0C000000 rvi 0C00t00 引 - みる会図書館


検索対象: TIME 2017年4月3日号
50件見つかりました。

1. TIME 2017年4月3日号

第第い TIME! 、ロ ' ロ 0 A home ⅲ spanish Trails senior Village, ⅲ zep hyrhills, F 厄 . , 0 れれ . 31 Time Off What tO watch, read' see and dO 4 田 ActorBeckyG's biggestrole 4 幻 TV dramas : photograph Fox's ShOts Fired' Christopher Hulu's 設@日0 お Morris—VIIfor TIME 4 QuickTalkwith Julie Andrews ー Movies: Jake Gyllenhaal ⅲも ; woody Harrelson ⅲ WiIson 4 引 A new novelby Hannah Tinti 4 引 8 Questions for PBS host Bruce Feiler The Features The View ldeas, opin innovations ユ引 Olympian lbtihaj Muhammad's open letter tO the President ユ 5 ー TheU. S. women's hockey team s fight for fairer pay ユ引 lnside theworld ofelite sommeliers ユ羽 The thorny history 0f cherry blossoms ユ 8 巨 00 super healthy and filling foods 3 ー conversation 4 ぽ or the Record The Brief News ″ om the し S. and around the Ⅳ 0 月 d 引 The airline electronicsban 8 llan Bremmer on hOW a stalemate is exacerbating Ukraine relations Camille paglia on free thought and free speech ユ幻 RIP guitar icon ChuckBerry, newsmanJimmy Breslin and poet DerekWalcott 12 ー German Chance110rAngela Merkel meets First Daughter lvanka Trump TlMEAsia published 引 ME ia ( HO Kor 回 L 加 . 引 MEpub 00i td ~ 0 issues• E h 00 ~ ⅳ 00f52 i 00 引 0 00 00000 ub ⅱ 0. 引 MEm 引 pub h 0 0 0 0 issues 02017 石 00 ia (Hong 03 Lim . 則 00 ~ . Repr 0 面 00 i00 加に 00i0 曲 0 0 ⅱせ 00 rmi i prohibited. 引 MEa 面物 0 Red B00 0 0 印 000 Ot ted 新 00 t0d0000k 00g び 0ti00 inthe し S. and i0t2080 ⅵ 0 、 w わ 000 引 MEma 幻冊 c ⅳ cu tes. MembecAudit Buræu of Ci000 i00 = 50 一 = げせ圄ⅲ ~ 0 に代物 at " " 0 云 ~ 00g ー 0u0 , " h " 000 曲 " 面ⅱ ga 00 " " 0 " 0 ⅳ 00 00000t d00 0 曲 in 0 00. C TOM 駅 s に EAND 旧第 0 . 24 / 7 、 , 加ー 000 ー 0 , 回 000 曲ー、わ / / ・・ " 面ー 0 0 , 0 / " 0 . php. You " 0 0 0 " 訓 000 C " 0 00 に 00 C00000t 0040 ″ 30 , - れ 00 00 旧 852 ) 312 & 56 0 te Time 0 ( Ho 03 L 部 , 3 〃 0 対 ~ ー , 、 0 0 ~ , 979 R d , 50 叮 B 可 , HO コ 000 ー 0 , 新 0 00000 ・ 20 030- 始 .00 , 00012066 & 236 00 Dia り 002 与 1 ・ 27FA 始 gO'Minato-ku,T1 01056227. 0i0f000ti0000d 0t00 , HO 0a0 、・ ( 800 ) 3 、 2 & 5169.00 ⅵに面ーー / ~ 0 航 . = 旧 f0000 、 i00 訓 ab に 0 、せ 00. ・ ' 物塢 - け 00. To 00q00000000 00 0 、、ⅵ忙 0000P 面 0. -. M = we 00k0 08 of 000 ⅲ、 ~ 訓 ab 厄 0 00 ~ 00000 " 0 000. 恥 000f0000 、 " ~ ~ 面 0W00 ~ 0 、 , 00 ー 0000 ~ 0C000000 rvi 0C00t00 引 MEA 引 0 Ho 00d 0 、 inSi 0800 面 Hong ng. Si 0800M0 ( p ) NO. 077 / / 2015. Ma は ia KKDN 0 瞰 00 S6 6 / 0 ・ / 、 0000 ・ . 2 TIME April 3 , 2017 The state Of Truthiness How fact-challenged president DonaIdTrump delivers deliberate and strategic lies tO control the national debate ByMichaeI Scherer 20 C ountering Nor 亡 Korea As KimJongUn races t0 build a nuclear-missile arsenal' TIME asked top intelligence and diplomatic experts what the U. S. and Chinacan dO t0 stOP him 28 Trailblazers seniors are findingthat mobile- home parks make splendid retirement ByKarI 巧 c た 34 ロ

