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只看该作者 50 发表于: 2006-12-03
51、Pearl Jam plays secret show in Hawaii
Fri Dec 1, 2006 3:18pm ET

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More Entertainment News... Email This Article | Print This Article | Reprints [-] Text [+] NEW YORK (Billboard) - Pearl Jam performed a secret show for about 300 people in Hawaii Thursday, two days before it headlines a gig at Honolulu's Blaisdell Center.

The outdoor show at the Waimea Valley Audubon Center was part of the opening festivities for the Quiksilver Big Wave Invitational surfing competition.

The 15-song set mixed favorites like "Corduroy," "Even Flow," "Better Man" and "Do the Evolution" with covers of the Who's "Baba O'Riley," the Avengers' "The Amerikan in Me" and Neil Young's "Rockin' in the Free World," which featured a guest turn on guitar by surfer Kelly Slater. Slater, a longtime friend of Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, also sung portions of "Indifference."

Earlier in the day, Vedder participated in the annual Paddle Out ceremony along with Slater, Bruce Irons, Myles Padaca, Braden Dias and Andy Irons, among many others.

Reuters Pictures

Editors Choice: Best pictures
from the last 24 hours.
View Slideshow

Next week, Pearl Jam will open the last show of U2's Vertigo tour at Aloha Stadium.

Here is Pearl Jam's set list:

"Corduroy"

"Do The Evolution"

"World Wide Suicide"   Continued...

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.
Severed Hand"

"Even Flow"

"Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town"

"The Amerikan in Me"

Reuters Pictures

Editors Choice: Best pictures
from the last 24 hours.
View Slideshow

"I Believe In Miracles"

"Can't Keep"

"Soon Forget"

"Crazy Mary"

"Indifference"   Continued...

"Better Man"

"Baba O'Riley"

"Rockin' in the Free World"

Reuters/Billboard
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只看该作者 51 发表于: 2006-12-03
52、Richards, offended club guests to meet Fri Dec 1, 7:36 PM ET



LOS ANGELES -     Michael Richards will apologize in person to the four black patrons he targeted in a tirade of racial slurs during a recent comedy club performance. A retired judge will mediate the meeting and determine whether he should act further to resolve the matter, Richards' spokesman and an attorney for the customers said Friday.

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A cash settlement could be part of the resolution, said Howard J. Rubenstein, who represents Richards.

"My client Michael hopes to put it behind him," Rubenstein said.

A time and place for the meeting have not been set.

Rubenstein complimented attorney Gloria Allred, who is representing the four comedy club patrons, for recommending the meeting.

Allred said Richards should meet with her clients "to hear the pain that he inflicted on them and to apologize to them."

Her clients felt "hurt, humiliation, in fear; they felt intimidated," she said. "We are happy about Mr. Richards' decision, and we commend him for accepting our challenge."

Kyle Doss, 26, one of four black people celebrating a friend's birthday at the Laugh Factory the night of the outburst, also applauded the opportunity to meet with Richards.

"We look forward to sitting down face to face with Mr. Richards," Doss said, refusing to answer any questions.

Richards, who played the wacky neighbor Kramer on 'Seinfeld,' has been on a campaign of contrition since videotaped footage of his Nov. 17 outburst at the Laugh Factory nightclub surfaced on the Web site TMZ.com.

He has apologized on the Rev.     Jesse Jackson's nationally syndicated radio program "Keep Hope Alive" and the "Late Show with David Letterman." He also apologized to civil rights leader the Rev.     Al Sharpton.

Richards has said the tirade was fueled by anger at being heckled and not bigotry. Allred denied her clients heckled Richards.
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只看该作者 52 发表于: 2006-12-03
53、Rights Groups Get Say in Madonna Adoption by Sarah Hall
Thu Nov 30, 9:26 AM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Madonna will have to justify her love to more concerned parties than she may have liked.

After a series of delays, a Malawi High Court judge has ruled in favor of a coalition of 67 human rights organizations' request to be a party to the assessment of the Material Mom's fitness as an adoptive parent.

Madonna and her husband,     Guy Ritchie, were granted interim custody of 14-month-old David Banda last month and were permitted to take him home to London, rather than remaining in Malawi for an assessment period of 18 to 24 months as the country's adoption laws require.

