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NBC's 'Today' readies substitutes for Savannah Guthrie's maternity leave

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 09 Agustus 2014 | 00.32

NBC will use Savannah Guthrie's maternity leave from "Today" as an opportunity to give other members of its morning-show team a turn at co-hosting the program's first two hours.

Natalie Morales will initially fill in for Guthrie, who will begin maternity leave after Monday's broadcast of the show. Tamron Hall and Hoda Kotb, who hold forth, respectively, in the show's third and fourth hours, will also fill in during the days ahead, as part of a rotation, according to a spokeswoman for the program.

Surprise guest hosts will appear on certain days. "We will announce guest hosts at a later time, said Megan Kopf, the spokeswoman for the show.

Matt Lauer continues his duties as the show's other co-anchor in its 7 a.m and 8 a.m. hours.

Guthrie, who announced her pregnancy on "Today" in March, will take a step away from the program as it is striving to make gains against first-place rival "Good Morning America" on ABC. As part of a recent overhaul of the show, "Today" is making efforts to present a first hour with a newsier focus, and Guthrie, a former White House correspondent with a law degree from Georgetown University, has played an integral role in that effort.

At the same time, NBC has worked to put a broader spotlight on the entire "Today" on-air staff, with Hall often filling in for Carson Daly in the show's first two hours, and a series about turning 50 with Kotb at the center. Guthrie's leave will likely allow other "Today" anchors to enjoy an expansion of their duties, for a time.

(C) 2014 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


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GM issues recall on SUVs

General Motors' troubles with safety recalls have surfaced in another case, this time with the company recalling a group of SUVs for a third time to fix power window switches that can catch fire.

The problem, revealed in documents posted by federal safety regulators this week, is so serious that GM is telling customers to park the SUVs outdoors until they are repaired because they could catch fire when left unattended.

The vehicles will be left outside for a while. Parts won't be ready until October at the earliest, according to GM. The automaker also has ordered its dealers to stop selling the SUVs as used cars until they are fixed.

The recall covers about 189,000 vehicles in North America, mainly from the 2006 and 2007 model years. Models affected include the Chevrolet TrailBlazer, GMC Envoy, Buick Rainer, Isuzu Ascender and Saab 97-X. The recall was one of six announced by GM on June 30 that covered 7.6 million vehicles.

GM is in the midst of the biggest safety crisis in its history, touched off by the delayed recall of 2.6 million older small cars to fix faulty ignition switches. The company has issued a record 60 recalls this year covering nearly 29 million vehicles.

Before this year, GM had been reluctant to issue recalls, at times opting for lower-cost fixes for safety problems. It's been fined $35 million by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for lapses in reporting the ignition switch problems, which it blames for at least 13 deaths.

After the ignition switch debacle, GM did a companywide safety review, appointed a new global safety chief and pledged to recall cars quickly.

The SUV problem first appeared early in 2012 when NHTSA began investigating consumer complaints of fires in the driver's-door switches that control power windows.

At first, GM tried to address the issue with a "service campaign," where it sent letters to owners telling them that water can find its way into the switches, causing rust that can result in short circuits, overheating and possibly fires. The campaign, which wasn't a recall, extended the warranty and offered service only to vehicles that exhibited the problems. It was limited to 20 states and Washington, D.C., where salt is used to clear roads in the winter.

But in August of 2012, under government pressure, GM recalled 278,000 of the SUVs in the cold-weather states and offered extended warranties to the rest of the country. NHTSA kept investigating, and 10 months later, GM expanded the recall nationwide.

By then, NHTSA and GM had received 242 complaints, including 28 about fires. There were no injuries.

In one complaint filed with NHTSA from October of 2008, a woman reported that the alarm sounded while her 2006 TrailBlazer was parked in her driveway. When she looked outside, it was in flames. Firefighters put out the blaze and told her it started in the driver's door.

"The fire burned the entire driver's side of the vehicle, a portion of the front passenger seat and the roof," she wrote. People filing complaints are not identified by the agency.

The fix used by GM last year was to put a protective coating around the window switch circuit boards, which is less costly than replacing the switches. But starting this April, GM received complaints that the switches malfunctioned in SUVs that had been repaired. So in June, it decided to do the third recall and replace all of the switches.

"We are recalling them because the fix that we put in did not work," spokesman Alan Adler said Thursday. "We're taking care of it. We're doing the right thing."

Initially GM tried the service campaign because number of incidents was low, he said. It was limited to the cold-weather states because salty water made the switches corrode quickly and incidents were few in warmer states, Adler said.

