WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange,  German chancellor Angela Merkel and pop music heartthrob Justin  Bieber are among the 100 "most influential people in the world",  Time magazine has announced.
The yearly list released today also included 30-year-old  Wael Ghonim, the Google executive who became the hero of the  Egyptian revolution.
"Wael Ghonim embodies the youth who constitute the majority of  Egyptian society," read a profile in the magazine, penned by  influential Egyptian politician Mohamed El-Baradei, a potential  presidential candidate.
"But, as with many of his generation, (he) remained apolitical  due to loss of hope that things could change in a society permeated  for decades with a culture of fear.
"By emphasising that the regime would listen only when citizens  exercised their right of peaceful demonstration and civil  disobedience, Wael helped initiate a call for a peaceful  revolution," added El-Baradei, a former director general of the UN  atomic agency.
Other nods to the popular Arab uprisings in North Africa and the  Middle East included Hamada Ben Amor, a Tunisian rapper better  known as El General, whose song Rais Lebled (Mister President)  helped inspire the rebellion that ousted president Zine El Abidine  Ben Ali after 23 years in power.
There were, however, some contradictions in the list.    Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, who the magazine dubbed a "motormouth"  for his vows to crush a popular rebellion in Libya, was included  but not his father, Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi.
US President Barack Obama, his wife Michelle, Vice President Joe  Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were listed, but not  the leaders of Asian giants China and India.    And yet the list included the likes of South Korean pop idol and  actor Rain, Gossip Girl TV drama star Blake Lively and Bieber.
Pop diva Lady Gaga, famous for bizarre costumes and  chart-topping dance music, featured in the 2010 list but was  omitted this year.
Britain's royal couple Prince William and Catherine Middleton,  due to wed on April 29, appear together as an entry.
Receiving praise from conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh was  US Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, a conservative Tea  Party favourite seen as a likely 2012 presidential contender who  said she was "humbled" by Time's selection.    "If she were liberal, she'd be celebrated from the mountaintops.
But she's conservative," Limbaugh wrote in an essay accompanying  Bachmann's Time selection.
"So because she is smart, talented and accomplished and a  natural leader - not to mention attractive - the left brands her as  a flame-throwing lightweight.
They underestimate her at their own  risk."
Tiger Mother Amy Chua, whose confessional book detailing her  no-nonsense Chinese-inspired parenting philosophy scandalised  Western sensibilities but nevertheless shot to the top of sales  charts, was also featured.
The list included Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, DVD rental  and video streaming firm Netflix chief executive Reed Hastings,  Brazil's first female president Dilma Rousseff, European Bank head  Jean-Claude Trichet and French President Nicolas Sarkozy as well.
"They are artists and activists, reformers and researchers,  heads of state and captains of industry.
Their ideas spark dialogue  and dissent and sometimes even revolution," Time wrote.    The US weekly has said its often counter-intuitive choices are  "not about the influence of power but the power of influence".
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