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Tuesday, June 25, 2024

カーシェアリングサービス”Patto”始まりました! - 信州千曲観光局

千曲市・戸倉上山田温泉に新しいモビリティサービスが設置されました!

その名も”Patto”

  • スマホでドアが開く!
  • スマホでカンタン予約!
  • 予約は1分単位から!ガソリン代も込み!

「Patto」はアプリでご利用いただけるカーシェアリングサービスです。Webサイトやお電話などでのご予約は出来ません。

サービス詳細

使用方法

  1. まずは、アプリをダウンロード!
  2. クレジットカード、運転免許証を用意してスマホから会員登録!
  3. スマホから使いたいクルマ、日時を指定して、予約!
  4. 指定日時になったらスマホからそのままドアを開けて利用開始!利用後に自動決済

お近くのパット乗れるステーション

Patoo千曲内川ステーション

(千曲市内川1239-2)

  • ヴェルファイア(7人乗り)
  • ヴィッツ(5人乗り)
  • フォレスター(5人乗り)

Patoo戸倉上山田温泉ステーション

(千曲市上山田温泉2-7-2)

  • スズキ ソリオ(5人乗り)

千曲市へお越しいただくために

『湯けむりNEOネオン号』そんな、素敵な響きの列車を、4月より運行する運びとなりました。軽井沢駅から、戸倉駅までノンストップでおよそ60分。これからの旅の楽しみを思い浮かべながら、列車の旅をお楽しみください♪

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『ポコダン』10周年記念インタビュー。10周年は終わりではなく始まり。ブレポコに並ぶコンテンツも作りたい - 電撃オンライン


――10周年おめでとうございます! まずは現在の率直なお気持ちをお聞かせください。

 前プロデューサーのせっきーが5周年のリアルイベントの際に「10周年を目指します!」という目標を掲げました。

 当時は遠い目標だと感じていましたが、気付けば無事に10周年を迎えることができて純粋にうれしいです。

 厳しい時期も良い時期もありましたが、こうして10周年を迎えられたのは『ポコダン』を楽しんでいただき、遊び続けてくれているポコラー(『ポコダン』プレイヤーの愛称)の皆様の支えがあってこそ。「ありがとう!」の想いでいっぱいです。

――現在プレイされているユーザーさんの反応はいかがでしょうか?

 6月15日に10周年を記念したリアルイベント”ポコダン超祭り”を行ったのですが、ポコラーの皆様から10周年を迎えたことに対して、たくさんのお祝いの言葉をいただきました。

 また、「11周年、12周年……20周年まで続いて欲しい!」とのお言葉もいただき、10周年が終わりではなく新しい始まりであることを感じ、身が引き締まる思いでした。

 Xでも『ポコダン』10周年を祝うコメントや思い出を振り返るコメントをたくさんいただいており、運営チーム一同、ありがたく拝読しております。

――10周年を迎えられた秘訣やこだわっているポイントなどをお聞かせください。

 ポコロン(マス)をなぞって繋げるシンプルなゲーム性ですが、たくさんのポコラーの皆様に長年に渡って遊んでいただいています。

 運営としても『ポコダン』のコアになるゲーム性は変えず、いかにおもしろく進化できるかを考え続けて、ポコラーの皆様の想像を越える体験を届けようと日々模索しています。

 このようなスタンスが取れるのは、運営チーム一同とポコラーの皆様が『ポコダン』の可能性を信じて熱狂し、楽しみ方を模索し続けられているからです。

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'Sing Sing' screens at Sing Sing, in an emotional homecoming for its cast

Repost News asikjost.blogspot.com

OSSINING, N.Y. -- Clarence “Divine Eye” Maclin is standing inside Sing Sing Correctional Facility for the first time since he was inmate here 12 years ago. In this very chapel, he reminisces, he once sold drugs — a backup plan for when the yard was closed.

Not many men pine to return to the prisons in which they toiled away years of their life. Maclin, 58, was incarcerated at Sing Sing for 15 years. But on this day, he's buoyant.

“I got a purpose now,” Maclin says.

Maclin was at Sing Sing, the 198-year-old maximum-security prison perched on a hillside overlooking the Hudson 30 miles upriver from New York City, last Thursday for the premiere of the upcoming movie “Sing Sing." In the film, which opens July 12 in theaters, Colman Domingo stars as an incarcerated man who helps lead a theater program for Sing Sing inmates. Together, they find community and catharsis through theater.

The program is real: Rehabilitation Through the Arts, or RTA, is a nonprofit founded by Katherine Vockins at Sing Sing in 1996. Many of its former participants make up the cast of “Sing Sing” alongside professional actors like Domingo and Paul Raci. Maclin plays himself – a hard, muscle-bound character whose talent for shake-downs in the yard, it turns out, transfers remarkably well to Shakespeare.

“On stage,” Maclin says, “I got permission to do anything.”

As movie premieres go, the one for “Sing Sing” at Sing Sing was about as poignant as it gets. The film was screened above the stage where RTA performed its first show for an audience half civilian, half inmates in navy green jumpsuits. For the formerly incarcerated actors in the film, returning to Sing Sing was an emotional homecoming. They brought a message of hope and healing that they, themselves, are still trying to live up to.

Plaques outside the walls of Sing Sing — a high-walled citadel of incarceration beside which trains carrying commuters pass regularly — tout its rich history. This is where phrases long ubiquitous in movies — “Up the river," “the Big House” — come from. Historically, Sing Sing — where, among many others, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed — has loomed in the public imagination more as a symbol of harsh, Victorian age-style punishment than soulful rehabilitation.

On a sweltering day with the sun still high above the Hudson, two former RTA members — Lorenzo Chambers, 33, and Jose Robles, 64 — stood outside the prison walls, handing out water bottles. In his 35-plus years in prison, Robles first began building sets for RTA productions and then became a performer.

“You learn more about yourself than you do the play, you know?” says Robles.

Inside the first gate, Sean Dino Johnson, a founding member of RTA and a co-star in “Sing Sing,” sits in the shade, cringing a little each time the gate opened and closed. Johnson, 59, served 22 years in prison. When he was first approached about RTA nearly two decades ago, he was a tad skeptical.

“I said, ‘You want me to get up there in tights and do ‘To be or not to be’?” recalls Johnson, grinning. “Where’s the punchline at?”

But Johnson, despite his doubts, gave it a go and soon found that he had “got the bug.” Looking inward as an actor brought him an inner peace that had previously eluded him.

“That was my first understanding of what a community is,” says Johnson as he makes his way up the hill to the theater.

___

While the cast members and others mill about in the chapel, the film’s director and co-writer, Greg Kwedar, eyes the next-door theater nervously. “Sing Sing” was largely shot at a decommissioned prison upstate, so this was a moment he had long awaited.

“I’ve imagined what this theater would look like for eight years,” Kwedar says. “This is the most important audience in the world for us. I just hope it's honest."

