Tag Archives: bids

Amitabh Bachchan | Amitabh Bachchan Bids Emotional Farewell To Kaun Banega Crorepati Season 15 |N18V – CNN-News18

  1. Amitabh Bachchan | Amitabh Bachchan Bids Emotional Farewell To Kaun Banega Crorepati Season 15 |N18V CNN-News18
  2. Kaun Banega Crorepati 15: Amitabh Bachchan’s Emotional Message For Fans On Season Finale NDTV Movies
  3. Amitabh Bachchan trends on Twitter as he bids goodbye to KBC 15, confused fans think he’s leaving show Hindustan Times
  4. Kaun Banega Crorepati 15: Amitabh Bachchan bids an emotional adieu to the show; audience calls him ‘God’s Times of India
  5. Kaun Banega Crorepati 15: From Sara Ali Khan recreating ‘adaab moment’ as a kid to Jaya Bachchan addressing Sharmila Tagore as Rinku di; Amitabh Bachchan shares candid moments on finale episode IndiaTimes

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Henry Cavill fights back tears in an emotional goodbye as he bids a final farewell to The Witcher – Daily Mail

  1. Henry Cavill fights back tears in an emotional goodbye as he bids a final farewell to The Witcher Daily Mail
  2. Henry Cavill Bids Final Farewell to Netflix’s The Witcher IGN
  3. Henry Cavill says bye to his Witcher co-stars: ‘You guys bring so much nuance and detail to these characters, which are often at risk of being oversimplified’ PC Gamer
  4. “You can’t give him a squeaky New York accent”: Original The Witcher Voice Actor Blown Away by Henry Cavill’s Deep, Gruff ‘Geralt’ Voice He Maintained Even after Filming Ended FandomWire
  5. Henry Cavill bids farewell to The Witcher co-stars, who worked to ensure characters not “oversimplified” Eurogamer.net
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Valerie Bertinelli Bids Farewell to Her Food Network Show After 14 Seasons: ‘Such a Dream Come True’ – Yahoo

  1. Valerie Bertinelli Bids Farewell to Her Food Network Show After 14 Seasons: ‘Such a Dream Come True’ Yahoo
  2. Valerie Bertinelli Shares the Good and Bad News About Her Food Network Show Entertainment Tonight
  3. Valerie Bertinelli’s cooking show will end after its 14th season Entertainment Weekly News
  4. Valerie Bertinelli Reveals That Food Network Canceled ‘Valerie’s Home Cooking’: “I Have No Idea Why” Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Valerie Bertinelli Reveals Her Food Network Show Has Been Cancelled After 14 Seasons: ‘I Will Really, Really Miss It ETCanada.com
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2023 March Madness, conference tournament schedules: 13 NCAA Tournament automatic bids on the line Saturday – CBS Sports

  1. 2023 March Madness, conference tournament schedules: 13 NCAA Tournament automatic bids on the line Saturday CBS Sports
  2. When does March Madness start? Full schedule for First Four, Round 1 games in 2023 NCAA Tournament Sporting News
  3. Bubble Watch: Early Look At How Schedule Strength Could Shape 2023 Field Of 64 Baseball America
  4. Bracketology Bubble Watch: Clemson, Vanderbilt need big conference tournament wins to overcome bad losses CBS Sports
  5. When is Women’s March Madness 2023? Dates, TV schedule, locations, odds & more for the NCAA Tournament Sporting News
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Anupam Kher chokes up as he bids an emotional goodbye to Satish Kaushik in a heartfelt video letter: It’s – Indiatimes.com

  1. Anupam Kher chokes up as he bids an emotional goodbye to Satish Kaushik in a heartfelt video letter: It’s Indiatimes.com
  2. ‘Medicines’ found from Delhi farm house where Satish Kaushik partied Deccan Herald
  3. Satish Kaushik ‘didn’t charge a penny’ for several films, Govinda reveals: ‘We had to convince him to take money for Aunty No 1’ The Indian Express
  4. Anupam Kher to hold Satish Kaushik’s prayer meet on March 21- Exclusive Indiatimes.com
  5. Our story was still unfinished: Shekhar Kapur posts about ‘brother’ Satish Kaushik mid-day.com
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2023 March Madness, conference tournament brackets, automatic bids: Colgate, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi in field – CBS Sports