2. TIME 2017年4月3日号

MOVIES Woody HarreIson turns a scowl upside down in W SO れ GRAPHIC NOVELIST DANIEL CLOWES SPECIALIZES IN A KIND ofcockeyed pessimism, a somber-funny worldview that acknowledges how crummy and stupid people can be, only t0 swing around t0 a kind ofgrudging humanism. That's the principle at work ⅲⅣ 0 れ , directed by Craig J0hnson (The SkeIeton Twins) and adapted by Clowes from his 2010 novel. Woody Harrelson plays the title character, a loner who shares his cluttered apartment with just one Other creature, a wi Ⅱ丘 11 fox terrier named Pepper. Whenever Wilson opens his mouth, the wrong thing tumbles out—and no one wants tO hear it. But ifWilson is a royal pain, he's also piercingly lonely. When he reestablishes contact with his ex-wife Pippi (Laura Dern), a onetime drug addict who's struggling t0 straighten out, he learns that he has a daughter, Claire (lsabella Amara), now a teenager. Pippi gave her up for adoption as an infant. Dazzled by ・ lt's something this newfound fatherhood, WiIson you hope for in sets out tO connect with Claire. But a character, that because this is Clowesland, almost you can just nothing goes right ・ throw him intO a W 0 れ is often wryly funny, situation and he though it t00 Often gives in tO glibness. (The marvelous character surpnses you. ' actor Margo Martindale appears DANIEL CLOWES, in the ⅲ a small role, but the scene, built New 洳「 ke ら on writing the around her character's 100ks, only Ⅳ〃 son screenplay scores points 0ff her. ) ln the end' it's hard not t0 feel for Wilson as Harrelson plays him. Heavy horn-rimmed glasses frame his perpetual scowl 0f consternation; he's like bewildered thundercloud. But once in a while, when something goes right, he cracks a nutty gap- toothed smile and you see through t0 his soul. Hell may be other people, but they're all we've got ・ Director Malick shapes Mara, Fassbender 0 〃 d Gosling into 0 equilateraltriangle ofdesire MOVIES Tiny dancers abound in SO れ 9 tO SO れ 9 IN CASTING ROMANTIC HEROINES, DIRECTOR Terrence Malick favors slender wraiths who are easily picked up and twirled around by their moony-eyed beaux. If this is your idea of romantic bliss, don't miss Song t0 Song, ⅲ which the wrenlike—and exceedingly twirlable— Rooney Mara plays Faye, an aspiring songwriter who's torn between two lovers and feeling like a fool. Michael Fassbender's Cook is a rich Austin music-biz playboy who might help her with her so-called career. (NOt that we ever see her working. Once or twice she straps on a guitar, though she clearly has no idea how t0 play the thing—it dangles there like Flavor Flav's clock. ) But Faye's real love is goofball swain BV (Ryan Gosling), a moderately successful singer- songwriter wh0 happens t0 be a close friend of Cook's. Loving both of them is breaking all the rules, though it's easy t0 see why they're entranced by her. She's winsome, drifty, characteristically Malickian. C ate Blanchett, tall C001 and self-possessed, ShOWS up for a scene or two, but apparently she's t00 hard t0 li 化 Song tO Song features every stylistic trick in the MaIick playbook: skies dotted with lustrous clouds , characters murmuring their deepe st thoughts in voice-over ()I forget what I am. Whose I am. ” ), birds and butterflies flitting around like silent, restless witnesses. Song to SO れ g is slightly less pretentious than Malick's last 61m , the 2015 sigh ofennui Knight 0fCups, though it features just as many miniature actresses. MaliCk alumnu Natalie Portman shows up here tOO, as a waitre ss turned trophy wife. She's so petite and darling, youjust want t0 scoop her up. And sure enough, someone does. —S. Z. Harrelson iS “ bumbler with heal ・ [ in Wilson 当 45

