hoka one one

粉絲以為EXO世勳的Instagram帳號被駭客入侵

世勳

EXO世勳出演同屬SM娛樂的大前輩BoA正規八輯《Who Are You》MV,描述陌生男女之間相識相惜的心動感情。不只粉絲興奮,世勳本人也相當開心,還到BoA姐姐的Instagram留言呢!

世勳一連留下多則評論:「KKKKK」、「刷屏」、「大家都跟著我來」、「MV等級,100歲禁級別」、「我人生第一次相親」、「相親,挺緊張的」、「感覺像在坐自由落體」、「真的,看完MV會亂的」。世勳的「暴風評論」也讓粉絲直呼:「太可愛了吧!」

不過,就在世勳評論「大家都跟著我來」時,有位粉絲問他:「去哪裡?」,世勳就到那位粉絲的Instagram留言「KKKKK」,其他粉絲也都跑去那位粉絲的Instagram留言,那位被世勳留言的粉絲嚇到了,趕緊把Instagram設成「非公開」。

後來,就有粉絲懷疑世勳的Instagram帳號是不是被駭客入侵,世勳只好留言:「不是hacking!!!!!!」、「對不起…」,然後上傳自拍,證明是世勳本人,並在Instagram簡介留下:「只是鬧著玩的,還有我進一個Instagram帳戶回覆留言也是想開玩笑,在留言裡隨便點一個帳號進去的,不要誤會,下次不會這樣了。」

【筆者按:過一段時間,世勳就把上傳的自拍刪除,也清空簡介內容。其實,世勳這樣做也是想要和粉絲更親近一點吧,但世勳的Instagram帳號曾經被駭客入侵,也難怪會有粉絲想:「或許是被盜了?」。無論如何,世勳做出此舉動,相信他沒有惡意的!】

石門水庫3階限水 持續供5停2


今年首波梅雨鋒面報到,石門水庫集水區7日凌晨下大雨,到上午11時大壩水位上升近1公尺,不過「旱災中央災害應變中心」仍決定暫時不解除石門三階限水措施。(中央社檔案照片)

今年首波梅雨鋒面報到,石門水庫集水區7日凌晨下大雨,到上午11時大壩水位上升近1公尺,不過「旱災中央災害應變中心」仍決定暫時不解除石門三階限水措施。(中央社檔案照片)

(中央社台北4日電)「旱災中央災害應變中心」今天開會決定,持續實施石門水庫三階限水措施。

要失望了 石門三階限水繼續實施

(中央社記者黃巧雯台北4日電)「旱災中央災害應變中心」今天開會決定,暫時不解除石門三階限水措施。

經濟部長鄧振中表示,會請經濟部水利署邀集相關單位做滾動式檢討 看看有無可能性暫停實施或解除,但這次會議無法做出是否解除石門三階限水的決定。1040504

梅雨雖然來了 石門水庫繼續供5停2

旱災中央災害應變中心4日開會,由經長鄧振中(中)
主持,決定由水利署邀集相關單位持續檢討是否暫緩或
解除石門供水區三階限水措施,這次會中無法決定。
中央社記者黃巧雯攝 104年5月4日

旱災中央災害應變中心4日開會,由經長鄧振中(中) 主持,決定由水利署邀集相關單位持續檢討是否暫緩或 解除石門供水區三階限水措施,這次會中無法決定。 中央社記者黃巧雯攝 104年5月4日

(中央社記者黃巧雯台北4日電)有關石門水庫供水區三階限水措施是否解除,旱災中央災害應變中心今天開會決定,由經濟部水利署邀集相關單位持續檢討,是否暫緩或解除供5停2措施,這次會中無法決定。

旱災中央災害應變中心今天召開第4次工作會報,由經濟部長鄧振中主持。

水利署表示,石門水庫供水區於5月5日將完成4週三階限水措施,由於限水已有成效,石門水庫蓄水下降已趨緩,且進入梅雨季,若近期有明顯降雨,會中建議可考量暫緩實施或解除供5停2限水措施。

儘管外界期待,隨著梅雨季到來,能讓石門供水區解除三階限水,不過鄧振中裁示時,將由經濟部水利署邀集相關單位持續檢討,是否暫緩或解除三階限水措施,這次會中無法決定,換言之,將繼續維持現行供5停2措施。