Letters notifying owners about the SUV recall should be mailed soon. Owners will get a second letter sometime from October to December telling them when parts are available to fix the vehicles.


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Kim Kardashian and Kanye West buy big suburban mansion

We know we're a bit behind the 8-ball on this but a complicated computer snafu tied our digital hands for the last nearly 24 hours. However, in the interest of keeping up the celebrity real estate Joneses and just in case any of the children somehow missed it, celebrity gossip juggernaut TMZ swears that reality television supernova Kim Kardashian has somehow convinced her high-minded rapper husband Kanye West to drop twenty million bucks on a freshly constructed mansion in the same family friendly, equestrian oriented and guard gated Hidden Hills community where her momager Kris Jenner already lives is a large but much smaller mansion.

Don't none of ya'll misunderstand Your Mama as Hidden Hills naysayer, 'cause we're not. Just because it's not our particular cup of suburban real estate tea doesn't mean it's not a much touted, well-groomed and exceedingly affluent enclave long favored by the rich and/or famous. Should they choose, Mister and Missus Kardashian can invite neighbors who Jennifer Lopez, Drake, Leann Rimes and Eddie Cibrian, Nicolette Sheridan, and Jessica Simpson to their housewarming party and it will no doubt be a fine place to bring up their directionally named baby.

  • BUYERS:Kim Kardashian and Kanye West
  • LOCATION: Hidden Hills, CA
  • PRICE: (reportedly) $20,000,000
  • SIZE: 15,667 square feet, 8 bedrooms, 8 full and two half bathrooms.

The 3.01-acre spread, originally listed in April 2013 and last listed for $20,995,000, was previously owned by rock 'n' roll royal Lisa Marie Presley but her former mansion was torn down a few years ago to make way for a sprawling compound that includes a stone-faced manor house lovingly described in digital marketing materials as a "French Country masterpiece."

The unquestionably stately abode has 8 bedrooms, 8 full and 2 half bathrooms including a house-sized master suite with private retreat, dual bathrooms, extensive closets and dressing areas, fitness room and a private terrace with spa. Three of the mansion's eight fireplaces are in the formal living room, formal dining room and custom paneled library. Less formal family and entertainment spaces include a three island kitchen, family room, home theater with upholstered walls and a suede-walled game room with wet bar.

The fully landscaped estate has two swimming pools, two spas, two barbeque centers, two vineyards, three fountains, a sport court and rose garden, over an acre of lawn and a gated motor court bigger than a 7-11 parking lot. In addition to the main house there's a 1,050-square-foot entertainment pavilion as well as a secluded pool house/guest house with fireplace and bathroom.

Kanye still owns a minimalist apartment in lower Manhattan and a contemporary art-filled abode in the Hollywood Hills he's had on and off the market for years -- it's not currently listed on the open market -- while Kimmy sold her Bev Hills bachelorette pad in February 2013 for $3.9 million. So the scuttlebutt goes, once the full-scale and no-doubt supremely price renovations are complete, K-K intend to flip the mock-Med manse in the Bel Air Crest community they bought in January 2013 for $9 million.

(C) 2014 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


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We’re turning one... and best of Herald Radio is yet to come

From a cast of political stars to the cast of "Star Trek," Boston Herald Radio has attracted dozens of prominent guests, landed national news-making bombs and revealed major breaking news stories in its first year of live Web broadcasts that have become can't-miss radio for listeners and viewers across the nation.

On the very first day of Herald Radio's "Morning Meeting" show, then-Mayor Thomas M. Menino dropped by the studio at 70 Fargo St. to bring gifts and a near surprise endorsement to mayoral candidate Charlotte Golar Richie.

Herald Radio's launch was named to the prestigious Frontier Fifty list of outstanding talk media webcasts in the nation by industry bible Talkers Magazine.

With three daily shows — "Morning Meeting" with Hillary Chabot and Jaclyn Cashman, "Trending Now" with Adriana Cohen and me, and "Sports Town" with Chris Villani, and a live morning news hour at 8 a.m. — Herald Radio has given listeners and viewers a new place to go for the best talk radio in town.

In only one year, Herald Radio has made national news with top sports guests including Red Sox honcho Larry Lucchino and Boston Marathon winner Meb Keflezighi, and political guests including U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, Ann Romney, Fox News host Bill O'Reilly, former Massachusetts U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, Attorney General Martha Coakley and columnist Charles Krauthammer.

