Sunday, 17 January 2016

Burkina Faso begins mourning after 12-hour siege by al-Qaeda fighters which left 28 people dead.

Burkina Faso has begun three days of national mourning after al-Qaeda fighters killed at least 28 people in an attack on a hotel and cafe popular with foreigners.
The national mourning began on Sunday, a day after government soldiers and French forces ended a more than 12-hour siege at the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou's business district.
President Roch Marc Christian Kabore said the people of Burkina Faso must unite in the fight against "terrorism".
He also announced on the national broadcaster, Burkina 24, that security forces would be stepping up their efforts to thwart future attacks and asked people to comply with the new restrictions.
"These truly barbaric criminal acts carried out against innocent people, claimed by the criminal organisation al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), seek to destabilise our country and its republican institutions, and to undermine efforts to build a democratic, quiet and prosperous nation," said Kabore.
The attack, which began on Friday night, was the first of its kind in Burkina Faso.
The al-Qaeda group, claiming responsibility for the killings, released an audiotape titled: A Message Signed with Blood and Body Parts.
When the gunfire and explosions finally stopped, authorities said 18 were killed in the hotel and 10 were killed at the nearby Cappuccino Cafe.
Among the victims was a Ukrainian woman who was co-owner of the cafe with her Italian husband, Gaetano Santomenna, according to Ukrainian officials.
Although Santomenna was not at the cafe and survived the attack, the couple's son, Michel Santomenna, nine, was killed, according to the Italian foreign ministry.
Paolo Gentiloni, Italy's foreign minister, called the child's death "a horrendous crime" in a tweet, which also expressed sympathy with the boy's father.
The toll includes six Canadians, according to Canadian officials.
Others killed include seven citizens of Burkina Faso, two Ukrainians, two Swiss, two French and one each from the US, Holland, Portugal and Libya, and one French-Ukrainian, according to Burkina Faso officials who released a partial list.
Other bodies were being identified.
The American - Michael Riddering, 45, of Cooper City, Florida - had been working as a missionary in Burkina Faso since 2011, where he and his wife ran an orphanage that also provided shelter to abused women and widows.
He is survived by his four children, two of whom were adopted from Burkina Faso.
Swiss authorities said its two nationals who were killed were also in Burkina Faso for humanitarian reasons.

With Aljazeera

Niger State Election: APC Sweeps Poll Again

The ruling party APC in Niger State has cleared all the positions in the 25 local government areas in recently held election.
Low turnout and late arrival of electoral materials characterised the local government elections, as electorates and party agents blamed neglect and ill-treatment on some alleged quarters on Saturday, according to Channel Television.
Although, the election was relatively peaceful, there was low turnout of voters as some of them were accredited and didn’t come out to vote.
The Niger State Deputy Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr Tanko Beji, while leaving the office of the Niger State Independent Electoral Commission (NSIEC) described the local government election as very unfortunate.
Mr Beji, after hearing some results on Sunday, expressed displeasure in the results announced, adding that he would consult the party before would take a stand later on the matter.
The local governments results collected from the various council returning officers were: Agaie, Chanchaga, Bosso, Lavun, Mokwa, Edati, Magama, Munya, Pailkoro and Rafi.
Others were: Rijau, Shiroro, Tafa, Bida, Wushishi, Gbako, Mariga, Lapai, Gurara, Borgu, Agwara, and Katcha Local Government Areas.
The only local government result being awaited was Kontagora, the country home of the State Governor.
Meanwhile election could not hold in Suleja Local Government Area due to perceived crisis in the area. It was rescheduled to hold on Saturday, January 23.