The ruling set off a flurry of controversy among human rights and child advocacy activists, who complained the adoption process was fast-tracked for the couple due to their celebrity. (Madonna and her attorneys have steadfastly denied that she was granted any special treatment.)

Justin Dzonzi, an attorney and chairman of the Human Rights Consultative Commission, stressed that the group was not trying to block the Ritchies' adoption but was instead seeking to draw attention to Malawi's "archaic" adoption laws, which he said are regularly circumvented by foreigners.

Judge Andrew Nyirenda granted the coalition's request, stating he saw no reason not to do so.

"I believe the applicants mean well, and this court will certainly benefit from the applicants' researched opinions," the judge said in a written order Wednesday.

The groups will now be a party to the court's first assessment of Madonna and Ritchie, which is expected in May.

According to Madonna's attorney, Alan Chinula, the singer accepted the ruling without question.

"The Ritchies called me from London and I explained to them the ruling...they have no problem with the ruling and are also willing to sit back and wait," Chinula told reporters.

As the singer tells it, she has little reason to be concerned about any failings as a parent, seeing as little David has made a virtually seamless transition into her home.

"David is amazing," Madonna said in a satellite interview on Oprah last month.

"What really surprises me is how great my children are with him and how he's transitioned so easily from living in Africa in an orphanage to living in our house," she said.
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只看该作者 53 发表于: 2006-12-03
54、Rod, Rachel Over...Seven Years Later by Josh Grossberg
Fri Dec 1, 7:07 AM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Have I told you lately…that I'm single?

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    Rod Stewart's long-in-the-works divorce from     Rachel Hunter finally became official on Nov. 2, seven years after the 61-year-old rocker and 37-year-old supermodel separated, according to new court documents.

Divorce papers released Thursday by Los Angeles Superior Court confirmed the dissolution of the marriage―Stewart's second, Hunter's first―but did not disclose any financial terms. Although the paperwork indicated some issues still needed to be ironed out, both parties had signed the document, signifying they were no longer mister and missus.

After tying the knot in 1990 and having two children together, Stewart and Hunter split up in 1999, but remained legally married for several years. In 2003, the former Sports Illustrated swimsuit pinup filed for divorce, but later inexplicably dropped her petition. Stewart then filed his own petition last June, citing irreconcilable differences.

With judge and both parties have making the breakup official, it paves the way for the "Forever Young" singer to wed fiancée Penny Lancaster. Stewart proposed to the model last March atop the the Eiffel Tower, four months after Lancaster gave birth to the couple's first child, a son named Alastair.

In all, Hot Rod has seven kids―daughter Sarah Thurbon, from a teenage romance with art student Susannah Boffey, born in 1964; daughter Kimberly, born in 1979, and son Sean, born in 1981, with Alana Hamilton; daughter Ruby, born in 1987, with ex-wife Kelly Emberg; daughter Renee, born in 1992, and son Liam, born in 1994, with Hunter; and Alastair, born in November 2005.

The couple had yet to set a wedding date, pending the finalization of his divorce from Hunter, but Stewart has previously indicated he and Lancaster were tentatively eyeing a summer ceremony in Scotland.

As for Hunter, the New Zealand catwalker recently told London's Sun newspaper that she accepted an offer from her ex-hubby of money for a house and trust funds for Renee and Liam, now 14 and 12, respectively. But she summarily dismissed reports that the reason it took their divorce so long to go through was because she was supposedly looking for a big payout. "It was never my intention to take Rod to the cleaners," she told the newspaper, before adding, "Rod and I have a good relationship now and we are glad we can move on with our lives."

After topping the chart in recent years with his quartet of Great American Songbook albums, featuring covers of pop standards produced by music impresario Clive Davis, Stewart hit number one in October with his first rock album in eight years, Rod Stewart Still the Same...Great Rock Classics of Our Time.

Stewart kicks off his latest North American arena tour Jan. 12 in Fort Lauderdale.
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只看该作者 54 发表于: 2006-12-03
55、 Scorsese Ready to Duel by Josh Grossberg
Fri Dec 1, 2:00 PM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Marty Scorsese's going medieval.