由於進入梅雨季後,氣象降雨變化快速,若降雨使水情有明顯改善,為能迅速反映水情,減少對民眾及產業不便,鄧振中表示,未來將以旱災中央災害緊急應變中心通報單發布暫停或解除限水措施。

根據水利署資料顯示,石門水庫供5停2措施已實施3週,平均每日再節省水量18.8萬噸,較原先預估11.6萬噸還要多,節水效果超出預期,增加節水量約400萬噸。1040504

温嵐挑貨小鮮肉蔣卓嘉、金韓一 看誰「G點」比較多

記者蕭采薇/台北報導

GJ蔣卓嘉和金韓一「同門雙帥」,將在8日一起舉辦《莫非,這就是情歌》小型音樂會,全場幾乎全已吉他方式彈唱情歌。5日他們為音樂會彩排,選擇男男合唱的情歌《Fly with me》。而當演唱接近尾聲,「師妹」温嵐忽然現身探班,兩人也再現場幫單身的温嵐招起桃花。

▲温嵐(中)現身探班「師兄」蔣卓嘉(右)、金韓一(左)。(圖/記者周宸亘攝)

順應「4G男」(GUTS有擔當、GIVER尊重、GELTLE體貼、GUARANTEE專情)話題,温嵐要在兩位小鮮肉蔣卓嘉、金韓一中,挑出符合最多「G點」的帥哥。為了贏得火辣姐姐青睞,蔣卓嘉跟金韓一除了唱歌,也各自準備才藝表演,將温嵐逗得樂不可支。

 

癌癒重生不脫了!AV女優麻美由真改當小清新歌手

日本AV女優麻美由真2012年罹患卵巢癌暫別演藝圈,在經過1年的療養之後,宣布抗癌成功,重現紅潤好氣色復出演藝圈,推出自傳小說鼓勵更多人,原本一度傳出她準備重回AV界,但近來她改行當起歌手,改走小清新路線,嘹亮歌聲引起網友驚豔,對她跨行歌壇相當看好。

▲▼麻美由真改行當歌手。(圖/翻攝自YouTube)

麻美由真將於20日推出出道第一張單曲《Re Start~明日へ~》,象徵重新出發的決心,新歌MV大手筆前往倫敦拍攝取景,她一改以往性感艷麗路線,在MV中走氣質風格,穿起居家服在廚房做菜,甚至拿著吉他在街頭自彈自唱,清新嘹亮的歌聲相當引人注意,讓人無法想像她曾經是AV女優。

▼麻美由真曾是性感AV女優。(圖/翻攝自日網)

google首頁Q版巴哈 向鋼琴發明人致敬

〔記者楊媛婷/台北報導〕今天連上谷歌首頁,會發現Q版巴哈正在彈奏鋼琴,演奏的音樂則是巴哈的第147號清唱劇《耶穌,世人仰望的喜悅》。原來今日(5月4日)是史上首位鋼琴樂器製作師巴爾托洛奧.克里斯多福里(1655-1731)360歲冥誕。

現代鋼琴的前身來自於巴洛克時期的大鍵琴與古鋼琴,不過這兩種樂器中,大鍵琴是無法控制力度,音量強弱總是相同;古鋼琴雖然可控制音量,並且有強弱音等細微變化,但音量卻很小,只能在家庭中使用,而無法應用在公開的演奏場合。

為了因應越來越多演奏的需求,克里斯多福里便綜合這兩種樂器的優缺點,打造出現代鋼琴,當時命名為「有強弱的大鍵琴」,該樂器也是第一台鋼琴。根據史料顯示,他共打造約20台鋼琴,目前傳世有3台,分別存於義大利羅馬、美國紐約大都會博物會、德國萊比錫。

[Google Doodle] Nellie Bly 娜麗布萊 首位環遊世界女性 151 歲冥誕

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今天Google 首頁紀念的是最有俠義心腸的女記者 Nellie Bly 娜麗布萊 151 歲冥誕。娜麗·布萊 (Nellie Bly)原名伊麗莎白·珍·科克倫(Elizabeth Jane Cochran)筆名娜麗·布萊 (Nellie Bly),1864年5月5日出生於美國賓州,為世界著名的女記者,她最廣為人知的事蹟是於1889年11月14日起完成環遊世界72天的旅程,及進入精神病院裡及貧民區採訪報導,喚起眾人的重視,是開啟隱秘採訪的先趨。

 

