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The Private Prophet: Mormon Church President Thomas Monson Dies At 90

Thomas Monson delivers the opening talk at the 180th Annual General Conference of the Mormon church before thousands of members in 2010 in Salt Lake City.

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Thomas Monson delivers the opening talk at the 180th Annual General Conference of the Mormon church before thousands of members in 2010 in Salt Lake City.

George Frey/Getty Images

Thomas S. Monson, president and prophet of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, died Tuesday night at the age of 90.

In a statement, church spokesman Eric Hawkins wrote that Monson died at 10:01 p.m. in his home in Salt Lake City surrounded by family.

Monson had been at the helm of the 16 million-member Mormon church for nearly a decade and will be remembered as much for his personal ministry as for his aversion to grand pronouncements. He was a traditionalist without a bold agenda whose presence as a church leader faded as he aged. In recent years, he remained quiet as the church grappled with issues like ordaining women and baptizing children of gay couples.

A storyteller

Monson was a storyteller. Many of his stories involved following an inner prompting from the Holy Spirit.

“On one occasion many years ago I was swimming laps at the old Deseret Gym in Salt Lake City when I felt the inspiration to go to the University Hospital to visit a good friend of mine,” Monson said during the October 2012 General Conference.

“I later learned from my friend that he had been utterly despondent that day and had been contemplating taking his own life,” Monson continued. “I had arrived at a critical moment in response to what I know was inspiration from on high.”

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A native of Salt Lake, many of his anecdotes took place there. Whether that was visiting the 80 widows that lived in his downtown congregation as a young bishop or dropping in to see someone at just the right time.

Monson was a young man, only 36, when called to be a full-time apostle for the church, part of the second-highest governing body. That would be unheard of today.

“He really spent most of his life serving in the church,” says William Walker, a former general authority for the church who worked closely with Monson for many years.

Walker and Monson would often travel together on assignment and during those trips, he says, Monson would always make time to meet and shake hands with as many church members as he could.

Walker remembers one time in particular when Monson had just spoken to a large gathering. Following the closing prayer, he leaned over to the church leader and said, “If we slip out the side door, I can get you back to the hotel very quickly and get you some rest.”

Monson looked at him and responded, “If Jesus was here, do you think he would slip out the side door?” Walker decided to never make that suggestion again.

On church practice and policy, Monson didn’t seem to have much of an agenda. He was a traditionalist.

“I often heard him refer to the previous leaders of the church and he wanted to follow precedent,” says Walker.

One big change he will be remembered for is lowering the age for full-time missionary service. Women are now able to serve at age 19 instead of 21. This change led to a dramatic increase in the number of missionaries serving worldwide.

But in recent years, Monson had scaled back public appearances and speeches. His health was declining and he was reportedly suffering from memory loss.

“President Monson had such a prodigious memory,” Walker says. “He could remember everybody and everything. So as [he] had to deal with that as [he] got older, that had to have been extremely challenging and difficult for him.”

A private prophet

Monson’s ill health came at an inopportune moment for the church.

“I feel like in the almost 10 years that he’s been president, it’s been a time of real turmoil for the church,” says Kristine Haglund, a Mormon writer and former editor of Dialogue magazine.

Haglund points to one recent time in particular as a stress point for church members. In November 2015, the church declared that the children of gay couples could no longer be baptized.

It was a shock for many, confusing for most and seemed to contradict a growing acceptance of LGBT Mormons. But most confusing of all was that Monson was nowhere to be found. He said nothing publicly about the decision.

“It wasn’t controversial to suggest that President Monson wasn’t necessarily in charge,” says Haglund.

Haglund says that as Monson became less and less involved in church governance, it wasn’t clear who was steering decisions like this one. He also remained quiet during a movement to ordain women that gained national attention.

During the nine years he served at the head of the church, Monson only held one press conference soon after he was called. Much of what he felt or thought about current issues was left entirely to speculation.

“Mormons generally like certainty, they like to testify of things that they know,” Haglund says. “They like to feel certain that the prophet will never lead them astray and will tell them what they should do in an uncertain time and in an uncertain world.”

For some, the past few years have been uncertain times. But, Haglund says, that’s the price of having leaders who serve for life and this likely won’t be the last time a Mormon prophet retreats during their final years.

“We have to get used to this kind of leaderlessness, or at least the diluted sense of a leader’s presence,” Haglund says.

The church has not announced who will take Monson’s place as president. A successor will not be chosen until after his funeral, a spokesman said.

But tradition is that the senior-most church apostle is called to be the next president. In this case, that would be Russell M. Nelson, a former heart surgeon who at 93 seems to be in good health.

The Health 202: Hatch’s retirement means the Senate could get even less bipartisan on health care

THE PROGNOSIS

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) speaks to reporters following a meeting with President Trump at the White House. Hatch announced Tuesday he is retiring after four decades in Senate. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

The Senate is losing a health-care heavyweight at a point of unprecedented weakness, as it struggles to move forward on just about any kind of health policy.

