Most women regard their legs as part of their sex appeal. But not Kanya Sesser, the stunning 23-year-old lingerie model. Kanya was born without legs, abandoned at 1 week old, and brought up in a foster home, but even all that has not held her back.
Kanya-Sesser
Kanya-Sesser
It has not enough to take the edge off her ambition for success because Kanya now makes an average of N220,000 (US$1000) per day as an underwear model.
Kanya is breaking down the barriers of the modelling world by showing that just because she is different, that doesn’t mean she isn’t sexy.
She defies traditional beauty standards by working as a model, and hopes to prove that “different” is sexy.
No medical explanation is given for Kanya’s condition, but she is believed to suffer from an extremely rare disease condition described as “Amelia”  that presents as complete absence of an arm or leg in as a result of the limb formation process being either prevented or interrupted very early during development as a foetus in the womb.
It is believed that the Amelia syndrome appears to have a recessive pattern of inheritance—that is, the parents of the affected person each carry one copy of the mutated gene, but do not show signs and symptoms of the condition.
In a few cases, amelia may be attributed to health complications during the early stages of pregnancy, including infection, failed abortion or complications associated with removal of an Intrauterine Device after pregnancy, or use of Thalidomide.
From a young age, the young California girl was determined to overcome her disability and started modelling for sports brands at 15.
After shooting for a number of outlets—as well as being featured by Billabong—the beauty was soon scouted by underwear and bikini brands.
Now she combines her modelling career with motivational speaking and her love of sports—she’s currently training for the 2018 Winter Paralympics.
“I was mainly doing athletics shoots then as I got older I got into lingerie modelling,” said Sesser, who lives in Los Angeles. “It’s something fun and it shows my story—I’m different and that is sexy, I don’t need legs to feel sexy.
“I enjoy making money from it and I love showing people what beauty can look like. These images show my strength.”
Sesser didn’t always dream of modelling.
Kanya-Sesser2
Kanya-Sesser
“It just happened for me and I got used to it,” she said. “I like expressing myself in a different way than people usually see.
“I’m very honest, I’m real—I’m never going to behave different to anyone. This is just who I am.”
Sesser was adopted from an orphanage in Thailand when she was 5 and moved to Portland, Oregon, with her new family.
Instead of a wheelchair, she uses a skateboard to get around and learned to walk on her hands.
Sesser loves extreme sports and hopes to compete in mono-ski in the Winter Paralympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, in 2018.
One of her biggest fans is her new boyfriend Brian, whom she has been dating for the past month.
“Brian is awesome—he is very supportive of everything I do,” she said. “He recently saw me modeling for first time and told me he thought it was beautiful and unique.”
Despite her work as a model, Sesser admits she prefers her natural looks. She is also working on a book about her incredible journey through life, set to be published in 2016.


18-yr-old Jeffrey Akoh has emerged the 2015 MTN Project Fame winner.
The young talent won 5 other finalists to emerge the winner of the 8th season of MTN Project Fame.
Jeff2
Jeff is a Sound Engineering graduate from the SAE Institute, Cape Town and has consistently wowed judges and the audience by going all the way in each of his performances. He joins the likes of Iyanya, iMike, Ayoola, Chidinma, Monica, Olawale and Geoffrey as a Project Fame superstar.
Third runner up in the competition was Ada, with second runner up being Anderson and Pearl being the first runner up.
His musical influencers are Chris Brown, Lawrence Flowers, and Kim Burrell. Jeff receives the grand prize of N5 million, an SUV and a recording contract.
Pearl Olanma Awa-Agwu secured a 2nd place finish, she receives a car and N3 million. Anderson Emmanuel Amos finished in 3rd place, he gets a car and N1 million. In 4th place was Adanoritsewo “Ada” Gold Tosanwumi and she receives a N1 million prize.
BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese government official said Monday that Hillary Clinton was "biased" on women's issues in China, while a newspaper compared the presidential hopeful to Donald Trump for her tweet saying it was "shameless" for China's president to preside over a U.N. conference on gender equality.
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks during a community forum on healthcare, at Moulton Elementary School in Des Moines, Iowa. A Chinese government official said Monday, Sept. 28, 2015, that Hillary Clinton was “biased” on women’s issues in China, while a newspaper compared the presidential hopeful to Donald Trump for her tweet saying it was “shameless” for China’s president to preside over a U.N. conference on gender equality.
Rights activists had criticized Chinese President Xi Jinping's co-chairing of Sunday's U.N. Women conference because of China's detentions of women, including five who were detained for 37 days this year over their plans to advocate against sexual harassment on public transportation.
Wang Yu, a female lawyer who defended one of the activists, has since been detained. Clinton tweeted on Sunday: "Xi hosted a meeting on women's rights at the UN while persecuting feminists? Shameless."
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Monday that China protects its people's rights in accordance with the law. "Someone in another country is biased on the relevant issue," Hong said in response to a question about Clinton's tweet. "We hope that they will respect China's judicial sovereignty."
The Global Times, which often publishes nationalist editorials, wrote Monday in its Chinese edition that Clinton's words — which it did not mention — were "vulgar, extremely lacking in manners" and called to mind "big mouth" Trump.
The Communist Party-run paper suggested that Clinton was "alarmed and jealous" at Trump's continuing excellent showing in polls, so had resorted to using his style of language. The editorial was carried on major news portals and websites of other state media, including the China Youth Daily and China National Radio.
