Subscribe to my full feed.

2007年11月18日 星期日

無題

泛泛的講一點最近的生活吧。

1.趁週年慶時買了一件comme ca的西裝外套,但是好像沒什麼穿的場合。是件有點過於
假掰跟高調的外衣。

2.大陸冷氣團來襲,冬雨降臨時心情很差,沒有工作意願。面對巨大的邪惡
缺少抵抗能力與堅持的毅力。

3.越來越愛惜身邊的東西了,好像是領會到人生可以珍惜的東西已經不多了的道理。

4.稍微發福了一公斤,希望是代表身體健康的徵兆。

Read More...

2007年8月29日 星期三

Los Alamos


上次去誠品看攝影展時順道去逛一下書店,看到了這本攝影集,越看越喜歡啊,跟在電腦上看到的都不太一樣,除了媒材上的差異之外,作品內容上感受也不同,這本的意義比較隱晦另外帶有點神秘感,每幅照片都缺少特定的性質,無法辨識照片與現實的對應。顏色經過特殊的轉染(dye-transform)因此濃豔到炸開來。我只找得到這張封面照片,看完整本會有震撼的感覺。


值得一提的是在AMAZON上查到這本要$200usd,但是我買到的卻連這的半價都不到。

Read More...

2007年8月16日 星期四

寰哥飛往紐約的那天










Read More...

2007年8月12日 星期日

vs Fulham

新球季旗開得勝趕快記錄一下,內容是逆轉勝與二比一,相當地激勵人心,所以做人的態度就是千萬不要放棄啊!!

Read More...

2007年7月30日 星期一

ばらの花 -- くるり


這次野台的好歌,完全被電到了。

這是今年為止最令人難忘的聲音,滿載著低寥與困惑,在寬闊的球場上飄盪著,永遠不會消逝的少年的背影,無論我們的臉被時間抓痕的多麼憂愁,無論我們的身被錯誤覆蓋的多麼卑微,還依然相信著某種古老的救贖。那是最接近自由的一刻。

還有能拯救世界的搖滾樂嗎?或許都變成了獨裁者奧運會上的祈願曲與和平鴿了。如果已經不在乎這個世界變成了什麼樣子,又何必吹毛求疵這個音樂祭那個叛徒的所作所為。


Read More...

2007年6月26日 星期二

Entourage!!!



苦等一年我們的大明星Vince終於又回來了,七月三十號晚上十一點第三季首播。


暑假就是要這種充滿著派對氣氛的生活啊,如果正常的生活中都沒有認識這種明星,那就自己來吧~~(十足的幻想語氣)
我發現我真得很喜歡這類活動啊。

Read More...

2007年6月24日 星期日

東京 -- くるり ( album:もしもし )


新找到的plug-in播放器,簡單清楚。暫時就先用這個吧。這個播放器連名字都很直接,就叫audio-player,本來是world-press專用,現在已經可以移植在其他的空間。設計相當美觀,檔案很小,讀取速度十分迅速,很適合放在文章之中。唯一缺點是不能夠放在部落格的頁面中,只能放在發佈的文章裡。


官方網站也是簡單有力型http://www.1pixelout.net/code/audio-player-wordpress-plugin
中文介紹可參考http://chenkaie.blogspot.com/2007/05/flash-mp3-audio-player.html



呼,待會去寫報告了。

Read More...

Henry - It was the most difficult decision of my life


Arsenal Football Club today gave Thierry Henry the opportunity to speak to Arsenal supporters about his departure from the Club. What follows is the unedited transcript of the interview. The views expressed by Thierry Henry are not necessarily representative of Arsenal Football Club or its employees.

Thierry you have left Arsenal, can you tell the supporters your reasons for going?

“I have said it so many times. Before Mr Dein left, for whatever reason, I went to the boss and said I don’t want to leave. There had been a lot of speculation about me and I assured him that I did not want to leave. But after Mr Dein left that unsettled the team and the boss. Especially as at the moment he has not committed himself to the club. He said he will see out his contract but you cannot be sure if he is going to go or stay [at the end of next season]. Hopefully he is going to stay but I need to be certain and reassured of that. Everybody knows I am 30. The boss being unsettled, Mr Dein going, it did unsettle me a bit. After that I had thoughts of leaving the club.

“It is a difficult day for me to come here at Emirates Stadium and talk about this. But I want to come here explain why to the fans. I want to be certain of where the club was going and reassured in a way. I wasn’t and I have chosen to go."

How long did the decision take and how agonising was it?

