トップ > ニュース一覧 > 記事
The Stock Market Selloff Looks Scary. Watch This Sign for the Time to Buy.ン
The Stock Market Selloff Looks Scary. Watch This Sign for the Time to Buy.

The VIX, which spent much of January and February at or below its long-term average of about 19.5, leapt to 27.1 Monday. Key levels to watch for.
続きを読む
Advertisement
Advertisement
あなたにおすすめ

Vin Diesel Hints At Groot Spinoff Movie Based On Marvel’s ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ Character: “Disney Wants Their Planet X”
Vin Diesel gave a recap on what he’s working on in 2025 and hinted that he might reprise his role as Groot from Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy.

Woman Gets Fat Injections in Eyelid to Resolve 'Facial Asymmetry' — and Five Stuck Contact Lenses Pop Out
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American Society of Plastic Surgeons

Porsche warns restructuring, trade tensions to hit year ahead
By Victoria Waldersee
Advertisement
Advertisement

‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
“Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” OK, that’s the wrong play since it’s a line from “Macbeth,” but it best sums up Jonathan Bailey’s performance in the new London production of “Richard II”: The actor cranks up several gears the moment his character is forced by usurper Henry Bullingbrook to give up the throne of England for a life of imprisonment in the second half of director Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Shakespeare’s history play. But the fact that Bailey takes time to catch fire is not entirely his fault, since neither Shakespeare nor Hytner make life easy for him. Given that the play is set at the close of the 14th century, it’s no surprise that Hytner believes the play, which depicts the ushering in of a nation’s decades-long succession crisis, needs contemporary reference points. That explains composer Grant Olding’s doom-laden, grinding, low strings that herald a driving rhythm and a light-touch, bitter piano melody opening the production, a clear hat-tip to Nicholas Britell’s Beethoven-tinged theme to “Succession.” It also governs Bob Crowley’s crisp men-in-black-suits design. The antithesis of the exuberantly colored “Guys and Dolls,” the last show to play at Hytner’s physically versatile Bridge Theatre (and which ran almost two years), this limited run of “Richard II” is stripped-down and stern. Gone is the expected heraldry and splendor of the English court in which King Richard traditionally basks. Instead, the audience is arranged in the round observing a traverse-style black runway staging with changing, minimal locations being lifted up through the floor on hydraulics. It makes for welcome fluidity, highly useful in a play that, for the first half at least, moves through an uncomfortable number of locations and a load of exposition.This is a story about the threat to the kingdom and, specifically, Richard, who ruled neither wisely nor well with absolute power by ancient Divine Right. The nation is torn apart by the plots and counterplots of men and their forces loyal to the crown and those backing Henry Bullingbrook, the Duke of Hereford who, successfully as it turns out, puts his eyes on the ultimate prize and steals it.That the tussle for dominance between the men is so potentially dramatic is illustrated by the fact that around fifty years ago, Richard Pasco and Ian Richardson, two leading Shakespeareans of their day, alternated the roles when they led the play in a celebrated RSC production. Here, alas, the balance is uneven. Royce Pierreson is nicely forthright and determined but his performance is unvarying. The wonderfully character-driven abdication scene between the two men is the production’s highpoint, but elsewhere Pierreson’s determination is too one-note. Anyone questioning the wisdom of the star-casting of “Bridgerton” and “Wicked” talent Bailey should bear in mind that he played Cassio in Hytner’s riveting “Othello” at the National Theatre back in 2013 and followed that with an arresting Edgar/Mad Tom opposite Ian McKellen’s King Lear for director Jonathan Munby. As a result, his handling of the language and, crucially, the intent behind it, is entirely easeful. His king is self-satisfied and perfectly petulant, dispatching orders, and often men’s lives, with gleaming disdain. He’s even better when he’s calmly and quietly coming to understand himself and the nature of his previous selfishness in the play’s highly reflective and tender final scenes.But between those extremes of temperament, the living center of the character remains unseen, robbing the production of strength. That’s partly because he has to energize scenes that here lack force. Hytner is unquestionably one of the great directors of Shakespeare, but this production is uncharacteristically undercast in places. Some of the acting proves more proficient than powerful.

Is The Rangers' Core Still In Need Of A Dissection?
A little more than two months have elapsed since the Rangers corpse was being examined. The question at the time: was the patient alive or not?