"When we walk out of here, I hope the air feels a little different for those of us who are going home,” adds Kwedar. “And I’m highly aware that half of the audience will be going back to their cells.”

Since its debut at the Toronto International Film Festival, “Sing Sing” has been widely celebrated. A24 acquired it soon after its premiere. In March, it won the festival favorite audience award at SXSW.

The emotional response “Sing Sing” provokes runs two ways, eradicating some of the divisions that exist between those on the inside and those on the outside. For the RTA alumni, it’s a rare platform to show that what they’re capable of. For civilians less acquainted with the oft-ignored lives of the incarcerated, it’s a window into their humanity.

“You don’t feel as separated from the world,” says Shaytuan Breazil, a 32-year-old serving a 12-year sentence who was helping to serve snacks for visitors.

When RTA started, performances were only for inmates. Its leaders, like director Brent Buell (played by Raci in the film), would make videotapes for their families to see. What began with modest expectations grew and grew. “I thought I’d come up here and direct — I love directing,” says Buell. “I had no idea I would come in and make the friendships of my life.”

More than 1,000 inmates have since passed through RTA, which is now in eight prison facilities. It plans to expand to two more in September. The U.S. Department of Justice has found that within one year of release, 43% of formerly incarcerated people are rearrested. Among RTA alumni, that number is less than 3%.

Jon-Adrian “JJ” Velazquez served more than 23 years in Sing Sing before he was granted clemency for his wrongful conviction by former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. He has worked closely with RTA and appears in “Sing Sing.”

“The most effective way to change somebody,” says Velazquez, “is to believe in them.”

___

Inside the un-air conditioned theater, old stained glass windows had been blacked out. Guards sat in elevated chairs along the walls. The former inmates warmly greeted current inmates across the aisle. It was the third screening that day at Sing Sing, whose warden, Marlyn Kopp, said she wanted the whole population to see it. (The first two screenings were for inmates only.)

After sitting in a row toward the back, Maclin was urged to take a seat in the front row. “I’m moving up,” he says as he bounded to the front. There were old acquaintances Maclin wanted to see at Sing Sing but, he said before the screening, it was more important that the inmates saw him, to realize what life after prison could hold.

When the movie was over, the inmates appeared visibly moved and stood in a standing ovation. They stood again just to applaud A24. Their biggest cheers weren’t for Domingo but those who had been jailed alongside them. After the film, Maclin and Johnson spoke on stage with a pair of currently incarcerated men who shared their emotional reaction.

“I’m home,” Maclin said. “Back home on my stage.”

Maclin and Johnson faced their chairs toward the inmates and addressed most of their comments directly to them. Whatever one might think normally is discussed inside prison walls would be startled at the tenor of the conversation. Acting, Maclin said, taught him that vulnerability and empathy weren’t weaknesses but strengths. Johnson spoke of listening, the importance of crying and of love. Keep working, he implored. “Men can change,” he said.

Soon, curfew would be called and the inmates of B Block would file out first. But for now, many heads nodded in agreement at Johnson's words. They didn’t have much, Johnson told them, but they have each other. And for RTA members when they get out, alums would be there with a ride, some help and maybe a few dollars for their pocket.

“This was Sing Sing’s best kept secret,” said Johnson. “Now, the world’s gonna know.”

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle at: http://x.com/jakecoyleAP

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'Sing Sing' screens at Sing Sing, in an emotional homecoming for its cast
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Chanel goes to the opera in a gleaming but designer-less couture collection

Repost News asikjost.blogspot.com

PARIS -- The show must go on, with aplomb. Chanel’s latest couture display Tuesday was a finely executed collection channeling theatricality.

Few Parisian fashion houses can fill the Paris Opera and gain applause from Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and other luminaries without even having a designer. It's a testament to Chanel’s enduring power and its world-renowned atelier following Virginie Viard's abrupt exit on June 5.

Here are some highlights of the fall couture displays:

Guests clutching Chanel opera glasses got happily lost as they explored marble staircases to find a stage in the Opera’s outer corridors, filled with red velvet opera boxes designed by French movie director Christophe Honoré. The stage was set with silhouettes evoking the opera and its heyday: dramatic capes, puffed sleeves and richly embroidered pieces.

The designs’ gleam rivaled only that of the sumptuous 19th-century atrium itself, with shimmering buttons and brilliant threads reflecting the light.

There were moments of drama, with guests reaching for their cameras to capture a black gown with puff sleeves whose feathers, beading and ribbons gleamed provocatively.

This season, there is a welcome move to less accessorizing, a departure from the hallmark of Viard. The focus was on the garments, highlighting the craftsmanship and luxurious materials. Feathers, tassels, embroidered flowers, precious braids, lacquered jersey, supple tweeds, silky velvet, illusion tulle, taffeta and duchesse satin adorned looks befitting the venue.

Although the necklines were a standout feature, the collection as a whole had a slightly disparate feel that sometimes seemed to lack a singular aesthetic anchor.

Chanel paid tribute to the ateliers of the “petites mains," or the dozens of artisans who work in six ateliers a stone’s throw from the venue.

Viard abruptly left after over 30 years with the brand. The overnight announcement of her departure was highly unorthodox, coming just weeks before the couture show.

Viard succeeded Karl Lagerfeld upon his death in 2019 and was his closest collaborator for almost 30 years. She had overseen record sales for Chanel, reaching a reported $19.7 billion last year. Ready-to-wear sales reportedly increased 23% during her tenure.

Yet in the fickle world of fashion, strong sales are not always enough. Viard’s tenure was dogged by controversy, most recently with criticism of her collections, including a poorly received mid-season show in Marseille. Viard faced backlash for runway shows that critics said lacked the grandiose flair defining Lagerfeld’s era, and she often received critiques for underwhelming design choices.

Though her appointment was initially seen as temporary, she was only the third creative director in Chanel’s over 100-year history after Lagerfeld and, of course, legendary founder Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel.

The fashion world speculates on her successor. Names like Hedi Slimane, Marine Serre and Simon Porte Jacquemus circulate, suggesting potential shifts in Chanel’s creative direction.

Bubbles are never far away from the effervescent couturier Alexis Mabille. Guests sipped champagne, with champagne-filled ice buckets even on the runway in a celebration of luxurious excess.

Unfurling, undressing, and plays on corsetry were on the drinks menu this season, starting with an opening number featuring a gleaming bustier that resembled an opening flower. The intimacy and ritual of getting dressed is a theme that pervades Mabille's work.

Varied looks sometimes surprised guests, such as a Bob Mackie-style feathered headdress that out-Cher-ed Cher. The extravagant piece had an almost equestrian flourish and was a real feat of couture execution, showcasing Mabille’s flair for Hollywood-inspired glamour.