Trump has accused China of stealing U.S. jobs and called for the canceling of a state dinner for Xi after a drop in China's stock markets and a devaluation of its currency led to a tumble of U.S. stocks.
Sunday's conference was a follow-up to a 1995 U.N. conference on gender equality in Beijing that Clinton addressed as first lady. She said then: "Human rights are women's rights and women's rights are human rights."
Xi echoed her words on Sunday, telling the conference: "Women's rights and interests are basic human rights. They must be protected by laws and regulations." He did not mention any of the women activists, but announced a $10 million donation to U.N. Women, and said that China would help developing countries produce 100 "health projects" for women and children, finance 100 programs to send poor girls to school, train 30,000 women from developing countries in China, and provide training opportunities for 100,000 women in other developing countries.


BERLIN (AP) — The latest developments on the Volkswagen emissions scandal. All times local.
A woman walks by a Volkswagen dealer in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015. German media report that Volkswagen received warnings years ago about the use of illegal tricks to defeat emissions tests. The automaker admitted last week that it used special software to fool U.S. emissions tests for its diesel vehicles.
12:55 p.m.
German prosecutors have opened an investigation against former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn in the company's emissions-rigging scandal.
Prosecutors in Braunschweig said Monday that the investigation would concentrate on the suspicion of fraud committed through the sale of vehicles with manipulated emissions data.
It added that the probe aims to establish who was responsible. Prosecutors have received a number of criminal complaints in the case, including one from Volkswagen itself that doesn't name any suspects.
12:15 p.m.
Volkswagen AG's upmarket Audi brand says 2.1 million of its vehicles are among those with the engines affected by the emissions-rigging scandal.
Audi said Monday that the engine in question was built into 1.6-liter and 2-liter turbo diesel models in the A1, A3, A4, A6, TT, Q3 and Q5 ranges, news agency dpa reported. The cars involved have engines in the "euro 5" emissions category; those with the newer "euro 6" engines aren't affected by the emissions scandal.
Volkswagen said last week that 11 million vehicles worldwide contain software involved in the emissions-rigging scandal, and later added that 5 million of those were cars were produced by its core VW brand. The group hasn't yet given a full listing of what cars were involved.
11:00 a.m.
A European environmental organization says it has found some new models of Mercedes, Volkswagens, BMWs and other new cars consume much more gasoline than lab tests claim.
The organization, Transport & Environment, said Monday it had found no proof the cars are equipped with the same sort of "defeat devices" installed on diesel-powered Volkswagens to enable them to cheat on emissions tests.
But the group called on European Union governments to broaden their probes into the "defeat devices" to cover gasoline cars as well.
Transport & Environment said according to its research, the gap between lab test results for fuel economy and real-world performance rose last year to 40 percent on average, from 8 percent in 2001.
NEW YORK (AP) — Face-to-face for the first time in nearly a year, President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday will confront rising tensions over Moscow's military engagement in Syria, as well as the stubborn crisis in Ukraine.
Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, right, in Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow. Face-to-face for the first time in nearly a year, President Barack Obama and Putin on Monday, Sept. 28, will confront rising tensions over Moscow’s military engagement in Syria, as well as the stubborn crisis in Ukraine.
Underscoring their deep differences, the U.S. and Russia couldn't even agree on the purpose of the meeting, which will occur on the sidelines of an annual United Nations summit. The White House said it would focus on Ukraine and getting Moscow to live up to a fragile peace plan. The Kremlin said Ukraine would be discussed only if time allowed, with Syria and the fight against the Islamic State dominating the discussions.
Despite little sign of a breakthrough on either front, U.S. officials insisted it was still worthwhile for the leaders to meet — something that has happened rarely since Obama vowed to isolate Putin in retaliation for Russia's provocations in Ukraine.
"The president believed it would be irresponsible to let this occasion in which the two leaders would be in the same city pass without trying to test to see whether progress could be made on these newly intractable crises," Samantha Power, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said Sunday on ABC's "This Week."
Ahead of their early evening meeting, Obama and Putin will each have a chance to make their case to a broader audience of world leaders gathered in New York for the United Nations General Assembly. Obama will address the body Monday morning, with Putin following shortly after.
Obama is expected to emphasize the need for a political resolution to Syria's civil war that includes the ouster of President Bashar Assad, a Russian ally. Putin, meanwhile, is expected to argue that Assad's military is the most capable force for fighting the Islamic State — the extremist group with key strongholds in Syria and Iraq — and therefore needs to be strengthened.
"There is no other solution to the Syrian crisis than strengthening the effective government structures and rendering them help in fighting terrorism," Putin said in an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes" that aired on the eve of his meeting with Obama.
Ahead of his U.N. visit, Putin deployed more weapons and troops to Syria. The Kremlin has also intensified its diplomatic efforts in recent months, launching a dialogue with Saudi Arabia, which is firmly bent on unseating Assad, and the Syrian opposition, in a renewed attempt to try to negotiate a political compromise.
In another development, Iraq's military said Sunday it will begin sharing "security and intelligence" information with Syria, Russia and Iran to help combat the Islamic State group. The move could further complicate U.S. efforts to battle the extremists without working with Damascus and its allies.
Russia has shown no indication that it would dump its support for Assad, whom it has shielded from U.N. sanctions and continued to provide with weapons throughout the nation's more than four-year civil war.