Utah Republican Orrin Hatch — whose 40 years in office makes him the longest-serving GOP senator —  has announced his intention to retire at the end of this year. With Hatch’s exit, the Senate will lose one of its few remaining negotiators, one of the bipartisan-minded types who have become scarce in the halls of Congress.

“He represents a different time in the Senate and I think it’s kind of sad to see the era end,” a former Hatch staffer told me yesterday. “I don’t think they make senators like him anymore.”

Pick just about any major health-care bill enacted over the past several decades and Hatch probably had a hand in it. For the whole time I’ve covered Capitol Hill goings-on, Hatch has always been a reliable source of the latest news (as long as you stood close enough to hear his barely-above-a-whisper voice). He’s chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and has sat for years on the Senate’s No. 2 health-care panel, the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

When Congress finally set out three years ago to replace a flawed Medicare formula that had annually threatened dramatic pay cuts for doctors, Hatch was in the middle of negotiations that eventually resulted in a new system that instead tries to reward doctors based on the quality of the care they provide.

Last September, Congress passed Hatch’s Chronic Care Act, a major victory for telehealth advocates because it allows Medicare accountable care organizations to expand virtual care for stroke and dialysis patients and builds broader telehealth benefits into Medicare Advantage plans.

But Hatch’s résumé extends way before The Health 202’s recollection. In the 1980s, he teamed up with Democratic Rep. Henry Waxman (Calif.) on major legislation that encouraged companies to manufacture generic drugs while establishing the modern system of regulating generic drugs (see yesterday’s Health 202 for more on generics). Hatch was also co-sponsor of Waxman’s Orphan Drug Act, which gave drugmakers tax breaks for developing treatments for rare diseases.

In the 1990s he worked with his dear friend, Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy (Mass.) to create what will be perhaps his best-remembered accomplishment: The Children’s Health Insurance Program, which has been very successful in covering many low-income children and pregnant women in the United States. Although support for the program remains bipartisan, it’s at a crucial moment as states start running out of funding and the parties remain gridlocked over how to fund the program for the long term.

Hatch and Kennedy, who were often described as “a legislative odd couple,” also worked together on bills involving biomedical research, AIDS, child care and civil rights for those with disabilities.

“I think they both were brilliant legislators,” said Pattie DeLoatche, who served as a health policy staffer to Hatch for more than a decade. “Both of them had a wonderful sense of humor and they both wanted to accomplish something.”

Of course, in recent years, Hatch has also lobbed his fair share of criticisms at the Affordable Care Act alongside his fellow Republicans. In February 2015, he introduced a bill with Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.) to replace the ACA with a system that included revamped insurance subsidies and structural changes to Medicaid.

As the first senator to introduce legislation repealing the health-care law’s individual mandate to buy coverage and the employer mandate to offer it, Hatch appeared extremely gratified when the individual mandate was repealed in the GOP’s recent tax overhaul.

But through the years, Hatch has often criticized his follow senators for allowing their disagreements to escalate into bitter animosity, a state that seems more the norm than the exception in Congress these days. The old-school approach was for senators to disagree without being disagreeable — and Hatch has appeared increasingly dismayed that that’s not the modus operandi anymore.

“I’m concerned about this body and how it’s going,” Hatch told his colleagues from the Senate floor last February. “I’m hoping that we can still have our fights and still have our arguments and still have the enjoyable aspects around here of comradeship and working with each other.”

The partisan situation became even worse over the spring and summer, as the GOP worked to pass entirely one-sided health-care bills that ultimately folded in the Senate. Throughout the process, Hatch would often express skepticism to reporters, and even frustration, the process.

But clearly the soft-spoken senator loves being a senator. Former staffers say he’s not prone to working on impossible-to-pass legislation just to send a message, as many members do. Instead, he generally focuses on getting a Democratic co-sponsor for anything he truly hopes can get done.

Another former Hatch staffer recalled to me how the Utah Republican would often get lunch with Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) or Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). “He constantly worked across the aisle in ways the public rarely saw,” the staffer said. “The Senate will be a much less civil place without him.”

The Americans With Disabilities Act, a 1990 civil-rights law prohibiting discrimination based on disability, was among several bipartisan legislative accomplishments Hatch touted in a Deseret News op-ed published yesterday.

“During my time in the Senate, I’ve authored more bills that have become law than any other member of Congress,” Hatch wrote.

Many on Twitter offered their thoughts about Hatch and his career:

Democratic operative Hilary Rosen:

Kaiser Health News’s Julie Rovner with some perspective:

PhRMA CEO Stephen Ubl:

Politico’s Jennifer Haberkorn: 

CQ Roll Call’s Mary Ellen McIntire: 

A CVS Health Corp. store in downtown Los Angeles. Photographer: Christopher Lee/Bloomberg

AHH: If you pay any attention to the health-care industry, you’ve probably noticed a lot of blame-shifting for steep medical costs. Insurers routinely blame drugmakers and providers blame insurers for the price tag of everything. And so on. Lately, pharmaceutical companies have been working hard to peg blame for rising drug costs on pharmacy benefit managers, our colleague Carolyn Y. Johnson writes. Pharmacy Benefit Managers, or PBMs, often serve as middlemen between the patient and drugmaker.