A golden bullet creation, and a gleaming metallic power cape with an armor-like bustier, gave the collection a lot of attitude, if not always coherence. Mabille’s collections often embrace a wide array of silhouettes and themes, sometimes leading to a lack of unified narrative. However, the diversity is also part of his charm.

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Chanel goes to the opera in a gleaming but designer-less couture collection
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Monday, June 24, 2024

決戦は火曜日いよいよ一般質問が始まります。 - いいくら一樹(イイクラカズキ) | 選挙ドットコム - 自社

いいくら 一樹 ブログ

決戦は火曜日

いよいよ一般質問が始まります。3ヶ月に1度しか来ないため、少し詰め込みすぎましたがやっていきます。昨日はほぼ一日市役所で最終調整、お昼は持ち帰り蕎麦専門店の「手打ち蕎麦 仁八」さんのお蕎麦を会派控室で最終調整組でいただきました。また、市内の不法投棄、ポイ捨てについての相談をいただきました。仕組みとしてどのような対策がとれるか取り組んでいきます。

一般質問の内容はこちら↓

件名:1,朝霞市における環境政策について
要旨:
(1)特定外来種への対応の朝霞市の現状と今後
(2)食品ロス、環境啓発の取り組みの現状
(3)城山公園含めてナラ枯れの状況について
件名:2,シビックプライドの高揚と対外的発信について
要旨:
(1)朝霞市のシティプロモーションの方針
(2)職員の意識向上
(3)マンホールカードの利活用
件名:3,アプリ等を活用した情報提供システムの活用
要旨:
(1)近隣市、先進市での導入状況
(2)市内での検討状況、導入へのハードル
件名:4,防災意識の高揚について
要旨:
(1)在宅避難、備蓄の啓発の状況について
(2)外国籍の方への対応、カラーユニバーサルデザインへの対応
件名:5,ごみコンテナの軽量化、ゴミの管理について
要旨:
(1)近隣市の状況、朝霞市での現状
件名:6,  若年層に向けた投票率向上の取り組みについて
要旨:
(1)近隣市の状況、朝霞市での検討状況

朝霞市議会 議会中継リンクはこちらから↓
https://smart.discussvision.net/smart/tenant/asaka/WebView/rd/council_1.html

#あさか未来 
#平成生まれ
#いいくら一樹
#いいひといいまちいいくらし
#朝霞市
#朝霞 #朝霞市議会議員 
#朝霞市議会 #あさか未来
#市民が主役子供達の未来のために

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イイクラ カズキ/31歳/男

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Sunday, June 23, 2024

【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売され ... - 4Gamer.net

画像集 No.001のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

今週も月曜日がやってきた。我々ゲーマーにとって,期待の新作が発売される週ほどワクワクするものはないわけだが,今週は何が発売されるかを抜かりなくキチンと把握している人は,どれくらいいるのだろうか。週刊連載「今週のモチベ」では,「え?あれって今週発売だったの!?」となりがちな人のために,今週発売される期待のタイトルをおさらいしていこう。

ファイナルファンタジーXIV: 黄金のレガシー(アーリーアクセス)


画像集 No.012のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日
発売日:2024年6月28日(金)
対応ハード:PC / PS5 / Xbox Series X|S / PS4 / Mac
価格:4620円〜
予約購入特典(デジタル):アーリーアクセス権 / ミニオン /アクセサリー / etc
画像集 No.010のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日 画像集 No.011のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

 MMORPG「ファイナルファンタジーXIV」の最新拡張パッケージで,未知の大地「トラル大陸」を舞台に新たな冒険が繰り広げられる。新ジョブとして「ヴァイパー」「ピクトマンサー」が実装されるほか,プレイヤーキャラクターとして選択可能な種族「ロスガル族(女性)」登場。アーリーアクセス権を持つプレイヤーは,6月28日18:00頃からプレイ可能となる。

ルイージマンション2 HD


画像集 No.007のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日
発売日:2024年6月27日(木)
対応ハード:Switch
価格:6578円
予約特典(デジタル):なし
画像集 No.006のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日 画像集 No.003のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

 ちょっぴり臆病なルイージが,オバケ吸引器・オバキュームを手に,オバケを退治すべくマンションを探索するアクションアドベンチャー。2013年に発売されたニンテンドー3DS用ソフト「ルイージマンション2」のグラフィックスを刷新した移植作で,タワーの1階から頂上を目指すモード「テラータワー」で,オンライン&ローカル通信による最大4人の協力プレイも楽しめる。

スーパーモンキーボール バナナランブル


画像集 No.013のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日
発売日:2024年6月25日(火)
対応ハード:Switch
価格:5489円
予約特典(デジタル):バナナの着ぐるみ
画像集 No.014のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日 画像集 No.015のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

 ボールに入った“おサル”を転がしてゴールを目指す,「スーパーモンキーボール」シリーズの最新作。新たなアクション「スピンダッシュ」が加わったほか,最大16人のオンラインマルチ対戦にも対応。「レース」「バナナコレクター」「ロボブレーカー」といったさまざまなルールでの協力/対戦プレイが楽しめる。

ビヨンド グッド & イービル 20周年エディション


画像集 No.008のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日
発売日:2024年6月25日(火)
対応ハード:PC / PS5 / Xbox Series X|S / Switch / PS4 / Xbox One
価格:2780円〜
予約特典(デジタル):なし
画像集 No.016のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日 画像集 No.002のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

 2003年にリリースされた「ビヨンド グッド & イービル」の発売20周年を記念したタイトル。4K解像度と60fpsに対応し,オートセーブやムービーのスキップ機能といった便利機能を追加。主人公ジェイドの過去に迫るミッション「トレジャーハント」や,20を超える新たな実績なども用意される。

爆走次元ネプテューヌ VS巨神スライヌ


画像集 No.009のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日
発売日:2024年6月27日(木)
対応ハード:PS5 / Switch / PS4
価格:3080円〜
予約特典(デジタル):なし
画像集 No.004のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日 画像集 No.005のサムネイル画像 / 【今週のモチベ】「FFXIV: 黄金のレガシー」のアーリーアクセスが始まり, 「ルイージマンション2 HD」が発売される 2024年6月24日〜7月1日

 「新次元ゲイム ネプテューヌVII」で活躍した天王星うずめを主人公とするバイクアクションゲーム。ネプテューヌ,ノワール,ベール,ブランの四女神も登場し,ステージ内をバイクで爆走しながら,大量発生したスライヌを奪い合う。

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【仙ペン】伝説の始まり…なのか - スポーツ報知

◆JERA セ・リーグ 巨人4―3ヤクルト(23日・東京ドーム)

 「10・8決戦」は社内でデスクとテレビ観戦。写真のキャプションを書いていた。槙原さんの完全試合の時は他球団の担当。お呼びじゃなかった。

 勝負弱いのか。それとも普段の行いが悪いのか。プロ野球の歴史に刻まれるような試合は、ことごとく見逃している。僕が現地で立ち会えたのは、強いて言えば大谷の「二刀流デビュー戦」くらいのもの…って自慢してどうする。