Putin's calls for strengthening Assad's military come amid striking troubles for Obama's plan to train and arm moderate rebels to fight the Islamic State in Syria. A $500 million Pentagon training program has resulted in just a handful of fighters to bolster airstrikes from a U.S.-led coalition.
The U.S. has agreed to talk with Russia about "deconflicting" their military action in Syria. U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has spoken to his Russian counterpart about Syria earlier this month, the first military-to-military conversation in more than a year.
It will be hard for Moscow and Washington to reach any common ground on Syria beyond the military talks. Putin clearly has no intention of joining the U.S.-led coalition in Syria, which would mean accepting U.S. orders, and Washington has voiced concern that Russia is using its military presence in Syria to shore up Assad, whom it sees as the cause of the Syrian crisis.
Obama and Putin have long had a strained relationship and their body language in face-to-face meetings is always closely scrutinized for signs of tension. Their last formal meeting was in June 2013, though they've had a number of conversations on the sidelines of international summits, including in China last November.
The Ukraine crisis drove U.S.-Russian relations to post-Cold War lows. Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and a pro-Russian armed insurgency continues in eastern Ukraine, with Kiev and NATO accusing Moscow of backing and supplying it.
A shaky peace deal for Ukraine was brokered in February by France and Germany, and Russia doesn't want the United States to become engaged in those talks. Another four-way meeting of leaders of Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany is set to take place in Paris this weekend.
U.S. officials say Obama will stress to Putin the importance of local elections in Ukraine scheduled for late October going forward without interference.

Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina rejects the conclusions of a Senate report on waterboarding. (Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Positioning herself as a steely advocate of aggressive counterterrorism programs, Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina offered a vigorous defense of CIA waterboarding as a tactic that helped “keep our nation safe” in the aftermath of 9/11.
“I believe that all of the evidence is very clear — that waterboarding was used in a very small handful of cases [and] was supervised by medical personnel in every one of those cases,” Fiorina told Yahoo News. “And I also believe that waterboarding was used when there was no other way to get information that was necessary.”
A Senate report last year portrayed waterboarding as “near drownings” that were tantamount to torture and concluded that the agency’s often brutal interrogations produced little actionable intelligence. But Fiorina rejected those conclusions, calling the report “disingenuous” and “a shame” that “undermined the morale of a whole lot of people who dedicated their lives to keeping the country safe.”
Fiorina’s remarks drew an immediate rebuke from Naureen Shah, director of the security and human rights program at Amnesty International USA, which last week filed a complaint with the Justice Department requesting an investigation into why prosecutors have not reopened a criminal probe of those responsible for waterboarding and other abusive practices — such as “rectal feeding” and rectal searches — based on new details documented in the Senate report.
“It’s outrageous for anybody to claim that torture was limited or that this is the way the U.S. should have conducted business after 9/11,” said Shah about Fiorina’s comments to Yahoo News. “This is completely rewriting the history of what happened.”
Fiorina’s comments came during an interview with Yahoo News in which she discussed a close, if little-known, relationship she maintained with U.S. intelligence agencies during her tenure as CEO of Hewlett-Packard.
They also come at a moment when Fiorina is seeking to emphasize her hawkish national security credentials in the crowded GOP presidential field. During this month’s CNN debate, Fiorina distinguished herself from rival Donald Trump after he said he would meet with Russian president Vladimir Putin to resolve the Syria crisis. “Having met Vladimir Putin, I wouldn’t talk to him at all,” Fiorina shot back, adding she would instead “begin rebuilding the Sixth Fleet” and “conduct regular, aggressive military exercises in the Baltic states,” among other steps, so he would “get the message.”
Fiorina’s relationship with the U.S. intelligence community dates back to the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, when she got an urgent phone call from then NSA director Michael Hayden asking her to quickly provide his agency with HP computer servers for expanded surveillance.
While he did not tell Fiorina the details, Hayden confirmed to Yahoo News last week that he needed the HP servers so the NSA could implement “Stellar Wind” — the controversial warrantless wiretapping program, including the bulk collection of American citizens’ phone records and emails, that had been secretly ordered by the Bush White House. “Carly, I need stuff and I need it now,” Hayden recalled telling Fiorina.
Fiorina acknowledged she complied with Hayden’s request, redirecting trucks of HP computer servers that were on their way to retail stores from a warehouse in Tennessee to the Washington Beltway, where they were escorted by NSA security to the gates of agency headquarters in Fort Meade, Md.
“I felt it was my duty to help, and so we did,” Fiorina said. “They were ramping up a whole set of programs and needed a lot of data crunching capability to try and monitor a whole set of threats. …What I knew at the time was our nation had been attacked.”
After Hayden became CIA director in 2006, he named Fiorina as chair of an agency external advisory board consisting of former top intelligence officials, generals and business leaders. In that capacity, she made regular trips to CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., including overseeing one specific project requested by Hayden: Provide advice on how the CIA could maintain its undercover espionage mission in a culture of increasing government leaks and demands for greater public accountability and openness.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Latest developments in Pope Francis' visit to the United States. All times local:
Pope Francis
Pope Francis arrives in his popemobile to speak in front of Independence Hall, Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015, in Philadelphia. (Tony Gentile/Pool Photo via AP)
9:45 p.m. Pope Francis has wrapped up his first day in Philadelphia after celebrating Mass, giving a speech on religious freedom and attending an event for Catholic families. Francis left the stage of the World Meeting of Families on Saturday night after hearing stories from six families around the world. He called families a "factory of hope."