3. TIME 2017年4月3日号

For the Record 'I HAVE C 凵 ENT. IT'S THE 'DO you want LAW.' tO have a handshake?' 'FORTY OR S0 LIVE 3 / 29 / 17 ・ / TO 〇 KA VIEWERS, TRAG/C, Date when Britain expects tO begin the “ B 肥 x ” H 〇 RR 旧 C AND N0 ONE 00e55 Of formally separating from the European Union EXPER/ENCE THOUGHT ▽ AND D/D T0 CALL N 〇万た E ア圧 AUTHORITIES.' D/M/N/SH ME. ' ANTHONYGUGLIELMI, Chicago KIM KARDASHIAN WEST, reality star, talking police spokesman, describing for the first time about the Oct. 3 robbery the March 18 sexual assault of in her Paris hotelroom, during a 15-year-old girl by as many as which she said she feared for her life as six males that was broadcast on the assailants stOIe about $ 10 million in Facebook Live; as of March 21 , jewelry; in mid- 」 anuary, 10 people were investigations were ongoing charged for the crimes $ 26 , 500 Amount in flnes a man was sentenced tO pay on March 17 , having pleaded guilty tO tying more than 100 helium balloons tO a lawn chair JuIy 2015 , which floated about 2.5 miles 0 e 「 CaIgary, Canada, tO the path Of commercial aircraft NEIL GORSUCH, Supreme Court 」 ustice nominee, promising tO keep politics and Other outside influences from entering intO his judgments, during a March 21 confirmation hearing ANGELA MERKEL, German ChanceIIor, speaking tO President Trump during a March 17 phOtO op for the pair's first meeting, tO which Trump did not respond in whatlooked like a public breach Of protocol; the White House said the President did not hear her T. rex The dinosaur iS one of MonopoIy's three newtokens G000 WEEK 日 AD WEEK Rex T. Secretary Of State Tillerson to the lone reporterlet on hiS plane in ASia, 当 didn'twant thisjob. " $ 170 million Amount that the film Beautyand the Beast grossed du ring its opening weekend, setting a new bOX- 0 市 ce 肥 CO for top domestic opening Of all time for a film rated PG ILLUSTRATIONS BY BROWN 8 一 RD DESIGN FOR TIME 7 have no わ brma ⅱ on that supports those tweets. ' 」 AMES COMEY, FBI Director, refuting President DonaId Trump's tweeted claims that President Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower SOURCES: ASSOCIATED PRESS; CBC; HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: INDEPENDENT 」 OURNAL REVIEW; NEW YORK TIMES

4. TIME 2017年4月3日号

Time Off Reviews case give rise tO unearned certitude. various characters, 仕 01 Ⅱ the State'S conservatlve governor (Helen Hunt) to a preacher fluent in the language ofthe Black Lives Matter movement (Aisha Hinds), operate as though, by delivering their takes at lncreasing volume, they can turn a young man S death intO a chance tO further their careers. lt's a cynical show, but this cynicism feels earned. Sh0ts Fired, created by film director Gina Prince-Bythewood ( B 0 れ d the Lights) and her husband Reggie Rock Bythewood, shares with Empire (which airs after (t) a bold and audacious concept and a worn-down weariness that lets a bit of air out ofthe show's spectacle. For all the inherent drama 0fits premise and for all its addiction tO plOt twists, ShOts Fired derives its power from its characters. Take the frustration Lathan barely allows herselfto acknowledge when dealing with a local white offcer (Stephen Moyer). Her jaw sets, her eyes narrow. Hers isn't a big performance—save moments dealing with 'The truth is her turbulent family you wouldn't life —but it c arrie s loud and clear the be here if I shot psychic toll ofhaving a black kid. No t0 grope for the truth one would. ' ⅲ the midst ofso many TRISTAN WILDS, playing people WhO are SO sure a black police officer they already know it. under investigation fO 「 l'm naturally shooting a white college student, on Shots Fired curious hOW the case will resolve itself, but Shots Fired is an achievement beyond its timely plot. Each episode finds a new avenue of inquiry, one that exposes another segment Of SOCiety. lt's rare tO see such a cross-section Of life on TV but Shots Fired, with empathy, grit and outrage, pulls it 0 圧 That the program airs on a network that made itS name early on With one-dimensional crime shows Cops and America's Most Wanted is a testament tO hOW ambitious even broadcast television has become. Sh0ts Fired isn't the only show trying to do something similar. l'd include AB C's American Crime, whose majestic third season is taking on migrant labor, as well as last year's The 2e0 が e v. 0.1 Simpson on FX. AII use short runs (Shots Fired is slated for 10 installments) to take big and ambitious swings. And all seem tO be less interested in "solving ” a story—bringing about a satisfying ending—than in diagnosing, in minute and particular detail, the American condition at this moment. lt didn't seem we needed a show about police violence, but with Sh0ts Fired we may have ended up with the definitive one. SHOTS FIRED airs on Fox on Wednesdays at 8 p. m. E.T. 42 TIME April 3 , 2017 QUICK TALK Julie Andrews The actoris bringing her ma れア talents to 0 new Netflixprogramfor children, JuIie's Greenroom. With cast 可天 m e SO puppets 0 れ d 0 roster ofcelebrityguests, 加 aims tO teach kids the virtues 可 the arts. This is a moment ⅲ the U. S. when funding for arts education is ⅲ 0 収 bt. Why does arts education matter? The arts are the first thing that suffer these days, and yet they are truly the most vital thing I can imagine to make our lives better, tO make a bridge between communities and countries and tO be able tO connect without any animosity. What 0 yo hope parents will get 0 t ofthe series? One ofthe things we hope is that parents or grandparents will be interested enough tO come and watch the program with their children. When you read something like Winnie-the-Pooh as an adult, there's a whole other level ofsophisticated humor. That's what l'm hoping our show has. I 'm hoping that the whole family will at some point want to sit down and share the experience with their children. There are new Jim Henson PUPpetS ⅲ this show, but 臧 0 YO 収 have a favorite classic Muppet character? When I worked occasionally with the Muppets, I loved the mad drummer puppet, AnimaI, and Oscar the Grouch too. But ofcourse Kermit. Kermit and I worked together many times, and 、 Miss Piggy, needless to say. I was watching a 1984 interview ⅲ : which yo 設 said yo exercised every day. DO YO 収 still? lfl said, "I wish,' would you understand? Everyone knows r ⅲ Maria's favorite things—raindrops on roses, etc. What are a few ofJulie Andrews' favorite things? My favorite things re- ally are the quiet moments with family, everything from simply pruning my roses t0 playing with my dogs. —SARAH BEGLEY ON MY RADAR THE CROWN "l'm amazedat れ 0 山 they managed tofilm 0t0 れ make as keen and clearas e リ do. れ as been such 0j0 リエ 0 ′ me. ” ANDREWS: DON ARNOLD; 工 ARLOTS: LIAM DANIEL—工 ULU