 2013年6月18日の広島・日本ハム戦(マツダ)。大谷は初めて同じ試合で投手と野手の両方に挑んだ。投手としては4回4安打3失点。バットでは2回に二塁打、5回に遊ゴロで勝ち越し点をもたらした。

 投手か打者、どちらかに専念するべき―。まだ当時は「二刀流」について否定的な声もあった。でも、どうだろう。1周回って「打者専念」も、あながち間違いでなかったのかも。11年後の驚異的なアーチ量産を見ていると、そんな気もしてくる。

 入団当時の大谷が興味深いことを言っていた。「投手・大谷と打者・大谷が対戦したら? 今なら打者が勝つと思います。左中間二塁打。真っすぐを打ち返すと思う」―。こうなったら今度は投手に特化した姿も期待したりして。欲が深すぎますか。

 そんなわけで打って守ってヘルナンデス。我らが救世主です。「インコースに難あり」とか言っていたのは誰だ。往年の落合さんを思い起こす肘を畳んでの内角球打ち。「穴はないんデス」と勝手に胸を張りたくなる。

 ジャンプ一番、5回の好守備にもグッときた。交流戦では「美しすぎるバンザイ」を披露。フェンス際の打球にも感覚がつかめないのか、イマイチ不安な雰囲気があった。だけど、それも、こっちの取り越し苦労だったみたい。

 そう言えば、二刀流のデビュー戦だけど、途中から大谷は外野の守備に入っている。この「三刀流」、あまり記憶にないのは興奮していたからでしょうか。

 いや、興奮するなら今でしょう。当たり前に思っちゃいけない。もしかしたら僕らが今、見ている景色は球団史上最強助っ人の「伝説のプロローグ」かもしれないんだから。

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東京都知事選挙が始まり、政治活動ができませんが、皆さまにしっかり政策や想いが伝わるよう、事務局... - しのはら ... - 自社

東京都知事選挙が始まり、政治活動ができませんが、皆さまにしっかり政策や想いが伝わるよう、事務局のみなさんと制作物などの最終確認や、来週末からの動きの確認をしています🙌

初めての挑戦。
緊張しないわけにはいかないですが、多くの皆様から支えられ、この挑戦ができることに感謝しつつ、明るく活動していきたい!と思っております✨

#しのはらりか
#無所属
#東京からやさしい未来を

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Saturday, June 22, 2024

「スター・ウォーズ:サーガ⑥ 新たなる希望の始まり」スター・ウォーズ ratienさんの映画レビュー(感想・評価) - 映画.com

SFって言っても、サイエンス・フィクションじゃなくて、スペース・ファンタジーの方です。
もう何度見たんだろうって位に数え切れないほど見ているのに、ホンっと飽きない。いつも楽しませてもらってます。

公開当時からリアルタイムで見てますが、一番最初に劇場で見たのは、中学生の時でした。数人の友達と公開前からワイワイ騒いで、待ちに待っての鑑賞だったと記憶してます。 勿論、鑑賞後も興奮冷めやらず、数々のグッズに手を出した覚えもあります。
その後もテレビ放映や、ビデオの普及、特別編の公開や、目に触れる機会はほんっとに多かった。

でも、「EPI」~「EPIII」までの前日譚が加わり、「ローグワン」に引き続いての鑑賞となるこの旧三部作は、さらに面白くなっている。
リアルタイムで見た時には、衝撃の事実の数々だったんだけど、その出来事が既に映像として、新たな情報として得た後での鑑賞はやっぱり印象が全く違います。 とは、言うものの本作品の王女を助けるという単純明快なストーリーは何度見ても、純粋に楽しめるものであります。

ただね~、やっぱり40年近く前の作品ということで、当時は最新技術だったとしても、昨今の目覚しいCGの進化から見るとその映像はトホホの部分があるわけで・・・。 所々に修正が加わってはいるものの、かえって不自然のような気がしないでもない。チープに感じちゃいます。反乱軍も人間しかいない。基地や宇宙船も狭いし・・・。(でも好きなんだけどね)

もう一つ思ったのは、ライトセーバーの対決ってこんなに雑だっけ? 前日譚の三部作が芸術的に素晴らしい殺陣だってのもあるかもしれないけど、ただ振り回しているだけのように見えちゃうのはちょっと残念だったかな。

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「アオーレ!ドイツフェスト2024」始まります! - ao-re.jp

いよいよ本日10時より、「アオーレ!ドイツフェスト2024」開催です!

本日は暑くなりそうです。
冷えたビールが美味しいと思います!

スタッフ一同お待ちしてます!!
(MI)

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Friday, June 21, 2024

STARKIDS 史上一番熱い夏の始まりを告げるパーティーチューン「PREGAME」がリリース! - PR TIMES


前作に続き2ヶ月連続でリリースされた「PREGAME」(読み:プリゲーム)はタイトルに表されているPREGAME=「パーティーの前」をイメージした作品となっており、この夏のSTARKIDSが起こす怒涛のムーブメントを予兆するような一曲だ。ディープハウスオルガンベースを活用したレイヴやユーロダンスのリードメロディが特徴的なサウンドプロダクションは前作のシングル「BIG HEAD」に続きlileffortによってプロデュースされた。

「今まで本当に待たせた、ここから僕たちが2年かけて溜め込んできたエネルギーを一気にみんなに渡すからそれを倍にして持ってきて欲しい。会場で待ってる。」 とSTARKIDSは語る。

作品のリリースのみならず、ライブでもSTARKIDSの熱量を感じて欲しい。昨年から3度ZEROTOKYOにて開催され大成功を収めている「AREA ZERO」に続き、次に彼らが仕掛けるのが、「G-Force」 STARKIDS文化祭。 8月3日(土)渋谷WOMB LIVEにて開催される本イベントは完全STARKIDSメンバープロデュースによる一大パーティーとなっており、彼らの好きな物が詰め込まれている。


STARKIDSのライブはもちろん、STARKIDSメンバー全員のソロライブアクト、他勢いのあるアーティストが多数出演予定。その他、文化祭をイメージしたライブ以外のコンテンツも多数実施予定。出演者と来場者が交流し、共に築き、楽しむことをコンセプトに、ライブのみならず来場者した方々全員が五感で楽しめ、記憶に刻み込まれるChaotic(混沌とした)な新たなパーティーの形を創ろうとしている。


イベント情報:

guntai9 Presents 「G-FORCE」 STARKIDS文化祭

会場: 渋谷WOMB LIVE

日程: 時間: 8月3日(土) | OPEN 15:00 START 16:00

出演者: STARKIDS, Space Boy, BENXNI, levi, ROAR, espeon, TAHITI and more. 