Before leaving, Francis asked everyone to attend Mass Sunday. Organizers estimate more than 1 million people will attend the Mass on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. Francis also painted the final stroke on a mural that will hang in Philadelphia in honor of the World Meeting of Families. The event was Francis' original reason for coming to the U.S.
He will alo speak to a group of clergy Sunday and visit a prison before ending a six-day visit to the U.S.
9:30 p.m.
Pope Francis says families are a "factory of hope" after he heard stories from families from around the world at a Philadelphia festival.
Francis gave an off-the-cuff monologue in Spanish after hearing from six families from the U.S., Australia, Ukraine, Jordan, Nigeria, and his homeland of Argentina at the World Meeting of Families on Saturday.
He called for families to be cared for and protected — particularly children and the elderly.
The families told Francis about their joys and struggles, in between musical performances from acts including The Fray and Aretha Franklin.
Francis will celebrate an outdoor Mass on Sunday, speak to a group of clergy and visit a prison before ending a six-day visit to the U.S.
8:45 p.m.
Church officials say they don't have an estimate of how many people turned out to see Pope Francis during the closing festival of the World Meeting of Families.
The Secret Service had estimated the secured festival space on Philadelphia's Benjamin Franklin Parkway could fit about a quarter-million people. But there were gaps along sidewalks at the height of attendance Saturday night. Some people, however, remained on side streets and outside the security area.
Train ridership into Philadelphia was much lower than expected. The main commuter rail agency said only a little more than half of the 53,000 who bought passes used them.
Church officials had estimated up to 750,000 could attend the festival. They have always predicted the biggest crowd, of a million or more, would attend the pope's outdoor celebration of Mass on Sunday.
8 p.m.
Seated on stage, Pope Francis is hearing from families from around the world and listening to musical performances at a festival hosted by the worldwide Catholic gathering that brought him to Philadelphia.
The pope is attending the World Meeting of Families festival Saturday, where he is meeting with families from the U.S., Australia, Ukraine, Jordan, Nigeria, and his homeland of Argentina.
An engaged Australian couple, Camillus O'Kane and Kelly Walsh, told the pope they are concerned about divorce and the push to change the definition of legal marriage.
The festival includes musical performances from Andrea Bocelli, Aretha Franklin and others. Actor Mark Wahlberg is the MC.
Francis will celebrate an outdoor Mass on the parkway Sunday in ending his first-ever U.S. trip.
7:10 p.m.
Pope Francis is riding in his white Jeep Wrangler popemobile in a parade around Philadelphia's City Hall and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.
Francis is on his way to a World Meeting of Families festival Saturday.
Thousands lined the parade route with crowds of five- to 10-spectators deep hoping to catch a glimpse of the pontiff.
The World Meeting of Families festival is being hosted by actor Mark Wahlberg and includes musical performances from Andrea Bocelli, Aretha Franklin, the Philadelphia Orchestra and others.
On Sunday, Francis will celebrate Mass for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people before ending his first-ever trip to the U.S. that included visits to Washington, D.C., and New York.
6:25 p.m.
Restaurant owners across Philadelphia are complaining that heavy security from Pope Francis' visit scared off their customers.
Stephen Starr operates more than 20 restaurants in the city. He told the Philadelphia Inquirer the slowdown has been so bad that "this affected business worse than Hurricane Sandy."
The website Open Table shows reservations are readily available at prime times Saturday at even the most popular spots.
Organizers have long said the World Meeting of Families that drew the pope to Philadelphia would be an economic boon to the city. But as the event drew closer, city officials were criticized for issuing dire warnings of travel difficulties and service shutdowns.
Schools and many businesses closed, and many residents left town in the days leading up to Francis' arrival.
Organizers still expect Saturday night's concert headlined by Aretha Franklin to attract hundreds of thousands, and they say more than a million will watch Francis celebrate Mass on Sunday
6:10 p.m.
Crowds along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway have begun to swell in advance of Pope Francis' appearance at a Vatican-sponsored "Festival of Families" Saturday night.
Pilgrims waited up to 45 minutes to clear security checkpoints late Saturday afternoon, but described the process as orderly. Crowds up to five deep lined the papal parade route.
At 6:45 p.m., Francis is scheduled to travel the length of the Parkway from the Philadelphia Museum of Art and City Hall and back in his open-air popemobile, a 2-mile loop. The festival, featuring Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, "Queen of Soul" Aretha Franklin and other entertainers, is set to start around 7:30 p.m.
Two boys tossed a small green-and-black football. Another group of four children swatted a blowup ball, nearly hitting a nun who tipped it back to them.
Jay Berryman was in a group of 160 from North Little Rock, Arkansas. He noticed a change in mood as the pope's visit neared.
"Everyone's getting nervous," he said.
5:15 p.m.
Pope Francis says that America's immigrant community should not to be discouraged by hardships and should be responsible citizens.
Francis delivered a speech on religious freedom and immigration in front of about 40,000 people at Independence Hall Saturday.
He implored the immigrants in the crowd to be proud of their heritage and to never be ashamed of their traditions.
Francis also said Americans should avoid repeating past mistakes and that people of all faiths should join together to call for respect and dignity of others.
As he finished his speech, some among the many immigrant groups in the crowd shouted, "Francisco! Francisco! Francisco!"
After a break, Francis will take part in a World Meeting of Families festival Saturday night.
4:50 p.m.
Pope Francis says that Americans need to remember history to avoid repeating past mistakes and that people of all faiths should join together to call for respect and dignity of others.