“Who decides what you pay for your medicines? Not who you might think,” warns a PhRMA-backed radio ad airing in D.C last month. “More than one-third of the list price of a medicine is rebated back to middlemen, like insurers and pharmacy benefit managers.”

“With national and state advertising campaigns, white papers and cartoon infographics, the powerful and well-funded drug-industry lobby spent 2017 working to redirect public anger about drug prices to pharmacy benefits managers: links in the supply chain that sits invisibly between the patient and the drugmaker — in the process bringing a long-simmering feud between two big health-industry players into the open,” Carolyn writes.

Early last year, President Trump and Congress appeared ready to take on pharmaceutical prices. But drug companies’ fight with PBMs and insurers has “helped thwart any real action — splintering the problem into a multi-industry echo chamber of accusations that’s hard to comprehend, much less solve.” “The intra-industry conflict has meant that 2017 — a year when it seemed as if concerns about the affordability of drugs might translate into action — was consumed with an effort to try to unravel what is happening in the supply chain,” Carolyn writes.

(iStock)

OOF: This seems crazy, but the National Academy of Medicine has estimated the health-care system wastes around $765 billion a year — which comprises about a quarter of what we spend. Why and how, you ask? Pro Publica’s Marshall Allen explores some possible answers in a piece where he describes a warehouse in Maine filled to the brim with unused medical supplies and equipment.

“It’s hard to downplay what I found when I began investigating the issue. Hospitals throw out so many valuable supplies that a cottage industry of charities has sprung up to collect this stuff and ship it to the developing world — otherwise, all those goods in that Maine warehouse would be headed for a landfill,” Marshall writes. “Nobody tracks how much hospitals waste rather than donate, and I couldn’t track down where each item came from. But experts told me when hospitals change vendors for a type of supply, they often toss the old stuff. Or, if they take over a clinic or facility, they get rid of the items that come with it, even if they are unused and unexpired.”

Operating rooms are a major culprit. One hospital tracking the value of unused items that went to waste during neurosurgery procedures in a single year found a total of $2.9 million wasted for one type of surgery at just one hospital. Nursing homes also throw away hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of valuable medication every year, Marshall writes.

Eliminating this waste would mean a lot more Americans could get covered. “The Kaiser Family Foundation says it costs an average of $6,690 to pay one person’s insurance premium in 2017. At that rate, the $10 billion saved could insure about 1.5 million people for a year,” Marshall writes. 

Dr. Zofia “Zosia” Piotrowska checks sores in the mouth of patient Diane Legg on Dec. 5 in Danvers, MA. Legg, 55, is undergoing yet another clinical trial for treating her lung cancer that has painful side effects. (Photo by Jamie Cotten for The Washington Post)

OUCH: A growing number of cancer survivors have powerful new immunotherapy treatments to thank, yet many are also suffering from a range of dangerous side effects including arthritis-like joint pain and lung and liver inflammation. These highly touted immunotherapy treatments have downsides that many doctors don’t yet know about, The Post’s Laurie McGinley writes.

“Called checkpoint inhibitors, the new therapies offer a tantalizing chance for survival for patients with advanced melanoma and hard-to-treat cancers of the bladder, kidney and lung,” Laurie writes. “But the treatments, designed to unleash the immune system to attack malignancies, also can spur an assault on healthy organs, causing varied and bizarre side effects ranging from minor rashes and fevers to diabetes and deadly heart problems.”

“Many doctors are not up to speed on how to spot and handle an immune system revved up by immunotherapy, with symptoms that can mimic those of the flu, infections or even food poisoning,” she notes. “That lack of awareness can be dangerous, given that quick intervention is the key to preventing serious damage.”

“Immunotherapy has a completely different side-effect profile than chemotherapy, and that has caught some physicians off guard,” said Drew Pardoll, director of the Bloomberg-Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at Johns Hopkins University. Doctors — including emergency-room physicians, dermatologists and gastroenterologists — “need to go back to school” to learn about immunotherapy, he told Laurie.

–Maybe this is currently the best way to characterize Republicans’ approach to repealing and replacing Obamacare: It’s complicated. While it’s nearly impossible to imagine how they’d manage to pass a health-care bill with an even narrower Senate margin and during an election year, House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) said yesterday that repeal — and entitlement reform — is at the top of the GOP to-do list for the new year.

“We’re going to have to work on health care again. I’m for repealing and replacing Obamacare,” Scalise said in a Tuesday interview with “Fox and Friends.” He added that repealing the health care law’s individual mandate through the GOP tax overhaul was a good start.