チケット情報:

特典付きチケット  ¥4900 (会場引換券5枚つき・先行入場)

通常チケット        ¥3900

チケット発売日:

2024 6月23日 12:00~

https://liveexsam.zaiko.io/e/STARKIDS-0803WOMBLIVE

※スタンディング

※入場時ドリンク代別途必要

※未就学児入場不可

※入場順:特典付きチケット(Premium Ticket)→通常チケット(Advanced Ticket)

STARKIDS プロフィール

STARKIDS (スターキッズ)は、Space Boy、BENXNI、TAHITI、levi、espeon、ROARからなる、東京を 拠点とする6人組ユニット。彼らの音楽の幅は、ユーロビート、ハッピーハードコアにインスパイア されたEDMインストゥルメンタルから、ハードなトラップとヒップホップ・プロダクションまで広 がっている。ハイエナジーなパフォーマンスで知られるSTARKIDSは、キャッチーなメロディーと、 英語と日本語の両方を見事に融合。グループ独特のオーラは、才能あるクリエイターたちを世界中か ら東京に引き寄せ、彼らのコレクティブおよびレコードレーベル「guntai9」の形成へと繋がる。 「Forever Stars, Forever Kids」と「Time to Shine with the 9」をキャッチフレーズに、STARKIDS は 世界的な認知を目指し、活気に満ちた前途有望な芸術の旅で、国際的な音楽シーンに忘れがたい足跡 を残すことを保証する。

HP: https://starkids.guntai9.jp/
Linktree: https://linktr.ee/starkidsjp
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@starkidsjapan/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/starkidsjp
Twitter: https://twitter.com/starkidsjp
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@guntai9

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UK fans wonder if Taylor Swift will say 'So long, London' after Eras Tour

Repost News asikjost.blogspot.com

LONDON -- Taylor Swift fans enjoy parsing the singer-songwriter’s lyrics for references to her romantic life and insights into her state of her mind.

But the pop superstar’s fans in the U.K. didn’t have to listen closely to her latest album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” to get the sense that Swift had soured on the country’s capital city after long making it a regular hangout and then her second home. The record’s fifth track is titled “So Long, London.”

As Swift brings her blockbuster Eras Tour to London’s Wembley Stadium, some Swifties therefore are wondering if they are witnessing the beginning of an extended goodbye. She is performing three nights starting Friday, and is scheduled to return to Wembley for six nights in August to close the tour’s European leg.

London is the only city on the tour where Swift is stopping twice. Some worry the arrangement may represent a swan song of sorts, while others think it just reflects a new era in Swift's bond with the Big Smoke. Whether “So Long, London” turns out to be a final chapter or a bookend to her valentine to the city, the song “London Boy,” Eras is arriving as an emotional milestone.

“Her relationship now kind of assumes London won't be somewhere she will be. It's not like there is an American football player living here,” said Maggie Fekete, 22, a Canadian graduate student who credits the London references in Swift's music with orienting her when she moved to the city three years ago. “I think there will be a lot less London in her music, which is sad.”

For those who haven’t been paying attention, Swift had a series of romances with famous British citizens, starting with Harry Styles in 2012 and ending last year, when she started dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. The speculation surrounding “So Long, London” and a mournful companion song that mentions a London pub, “The Black Dog,” stems from the 2023 breakup of Swift and English actor Joe Alwyn, who were together for over six years.

Alwyn is assumed to have inspired “London Boy,” a song from her 2019 album “Lover.” A special-edition “Lover” CD included what appeared to be a January 2017 diary entry in which Swift talked about being “essentially based in London” but trying to lay low. British tabloids later reported that Swift spent much of the COVID-19 pandemic sheltering with Alwyn in north London.

The Sun newspaper reported in December that the multiple Grammy-winner had bought a large property in the area and was remodeling it to be her base in Europe. After Swift released “The Tortured Poets Department” last month, however, a writer for the British edition of ELLE magazine observed that Londoners had an opening “for an all-American A-lister who can slot into her place in our collective consciousness."

“We had Swift before we lost her to her record-breaking, box office-breaking Eras Tour and now, it would appear that her vacant position has been filled by Zendaya,” writer Naomi May playfully posited before listing the various locations the American actor had been spotted with her longtime boyfriend, British actor Tom Holland.

Either way, the capital is putting on quite a show of its own to make sure Swift and her fans feel appreciated. Guides are offering walking, bus and taxi tours that retrace her footsteps, including a kebab shop whose owner says his establishment is supplying sandwiches for the singer and her crew on Friday.

Before the end of August, Swifties can partake in a full diet of Swift-themed brunches and dance parties, or ride the London Eye Ferris wheel accompanied by a string quarter playing her music. Souvenir stalls in Camden Market, one of the places mentioned in “London Boy,” stocked up on Swift-specific caps, T-shirts, bags and stickers in preparation.

“We’re very proud that London is hosting more shows than any other city on Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour, a real testament to her love for London,” Laura Citron, CEO of tourism agency London & Partners, said.

Fans started lining up outside Wembley on Thursday in hopes of being among the first ticket-holders to claim spots in standing sections close to the stage. A pop-up tour merchandise store opened in a parking lot by the stadium that morning.

Zachary Hourihane, who co-hosts a Swift podcast called “Evolution of a Snake" and posts YouTube and TikTok videos under the name Swiftologist, said it's too soon to know whether the singer will retain her honorary citizenship or part ways with London. As her fans know all too well, only time will tell with Taylor.

Hourihane notes that Swift started spending more time in London after a difficult year in which she went from winning album of the year at the 2016 Grammy Awards for “1989” to seeing her popularity plummet amid a public feud with Kim Kardashian and Kanye West. From his study of her life in England, he thinks the happy memories she created there come mixed with “a sense of isolation.”

“There is a lot of nostalgia that might have turned into regret,” Hourihane said. “She felt like she was trapped there for a while.”

Fast forward several boyfriends, 10 albums (including the Taylor's Version re-records ) and the Eras Tour juggernaut, and it's not surprising her life is up for reappraisal. Hourihane suspects Swift is “not quite ready to give up on London” for both practical and artistic reasons.

“Taylor is someone who retraces her steps a lot. Things are never really over with her. She likes to revisit things that have finished,” he said. “Let's be realistic about it. Her relationship, even if it is, ‘so long, goodbye,’ she has good reason to be in London and good money to make there.”

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New Mexico judge weighs whether to compel testimony from movie armorer in Alec Baldwin trial

Repost News asikjost.blogspot.com

SANTA FE, N.M. -- A New Mexico judge is scheduled to consider at a Friday hearing whether to compel a movie set armorer to testify at actor Alec Baldwin's involuntary manslaughter trial for the fatal shooting nearly three years ago of a cinematographer during rehearsal for the Western movie “Rust.”

Prosecutors are seeking a court order for Hannah Gutierrez-Reed to testify with immunity for her against related prosecution. Gutierrez-Reed was convicted in March of involuntary manslaughter for her role in the shooting of Halyna Hutchins at a movie-set ranch.