5. TIME 2017年4月3日号

TheView BOOK IN BRIEF Forks, N. D. "Women shouldn't have to choose between their passion and having a family; ” she says. "They should be able to do both. ” Across all fields, median earnings for full-time female workers ⅲ the U. S. are 80 % ofwhat men make—and sports stars are no exception. Last year five members Ofthe U. S. women s soccer team, the defending World Cup champions, filed a wage- discrimination suit against the sport's national governing body, arguing that the players receive about a quarter Ofthe compensation their male counterparts make despite being more successful on the field and a draw on TV.. such fights have been waged by tennis stars for decades. After Billie Jean King threatened t0 sit out the 1973 U. S. Open, the men's and women's winner for the first time each tOOk home the same $ 25 , 000 bonus.Wimbledon became the last 0f the sport's four Grand Slams to offer equal prize money ⅲ 2007 , after pointed lobbying 仕 om Venus Williams. "How did we get equal prize money? ” says Stacey Allaster, former president and CEO ofthe Women's Tennis Association. "Ultimately it's the athletes' VOice, the athletes' power. ” Even SO, some lower- level tournaments continue tO Offer more money tO the men's draw,. The pay gap for tennis stars may not be the most urgent wage divide in the nation, but by using their perch t0 fight for a larger principle, female athletes have the potential to shift the national debate. "These athletes are role models,: ” says B0bbi Thomason, a senior fellow at the Wharton SchOOl of the University of Pennsylvania. "They pave the way for women in the workplace to fight for what's fair. ” The women on the U. S. hockey team aren't demanding the seven-figure contracts Of their counterparts on the men's team, wh0 play profes- sionally ⅲ the National Hockey League. They simplywant a fairer deal from USA Hockey, one that recognizes the equal work they put intO their jobs and the results on the ice: back-to-back silver medals and a consistent rank as one Ofthe world's top teams. The players alSO want equal investment in girls' hockey programs and more marketing and promotion tO grow the women's game. With the boycott threat as leverage, the players made progress during a marathon negotiating session with USA Hockey on March 20. If they do get a fairer deal, they say it will be the result Of not only their specific case but alSO a social climate that has changed significantly since King spoke out at the U. S. Open. "The women that are standing up for thems elve s are making history, says Meghan Duggan, a member 0f the team since 2007 , drawing a line 仕 om her team's fight tO recent protest efforts like the Women's March. "And it's a good time t0 be on this side ofhistory. ロ 16 TIME April 3 , 2017 ln defense of 'bad' wine WINE AFICIONADOS TEND TO SCOFF AT che 叩 , mass-produced bottles—in part because the Wine inside iS Often augmented with various powders, Oils, salts and concentrates tO make it more palatable t0 the average drinker. But ⅲ her new book, Cork Dork, Bianca BOSker points out that such chemical manipulation has always been part of winemaking. FOI' centuries, even the fine st winemakers have added ingredients like egg whites or sulfur dioxide to lmprove a W1ne S flavor and prevent it from spoiling. The fact that mass producers use more manipulation doesn't make their WIne bad, Bosker argues; it raises the bar for all wines. What sommeliers consider "bad ” wine, she explains, is "really wine that [tastes] good, at least tO large numbers ofwine drinkers. ” ln 2015 , for example, Americans spent almost $ 2 billion on just five brands of mass- market wines: Barefoot, Sutter Home, Woodbridge, Franzia and Yellow Tail. —SARAH BEGLEY VERBATIM 'We have a very healthy marriage, and we got there by dOing therapy when we needed it. ' KRISTEN BELL, actor, on the importance Of working through maritalissues; She married actor Dax Shepard in 2013 引 A N C A B 0 5 K E R 0 A 響ー N ー・をー、一 0 AOV ーすリ第一 4M0 物 0 ! 当 0 ・一一 5 V ー SOMN を、 ・一 0 ー 0 ー T ー第を・気 響日 0 A リ GH 了当いを「 0 費す A ー 1 を 、第ト ~ , 帳・い CHARTOON Click-bait costume drama “丁凱子 roo 川” e 淞 5 row 川恆 5 why! 1 昭凱 rd ” 9 山 P 35e5 凱 c 長 . Aappens 月子 will 3 、。 cro+che+y を yo 川 d ! 丁リ帚 25 h 叩 0 8 wi[l 川 e yo 久石 子行肥計 ocr y ! de 子子 eis 0 Top 10 を皿 p . .8 will JOHN ATKINSON, WRONG HANDS