“It was a long one but nobody knew what was happening to be honest. We were hearing some stuff in the press about what happened and what did not happen so you have to make your own mind up. It was the most difficult decision of my life.

“Beating the record of Wrighty, putting it at 226, playing for Arsenal, loving the club. It was and will remain the most difficult decision of my life. I will always love the club.”

Arsène Wenger has always said ‘Arsenal will be club of my life’ because he has spent the prime of his career here. Is that true for you too?

"I don’t know if I will play eight years more or where the future is so yes. I had a special relationship with the fans with the boss, Mr Dein and everybody who was attached to Arsenal. Arsenal will always be in my heart, my blood, my head. Everybody will. The press office, the chef, the girls at the training ground, the guys who made the pitch perfect at the training ground and at Emirates, the guys at stadium who help us perform at our best. I will miss everybody. The Arsenal fans who told me to step up my game or to carry on. It will be huge miss for me. I will take everybody in my head and my heart. Everybody who I trained with a worked with. Especially the boss and Mr Dein and the Arsenal fans who have been more than tremendous to me. It was unreal at times.

“I looked the schedule and already know when we, I mean you, are playing against Tottenham. I did it as a reflex. When fixtures came out I looked for Tottenham and I know it is pretty early on. When they play I will be watching and trying to be the first to know the result even though I know the fans will beat me. It is really special coming here [to Emirates Stadium] to talk about it. I will always have Arsenal in my blood I know some people will never accept the decision I just want to say to the fans that I always gave 100 per cent. Even the last year when I was injured I tried to perform. It was not the 30 goals you were used to but it was 17 games in the League and scored 10 so that was not a bad ratio. It was all about the heart and the commitment to win for Arsenal. I always, always, always, always gave 100 per cent.”

Let’s look back, what was your best goal?

“They were all amazing for me. I think I scored some good goals at Highbury and away but the one that stands out was my second against Liverpool when we went unbeaten in the League. I never heard Highbury going crazy like that. I thought the place was going to collapse and you could tell by my celebration that it was the right time and place to score that goal. I went a bit mental. The place was just too loud. Scoring goals for Arsenal gave me goosebumps but that was a stand-out goal and kept us in the title race. We stayed there until the end.”

Your best moment?

“I would say winning the League unbeaten but one that would top that is my last goal at Highbury when I kissed the ground. It was a special moment for me. But as well this particular day is one of the saddest of my career, leaving Highbury. I can’t say it was the best moment but it was a particular moment. I am still shaking talking about it now.”

The best Arsenal side you have played in?

“Difficult to say, some people came here and did not win anything but that does not mean they were not great players. If I go with the team that stayed unbeaten then that means I have to leave out David Seaman and a load of other players. But in terms of the results then staying unbeaten is something rather amazing. But then with the guys before, we had won the Double. Every time I wore an Arsenal shirt it was just amazing. When I stepped on that pitch even where I was not performing well whoever was playing with me at the time was the right guy for me."

As for the fans was there any moment that sums them up?

“I would say when we lost the Champions League Final against Barcelona in Paris. They all stayed afterwards and clapped us. That was a very special moment for the team. It is easy to stay there and cheer when you win but it is hard to clap your guys when you have just lost one of the titles you were waiting for.

“But as well I would say the first time I arrived here and people were giving me stick. The fans were always behind me and cool with me. I could go through whole eight years, it was crazy. I have had a really special relationship with them.”

How has Thierry Henry and Arsenal changed in the last eight years?

“I would like to think that when people talk about Arsenal they see the Boss has brought the ‘Arsenal touch’ and the ‘Arsenal way’, and I’m truly proud of being one of those guys to have helped play the way we have been. And I am sure it will carry on, because Arsenal was playing like that before me and they will be playing like that after me.

“Arsenal is a club that is now well known throughout Europe and that’s all down to the Boss. Also, the fans, they are never in trouble with fighting or disrespectful to other fans. The Arsenal fans have always made us proud.

“From a personal point of view, at Arsenal I have really become a man. This is thanks to the Boss, thanks to all the players, thanks to all the facilities at the Club and as I said before, thanks to all the people who made my life easier here, they have made me a man.”

Turning to the future of the Club, if you read the media at the moment it’s 'crisis at Arsenal' and 'the walls of Emirates Stadium are coming down'. Surely that’s not true, the players and the set-up are far too good?

“The set-up and the facilities are far too good and we still have a lot of the main people who are staying. As I have said so many times, the team here is growing and there is some amazing talent here and I do think this is the right time for Robin van Persie, Emmanuel Adebayor and Nicklas Bendtner who is coming back from Birmingham, to shine. Hopefully they will do it. As soon as you know they can do it, they will forget about me, that’s the way it is.