家人稱娜麗·布萊 粉紅(Pink),她在進入報社工作前,一直找不到一個好工作,有一天她在匹茲堡電訊報看到報紙的編輯發表文章表示女性不該擁有工作,她投書反駁,反而獲得編輯賞識進入報社工作。

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娜麗·布萊常以隱秘採訪,深入各種環境調查報導社會的黑暗面,喚起眾人的重視,進而改變,1887年在紐約世界報任職時,她讓自己成為一名精神病患,進入紐約市的精神病院採訪,觀察精神病患們的行為,並把其受到的不人道待遇與所處惡劣環境,據實揭露,報導經由廣大的讀者閱讀後,震驚社會,促使群眾對以醫生及官員抗議,引起相關單位重視,這調查報導完整記錄於瘋人院十日 (Ten Days In a Mad-House)一書。除此之外娜麗·布萊也曾經深入貧民區採訪,因為她的報導讓貧民的生活得到改善,及報導販賣孩童等不法行為。

1888年,娜麗·布萊仍在紐約世界報任職時,有人建議報社模仿法國作家朱勒凡爾那(Jules Verne)”環遊世界80天”的著作,派出記者環繞全球一週。娜麗·布萊表明意願,也成了報社指派人選,1889年11月14日,她獨自離開紐約啟程,以火車與船當交通工具,前往法國作家朱勒·凡爾納的家鄉,之後去了英國、義大利、埃及、新加坡、日本、中國、香港、舊金山,最後於1890年1月25日回到紐約,長達24,899英里的旅程,當時是最快環繞全球的世界紀錄,當年她年僅25歲。過程記錄於她的著作「環遊世界72天」。

Nellie_Bly_2

*from http://www.hzgj.net/html/pqqkmso/

1922年1月27日57歲時,娜麗·布萊因肺炎去世。但她為關懷弱勢、提升社會底層人類的生活、常將所見所聞,讓新聞化為具有真實的個人身歷其境的感受,衍生成改變世界契機的報導,受到同業與後世推崇,被認為是最優秀的記者,這種重深入採訪,並作交叉查證,與當事者站同一陣線深具同理心的報導整理,值得台灣的新聞媒體從業者借鏡與自省。

This Is What Zoe Kravitz And Miley Cyrus Do When They’re Bored In A Hotel Room

Ever wondered how Zoë Kravitz and Miley Cyrus would entertain themselves if they were trapped in a hotel room for hours? Well, we have the answer in LOLAWOLF’s video for “Bitch.”

The catchy, rap-infused track is featured on the band’s debut LP Calm Down and the accompanying visual, directed by Trouble Andrew has a very Lo-fi aesthetic. You sort of feel like a friend, filming other friends, who are doing things you wouldn’t necessarily want your parents to see.

The video opens with a half naked Zoë in her hotel bed, then we catch her going through the motions to get (partially) dressed before Miley shows up to hang out.

Once they link up, there are a few activities going down, for example playing Go Fish with a deck of Hannah Montana cards, but the rest, you should probably just watch and see.

When MTV News caught up with Zoë back at SXSW in Austin, Texas, she told us that she’d just filmed a video in her hotel room, so if we’re connecting the dots, this might be the outcome of that shoot.

Below she also chats about going on tour with Twin Shadow and potentially collaborating with Drake or A$AP Rocky in the near future.

Kurt Cobain Influenced Pretty Much All Genres — Just Ask Wiz Khalifa And Fall Out Boy

Kurt Cobain’s Nirvana released just three full-length studio albums from 1989 through 1993, but their music is still inspiring audiences today.

That influence is sure to reach even greater heights when HBO airs its Cobain doc “Montage of Heck” on May 4.

So, how has Nirvana maintained its importance more than 20 years after Cobain’s passing in ’94?Wiz Khalifa might have the answer. As he put it, Cobain’s work continues to inspire because it’s simply timeless.

“I’m only 27 so when they were poppin’, I was really, really young,” Khalifa told MTV News. “But him as a writer, how he put his stuff together, it reaches so many people and so many ages. It’s just timeless.”

Fall Out Boy’s Patrick Stump agrees, but notes that he didn’t fully appreciate Cobain’s greatness until it was almost too late.

“In the era, I remember being like, ‘Eh, I don’t like Nirvana. I don’t like this. This isn’t for me,’” Stump recalled. “Toward the end, I started to realize, this is awesome. I was one of those jerk-little kids that was like, ‘Eh. Whatever’s popular, I don’t like that.’”