Baldwin figured prominently at that previous trial, which highlighted gun-safety protocols and his authority as a co-producer and the lead actor on “Rust.”

“The jury should hear all of the information Ms. Gutierrez has regarding Mr. Baldwin, both exculpatory and inculpatory,” special prosecutors Mari Morrissey and Erlinda Johnson said in court filings. “Counsel for both sides should be permitted to fully cross-examine Ms. Gutierrez.”

Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed both oppose efforts to compel her testimony.

At a pretrial interview in May, Gutierrez-Reed exercised her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and declined to answer questions. Her attorneys say compelling her to testify, even with immunity, would “virtually eliminate” the possibility of a fair appeal and possible retrial. She also is fighting a separate charge of carrying a firearm into a Santa Fe bar weeks before the fatal shooting.

Also during Friday's hearing, Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer is expected to weigh two defense requests to scuttle the trial on arguments that Baldwin had no reason to believe the gun could contain live ammunition and that it was heavily damaged during FBI forensic testing before it could be examined for possible modifications that might exonerate the actor.

“The government took the most critical evidence in this case — the firearm — and destroyed it by repeatedly and pointlessly striking it with a mallet,” defense attorneys said in court filings. “Government agents knew that the firearm would not survive.”

During the fatal rehearsal on Oct. 21, 2021, Baldwin was pointing the gun at Hutchins when it went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza, who survived. Baldwin says he pulled back the gun’s hammer but did not pull the trigger.

Prosecutors plan to present evidence at trial that they say shows the firearm “could not have fired absent a pull of the trigger” and was working properly before the shooting.

At Gutierrez-Reed’s trial, an FBI expert testified the gun was fully functional with safety features when it arrived at an FBI laboratory. The expert said he had to strike the fully cocked gun with a mallet and break it for the gun to fire without depressing the trigger.

Baldwin has pleaded not guilty to the involuntary manslaughter charge, which carries a maximum sentence of 18 months in prison.

Marlowe Sommer previously rejected another Baldwin motion for dismissal, ruling that the grand jury was able to make an independent judgement on the indictment.

Last year special prosecutors dismissed an involuntary manslaughter charge against Baldwin, saying they were informed the gun might have been modified before the shooting and malfunctioned. But they pivoted after receiving a new analysis of the gun and successfully pursued a grand jury indictment.

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Thursday, June 20, 2024

Different versions of 'home' roost at the American Folk Art Museum

Repost News asikjost.blogspot.com

NEW YORK -- What does “home” mean? Different things to all of us, of course.

A place of love, for some. One fraught with trouble, for others. An elusive concept for too many.

“Home isn’t always a place of comfort. Nor is it always a location, or a place. Home can be a state of mind," says Brooke Wyatt, curator of a show at the American Folk Art Museum called “Somewhere to Roost.”

The collection of 60 pieces explores artists' conceptions of home in paintings, illustrations, folk art objects, collages, blanket chests, quilts and family photographs.

The exhibition’s title piece, “‘Birds Gotta Have Somewhere to Roost” by Thornton Dial Sr., is a collage of weathered wood, burlap, carpet and tin. At first glance, it’s a scramble of tossed-away scraps. But consider the title and you imagine something else: birds gathering the bits to make a nest. Dial's work, including many such assemblages of found materials, are in museum collections around the U.S.

Birds are depicted in a pen-and ink drawing made in the 1800s by V.H. Furnier, an artist and penmanship teacher in Indiana, Pennsylvania. It includes the words “Home Sweet Home," and above it an avian pair, one of them carrying a sprig with the words “Spare the Birds.”

New Englander Joseph E. Clapp’s beautiful birdcage is another standout. Made of Peruvian mahogany and whalebone with petite brass pins, it’s a marvel of construction. Clapp was a master mariner who worked on whale boats in the 1850s. When he retired, he created a bird sanctuary in Peru. He finally returned to Nantucket, where he was often seen strolling the streets with his pets in their cages.

A drawing called “Devil House” conveys what it means when home is a literal prison cell. Incarcerated in a Huntsville, Alabama, prison, Frank Albert Jones started drawing with the red and blue pencil stubs discarded by inmate bookkeepers. A recurring theme is enclosed rooms surrounded by jagged wiry barbs he called “devil’s horns,” with grinning spirits. He frequently includes a clock; for many years, his cell faced the penitentiary’s clock tower.

Jones' signature on “Devil House” includes his neatly printed prison number, 11451.

Clementine Hunter grew up on Louisiana plantation and became an acclaimed self-taught artist. Starting in her 50s, she created a visual history of everyday life there — from laundry days to weekend parties — as she remembered it in the early 1900s. Two of her untitled works are in the exhibition; one shows people gathering at an outdoor funeral, while the other depicts a courtroom scene.

Another painting in the exhibit is of Roberta Flack, by the Jamaican artist Kapo, whose given name was Mallica Reynolds. Flack and Reynolds had become close in the 1970s after she saw his works on display in a hotel in Jamaica, and Flack set up a foundation for the artist so he could concentrate on his work without worrying about finances.

When Kapo's house burned down, it was Flack who helped him rebuild, and her support allowed him to stay in his hometown and continue his art. It was one of many obstacles that he overcame, said his daughter, Christine Reynolds, who came to see the exhibition.

“Seeing his painting on view in `Somewhere to Roost' is yet another signal that his work made it through," she said. "I feel pride, vindication and joy, and I only wish I had him at the museum next to me so that I could watch his reaction to seeing it.”

A photograph by Margaret Morton entitled “Mr. Lee’s Home” shows a makeshift dwelling that was part of a lower Manhattan homeless encampment in the 1980s and early '90s. It and some other shelters were destroyed by an arsonist in 1992; resident Yi-Po Lee died in the fire.

Morton chronicled the camp’s residents in her series “Fragile Dwelling.”

“These impoverished habitats are as diverse as the people who build them, and they bear witness to the profound human need to create a sense of place, no matter how extreme one’s circumstances," she wrote.

In one painting, a young boy is wearing some snazzy red slippers and a blue romper. He’s got a big book in one hand and an even bigger hat in the other. You get the impression he’s stopped only momentarily before running off to play in his room.

“Portrait of Frederick A. Gale” was painted by Ammi Phillips in 1815 and is one museum director Jason Busch's favorite pieces in the collection. It stands out, he said "because it’s representative of an art genre that, up till then, had been the purview of society’s upper crust.

“But around this time, more middle-class families were financially able to commission portraits."

Frederick wears a big smile and clothes that are less fussy and more childlike than those of kids in more traditional portraits.