  1. 2023 March Madness, conference tournament brackets, automatic bids: Colgate, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi in field CBS Sports
  2. Colgate rolls to third straight Patriot Tournament title The Washington Post
  3. No. 1 Colgate Claims Sixth Patriot League Men’s Basketball Title in Victory over No. 6 Lafayette Patriot League Official Athletic Site
  4. How to Watch Colgate vs. Lafayette: Patriot League Tournament Live Stream Free, TV Channel, Start Time Sports Illustrated
  5. Terriers Gear Up for PL Semifinal Bout Against Army West Point on Thursday Boston University Athletics
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A heartbroken Philadelphia bids farewell to fallen Temple Police Officer Christopher Fitzgerald – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. A heartbroken Philadelphia bids farewell to fallen Temple Police Officer Christopher Fitzgerald The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Christopher Fitzgerald funeral Fallen Temple University police officer honored for his service, promoted to sergeant WPVI-TV
  3. Kenney: PA Should Control Gun Sales ‘Like We Control the Sale of Liquor and Wine’ NBC 10 Philadelphia
  4. Christopher Fitzgerald funeral: Viewing, Mass, burial for shot Temple police officer The Philadelphia Inquirer
  5. Remembering Officer Chris Fitzgerald: Viewing held at Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul CBS Philadelphia
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Boeing bids farewell to an icon, delivers last 747 jumbo jet

SEATTLE (AP) — Boeing bids farewell to an icon on Tuesday: It’s delivering its final 747 jumbo jet.

Since its first flight in 1969, the giant yet graceful 747 has served as a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, a transport for NASA’s space shuttles, and the Air Force One presidential aircraft. It revolutionized travel, connecting international cities that had never before had direct routes and helping democratize passenger flight.

But over about the past 15 years, Boeing and its European rival Airbus have introduced more profitable and fuel efficient wide-body planes, with only two engines to maintain instead of the 747′s four. The final plane is the 1,574th built by Boeing in the Puget Sound region of Washington state.

A big crowd of current and former Boeing workers is expected for the final send-off. The last one is being delivered to cargo carrier Atlas Air.

“If you love this business, you’ve been dreading this moment,” said longtime aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia. “Nobody wants a four-engine airliner anymore, but that doesn’t erase the tremendous contribution the aircraft made to the development of the industry or its remarkable legacy.”

Boeing set out to build the 747 after losing a contract for a huge military transport, the C-5A. The idea was to take advantage of the new engines developed for the transport — high-bypass turbofan engines, which burned less fuel by passing air around the engine core, enabling a farther flight range — and to use them for a newly imagined civilian aircraft.

It took more than 50,000 Boeing workers less than 16 months to churn out the first 747 — a Herculean effort that earned them the nickname “The Incredibles.” The jumbo jet’s production required the construction of a massive factory in Everett, north of Seattle — the world’s largest building by volume.

The plane’s fuselage was 225 feet (68.5 meters) long and the tail stood as tall as a six-story building. The plane’s design included a second deck extending from the cockpit back over the first third of the plane, giving it a distinctive hump and inspiring a nickname, the Whale. More romantically, the 747 became known as the Queen of the Skies.

Some airlines turned the second deck into a first-class cocktail lounge, while even the lower deck sometimes featured lounges or even a piano bar. One decommissioned 747, originally built for Singapore Airlines in 1976, has been converted into a 33-room hotel near the airport in Stockholm.

“It was the first big carrier, the first widebody, so it set a new standard for airlines to figure out what to do with it, and how to fill it,” said Guillaume de Syon, a history professor at Pennsylvania’s Albright College who specializes in aviation and mobility. “It became the essence of mass air travel: You couldn’t fill it with people paying full price, so you need to lower prices to get people onboard. It contributed to what happened in the late 1970s with the deregulation of air travel.”