With his good-cop, bad-cop suspense drama The Departed now the biggest box-office hit of his four-decade career, the Oscar-nominated director is ramping up plans to make even more grandiose projects.

Per Variety, Scorsese has snagged the rights to adapt Eric Jager's historical narrative The Last Duel: A True Story of Crime, Scandal and Trial by Combat in Medieval France to the big screen. The picture is the first to be developed under the new four-year, first-look agreement the filmmaker signed with Paramount Pictures three weeks ago.

Published by Broadway Books in 2004, Jager's opus chronicles the "duel to end all duels," the dramatic true story of the last state-sanctioned fight that occurred in France circa 1386 between Norman knight Jean de Carrouges and a squire, Jacques LeGris, who was accused of brutally raping the knight's beautiful young wife.

Duel will be produced by Misher Films, the Paramount-based company whose other credits include The Rundown (2003) and The Interpreter (2005).

But before Scorsese brings to life the violent rivalries of a bygone era, the helmer first has several other films to complete.

Chief among them is an untitled Rolling Stones concert documentary in the vein of The Last Waltz, which he recently shot in New York City; Paramount plans to distribute the film sometime next year. Another is The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, a long-gestating biopic that reunites him with     Leonardo DiCaprio―this time playing a youthful, prepresidential Roosevelt as he recast himself from privileged New York politician into the hero who commanded the Rough Riders during the Spanish-American War of 1898.

Scorsese is also eyeing Science, another historical epic. The story follows the travails of two Jesuit priests in 17th-century feudal Japan who witness the Shogunate's brutal attempt to erase all traces of Western influence from the country. It's based on the book by Shusaku Endo and is being adapted by Jay Cocks, who penned GoodFellas. Scorsese, of course, has a soft spot for period pieces, having helmed Raging Bull (1980), The Last Temptation of Christ (1989), Goodfellas (1990), The Age of Innocence (1993), Gangs of New York (2002) and The Aviator (2004).

After the success of The Departed, Paramount's new head, Brad Grey, lured the auteur into the studio's fold. Under the terms of the deal, Scorsese gets $2.5 million annually to develop feature films like The Last Duel as potential directing vehicles, as well as television, direct-to-DVD and digital content. As part of the deal, Paramount gets first crack on cofinancing and coproducing any project Scorsese sets up at a rival studio.

Meanwhile, The Departed continues to whack the competition at the box office. Since its Oct. 6 opening, the police thriller, starring DiCaprio,     Jack Nicholson,     Matt Damon,     Mark Wahlberg,     Martin Sheen and     Alec Baldwin, has grossed $113 million domestically and is considered to be an early Oscar favorite.
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只看该作者 55 发表于: 2006-12-03
56、Selma Blair Legally Divorced by Natalie Finn
Fri Dec 1, 7:30 AM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) -     Selma Blair and Ahmet Zappa are single again.

The couple's divorce was finalized Monday, a rather quick resolution considering Blair just filed in June and more and more Hollywood couples are going the multi-year distance these days when it comes to divorce proceedings (see:     Charlie Sheen and     Christian Slater).

According to court documents, both Blair, 34, and Zappa, 32, waived spousal support, which surely sped things along.

The duo tied the knot in a traditional Jewish ceremony at     Carrie Fisher's Beverly Hills home in January 2004, after a quickie six-month courtship. Their two and a half years as a married couple did not produce any children.

Blair, who starred in Cruel Intentions, Legally Blonde and Hellboy, is currently signed up for a handful of films. Up next is the Ed Burns-directed Purple Violets, costarring Burns,     Debra Messing and     Patrick Wilson, in which she plays a writer threatening to cave under the pressure of becoming the "next big thing."

Also on the actor's slate, per the Internet Movie Database, are roles in the comedy Chlorine, the horror pic Waz,     Homeland Security with     Meg Ryan and     Antonio Banderas (that's gotta be funny, right?) and a Hellboy sequel.

Zappa, meanwhile, is reaching out to a younger audience. His first young-adult-themed novel, The Monstrous Memoirs of a Mighty McFearless, debuted in July, and last month he joined up with the Jim Henson Company to give the big-screen treatment to the classic muppetfest Fraggle Rock.