Francis spoke in front of about 40,000 people Saturday in front of Independence Hall. He says visiting the area where the country was born was one of the highlights of his visit.
He also says that religious liberty means people don't have to leave their religious beliefs at home to be part of public life.
After a break, Francis will take part in a World Meeting of Families festival Saturday night.
He will celebrate an outdoor Mass on Sunday for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people.
4:45 p.m.
After emerging from Independence Hall to "Fanfare for the Common Man," Pope Francis is giving a speech on religious freedom and immigration from the lectern used by President Abraham Lincoln when he delivered the Gettysburg Address.
About 40,000 people are watching the speech Saturday on Independence Mall, many of whom have been waiting since early in the morning.
Shouts of "il papa" erupted from the crowd. Thousands of others are watching the speech from large TV screens around the city.
Francis arrived on the mall in his white Jeep Wrangler popemobile, waving to crowds and kissing babies as he drove.
Following the speech, he will join a World Meeting of Families concert and on Sunday will celebrate Mass for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people.
4:35 p.m.
Pope Francis has blessed a 5-foot wooden cross that is especially important to Hispanics as he prepares to give a speech on religious freedom and immigration in Philadelphia.
Francis blessed the Cross of the Encuentros Saturday afternoon after arriving at Independence Mall for the speech. A family of seven that came to the United States from Mexico presented the cross to Francis.
Encuentros is the Spanish word for meetings or encounters. Catholic officials say the cross will be taken to dioceses across the country as a symbol of an ongoing national pastoral movement called Encuentro, which has spurred Hispanic ministry in the country.
The movement includes a three-year process of missionary activity, consultation, leadership development and pastoral discernment.
4:25 p.m.
The crowd is erupting as Pope Francis arrives at Independence Mall in his white popemobile for a speech on religious freedom and immigration.
Francis waved as he was driving along Market Street in Philadelphia in the open, converted Jeep Wrangler.
Bodyguards passed one baby after another to Francis so he could kiss their foreheads. A police officer handed the pope a boy in a Batman shirt; another baby was wearing a tiny peaked hat similar to the pope's iconic mitre.
Francis will give the speech from the lectern used by President Abraham Lincoln when he delivered the Gettysburg Address.
In a speech to Congress this week, Francis implored lawmakers to show compassion to immigrants.
3:55 p.m.
Pope Francis and his papal motorcade have left the suburban seminary where he is staying and is riding through the streets of Philadelphia toward Independence Hall.
Francis is scheduled to give a speech late Saturday afternoon about religious freedom and immigration at the site where the Constitution and Declaration of Independence were signed. About 40,000 attendees are expected at the ticketed event.
But first, Francis will return to the downtown cathedral where he celebrated Mass earlier in the day and transfer to the popemobile for the final 1 1/2 miles to the historic neighborhood.
Following the speech, he will join the final event of the World Meeting of Families. It will be hosted by actor Mark Wahlberg and will include performances from Andrea Bocelli, Aretha Franklin, the Philadelphia Orchestra and others.
3:30 p.m.
Pennsylvania and New Jersey transit agencies say train ridership to see the pope in Philadelphia has been lower than expected.
As a result, some schedules have been adjusted.
The seven-lane Benjamin Franklin Bridge between New Jersey and Philadelphia is closed to all but pedestrians and emergency vehicles. But pedestrian traffic has been light.
College student Christina Carabaho of Williamstown, New Jersey, and her family walked the nearly 2-mile bridge to save the expense of parking and taking a ferry. Her only complaint: She wore boots instead of sneakers.
Heading into the papal weekend, there had been fears some visitors were scared away by all the security and travel restrictions.
2:25 p.m.
Pope Francis is resting up at the suburban seminary where he is staying before restarting a packed itinerary on his first day in Philadelphia.
Francis is scheduled to return to the cathedral where he celebrated Mass Saturday morning and transfer to the popemobile for a mile-and-a-half journey through downtown.
He will give a late-afternoon speech focusing on religious freedom and immigration at Independence Hall, where the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were signed.
A festive night follows, with a concert featuring Aretha Franklin, Andrea Bocelli, the Philadelphia Orchestra and others. The event hosted by Mark Wahlberg caps the World Meeting of Families, which drew Francis to the United States for the first time.
On Sunday, an estimated 1 million people are expected to attend a public Mass that Francis will celebrate.
12:55 p.m.
Pope Francis has been serenaded by a group of about 150 seminarians after arriving at the suburban seminary where he will stay while visiting Philadelphia.
The seminarians also sang "Happy Birthday" to Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput, who turned 71 Saturday.
Francis will spend some time resting at the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Lower Merion before giving a speech on religious freedom and immigration in front of Independence Hall.
He will then be part of a parade along the parkway where a festival will be held for the final night of the World Meeting of Families.
The final event will be hosted by actor Mark Wahlberg and include performances from Andrea Bocelli, Aretha Franklin, the Philadelphia Orchestra and others.
On Sunday, Francis will celebrate Mass for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people.
12:35 p.m.
Fifty members of the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas were on hand to hear Pope Francis call for the church to value the contribution of women.
The nuns received tickets to Saturday's Mass at the main cathedral in downtown Philadelphia.
He celebrated Mass in front of about 1,600 people.
Francis settled a controversy in April over a three-year Vatican investigation into the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which the sisters are part of.
The umbrella group for women's religious orders had been accused of straying from church teaching.
