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				 CJ's hectic schedule in the days after he was crowned "Best in 
				Show" included appearances on "Fox & Friends," "Good Morning 
				America," "The View" and other television shows. There was a 
				glitzy trip to the top of One World Trade Center, the nation's 
				tallest building, and a photo-op with fashion designer Michael 
				Kors at Sardi's Restaurant in New York's Theater District. 
 "So much has changed and yet really nothing has," said CJ's 
				owner, Valerie Nunes-Atkinson, a professional dog handler who 
				runs a pet resort in Southern California. "He still terrorizes 
				our cat."
 
				
				 
				
 Judging from the similarly glamorous experiences of other 
				Westminster Kennel Club champions, the winner of the 143rd 
				annual competition, which opens on Monday at New York's Madison 
				Square Garden, can expect to be swept up in a whirlwind of 
				excitement, too.
 
 Uno, the first beagle to ever win at Westminster, toured the 
				country for years after his victory in 2008, meeting President 
				George W. Bush and lifestyle maven Martha Stewart, according to 
				the American Kennel Club. His death in September at age 13 made 
				national news headlines and was mourned by many.
 
 Uno's grandniece, Miss P, followed in his footsteps, becoming 
				the second-ever beagle to be crowned "Best in Show" at the 2015 
				competition.
 
 After celebrating her victory with appearances that included a 
				meeting with then-real estate magnate Donald Trump years before 
				he was elected president, Miss P retired to motherhood, staying 
				out the spotlight in her native Canada.
 
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			German shepherd Rumor also gave birth to a litter of puppies after 
			she won the competition in 2017, but not before appearing on the 
			floor of the Wisconsin State Assembly. 
			The reigning Westminster champion, Flynn, a fluffy white bichon 
			frise, stepped down in style this year with a walk down the runway 
			as the first "celebrity spokesdog" at an American Heart Association 
			fundraising fashion event this week.
 Since triumphing at Madison Square Garden in 2016, CJ is still going 
			strong. The six-year-old pointer has taken several canine titles, 
			including a whopping 43 "Best in Show" titles at other, less 
			well-known competitions.
 
 Still, fame has not changed CJ much, according to his owner. When 
			the Westminster hoopla was over, he headed back to California to 
			roam the two-acre (0.81-hectare) property, lounge on the couch, and 
			torture the family feline, Nunes-Atkinson said. He also works as a 
			"therapy dog" with children, particularly those with disabilities.
 
 "He was our crazy dog before he went to Westminster and after," she 
			said.
 
 (Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Sandra 
			Maler)
 
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