No Ozil, No Party As Stoke City Held Arsenal To A Goalless Draw

Arsenal failed to beat Stoke away from home for the sixth straight game but a 0-0 draw took them top of the Premier League.
It was a game where both goalkeepers shone as Jack Butland denied Olivier Giroud with two smart saves either side of the break before Petr Cech stood strong in the second period.
Stoke have now lost just one of their eight league games at the Britannia Stadium against Arsenal, who jump above Leicester City in the table but only on goal difference.
Arsene Wenger's side missed the creativity of Mesut Ozil, who was injured, but had chances to win the game only to be denied by Jack Butland.
The England goalkeeper tipped over Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain's long-range strike, before denying Olivier Giroud's header.
Stoke finished strongly as Jon Walters had a late header cleared off the line by Aaron Ramsey.
Arsenal have started 2016 well poised to challenge for a first league title in 12 years, and key to their impressive form this season has been Ozil.
The German tops the Premier League assist chart with 16, so his absence on Sunday because of a foot injury was undoubtedly a big blow for the Gunners.
It did, however, provided Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain with the chance to step up.
He certainly looked like he had a point to prove, forcing Butland into a fine one-handed save with a curling strike midway through the first half.
However, he was also guilty of losing possession at times and became increasingly anonymous as the game wore on.
If he is to prove himself an able deputy for Ozil, he will need to a show a lot more than he did on Sunday.
Arsenal may never get as good a chance to win the league as they will this season, with the challenge from their traditional title rivals faltering.
Arsene Wenger's side had lost just once in the eight games prior to the trip to Stoke, but Gunners fans might have been forgiven for feeling a little uneasy about their recent away form - they have now picked up just six points from a possible 18.
Arsenal were looking for their first win at the Britannia Stadium since 2010, so a victory at Stoke - especially without their talisman Ozil - would certainly underline their credentials as genuine title contenders.
In the opening stages of the game, however, they were second best, struggling to match Stoke's neat passing.
They improved as the game wore on, but not by much. Giroud's header - well saved by Butland - was their only effort on target in the second half.
Stoke's attacking talent has, quite rightly, been getting plenty of praise this season but Butland has been just as impressive in the Potters' goal.
His total of 81 is more saves than any other goalkeeper has made in the Premier League this season and he was key to Stoke's frustrating of Arsenal.
His saves from Oxlade-Chamberlain and Giroud kept his side in the game, allowing them to press in the closing stages as the visitors retreated, opting to protect the point.
As a consequence, Stoke could have snatched all three points just before full-time, but Walters' header from a corner was kept out by Ramsey, before Petr Cech blocked Joselu's follow-up.

Stoke manager Mark Hughes, talking to BBC Sport: "It was a game between evenly matched sides. Both teams approached the game in the right manner and created chances. All-in-all we're pleased. It shows our progress. Teams have found it difficult to get points here. 
"We are showing everyone we have belief in our ability. There was a period where Arsenal had some play around the box without creating too much. It was a similar story at the other end.
"It was a competitive game. At times, there were good opportunities to put the ball in the box and so the only criticism I would have is that we were reluctant to do that."

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger, speaking to BBC Sport: “Maybe we had a better opportunities to score, they played very well, very physical and were very direct, which is an unusual style for them.
"We needed to be strong physically and had a great spirit, we fought very hard but couldn't take our chances. It is a hard fought 0-0. We have done better than years before at this ground and showed we can fight even when we miss certain players.
"Petr Cech was outstanding, we needed a player like him in the air when Stoke played that kind of game."

How To Meet Powerful People

Gillian Zoe Segal interviewed Warren Buffett, artist Jeff Koons, and a Nobel Peace Prize winner, among others. Here she offers 15 tips to meeting anyone you want.