Francis' progressive agenda parallels their views on helping the poor and immigrants, preserving life and ending the death penalty.
Sister Catherine Darcy, of Merion, Pennsylvania, says this is a special moment for the Catholic church and that they have felt strong support from Francis.
12:15 p.m.
Pope Francis has finished celebrating a Mass, stopping to bless children in wheelchairs before leaving the cathedral in downtown Philadelphia.
Francis walked through a chapel adjacent to the main room in the cathedral on Saturday to greet ill and disabled parishioners, along with other visitors. He blessed the children and gave them a kiss on the head.
Francis delivered a homily in Spanish in front of about 1,600 people. He says the future of the church depends on an increased role for the laity and valuing the "immense contribution" of women.
He will spend a few hours at a seminary just outside of the city before giving a speech Saturday afternoon on religious freedom and immigration.
Noon
The former Archbishop of Philadelphia who retired in 2011 amid a scandal over clergy sex abuse is celebrating Mass with Pope Francis.
Cardinal Justin Rigali joined Francis and other bishops at the Mass Saturday on the pope's first stop in Philadelphia.
Rigali's successor, Archbishop Charles Chaput, also was on the altar in front of about 1,600 people at the main cathedral in downtown Philadelphia.
Rigali retired to the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee, months after a grand jury accused the Philadelphia archdiocese of sheltering more than three dozen credibly accused priests and lying about it to victims and others.
Later Saturday, Francis will give a speech on religious freedom and immigration and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families.
This story has been clarified to show that Rigali is the former archbishop, but remains a cardinal.
11:10 a.m.
Pope Francis says the future of the church depends on an increased role for the laity and on valuing the "immense contribution" of women.
Francis delivered a homily in Spanish Saturday while celebrating Mass in front of about 1,600 people at the main cathedral in downtown Philadelphia.
Francis has repeatedly said women should have a greater role in church leadership, although he has rejected the idea of ordaining women.
By touching on the issue, Francis seemed intent on healing one of the major rifts in American Catholicism that has alienated many from the church.
Later Saturday, he will give a speech on religious freedom and immigration and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families.
On Sunday, he will celebrate Mass for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people.
10:45 a.m.
Pope Francis is celebrating Mass in front of 1,600 people at Philadelphia's main Catholic cathedral.
Francis walked down the aisle of the church holding a large staff with a crucifix on top while a choir sang.
Francis arrived at the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul Saturday morning in his black Fiat after landing in Philadelphia from New York.
Pope John Paul II spoke at the cathedral in 1979, the only other papal visit to Philadelphia.
Later Saturday, he will give a speech at Independence Hall and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families. On Sunday, he will celebrate Mass for an estimated 1 million people.
10:20 a.m.
Pope Francis is set to celebrate Mass in front of 1,600 people at Philadelphia's main Catholic cathedral.
Francis pulled up in front of the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul Saturday morning in his black Fiat after landing in Philadelphia from New York.
He was greeted at the steps by former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett and his wife. Corbett originally invited Francis to Philadelphia.
Before going inside, Francis twice turned around to wave to the hundreds of cheering people standing outside of the cathedral.
Pope John Paul II spoke at the cathedral in 1979, the only other papal visit to Philadelphia.
Later on Saturday, Francis will give a speech on religious freedom and immigration and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families.
10 a.m.
Pope Francis has left Philadelphia's airport and is headed to its main Catholic cathedral to celebrate Mass for about 1,600 people.
Among those greeting Francis Saturday was a former Philadelphia police officer wounded in the line of duty seven years ago and his family. Richard Bowes' daughters presented flowers to Francis and he hugged the two girls and Bowes' son.
Francis also got out of his black Fiat to bless a 10-year-old boy in a wheelchair on the tarmac, kissing him on the forehead.
A local Catholic high school band played, including the theme song from the Philadelphia-set movie "Rocky."
Later on Saturday, he will give a speech at Independence Hall and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families. On Sunday, he will celebrate Mass for hundreds of thousands.
This story has been corrected to show that Francis blessed a boy, not a man, at the airport.
9:40 a.m.
Pope Francis has arrived in Philadelphia to begin a visit that will include celebrating Mass for what organizers estimate will be more than 1 million people.
His chartered American Airlines plane touched down Saturday morning after Francis spent four days in New York City and Washington.
He is being greeted by a Catholic high school band and local dignitaries.
Francis is headed first for the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul, where he will celebrate Mass for about 1,200 people. He will later give a speech on religious freedom and immigration in front of Independence Hall and then join in the final night of the World Meeting of Families.
He will also visit a prison while in Philadelphia, before celebrating a Sunday Mass on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.
9:05 a.m.
Pope Francis has left New York City for Philadelphia, the last stop in his three-city visit to the United States.
Before taking off, the pope greeted nuns at Kennedy Airport. With the wind whipping, he took a small stumble as he ascended the stairs to a waiting jet. He waved to the crowd as the airplane taxied.
In Philadelphia, his itinerary includes Masses, prayer vigils and a visit to a prison. On Sunday, he'll celebrate the closing Mass for the World Meeting of Families, which is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of people.
In New York City, Francis spoke at the United Nations and celebrated Mass at Madison Square Garden.
His first stop was Washington, where he was met by President Barack Obama and spoke to Congress. He heads back to Rome on Sunday night.
8:30 a.m.
Pope Francis has begun his trip to Philadelphia, the last stop on his U.S. trip.
