appearance in the CFP national semifinals, Notre Dame closed out another double-digit win season with arguably its best all-around performance of the year against Iowa State at the Camping World Bowl in Orlando, Fla.

Ian Book threw for 247 yards and a touchdown, Tony Jones Jr. scored on an 84-yard run, and game MVP Chase Claypool had seven receptions for 146 yards and a touchdown for the Irish (11-2, No. 15 CFP), who finished on a six-game winning streak after losing to Michigan to tumble out of contention for a playoff berth in late October.

Notre Dame also lost to Georgia in September; however, coach Brian Kelly said the team remained focused and continued to focus and get better.

Book completed 20 of 28 passes without an interception, including a 27-yard touchdown throw to Claypool, who went over 1,000 yards receiving for the season and also recovered a fumble on special teams to set up an early field goal.

Iowa State (7-6) lost to four ranked teams — Iowa, Oklahoma, Baylor and Oklahoma State — by a combined 11 points this season and was hoping to end its fourth season under Matt Campbell with a signature win for a once-downtrodden program.

Brock Purdy was 17 of 30 for 222 yards and no interceptions for the Cyclones, but he was unable to get his team into the end zone after throwing for a school single-season record 27 touchdowns during the regular season.

The sophomore quarterback left the game in the closing minutes with what Campbell described as a high ankle sprain.

Connor Assalley kicked field goals of 41, 26 and 42 yards.


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ATLANTA — 

Joe Burrow turned in the greatest performance yet in his Heisman Trophy season, throwing for seven touchdowns and 493 yards as No. 1 Louisiana State romped to a breathtaking 63-28 victory over No. 4 Oklahoma in the Peach Bowl semifinal game Saturday.

The Tigers (14-0) are headed to the national championship game against No. 3 Clemson — which beat No. 2 Ohio State 29-23 in the Fiesta Bowl on Saturday night — clicking on all cylinders, having dismantled the Sooners (12-2) with a first half for the ages.

Burrow tied the record for any college bowl game with his seven touchdown passes — which all came before the bands hit the field for the halftime show at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Justin Jefferson was on the receiving end for four of those scoring plays, also tying a bowl record.

For good measure, Burrow scored an eighth touchdown himself on a three-yard run in the third quarter, thoroughly dominating his expected duel with Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts, the Heisman runner-up.

The impressive victory came with heavy hearts. Shortly before the game, LSU offensive coordinator Steve Ensminger learned that his daughter-in-law, broadcaster Carley McCord, was among five people killed in a plane crash in Louisiana.

The small plane went down shortly after takeoff for what was supposed to be a flight to Atlanta for the game.

Ensminger had tears running down his cheeks during warmups, but he was in his usual spot high above the field when the game kicked off, calling plays along with passing game coordinator Joe Brady.

It was a brilliant, poignant performance in the face of such tragedy. The players didn’t learn until afterward what Ensminger was going through.

“He’s the MVP right now,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said in a halftime interview with his team leading 49-14.

LSU needed only three plays to race 42 yards for its first score — a perfectly thrown ball over Jefferson’s shoulder for a 19-yard touchdown less than three minutes into the game.

Oklahoma briefly put up a fight. Hurts’ 51-yard pass to CeeDee Lamb set up a three-yard touchdown run by Kennedy Brooks that tied the score at 7.

After that, the rout was on.

The Tigers’ potent spread offense made this one look much like the Harlem Globetrotters carving up the Washington Generals, only it was the Sooners playing the hapless victim. At times, it was hard to tell whether Oklahoma was actually trying, but that was merely a reflection of Burrow’s precision and the excellent protection that gave him plenty of time to throw.

Jefferson hauled in a 35-yard pass for touchdown No. 2. Then a 42-yarder for No. 3. And, finally, a 30-yard scoring strike that left him counting off four fingers for the crowd — all before the midway point of the second quarter.

Terrace Marshall Jr. contributed to the onslaught with touchdown catches of eight and two yards. Tight end Thaddeus Moss — the son of NFL Hall of Fame wide receiver Randy Moss — made his daddy proud by getting free behind the secondary, hauling in a pass and shoving off a fast-closing defender to complete the 62-yard scoring play.

“What a tremendous job by everybody,” Orgeron said. “One team, one heartbeat. Everybody in our organization. We got tremendous play by Joe Burrow and have a great coaching staff.”

It was a miserable finale for Hurts, who closed out a nomadic college career that began with him leading Alabama to a pair of national championship games before losing his starting job to Tua Tagovailoa. After graduating, Hurts transferred to Oklahoma for a one-and-done final season that produced some dazzling numbers but ended short of the ultimate goal.

Running for his life most of the game, Hurts was largely stymied on the ground and through the air. He ran for a pair of touchdowns but gained just 43 yards with his legs. He was held to 15-of-31 passing for 217 yards, giving up a brilliant, leaping interception to Kary Vincent Jr. that quickly brought the LSU offense back on the field as the Tigers were blowing the game open.