Clarence and Grace Woolsey of Reinbeck, Iowa, had fun creating things out of the boxes of bottle caps that everyone had in the 1960s, before recycling programs became widespread. They strung together dozens of caps with baling wire, forming them into animals, objects and structures. The Museum has one of the small houses from the collection; the red-painted, tightly-packed caps with wavy edges resemble shingles, and the homey vibe epitomizes found-object craft art at its best.

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“Somewhere to Roost” runs until May 25, 2025, at the American Folk Art Museum in New York City.

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Different versions of 'home' roost at the American Folk Art Museum
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Judy Garland's hometown is raising funds to purchase stolen ‘Wizard of Oz’ ruby slippers

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GRAND RAPIDS, Minn. -- The Minnesota hometown of Judy Garland, the actress who wore a pair of ruby slippers in “The Wizard of Oz,” is raising money to purchase the prized footwear after it was stolen from a local museum and then later turned over to an auction company.

Grand Rapids, Minnesota, where the late actress was born in 1922, is fundraising at its annual Judy Garland festival, which kicks off Thursday. The north Minnesota town is soliciting donations to bring the slippers back after an auction company takes them on an international tour before offering them up to prospective buyers in December.

“They could sell for $1 million, they could sell for $10 million. They’re priceless,” Joe Maddalena, Heritage Auctions executive vice president, told Minnesota Public Radio. “Once they’re gone, all the money in the world can’t buy them back.”

The funds will supplement the $100,000 set aside this year by Minnesota lawmakers to purchase the slippers.

Dallas-based Heritage Auctions received the slippers from Michael Shaw, the memorabilia collector who originally owned the iconic shoes. Shaw had loaned them in 2005 to the Judy Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota.

That summer, someone smashed through a display case and stole the sequins-and-beads-bedazzled slippers. Their whereabouts remained a mystery until the FBI recovered them in 2018.

The man who stole the slippers, Terry Jon Martin, 76, pleaded guilty in October to theft of a major artwork, admitting to using a hammer to smash the glass of the museum’s door and display case in what his attorney said was an attempt to pull off “one last score” after turning away from a life of crime. He was sentenced in January to time served because of his poor health.

In March, a second man, 76-year-old Jerry Hal Saliterman, was charged in connection with the theft.

The ruby slippers were at the heart of “The Wizard of Oz,” a beloved 1939 musical. Garland’s character, Dorothy, danced down the Yellow Brick Road in her shiny shoes, joined by the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion.

Garland, who died in 1969, wore several pairs during filming. Only four remain.

Maddalena, with Heritage Auctions, says he sold two other pairs of ruby slippers. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio and a group of the actor’s friends purchased one set for the Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences.

Advance notice could help venues like the Judy Garland Museum secure the slippers that will be auctioned in December, he said. The museum which includes the house where Garland lived, says it has the world’s largest collection of Garland and “Wizard of Oz” memorabilia.

“We wanted to enable places that might not normally be able to raise the funds so quickly to have plenty of time to think about it and work out ways to do that,” Maddalena said. “That’d be an amazing story. I mean, if they ended up back there, that’d be a fantastic story.”

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Judy Garland's hometown is raising funds to purchase stolen ‘Wizard of Oz’ ruby slippers
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Rapper Travis Scott arrested in Miami Beach for misdemeanor trespassing and public intoxication

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. -- Rapper Travis Scott was arrested by Miami Beach police early Thursday on misdemeanor charges of trespassing and public intoxication.

Miami Beach police confirmed the arrest, but did not immediately provide any details. Scott, 33, posted his $650 bond, which means he will be released later Thursday, Miami-Dade County jail records show.

His publicists, Jamie Sward and Alexandra Baker, did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment, and jail records don't list an attorney for Scott. His agent, David Stromberg, didn't immediately respond to a message sent to his LinkedIn account.

Scott, who is one of the biggest names in hip-hop and whose birth name is Jacques Webster, has more than 100 songs that made the Billboard Hot 100 and put out four singles that topped the chart: “Sicko Mode,” “Highest in the Room,” “The Scotts,” and “Franchise.”

Ten people were killed in a crowd surge at Scott's 2021 performance at his Astroworld Festival in Houston. Attendees were packed so tightly that many couldn't breathe or move their arms. Those killed, who ranged in age from 9 to 27, died from compression asphyxia, which an expert likened to being crushed by a car.

Lawyers for the victims alleged in lawsuits that the deaths and hundreds of injuries at the concert were caused by negligent planning and a lack of concern over capacity and safety at the event.

Scott, promoter Live Nation, and the others who were sued have denied these claims, saying safety was their No. 1 concern. They said what happened could not have been foreseen.

The final lawsuit was settled last month.

After a police investigation, a grand jury declined to indict Scott, along with five others connected to the festival.

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Movie Review: In 'The Bikeriders,' the birth of a subculture on two wheels

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Still images have been a source of wonder and mythology in the films of Jeff Nichols.

“Mud,” Nichols’ Twain-soaked Mississippi fable, seemed derived from the magical sight of a boat held aloft by a tree. “Loving,” about a ‘60s interracial marriage, took inspiration from tender Life magazine photographs taken of the real-life couple. Nichols’ latest, “The Bikeriders,” is based on photographer Danny Lyon’s 1968 book of the same name, for which he spent four years with a Chicago motorcycle club.

It’s not hard to see what Nichols saw in Lyon’s black-and-white stills. There’s the stylish raw materials — the chrome bikes, the slicked back hair, the black leather jackets. But there’s also a just emerging antiauthoritarian, easy-riding spirit and camaraderie. Like the central figures of “Loving,” they are classically drawn outsiders who encapsulate something glorious and uneasy about freedom in America.

In the exhilarating first half of “The Bikeriders,” which opens in theaters Friday, Nichols is less compelled to build a narrative around his bike gang, the Vandals (based on the Outlaws) than summoning an intoxicating atmosphere reminiscent of those old photographs. “The Bikeriders” eventually becomes saddled with heavier plot mechanics — you can almost sense his riders growing weary from having to strap narrative devices onto their bikes. The movie wants to ride, but it’s not sure how much story to pack for the trip. But this is a vivid dramatization of the birth of an American subculture.

The framing device Nichols settles on is Lyon, himself, played by Mike Faist, who’s conducting interviews for his book. His conversations with a woman named Kathy ( Jodie Comer ) bookend and sporadically narrate the movie.

Kathy, also based on a real person, seems at first an unlikely spokesperson for the gang. She speaks with a thick Illinois accent (an actorly distraction throughout) and has no affection for motorcycle riders. But one night at a bar, she sees Benny ( Austin Butler ) across the smokey room and, even if she doesn’t admit it at that moment, falls for him. Again, it’s not hard to see why. Butler is by now well removed from Elvis Presley but the suppleness with which he can sink into mid-century America is no less apparent. Benny drives Kathy home, parks his bike outside the place and patiently waits for her boyfriend to skip town.

