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1. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

THE THRILL-SEEKERS EXPRESS THE ULTIMATE WOR し 0 TOUR FOR SPORTS FANS RANGES FROM OAHU TO BASE CAMP AT MOUNT EVEREST B Y R 0 B ド [ E 0 E R clock but from the buzzer that always sounds on teams, on arenas, on athletic careers. The best way to see all your treasured athletes and ven- ues is in person, ofcourse, but this quick round-the-world fantasy trip, adapted from The Sp な B たもなた 101 税 g んな E 怩リ Sp な Fa れ S ん 0 See B ビビ C ん R リ 0 by Rob FIeder and Steve Hoffman (HarperC011ins, May), offers, in pictures and a few words, a tempting glimpse and a goad t0 action. There's still time left on your clock' but it's always running. AN ANONYMOUS sports fan once said, "Life iS not mea- sured by the number 0f breaths we take but by the places and moments that take our breath away. " OK, I don't know ifthe guy who said that was a sports fan ()r even a guy), but I do know that for those ofus who love sports, the thrill of seemg an epic event or storied arena can be close tO the meaning 0f li . We fans are thrill-seekers. We are also memory collectors—memory hoarders, tO be more precise, and as we check items 0 代 our bucket lists, those checks become prized mementos. And our personal sports bucket list becomes an lmpatiently tapping toe: Time's a-wastin. The long goodbyes 0fDerek Jeter and K0be Bryant over the past few years, and the final bell for Muhammad Ali and Gordie Howe, remind every fan that the 01d saw, wait till next year, is not always the best advice. The urgency Ofa sports bucket list comes not just from our own ticking G 〇 LDEN STATE WARRIORS ORACLE ARENA, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA HOW DO you turn a perennial sad-sack franchise intO the greatest shOW in hoops, a team that fills everyvenue it plays, at home and on the road? Simple: You buy the G01den State Warriors for $ 450 million, as the current owners did in 2010 , then rebuild your roster based on the conviction that the 3-point sh0t is a weapon that's been grossly underused in the NBA. ln successive drafts, you scoop up Stephen Curry (shown here), Klay Thompson and Draymond Green tO exploit the advantage s and minimize the vulne rabilitie s of long-range firepower. Add a few more complementary pieces and there you have it: a team that won a champi- onship in 2015 , defended it with an unprecedented 73-win season, then added Kevin Durant, one 0f the world's top five players, tO the mix this season. Easy game, right? 当ロ・ 000 に目朝・をを = N E W S W E E K 34 M A Y 2 6 , 2 017

2. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

P A IUIÄ I N G S H () 'llona With Her Dau hter, Michelle, 4 , Moscow' Lauren reenfield, 2012 0 that slogan—"l'm a luxury —on a knitwear one -0 代 , commlSSioned frOI れ the designer Andrey Artyomov. ls that a joke? Or is it as serious as her daughter, unsmiling on her pristine toy horse? D ocume ntary photographe rs , ” write s Greenfield, in an online essay on her craft, tended tO shoot'down, gravitating toward the easler access afforded by the street, as well as toward the pressing social issues Ofthe third world. ” She points her camera the other way. Her subjects are the genuinely wealthy—the billionaire couple building a 90,ooo-square- fOOt palace in Florida, the Toronto socialite wh0 models herselfon Truly Scrumptious, the candy heiress in C んり C んり Ba Ba . But she has also observed how symbols ofwealth— the boob job, the stretch limo, the Versace bag—have floated free from the wealthy themselves. One Ofher subJects is Christina, a 21-year-01d woman on the way t0 her wedding in a glass coach pulled by six miniature white ponies. Christina iS not a princess. She iS a pharmacy technician wh0 works for Wal-Mart. The rich are always with us. But Greenfield has found something new tO say about them. lnstead ofrickets and phossy Jaw, diseases ofthe age ofindustry, her camera records the symptoms Ofthe age ofconsumption— pneumatized breasts, diet-punished bodies, over-thought hairstyles. DO llona and her daughter want tO be envied? Or rescued? Like those long-dead match girls, they seem t00 far away tO ask. ロ ・ Generation WeaIth": Fahey/Klein GaIlery, LOS Angeles, to June IO. Prints, editions Of 25 , 40 x 60 inches, from $8,000 at FAHEYKLEINGALLERY.COM/ A book of the same name is published by Phaidon ( $ 75 59.95 ) out now: PHAIDON ℃ OM BY AT THE END OF THE 19TH CENTURY, MATTHEW SWEET photographers set up the ir tripods in teneme nts and alleys and made portraits ofthe poor: barefoot kids holding rag-swaddled babies, starved wives rolling C1gars, girls with jaws turned brittle by match-factory phosphorous. Ph0tography transformed their bodies and their homes intO a moral spectacle—one that argued for slum clearance, fortified bread and free school meals. What does Lauren Greenfield's 2012 photograph argue? Here's llona, a Latvian former model, in her frictionlessly clean Moscow h01 e. ForenSICS would find nothing on her GREENFIELD'S marble mezzanine floor. Perhaps everything in her CAMERA RECORDS wardrobe is cyan and blue. THE AGE OF Perhaps she owns skinny pants, sneakers, earrings CONSUMPTION. and sweaters from the rest 0fthe spectrum. And NEWSWEEK 64 ・ "MAY 26 , 2017

3. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

、国当 3 ー 、すド、を・第き一 十 STANDING OFFER: Moon Jae-in, South Korea's new pres- ident, supports economic engage- ment with the North, which could put him in conflict with Trump. 0 Killing Them With Sunshine THE DOVISH NEW LEADER IN SOUTH KOREA COULD COMPLICATE DONALD TRUMP'S PLANS TO ELIMINATE NORTH KOREA'S NUKES reservauons aboutthe missile FOR D ONALD TRUMP, figuring Moon hedged abit. He insisted defense system the U. S. has given he wouldn'treopen the site outawayto haltNorthKorea's unconditionally, and he stressed to Seoul—the so called Terminal nuclearweapons programs HighAltitudeArea Defense, or justgotmore complicated. On that the し S. and South Korea THAAD—his camp has signaled should coordinate their policies May9, South KoreaelectedMoon that ifthe Americans got it up Jae-in, a left-leaninghumanrights before they make anynew deci- and running before the election, lawyer, as its newpresident. sions about Pyongyang ・ the newgovernmentwould leave Trump has been leaning on The U. S. president has toned it ⅲ place. The U. S. did justthat. down some ofhis rhetoric about countries ⅲ the reglonto put Domestic politics will force North Korea. He has said he more economrcpressure on Kim the newpresidentin Seoulto would be "honored ” tO meet JongUn's regrme, amongother tread carefully. Withtensions Kim ifthe conditions existed for things, as awayofgettingthe mcreasingwiththe North,Trump such a summit. And Secretary 0f North to discuss a freeze Ofits hurthimselfin South Koreaby State Rex Tillerson said the U. S. weapons program ・ complaining (again) aboutthe wanted t0 bring Pyongyang tO But Moon wants open dia- THAAD deployment, arguing its senses, notto its knees. logue wlththe North, aswell as thatSouth Koreashould payforit. The softened U. S. rhetoricwill more economrc engagement. His incessant whining about the Bothwere hallmarks oftheleft's likelypleasethe South Korean U. S. -Seoulfree tradeagreement leader, and an earlymeeting "Sunshine policy," which pro - alSO irritates ordinary Koreans. moted a vast industrial park just betweenthetwopresidents Butthe mostpressmgissue should notbe ruled out, omcials across the demilitarized zone for Washington and Seoulis ⅲ Washington say. ln fact, despite that divides the peninsula, where how they'll handle the pudgy some 0fMoon's dovish campargn South Korean manufacturing young leader ⅲ Pyongyang and companies employed North statements, the Trump admin hisgrowingarsenal. Trump and istration does notseemoverly Koreans tO make their goods. fiis teamwantto tighten the South Korea closed the park concerned aboutthe possibility economrc noose—"leamng mtO thatits keyallyin Koreamight ln early 2016 tO protest one Of the Chinese, ⅲ particular, to no longerbe in lockstepwhenit Pyongyang s nuclear tests. But d0 SO, as Tillerson put it—while comes tO the NO h. during the recent presidential 、一 00n campaigned on increasing campargn, Moon said he was ⅲ part ofthe reason no one is panicking: Even though as favor ofreopemngit ・ econom1C engagement. candidate Moon expressed lt can't be both. ロ Yetas the electionwore on, BY BILL POWELL NEWSWEEK 17 MAY26 , 2017

4. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

INTHEIRWORDS The Trump Card BRITISH AUTHOR HOWARD JACOBSON has a deep love for words and wordplay. ln comedic novels such as The M んり Ⅳ 4 ( 1999 ) and the Man Booker prize—winning T んビ Finkler Q リぉ 0 〃 ( 2010 ) , hi S characte rs revel in dialectic JOusts and displays of deadpan irony ・ That's why he believes it was affront tO writers everywhere" that a man with such a limited lexicon and lack of sophistication as Donald Trump should find his way to the White H ous e. But where Jacobson differs from his peers 1S that he is the first maJOr writer tO transform his indignation at Trump s Howard Jacobson takes on a new target there; l'd be thinking, provide the models rise into a fully-fledged novel. "Usually, l'm a slOW They're all at home writing for a rogues' gallery of unscrupulous opportunlsts. writer—l love feeling a ab out Trump. thing grow," the 74-year-01d Jacobson has never That, in fact, they seen himselfas a political novelist says on the phone weren t, or at least have not yet produced the fruits 0f novelist before now, but from his London home. But their labor, is something he says hiS priorities are as Jacobson began writing that continues tO baffe changing as the world ? ワー a biting dystopian Jacobson. "lt shouldn't changes unexpected and s atire about a Trump -like just be left tO comedians, unwelcome ways. I WOke figure who is championed because that's a different up the morning Of Brexit, by a populace every bit type 0f satire," he says. and tO my astonishment as puerile as he is—an Jacobson's literary there was an emptiness unfamiliar sense ofurgency that l'd never felt about inspirations for 2 リツ gripped him. "ljust felt that every any national event or sprang from 18th-century anything t0 d0 with politics S atiric al nove 1 S such as write r in the country would before, ” he says. SamuelJ0hnson's な知ワ 0 工 be on this, and I didn't want Another reason why tO be the last in the queue, and Jonathan swift's says Jacobson. "I would go he rushed t0 finish P ワ G リ〃ⅳ Tra 怩な . His was that he wanted tO get tO the Groucho [a London private members' club that it intO bookstores before story s protagonist, Prince the American people saw Fracassus, is the petulant iS a h01 れ e away from h01 れ e reason and found a way tO for the literary setl , and heir t0 an opulent duchy derail Trump s presidential wh0 spends his there would be no writers bid. Jacobson believes the days watching reality TV fact that Trump triumphed, and fancies himself a modern-day version Ofthe and remams very much in charge 0fthe world's most Roman emperor Nero. He powerful nation, means latches on tO a succeSS1011 that the novel has not ofdodgy mentors who only turned out tO be a lOOk at serve tO comfort hiS 0 、Ⅳ n what ills might beset us in narrow-mindedness. These include his Twitter the future. lnstead, he says, it is dystopia now. coach, Caleb Hopsack, leader ofthe Ordinary —TOBIAS GREYN people's party, whO is W 0 」 ACO お described as being dressed USS like a sto ckbroker 's ide a Of a gentleman farmer who enjoyed a tipple ・ " Hopsack is clearly a thinly veiled version 0f Nigel Farage, the British Trump associate and former leader ofthe right-wing し K. lndependence Party; part ofthe fun 0f Jacobson's novel iS divining which real-life politicians 十 PO ON PEN. 」 acobson says Trump's political elevation iS affront to writers everywhere. ' By Howard 」 acobson Random House, out now, $ 23 は 13 ) N E W 5 W E E K 61 M AY 2 6 , 2 017

5. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

MOVING TARGETS: There iS vaccine fo 「 the hepatitis C virus, which mutates extremely fast in the body. 第第が飜 Most of the 257 million people living with the disease are adults whO became infected before the vaccme was available. Nearly halfofthe HBV population lives in a region 0fthe world that the WHO calls "western pacific, ” which includes Australia and China. Sixty million people across Africa are infected with the virus. Treatment rates for HBV are currently t00 IOW tO eradicate the disease. part ofthe problem is that most people with the disease don't know they have it. Only 22 million people infected with the virus—9 percent 0f the HBV popula- tion—have received a medical diagnosis. With- out the diagnosis, there's no treatment. And without treatment, there's no stopping the con- tinued spread Of the disease. Access tO care IS alSO problematic. Hepatitis B can be controlled with tenofovir, a drug also used tO treat HIV. But in 2015 , only 8 percent ofpeople diagnosed with HBV were treating their disease. "AUTHORITIES NEED TO BE ENCOURAGED TO MAKE GOOD PUBLIC HEALTH DECISIONS BASED ON EVIDENCE, NOT IDEOLOGY. ” NO vaccme exists for hepatitis C. The disease is caused by a virus that mutates extremely fast. lmmunizing bOdies against a future infection has so far proved impossible because the part 0f the viral genome that guides replication inside a new host is a constantly moving target. But HCV is now curable. Decades ofresearch finally led t0 NEWSWEEK 51 MAY26 , 2017

6. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

0 0 3 0 PLAYING BERNIE MADOFF in HBO's The Ⅳ 4 廱お , RObert De Niro occuples a space at the center Ofthe movle much like the one hiS character occupies at the center ofhis family's life. De Niro's Madoffis a glum, forbidding presence whO demands respect and b anishe s all light and j oy. He is impossible tO avoid, but no one WhO comes intO contact with him expe cts any real pleasure. De Niro doesn't glve a Financial Crash bad performance, exactly. But there's no Jtuce tO his 7 方 e はのて / leaves the acting—not even a hint Of ple asure in portraymg one viewer feeling bankrupt criminals as the dead- hearted SWine he iS. De Niro is not entirely he's a sociopath. But for the piece ofwork, but the most With so little to draw at 信ⅲ t. Neither the script, 仕 0n1 the movie's villain, it can claim is a bloodless preceding tWO and a quarter adapted from the b00k 0f competence, lacking the hours, sociopathy is all The Ⅳに 4 廱 might the same title byjournalist ん 2 that animated we ve seen ofhim, as he lies have been stronger had Diana Henriques, nor Barry Levinson S movies back to his clients to draw them it focused more closely L evinson's dire ction getS when he was working with deeper int0 his pyramid on three ofthe people very far into Mad0ff. Maybe a com1C sensibility. lt needs scheme When he needs their whose lives he ruined—his because there's just not that something like the back- cash t0 prop it up.When his loyal wife, Ruth (MicheIIe far to go ・ and-forth of the guys from S1ster-in-law wants tO lnve St Pfeiffer), and his sons, Levinson's Diner ( 1982 ) , who The film begins with her life savmgs, he doesn't Mark (Alessandro Nivola), the revelation ofMadoff's would have taken one 100k he sitate. There 's no rule whO committed smcide at Mad0ffand proclaimed, scam—a multibillion- dollar that says the vile must have ln 2010 , and Andrew What a 42 r. Ponzi scheme that became depth, but the film suffers (Nathan Darrow), who ln the final scene, during for Madoff's apparent lack died ofcancer in 2014. the biggest financial fraud in American history—and an interview with T んどⅣル Thanks largely to solid ofit—there is nothing in the then skips b ackward and 物 Times, M adoff bristle s screenplay or in De NirO'S acting, the scenes involving Madoff's family are the forward in time tO show how that another newsp aper h a s performance tO suggest film's most affectlng. it began and how Madoff's compared him t0 serial killer we should want tO le arn world came down after he Ted Bundy and demands to 1 れ ore about the man WhO As Mark, Nivola is was caught. lt's not a terrible especially fine, capturing know ifthe reporter thinks destroyed SO many lives. ・ⅢⅱⅲⅢ川ⅲⅢⅢⅢⅢⅢに 0 0 0 4 THE SCREENING ROOM N EW S W E E K 62 M AY 2 6 , 2 0 1 7

7. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION their mandate isfromthe Sultan himselfand they are keentostriveforthe bestfortheircountry. SO confidentarethe highestechelonsofpower in 0man of a boom that it has been decided t0 developthree additionalregional airports- S0har, Duqm, and Ras AI Hadd - tO accommodate the expected growth. The expansion Of S0har, once completed, is expected tO make it the next big international airportinthe reglOn. Omran is not without grounds for confidence. A number oflntegrated Tourism Complex (ITC) projects are currently in development which testify t0 the industry's growth: Madinat Allrfan is one Oftheir major pr0Jects, and they are in the process Of meeting With investors ー 70 investors have been met with in the last four months. The project iS an ambitious move tO establish a new urban centre within When asked about future clients or partners he would like t0 attract, his message is predominantly green: "Sewage disposalis a personal thing thatl Muscat, creating, according tO omran, "a magnetfor business, a centre fO 「 tourism, and a greatplaceto live andwork. " Eng. SaifAl Hinai, acting- wanttO focus on. Renewable energy and recycling is importantto me.lfyou CEO of 0mran, explainsthe origins ofthe idea: "The idea stemsfrom the think aboutthe waste that goes intO one spot, itforms a chemical disaster.l factthat we really need t0 develop our urban lifestyle. We think there's believe it's important tO treat this. People burn trash, 0 「 bury it, 0 「 send it in barges tO be thrown tO the sea.l wanttO provide a solution tO this. enough roomforimprovementin oururban planning and withthe support Of government and key stakeholders, we are embracing international Asked why investors should come t0 Oman, he is tO the point: "We standards tO develop this project. welcome newideaswith open arms. Another Ofthe largest projectsthat Omran are involved in isthe Mina ltisthisattitudewhichhascharacterisedtheSultanateinrecentdecades Sultan Qaboos Waterfront. The US $ 1.3 billion plan, instigated by the asithasattemptedtoforgeapathnotentirelydefinedbyoil. OmanhasIedthe Sultan himself,isto build atourism porttoactasatourism hubforthe city region in attempts tO diversify, and now StandS as one Of itS most promising 0f Muscat. ltis scheduled for completion in 2020. economies. Readyto invest and welcoming tO investment,the Sultanate is ticking all the boxes that make economic development inevitable. These projects are inkeeping with Tanfeedh,the country's programme fO 「 enhancing economic diversification. The initiative, WhiCh iS the latest in a series Of five-year development plans, targets the sectors Of manufacturing,tourism,transportand logistics,mining,andfisheries,and is intended to boost their contribution to the Sultanate's GDP. Tanfeedh will see the government promote self-funded projects tO spur economIC growth, with greater efforts made tO ease the process Of dOing business and making private investments. More public-private partnerships, such as we have seen through Omran with Madinat Allrfan, will surely also be welcomed as the country lOOks tO further develop its infrastructure, particularlyintransportand logistics. Hemant Murk0th, CEO Of Business Gateway lnternationa し sees 0ther opportunities for investment and development: "ICT infrastructure in 0man still has a long way tO go. We have not reached that particula 「 level, butl see a lOt Of perspective and opportunities fO 「 the nextthree tO fouryears. " lnthe manufacturing Of 川 Murkothtells us, and in Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) Oman "has a IOttO catch 叩 on. lnvesting in ICT, as Murkoth suggests,will be essentialtothe Sultanate's development, and will be done as an extension tO the infrastructure investment it has SO readily given. There will surely be 「 00m fO 「 private- public partnerships 0f the like being seen in 0ther industries t0day. Murkoth emphasises, as dO SO many others, the need tO diversify away from Oil and gas,butalso praisesthe government'sapproach: "Nowthere is a realitythatdiversifications are needed. Butl am pleasantlysurprised that0man has notpressedthe panic buttonyet, although othercountries inthe GCC [the GuIf Co 叩 eration Councillregion have. They are keeping a cool head. An innovator in the story Of 0mani development has been Hayut lnternational, which began as a telecommunications company and has sinceevolvedintonewfieldsvaryingfrommilitaryequipmenttorenewable ー energy Raad AlFarsi Of Hayut explains the company's modus 叩 erandi as follows: "We just 100k atwhat is outdated,what needsto be changed, and offerthe best solution around that. Sometimes we have to tell clients why theyneed a certain solution. Farsi is keen tO discuss Hayut'S newest innovations; he tells us Of the SmartFIower,which is a solarpanel base, and ofa headsetwith camera, microphone, and earpiece tO use in the field tO consultwith specialists. lts non-oil exports reached US$8 billion in 2015 , 叩 f 「 om US $ 680 million in 2002 , withlocally-produced goods today being exported t0 140 countries worldwide. DEVELO 円 NG NEW HORIZONS FOR OMAN At OMRAN we develop strategic tourism projects which will bring substanfial benefits tO the national economy and ー OC communities. We act as a partner Of first chOice for potentialinvestors whO wish tO invest in ou 「 nation's tourism boom and a 0 provide the best practice management tO gover- ment-owned hospitality assets. 0n1 「 an. 0n1 Ⅷを。 3 MASTERDEVELOPER collaboration with ー VO にを 5 OF LE △ 0 を R 第 JournalistWilliam E Morris produced this 「 eport.

8. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

RADAR The Art of Fashion TWO NEW EXH 旧 ITIONS fairly recent. Artists were originally artisans, invite LIS tO ponder once craftspeople whO dealt more the reiationship ⅲ images-lt was 0 y in between fashion and the Renaissance that the art. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art ⅲ New artist-celebrity was bO 「ル Context plays a crucial York, the work Of Japanese 「 0 厄 - Try this exercise- designer Rei Kawakubo is lmagine a beautiful dress, on show 第 while London's then decide whether ⅲ Victoria and Albert the following situations it Museum highlights that Of is orisn't art: hanging ⅲ Spanish couturier someone's cupboard; on a Crist6baI BaIenciaga. catwalk; behind glass in a The "AIexander McQueen: Savage Beauty" museum; in a magazme; ーれ a painting by J0hn Singer exhibition was a hit at Sargent; ⅲ a painting by both venues in 2011 and an amateurø Hard, isn't it? 2015 , and the museums The black-and-white will be hoping fO 「 more Of certainty Of a world ⅲ the same. SignificantIy, which Yves Saint Laurent all these designers have proclaimed himseif "a made clothing that failed painter" is gone.lf aspires tO something we these two exhibitions turn already recognize as art: out to be blockbusters McQueen's oeuvre has a t00 , it can only be a theatricality that quotes matter Of 第 e until great from the stage; the work Of painters lament that they Balenciaga and Kawakub0 has strong sculpturai and are failed couturiers. —REBECCA Ⅳ胚リ S ロ abstract qualities. Some critics feel queasy about the conflation of Kawakubo, Met, NewYork, tO fashion and art. Look at Sept. 4 , METMUSEUM.ORG/ the big picturev though, Balenciaga, V&A, London, and the distinction is May 27 to Feb. 18 : VAM. AC.UK Madoff's most wounded VICtims. ln one scene, addressing a writing class, Andrew acknowledges that his family's suffering can't begin tO compare tO that Of the people whose fortunes Mad0ffwiped out. But the film is at its best when it explores what it means for the family to discover that the privileged life they've led has been at the horrific— and in some cases fatal— expense ofothers. The movie S account, though fictionaliz e d, take s the view that the family members were telling the truth ab out the ir ignorance. (The facts ofthe story contribute tO that sense as well: Madoff's sons, after all, were the ones tO turn him in. ) The feds' certainty about the Madoffbrothers' involvement findS an ugly mirror in the public's rush t0 j udge the m. And De Niro plays Mad0ff as such a controlling megalomamac, you can see why the family would do anything not t0 rile him. The depressing thing about The Ⅳ 4 廱お is that it 's such a heavy-spirite d prestige project, it does nothing tO rile us eithe r. —CHARLES TAYLOR ロ 気いいⅱ朝い RAGING DULL: De Niro's Madoff is a glum, forbidding presence in The Wizard of Lies. the torment Ofan essentially decent guy whO obsesses over his family's treatment in the press, which barely considers that they might b e telling the truth ab out knowing nothing ofthe scheme. While some actors might seize the role as an opportunity t0 fall apart theatrically, NiV01a plays Mark's destruction as a quiet implosion. Pfeiffer, wh0 employs a broad New York Jewish accent and looks to have taken pounds offher already slim frame for the role, has that tense, stringy 100k that, in rich New York 、 V01 en , iS Often mistaken for beauty. lt's an almost unwntten role, but She putS S01 れ e meat on an unde rnourishe d p art. For all that the secondary actors give their characters, The Wizard 廱ぉ is careful not t0 portray the family as CHIC, UNIQUE: Kawakubo's designs have strong sculptu ー qualities. Worldwide releases continue to May 2 & HBO.COM

9. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

BeatIes, the world's best-known Beatles tribute most important rock & roll album ever made, an unsurpassed adventure in concept, sound, song- band, will play S . 2 印 2 in 血Ⅱ , backed by the writmg, cover art and studi0 technology by the Liverp001 Philharmonic Orchestra. They may be greatest rock & roll group ofall time. Bootlegs, but they are used to playmg the pp George Harrison once paid tribute tO a band songs live, something the real Beatles never did. he loved by saymg, NO Shadows, no Beatles. " The album itself will reappear on May 26 in When Sgt. P 2 was complete, one 0f the first several guises. The Beatles' company, AppIe people invited t0 Abbey Road Studi0S t0 hear it Corps, calls them "a suite 0f lavishly presented was pete Townshend ofthe Who, who went on tO write the world's first rock opera. NO P 印 2 , no 肪襯 ~ ). Among the visitors during the re cording THE NEWSGT. were some earnest young wannabes WhO called MAY BE MOT ハ IATED BY themselves Pink Floyd. No pp no Da S ビ M 側ル When Bowie finally made the grade PERFECTIONISM, NOT MONEY. in 1972 , lt was by slipping int0 an alter ego, as the Beatles had in 1967. No P 2 no み ) , S 地リ立 . When Freddie Mercury was an art student in London in 1968 and 1969 , his friend Chris smith said they used to "write little bits of songs which Sgt. PepperAnniversary Edition packages, giving we linked together, like 'A Day in the Life. '" No them all the allure ofa time-share in Tampa. One 2 印 2 no "B0hemian Rhapsody. package appears tO consist entirely Of statistics. The golden jubilee will unfold as ifthe sergeant lt runs tO six discs, rounds up 33 outtakes, con- were a monarch. Liverpool, where all the Beatles tains a 144-page b00k and has a recommended grew up, is staging an arts festival, Sgt. 2 2 4 ー price 0f 毛 140 ( $ 180 ). The most palatable ver- ) 0 , featuring 13 new pieces (one for each track) sion may be the plainest—a single-disc Sgt. ~ - lll vanous art forms, from names as big as Amer- 2 , CO sting 毛 10 in British sup e rmarkets (record ican choreographer Mark Morris and Turner stores having largely died out). lt's a fresh mix by Pnze-wmning British artistJeremy Deller. ln cin- Sam Okell, a young engineer, and GiIes Martin, emas, there will be a feature-length documen- George S son and successor as the pair Of hired tary, なⅣ F ッ 4 Ago d , which, unlike hands the surviving Beatles trust. last year's E ん一 Da. ツ 4 Ⅳた , is unoffcial, so it Emerick, still making records at 70 , IS no lon- may be Ha 襯 I without the soliloquies. At Lon- ger a member 0f the court, which allows him t0 don's Royal Albert Hall and on tour, the Bootleg speak his mind. "AII that reissue stuff" he says, 冊 BEATIÆS ・・ 0 An ・物 bit 地・′。朝宿ー ん第ル ( 0 物を一 0

10. Newsweek 2017年5月26日号

CHEYENNE FRONT 旧 R DAYS CHEYENNE, WYOMING BIG HATS and bigger cattle are the hallmarks 0f this extravaganza: 10 days 0f high-stakes outdoor professional rodeo, along with what you might call a giant Western exposition, hoedown and pig-out ・ The whole thing started as an old-fash- ioned roundup—sort 0f a cowboy J0b fair— way back in 1897 , when Cheyenne was a maJOr crossroads Ofthe booming cattle busi- ness. Cowboys came tO town tO strut their stuff and pick up work busting broncos and roping steers. Before long, all that morphed intO Frontier Days, and when they refer tO it as "the Daddy 0f 'Em AII," it's a tip ofthe 10-gallon hat t0 not just longevity (the festi- val is pushing 120 , after all) but also the stat- ure Ofthe rodeo competition. These days, the boom you hear at Frontier Days iS not economic but SOIIIC, and it comes from the し S. Air Force Thunderbirds doing their scheduled flyovers. Days start with free pancake breakfasts and proceed from there tO all manner Of diversion, frOI れ antique car parades t0 Wild West fashion and art shows. And what's become of the old roundup is a big daily dose ofrodeo—saddle and bareback bronc riding, steer wrestling, bull riding and tie-down roping, plus cowgirls and cowboys slaloming through barrels on fast horses. Later, the Cheyenne Frontier Days Arena seats 19 , 000 for country-and-western head- liners at the big evenlng concerts, and no doubt there's plenty ofaction worth seeing at those music shows. But for our money, buying a ticket t0 watch a cowboy dive 0 代 a galloping horse tO tackle a runaway steer iS an even bet- ter deal than the free pancakes. ロ Copyright @ 2017 by LOW Gear & Minuslnc. and Apartment 8H 旧 c. Published by Harper Design, an imprint Of HarperCollins Publishers. 当なを = 、を