“We needed to take advantage of every opportunity we had against a team like this,” Hurts said. “We failed to do that.”


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GLENDALE, Ariz. — 

Needing four yards on fourth down for a chance to put defending national champion Clemson away, Ohio State coach Ryan Day decided to punt the ball back to a golden-locked quarterback who has never lost a college football game.

Trevor Lawrence needed to go 94 yards in three minutes to keep his remarkable unblemished record intact and advance the No. 3 Tigers to their second consecutive title bout. The sophomore quickly took over the offensive huddle from Clemson coach Dabo Swinney and told his teammates: “I love all you guys. Let’s go win this thing.”

One minute later, Clemson had used just three plays to arrive at the Ohio State 34-yard line. There, Lawrence got the signal for a clever quarterback-keeper-turned-pass to Travis Etienne, a play the Tigers had not been executing well in practice.

“I didn’t feel super confident about it,” Lawrence said.

Yet, in typical Clemson fashion, the call worked to perfection. Etienne blazed into the end zone for his third touchdown.

On the ensuing drive, Ohio State’s comeback attempt fell flat when a Justin Fields pass sailed into the arms of Clemson safety Nolan Turner, leading to that exceedingly familiar orange-and-white confetti being sprayed into the air when the clock hit zero.

The Tigers won a College Football Playoff semifinal Saturday night that felt every bit like a national championship tilt over the heartbroken Buckeyes, 29-23, in the Fiesta Bowl.

“Proud, sad, but angry too,” Day said.

The Tigers’ reward for winning their 29th in a row? A CFP final match with No. 1 Louisiana State on Jan. 13 in New Orleans’ Superdome in front of tens of thousands of rowdy Cajuns.

Swinney sounded up for it, and, with LSU set as the early betting favorite, he can continue to convince his Tigers that nobody gives them respect.

No. 2 Ohio State whiffed on a prove-it opportunity that was three years in the making. On New Year’s Eve in 2016, Clemson systematically slaughtered the Buckeyes 31-0 inside this same shiny and silver desert orb that’s now called State Farm Stadium. Three days later, Urban Meyer hired Day, then an assistant with the San Francisco 49ers, as his co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.

It was no secret to Meyer, who won two national championships at Florida and one at Ohio State, that the Buckeyes needed to continue to evolve into a team that might play in the Big Ten Conference but more resemble a Southern program in the way it was built.

Fields, a transfer from Georgia, fit right in with the skill players Ohio State was already collecting from locales outside the Big Ten footprint. The Buckeyes plucked running back J.K. Dobbins and wide receiver Garrett Wilson out of Texas. Receivers Chris Olave (California), K.J. Hill (Arkansas) and Binjimen Victor (Florida) rounded out a core of non-Midwesterners who Woody Hayes never would have believed necessary for Ohio State to have a puncher’s chance against a powerhouse from the South.

So, in the first quarter Saturday, when Dobbins burst through a hole and outran the back end of the Clemson defense for a 68-yard touchdown to give the Buckeyes a 10-0 lead, more meaning was attached to it than one could understand if they didn’t cheer for a traditionally plodding Big Ten school.

Ohio State (13-1) jumped out to a 16-0 lead, but Swinney never allowed Clemson (14-0) to panic. He trusted his players, some of whom had helped the Tigers win two of the last three national titles. Swinney is the first to acknowledge that he doesn’t have to go far to stock his roster with blue-chippers, especially now that the results match the Southern charm.

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With five straight trips to the CFP, Clemson has changed the meaning of the verb “Clemsoning” from shrinking in the biggest moments to rising to any occasion. All the Tigers need is a window, and they’ll blow right through it.

That opening came in the second quarter when Ohio State cornerback Shaun Wade was called for targeting on Lawrence, extending a drive the Tigers dearly needed.

They’d score a touchdown on a nifty eight-yard cutback run by Etienne, and before too long, the 6-foot-6 Lawrence would be chugging down the field for an improbable 67-yard touchdown run that cut right through the heart of any earlier notion Ohio State had truly caught up to Clemson.

In the third quarter, the Tigers continued to run away from the Buckeyes on a 53-yard touchdown pass from Lawrence to Etienne in which the running back took a screen pass and did all the work himself to give Clemson a 21-16 lead.

The Buckeyes answered on a Fields fourth-down pass to Olave that put them up 23-21 with 11:46 to go.

But Fields could not answer Lawrence, the sport’s unicorn of a quarterback, a second time.

A simple miscommunication — Olave thought Fields was going to scramble and broke off his post route toward the corner, while Fields stayed in the pocket and threw to the post — led to the game-clinching interception for Clemson.

Up next, a Tigers versus Tigers showdown in New Orleans that will keep the power centered south of the Mason-Dixon line.


Etiwanda has been known as “clamp city” for years because of the way the team plays man-to-man defense under coach Dave Kleckner. The Eagles put their skill on display before a packed gym on Saturday night against No. 1 Sierra Canyon in the semifinals of the Platinum division of the Classic at Damien.