“I realized almost too late that that was exactly what Kurt was into,” he continued. “He was like, ‘No, I don’t want us to be this big popular band.’ They came to kill hair metal. He was like the ultimate anti-rock star.”

Over time, Stump saw himself in Cobain because of that “anti-rock star” quality.

“That related to me a lot, and kind of informed a lot,” he said. “It’s hard to relate to musicians who act like gods. You know? It’s way different when they’re real people and you know that and that kind of comes through. And then, they’re kind of amazing in their own way. He’s like the ultimate of that hyper-relatable [star].”

Rock fans weren’t the only ones who could relate to Cobain. DJ Drama also found himself in awe when he first heard Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit.”

“[It] was like nothing I had ever heard before,” he said. “I remember it was like the coming of Nirvana was the transition from heavy metal to grunge.

“When you think about the ‘90s, Kurt Cobain is one of those symbols just as [Tupac Shakur] is,” Drama, who’s joining Wiz and Fall Out Boy in their “Boys of Zummer Tour” this June, added. “So outspoken. And just through the music, even the harmonies of Nirvana and his song patterns touched everybody. It crossed genres in so many ways.”

That influence remained strong even after Kurt Cobain’s death in 1994.

“I remember going to school in high school the day after he passed away,” Pete Wentz said. “There were kids who had Ks written on their hands. I remember where I was. Kurt and Nirvana was one of those few moments in music that we got live through where everything was different after Nirvana.”

Here’s How ‘Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck’ Made Me Get Over My Love Affair With Dead Rock Stars

Since I was a kid with a stack of records in my room and a turnable I stole from my parents, I’ve been a fan of dead rock stars. I don’t think it was any kind of conscious decision — I wasn’t really a goth or a ghoul.

There was Nick Drake, whose collected discology I painstakingly collected in its entirety (which wasn’t hard since he died when he was 26 of an overdose of antidepressants). I used to listen to one of his final songs, “Black Eyed Dog,” on repeat, wondering if he was trying to tell everyone something, as we read some short story in school once about how black dogs are associated with death.

Then there was Jim Morrison, whose face is still plastered all over my childhood bedroom and who remained an obsession through high school into college. I liked his sad poetry books even though they weren’t really that good. I even declined to visit his gravesite on a school trip to Paris because then I’d have to share him with all the other people who had scrawled across every inch of his memorial.

It was with that predilection that I saw HBO’s luminous and crushing documentary, “Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck.” If you watched it tonight (May 4), you may be crying. You may be bummed. You may be cursing director Brett Morgen’s name because, as you know by now, the film just ends.

Yup, after watching this man grow up from wild child baby with firecrackers strapped to his chest into a rock star holding his own baby (dazed and confused) — spoilers ahead — the doc leaves you with a few screens and a few scattered pieces of text informing you, the highly invested viewer, that Kurt Cobain is dead.

You may be crying. You may be bummed. You may be cursing. But me? Well, guys, I felt kind of ashamed. Because that’s when I — a girl who has always loved dead rock stars — realized that a person who died long ago isn’t some kind of celestial legend. He’s a guy who died long ago — and he was real. Kind of sad to come to that realization at age 30, but there you go.

These musicians who were separated from me by death — they were safe, I realized later. They couldn’t disappoint me. They couldn’t get older and put out a sh-tty folk record or write a lot of angry autobiographies or become sad, shaded parodies of themselves, rebelling against something that doesn’t need rebelling against anymore. They would always remain young — younger than me, now. They would always remain talented. They would always remain perfect. They were legends because they died young — untouchable like Jesus, or Finny from “A Separate Peace.”

“Montage of Heck” explodes that idea. It makes Kurt Cobain into a man — in part because it ends where a person’s life ends: with his death.

“When I showed the film to Frances Bean [Cobain] for the first time, we were talking afterwards and she said, ’You know what my favorite part of the movie is? The end, when it cuts to black,’” director Brett Morgen told MTV News weeks before the doc aired on Monday. “I was like, ’That was your favorite part of the movie? I don’t know if I should be offended or not.’”

For those who didn’t watch the film tonight, “Montage of Heck” does not end with a funeral. It does not end with that famous recording of Courtney Love reading Kurt’s suicide note or her interview with MTV News following his death. It ends with a black screen.