The first 747 entered service in 1970 on Pan Am’s New York-London route, and its timing was terrible, Aboulafia said. It debuted shortly before the oil crisis of 1973, amid a recession that saw Boeing’s employment fall from 100,800 employees in 1967 to a low of 38,690 in April 1971. The “Boeing bust” was infamously marked by a billboard near the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport that read, “Will the last person leaving SEATTLE — Turn out the lights.”

An updated model — the 747-400 series — arrived in the late 1980s and had much better timing, coinciding with the Asian economic boom of the early 1990s, Aboulafia said. He recalled taking a Cathay Pacific 747 from Los Angeles to Hong Kong as a twentysomething backpacker in 1991.

“Even people like me could go see Asia,” Aboulafia said. “Before, you had to stop for fuel in Alaska or Hawaii and it cost a lot more. This was a straight shot — and reasonably priced.”

Delta was the last U.S. airline to use the 747 for passenger flights, which ended in 2017, although some other international carriers continue to fly it, including the German airline Lufthansa.

Atlas Air ordered four 747-8 freighters early last year, with the final one leaving the factory Tuesday.

Boeing’s roots are in the Seattle area, and it has assembly plants in Washington state and South Carolina. The company announced in May that it would move its headquarters from Chicago to Arlington, Virginia, putting its executives closer to key federal government officials and the Federal Aviation Administration, which certifies Boeing passenger and cargo planes.

Boeing’s relationship with the FAA has been strained since deadly crashes of its best-selling plane, the 737 Max, in 2018 and 2019. The FAA took nearly two years — far longer than Boeing expected — to approve design changes and allow the plane back in the air.

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Emerson Electric Bids to Buy National Instruments for Nearly $7 Billion

Emerson Electric Co.

EMR -6.82%

has disclosed a nearly $7 billion offer to acquire

National Instruments Corp.

NATI 10.79%

, which it said it has been trying to buy for more than eight months.

Emerson, a St. Louis-based technology and engineering company, said it was offering $53 a share in cash for National Instruments, which it said represents an enterprise value of $7.6 billion. The offer represents a 32% premium over National Instruments’ closing price from last Thursday, the day before the Texas-based equipment and instrumentation company said its board was evaluating strategic alternatives and had already been approached by potential acquirers.

Emerson’s public proposal comes eight months after National Instruments rejected its offer for an acquisition at $48 a share, the company said. Emerson upped its bid to $53 a share in November, but now claims National Instruments has continued to spurn its advances.

National Instruments confirmed Tuesday that it had received Emerson’s offer but said it remains committed to the strategic review process it announced on Friday.

By making the offer public, Emerson is hoping to win over shareholders who until now “have been unaware of this opportunity to realize an immediate cash premium,” Chief Executive

Lal Karsanbhai

said Tuesday in a conference call.

“Emerson urges NI shareholders to engage with their board to ensure this public strategic review process is not merely another delay tactic,” he said.

National Instruments’ shares jumped more than 10% to $52.04 by the close of the Tuesday market. Emerson’s shares meanwhile fell almost 7% to a low of nearly $91 in one of their steepest drops since June 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

Emerson said that picking up National Instruments’ portfolio of electronic test and measurement offerings would bolster its automation business while also adding to its adjusted earnings within the first year. The company isn’t putting any financing conditions on the deal, saying it can fund the transaction with cash on hand and existing lines of credit.

On a call with analysts, the company detailed eight months of snubs from the National Instruments board that started in May, when Emerson said it reached out for an in-person meeting about a potential deal and was instead offered a phone call with management. Emerson sent a formal letter soon after with its all-cash $48-per-share offer, but National Instruments turned it down, the company said.

National Instruments continued to rebuff offers to negotiate privately in the months that followed, Emerson said.

Emerson also noted that National Instruments purchased more than two million of its own shares at an average weighted price of $40.25 during that time. Mr. Karsanbhai criticized the company on Tuesday for launching one of its largest-ever buybacks for a per-share price that was well below Emerson’s offer.