The son of late rocker Frank Zappa will executive produce and pen the script for the Fraggles' latest adventure.
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只看该作者 56 发表于: 2006-12-03
57、Streisand, Stones Do Big-Time Box Office by Natalie Finn
Wed Nov 29, 9:42 AM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Overcoming flying beverages, fans who didn't appreciate her Bush-bashing and initial worries about poor ticket sales,     Barbra Streisand put up record-setting numbers at the box office this year.

Billboard reported Tuesday that the singer's 20-date North American concert tour, Babs' first string of live performances in six years, has grossed $92.5 million and set house gross records in 14 of the 16 venues she played.

And she already holds the record for highest grosses at the other two arenas, New York's Madison Square Garden and Las Vegas' MGM Grand Arena, so no worries there. The Funny Girl, who wrapped up her latest run Nov. 20 at Los Angeles' Staples Center, now holds the top three spots at MSG and the top two at the MGM.

"I say nay to the naysayers," tour producer Michael Cohl, founder of global touring company CPI, said. "That was probably one of the most satisfying parts of the whole thing. But the most satisfying part for me was how amazing the show was. I watched every night, and I loved it. I'd never seen her in concert and she was sensational."

Cohl said Streisand's camp is talking about a possible 2007 tour.

"From the stage in Los Angeles she said that she's thinking of going to Europe and the Far East, so here's hoping it happens," he said.

It worked for the Rolling Stones, whose A Bigger Bang tour's $437 million in ticket sales has knocked U2's Vertigo tour out of the top spot to become the highest-grossing tour in history. The "Brown Sugar" rockers, who attracted 3.5 million fans to 110 shows, not including the 2 million who showed up for a free concert in Rio de Janeiro in February, are also thinking of expanding their tour into 2007.

Additionally, the Stones' November performance at New York's Beacon Theater was filmed by     Martin Scorsese for an as-yet untitled documentary due out next year.

Meanwhile, Bono & Co. earned more than $333 million on the road between Mar. 28, 2005, and Mar. 2, 2006, to scoot ahead of the Stones and their 1994-95 Voodoo Lounge tour, giving the Dubliners a temporary hold on number one. U2's 10 makeup shows this month are expected to get Vertigo to the $377 million mark.

The Stones also overcame adversity on their way to total monetary dominance, including     Keith Richards' palm tree tumble and ensuing head injury,     Mick Jagger's laryngitis and now a $51 million lawsuit filed by two fans who got no satisfaction in Atlantic City last month when Jagger's sore pipes led to a cancellation. Ticketmaster was also named as a defendant.

But you can't always get what you want, and a few disgruntled customers aren't going to put a damper on what the Stones' top-dog status means for Cohl's CPI, which produced A Bigger Bang in addition to Streisand's '06 outing.

"It was the most amazing year of my life, let's face it," Cohl, who has produced every Stones tour since 1989's Steel Wheels, told Billboard. "It was a busy year. But I had sat around and done very little hanging out in Florida for over a year, trying to figure out what to do and whether or not to do it. And as soon as the Stones decided they were going to work, then I was going to go back to work, so you may as well go at it whole hog. So, I did.

"Definitely there was drama and hurdles, but at the end of the day, if you tour long enough, everything's going to happen, isn't it?"
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只看该作者 57 发表于: 2006-12-03
58、Taylor Hicks Explains Idol Remarks by Natalie Finn
Fri Dec 1, 1:49 PM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - Taylor Hicks didn't mean to sound ungrateful.

That's what the American Idol winner said on KIIS-FM Friday after coming under the gun about his comments in a recent magazine interview that were construed by many as being disparaging to the show that gave him his big break.

Speaking to Relix magazine in October, Hicks said that he had never watched Idol before appearing on the show and that, for him, the Fox megahit "is fizzling out."

"I want to take that opportunity and exposure: you either come to see me, buy my album or you don't," the Alabama native said. "I'm not trying to meet expectations. If you can say you're a working musician, then you're doing something good."

Responding to cries that he was biting the hand that fed him so heartily, Hicks said Friday, "I'm giving up my crown soon. That's what I meant. I'm just now learning about how the media can turn things around.