Herald Radio also gave voters the first major Democratic gubernatorial debate — streamed live on bostonherald.com — and exclusive Suffolk University/Boston Herald polling results revealed live on "Morning Meeting."

The Suffolk/Herald poll accurately predicted Mayor Martin J. Walsh's election victory and made headlines across the country with a recent poll showing former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney trouncing other potential GOP candidates in a 2016 New Hampshire primary matchup.

U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) also created national shock waves by predicting Obamacare would be a disaster for Democrats in the 2014 elections in a candid interview on "Trending Now."

But politics isn't the only thing gaining attention on Herald Radio. The Internet station has featured guests like William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy of "Star Trek," actors Gary Sinise and Sean Astin, Olympic gold medalist Kayla Harrison and local celebrities such as Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockhart and chef Lydia Shire.

Herald Radio also is the place to be for the "High Noon" show with Howie Carr and me, streamed live every Wednesday at noon, and the media criticism show "Press Party" hosted by Herald multimedia reporter Erica Moura every Friday at noon.

So tune into Herald Radio this morning. The best is yet to come.


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Market Basket cuts hours of hundreds of part-timers

Hundreds of part-time Market Basket employees will be without a job come Monday as store managers scramble to keep up with the demands of the embattled grocery chain's leadership, and while the company promises there will be no layoffs, those on the front lines are telling a different story.

"They are just trying to cover themselves here. The fact of the matter is that we can't schedule these people to work, and on Monday they won't have any more shifts," said Glenn Connors, who manages the Brockton Market Basket. "We had to tell these people that they can't come back to work next week. My employees are horrified."

Store managers were notified by Market Basket co-CEO Felicia Thornton last Friday that they "need to schedule staff levels necessary to serve your current customer base and maintain store conditions," according to an email obtained by the Herald.

In the wake of the ongoing protests to reinstate fired CEO Arthur T. Demoulas, Market Basket's shelves have been nearly empty, and its customers have gone elsewhere.

With plummeting revenues, store managers are forced to make cuts, and the only option is to part ways with hundreds of part-time employees.

"It's almost like they're trying to set us up," said Scott Ivers, manager of a store in Lowell. "They told me I had to make payroll and keep the store going. If I had to do the math and make payroll, I'd have to lay everyone off. This is the only way we can physically do this and even come close."

Market Basket, meanwhile, maintains managers are not being asked to lay anyone off.

"Store directors were not instructed to lay off associates, but to adjust hours to meet current demand," the company said in a statement. "It is our hope that we will be back to normal business levels in the not too distant future and all associates will be back to a full schedule."

According to the statement, Thornton also told all store managers "to let their associates know that they are not laid off."

Semantics didn't matter to Matt Forrest, 21, a grocery clerk who works summers at a Lowell Market Basket to help pay his way through college.

"It's really stressful for me because I'm a student and I have to buy books and get ready for school. I'm just trying to get by," he said. "I've been working in this store for a while, and now I can't come in on Monday. This really is terrible."

Attorney General Martha Coakley yesterday set up a hotline for Market Basket employees to call after her office received "more than 100 calls over the last 24 hours," according to a statement. Coakley and New Hampshire Attorney General Joseph Foster sent a letter to Market Basket brass to remind them of the laws regarding worker termination.


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Boston Comic Con set to attract record crowds

It's that time of year again: You're walking in Boston's Seaport District, minding your own business, when you look up and suddenly see Batman walking toward you, flirting with My Little Pony.

You debate what the proper etiquette is for this conundrum and conclude that you can (a) walk hurriedly past them, trying not to stare, (b) ask them where Robin is or (c) follow them into the Seaport World Trade Center and surrender yourself to three days of unbridled wackiness.

Yes, it's the seventh annual Boston Comic Con, where as many as 40,000 comic book aficionados of all ages — many of them dressed as their favorite characters — gather beginning today to meet the more than 200 authors and illustrators who created them.

"Not only is Boston Comic Con drawing interest from the area's extensive comic book community, but it's becoming a destination event that brings tourists to Boston," said Nick Kanieff, the convention's co-founder. "The growing excitement around this convention demonstrates the strength and vibrancy of the creative community we have here in Boston and in the surrounding region."

Sara Richard of Portsmouth, N.H., a five-year veteran of Boston Comic Con who's done illustrations for the "The Littlest Pet Shop" and "My Little Pony," said she'll be taking sketch requests and trying to get an autograph from John Barrowman of "Doctor Who," one of several celebrities who'll be on hand.

