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‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies
Neither attended the event. “Saturday Night Live” was the night’s biggest winner with 11 awards for its 50th season. (AP)
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Updated 08 September 2025

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies
  • Lamar won for music direction of his Super Bowl halftime show, while Obama won for documentary narration
  • Neither attended the event. “Saturday Night Live” was the night’s biggest winner with 11 awards for its 50th season

LOS ANGELES: Kendrick Lamar and Barack Obama each won their second career Emmys on Sunday night, while the 50th season of “Saturday Night Live” was the biggest winner with 11 on the second night of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards.
Lamar and Tony Russell won for the music direction of his Super Bowl halftime show. He won his first Emmy in 2022 as a performer at the Super Bowl halftime headlined by Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg.
Obama won a star-studded documentary narrator category that also included Tom Hanks, Idris Elba and David Attenborough. He won the same award in 2022.
Neither Lamar nor Obama was at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles to accept his Emmy. Neither were expected to be, at a show that despite several high-profile winners including Jimmy Kimmel, Conan O’Brien and Alan Cumming is primarily devoted to behind-the-scenes crew members a week before TV’s stars take the same stage for the bigger Emmys ceremony.
Presenter Jordan Klepper laughed along with the crowd as he said, “Apparently, Barack Obama couldn’t be here tonight” after announcing the winner.
“SNL 50: The Anniversary Special,” the pinnacle of a season-long celebration for the NBC sketch institution, won seven Emmys, including awards for its directing, writing, hairstyling and editing. A pop-up immersive experience tied to the special won an Emmy for emerging media and regular episodes of the show won three more.
HBO’s “Pee-wee as Himself” won four awards including best documentary, posthumously giving its star and subject Paul Reubens, who died in 2023, his first Emmy.
O’Brien won two Emmys for his travel series, “Conan O’Brien Must Go,” taking his career total to six. And while he didn’t get one personally for the show, Netflix’s “Conan O’Brien: The Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize For American Humor” beat out football halftime shows from Lamar and Beyoncé to win best variety special.
Beyoncé did win a previously announced special Emmy for the costumes on her Christmas Day “Beyoncé Bowl” on Netflix.
Kimmel, who has hosted both the Oscars and the Emmys multiple times, was here to accept his fourth Emmy, for best host of a game show for his work on “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.”
He thanked the show’s late original host Regis Philbin for making “Millionaire” a cultural phenomenon.
“Regis was the best at this,” Kimmel said backstage. “It is exciting to have this and to know that he has this same Emmy in his family’s collection somewhere.”
“Jeopardy” won best game show, while Cumming won best host of a reality show for “The Traitors.”
The two-night Creative Arts Emmys hands out nearly 100 awards in hyper-specific categories that can bring oddities. Like the Grammys and Oscars winning Emmys, as each did Sunday.
The CBS Grammys telecast won for its choreography, while ABC’s Oscars telecast — also hosted by O’Brien — won for its production design.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting was honored with the Television Academy’s Governors Award even as it winds down its nearly 60-year work after the US government withdrew funding from the institution that has helped pay for PBS, NPR, 1,500 local radio and TV stations
The award goes to a person or entity “made a profound, transformational and long-lasting contribution to the arts and/or science of television.”
“Even an act of Congress can not erase an indelible legacy,” Henry Louis Gates Jr., host of “Finding Your Roots” on PBS, said during the presentation.
“Queer Eye” won best structured reality show, while “Love on the Spectrum” won best unstructured reality show.
The Creative Arts show runs quickly and efficiently — 47 awards are handed out on Sunday aloe in about 2 1/2 hours — but the atmosphere is loose. Swearing is allowed because of the lack of TV, as Kimmel showed when he told nominee Will Ferrell to shut up during his speech.
“This is the Emmys for the people that the people who run the Emmys don’t think should be seen on network TV,” presenter Sarah Silverman said when she opened the show as a presenter.
The two nights are edited down into one show that will air on TV on FXX on Saturday. The following day, the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards, hosted by Nate Bargatze, will air live on CBS.
While Sunday honored variety, documentary and reality TV, scripted series had the stage on Saturday.
“The Studio” won nine early Emmys including best guest actor in a comedy for Bryan Cranston, making it the front-runner to end up with the biggest total after next Sunday’s main show.
“Severance” was tops among dramas with six awards, including best guest actress in a drama for Merritt Wever.
“The Penguin” pulled in eight in the limited series categories, and Julie Andrews won her third Emmy at age 89 for her voice-over work on “Bridgerton.”


