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House advances aid bills for Israel, Ukraine, putting Johnson’s speaker job in jeopardy
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Conan O’Brien will host the 2025 Academy Awards
A year after turning to comedian Jimmy Kimmel to host their big show, The Academy Awards will pivot to another familiar TV funnyman – Conan O’Brien.
“America demanded it and now it’s happening: Taco Bell’s new Cheesy Chalupa Supreme. In other news, I’m hosting the Oscars,” O’Brien said in a statement Friday.
It will be his first time as the Oscar host but he’s emceed other high-profile awards shows, like the Emmy Awards in 2002 and 2006 and the White House Correspondents’ dinner in 1995 and 2013.
The Oscars will air live on ABC on March 2, 2025.
O’Brien is best known for hosting the late-night talk shows “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” “The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien” and “Conan.” Before his TV hosting career, O’Brien was a writer for “Saturday Night Live” and “The Simpsons.”
O’Brien joins the list of Oscar hosts that includes Johnny Carson, Billy Crystal, David Letterman, Whoopi Goldberg, Chris Rock, Jon Stewart, Hugh Jackman and Neil Patrick Harris.
“He joins an iconic roster of comedy greats who have served in this role, and we are so lucky to have him center stage for the Oscars,” said Craig Erwich, president of Disney Television Group.
O’Brien worked as a late-night host for nearly three decades. In 2015, he became the “longest-working current late night talk show host” in the U.S., following David Letterman’s retirement, according to TBS.
The star served as a writer and producer on multiple TV shows, including “Saturday Night Live,” before becoming the host of “Late Night” on NBC in 1993, TBS said. He famously left the network in January 2010 after a brief time as the host of “The Tonight Show.” His TBS debuted in 2010.
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The Offspring on 30 years of punk rock and new album
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Judge says death row inmate Melissa Lucio is “actually innocent,” recommends 2008 conviction be overturned
The judge who presided over the murder trial of Melissa Lucio said he believes Lucio is “actually innocent” in the 2007 death of her 2-year-old daughter Mariah.
Lucio has been on death row in Texas since 2008. In 2022, the state Court of Criminal Appeals issued a stay of execution in the case. The Court of Criminal Appeals ordered the original trial court to consider whether Lucio was actually innocent and whether state prosecutors had presented false testimony and hidden evidence from the defense.
In April 2024, Nelson, who presided over the original trial, agreed that the former district attorney illegally withheld favorable evidence that would have helped prove Mariah died from an accidental fall, not abuse, as the prosecution claimed.
The new evidence suggested that Mariah’s bruises were consistent with a brain injury from an accidental fall down the steps of the family’s home two days earlier, CBS News previously reported. Lucio and some of her children had recounted the fall to police officers and child protective services. Nelson ruled that this violated Lucio’s constitutional rights and recommended the appeals court overturn Lucio’s conviction and death sentence.
Court documents released yesterday show that in October, Nelson ruled there was clear and convincing evidence that Mariah died from an accidental fall, and said Lucio “is actually innocent; she did not kill her daughter.”
“No rational juror could have convicted (Lucio) of killing her daughter after hearing all of the evidence from her original trial alongside all of the new evidence she has presented,” Nelson wrote.
Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz, who was not in office at the time of Lucio’s original trial, also agreed that the previous prosecuting team suppressed evidence that could have supported Lucio’s innocence, according to a news release from the Innocence Project.
The case is now before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which will decide whether to accept Nelson’s recommendation.
“This is the best news we could get going into the holidays,” said John and Michelle Lucio, Ms. Lucio’s son and daughter-in-law, in a statement shared by The Innocence Project. Joined by Ms. Lucio’s son Bobby Alvarez, they added, “We pray our mother will be home soon.”