TV News
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As trial was to start, settlement reached in MLB TV dispute
NEW YORK (AP) — Just as a trial was to begin, Major League Baseball and its fans reached agreement Tuesday to expand the menu of online packages for televised games.
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Idris Elba: Lack of diversity is not just a US problem
LONDON (AP) — A lack of diversity in films and television is not just an American problem, according to actor Idris Elba.
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With Confederate flag gone, King Day rally shifts focus
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — For the first time in 17 years, civil rights leaders gathered Monday at the South Carolina Statehouse to pay homage to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. without the Confederate flag casting a long shadow over them.
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Mexican judge upholds sentence against US TV producer
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) — A Mexican state court has denied an appeal and upheld a 12-year prison sentence for a former "Survivor" producer convicted of killing his wife on a 2010 Cancun beach vacation.
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Who's defending Bill Cosby? A look at his criminal team
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — At his only criminal court appearance to date, aging TV icon Bill Cosby stumbled past a scrum of photographers while two lawyers held him up on either side, walking him into a suburban Philadelphia courtroom.
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List of Winners for the Critics' Choice Awards
LOS ANGELES (AP) — List of winners of the 21st annual Critics' Choice Awards, announced Sunday in Santa Monica, California.
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Buress calls impact of his Cosby joke 'weird,' unexpected
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Hannibal Buress calls it a weird surprise that his Bill Cosby "rapist" joke precipitated the star's fall from grace.
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Manning, Brady to meet in AFC championship game
DENVER (AP) — The last time Tom Brady and the New England Patriots came to Denver, Peyton Manning watched the game on television from inside the locker room.
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'High School Musical' stars reunite for 10th anniversary
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The stars of "High School Musical" are reuniting for a 10th-anniversary tribute to the TV movie.
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One-time presidential favorites engage longshot rivals
WASHINGTON (AP) — Parallel political clashes were igniting Sunday in the volatile presidential primary races, as one-time Republican and Democratic favorites battled once-unlikely rivals in their own party over guns and foreign policy ahead of the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses. Fueling the back-and-forth: President Barack Obama's address heralding two developments in U.S. relations with Iran as triumphs for "smart" diplomacy.
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