TV tonight: Kevin Bridges warms up for World Cup fever
The comedian travels the globe to get to the heart of the beautiful game. Plus, a thrilling encounter with tigers. Here’s what to watch this evening 10.30pm, BBC One Continue reading...
"BEAUTIFUL" · 총 127건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 82,487건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,074건(4.9%)·중립 76,466건(92.7%)·부정 1,947건(2.4%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.7(중도 균형)입니다.
The comedian travels the globe to get to the heart of the beautiful game. Plus, a thrilling encounter with tigers. Here’s what to watch this evening 10.30pm, BBC One Continue reading...
Here is a selection of the best NYC venues celebrating the World Cups most popular nations in flavorful and festive ways, from the June 11 opener in Mexico City through the July 19 Final at MetLife Stadium. Fans will be able to enjoy 104 matches among 48 teams.
Singer Dua Lipa and Callum Turner have celebrated their wedding with a beautiful ceremony in Sicily, where guests also enjoyed a surprise performance from Sir Elton John. The couple held a grand celebration at Villa Valguarnera in Bagheria, near Palermo, a few days after their...
President Donald Trump said Saturday the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool’s renovations in Washington are “complete” after crews began refilling the pool on Thursday after weeks of renovations. Trump credited Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum and crew members for submerging the “Dark Blue surface of the Reflecting Pool” in “CLEAN, BEAUTIFUL WATER” and restoring a […]
A young man took a tragic plunge off a beautiful California cliff overlooking a nude beach in Santa Cruz County early Saturday morning.
Marine Basmajian killed her husband and two young children before ending her own life. Now her devastated brother Arthur is speaking exclusively to the Daily Mail.
Danica Patrick celebrates summer on an Italian yacht while Saturday Screencaps covers golf stories, smart home debates, and college baseball.
From Edinburgh Castle's volcanic rock above the capital to Dunnottar's clifftop ruins reachable only by 200 steps down and back up
By Kirk Bowman (*) - At the 2026 World Cup draw, FIFA Peace Prize recipient and U.S. President Donald Trump announced that the game should really be called “football.” “There’s no question about it. We have to come up with another name for the NFL. It really doesn’t make any sense,” said Trump, an apparently new convert to the round-ball game.He isn’t alone. The word “soccer” is, in some parts of the world, shunned by some fans.
"You make them a partnership in this revolution," Trump told reporters Friday. "It would be a beautiful thing."
'We turned what destroyed our land into something beautiful. Every material is a symbol of our strength, determination, and ability to rise again,' says Yrah Gallego of the Canlaon Artisans and Weavers Association
The Central Asian nation of Uzbekistan is a hidden gem that is fast being discovered by a new generation of international travellers, including those from China. At the Center for Islamic Civilization, a popular tourist attraction in the capital Tashkent, a cross-section of tourists told RTHK that the country is becoming increasingly accessible and a must-visit destination. A traveller from Shaanxi province in China, surnamed Wang, said he was attracted by a blend of post-Soviet history and Islamic architecture. "I just want to experience the fourth largest republic of the former Soviet Union. Just to see how they've developed since breaking away from the Soviet Union, and to see what changes have taken place in the city's appearance," he said. "So I came to stroll around and take a look, just to experience the different culture of another country." Wang noted that travel has become significantly easier. "It’s visa-free for 30 days," he explained, having arrived via Almaty, Kazakhstan. Wang also noted that more Chinese people have been visiting Uzbekistan in the past few years. That sense of discovery is echoed by European visitors. "We didn’t know anyone else who has been here, so it was really exciting to come somewhere completely different and experience a completely different culture," said William Norton, a tourist from Scotland. But he also met some challenges. "Language is the main one – we don’t speak Uzbek or Russian, which would help a lot. "Apart from that, obviously the lack of public transport as well has been a little bit of a problem in Tashkent. The metro is easier, however, in other places in Uzbekistan like Samarkand." Yet, for Norton, those very challenges are part of the charm. "You go to other places in Europe that are equally as beautiful if not less beautiful and they are absolutely rammed with people, so it's nice that it's a little bit quieter here." His travel companion, Christian Cannarella, agreed, saying their friends back in Scotland were surprised by their travel plans. He said people in Uzbekistan have been very welcoming and visiting the landmarks is an "incredible" experience. For travellers from other Islamic nations, the attraction lies in the shared cultural heritage. Ammar Nizamani, visiting from Pakistan, said he wanted to find out what they have in common in faith and history. He said he tries to visit different countries whenever he has the chance. Edited by Robert Kemp
Modern Art, London The mathematically named new works of Along the River are disorienting, illusive and seem to offer a flash of the secret sequences that underpin the physical world Why do we find things beautiful? More precisely, why do some paintings of coloured dots in rippling patterns inspire in me something like revelation? The idea that beauty is the feeling you get when encountering truth is unfashionable in the arts, but lingers in the sciences. The physicist Paul Dirac once proposed that it is more important that a formula is beautiful than that it can be proven: when a perfectly beautiful theory produces results that cannot be real, he argued, then we should not discard the theory but reconsider what is real. Since the 1970s, Terry Winters has been rebuilding that bridge between art and science. Taking inspiration from disciplines including botany – his early paintings, particularly, evoke sprouting pods and tangled roots – engineering, computer modelling and cybernetics, his paintings might be understood as diagrammatic approximations of the patterns that govern everything from the division of cells to the constellation of stars. If every era has to renew its standards of beauty to reflect new understandings of how the world is constructed, then Winters comes as close to providing that model as any living painter. Continue reading...