The pope left Manhattan on Saturday morning for Kennedy Airport in a helicopter. He will fly to Philadelphia after a brief farewell from worshippers waiting to see him off.
Groups of Roman Catholic parishioners prayed together as they waited at JFK.
"Our Father..." was heard above the rumble of the American Airlines jet engines warming up for the flight to Philadelphia.
In keeping with Francis' efforts to bring religions closer, New Yorkers who came to say farewell to Francis included a Sikh in a white turban as well as representatives of other faiths.
7:30 a.m.
Two Marine helicopters have taken off from New York's Kennedy airport to pick up Pope Francis in Manhattan and take him to the airport.
Francis is scheduled to leave New York for Philadelphia on Saturday morning.
Roman Catholic worshippers and church officials have gathered for a brief farewell on the JFK airport tarmac.
They include seven cloistered nuns from the Precious Blood Seminary in Brooklyn. Four of them are originally from Francis' native Argentina.
Francis arrived in New York on Thursday evening from Washington, D.C. His crowded New York itinerary included a speech to the United Nations General Assembly, a visit to the World Trade Center Memorial and Museum and a Mass at Madison Square Garden.
It is the pope's first visit to the United States.
2:30 a.m.
After speeches to Congress and the United Nations aimed at world leaders, Pope Francis will embark on the segment of his American journey expected to be the most centered on ordinary Catholics: a Vatican-organized rally for the family that will culminate in an outdoor Mass for a million people.
Francis heads to Philadelphia on Saturday.
He will speak at Independence Hall, where the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence and Constitution.
As he has done in New York and Washington, he will give his attention to both the elite and the disadvantaged, this time visiting inmates in Philadelphia's largest jail. On Saturday night, he will be serenaded by Aretha Franklin and others on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway at a festival celebrating families. He will return there Sunday for the Mass, his last major event before leaving for Rome.
NEW YORK (AP) — Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel tells officials she plans to fly a World Trade Center memorial flag at the German Chancellery in honor of the 37 police officers with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey who died in the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Angela Merkel, Michael Bloomberg
German Chancellor Angela Merkel walks past the South Pool of the 9/11 Memorial with former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015, in New York.
Port Authority police spokesman Joe Pentangelo says Merkel visited the Sept. 11 memorial site at the World Trade Center on Saturday. Inspector Ron Shindel, who speaks German, greeted Merkel and presented her with the World Trade Center memorial flag and a police challenge coin. Merkel told police officials she plans to fly the flag at the chancellery, which is home to Germany's federal government.
A spokesman for the Permanent Mission of Germany to the United Nations didn't immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
PARIS (AP) — Six French jet fighters targeted and destroyed an Islamic State training camp in eastern Syria, President Francois Hollande said Sunday, making good on a promise to go after the group that the president has said is planning attacks against several countries, including France.
Francois Hollande
France’s President Francois Hollande visits a public center for insertion of the Defense (EPIDE) in Montry, France. France has fired its first airstrikes in Syria as it expands military operations against Islamic State extremists, President Francois Hollande's office announced Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015. The office said that "France has hit Syria" based on information from French reconnaissance flights sent earlier this month.
The airstrikes were the first in Syria by France as it expands its mission against IS. "The camp was totally destroyed," Hollande said Sunday after arriving at the United Nations, before the start of a major development summit and the U.N. General Assembly bringing together world leaders.
"We're sure there were no casualties" among civilians, he added. The French president's office announced the strikes, without details, in a statement hours earlier. "Our nation will strike each time our national security is at stake," the statement said.
Hollande told reporters the strikes on the training camp, and others to come, were aimed at "protecting our territory, cutting short terrorist actions, acting in legitimate defense." Hollande said more strikes "could take place in the coming weeks if necessary." The targets were identified in earlier French reconnaissance flights and with information provided by the U.S.-led coalition.
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The president announced earlier this month a change in French strategy — expanding its airstrikes over Iraq into Syria. France has carried out 215 airstrikes against IS extremists in Iraq as part of the U.S.-led coalition since last year, the Defense Ministry said earlier this month. But it previously held back on engaging in Syria, citing concern over playing into Assad's hand and the need for such action to be covered by international law.
Officials now evoke "legitimate defense" as spelled out in the U.N. Charter to support strikes in Syria. France has already been attacked by extremists claiming ties to IS. Hollande, who has ruled out sending ground troops into Syria, has cited "proof" of plans for attacks on France and the growing danger to Syrian civilians, with a large chunk of the population fleeing in a massive exodus.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls said France was going after IS "sanctuaries where those who want to hit France are trained." The goal of the strikes is to "slow, break, stop if possible the penetration of Daesh," Gen. Vincent Desportes said on the iTele TV station, using the Arabic acronym for IS.
Hollande stressed the importance of seeking a political solution for Syria. "More than ever the urgency is putting in place a political transition," including elements of the moderate opposition and Assad's regime, the statement said.
In New York, the French president said he would be meeting this week "all the partners" in the Syrian conflict. "This political solution requires that all stakeholders are involved," he said. "We are not excluding anyone." He didn't name countries.
At the same time, he said, "The future of Syria cannot be with Bashar al Assad." The French government has insisted that while it is part of the U.S.-led coalition, France is deciding independently who and what to hit in Syria.
Hollande announced on Sept. 7 France's intention to start airstrikes, days after the photo of a dead 3-year-old Syrian boy galvanized public concern about Syrian refugees fleeing to save their lives. In his statement Sunday, Hollande said: "Civilian populations must be protected from all forms of violence, that of IS and other terrorist groups but also the murderous bombardments of Bashar Assad.