“Now we need to go and fix the things wrong in health care that are jacking up the costs, so lets get back to work on some of those things, like what we passed in the House, that almost passed in the Senate, so that we can get our health-care system working and rebuild a private marketplace,” Scalise said.

Reporters must wait a few more days to badger individual House members on this question, as that chamber doesn’t return until next week. But today, we welcome back the Senate from its holiday break.

In the meantime, the ACA’s tax on medical device manufacturers has gone into effect, despite earnest attempts by the industry to get it repealed or suspended in various health-care bills and the year-end spending bill. No such luck for the industry. The 2.3 percent excise tax went into effect Monday, after being suspended for 2016 and 2017, the AP reminds us.

But device makers aren’t giving up their fight. “They still hold out hope of repealing or again suspending the tax,” the AP writes. “Despite earlier failures, industry officials say congressional backing for repeal remains strong. The next attempt could come in connection with a spending bill needed by Jan. 19 to avert a government shutdown.”

–A few more good reads from The Post and beyond:

Coming Up

  • The American Enterprise Institute holds a discussion on “Reconnecting Health Care Policy with Economics: Finding and Fixing Distortive Incentives” on Thursday.
  • The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee holds a hearing on the opioid crisis on Jan. 9.
  • The House Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity holds a hearing on “Home Loan Churning Practices and How Veteran Homebuyers are Being Affected” on Jan. 10.
  • The National Academy of Sciences holds a workshop on “The Promise of Genome Editing Tools to Advance Environmental Health Research” on Jan. 10-11.
  • The House Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittees on Health and on Economic Opportunity hold a joint hearing on addressing veteran homelessness on Jan. 18.

Here’s what’s on the GOP agenda this year: 

With Sen. Orrin Hatch’s retirement, President Trump is losing an ally, and might be gaining a foe:

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders wouldn’t say whether President Trump is open to supporting Mitt Romney for the Utah Senate seat vacated by Hatch:

Here’s what you should know about Hoda Kotb, named co-anchor of NBC’s “Today” show:

YouTuber Logan Paul apologizes for showing body in Japan’s ‘suicide forest’


A group of schoolchildren read signs posted in the dense woods of the Aokigahara Forest at the base of Mount Fuji, Japan. American blogger Logan Paul is apologizing after getting slammed for a video he shared on YouTube that appeared to show a dead body in the Aokigahara Forest in Japan, which is famous as a suicide spot. (AP Photo/Atsushi Tsukada, File)

Logan Paul, one of YouTube’s biggest stars, treated a video he uploaded over the weekend as the equivalent of a TV sitcom’s “very special episode.” To indicate the seriousness of the matter to his young fans, Paul posted a warning at the beginning, telling viewers who are having thoughts of suicide or self harm to seek help. He also demonetized the video so that he would not earn advertising money off its views.

The now-deleted video was titled, “We found a dead body in the Japanese Suicide Forest . . .”, and that is, more or less, exactly what the vlog showed — complete with extended footage of the body of an apparent suicide victim. In a short intro, Paul called it “the most real vlog I have ever posted on this channel” and “a moment in YouTube history.”

On Monday, amid outrage on Twitter and from other YouTube personalities, the video disappeared from Paul’s YouTube channel, and the social media superstar tweeted out an apology. Paul said he “intended to raise awareness for suicide and suicide prevention” with the video, and claimed he “didn’t do it for views.”

“I’m often reminded of how big a reach I have with great power comes great responsibility,” He said. “For the first time in my life I’m regretful to say I handled that power incorrectly. It won’t happen again.”

A moment like this was perhaps inevitable in Paul’s world, where everything is content before it is anything else. The only wrong decision in this universe is to turn the camera off.

If you’re over 25, this might be the first time you’ve heard of Logan Paul. The thing you need to know about him is that he is very famous. Paul has 15 million subscribers on YouTube. Each one of his daily videos routinely gets more than 5 million views. Like his younger brother Jake Paul, who also vlogs daily on his own YouTube channel, Logan’s fans are young — tweens and under, often.

Each Paul has a boy band-like role to play in the brotherhood. Jake Paul was the bad boy, the one who lost his Disney gig after the news picked up on the mayhem outside of his former Los Angeles-area home. Until he vlogged about a dead body, Logan played the relatively responsible older brother, or at least responsible enough to still get cast in TV and movie roles.

Logan calls his fans the “Logang;” Jake’s are the “Jake Paulers.” The brothers treat fandom like a competition, pitting their viewers against each other by maintaining a mostly fake, on-camera rivalry to see who can get the most YouTube views or merchandise sales.

It works, and because of their success, the brothers have become the prosperity gospel preachers of social media stardom, inviting their young fans to follow in their vlogging footsteps. Your daily life, the gospel says, is meant to be monetized, just as the Pauls have done. Jake Paul’s catch phrase is “It’s every day, bro,” which explicitly refers to the fact that he posts a new vlog about his life, every day. He turned “it’s every day bro” into a rap video that, while mocked into the meme stratosphere for its horrible lyrics, currently has more than 167 million YouTube views.