"I've always been a fan of comic books," said Richard, 28. "I have a very active imagination, and comic books marry fantastical stories with equally fantastical art. Comic Con's also nice because you get to meet other fans."

The demographics of those fans have "radically changed" in recent years, Kanieff said.

"Five years ago, comic books were an underground medium, and the fan base here was 95 percent male between the ages of 20 and 40," he said. "Now, there's a huge contingent of females and families. Comic book characters are in everybody's home today, and it's all because of Hollywood."

Christian Sherman of West Bridgewater will be taking his 15- and 13-year-old daughters Sunday. His older daughter, Samantha, will be going as Raven from "Teen Titans," while his younger daughter, Emily, will be going as Elastigirl from the Disney movie "The Incredibles." Not to be outdone, Sherman, 42, will be Black Manta, the arch-nemesis of the title character in the "Aquaman" series.


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The Ticker

Lululemon founder to sell big stake

Lululemon Athletica founder Dennis "Chip" Wilson will sell half his stake in the company as part of a truce that averts a potentially messy battle at the maker of yoga apparel and other exercise gear.

Under the deal announced yesterday, Boston-based investment firm Advent International, a major investor in Lululemon before selling its stake in the company in 2009, will pay Wilson $845 million for 20.1 million shares. That will whittle Wilson's stake in Lululemon from nearly 28 percent to just under 14 percent.

Study: N.E. spends more on basics

New Englanders spent more on food, health care, gas to run their cars and electricity to heat and cool their homes in 2012 than most other Americans, according to statistics released yesterday by the federal government showing that spending has rebounded since the recession ended in 2009.

Spending per individual in the six New England states ranged from a low of $36,974 in Rhode Island, which has been hobbled by persistently high unemployment, to $47,308 in Massachusetts.

FRIDAY

 Labor Department releases second-quarter productivity data.

THE SHUFFLE

Liaison International, a Wakefield company that provides admissions management solutions, announced it has named Meghan VanSpriell as vice president of marketing. VanSpriell comes to Liaison with broad experience in higher education and technology.


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Live large in Danvers 
brick estate

A million dollars buys a lot less house these days, and it's become the going rate for two-bedroom condos in Boston's most desirable neighborhoods.

But with this brick estate at 9 Kenmore Drive in Danvers, you get a lot of house for $1.15 million — six bedrooms, six bathrooms, an attached three-car garage and almost 10,000 square feet of living space in­cluding the finished basement.

The custom Mediterranean-style house, located in a choice neighborhood near St. John's Prep, features five marble fireplaces, oak floors with inlays, tall windows and has a showpiece entry foyer and two double-height great rooms. It's set on more than a half-acre that backs up to town-owned conservation land.

The beautiful back yard features a large slate veranda leading down to a built-in heated swimming pool with a cabana. The front and back yards are landscaped with fig, peach and apple trees and many flowering bushes.

Since it was built in 1992, the home has been in the family that owned the now-closed Despina's Place, a Greek/pizza eatery on Mass. Ave. in the Back Bay.

"This isn't a house that was built to be sold, but for someone to live in for a lifetime," said owner George Tzantyos, whose relative, original owner John Gikas, passed away in 2009.

The house can support a large extended family or someone who wants live-in help, as its finished basement has a full kitchen, bathroom, laundry room, cedar closet and several bedrooms. There are twelve heating zones and central air conditioning.

It's not the easiest house to sell, admits listing agent Gail Tyrrell of Re/Max Advantage in Salem, who recently reduced the price from $1,430,000. Although it was built with high-­quality finishes, the 1990s-era colored bathroom fixtures look outdated.

"Buyers are looking for the latest and greatest finishes," Tyrrell said. "But this large home has everything else a buyer could want, all the high-end bells and whistles. To reconstruct this home today would cost well over $2 million."

But even if the kitchen could use some freshening up, it's spacious — with lots of cabinets, a central island, newer wall ovens and electric cooktop, and a glass-­enclosed breakfast room with views out to the back yard.

The soaring barrel-­vaulted grand foyer has granite floors and a mahogany bridal staircase with a large crystal chandelier.

Corinthian columns on either side of the foyer lead to formal living and dining­ rooms with inlaid hardwood floors, crown molding and floor-to-ceiling windows. The living room has a marble fireplace and the dining room a large crystal chandelier. There's also a mahogany-­lined private library with another marble fireplace.

