Disney, Korea, Theresa May |
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Friday, December 15, 2017
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Asia Edition
[Your Friday Briefing](
By CHARLES MCDERMID
Good morning.
Hereâs what you need to know:
Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters
⢠The Walt Disney Company reached a [roughly $52 billion deal to buy most of 21st Century Fox]( the media conglomerate controlled by Rupert Murdoch, in a once unthinkable deal that â if approved by regulators â promises to reshape Hollywood, the tech industry and the competitive world of streaming.
Disney now has enough muscle to battle Netflix, Apple, Amazon and Facebook in the fast-growing realm of online video. [Here what Disney gets in the deal](.
And Mr. Murdoch, 86, [must now divide up a lifetime of spoils](. He moved quickly to reassure investors. âAre we retreating? Absolutely not,â he said. âWe are pivoting at a pivotal moment.â
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Doug Chayka
⢠The F.C.C. voted to [dismantle so-called net neutrality rules]( which have prohibited U.S. internet service providers from blocking websites or charging for higher quality delivery.
Itâs the [biggest victory in Ajit Paiâs eventful 11-month tenure]( as the agencyâs chairman.
For a preview of life without net neutrality, [an Op-Ed contributor suggests looking to China]( where the internet comes with surveillance and censorship. âNet neutrality is called the First Amendment of the internet for a good reason,â he writes.
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Pool photo by Nicolas Asfouri
⢠President Moon Jae-in promised [a ânew startâ in South Koreaâs relations with China]( as he met President Xi Jinping for a détente that many hope will lead to stepped-up diplomatic efforts on disarming North Korea.
But âMr. Moon appears to have fallen short of pleasing Beijingâ on South Koreaâs nettling embrace of Thaad, the U.S. antimissile system, our correspondent says.
The visit was also marred by the beating of a South Korean photojournalist by Chinese security guards. South Korea demanded a formal apology.
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⢠China, stung by Australiaâs laws against foreign interference, [summoned the countryâs ambassador in Beijing](.
Our bureau chief in Sydney looks at why [the debate over where Australia stands with China]( has grown so heated.
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⢠A field survey of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh found that at least [6,700 members of the Muslim minority]( including 730 children under 5, met violent deaths in Myanmarâs Rakhine state in the month after the countryâs military cracked down on their villages.
The medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières said that nearly 70 percent of the victims it had tallied had been shot and that 9 percent were incinerated in their homes.
Rakhine has been shut off from most international relief agencies and journalists, but our reporter in Geneva heard [reports of paralyzing fear and deprivation]( via an International Red Cross official.
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Chad Batka for The New York Times
⢠âFor years, he was my monster.â
Salma Hayek, the Hollywood actress, [broke her silence about Harvey Weinstein]( the disgraced movie mogul who tormented her over her film âFrida.â
And [Russell Simmons]( the rap kingpin and co-founder of the Def Jam record label, was accused of rape by three women.
The Times Magazine put together a collection of essays and art that takes on the complicated conversation about [women and power in the workplace](.
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Brian Rea
⢠We were overwhelmed by the love and feedback we received in the callout last week to readers of this briefing.
We read every message and take all to heart, including this one: âWhat I would like to read about less? Donât laugh: Trump.â (You can always reach us at asiabriefing@nytimes.com.)
More broadly, [here are 11 things we learned]( from readersâ comments this year, including how not to get hit by a truck.
Business
Damon Winter/The New York Times
⢠Generational shift at The New York Times: [A.G. Sulzberger, 37, will take over]( as publisher from his father, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., on Jan. 1. âI am an unapologetic champion for this institution and its journalistic mission,â the younger Mr. Sulzberger said.
⢠HNA Group, the vast, acquisitive Chinese corporation, is trying to keep more investors from running for the exits while also completing billions of dollars in foreign deals. And itâs become [a test case]( for how effectively China can curb its heavily indebted âgray rhinos.â
⢠The World Trade Organization ended a [three-day conference empty-handed and in discord](. Members have some âreal soul searchingâ to do, the W.T.O. director said.
⢠This was the year tech giants realized that running powerful online platforms brings real-world responsibility, [our columnist writes](. âThe big mystery of 2018 and beyond is what, exactly, that responsibility will look like.â
⢠Tech tips: Our personal tech section fielded lots of questions this year. Here are [five of the most compelling, fully answered](.
⢠U.S. stocks [were flat](. Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
via YouTube
⢠The death of a Chinese celebrity daredevil exemplifies the internetâs obsession with danger. [[The New York Times](
⢠Theresa May arrived at an E.U. summit in Brussels trying to work past a parliamentary defeat that could weaken her hand in Brexit negotiations. [[Reuters](
⢠Indonesiaâs Constitutional Court narrowly voted not to ban sex outside marriage, a blow to increasingly influential conservative Islamic groups. [[The New York Times](
⢠A requiem for Cambodia. âBangsokol,â one of the first symphonic works to reckon with the Khmer Rouge era, opens in New York today. [[The New York Times](
⢠A giant, waddling predator? A 57-million-year-old fossilized penguin found in New Zealand stands 5 feet 7 inches and has a long bill. âProbably they speared their prey,â a scientist said. [[The New York Times](
Smarter Living
Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
⢠For the wine drinker in the family: [five wine books]( to give this holiday season.
⢠Hereâs how you can [score a seat at that new restaurant]( the smart and easy way.
⢠Recipe of the day: End the week with a comforting plate of [baked giant shells and ricotta](.
Noteworthy
Ko Sasaki for The New York Times
⢠Traverse the haiku bar trail. [Matsuyama, Japan, is honoring its 19th-century poet]( Masaoka Shiki, who coined the term haiku, with a range of sake-fortified celebrations.
⢠In memoriam: [Bruce Bowen]( 80, the director of the classic â60s surfing documentary âThe Endless Summer,â which portrayed two young men hunting for the perfect wave in Senegal, Ghana, South Africa, Australia, Tahiti, New Zealand and Hawaii.
⢠Finally, remember the BBC dad? The dancing hot dog? Despite appearances, there were actual moments of pure joy online this year. We caught up with a few of [2017âs viral stars](.
Back Story
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
The Times once noted that it may sound â[as wrong as the Twelve Commandments]( but the original version of the U.S. Constitutionâs Bill of Rights had a dozen amendments, not 10.
What happened to the two that got away? Itâs a worthy question on this date, the anniversary of the passage of the Bill of Rights back in 1791.
One was originally the first amendment on the list. It had nothing to do with freedom of speech or religion, but instead proposed that [a limit to the number of people each congressional district should have](. With the growth of the U.S. population, that would have resulted in about 6,000 members of Congress today â more than double the size of Chinaâs parliament, the [largest legislative body in the world](.
The other came second, and dealt with congressional pay rather than the right to bear arms.
Neither was ratified by the states at the time, so they dropped off and the remaining 10 became the Bill of Rights.
However, a loophole that placed no time limit on ratification â and the work of a determined university student â led to the original Second Amendment [becoming the 27th Amendment]( more than 200 years later.
Anna Schaverien contributed reporting.
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Your Morning Briefing is published weekday mornings and updated online. Browse past briefings [here](.
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What would you like to see here? Contact us at [asiabriefing@nytimes.com](mailto:asiabriefing@nytimes.com?subject=Briefing%20Feedback%20(Asia)).
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