BBC criticizes news presenter for calling Hamas a ‘terror group’ amid ongoing Gaza coverage row

BBC criticizes news presenter for calling Hamas a ‘terror group’ amid ongoing Gaza coverage row
Updated 2 min 20 sec ago

BBC criticizes news presenter for calling Hamas a ‘terror group’ amid ongoing Gaza coverage row

BBC criticizes news presenter for calling Hamas a ‘terror group’ amid ongoing Gaza coverage row
  • BBC says it avoids directly labeling Hamas as a terrorist group, instead using the term only with attribution or when in a quote

LONDON: The BBC has censured one of its news presenters for referring to Hamas as a “terror group” as the UK public broadcaster faces mounting scrutiny over its coverage of the Gaza war and pressure from officials to adopt the label.

The broadcaster’s Executive Complaints Unit said on Thursday that the use of “terror group” in reference to Hamas in a June 15 news broadcast was a “breach of the BBC’s editorial standards.”

It added: “The finding was reported to the management of BBC News and discussed with the editorial team responsible.”

The BBC has resisted pressure from British and Israeli officials to label Hamas as terrorists in its news coverage. The ECU said on Thursday that, for “reasons connected with due accuracy and impartiality,” the BBC avoids directly labeling Hamas as a terrorist group, instead using the term only with attribution or when in a quote. Hamas is designated a terrorist organization by the UK, US and EU.

The BBC has faced accusations of bias from both pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian groups for its coverage of the war in Gaza.

Earlier in February, the BBC cancelled the scheduled broadcast of a documentary about Gaza’s children after discovering its 13-year-old narrator was the son of a Hamas official. The move, which was made following pressure from the UK government and pro-Israeli lobby groups, attracted widespread criticism from pro-Palestinian groups and activists.  

In June, the corporation decided not to broadcast a documentary about doctors working in Gaza due to “impartiality concerns.”


Lebanon licenses Elon Musk’s Starlink for satellite Internet services

Lebanon licenses Elon Musk’s Starlink for satellite Internet services
Updated 6 min 54 sec ago

Lebanon licenses Elon Musk’s Starlink for satellite Internet services

Lebanon licenses Elon Musk’s Starlink for satellite Internet services
  • Starlink will provide Internet services throughout Lebanon via satellites operated by Musk’s SpaceX
  • The announcement came nearly three months after Musk spoke with Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun

BEIRUT: Lebanon has granted a license to Elon Musk’s Starlink to provide satellite Internet services in the crisis-hit country known for its crumbling infrastructure.
The announcement was made late Thursday by Information Minister Paul Morcos who said Starlink will provide Internet services throughout Lebanon via satellites operated by Musk’s SpaceX.
The announcement came nearly three months after Musk spoke with Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun by telephone and told him about his interest in working in the country’s telecommunications and Internet sectors.
During the same Cabinet meeting, the government named regulatory authorities for the country’s electricity and telecommunications sectors.
Naming a regulatory authority for Lebanon’s corruption-plagued electricity sector has been a key demand by international organizations.
The naming of a regulatory authority for the electricity sector was supposed to be done more than 20 years ago but there have been repeated delays by the country’s authorities. The move is seen as a key reform for a sector that wastes over $1 billion a year in the small Mediterranean nation.
State-run Electricite du Liban, or EDL, is viewed as one of Lebanon’s most wasteful institutions and plagued by political interference. It has cost state coffers about $40 billion since the 1975-90 civil war ended.
Since taking office earlier this year, Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam have vowed to work on implementing reforms and fighting corruption and decades-old mismanagement to get Lebanon out of an economic crisis that the World Bank has described as among the world’s worst since the 1850s.
Lebanon has for decades faced long hours of electricity cuts but the situation became worse following an economic meltdown that began in late 2019. The 14-month Israel-Hebzollah war that ended in late November also badly damaged electricity and other infrastructure in parts of Lebanon.
In April, the World Bank said it will grant Lebanon a $250 million loan that will be used to help ease electricity cuts.