Getting There has, thankfully, been well received and people are incredibly interested in what my subjects have to say — but, by far, the most common question get is: How did you manage to land these people??!!
Well, it wasn’t quick or easy, but laid out below are all my networking techniques — a blueprint you can use for landing your own “impossible” connections, whether they be potential employers, investors, customers, or some other great get.
First, understand the lay of the land: 
Most luminaries are extremely busy. They receive multiple requests every day for interviews, speaking engagements, new business opportunities, charity functions, you name it, not to mention the obligations they have with their careers, families, and personal lives. Understandably, there are simply not enough hours in the day for them to say yes to everything. And they definitely don’t.
If you are not a big name or don’t have something major to offer, accept that you will not be at the top of anyone’s priority list —no matter how important your request might seem to you.
Next, toss your ego out the window.
You will be ignored and rejected a lot, and you can’t take it personally or allow it to depress or discourage you.
Know that you can lead a horse to water, but the biggest hurdle is making sure the horse knows that the water is in front of its face. 
You must get your request noticed by the decision maker.
If you have any connection at all, use it.
Your connection doesn’t need to be a big one.
Here’s how I contacted Leslie Moonves, President and CEO of CBS  CBS -1.82% : My best friend’s husband had a friend who used to work at CBS and was willing to put me in touch with Moonves’s assistant. The assistant, who works closely with him every day, made sure he saw my request.
If you don’t have a connection (and most often I didn’t), here are some ways to get your request noticed:
Make yourself as human as possible — the less human you appear, the easier it is for someone to reject you.
Asking in person is the best method; that way it’s obvious you’re human. (It’s a lot easier to say no to a faceless email or tweet.) If you can figure out a way to run into your target in a not stalkerish way, try to do so — for example at a party or event. But don’t be annoying or take up too much of your target’s time. I usually introduce myself, give a one or two sentence pitch, and then ask whom I should contact with more details. The luminary usually gives me the name of a point person; then I contact that person ASAP.
Example: I had sent several requests to the artist Jeff Koons’ office with no response. I then happened to see Koons at an art event in NYC. I went right up to him, told him about my book and that I had already contacted his office to no avail — so I needed to know exactly who to reach out to. Koons gave me a name and the next morning I wrote to that person with something like, “Jeff and I met last night. We briefly discussed his participation in my upcoming book and he told me to contact you with the details.”
I got the chef Daniel Boulud and Warren Buffett to participate in a similar way. Check out this article for a detailed account of how I asked Buffett.
If you can’t ask in person — and most times you can’t — try to connect to the person you can reach (your target’s publicist, assistant, etc.). 
Always use the name of the person you are corresponding with since it makes for a more personal connection. If you don’t have that person’s name, ask for it. An email to a specific person instead of one addressed “to whom it may concern” is a bit harder for the recipient to ignore.
Here’s how I got Nobel Peace Prize recipient Muhammad Yunus to participate: I once had lunch with a woman who is a friend of Yunus’s daughter. She tried to contact his office on my behalf to make the introduction but was ignored. When I checked in with her to come up with a Plan B, she told me Yunus happened to be in town giving a speech at a hotel. I lurked in the lobby until he was done, made my pitch while following him out to get a taxi, and snapped his photo in case he eventually agreed to participate in Getting There (after all, he lives in Bangladesh.) I then pursued him for over a year and a half to get a phone interview — all the while bouncing among about five different assistants at two different offices. I know all those assistants’ names and they got to know mine.
Never accept “no” from someone who can’t give you a “yes.”
My friend (Steve Cohen!) told me this early on, and it really stuck with me. The point is, don’t let a “no” from one employee deter you. If the front door is locked, try the back door; if the back door is locked, try the side door; if the side door is locked, try crawling in a window. If you can’t do that, wait a while then try the front door again. Someone might answer this time!
What does this front door/side door/window bit really mean? I am talking about ways in — avenues — like a publicist, an agent, an employee, someone who once did business with the person, a friend of a friend of a friend….
I rarely dealt with just one employee and one door. When someone ignored me repeatedly or rejected me, I switched to someone else and acted like nothing had ever happened — I never mentioned I was previously ignored or rejected. (A lot of times your target never even saw your request — an employee rejected it instead.)