From the beginning, Etiwanda (11-2) gave Sierra Canyon (14-0) all it could handle, but in the end, the Trailblazers got clutch plays from Shy Odom to pull out a 57-53 victory and advance to Monday’s championship game. Odom’s basket in the final minute put the Trailblazers ahead and he added a free throw with 17 seconds left. The Eagles twice had opportunities go ahead but missed shots. BJ Boston clinched the victory with two free throws. He finished with 31 points.

Sierra Canyon trailed 31-30 at halftime, but one very important quality shown by the Trailblazers in the opening month is performing well in the second half after making adjustments. They opened a 39-31 lead in the third quarter. Sierra Canyon will be getting a big addition on Monday. Ziaire Williams, the former Sherman Oaks Notre Dame standout, will become eligible.

The Trailblazers will face Rancho Christian at 8:30 p.m. at Damien in the final. Rancho Christian is the last team to defeat Sierra Canyon in the final regular season game from last season. Rancho Christian defeated St. John Bosco 70-58 in the other semifinal. Bryson Stephens scored 16 points, Evan Mobley 15 and Luke Turner 1`2. Josh Camper had 21 points for St. John Bosco.

Washington Prep (9-8) advanced to the Gold division championship game by defeating unbeaten Rolling Hills Prep 52-47 in overtime. DeShawn Johnson led the way with 16 points. The General have played the toughest schedule of any City Section team and continue to hang tough. Brandon Burks made a free throw with 2.7 seconds left for Washington to send the game into overtime. Washington Prep will play Santa Clarita Christian, a 67-55 winner over Chaminade. Kaleb Lowery scored 25 points.

Birmingham was beaten by Richmond Salesian 61-55. David Elliott scored 22 points.

Dylan Andrews was 10 of 10 from the free-throw line and finished with 20 points in Windward’s 73-70 win over Damien. Kijani Wright added 16 points. Malik Thomas led Damien with 36 points.

Barry Wilds scored 16 points to help Fairfax reach the consolation final in the Platinum division with a 76-69 win over Dublin.

Ribet knocked off St. Bernard 80-72 behind Tyler Powell, who scored 25 points.

Heritage Christian (13-2) defeated Jesuit 72-52. Skyy Clark scored 30 points and Max Allen 26.

St. Francis defeated Village Christian 51-34 and will play in the Silver division final. Andre Henry scored 22 points.

In Oregon, Santa Ana Mater Dei advanced to the tourney final with a 63-45 win over Norcross. Devin Askew had 23 points.

Andrew Ramirez scored 26 points to help Oxnard (16-1) defeat Buena 77-51. Oxnard will play Servite in the Ventura tournament final on Monday. Servite defeated Shalhevet 69-37. Tavavis Miller had 21 points.

At the Holiday Classic in San Diego, Evan Oliver scored 21 points to help Riverside Poly defeat Bishop O’Dowd 72-63. Riverside Poly gets Corona Centennial transfer DJ Davis eligible on Monday.

Westchester was beaten by Sheldon 77-64. Joseph Johnson had 19 points for Westchester.

JSerra received 32 points from Ian Martinez in a 63-57 win over Desert Vista.

Crespi advanced to the championship game of the Orange tournament with a 54-39 win over Warren. Mike Price and Robert Power each scored 17 points.

Ben Shtolzberg scored 21 points as Sherman Oaks Notre Dame defeated Bakersfield 65-63.

Loyola won the Sand Dune Classic behind tournament MVP Colby Brooks, who scored 15 points in a 59-58 win over St. Ignatius.

Dylan Stone scored 22 points in Crossroads’ 73-45 win over Moreau.

Mission Viejo defeated Tesoro 60-55 in the semifinals of the Tustin tournament.

Adrian McIntyre scored 35 points but Saugus lost to Florida Westminster Catholic 67-64.

Brentwood defeated Clovis North 62-58. Christian Moore had 21 points and 20 rebounds.

Oak Park improved to 12-2 with a 76-61 win over Murrieta Mesa. Clark Slajchert scored 34 points.

Jake Hlywiak finished with 30 points in Valencia’s 84-70 win over Colony.

Moorpark received 27 points from Troy Anderson in a 65-42 win over Alta Loma.

Bishop Montgomery defeated Maranatha 60-28. Isaiah Johnson scored 17 points.

Peyton Watson scored 28 points but Long Beach Poly was beaten by Dillard 67-58.

Hart defeated Grant 79-77. Dipa Salim scored 24 points for Grant. Highland defeated Granada Hills 63-55.

Alemany handed Palisades a 78-64 defeat. Brandon Whitney scored 30 points. Nico Ponce added 21 points. Alemany will play Bishop Montgomery for the So Cal Christmas Classic championship on Monday.

Quincy McGriff scored 19 points to lead Santa Monica past Lynwood 67-64.

In Arkansas, Corona Centennial defeated Jacksonville 58-54. Paris Dawson and Donovan Dent each scored 14 points.


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