6. TIME 2017年4月3日号

SHARE OF し S. HOMES THATARE MOBILE HOMES 6.4 % 44K NUMBER OF MOBILE-HOME PARKS IN THE し S. SHARE OFAMERICANS WITH LESS THAN $ 10000 IN REThREMENT SAVINGS 56 % "lt's coming, one way or the Other, says Dan Soliman, housing specialist at the AARP Foundation, where experts spend a great deal 0f time looking hard at the collective reality that individuals may be loath t0 face. Some 10 , 000 baby boomers turn 65 every day, a "silver tsunami ” 0f demography that will be followed, before anyone knows it, by millennials, Whose prospects are even tougher. "We can either ride this wave 舅 and have a 10t 0f ん n , ” says S01iman, 'or crash ontO the rocks. ” 2 砒ⅱ c た Broderick, 78 , stays 00t 砒 Betmar. Acres, where residents 0 7 れ the 1 , 663 lots, 0 ofwhich is his 第をイト SOMEHO 、 THE ADVANTAGES Of senior trailer parks have remained obvious almost exclusively tO their residents. lt is a success story without Offcial ambas- sadors, all but unstudied by academics. "Honestly, I think it's because very few people in the academy, especially in business schools, are familiarwith parks, says Charles 、 1. Becker, an econom1CS professor at Duke University whose own point Of entry was some Of his wife's relatives. Their story, by the numbers: sold home for $ 180 , 000 , bought a used double-wide for $ 24 , 000 , put $ 5 , 000 into fixing it up "and walked away with a pile ofcash. ” Some ofthe windfall theywisely set aside ()n annuity iS wise, Becker says) for utilities, taxes and payments on the piece ofland the trailer would sit on. But the bottom line shines bright and clear through the gloom. "You can'tbuy $ 30 , 000 worth ofhouse ⅲ a stick-built house without being afraid of the neighborhood you live in; ” Becker observes. "Trailer parks can be thought 0f as gated communities for people wh0 aren't SO wealthy. ” lt's certainly awhole new way ofthink- mg about them. The old way everybody already knows. Trailer parks are "the last acceptable prejudice in America,' says Andrea Levere, whO studies issues Of 6- nancial security and class as president Of the Corporation for Enterprise Develop- ment. There may be some basis for the stigma in many Of the nation's 44 , 000 parks. They tend t0 be operated notby the residents (like the seniors 0f Sleepy HOI- low) but by landlords exploiting the tra- ditional model. The park owners rent tiny patches 0f land t0 the people wh0 own the homes perched on it and charge pretty much whatever they like. Landlords have the upper hand because mobile homes tend tO be mobile in name only; moving one can COSt from $ 5 , 000 tO many times that. The typical mobile home arrives on wheels and stays put forever, poor people paying the rich. " 0 like 000i0g 0 、 MaffIe H00 el where the customers are chained tO the booths,: ” in the words ofFrank Rolfe, who co-owns more than 250 parks across the U. S. while also operating Mobile Home University. The "school; ” which conducts occasional seminars in hOtel conference rooms, advises people looking tO invest ⅲ parks. R01fe boasts that mobile-home parks provide the steadiest income stream Ofany form ofcommercial real estate, and the highest rate ofreturn. And trends are running their way. "AS America gets poorer, mobile-home parks are the onlyform ofhousing devoted to this demographic; ” R01fe points out. What's more, the stigma actuallyworks tO the advantage ofinvestors. Because local authorities seldom approve new parks, supply remams constant even as demand grows and grows. ln the past half-decade, wall Street has caught the scent. A former Goldman Sachs associate and a Harvard graduate started buying parks , rffng about methamphetamine and SWAT teams. ln 2013 , private-equity giant Carlyle Group “ made a play. ” Explaining 」 7