Experiences that don’t become content are, in the Pauls’ world, money and influence left on the table. The daily vlogging gospel only promises wealth and influence if your life on camera is interesting enough to deserve it.So in this context, consider that Logan Paul had footage of a dead body — and more importantly, his own on camera reaction to seeing a dead body for the first time in his life. As I said, it was inevitable.

Dozens of research studies suggest that media sensationalizing suicide, showing it extensively and graphically as this vlog did, can put vulnerable individuals at risk. But that research doesn’t seem to register as even a blip for Logan Paul.

The now-deleted video reveals something else: from the moment Paul walked into that forest, he intended to make a video about death and suicide. But his original plan was to fake it, treating the Aokigahara — where dozens of real corpses are found every year — like a haunted house.  They were going to camp overnight in the forest. When it was dark, they’d pretend to see things, maybe a dead body. It’s the sort of video that tons of YouTubers make while visiting Japan.

Several minutes into the video, Logan and his crew are walking in broad daylight to find a place to camp, like the other YouTubers who have visited this forest for content before them have done. Then they find the body. They move in closer, camera rolling. Logan zooms the camera he is holding in on the body, closer still. He then turns the camera on himself.  “I’m so sorry about this Logang,” Paul said, using the nickname for his millions of YouTube fans, “this was supposed to be a fun vlog.”

Still standing there, feet from the body of an apparent suicide victim, Logan tells his viewers that “we came here with an intent to focus on the haunted aspect of the forest, this just became very real and obviously a lot of people are going through a lot of s— in their lives.”

“Suicide is not the answer, guys, there are people who love you and care for you,” Paul said.

Later, Paul and his crew are beginning to freak out.  “I’ve never seen a dead person. Like, I’ve never discovered a dead person,” Paul says. But standing there, it’s clear that they have already decided to use this footage. Paul tells his viewers that they will be blurring the face of the victim to protect his identity. Authorities have not yet arrived.

“This is the most real vlog I’ve ever made,” Paul says. “400 vlogs And I’ve never, I’ve never had a more real moment than this.”

The vlog is now gone from Paul’s channel. But before it went, a cached version shows, the video had hundreds of thousands of likes and more than 6 million views.

More reading: 

Hoda Kotb becomes official co-anchor of ‘Today’ after Matt Lauer firing

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Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie are Today’s new anchor team.
Time

Hoda Kotb has been named a permanent co-anchor of the Today show alongside Savannah Guthrie following Matt Lauer’s firing amid sexual harassment allegations. 

Lauer’s ouster in November left a major opening for the morning program, which Kotb filled temporarily until the announcement Tuesday made her position permanent. 

“This has to be the most popular decision NBC News has ever made,” Guthrie said at the top of the broadcast. 

NBC News chairman Andy Lack shared the news in a staff memo Tuesday morning. “Over the past several weeks, Hoda has seamlessly stepped into the co-anchor role alongside Savannah, and the two have quickly hit the ground running,” he wrote. “They have an undeniable connection with each other and most importantly, with viewers, a hallmark of Today.” 

More: Matt Lauer’s ouster creates problems for NBC leadership, and future of ‘Today’ show

More: Replacing Matt Lauer: Is the era of the big-name TV news anchor over?

Guthrie and Kotb will co-anchor the 7-9 a.m. hours, along with Al Roker and Carson Daly. Kotb will also continue co-hosting the 10 a.m. hour with Kathie Lee Gifford, a role she has held since 2008.

NBC fired Lauer on Nov. 29 after receiving what Lack called a “detailed complaint” about “inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace.” 

Hours later, Variety published the results of a two-month investigation focusing on three women who identified themselves as victims of sexual harassment by Lauer.

The women, who spoke anonymously for fear of professional repercussions, detailed how Lauer used his position of power over NBC employees who would be reticent to complain because of his prominent position in the company. According to the outlet, Lauer developed a pattern of inviting women late at night to his hotel room while covering the Olympics over the years, and to his secluded office within 30 Rockefeller Center. 

Addie Collins Zinone, one of as many as eight accusers, came forward publicly, describing how a newly married Lauer seduced her into sexual encounters in his dressing room, a bathroom and his office when she was a 24-year-old production assistant.

Regarding the allegations, Lauer said in a statement following his ouster that “there is enough truth in these stories to make me feel embarrassed and ashamed. I regret that my shame is now shared by the people I cherish dearly.”

“There are no words to express my sorrow and regret for the pain I have caused others by words and actions,” the statement continued. “To the people I have hurt, I am truly sorry. As I am writing this I realize the depth of the damage and disappointment I have left behind at home and at NBC.”

The question of who would replace Lauer, 60, the biggest star of morning television with a nearly 21-year run anchoring Today, swirled over the last month. However, viewers tuned in, bumping up ratings, and the NBC morning show beat ABC’s Good Morning America in the first week of December for the first time in three months, according to Nielsen.

