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Muere Brigitte Bardot, legendaria actriz francesa y activista de los derechos de los animales, a los 91 años

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Por Lee Smith, CNN

Símbolo de la juventud rebelde y la belleza, Brigitte Bardot ayudó a impulsar la revolución sexual en el cine con sus interpretaciones sensuales y desinhibidas en películas como “Contempt” (“Le Mepris”) de Jean-Luc Godard. Luego, en la segunda mitad de su vida, forjó un camino poco convencional como una feroz defensora de los derechos de los animales.

La legendaria actriz francesa murió a los 91 años, según un comunicado de su fundación proporcionado a CNN este domingo.

“La Fundación Brigitte Bardot rinde homenaje a la memoria de una mujer excepcional que lo dio todo y lo dejó todo por un mundo más respetuoso con los animales”, dijo la fundación. “Su legado vive a través de las acciones y luchas que la Fundación continúa con la misma pasión y la misma fidelidad a sus ideales”.

Conocida en Francia simplemente por sus iniciales B.B., Bardot fascinó al público y escandalizó a las autoridades morales con su despliegue de sexualidad en bruto en los años 50 y 60. Se convirtió en un fenómeno de taquilla en Estados Unidos y ayudó a popularizar el cine extranjero entre los estadounidenses en una época en la que la censura en Hollywood prohibía las discusiones francas sobre el sexo, y mucho menos la desnudez.

Describiendo su impacto, la revista Life dijo en 1961: “En todas partes, las chicas caminan, se visten, llevan el pelo como Bardot y desean ser almas libres como ella”.

Dividió la opinión pública como una de las primeras celebridades verdaderamente modernas. Mucho antes que Madonna, Bardot mantuvo varios romances bajo sus propios términos y no se disculpaba por su comportamiento y estilo de vida hedonista en una era previa al feminismo.

“En el juego del amor, ella es tan cazadora como presa”, observó la escritora francesa Simone de Beauvoir en un famoso ensayo de 1959 publicado por primera vez en Esquire, “Brigitte Bardot and the Lolita Syndrome” (“Brigitte Bardot y el síndrome de Lolita”). “El hombre es un objeto para ella, igual que ella lo es para él. Y eso es precisamente lo que hiere el orgullo masculino”.

La estrella restaba importancia a su talento actoral y rara vez recibía elogios de la crítica, pero su carisma era innegable durante casi dos décadas en más de 40 películas como “…And God Created Woman” (1956), “Contempt” (1963) y “¡Viva María!” (1965). También se convirtió en una cantante popular en Francia en los años 60.

Más allá de sus películas y música, el sentido de la moda de Bardot la mantuvo a la vanguardia de la cultura pop en la segunda mitad del siglo XX. Su cabello rubio decolorado, largo y liso, o recogido con mechones sueltos, así como su preferencia por atuendos casuales y ajustados, mantuvieron su imagen contemporánea mucho después de los años 60. Jane Fonda y Julie Christie estuvieron entre las actrices que la imitaron, mientras que modelos como Kate Moss y Claudia Schiffer también copiaron su look sexi y despeinado.

Un marchante de arte londinense explicó qué hacía de Bardot una creadora de tendencias durante una exposición fotográfica en 2009 para celebrar el 75º cumpleaños de la estrella.

“Era natural, iba descalza, no se peinaba, no usaba maquillaje, llevaba bailarinas porque se formó como bailarina de ballet”, dijo James Hyman a The Guardian.

“Es esa imagen de libertad, exuberancia y juventud. Se mostraba auténtica, instintiva, libre. Para las mujeres, era algo feminista; se trataba de comportarse como los hombres, tener amantes y romances”.

Tras retirarse del cine a los 39 años en 1973, Bardot usó su fama para llamar la atención sobre la situación de los animales.

“Di mi belleza y mi juventud a los hombres, y ahora doy mi sabiduría y experiencia, lo mejor de mí, a los animales”, dijo

Brigitte Bardot, legendary French actress and animal rights activist, dies at age 91, her foundation says

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By CNN staff

(CNN) — Brigitte Bardot, legendary French actress and animal rights activist, has died at age 91, according to a statement from her foundation obtained by CNN.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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The end of the line: New York City’s iconic MetroCard is about to go out of service

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By Elisabeth Buchwald, CNN

New York (CNN) — For more than three decades, lifelong New Yorkers and tourists visiting the Big Apple have shared the experience of a MetroCard swipe gone wrong. Swiping the transit card too fast or too slow, with the stripe facing the wrong side, or having insufficient fare all led to the subsequent, seemingly judgmental thud of the turnstile slamming into you.

“It’s embarrassing. You feel like you’re not an authentic New Yorker if you’re not swiping your MetroCard the right way,” said Mike Glenwick, 37, who has lived in the city most of his life and has been collecting limited-edition MetroCards since he was six.

Now the days of swiping the blue and yellow plastic cards are numbered. Come January 1, the Metropolitan Transit Authority will no longer sell MetroCards, and riders will be required to use OMNY, a contactless fare payment system. (Existing MetroCards will continue to be accepted at terminals, though MTA said their “final acceptance date will be announced at a later time.”)

Bidding farewell to the card has been a journey for New Yorkers and the MTA alike.

From tokens to cards

New York City subway’s iconic tokens were the default form of fare payment before the MetroCard was introduced. When tokens were initially rolled out in 1953, they were about the size of a dime and most had a hollowed-out Y between an engraved N and C, spelling out NYC.

Though clunky to carry around, they were easy to use: all transit passengers had to do was drop the tokens into a turnstile or farebox. For the MTA, it overcame the issue of being able to increase fares without having to redesign fare collection systems to accept various kinds of coins.