“When Patrick left everyone was devastated, including me and then after that a little guy came around called Cesc Fabregas and, although I didn’t agree with it, everyone started saying ‘who needs Patrick Vieira?’ For me the guys we have here are amazing, but you always need Patrick Vieira.

“I don’t believe what everybody is saying about the Club collapsing, having a lack of players and everyone leaving. I think it is untrue. Cesc Fabregas is a world class player, Robin van Persie is a world class player, hopefully Adebayor will become a world class player, Tomas Rosicky is a world class player, Jens Lehmann is a world class player, Toure and Gallas are world class players. You can go through the whole squad like that.

“As I said to you, I will now become now an Arsenal fan and will be looking at every result and I’m sure the team will be successful.”

How did you tell the Boss you wanted to go?

“To be honest, I have a great relationship with the Boss. I’ve told you the reasons why I wanted to go and I told him exactly the same reasons. That’s how it is, I talked to the Boss about private stuff and non-private stuff. A bit of everything.

“But as I said to you, today is a very sad day for me. Whatever people are going to talk or read or see into it, it is a very sad for me.

“One thing that I forgot to say earlier was about the pride to play for the shirt and the team. In France we don’t have that. When I was young I used to support Bordeaux, but when they lost I went to support Marseille. But here you really learn the importance and the value of the shirt and the club. Arsenal is like that, an English family.

“Although I have had disagreements with the press over here, they have been tremendous to me, keeping me on my toes. But everyone has been great, the fans, playing away, getting booed, getting cheered, getting standing ovations. I will always, always remember that. And Arsenal gave me that, the way we were playing, getting standing ovations from away fans was just out of this world. It’s hard to understand because in France they are just not like that. If you play well at home [in France] you get a standing ovation, if you play well away from home, well, you play well away from home, that’s it.

“Getting a standing ovation away from home with Arsenal is something I will never forget, because you know a lot of people are really appreciating what you are doing as a team and it’s outstanding.

“As I have said before, I just want to thank everyone at the Club, the girls who work at the training ground, the girls who wash the kits, the masseurs, the staff at the Club, the staff at the stadium, the staff who work on the pitch at the stadium, the staff who work on the pitches at the training ground, the press office, the coach driver, everybody. Everybody here, I would just like to thank everybody here.

“Also to all the teams I have played against here, all the battles I have had against the players here, some of the fans away, the press and the refs, it’s been a great time. Everyone has just made it special and I would just like to thank everybody, but especially to all the people involved at Arsenal.

“It’s important to me to come to the Club today and say something properly because the fans have given me so much and I hope I gave a lot back to them. I want to keep my box here and I want to come back and watch some games, if they let me in! But it’s been a very weird day.”

Arsène Wenger has said he will stay on at least until his contract finishes next summer. We hope he stays on. If he does would you regret your decision?

“I don’t regret what I do. Playing for Arsenal was an honour for me. And I will say that until the day I die. When Patrick Vieira left the team had to move on and we came close to winning the Champions League. But this type of guy we were already missing.

“Not having Arsène around anymore — and everybody at the Club — will be ‘missing’ for me. It is a fact but it won’t be a regret. When Patrick left, I was devastated I missed the guy and I still miss the guy even though I see him with the national team. But I was devastated because he was a good guy to be around on the pitch or off the pitch. It goes beyond sport. That is why I won’t go with the regret word but more ‘missing’.

If you left Arsenal was it always going to be Barcelona. Is there some thing special about them?

“There is something special here at Arsenal too. I left Arsenal to go to Barcelona because, no disrespect to any other team, but there are only two teams in the world who play football the way I like it. That is the way the people here like it — the Arsenal way. That is how we play football here and ‘we’ play football there. If I can say that is one of the is the main reasons for Barcelona. The football they play is attractive to watch.”

Finally, your last Arsenal.com question as a Arsenal player, do you have a message for the fans?

“Well, I would to say you have been tremendous for me I really do appreciate it. I am shaking as I say this. I will always remember you. I will have you in my head and my heart. I wanted to reassure you that I always gave 100 per cent here. I know some people said some other stuff but I always gave 100 per cent. I hope you appreciate what I did here because I appreciate what you did for me. I grew as a man and became a better football player. I will always take that with me no matter what happens.

“Arsenal will be in my blood aswell as my heart. I will always, always, always remember you guys. I said I was going to be a Gunner for life and I did not lie because when you are a Gunner you will always be a Gunner. The Club is in my heart and will remain in my heart forever.”