Gary Levin contributed to this report. 

More: Matt Lauer scandal: Lawyer for accuser blasts NBC, ex-intern describes predatory affair

More: After Matt Lauer firing, NBC gets ratings boost

 

South Korea Proposes Border Talks With North Korea After Kim’s Overture

North Korea’s offer to send a delegation to the Winter Olympics, which are to begin in February in the South Korean town of Pyeongchang, represented a breakthrough for President Moon Jae-in of South Korea, a dogged champion of dialogue and reconciliation with the North.

Mr. Moon has repeatedly urged North Korea to join the Pyeongchang Olympics, hoping it would ease the military tensions over the North’s nuclear and missile programs. Mr. Moon said that the North’s participation would compel the two Koreas to open talks, which he hoped would lead to broader negotiations, involving Washington and others, for the North’s denuclearization.

After ignoring Mr. Moon for months, calling his South Korean government an American stooge, Mr. Kim used his New Year’s speech on Monday to embrace the South Korean leader’s overture.

Photo

American Marines drilling with South Korean troops in Pyeongchang last month. Mr. Moon has suggested that the countries could suspend joint exercises during the Olympics.

Credit
Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

“I appreciate and welcome the North’s positive response to our proposal that the Pyeongchang Olympics should be used as a turning point in improving South-North relations and promoting peace,” Mr. Moon said early Tuesday, instructing his cabinet to move swiftly to open dialogue with North Korea.

With barely 40 days before the Olympics, the two Koreas must swiftly sort out logistics and other details for North Korean athletes if they are allowed to participate, officials said.

South Korea has proposed that the North Korean athletes travel through the 2.5-mile-wide Demilitarized Zone, the world’s most heavily fortified border, a route that would be rich in symbolism. It also wants to discuss the possibility of the two Korean delegations marching together in the Games’ opening ceremony. It also wants to know whether the North plans to send a cheering squad.

If the North participates in the Games and the two Koreas march together, it would be a milestone in inter-Korean relations.

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Strong ethnic nationalism compels people in one Korea to cheer for the other in competition with any other country, especially Japan, which once ruled the Korean Peninsula as a colony. The potential implications of millions of Koreans cheering together could be huge — a prospect that could further advance Mr. Moon’s policy of promoting dialogue and exchanges with the North and creating a thaw after years of tensions spurred by the North’s nuclear and missile tests.

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An enormous flagpole jutting up from North Korea as seen from Paju, in the Demilitarized Zone. The North’s participation in the Olympics, to be held in South Korea, would be a milestone in relations.

Credit
Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times

In 2000, the year the two countries held their historic first summit meeting, their delegations marched together at the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics. They again marched together at the 2004 Athens Olympics, using the single name “Korea” and carrying a “Korea is one” flag. But they competed separately in 2000 and 2004.

North Korea also sent squads to cheer for its athletes in international events in South Korea in 2002, 2003 and 2005.

But such scenes came to an end after the conservatives took power in the South in 2008 and instituted tougher measures against the North’s nuclear weapons development.

In June, Mr. Moon, whose election in May ended the years of conservative rule, said he hoped to see the national teams of the two Koreas march together again in Pyeongchang.

But the coming talks with North Korea over its Olympic participation could be a testing ground for Mr. Kim’s intentions.

While proposing to send an Olympic delegation, Mr. Kim on Monday said South Korea should end its regular joint military exercises with the United States and stop letting the Americans bring bombers and other nuclear-capable military assets into the Korean Peninsula. Mr. Moon has suggested that South Korea and the United States could postpone their joint military drills until after the Olympics.

Mr. Kim also demanded that South Korea stop joining the American-led campaign to squeeze North Korea with sanctions. Instead, he said the South should work together with the North to bring peace to the Korean Peninsula, while boasting that his nuclear weapons would prevent the Americans from starting a new war in Korea.

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Analysts said Mr. Kim was using the North’s Olympic participation to try to drive a wedge in the alliance between South Korea and the United States and between Mr. Moon and President Trump. Mr. Trump has voiced a much tougher stance against the North, focusing on pressure and sanctions and once dismissing Mr. Moon’s efforts for dialogue with the North as “appeasement.”

Faced with increasingly harsh sanctions and desperate to rejuvenate his country’s economy, Mr. Kim was seeking an “exit” from his predicament by cultivating ties with South Korea, the South’s Unification Ministry said in an analysis of Mr. Kim’s speech.

Mr. Cho said on Tuesday that the South was closely consulting with Washington on its dealings with the North.

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New York Family of 5 Among 10 Americans Killed in Costa Rica Plane Crash

“They were the kind of people you would like to have many of,” the relative said before saying she had to hang up. “They always did everything as a family.”

Lyn Kaller, a close friend of Ms. Steinberg who also lives in Scarsdale, said she learned of the plane crash in a text message from a rabbi in Costa Rica on Sunday afternoon. “Something happened to the Steinbergs,” the rabbi wrote.