But in 1983 Richard Ravitch, then the commissioner of the MTA, began to envision a different fare payment system. Instead, he floated a magnetic stripe card with a stored value.

“His argument was that New York is a very modern cosmopolitan city and there are other modern cosmopolitan cities that are using this as their fare payment system,” said Jodi Shapiro, curator of the FAREwell MetroCard exhibit at the New York Transit Museum. But as his idea gained traction, it quickly became about more than just keeping up with other cities. At one point the MTA considered integrating MetroCards with pay phones so callers didn’t have to use coins (that didn’t end up happening, though).

The MTA initially thought the shift to MetroCards would “spell the death knell for fare evasion” since many riders were previously getting away with using various other kinds of coins and tokens, said Noah McClain, a sociology professor who has researched MetroCard technology and fare evasion trends. But that was hardly the case: “Fare evasion certainly endured, albeit often in different forms.”

One famous one, “swipers,” as they came to be known, sold bent MetroCards that allowed riders to fraudulently bypass turnstiles. Separately, a group of hackers was able to successfully reverse engineer many parts of the MetroCard.

But riders saw benefits, too. One of the biggest selling points for the MetroCard was that users could purchase different, more flexible fares. That included discounts for seniors, disabled people and students, as well as cards that offered unlimited rides throughout the month.

Cards also came with a massive perk that tokens didn’t: free transfers. One swipe of a MetroCard on a bus or subway meant riders didn’t have to pay again if they transferred to another bus or subway train.

A collector’s item

But just as New York subway tokens became icons of the city, so did the MetroCard. And that was by design.

“MetroCards were made to be collected,” Shapiro said. The year the MTA launched the MetroCard, 1994, was also when it released an inaugural limited edition card. Since then there have been around 400 co

Wind Advisory issued December 28 at 1:08AM PST until December 28 at 10:00PM PST by NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard CA

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* WHAT…For the Wind Advisory, northeast winds 20 to 30 mph with
gusts up to 45 mph expected. For the High Wind Watch, northeast
winds 25 to 40 mph with gusts up to 65 mph possible.

* WHERE…Interstate 5 Corridor, Santa Susana Mountains, Western San
Gabriel Mountains and Highway 14 Corridor, and Western Santa
Monica Mountains Recreational Area.

* WHEN…For the Wind Advisory, from 6 PM to 10 PM PST this evening.
For the High Wind Watch, from 10 PM Sunday through Monday
afternoon.

* IMPACTS…Damaging winds could blow down trees and power lines.
Widespread power outages are possible. Travel could be difficult,
especially for high profile vehicles. In addition, unsecured
objects will be blown around.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS…Wet soils will increase the likelihood of
damage.
Monitor the latest forecasts and warnings for updates.

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Zelensky and Trump to meet in Florida after weeks of intensive peace talks

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By Kevin Liptak, CNN

West Palm Beach, Florida (CNN) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrives here Sunday as his frozen capital of Kyiv comes under assault by Russian missiles and drones, a deadly reminder from the war’s aggressor that its attacks would continue even amid accelerated peace talks.

The 1 p.m. ET Mar-a-Lago meeting between Zelensky and President Donald Trump, announced only two days beforehand, is intended to close gaps in the original 28-point peace plan that Trump first proposed last month and which Ukraine has since revised to 20 points. Intensive work has been underway by American envoys to finalize a proposal both Ukraine and Russia can agree on.

Trump, who has been in Palm Beach since December 20, will interrupt his holiday break for the discussion. The meeting was arranged after Zelensky held an hourlong phone call late last week with Steve Witkoff, Trump’s foreign envoy, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law who is working to finalize the peace agreement.

Trump said earlier this month he didn’t think meetings with Zelensky or his European allies would be useful unless they were close to reaching a deal, a sign of the negotiations’ advanced stage. American officials have described significant progress in the peace efforts, with a US official saying earlier this month that 90% of the terms of the deal had been settled. Zelensky affirmed that figure Friday.

“It isn’t easy. No one is saying that it will be 100% right away, but nevertheless, we must bring the desired result closer with every such meeting, every such conversation,” he said.

The remaining 10% have proved difficult to resolve and include the thorny issue of land concessions that will be necessary to end the nearly four-year war. Russia has not backed off its maximalist demands, including that Ukraine surrender the entire eastern Donbas region.

Zelensky, however, is no longer ruling out concessions entirely, and says he would bring the peace plan up for a referendum if Russia agrees to a ceasefire. (Ukraine’s constitution requires any changes to the country’s borders to be approved in a referendum.)

The US side has offered “thought-provoking” ideas on how to resolve the impasse, one US official said, including the development of an “economic free zone” in the eastern part of Ukraine.

Also unresolved is the fate of the Russia-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe’s largest. Zelensky said Kyiv proposes the plant be operated by a joint enterprise between the US and Ukraine, with 50% of the electricity output going to Ukraine and the remainder allocated by the US.

Russia will not be represented at Sunday’s meeting, and it remains unclear whether Moscow is willing to agree to an immediate ceasefire that would allow a peace plan to take hold. Trump has frequently pointed to both Ukraine and Russia as obstacles to peace.

Speaking a day before the meeting, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that “if Kyiv is not willing to resolve the matter peacefully, Russia will accomplish all the aims of the special military operation by military means,” using a euphemism for the war in Ukraine, according to Russian state media service TASS.

Russia launched 519 drones and 40 missiles at Ukraine overnight into Saturday, according to Ukraine’s air force. Zelensky said Saturday morning that while Russian officials are engaging in talks to end fighting, the ongoing violence speaks for itself.

American officials are hopeful the meeti

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