7. TIME 2017年4月3日号

The Brief 'THISISA WORLDIN WHICHSIZEMATTERS. THEBIGGER THEDEVICE, THEMORE YOUCANGETIN THERE. ' —NEXT PAGE を物盟に載ーを讐。物ー込、 : 物黶・ , はをを lnvestigators suspect 砒 lastyear's lost EgyptAirfiight was downed explosives laptops and iPads tO cameras and AIRLINE SECURITY REQUIRES constant vigilance as terrorists ' tactics handheld gaming devices. Trump Administration offcials evolve with consumer technology. ln 2010 an al-Qaeda affliate in Yemen say they know 0f no specific credible tried to slip a bomb hidden inside a threat against U. S. -bound airliners. printer cartridge onto a cargo flight But they are wary of the growmg bound for the U. S. Last year a SomaIi sophistication Of terrorist groups that "continue tO target commercial airliner was nearly brought down when a suicide bomber detonated a aviation and are aggressively pursuing device concealed in his laptop. mnovative methods; ” a senior TO keep pace with the evolving Administration offcial said. According threat, the し S. government is cracking tO a U. S. counterterronsm 0 伍 ci down on gadgets in the cabin. The authoritie s are paymg p articular Department 0f Homeland S ecurity attention tO lbrahim al-Asiri, the (DHS) announced on March 21 that chiefbombmaker for aI-Qaeda im it would require pas sengers on direct the Arabian Peninsula, the group flights t0 the U. S. from 10 airports in thought t0 be responsible for the the Middle East and North Africa to 2010 printer-cartridge p10t. Other stOW devices larger than a smartphone groups in the region have copied his in their checked baggage. The new tactics. The bomb smuggled onto the restrictions cover everything 仕 0n1 Somali airliner in 2016 was claimed AVIATION Why the U. S. iS C rac king down on gadgets in airplane cabins By Zeke J. MiIIer SB トコ 3 PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRISTIAN HARTMANN

