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They're still determined to try this reality thing, even if it means suing VH1 for the right to do so. They want to have their lives broadcast, not only to help revive Liza's career--she's got an album out, a comedy film deal in development and three Christmas shows at Manhattan's Town Hall in early December--but to serve as an inspirational role model. "Part of the thing I wanted to do with the show was to help somebody, baby," Liza says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Love That Dares to Speak | 12/2/2002 | See Source »

More ambitious psy-ops are ahead. The Air Force intends to put into the air over Iraq its EC-130 "Commando Solos," planes that will broadcast TV and radio signals to the country. Iraqi opposition groups are turning over telephone numbers of active-duty Iraqi troops to their U.S. military liaisons. If war begins, those in Iraq will get taped U.S. phone messages from their exiled colleagues suggesting it might be sensible for them to stay on the sidelines. "There is a professional officer corps, and they do have contacts outside," says the former U.S. official who in September acted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The Secret Campaign To Topple Saddam | 12/2/2002 | See Source »

...NCWO has now urged CBS, the television network that will broadcast next year’s Masters Tournament, to drop its coverage in protest of Augusta’s refusal to admit a female member. Unfortunately, CBS continues to persist in its support of Augusta. For that reason, when the Masters is aired in April, men and women alike should take action, grab their remote controls and change the channel...

Author: By Anat Maytal, | Title: A Man’s World After All | 12/2/2002 | See Source »

...shocked the world last month when the secretive Stalinist state admitted it was running a nuclear weapons program. Since then, the question on everyone's mind has been: do they already have the Bomb? North Korean leader Kim Jong Il is keeping the world guessing. In a Nov. 17 broadcast, Radio Pyongyang said: "We have come to have powerful military counter-measures, including nuclear weapons." Two days later, the commentary was rebroadcast twice, but the phrase "come to have" was replaced by "entitled to have" nuclear arms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dear Leader's Nuclear Agenda | 11/25/2002 | See Source »

...hotel for an elaborate ceremony to mark Airtel's local launch. First, Mittal tried to light a large oil lamp with a candle, but the wicks were soaked in too much oil and he stood awkwardly as they refused to catch fire. Then, the speaker system failed during the broadcast of a mobile phone call he made to the state's Chief Minister. Instead of making a fuss, Mittal told his Bombay manager: "Things happen." Asked about the incident months later, he explained simply that "I concentrate on things that have a large impact...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Speed Dialing | 11/25/2002 | See Source »

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