Meriah Doty

Paul Feig Bemoans 'Ghostbusters' Leaks, Is Psyched About Bill Murray, and Basks in 'Spy' Action
Paul Feig, center, directing ‘Spy’ (Photo: 20th Century Fox)
From Freaks and Geeks to Bridesmaids to Spy and the upcoming Ghostbusters reboot, writer-director Paul Feig keeps upping his profile — and his production budgets — exponentially.
Days before the female-led Ghostbusters wrapped, Feig called Yahoo Movies to talk about the comedy starring Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, and Kate McKinnon — with cameos from Ghostbusters originals Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, and, just announced by the director on Friday, Sigourney Weaver.

Gwynne Watkins

Will Smith Will Not Return for 'Men in Black 4'
Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones in 2012′s Men in Black 3 (AP Photo/Columbia Pictures-Sony, Wilson Webb)
The men in black are returning to theaters — but their star secret agent has stepped down. A Hollywood Reporter interview with Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald, who produced Men in Black and its two sequels, has confirmed that a franchise revival is moving forward without Will Smith. (Of course, if they zap the audience with a neuralyzer, they’ll never know he was there in the first place!)
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“We’re in the middle of it. It’s very active,” Parkes said of the new Men in Black movie, which is intended to be the first part of a second trilogy. Asked whether Smith will be involved, Parkes told THR, “Most likely no.”
Based on a 1990 comic book series, the sci-fi comedy Men in Black — about two employees of a secret government agency (played by Smith and Tommy Lee Jones) that monitors extraterrestrial life on Earth premiered in summer 1997 to huge success, grossing more than $250 million during its theatrical run. (Making it the second biggest hit of that year, after Titanic.) Smith and Jones returned for the critically maligned Men in Black II in 2002, which had a bigger opening weekend than the first movie but topped out at $190 million. Ten years later, the stars returned for the MiB3, though Jones played a much smaller role, as the plot mostly dealt with Smith time-traveling back to work with Jones’s younger self, played by Josh Brolin. The 2012 threequel made $179 million domestically — but ended up as the most lucrative installment of the franchise thanks to international grosses that combined to take it to over $600 million worldwide.


Quantico, ABC’s new, twist-filled Sunday night drama about a group of FBI trainees, marks the American TV debut of actress and singer Priyanka Chopra. And if it also marks the first time you’ve seen the India-born star in action, prepare to be impressed. Chopra — who makes good on her goal to make her Alex Parrish a Jason Bourne-level action heroine — is sharp, intense, infinitely watchable, and the main reason Quantico may also become one of your new faves. Here, 12 things to know about one of fall TV’s most interesting new faces:
1.  The 33-year-old is already a superstar internationally, with more than four dozen movies on her resume, and is one of the highest paid Bollywood actresses. Highlights of her film career in India include Fashion, which won her a 2008 Best Actress win at the National Film Awards, the equivalent of an Oscar in India, for playing an aspiring model; and 2014’s Mary Kom, in which she played the titular role as the Olympic Indian boxer.
2. She was born in India, but has lived all over the world. She spent several teenage years in Boston, Iowa, and New York, for example, and she now splits her time between New York, Mumbai, Los Angeles, and Montreal, where Quantico films.
3. In 2000, she won the Miss World crown, during a pageant co-hosted by Jerry Springer. She is also the first Indian Guess Girl.
4. She is also a pop star, who has recorded music with will.i.am and Pitbull. Her first single, “In My City,” was the theme song for Thursday Night Football on the NFL Network for the 2012-13 season, and the video was directed by Joseph Kahn, who directed Taylor Swift’s “Bad Blood” video.
5. Though Quantico is her debut on American television, she voiced the airplane named Ishani in the 2013 Disney animated movie Planes. (Ishani had a fling with a plane named Dusty, voiced by Dane Cook.)
6. Chopra has written essays for The New York Times, and pens a monthly column — “Pret-a-Priyanka” — for Elle.com.
7. The actress thrives on playing a tough, smart, and feminine woman like Quantico’s Agent Alex Parrish. “Any actress worth her salt would have wanted to do this part, because she’s an action heroine, but at the same time, she’s vulnerable and feminine, and she’s a celebration of everything female,” says Chopra. “The strength of a female, the weaknesses of a female, our emotions, but at the same time, our ability to be able to overcome anything. We multitask really well, we have the balls to be able to be tough and deal with life. Alex does all of that together. I mean, she’s slowly becoming my hero. She’s someone I would want to grow up and be. Every time I [film] her, I’m like, ‘Damn, that’s so badass. It’s so cool. I wish I could do that in real life.’”
Watch the first 8 minutes of ‘Quantico’ here:
8. Being a woman of action isn’t a new thing for her. In 2010, she hosted the third season of Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi, the Indian version of the NBC reality series Fear Factor. And she tried some of the show’s stunts herself.
9. She tweets a lot, and has more than 11 million followers.
10. And she loves to Instagram photos from the Quantico set, as well as proof that she loves fast food and pie.
11. Chopra is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and United Nations Girl Up Champion. She’s also formed her own charity, The Priyanka Chopra Foundation, to help promote the rights of children and educational and entrepreneurial opportunities for girls in India.
12. Her alternate career plan before becoming Miss World and segueing into a career as a performer? Aeronautical engineer.
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