Israeli soldiers, and their mothers, increasingly reject calls to return to Gaza

Israeli soldiers, and their mothers, increasingly reject calls to return to Gaza
Updated 13 min 6 sec ago

Israeli soldiers, and their mothers, increasingly reject calls to return to Gaza

Israeli soldiers, and their mothers, increasingly reject calls to return to Gaza
  • The defiance is emerging as Israelis have joined mass protests accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of prolonging the war for political purposes

Many opponents, including former senior security officials, fear that the latest offensive will achieve little and put the hostages at risk

TEL AVIV: As Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for its invasion of Gaza City, a growing number of soldiers — and their mothers — are saying no.
There are no official figures, but newly formed groups are broadcasting their refusal to serve despite the risk of imprisonment. It’s a new phenomenon in the nearly two-year war sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack, though so far it has had no apparent effect on military operations.
The defiance is emerging as Israelis have joined mass protests accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of prolonging the war for political purposes instead of reaching a deal with Hamas to bring back the remaining 48 hostages, 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Many opponents, including former senior security officials, fear that the latest offensive will achieve little and put the hostages at risk. Israel also faces heavy international criticism over the humanitarian catastrophe unleashed by the war and its blockade.
One group calling on Israel’s leaders to stop sending their children into war is comprised of mothers who fear their sons will die in vain.
“I couldn’t stop thinking of how to break his leg, break his arm, wound him in some way that he won’t be able to go back,” Noorit Felsenthal-Berger said as she wiped tears from her cheeks, terrified her youngest son will be forced to return.
Fatigue and dwindling morale
Avshalom Zohar Sal, a 28-year-old soldier and medic who served multiple tours in Gaza, said soldiers are exhausted, demoralized and no longer know what they are fighting for.
His doubts first surfaced last year, when he was serving in an area near where six hostages were later killed by their captors as Israeli troops closed in. “I felt this was my fault,” he said.
His skepticism deepened during his most recent tour, in June, when he saw troops returning to the same areas where they had fought earlier in the war. He said some soldiers seemed less focused, leaving them vulnerable to attacks from a vastly diminished but still lethal Hamas.
“Don’t put me in the position that I need to decide if I’m going to risk again my life,” he said, addressing the military.
A group known as Soldiers for Hostages says it represents more than 360 soldiers who refuse to serve. While the number remains small, it is a contrast from the early days of the war, when reservists rushed for duty in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack. Such refusal is punishable by imprisonment, but that has only happened in a handful of cases.
“Netanyahu’s ongoing war of aggression needlessly puts our own hostages in danger and has wreaked havoc on the fabric of Israeli society, while at the same time killing, maiming and starving an entire population” of civilians in Gaza, Max Kresch, a member of the group, said at a Sept. 2 news conference.
Another group known as “Parents of Combat Soldiers Shout Enough,” also known by its slogan “Save Our Souls,” or SOS, says it represents nearly 1,000 mothers of soldiers. A similar movement was credited with helping to end Israel’s 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon in 2000.
“We have to be their voice,” said Felsenthal-Berger, whose two sons have fought in Gaza. The group has held protests around the country, met with government officials and published letters. She says her sons, including one on active duty, are no longer in Gaza. She says they support her efforts but have not officially refused to serve.
Yifat Gadot says her 22-year-old son, who fought in Gaza for nine months at the start of the war, told her that soldiers there felt like sitting ducks. More than 450 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the start of the 2023 ground invasion, according to the army.
“I told him, ‘We the mothers will do everything we can to get you out of Gaza and save you from this political war,’” she said.
Some of the women have encouraged their sons to refuse to report back for action in Gaza, while others say they respect their son’s decisions. All say their message is aimed primarily at the country’s leaders.
Netanyahu’s office declined to comment.
Israelis are fed up, but military service is ‘sacrosanct’
Israel’s call-up of 60,000 reservists is the largest in months, in a country of fewer than 10 million people where military service is mandatory for most Jewish men. Many have already served multiple tours away from their families and businesses.
The Israeli government’s failure to draft ultra-Orthodox men into the military has added to their anger. Religious men have long avoided military service through exemptions negotiated by their politically powerful leaders, who have been a key component of Netanyahu’s government. That has fueled resentment among the broader public — a sentiment that has grown during nearly two years of war.
The military does not provide figures on absences or refusals and says each case is evaluated on its merits. “The contribution of the reservists is essential to the success of missions and to maintaining the security of the country,” it said.
At least three soldiers associated with the Soldiers for Hostages group have been imprisoned this year for refusing to serve, with some jailed for up to three weeks, the group said.
Support for the war ran high after Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251.
But sentiment has changed over the course of the war, especially since Israel ended a ceasefire in March that had facilitated the release of hostages. The war has killed more than 64,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. The agency doesn’t say how many of the dead were civilians or militants, but says about half the dead were women and children.
A recent poll found that around two-thirds of Israelis, including about 60 percent of Israeli Jews, think Israel should agree to a deal that includes the release of all the hostages, the cessation of hostilities and the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.
The poll, conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute in the last week of August, surveyed 600 people in Hebrew and 150 people in Arabic. It has a margin of sampling error of 3.6 percentage points.
Hamas has long said it would accept a deal along those lines, but Netanyahu has refused. He has said the war will end only when all the hostages are returned and Hamas is disarmed, with Israel maintaining open-ended security control over the territory.
Mairav Zonszein, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, said that pushing soldiers in a deeply divided country to keep fighting could have a lasting impact on Israel’s capabilities.
Many believe that divisions over a planned judicial overhaul in 2023, which generated mass protests and threats from soldiers not to serve, weakened Israel ahead of the Oct. 7 attack.
Still, refusing military service remains a red line for many in Israel. “The military, and serving in it, is still sacrosanct,” Zonszein said.