[ Saturday, June 23, 2007]

Read More...

Nick Hornby's interview

Q: WILL THERE EVER BE A SEQUEL TO FEVER PITCH, A BOOK WHICH COVERS ARSENAL’S SUCCESS IN THE LAST FEW YEARS?

A:
I wouldn’t want to write one. Sequels are very rarely a good idea, and in any case, the success of the book changed my relationship with the club in some ways. When I wrote Fever Pitch, I felt that I could represent the typical fan, but the success of the book changed my relationship with the club. I’ve met a number of the players, and got to know many of the staff at Arsenal…I don’t think I could write with the same perspective, and the perspective was very important to the original.

Q: HAS FOOTBALL CHANGED SINCE YOU WROTE FEVER PITCH? AND CAN YOU REALLY IDENTIFY WITH A TEAM FULL OF FRENCH AND BRAZILIAN PLAYERS IN THE SAME WAY THAT YOU COULD WHEN IT WAS AN ALL- BRITISH SIDE?


A:
I think more has changed in the thirteen years since the book came out than in the previous hundred. Even at the beginning of the 90s people in England stood on the terraces to watch British players who would almost certainly need a job of some kind when they retired. Now we sit down to watch mostly foreign players who couldn’t possibly get through the money they earn. And we hardly need ever go to the stadium to watch every game live, because they’re all on TV. Many of these changes haven’t been for the better. But Arsenal fans are probably in two minds about it all, because the last decade has been the best of our lifetimes. We’ve seen fantastic football, and we’ve seen our team win a lot of trophies.

I’ve never really understood the argument about foreign players. Of course a player like Tony Adams, who was relatively local, came through the youth team and stayed with the club throughout his career, is always going to be special to the fans. But Charlie Nicholas wasn’t local, and neither were Lee Dixon or Nigel Winterburn, who’d played for loads of different clubs. Lee Dixon was a Manchester City supporter who became a key Arsenal player simply because of his commitment to the club. And if he can find it, then why not Henry or Vieira? Dennis Bergkamp has already played a lot more games than Charlie George ever managed - Charlie George was a local boy who only stayed for a couple of years. It’s the transfer system that’s the problem, not the influx of foreign players, and the transfer system has always been with us, and will always be with us.

Q: ARE THERE ANY GOOD BOOKS ABOUT FOOTBALL THAT YOU CAN RECOMMEND?


A:
Pete Davies' All Played Out, which is about the 1990 World Cup and certainly helped me get Fever Pitch published; Eamon Dunphy's Only A Game?, which is the diary of a so-so professional footballer, and gave insights that most of those player books don't; Hunter Davies' The Glory Game - a year spent on the inside of a club, and I'd love a club to be brave enough to give someone similar access now; and Simon Kuper's Football Against the Enemy.

I've never particularly wanted to read a football novel. Like most football fans, I suspect, I wouldn't believe in a Melchester Rovers, nor in a player I'd never heard of. And I'm not sure what the POINT of such a book would be. Real-life sport already contains all the themes and narratives you could want.
07

Read More...

2007年6月23日 星期六

It's now or never for me

既使在告別的時候他還是給了我們一個最好的禮物,讓人無法恨他。
正如同在兩家俱樂部之間的選擇,在球員與俱樂部之間,我還是留
在了Arsenal這邊。然後我們會穿著14號球衣繼續看著每一場球賽。

偶而切換頻道看到熟悉的背影穿著藍紅色的球衣,電視畫面上應該有
個更豪華的球場,更多的球迷,更偉大的隊友,對我來說影像卻是
遙遠無聲的,因為同一雙眼已經無法接受另一種顏色了。在平淡漠然
的眼光之中參雜尷尬與遺憾的情緒,這氣氛讓人沈默以對。

不再能真心的為他加油吶喊令人難過得想要哭泣,當他說著「兵工廠的
球迷使比賽不同了,他們會一直在我的心中。我與兵工廠之間存在著特
殊的關係。」不曉得有沒有因為不能再為我們而出賽感到一絲難過?

再看一眼他帶來的最美好的時刻吧。

這個compilation算是把我最喜愛的幾個進球都收錄進去了,2001對熱
刺的60碼長途奔襲,2004對曼聯的長射,2005對雀爾西轉身抽射。真的
很棒。剩下一個我認為是去年的最佳進球沒有收進去,所以我另外找出
來放在下面。


[ Friday, June 22, 2007]

Read More...

2007年6月22日 星期五

The spot

Read More...