Take responses literally.
If you don’t get a definitive “no” from someone, try again. For example, if you get an, “Unfortunately, he can’t participate in that now,” take “now” literally and follow up later.
Never be anything but friendly and pleasant to deal with.
No one reacts well to “attitude” from strangers. That kind of behavior will only get you ignored even more — or axed for good. (It may also earn you a bad reputation.)
If you do get what you consider to be a final rejection, lose graciously and thank the person for considering your request.
Never rub anyone’s nose in the fact that they’re ignoring you.
For example, don’t complain that you called five times already. If you send a follow-up email to someone that has been ignoring you, don’t forward the old email. Send a new email (or send your prior email) like it has never been sent before.
This allows your contact to save face if they do choose to respond — and lets that person respond without having to make any excuses for why they previously ignored you.
Keep your correspondence simple and clear.
Get to your point quickly. Remember how busy everyone is; no one has time to sift through paragraphs to figure out what your email is about.
Once you get a response from someone, grab hold of that person and don’t let go.
I learned this lesson the summer of 1993, when I worked as a real estate broker. When clients decided they wanted to rent an apartment I had just shown them, I was instructed to not to let them out of my sight until they put down a deposit. Why? Simple: if I let them walk away and “get back to me tomorrow,” they might reconsider their decision. So I literally accompanied my clients to the bank while they took out cash for their deposit. The same is true with networking. If someone responds to your request, act fast and respond immediately. You need to get the ball rolling before they forget about you and move on to something else.
Take whatever you can get as soon as you can get it.
That means accepting the very first day the person is available — regardless of your schedule.
Get your foot in the door any way you can.
My interview with Warren Buffett was scheduled for 10 minutes. I traveled from NYC to Omaha for it.
Before we met Warren said he didn’t want me to take his photo. I told him I needed to take it but assured him it wouldn’t cut into my allotted time with him, joking by email, “… even if it ends up being a photo of you running away from me.”
In the end, I took Warren’s photo as soon as I walked in his office door and our interview actually lasted for about an hour. Check his entire essay out here.
One of the most challenging Getting There subjects for me to land was the architect Frank Gehry. I sent a couple of blind requests to the email address listed on his company’s website. The good news is that I was not totally ignored; the bad news is that I was rejected both times.
A few months later I found out my friend’s father’s new girlfriend (read that relationship twice and realize anyconnection can be a good connection) knew Frank and was willing to pass along my request. She sent him my request twice and was totally ignored both times!
A few months later I figured I would try again (after all, emails are free, and ya never know!), so I sent yet another email to his company’s email address and a miracle happened — I got a response! I can only assume a new assistant was on duty that day.
I immediately emailed her back, got her name, and asked if I could send her some samples of my work to show Gehry. Again, strike while the iron is hot: I was away at the time so I had my cat sitter overnight the material to her.
I called the office to follow up and make sure that she got it; remember, speaking on the phone makes the connection more personal. She showed my material to Gehry, he said yes, and we set up an appointment!
But that’s not the end of the story. Gehry then proceeded to cancel on me for a full year (I was that low on his priority list). During that time I bounced between 4 of his assistants (it seemed like every time I called to follow up a new person needed to be filled in on who I was and what Gehry had agreed to), but I eventually got some time with him and he is now in Getting There!
By the way: when I finally met with Gehry,Fra he had absolutely no idea I had ever been hounding him or his office. (In fact, none of my subjects did.)
Persistence pays off.
If I learned one lesson from the people who I interviewed forGetting There it is that determination and resilience eventually pay off. Of all my subjects, I think that Ian Schrager sums up this sentiment best in his Getting There essay. He says, “In the end, there’s so little that separates people. Those who want success the most and are relentless about pursuing it are the ones who get it.”
Pursuing any goal is much easier if you are truly passionate about what you want; that’s what gives you the fuel to persevere. In my case, I really believed in the concept of my book and felt that readers would truly benefit from what my subjects could share. I also felt sure my subjects would be happy with the finished product; if I hadn’t felt that way it would have been extremely difficult to overcome all the rejection and keep approaching people over and over again.
With Fortune and Gillian Zoe Segal