Nichols, a devotee of films like “Hud” and “Cool Hand Luke,” is a filmmaker who works very consciously within classic American idioms. In Butler he has his James Dean, making Tom Hardy his Marlon Brando. Hardy plays Johnny, Benny’s best pal and the one who starts up and presides over the Vandals. (The “whaddya got” clip of Brando from “The Wild One” is even briefly seen on a small TV in “The Bikeriders.”)

The Vandals, as a club, start about as simply as kids might call a tree house to order. They’re a bunch of guys who like riding motorcycles and like talking about them. Simple as that. But men come like moths to a flame, attracted by the tough lifestyle, the cool jackets with patches and a way out of mainstream America. Among them are Cal (Boyd Holbrook), Cockroach (Emory Cohen), Funny Sonny (Norman Reedus) and Zipco (Michael Shannon).

“Obscenity and motorcycles travel hand in hand,” someone says, with pride.

The early days of the group are, it would seem, a lot of fun. Barroom brawls and riding carefree through corn fields. Most of these guys don’t have much, but they have each other. And their loyalty is total.

Kathy isn’t so sure sure. She watches the growing gang — a completely male bunch — with skepticism and fear for Benny. (In a scene teased in the film’s opening, he’s beaten badly enough to be hospitalized.) Sometimes, they throw down purely for fun. They are the original Fight Cub.

But soon, Kathy isn’t the only one with doubts at what they’ve created. As their gang grows, what the Vandals embody is less clear, even to Johnny and Benny. Some of the new entrants are coming straight back from Vietnam. Their old hijinks give way to more serious crimes. In one chastening scene, Kathy finds herself very nearly assaulted by its members. The gang — and all its posturing of toughness — begins to feel more like a trap for even its leader. Benny is drawn into a choice between the Vandals and Kathy. The homoerotic subtext is understated but not ignored; when Benny and Johnny discuss their future together, they do it gently and intimately, in the dark, like a secret confession.

As the Vandals' original ideals disintegrate, it can feel like “The Bikeriders” gets locked into a familiar “Goodfellas”-like structure, but with a telling shift in narrator for a drama that's ultimately about masculinity. This is a movie that’s juggling a lot of contradictory ambitions. It wants to be authentic but it wants to tell a grand America saga. It wants mythology but also naturalism. It’s those instincts that have made Nichols one of the most essential filmmakers of his generation, even if the results have sometimes been underwhelming by a hair. Even his best, most firmly rooted films (“Take Shelter,” “Mud”) strive for a balancing act that can be elusive.

But I think it’s those dual impulses — and, again, all the cool jackets — that makes “The Bikeriders” work. The movie is unabashedly romantic about the Vandals but it’s equally dubious about the rugged masculinity they embody, too. “The Bikeriders” has its hands firmly on the throttle just it does the brakes.

“The Bikeriders,” a Focus Features release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for language throughout, violence, some drug use and brief sexuality. Running time: 116 minutes. Three stars out of four.

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle at: http://x.com/jakecoyleAP

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Wednesday, June 19, 2024

生成AIに関する実態調査2024 春 ―試行錯誤の中で見え始める二極化の兆し:生成AIを経営資源の1つとする変革の始まり - PwC

はじめに

PwCコンサルティング合同会社のデータアナリティクスチームは、企業における生成AIの認知度、活用状況、および現状の課題を明らかにすることを目的に、「生成AIに関する実態調査2024 春」を実施しました。2023年4月・10月に発表した前回、前々回の実態調査以降、生成AIを取り巻く環境は著しく変化しています。

まず、生成AI技術の急速な進化により、多くの新しいツールやアプリケーションが市場に登場しました。これにより、生成AIの活用範囲が広がり、企業がその潜在能力を効果的に引き出す機会が増えています。同時に、生成AIを取り巻く規制も強化されており、企業はコンプライアンスの観点からも注意を払う必要があります。

さらに、生成AIに関連する社会的な議論も活発化しています。フェイクニュースの拡散やプライバシー問題に対する懸念が高まり、生成AIの倫理的な利用に対する関心が増しています。これらの要因が相まって、生成AIを上手く活用できている企業とそうでない企業の間で二極化の兆しが見えます。

本調査は、これらの背景を踏まえ、売上高500億円以上の日本国内の企業・組織の課長以上の方々を対象に実施されました。本調査結果が、生成AIの活用を進める上での貴重な指針となり、企業がこの先進技術を効果的に取り入れ競争力を高めるための一助となることを期待しています。

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Japan's 'beat poet' Kazuko Shiraishi, pioneer of modern performance poetry, dies at 93

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TOKYO -- Kazuko Shiraishi, a leading name in modern Japanese “beat” poetry, known for her dramatic readings, at times with jazz music, has died. She was 93.

Shiraishi, whom American poet and translator Kenneth Rexroth dubbed “the Allen Ginsberg of Japan,” died of heart failure on June 14, Shichosha, a Tokyo publisher of her works, said Wednesday.

Shiraishi shot to fame when she was just 20, freshly graduated from Waseda University in Tokyo, with her “Tamago no Furu Machi,” translated as “The Town that Rains Eggs” — a surrealist portrayal of Japan’s wartime destruction.

With her trademark long black hair and theatrical delivery, she defied historical stereotypes of the silent, non-assertive Japanese woman.

“I have never been anything like pink,” Shiraishi wrote in her poem.

It ends: “The road / where the child became a girl / and finally heads for dawn / is broken.”

Shiraishi counted Joan Miro, Salvador Dali and John Coltrane among her influences. She was a pioneer in performance poetry, featured at poetry festivals around the world. She read her works with the music of jazz greats like Sam Rivers and Buster Williams, and even a free-verse homage to the spirit of Coltrane.

Born in Vancouver, Canada, she moved back to Japan as a child. While a teen, she joined an avant-garde poetry group.

Shiraishi's personality and poems, which were sometimes bizarre or erotic, defied Japan's historical rule-bound forms of literature like haiku and tanka, instead taking a modern, unexplored path.

Rexroth was instrumental in getting Shiraishi’s works translated into English, including collections such as “My Floating Mother, City” in 2009 and “Seasons of Sacred Lust” in 1978.

Over the years, her work has been widely translated into dozens of languages. She was also a translator of literature, including works by Ginsberg.

In 1973, Paul Engle invited her to spend a year as a guest writer at the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa, an experience that broadened her artistic scope and helped her gain her poetic voice.

“In the poems of Kazuko Shiraishi, East and West connect and unite fortuitously,” wrote German writer Gunter Kunert. “It refutes Kipling’s dictum that East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet. In Kazuko Shiraishi’s poems this meeting has already happened.”

A private funeral among family has been held while memorial service is being planned. She is survived by her husband Nobuhiko Hishinuma and a daughter.

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Yuri Kageyama is on X: https://twitter.com/yurikageyama

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Japan's 'beat poet' Kazuko Shiraishi, pioneer of modern performance poetry, dies at 93
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