“I’m the most beautiful woman in comedy besides Matt Rife. Except my lips are real.”
The summer rainy season in Puerto Vallarta and around the Banderas Bay region changes everything ... and in a very beautiful way. The post Waiting on the rain in the Bay of Banderas appeared first on Mexico News Daily
The summer rainy season in Puerto Vallarta and around the Banderas Bay region changes everything ... and in a very beautiful way. The post Waiting on the rain in Puerto Vallarta appeared first on Mexico News Daily
Sadler’s Wells East, London With a 3am aloofly sexy vibe, the Portuguese choreographer’s slow build is subtly intoxicating – while its intensity will leave you craving more Last year, for dance’s answer to the Turner prize, the Rose international dance prize, four choreographers competed for £40,000. One of those finalists was the Portuguese choreographer Marco da Silva Ferreira. He didn’t win, but he definitely marked himself out as an of-the-moment voice. His work has echoes of Hofesh Shechter and Sharon Eyal, but with its own clear agenda: protest through partying; activism meets choreographic collectivism; aloofly sexy, beautiful people, clubby beats, a somewhat 3am vibe and a conviction that the world should be a better place. Da Silva Ferreira’s dance is like minimalist music: small cells of movement, repeated, gradually shift and morph. A slinking step, a strut, the pop of a muscular torso, a slippery moonwalk, etc, etc. Eight dancers are in unison, but there’s no sense of them being automatons – they’re real, sweaty humans in shiny trousers and chainmail vests with red makeup smeared under their eyes. This piece, F*cking Future, is all about the slow build. The kind that might seem boring till you tune in and live it with them, beat by beat. Continue reading...
[OSEN=연휘선 기자] 확 달라진 모습으로 건강이상설에 휩싸였던 배우 한채영이 결혼 19주년을 맞아 밝은 근황을 공개하며 우려를 종식시켰다.한채영은 지난 4일 개인 SNS에 "Beautiful 19 years! #loveyouhoney #happyanniversary"라며 짧은 영상을 게재했다. 공개된 영상에는 한채영이 남편과 결혼 19주년을 기념하는 모
The Central Asian country of Turkmenistan is immensely proud of its horses. The ancient and endangered Akhal-Teke species has become a symbol of great national pride in a deeply isolated state where power is firmly concentrated, and are considered so beautiful that beauty pageants are held for them annually. The species and the culture surrounding them has even been listed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage List.
The Environmental Protection Department (EPD) on Friday said it was aiming to create a culture in which green living has become a way of life throughout the city. Principal environmental protection officer Jackie Ng said the department's current campaign aimed to make environmental protection accessible, convenient, and meaningful. The remarks came as the EPD this week launched a publicity campaign called "Beautiful Hong Kong Green Fest", to celebrate World Environment Day, which falls on June 5, and the department's 40th anniversary. Speaking on RTHK's Backchat programme, Ng said this week's environmental activities could foster a deeper emotional connection in which hands-on involvement becomes part of people's routines. "It [hands-on involvement] helps make the experience more engaging and memorable for everyone, transforming environmental protection from some abstract concepts into personal experience and action," Ng said. To strengthen environmental education for young people, Ng said the department has partnered with Ocean Park to deliver both on‑site and in‑school activities, where they can learn more about how to protect the environment and natural conservation. "The programme combines not only fun activities and also educational materials, making the concept more accessible and memorable, and these activities also provide them some opportunities to do some self-direct learning and exploration," he said. Edited by Tony Sabine