3 Ways to Use the Power of Persuasion in Your Marketing

                                         Image credit: Old Spice
To fully understand what persuasion is, it helps to begin with what it is not.
Derek Rucker is a professor of marketing at Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management whose research focuses on persuasion and consumer behavior. He is also the father of an 8-year-old girl with an iPad. Because he limits her screen time to an hour a day, he frequently tells her to turn off the device and put it away. She usually listens. But is that persuasion?
Not really. "She still believes she should be able to use the iPad as much as she wants," Rucker says. Yes, he has influenced her actions -- but it stemmed from his parental authority, not his ability to change her beliefs.
Persuasion, meanwhile, requires the ability to alter not just action but attitude. The difference is subtle, but important: A cereal brand that slashes its prices may gain new customers, but it hasn't fundamentally changed how it is perceived.
It's a distinction that gets at why persuasion can be so tricky, often requiring time, skill and a nuanced reading of multiple moving parts. But for brands looking to make, improve or reconfigure their image with consumers, there are few tools more valuable.
Here are three things to consider when attempting to craft a persuasive message:

1. Know your message.

In the early to mid 2000s, male grooming product company Old Spice's marketing strategy revolved around projecting sex appeal -- wear Old Spice, get the girl. The problem, Rucker says, was that Axe also already relied on that same message. That brand had a firm grasp on the "sexy" corner of the market.
Old Spice was losing ground, so the company tried another approach in 2010. Instead of projecting sex appeal, its new ad campaigns projected an overtly humorous take on masculinity and confidence, speaking to men and women consumers alike. Take the below ad, part of Old Spice's "Smell Like a Man, Man" campaign, in which the chiseled actor Isaiah Mustafa delivers the following line, straight-faced and shirtless, on a beach: "Anything is possible when your man smells like Old Spice and not a lady." It became a viral hit. By shifting strategies, Old Spice emerged from under Axe's shadow.
Certain messages can be a harder sell simply because a competitor is already selling them convincingly. "Part of your job is reading the board," Rucker says. For him, the most enjoyable aspect of constructing a marketing strategy is taking additional players' tactics into consideration.
Persuading consumers isn't structured like a debate. It's rarely that clean. Instead, it's a competition to gain attention, good will and dollars in a sea of competing voices.  
Old Spice wasn't successful at persuading consumers to buy its products by convincing them it had more sex appeal than Axe. So it recalibrated and changed strategies.
"[Old Spice] tried to get there from one route, couldn't do it, and then tried a different way," Rucker says. "That's the fun thing about persuasion -- there's rarely a single message that's the one right message."

2. Know your audience.

A message’s persuasiveness also depends on who is listening and how they are doing so.
People exist on a spectrum, Rucker says. Some scrutinize every message, others make snap judgments based on peripheral cues and most fall somewhere in between. Fact-based messages from experts tend to resonate with the former group, while messages from charismatic sources are a good bet for persuading the latter
Context also matters, of course. The more engaged a person is with the topic and content of a message, the more likely he or she is to look past surface charisma to evaluate its objective strength. This makes intuitive sense, Rucker says, because an audience’s level of interest in a message tends to be positively correlated with the amount of attention they pay it.
The situation matters, too. Distractions, fatigue and a lack of time are compounding factors that can slide an audience’s receptiveness away from quality towards quantity.
For a brand, this means identifying its audience’s general position on the continuum and crafting persuasive strategies accordingly. If the audience is engaged, “stick to arguments that are strong.” If they are distracted or disinterested, “you should definitely throw in everything.”

3. Know your competition.

Apple is a very sophisticated persuader, Rucker says, because its strategy employs both substance and charisma to appeal to consumers on multiple levels. Take the rollout of the Apple Watch -- the campaign began with ads that emphasized the wearable’s functionality, and then moved into a series of ads that focused on the device's attractive design and lifestyle appeal.
“It was a very clever move strategically,” Rucker says. “Remember: competition matters." The  two-pronged approach meant that smartwatch manufacturers such as Pebble, Samsung and Google "had to beat Apple not only on the functionality, but on image association as well.”
Historically, Apple has been masterful in generating consumer confidence around the superiority of its products. While likeability is an asset, a brand's ability to inspire conviction is an invaluable competitive advantage. It’s far easier to convince consumers to try a new product than it is to convince them to abandon a product they believe in, Rucker says.
“As people become more confident, it becomes increasingly difficult to change their beliefs," he says. They will dismiss conflicting information and approach challenges with suspicion, which means competing brands must first erode consumer confidence before they can successfully sell their own message.