Ms. Kaller said she immediately called the man, who told her that the plane the family was on had crashed after takeoff, but she did not believe him until her son found a news story online about the accident.

In the hours after the crash, Ms. Kaller said that an official with a United States consulate in Costa Rica also contacted her about the crash. The Steinbergs had many friends in Scarsdale, she said, so why the rabbi and government official contacted her had become another mystery in Sunday’s tragedy.

Mr. Steinberg worked in investment banking, and Ms. Steinberg volunteered at many nonprofits, Ms. Kaller said. She said she met Ms. Steinberg about 14 years ago when Matthew Steinberg and her son, Noah, attended nursery school at Westchester Reform Temple in Scarsdale.

Photo

Smoke rising from the crash site.

Credit
Costa Rica’s Public Safety Ministry, via Associated Press

Matthew was an eighth-grader at a private school, William attended the University of Pennsylvania and Zachary was at Johns Hopkins University, Ms. Kaller said. She said that their parents made an effort to expose them to cultures all over the world. It was a trip to Asia in a previous year, and the latest was the vacation to Costa Rica.

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“Irene and Bruce felt very strongly about providing that kind of culture and enrichment for their children,” she said in an interview.

Aviation and security officials in Costa Rica told local news media on Sunday that the cause of the crash was unknown but that the Nature Air plane encountered inclement weather on Sunday when it first tried to land in Punta Islita to pick up the American passengers. The plane returned to another airport before it eventually landed in Punta Islita around 11 a.m., the country’s civil aviation director told the newspaper El Mundo.

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After the pilots picked up the American passengers, the plane took off for San José, the capital, which is about 140 miles east, the authorities said. Photos posted by government officials on Facebook show that the Cessna plane crashed several hundred yards from the end of a runway at Punta Islita Airport.

Laura Chinchilla, the president of Costa Rica from 2010 to 2014, said on Twitter that her cousin was one of the crew members killed in the crash.

Costa Rica, particularly its pristine beaches and mountains on the Pacific coast, is popular with North American and European tourists. More tourists visit Costa Rica from America than any other country. Eco-tourism is a major draw, and Nature Air bills itself as the first carbon-neutral airline in the world.

In September, an American and another passenger on a Nature Air flight died when a single-engine Cessna crashed in a river in Guanacaste. Another American on the flight was injured.


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Four dead in Jersey Shore New Year’s shooting; 16-year-old arrested

A 16-year-old gunman killed four family members in a brutal New Year’s Eve slaying at their central New Jersey home, officials said.

The suspect, whose identity hasn’t been released, used an assault rifle to kill his parents — Steven, 44, and Linda Kologi, 42 — as well as his 18-year-old sister, Brittany, and a 70-year-old family friend inside the family’s Long Branch home late Sunday, according to Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher Gramiccioni.

His brother and grandfather both survived the attack uninjured, he added. 

The teen was arrested without incident, the prosecutor said, but it’s unclear if he was armed at the time.

“Thankfully it was uneventful,” Gramiccioni told reporters Monday morning, just hours after the shooting. “It didn’t require any force.”

Police have recovered the weapon they believe was used, which Gramiccioni described as a semi-automatic rifle.

It wasn’t clear if there were other weapons inside the home, Gramiccioni said.

Police are on the scene after four people were shot to death at a central New Jersey home on New Year's Eve.

Police are on the scene after four people were shot to death at a central New Jersey home on New Year’s Eve.

(TheLakewoodScoop.com)

“That’s not what I’m hearing at this time,” he said.

The 16-year-old gunman will be charged as an adult later Monday with four counts of murder as well as one count of possession of a weapon for unlawful purposes.

Police described the 70-year-old victim, Mary Schultz, as a family friend who also lived in the home.  

Long Branch is located on the Jersey Shore and has a population of roughly 30,000. 

This is a developing story and will be updated

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Trump rips Pakistan in first tweet of 2018

President TrumpDonald John TrumpHouse Democrat slams Donald Trump Jr. for ‘serious case of amnesia’ after testimony Skier Lindsey Vonn: I don’t want to represent Trump at Olympics Poll: 4 in 10 Republicans think senior Trump advisers had improper dealings with Russia MORE blasted Pakistan in his first tweet of 2018, saying its leaders have given the U.S. “nothing by lies deceit.”

“The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools,” he said Monday morning.

“They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little help. No more!” he added.

The New York Times reported late last week that the Trump administration might withhold $225 million in aid over frustration with Pakistan’s handling of terror networks.

Administration officials told the newspaper that a final decision is expected in the next few weeks.

U.S. officials have long accused Pakistan of being slow to stamp out terrorist groups within its borders.

In August, Trump unveiled a new U.S. strategy for the war in Afghanistan aimed at defeating the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network, an affiliated group that operates in Pakistan.

Trump said then that Pakistan “gives safe haven to agents of chaos, violence and terror.” He also vowed the administration would be tougher on the country.