There's a great room off the foyer with 25-foot vaulted ceilings, a marble fireplace and glass doors out to the veranda and pool and a second vaulted great room off the kitchen that also opens to the veranda.

"It's a house that can hold lots of people," Tzantyos said. "The original owner did a lot of entertaining here."


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Logan employees hold rally for higher wages, union

Mobilizing to form a union in a quest for "livable wages," service workers at Logan International Airport rallied yesterday, flanked by Democratic pols, including gubernatorial candidates Attorney General Martha Coakley and state Treasurer Steve Grossman.

Employees who work for contractors secured by airlines, including cabin cleaners, wheelchair assistants and baggage handlers, make as little as $8 an hour with few, if any, benefits, and are fighting for increased pay and a "livable wage," said Roxana Rivera, district leader for SEIU 32BJ.

"Workers have been playing by the rules," she said. "They have been coming to work every day to keep the airport running, now the only thing we are asking for is decent wages."

Coakley told the crowd that service employees deserve to "make a living wage and get ahead just like everybody."

Grossman said, "Let's talk to Massport. Let's talk to public officials. Every public official who is not standing with us today is standing on the other side."

Massport in a statement said it is "sympathetic to the concerns raised regarding working conditions and take them seriously. This matter is primarily one between private employers — hired by the airlines — and their workforce."


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GM issues third recall on SUVs that can catch fire

General Motors' troubles with safety recalls has surfaced in another case, this time with the company recalling a group of SUVs for a third time to fix power window switches that can catch fire.

The problem, revealed in documents posted by federal safety regulators this week, is so serious that GM is telling customers to park the SUVs outdoors until they are repaired because they could catch fire when left unattended.

The SUV recall was one of six announced by GM on June 30 that covered 7.6 million vehicles. It covers about 189,000 vehicles in North America, mainly from the 2006 and 2007 model years. Models affected include the Chevrolet TrailBlazer, GMC Envoy, Buick Rainier, Isuzu Ascender and Saab 97-X.

Those vehicles will be left outside for a while. Parts won't be ready until October at the earliest, according to GM. The automaker also has ordered its dealers to stop selling the SUVs as used cars until they are fixed.

GM is in the midst of the biggest safety crisis in its history, touched off by the delayed recall of 2.6 million older small cars to fix faulty ignition switches. The company has issued a record 60 recalls this year covering nearly 29 million vehicles.

Before this year, GM had been reluctant to issue recalls, at times opting for lower-cost fixes for safety problems. It's been fined $35 million by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for lapses in reporting the ignition switch problems, which it blames for at least 13 deaths.

After the ignition switch debacle, GM did a companywide safety review, appointed a new global safety chief and pledged to recall cars quickly.

The SUV problem first appeared early in 2012 when NHTSA began investigating consumer complaints of fires in the driver's-door switches that control power windows.

At first, GM tried to address the issue with a "service campaign," where it sent letters to owners telling them that water can find its way into the switches, causing rust that can result in short circuits, overheating and possibly fires. The campaign, which wasn't a recall, extended the warranty and offered service only to vehicles that exhibited the problems. It was limited to 20 states and Washington, D.C., where salt is used to clear roads in the winter.

But in August of 2012, under government pressure, GM recalled 278,000 of the SUVs in the cold-weather states and offered extended warranties to the rest of the country. NHTSA kept investigating, and 10 months later, GM expanded the recall nationwide.

By then, NHTSA and GM had received 242 complaints, including 28 about fires. There were no injuries.

In one complaint filed with NHTSA from October of 2008, a woman reported that the alarm sounded while her 2006 TrailBlazer was parked in her driveway. When she looked outside, it was in flames. Firefighters put out the blaze and told her it started in the driver's door.

"The fire burned the entire driver's side of the vehicle, a portion of the front passenger seat and the roof," she wrote. People filing complaints are not identified by the agency.

The fix used by GM last year was to put a protective coating around the window switch circuit boards, which is less costly than replacing the switches. But starting this April, GM received complaints that the switches malfunctioned in SUVs that had been repaired. So in June, it decided to do the third recall and replace all of the switches.

"We are recalling them because the fix that we put in did not work," spokesman Alan Adler said Thursday. "We're taking care of it. We're doing the right thing."

Initially GM tried the service campaign because number of incidents was low, he said. It was limited to the cold-weather states because salty water made the switches corrode quickly and incidents were few in warmer states, Adler said.

Letters notifying owners about the SUV recall should be mailed soon. Owners will get a second letter sometime from October to December telling them when parts are available to fix the vehicles.


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