"I'm very grateful to that show and we're like one big family. It was taken completely out of context. I will be watching next season on my tour bus."

Hicks' self-titled debut album is slated for a Dec. 12 release. Missing from the disc, but expected to be offered as a bonus track if you download the album, is the singer's Idol-tailored hit single "Do I Make You Proud," which he described to Relix as purely "the show's single."

"It's not mine," Hicks said. "The song that was given to me first, I got up from a chair and walked right out of the studio. I was handed this song and I was just like, 'No way, you're not going to make me sing this song.'"

But obviously he did, and "Do I Make You Proud" sold 190,000 copies and 38,000 digital downloads its first week out of the gate, debuting at number one on the Hot 100, according to Billboard. As of September, Hicks had asked 622,000 people if he has made them proud.

In another bout of damage control, Hicks told In Touch that, once again, he didn't mean anything by it when he talked about being forced to record "Do I Make You Proud."

"Those words were taken completely out of context," the Soul Patrol captain said. "I'm very thankful to have the opportunity to be on American Idol. It's a show that teaches a lot of young people about music and ties families together. I'm very grateful."

And we're grateful that season six of the family show/ratings juggernaut premieres Jan. 16. Happy New Year!
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只看该作者 58 发表于: 2006-12-03
59、Three 6 Mafia Settles Up by Natalie Finn
Fri Dec 1, 6:29 AM ET



Los Angeles (E! Online) - It's not as hard out there if you reach a settlement.

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Three 6 Mafia paid out an undisclosed sum last month to a Pittsburgh man who was suing the Oscar-winning rap group, claiming he was severely beaten up at a 2003 concert after one of their songs incited violence.

Ramone Williams, who was 19 at the time, stated in his lawsuit that he suffered a fractured jaw after being knocked to the ground, hit with a chair, stomped on and kicked in the face.

Although it was part-time Mafia members Robert "Koopsta Knicca" Cooper and Darnell "Crunchy Black" Carlton who actually performed the raucous tune "Let's Start a Riot," Williams charged that main emcees Jordan "Juicy J" Houston and Paul "DJ Paul" Beauregard were the ones responsible for warning the audience that things might get out of hand.

Cooper, Darnell (both of whom have left the group) and the now-out of business nightspot, the Rock Jungle, were also named in the lawsuit. The defendants were slapped with the suit in July 2005, about seven months before Three 6 Mafia rose to new heights by winning the Oscar for Best Original Song for the Hustle & Flow anthem "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp."

Williams has already won a default judgment against the club, which he said had no business letting him in to see the concert in the first place, considering he was underage at the time. Attorneys for Three 6 Mafia moved to have the lawsuit dismissed in September, claiming there was "no genuine issue of material fact" in Williams' complaint.

Meanwhile, the Memphis-based hip-hop artists can be heard on     Justin Timberlake's FutureSex/LoveSounds tune "Chop Me Up," and they are working on a comedic reality series for MTV.

Adventures in Hollyhood will follow DJ Paul and Juicy J as the Tennessee natives uproot their lives and get used to conducting business in Hollywood.

The Memphis Business Journal reported earlier this month that DJ Paul and Juicy J would be making an on-camera stop at the Artitude art gallery, which has provided paintings that will be featured in the MTV show in the rappers' new Hollywood home.  

"Relocating to Hollywood is a big move for Paul and Juicy J," Adventures in Hollyhood executive producer Kevin Lee said. "The guys wanted to keep their roots nearby by surrounding
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只看该作者 59 发表于: 2006-12-03
60、Vieira's smooth transition to `Today' By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer
Fri Dec 1, 2:36 PM ET



NEW YORK - Katie Couric's ratings, attempts to inject an opinion segment into the "CBS Evening News" and search for a signoff have all been meticulously detailed in print. The state of     Rosie O'Donnell's relationship with the other women of "The View" is monitored daily.

What was that other big television change this fall? Sometime in the morning?

Oh, yeah. Meredith Vieira.

NBC News, which prides itself on smooth talent transitions, seems to have achieved it on the "Today" show, where Vieira slipped into the anchor chair beside Matt Lauer in September without roiling the morning show audience.