In July, the Pentagon withheld $50 million in funding for Pakistan after Defense Secretary James MattisJames Norman MattisOvernight Defense: Trump recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capital | Mattis, Tillerson reportedly opposed move | Pentagon admits 2,000 US troops are in Syria | Trump calls on Saudis to ‘immediately’ lift Yemen blockade Trump has yet to name ambassadors to key nations in Mideast Mattis, Tillerson warned Trump of security concerns in Israel embassy move MORE told Congress he would not certify that the country has done enough to fight the Haqqani Network.

For Trump, a Year of Reinventing the Presidency

‘That’s Why He Won’

Presidents are human, too, a blend of varying degrees of idealism, generosity, empathy, ambition, ego, vanity, jealousy and anger, but they generally hide their unvarnished traits behind an official veneer. Call it decorum, call it presidential. Mr. Trump essentially calls it fake, making no effort to pretend to be above it all, except to boast that he is stronger, richer, smarter and more successful than anyone else. To him, the presidency is about winning, not governing.

The first president never to have served in government or military service, Mr. Trump repeatedly jumps the guardrails that his predecessors heeded. When the mayor of San Juan, P.R., complained about federal recovery efforts after the island was ravaged by Hurricane Maria, Mr. Trump dismissed her as “nasty.” When he did not receive enough gratitude for helping to free three American college basketball players from China, he exclaimed, “I should have left them in jail!”

He distorted a comment by the Muslim mayor of London to paint him as soft on terrorism. He accused Mr. Obama of tapping Trump Tower, calling him a “Bad (or sick) guy!” — a claim Mr. Trump’s own Justice Department rejected. He said there were “very fine people on both sides” of a white supremacist rally and counterprotest in Charlottesville, Va. He endorsed an accused child molester for Senate.

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He called various targets of his ire “crazy,” “psycho,” “short and fat,” “crooked,” “totally inept,” “a joke,” “dumb as a rock,” “disgusting,” “puppet,” “weak and out of control,” “sleazy,” “wacky,” “totally unhinged,” “incompetent,” “lightweight” and “the dumbest man on television.” Among others.

Even in small ways, Mr. Trump has broken presidential protocol. Presidents generally do not talk about daily gyrations of the stock markets or tout corporate expansion plans, seeing it as inappropriate. But Mr. Trump eagerly trumpets market increases, making them a substitute metric for success given his anemic poll numbers, and claims credit for corporate decisions with the gusto of a mayor or governor, whether related to his policies or not.

To supporters, his willingness to say anything and take on anyone comes across as refreshing.

“One thing he’s done to the Oval Office and our political culture as a whole is brought a lot more authenticity than people have been used to from politicians,” said Andy Surabian, a senior adviser to the Great America Alliance, a Trump-aligned group. “Whatever you think of him from an ideological point of view, I think for the first time in my lifetime, you have someone in the Oval Office who doesn’t seem plastic.”

“You hear all the time he’s not presidential,” he added. “But I say to myself, ‘That’s why he won.’”

Other presidents have experimented with how they communicated to the public and were criticized for diminishing the dignity of the office, only to have their innovations become standard fare for their successors. Franklin D. Roosevelt instituted fireside chats on the radio. Dwight D. Eisenhower inaugurated news conferences on television. John F. Kennedy allowed the briefings to be aired live instead of taped and edited.

Those presidents, however, did not use their platforms as weapons as Mr. Trump has. And they presided over serious, if sometimes unwieldy, policymaking structures designed to inform their decisions. Mr. Trump’s decisions, announced over Twitter, often seem like spur-of-the-moment reactions to something he has seen on television.

“He is a one-man show,” said Shirley Anne Warshaw of Gettysburg College, the author of nine books on presidential decision making. By her count, Mr. Trump has filled only about 350 of 469 positions on the White House staff. “He just doesn’t need them.”

Indeed, even those slots do not stay filled for long. A new Brookings Institution study found a 34 percent turnover rate in Mr. Trump’s White House, more than twice as high as any first-year personnel change in the 40 years examined.

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“It’s a presidency of one person,” said Ron Klain, a White House official under Mr. Clinton and Mr. Obama. “That’s really kind of a stunning thing. There is no Trump doctrine. There is no Trump plan. There is no Trumpism. There’s just Trump. Whatever Trump says is what Trump is. No one else speaks for him.”

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Even Mr. Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general who took over in July as chief of staff, has met the limits of his ability to guide the president. Rather than seek to control Mr. Trump, Mr. Kelly has tried to control the information that gets to him and make sure it is vetted. The structure he has established resembles that of previous presidents. That does not mean Mr. Trump adheres to it.

“I’m not put on earth to control him,” Mr. Kelly said. “But I have been put on earth to make this staff work better and make sure this president, whether you voted for him or not, is fully informed before he makes a decision. And I think we achieved that.”

“He remains fairly unconventional,” he added. “But as I point out, he now is fully briefed on the issues and the pluses and minuses, pros and cons.”

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