With Entreprenuer

Rooney snatches United win

Wayne Rooney scored his first goal at Liverpool since 2005 to help Manchester United move back within two points of the Premier League top four.
                                                                                       Reuters
Liverpool had more chances in a dour encounter, with Emre Can's shot being superbly tipped away by David de Gea.
But they were made to pay when Rooney rifled in from six yards after Marouane Fellaini's header hit the bar.
The visitors, who are fifth, had not managed a single shot on target until the England captain's winner.
Liverpool stay in ninth position in the top-flight table, six points behind rivals United.
And that will no doubt frustrate Liverpool who slipped to a fourth straight defeat to United, missing the chance to close the gap in the Premier League standings.
The results sees United, who move up a place to fifth, open up a potentially crucial six-point gap over their North West rivals in the table, while Liverpool remain ninth.
Both teams entered the game on the back of 3-3 draws which seemed to please both managers, with Jurgen Klopp making just one change, with Lucas Leiva replacing Jordan Ibe, while Louis van Gaal named an unchanged side.
Early chances in the second half clearly illustrated Klopp had instructed his side to get at United after the break but, having done well to get away from Chris Smalling, Emre Can was denied by De Gea, who defected the German's effort agonisingly across the face of goal.
United enjoyed their best spell of the game shortly after as Martial showed great control to get away from three Liverpool defenders before fizzing a low effort from a narrow angle wide.
And then the visitors had two half-hearted penalties claims turned down in quick succession, as referee Mark Clattenburg ruled Mamadou Sakho and Lucas not to have fouled Martial and Herrera respectively.
De Gea then produce the save of the game to tip Can's rasping drive away on 66 minutes, before denying Firmino's effort on the rebound. And Sakho couldn't rise high enough to head Milner's cross home on 72 minutes.
And Liverpool were made to pay for their prolificacy in front of goal. The hosts failed to react to a quick United corner, allowing substitute Juan Mata to find Fellaini in the area. His headed struck the bar and fell for Rooney who made no mistake in sealing a vintage United smash-and-grab raid at the home of their fiercest rivals.
Manchester United's Liverpool-born matchwinner Wayne Rooney talking to BBC Sport: "This is a special feeling, obviously. It is always great to score at your rivals and, against Liverpool for this football club, it is a massive result. On a personal note it doesn't get much better.
"For my goal, I know Simon Mignolet is a very good goalkeeper and there were players trying to cover so I just tried to put my foot through it and take whoever was in the way with it! Thankfully it went in and won us the game.
"Today the performance wasn't that important - the result was all that mattered."

Manchester United manager Louis Van Gaal speaking to Sky Sports: "When you beat Liverpool, it is good for the fans and for the table as our competitors also lose points, it is a big step in a good direction and I am very happy.
“In the first-half we didn’t keep the ball and we have survived the first-half. In the second-half we played much better and kept the ball better and created chances and Wayne Rooney makes the fantastic goal again.
“I don’t think David de Gea has done very much, two or three balls he has to stop, a goalkeeper has to do that. He is playing very good but you can not say he was a fantastic, marvelous goalkeeper today.
“We have played against Newcastle and given away two leads and now we have done the things we have trained and discussed so that is most precious aspect of the game today. We won and a we have won a lot of games in 2016 now and have not lost yet.”

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp talking to BBC Sport: "I didn't see too many chances for Manchester United and we didn't take ours. Of course it is frustrating. We lost a game that we should not have lost.
"The goal was to defend and we didn't do it. That is our responsibility. We have to defend set pieces better.
"We did really well creating the chances, but there were a lot of situation where we could have created more chances and didn't. There were a lot of things but we lost in a derby against Manchester United so I can't be very positive at this moment so soon after the game."

Shirtless Justin Bieber Really Wants to Show Off His New Purple Hair

                                                             Instagram
When it's time to show off a brand-new haircut, many people choose to snap a casual selfie outside the hair salon. Some may want to debut it at a special event or party. Or if you're Justin Bieber, you show it off in nothing but a gym towel.
After teasing fans about his new haircut Friday night, the "Sorry" singer took to Instagram Saturday morning where he shared not one but two shirtless selfies. In both shots, fans got a clear view of his purple hair and a little more thanks to that extra low shower accessory.
"Back in the gym," he wrote on Instagram with his signature Calvin Kleinunderwear nowhere to be found.
The purple ombré style reminds us of a new trend some are calling the "mermaid hair." In the Biebs case, the singer opted for a darker shade in the back with a grayish lavender color in the front.
In an added twist, teenagers noticed another young famous face change up her hair this weekend. Little Mix singer Jada Thirlwall also debuted a new color that proves this style really may be a hit.
"Grey…shante you stay," she captioned on Instagram after snapping a perfectly normal selfie.
Putting hairstyles aside, Justin has a big reason to hit the gym on a regular basis.
The pop star is gearing up for his first world tour in nearly three years with a start date just around the corner. While making an appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, the Biebs announced the Purpose World Tour kicks off March 9, 2016 in Seattle.

