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Murdoch, Bloomberg among Time's 100 most influential people

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg gestures at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for Deluxe New York, a state-of-the-art motion picture laboratory and digital intermediate facility in the West Village in New York, Thursday, April 24, 2008. The facility, scheduled to open in early May, will allow filmmakers and television producers to finish their projects in New York, rather than in Toronto or Hollywood. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg gestures at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for Deluxe New York, a state-of-the-art motion picture laboratory and digital intermediate facility in the West Village in New York, Thursday, April 24, 2008. The facility, scheduled to open in early May, will allow filmmakers and television producers to finish their projects in New York, rather than in Toronto or Hollywood. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
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May 1, 2008

NEW YORK—Playwright, actor and filmmaker Tyler Perry, media mogul Rupert Murdoch, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg are among the newsmakers on Time magazine's list of the world's 100 most influential people.

The 2008 list, appearing on the magazine's Web site Thursday morning and on newsstands Friday, also includes presidential contenders Barack Obama, John McCain and Hillary Clinton. Obama and Clinton made the list last year. Iraq Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and President Bush also are named.

In a piece he wrote for the magazine, former President Bill Clinton said he advised his friend Blair to take some time off to spend with his family and make a list of issues he wanted to pursue after stepping down in 2007.

"Tony listened to my advice graciously but ignored it completely by immediately accepting a new job as Middle East envoy for the Quartet," Clinton wrote. The announcement of Blair's appointment to the so-called "Quartet" of Mideast peacemakers -- the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia -- came hours after his resignation.

It is Blair's first time on Time's 100 list; his successor, Prime Minister Gordon Brown, made the list in 2005.

The 2008 list includes more than three times as many men as women and draws nominees from 23 countries, a magazine spokeswoman said.

Others on the list include Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Dalai Lama, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Chinese President Hu Jintao, African National Congress President Jacob Zuma, Mexican golfer Lorena Ochoa, Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez, Radio Publique Africaine founder Alexis Sinduhije, singer Mariah Carey, personal-finance adviser Suze Orman and media maven Oprah Winfrey, who has made the list five times, more often than anyone else.

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On the Net:

http://www.time.com

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