Emerson reached out with its improved offer on Nov. 3 to buy National Instruments for $53 a share, which marked a 45% premium to the company’s share price at market close that day. The National Instruments board responded at the time that it had formed a working group to evaluate the proposal and weigh its strategic options, but otherwise refused to engage with Emerson, Emerson said.

National Instruments said Tuesday that it welcomes Emerson’s participation in its strategic review process but also thinks that negotiating exclusively with the company “would be detrimental to shareholders.”

“NI notes Emerson’s expressed disappointment in this effort to maximize NI shareholder value,” the company said.

Write to Dean Seal at dean.seal@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Cecily Strong bids SNL goodbye in holiday episode

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The exodus of beloved “Saturday Night Live” cast members continues with Cecily Strong joining the alumni ranks, bidding farewell to the show in Saturday’s episode and joining the recent departures of Kate McKinnon, Aidy Bryant and Pete Davidson, among others.

Strong, who joined the show in 2012, was a regular in political sketches and did an array of impressions, including of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D), former first lady Melania Trump and Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake.

Saturday’s cold-open sketch once again featured James Austin Johnson’s take on Donald Trump, this time touting his digital trading cards. Photoshopped in the same art style as the real trading cards that Trump announced last week, the parody NFTs (“nifties,” as Johnson’s Trump dubbed them) feature scenes with the former president melting President Biden’s ice cream with his laser eyes and with Trump on the cover of a romance novel.

“Trump cards are each $99. Seems like a lot. Seems like a scam, and in many ways, it is,” he rambles.

The grift doesn’t stop there. He then welcomes his “third least-embarrassing child,” Donald Trump Jr. (Mikey Day), and his tonally challenged fiancee, Kimberly Guilfoyle (Strong), to shill their Christmas CD, “Now That’s What No One Calls Music.” Guilfoyle belts (squawks?) that those who listen will “sleep in heavenly peace,” before being shooed offstage by Trump.

“Saturday Night Live” on Dec. 17 lampooned former president Donald Trump’s launch of non-fungible token trading cards depicting him in various guises. (Video: The Washington Post)

Saturday’s “Weekend Update” segment also made light of Trump’s NFT launch: “Semiretired maniac Donald Trump has launched a collection of digital NFT trading cards depicting him in various costumes including cowboy, superhero and, most unbelievable of all, guy who didn’t dodge the draft,” said “Update” co-host Colin Jost.

With the NFT market plummeting, Jost also questioned the timing of this release. “It’s such a funny move to get into NFTs after the whole market just crashed. It’s like getting into Kanye now.”

Strong, who briefly co-hosted “Weekend Update” during the 2013-2014 season, returned as the criminally kooky commentator, Cathy Anne. Wearing a Santa hat because of an accidental escalator scalping incident, Cathy Anne announced her departure: “Truth is, I’m here to say goodbye.”

Her criminal admissions on “Update” have landed her in prison. Cathy Anne said she wasn’t afraid to serve time, because she has “friends on the inside, they seem to be doing okay,” as a photo of former cast members Bryant and McKinnon wearing prison jumpsuits appeared on screen.

Strong leaves behind several memorable “Update” archetypes, including “girl you wish you hadn’t started a conversation with at a party” and “one-dimensional female character from a male-driven comedy.”

Musical numbers were a theme throughout Saturday’s episode, with host Austin Butler recently starring in the Golden Globe-nominated film “Elvis.” In a sketch about Jewish Elvis, Butler got the chance to be a geriatric fan girl, along with Strong and Ego Nwodim. The crew swooned and applauded as Sarah Sherman’s gyrating Elvis offered commentary to Elvis’s hit songs, asking, “Who are these wise men? Why are they so wise?” during a rendition of “Can’t Help Falling in Love.”

As a final farewell to a tearful Strong, the cast, led by Butler, sang a personalized version of “Blue Christmas.” As fake snow descended, they sang: “You’ll be doing all right, every Saturday night, but we’ll all have a blue, blue, blue, blue Christmas.”

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