8. TIME 2017年4月3日号

TheView Nutrition How tO eat well— and still feel full By AIexandra SifferIin BY NOW YOU KNOW THE BASICS OF A healthy diet: lots of fruits and vegetables, some nuts, healthy dairy and a little fish and lean meat. But that doesn't mean you always abide by those rules—or that they're easy t0 follow. Most food choices are guided by hunger—which can lead people to make in-the-moment decisions that don't line up with their longer-term nutrition goals. ln fact, research suggests that one of the strongest predictors ofwhether a diet will be successful is how hungry a person feels while he or she is on it. That's why forward-thinking doctors have shifted their focus away from nutri- ents like fat and even carbs and instead recommend fOOdS according to their のんⅡ nutrition profile. What they've found is that many ofthe most filling foods are also the healthiest. TO pick 100 ofthe healthiest, TIME edi- 0 tors combed through government nutri- tion databases tO identify some Ofthe most satisfying, hunger-quelling foods that are also enjoyable t0 eat and easy to find at the grocery store. We focused on overall nutri- tion rather than calorie count. Nearly all the foods on the resulting list are high ⅲ protein or fiber ()r both), which isn't sur- prising when you consider that those are the two nutrients that play the biggest role ⅲ how filling a given food is, Science aside, the most satisfying fOOds you can eat are the ones that taste delicious and are simple to prepare at home. Fill your plates with foods like these and you'll take the guesswork (and calorie counting) out ofhealthy eating. Adaptedfrom the TIME ec ト ed ⅲ 0 れ b00 た , 100 Healthiest Foods to Satisfy Your Hunger. Available 0 れ Amazon 0 れ d in bookstores. The whole list is online at time.com/100-healthy. PHOTOGRAPHS BY DANNYKIM FORTIME Eggs Eat the whole th i ng, yo included 、 Pairing eggs with greens helps you absorb more Of the vegetables' nutrients. WHYTHEY'RE G000 FORYOU YoIks make the fat-soluble nutrients in eggs easierto digest, and they don't elevate cholesterol as doctors previously thought. NUTRITION Eggs contain all nine ~ 、 essential amino acids. damame One Of the best ways to enjoy edamame iS steamed, With a light sprinkling Of salt. WHYTHEY'RE G000 FORYOU Edamame, which are young soybeans, are high in filling protein and fiber. NUTRITION They're good sources Of enzymes and nutrients that fight inflammation, which can fuel many kinds ofdisease. 、い。 TIME BIackberries Nature Often gives nutrition cues with colors. Blackberries deep purple hue means they're high in antioxidants. WHYTHEY'RE GOOD FORYOU Black- berries are rich in vitamin C, which is thought tO have a ro in cancer prevention. NUTRITION Compared with other berries, they're especially high in fiber and IOW in sugar. Figs Figs, which are members of the mulberryfamily, are slightly sweetand a 0 high in fiber. WHYTHEY'REGOOD FORYOU Figs are an unlikely source Of vitamin B6, which may play a ro in energy, hormone balance and mood. NUTRITION These fruits are high in vitamin C, as well as bone- building calcium.

9. TIME 2017年4月3日号

American Voices Becky G, actor The Mexican-American star hasn't met a stage ・—online, on tour, on television—she hasn't dominated. NOW she's taking on her biggest role yet as a teenage superhero ⅲ the diverse, big-screen Power Rangers adaptation BECKY G JUST GOT HER DRIVER'S LICENSE—NOT THAT SHE has many opportunities tO drive. "I will if it's an emergency or I need t0 get somewhere quickly; ” says the 20-year- old. But her mom or other members of the family have chauffeured her around for more than a decade. That's how long Becky, born Rebbeca Marie Gomez, has been working as an entertainer. "Don't get me wrong," she says. "l'm a grown woman and a boss lady. But l'm still growing up. ・ Wh0 wants tO drive in L. A. traff1C anyway? ” After starting with voice acting and commercial work when she was 9 , the Los Angeles native developed a following for her YouTube covers ofpop and hip-hop songs. Byher mid- 'Anyone c an be powerful. lt's not the color Of your skin. lt's not the social gro up you belong tO in high school. ' teens, she had signed a deal with RCA Records and released singles like the Top 20 hit "Shower. " The young singer's pop confections have attracted big-name collaborators like Pitbull and Kesha. She has also opened for Katy Perry on tour, modeled for CoverGirl and appeared in episodes 0fEmpire and Nashville. NO 、 SHE IS one Ofthe stars Of Power Rangers (March 24 ) , a big- budget, cinematic reimagining Of the FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES The video fo 「 Becky's single "Becky From the Block ” featured a cameo by 」 ennifer LO pez. television series that's long been a staple Of Saturday-morning kids' TV.. The original—in which otherwise normal teenagers find themselves piloting mechanical giants to fight enormous monsters—relied on goofy special effects and stunts tO keep kids watching. But this new 61m , while still aimed a young audience, iS an attempt tO launch a new superhero franchise not based on a comic bOOk, a diffcult proposition in the age Of Marvel's dominance. Gomez plays YellOW Ranger Trini, wh0 teams up with four friends t0 stop the evil Rita Repulsa (Elizabeth Banks) from destroying the world. She says she wanted t0 be in the film because this adaptation promised tO be socially aware and diverse. The other Rangers include Chinese - C anadian actor Ludi Lin; English-born, half-lndian actor Naomi SCOtt; African-American actor RJ Cyler; and Australian actor Dacre Montgomery. "You've got all kinds Of culture s, and in the character breakdown, there were no ethnicities,: ” Gomez says. "That's the wh01e point: anyone can be powerful. lt's not the color ofyour skin. lt's not the social group that you belong t0 in high sch001. That's why Rangers is so 40 TIME April 3 , 2017 awesome—・ because those walls come tumbling down. ” For Gomez, whose grandparents emigrated from Mexico, issues Of representation are crucial, especially at a time when immigration is a hOtly contested issue. "Although it doesn't affect me firsthand because I am American,: ” she says, "it does affect me because I am proud to be Mexican. For people t0 be able to make me feel like I don't belong is terrible. ” And despite her fame, she says, she's been discriminated against: "I have heard my family referred t0 as you people' before. ” She describes a recent tense interaction at an airport that tOOk on new gravlty in the light Of recent events. lt was alSO meaningful tO Becky that her character questions her sexuality. The revelation takes place ⅲ a blink- and-you'll-miss-it moment. But ifthe movie becomes a hit, it's likely to be the kind of detail that becomes meaningful for a segment 0f its primarily young audience. "When I was dOing that scene, it was the first time as actress where I couldn't control my emotions, she recalls. "I felt very connected to her, because this is something that a lot of people go through. " IT'S NOT CERTAIN that Power Rangers will be successful enough tO generate sequels. So for now, Becky is going back to her first love, music. She's working on tWO albums, one in English and one ⅲ Spanish. She's clearer in her artistic ViSion realize wh0 you really are. ” says, "SO you can come back and get lOSt at some point,: ” she like it's a rite ofpassage tO before. "I almost feel than She'S ever For more Voices, visittime.com/AmericanVoices ー SAM LAN S KY