With E!

Comedian Heather McDonald ‘lived in fear’ while Chelsea Handler's E! show

Comedian Heather McDonald doesn't like the way she was handled by a controversial late-night star.

McDonald, who was a roundtable regular on Chelsea Handler's E! show, said most Handler's crew lived in fear of the former "Chelsea Lately" host.

"I lived in fear, 100 percent lived in fear. I enjoyed my time there, I was happy, but something could happen and my heart would be beating and I'd be like 'is this it?" she said.

In a promo for Matt Weiss and Theo Von's "Allegedly" podcast, the "You'll Never Blue Ball In This Town Again" author felt blindsided by Handler when she didn't tell people on set she was bowing out.

The future of Handler’s contract was a daily speculation among McDonald’s colleagues during coffee breaks, but the end of “Chelsea Lately” — and her job — was a surprise delivered en route to a Lakers game.

“Her manager was on a red carpet and said Chelsea, the show, was ending this year,” McDonald said.

In July, the "Uganda Be Kidding Me" stand-up star announced she was leaving E! to film "Chelsea Does" for Netflix.

"I think she's a good person, I don't agree with how she treats relationships in her life," McDonald said on the podcast, which airs Tuesday. "I think she's missing out by dumping people."

"When you’re in her life and you’re her friend, it’s the greatest thing,” she said of her former pal. “She makes you feel so special until you're not.”

Handler inked a seven-year deal with Netflix. Her new four-part docuseries, premieres Saturday.

She'll also launch a new talk show on Netflix after the documentaries air.


With Daily News

Confusion as a Imam was arrested after 'blasphemer' teen cuts off hand

Pakistani police have arrested the imam of a mosque for inciting violence after a 15-year-old boy, who was told by the religious leader that he was a blasphemer, went home and cut off his own hand.
Shabbir Ahmed was delivering a sermon at a village mosque in the east of Pakistan's Punjab province when he told the gathering those who love the Prophet Mohammad always say their prayers before asking who, among the crowd, had stopped praying and did not love the prophet.
Local police chief Nausher Ahmed told Reuters news agency that Mohammad Anwar, mishearing the question, raised his hand. The imam quickly singled him out and called him a "blasphemer" in front of the congregation.
Anwar went home and cut off his hand - an act welcomed by his father who told police he was proud of his son and did not want the imam arrested.
The boy presented his arm to the imam on a plate, said Nausher who added he saw a video in which the boy was greeted by villagers in the street as his parents proclaimed their pride.
The incident took place at a village in Hujra Shah Muqeem town, about 125km south of Punjab's capital Lahore.
Police filed anti-terrorism charges against Shabbir and arrested him on Saturday.
"Such illiterate imams of mosques should not be allowed to deliver speeches," Nausher said. "His arrest is under the National Action Plan that hate speeches inciting violence are no longer allowed in this country."
Blasphemy is a highly controversial issue in Pakistan, and angry mobs have killed many people accused of insulting Islam in the Muslim-majority country.
The law does not define blasphemy but stipulates that the penalty is death, although a death sentence has never been carried out.
Since 1990, more than 65 people have been extrajudicially killed as a result of blasphemy cases.
Supporters of convicted killer Mumtaz Qadri during a sit-in protest demanding his release in Karach [Reuters]


With Aljazeera

Burkina Faso: President Buhari Promise To Support


President Buhari’s statement is coming as Burkina Faso grapple with the aftermath of Friday night’s terrorist attack on Ouagadougou.
In a telephone call to President Kabore on Saturday, the President expressed shock at the attack on the Splendid Hotel in Burkina Faso’s capital in which 26 persons were reportedly killed and a further 56 injured.
“Accept my sympathy over what happened in your country. I am however glad to hear that your forces have rallied, and things are now under control,” President Buhari told his counterpart.
He assured President Kabore that Nigeria would continue to work with Burkina Faso, other members of the Economic Community of West African States, the African Union and other peace-loving nations of the world to overcome the scourge of international terrorism.


With Channel News