People

More diaper duty for Jerry

New York You’ve gotta see the baby for the second time.

Jerry Seinfeld and his wife, Jessica, are expecting another child, Seinfeld spokesman Steve Rubenstein told AP Radio on Wednesday.

The baby is due in spring, said Rubenstein, who added that the couple are “thrilled.”

The comedian and his wife already have a daughter, Sascha, who will be 2 in November.

Warhol exhibit draws crowd

Los Angeles The “Andy Warhol Retrospective,” which ended a 12-week run at the Museum of Contemporary Art earlier this month, boosted Los Angeles’ economy by $55.8 million, city officials said.

Attendance at the museum during the exhibition also increased 275 percent over the same time last year, according to a study conducted by Lauren Schlau Consulting, an independent marketing and demographics research firm. CIC Research Inc., a San Diego-based economic research firm, generated the economic impact estimates.

“It was great for the museum and great for the city,” Bob Tuttle, chairman of the MOCA board of trustees, said of the show’s impact. “If there was a negative, I can’t tell you what it was.”

Los Angeles was the third and final stop for the $2.7 million exhibition, which opened in Berlin and continued on to London.

Star No. 2,203 is born

Los Angeles Singer Michael Bolton received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Tuesday while touring to promote his album “Only a Woman Like You.”

Bolton, 49, accepted the honor amid a throng of admirers at a ceremony on Hollywood Boulevard, across from the historic Chinese Theater and next to the Roosevelt Hotel.

The two-time Grammy winner’s hits include “Forever,” “Living Without Your Love,” “Just the Thought of Losing You” and “How Am I Supposed to Live Without You?”

Bolton, whose star was the 2,203 on the Walk of Fame, is scheduled to perform at several venues in Southern California through the week.

May the force be with them

More than 70,000 people in Australia have declared that they are followers of the Jedi faith, the religion created by the “Star Wars” films, BBC Online reports.

A recent census found one in 270 respondents or 0.37 percent of the population say they believe in “the force,” an energy field that gives Jedi knights like Luke Skywalker their power in the films.

Most of the 70,509 people who wrote Jedi on their census forms were suspected to have done so in response to an e-mail sent around the world in 2001 encouraging all “Star Wars” fans to get it recognized as an official religion.

But the majority does not seriously tell each other “May the force be with you,” according to Chris Brennan, the Australian Star Wars Appreciation Society president.

“You probably have got about 5,000 people in that 70,000 that were true hard-core people that would believe the Jedi religion carte blanche,” he told ABC Radio.