If this were a fictional film, this is where the audience would rise to their feet, shouting about wanting their price of admission back. When I saw the film in a screening room filled with rock journalists who had — hours before — been chatting loudly about their latest interviews and career coupes, this is where we all sat in the silence and the darkness and thought.

“[Frances told me] ’That’s how it is. That’s how life is. And that’s how death was. And it’s so honest,’” Morgen told MTV. “At some point, it became clear that you couldn’t wrap it up with the bow, like a stupid Hollywood ending. You know, ’Well, Kurt, he’s not here anymore, but you know he’s brought so much comfort and joy in the world!’ No. It was tragic and we needed to sort of show this.”

And they did. They needed to. Kurt Cobain is a very easy dead rock star to fall in love with. He’s an angel-faced man who, as Love says in the film, doesn’t know how attractive he is. He is, as you can see in the film, a misfit from a tumultuous home who just doesn’t fit in — you know, like the skater/stoner/loner in your high school class that you know would understand you if you ever mustered up the guts to talk to him.

To be honest, I was never a Nirvana fan as a kid. I knew all the hits from the radio, sure, and I had burned a live CD from the library and listened to “Lake of Fire” on repeat for a while (kind of similar to “Black Eyed Dog,” no?). I became a real fan pretty recently — when I saw the remaining members of Nirvana play onstage at the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony. When I saw Michael Stipe tearfully say, “And that voice … that voice.”

Here was another dead rock star. Another perfect ghost to add to the portrait gallery of icons in my head (where I found my friends, like Kurt did in “Lithium”). He was safe. He was gone. He couldn’t disappoint me by putting out a Christian rock album or launching his own line of shoes or just, you know, putting out a mediocre record that was like “Nevermind 2.0″ without all the angst. He couldn’t grow up.

And then I saw “Montage of Heck.” I sat in the dark and I watched that Peter Pan of the Afterlife growing up strange and sad and angry and talented. I read his journals and saw his angry scrawl. I heard about how he lost his virginity to the girl everyone teased and then almost lay down on the railroad tracks. I saw him playing with his baby and his wife and his family who have to live with the fact that he’s gone — reminded constantly of his golden youth every day by the radio and the TV and fans in shirts with X’d-out eyes and smiley faces.

Then, it all ended, as Morgen said, like life does. There was no one there to tell me that it was all right. No one to tell me that Kurt would go on to be a hero even in death and lead generations of disaffected youth into the knowledge that they are not alone. Because it wasn’t all right. Cobain didn’t die to save us all. He died because — well, we don’t know why. Because it’s not really our business.

Although Morgen told me later that he never felt like he was trespassing on Kurt’s life — that Cobain kept his journals out in the open and talked for hours with journalists even though he said he hated the press — “Montage of Heck” made me feel like I was was spying. I began to fully experience Kurt Cobain as a person — a real person. And I slowly started taking down the portrait gallery of ghosts in my head.

So, this is a “thank you” letter to director Brett Morgen. This is a “thank you” for being a major bummer. This thank you for bringing me to tears. This is a “thank you” for making me feel like kind of an a–hole. This is a “thank you” for the decision to end your documentary the way you did — at the end. In doing so, you made a movie not about a dead rock star — but about a man.

20 photos that illustrate the awesomeness of the New Orleans Jazz Fest

the first day of the 2015 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival was one that had great music, amazing food, lots of shopping, and unfortunately…some horrible weather. While the rain usually comes every year to New Orleans at this time, this was the year it got really bad…but it didn’t soak out any of the fun or the spirits of the festival-goers.

Lightning strikes and tornado watches actually caused Jazz Fest to stop the music and shut the gates early on Friday night. It was just an hour early and fans hated to miss out on any time, but the rest of the day certainly didn’t disappoint.

Keith Urban sadly had his set cut short, but he still got through 11 songs in 52 minutes of play-time.

While the music paved the way with Wilco, Tedeschi Trucks Band, Hozier, and more; it was still the food and drink that made Jazz Fest so awesome on day one. Crawfish were flowing in full force as po-boys were being carried around the festival and enjoyed to their fullest content.

The music played on and the rain came down, but nothing dampened the spirits of any of the festival-goers.

It’s like you were here: Elton John, The Who, Ed Sheeran, Pitbull highlight Jazz Fest coverage on AXS TV