Israel PM accuses Spain of ‘genocidal threat’, Madrid fires back

Israel PM accuses Spain of ‘genocidal threat’, Madrid fires back
Updated 19 min 32 sec ago

Israel PM accuses Spain of ‘genocidal threat’, Madrid fires back

Israel PM accuses Spain of ‘genocidal threat’, Madrid fires back
  • ‘I don’t think Netanyahu is exactly the person entitled to lecture anyone while committing the atrocities he is committing in Gaza’

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused his Spanish counterpart Pedro Sanchez of levelling a “genocidal threat” against Israel, drawing an outraged response from Madrid on Friday.
“I don’t think Netanyahu is exactly the person entitled to lecture anyone while committing the atrocities he is committing in Gaza,” Spanish defense minister Margarita Robles told Antena 3 television.
Her comments came in reaction to a message Netanyahu’s office posted on X Thursday accusing Sanchez of threatening Israel – the latest fiery exchange between the two countries.
On Monday, the Spanish premier had announced measures to “put an end to the genocide in Gaza,” including an arms embargo, a ban on boats carrying fuel for the Israeli military and restrictions on imports from illegal settlements.
“Spain, as you know, does not have nuclear bombs. Nor does it have aircraft carriers or large oil reserves. We alone cannot stop the Israeli offensive, but that does not mean we will stop trying,” he said in an address.
On Thursday, Netanyahu’s office issued a scathing response.
“Spanish PM Sanchez said yesterday that Spain can’t stop Israel’s battle against Hamas terrorists because ‘Spain does not have nuclear weapons.’ That’s a blatant genocidal threat on the world’s only Jewish State,” it said.
A few hours later, Spain’s foreign ministry issued a rebuttal.
In a statement, it stressed that “the Spanish people are friends of the people of Israel as of the people of Palestine,” denouncing the Israeli premier’s remarks as “false and slanderous.”
The week-long spat between Israel and Spain comes after months of worsening relations.
Socialist leader Sanchez has been one of Europe’s most vocal critics of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, launched after the unprecedented October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israeli soil.
He is the most senior European leader to refer to the war as a “genocide,” and in May of last year broke with European allies by recognizing a Palestinian state.
Israel has since had no ambassador in Madrid, which recalled its own ambassador to Israel on Monday after Foreign Minister Gideon Saar accused Spain of waging an “anti-Israel and antisemitic campaign.”


Trump to send National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns

Trump to send National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns
Updated 27 min 28 sec ago

Trump to send National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns

Trump to send National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns
  • Since sending the National Guard to Los Angeles and Washington, Trump has openly mused about sending troops to some of the nation’s most Democratic cities

NEW YORK: President Donald Trump said Friday he’ll send the National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns there with the support of the mayor and the governor.
Trump, a Republican, said on Fox News Channel “the mayor is happy” and “the governor is happy” about the pending deployment. The mayor is a Democrat, and the governor is a Republican.
He said the city is “deeply troubled” and “we’re going to fix that just like we did Washington,” where he’s sent National Guard and surged federal law enforcement.
Since sending the National Guard to Los Angeles and Washington, Trump has openly mused about sending troops to some of the nation’s most Democratic cities – including Chicago and Baltimore – claiming they are needed to crack down on crime.
Trump said he “would have preferred going to Chicago,” where local politicians have fiercely resisted his plans, but he suggested it was a “hostile” place with “professional agitators.”
Trump first deployed troops to Los Angeles in early June over Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s objections by putting the California National Guard under federal jurisdiction, known as Title 10, to protect federal property from protests over immigration raids.
Besides 4,000 guard members, Trump later sent 700 active duty Marines, and California sued over the intervention. The guard went on to help protect officers during immigration arrests.
Meanwhile, the unique status of the District of Columbia National Guard – Trump is its commander in chief – means he has been able to use it for everything from armed patrols to trash cleanup without any legal issues. Because it is on state and not federal orders, legal restrictions on law enforcement don’t come into effect.