10. TIME 2017年4月3日号

Time Off Reviews 句覗 e ⅲ ta and Ferguson in Life:fear is れ Ot an 0 〃ⅱ 0 れ , but ア oati れ g is 0 0 0 MOVIES owes a debt tO Swiss artist—andAlien critter creator—H. R. Giger. What matters more iS hOW Espinosa (safe House, C ん旧 44 ) shuffles and recombines familiar elements , more Often stOking By Stephanie Zacharek slow-burning terror than goosing us with jump scares. (Although he does toss in a the space station via satellite, name few ofthose. ) Part ofwhat makes も so CLAUSTROPHOBIA, PARANOIA, LONELI- it Calvin. Before long it grows into unsettling is how eerily calming much ness, fear 0fa hostile takeover by anyone an iridescent tadpole-orchid hybrid Ofit is. The station is a nest ofcorridors or anything. Whatever your anxiety, that grabs 0 Ⅱ t0 Hugh's gloved finger rendered in soothing pearl-graytones. Daniel Espinosa's polished space thriller adorably. "lts curiO sity outweighs its When the crew members slip intO their is designed t0 tease it out. Jake fear! ” he exclaims. Meanwhile, those of little space pods for a night ofshut-eye, Gyllenhaal's space doctor David is part the unknowability ofthe galaxybecomes Ofa six-person crew parked at a research us WhO have seen a SCi-fi horror moue in the past 40 years—or, for that matter, a cozywhisper. station somewhere between Earth and But when も旅 jolts awake, thé Mars. He and his fellow space travelers— ever— are shrinking in our seats. Or tension is almost unbearable, rightup trying t0 climb atop them. among them Rebecca Ferguson's There probably isn't a single element to the brooding, cautionary ending. cucumber-cool CDC rep Miranda and of も that you haven't seen before. And ThiS iS an effective and unsettling Ryan Reynolds' wisecracking fix-it guy piece 0f filmmaking, partly because like SO many movle creatures these days, Rory—have collected some nice red-soil GyIIenhaaI has one of the most our little protozoan turned predator samples 仕 om our neighboring planet. sympathetic faces ⅲ movies today— Now Hugh (Ariyon Bakare), the crew's LIFE ON MARS? it's haunted and haunting. His David botanist-geneticist, is dropping bits Of NASA's 1976 Viking mission is the super-principled guy who'll d0 liquid on them tO see ifhe can summon turned up only dust and rocks, anything tO save everyone. But he alSO any signs oflife. As ifthat's ever been a but some scientists still hope for more. "Every new piece Of tells Miranda that he prefers floating in good idea. information we get about the the sky to living on Earth "I can't stand At first all he sees is a harmless- planet seems tO point tO greater what we dO tO each Other dO 、 V11 there. ” looking blob, a microscopic single-cell and greater habitability," NASA For him, space is the place. But it's still organism sporting a couple ofwhiskery astrobiologist Penny Boston tO no respite 仕 om a troubled world. flagella. E arth children, in contact with the Washington POSt in 2016. 44 TIME April 3 , 2017 ln び , the b10b from Mars is small and very scary ロ