"It's been too smooth," said Jim Bell, "Today" executive producer. "It's been too good. As great a story as it has been for us, it's just been seamless and that may be why it hasn't drawn as much attention. That's fine, I guess. We're more than thrilled, obviously, with the results."

The average "Today" audience of 5.8 million viewers during the first two months of Vieira's tenure was about the same as it was during Couric's tenure in 2005, according to Nielsen Media Research.

At the same time, chief rival "Good Morning America" on ABC has slipped. Since Vieira took over, there have been 22 days where "Today" had a lead of more than a million viewers, compared to six times during the same period a year before, Nielsen said.

Those looking for cracks in the armor would note that Nielsen's averages are skewed by the large number of curious viewers who tuned in for Vieira's first few days. "GMA" pulled to within 330,000 during the mid-November week when it was boosted by a colorful travelogue series and interviews with "Dancing with the Stars" contestants.

"I'm sure they look at it as `boy, we weathered the storm,'" said Steve Friedman, executive producer of CBS' revamped "The Early Show." "But other people from the outside expected more."

Either way, the Vieira transition is far better than one "Today" famously botched, replacing Jane Pauley with Deborah Norville. And it's virtually certain "Today" will reach a new milestone this week: 11 years of unbroken ratings domination.

"I didn't know what to expect, to be honest with you," Vieira told The Associated Press. "I think the thing I feared the most was the time change, getting up early, and that has turned out to be not nearly as big a deal as I thought it would be."

She's come to enjoy the quiet few minutes in her kitchen before leaving for work, even if it's at an ungodly hour.

Her children certainly don't mind mom going to bed early. Her husband, writer Richard Cohen, usually turns in early, too.

"They're teenagers," she said jokingly. "They would have me down at 6 in the evening, so I can't know what they're doing. They love this job. It fits into their life of deceiving their parents very well."

What's often overlooked is how so much of "Today" now resembles what she used to do on "The View." There's a preponderance of light features, useful tips and entertainment geared primarily to female viewers.

Unless there's a huge breaking story that requires attention for her two full hours ― there hasn't been so far ― the bulk of the show's hard news subjects are covered in the first 30 minutes.

Despite the occasional glitch like interrupting an Andrea Mitchell report on     Iraq one day last week, Vieira has shown that the news chops that got her to "60 Minutes" haven't disappeared while dormant for a decade. Bell said he didn't hesitate to throw her into the mix, assigning her early interviews with former     President Clinton and first lady     Laura Bush.

Vieira said she could feel the stakes riding on her Bush interview.

"I knew everybody was watching to see how I did, including the White House," she said. "They weren't sure what to think of me because there had been a lot written up before I took this job about how I had been at an anti-war rally. So much was made of that I didn't know if they thought that I would come in with an agenda, which I don't when it comes to a news story."

Interviewing Madonna was another highlight, she said.

"I just had a great time with her from the minute I met her," she said. "I connected with her as a mom."

Vieira, 52, tries to connect with "Today" viewers through her Web log. Sometimes thoughtful, sometimes pithy, the blog feels like any good one should, as a letter from a friend. Last week she wrote poignantly about whether her children could appreciate the idea of Santa Claus now that they old enough to know he doesn't exist. She also wrote about her nervousness finding out NBC honcho Jeff Zucker had waited fruitlessly outside her office to say hello.

One odd possible byproduct of Vieira's higher profile is the success of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" this fall. Viewership for the syndicated game show, which Vieira continues to host, has been up 18 percent since last fall, Nielsen said.

Vieira is under contract for one more year of "Millionaire," and said she'd like to continue beyond that.

At "Today," Bell said Vieira has "passed every single test imaginable. She continues to grow and get more comfortable every day."

For a program that actively promotes the concept of family, it seems the audience so far has welcomed Vieira into theirs.

"I don't know that they have," she said. "I get a very nice response when I go out on the plaza. I don't think they'd send me all the e-mails from people who would prefer that I would drop dead."

___

On the Net:

http://www.nbcnews.com/

http://meredithtoday.ivillage.com/entertainment/

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ― David Bauder can be reached at dbauder"at"ap.org
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