Capgemini posts 2% sales dip, but beats estimates aided by AI demand
(Reuters) -French IT consulting firm Capgemini reported a 2% drop in its annual constant currency sales on Tuesday, but narrowly beat market expectations, helped by sustained demand for its cloud and AI services.
Advertisement
アクセスランキング
Indonesia Forces Exporters to Keep FX Earnings Onshore
(Bloomberg) -- Indonesia is pushing ahead with a plan to force natural resource exporters to keep more foreign exchange earnings onshore in Southeast Asia’s largest economy, aiming to bolster central bank reserves by $80 billion and reverse a slide in the country’s beleaguered currency.

Travis Sanheim Picks Up Assist For Canada; Flyers Duo Headed To 4-Nations Final Against Head Coach
In a pivotal 4 Nations Face-Off semifinal, Team Canada secured a 5-3 victory over Finland at TD Garden in Boston, propelling them into the championship final against Team USA.

Cognition AI Hits $4 Billion Valuation in Deal Led by Lonsdale’s Firm
(Bloomberg) -- Cognition AI Inc., the developer of an artificial intelligence-powered coding assistant, has raised hundreds of millions of dollars at a valuation close to $4 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

17 Wedding Guests Shared The Times They Witnessed An Objection, And The Stories Are Suuuuuuper Juicy
Whether you're the bride or just a guest, weddings are always a memorable event...especially when things go awry.

Sony Pictures Names Pixar Vet Michael Agulnek EVP Global Publicity; Rose Phillips Promoted To EVP Global Digital Marketing & Social Media
EXCLUSIVE: Former Disney/Pixar veteran Michael Agulnek has joined Sony Pictures as EVP Global Publicity, where he will report to Danielle Misher, Co-Head of Theatrical Marketing.

Millie Bobby Brown plans to 'shave her hair off' again for major life event
Millie Bobby Brown wants to "shave her hair off" when she has her first baby. The 21-year-old actress - who is getting married to Jon Bon Jovi's son Jake Bongiovi - is keen to raise a family in the future, and she'd love to go back to her 'Stranger Things' look by getting rid of her locks in time for giving birth. She told the 'Call Her Daddy' podcast: "I always tell Jake, for my first baby, I want to shave my hair off. "I don’t know. It was really liberating, would suggest it for anyone. Any girl... Maybe [I would shave it] right before I’m about to give birth because I just think hair is such an ordeal anyway to deal with. "I’m gonna nurture my child. Why deal with my hair? And I think it’s such a liberating experience. "To be a woman is, and I felt like I had that experience as a girl, but I’d like to have that experience as a woman." Millie was just 12 years old when she was cast as Eleven in 'Stranger Things', but she had absolutely no qualms about shaving her head before filming the hit Netflix show. She recalled: "I honestly did not care and I’m saying that like I really did not care. I didn’t have anxiety, I wasn’t sad when they shaved it off. "I just thought, 'Cool. Now this is what I’m doing.' I think it started to hit me months and months in where you get to that age where you’re 11 now and you’re shaving it consecutively every three days because it cannot grow past a certain length because we’re filming, so continuity-wise you’re shaving it, so every time it started to grow and I’d get excited, we’d shave it again." She started to feel "insecure" once she and her friends were getting to the age where boys were getting interested in other girls. She added: "So, I think it became to the point where I was like 12, 11 or 12, where I was like, the boys started liking girls and I was kind of like maybe, 'Why are boys not liking me?' "And then I was like, 'I’m feeling insecure now,' so I would put wigs on and I did get really, really bullied. "In public, people would make comments and stuff but honestly, I still to this day loved the experience and I would do it again."

John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston Will Reopen Wednesday After Brief Closure
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."

Wendy Williams Claims She Passed Mental Competency Evaluations 'with Flying Colors' After Being Escorted to Hospital by NYPD
Ilya S. Savenok/Getty

DOGE website offers error-filled window into Musk's government overhaul
By Brad Heath and Tim Reid

Joseph Kosinski & Jerry Bruckheimer Eyeing Reteam On UFO Disclosure-Themed Feature – The Dish
Following collaborations on smash hit Paramount sequel Top Gun: Maverick and the forthcoming Formula 1 pic F1 for Apple and Warner Bros, director Joseph Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer are eyeing a reteam on a hot new package out to the town.

Petronas Mulls Over $1 Billion Loan for Malaysian LNG Project
(Bloomberg) -- Malaysia’s Petroliam Nasional Bhd is in talks with banks for a potential loan to fund a liquefied national gas project, according to people familiar with the matter.

Nicole Kidman's Lookalike Teen Daughter Walked the Runway at Paris Fashion Week
Getty images

What a sixth Bank of Canada interest rate cut could mean for mortgages as tariffs loom
A series of five consecutive Bank of Canada (BoC) interest rate cuts through 2024 has offered some relief to mortgage holders and at least a flicker of movement in the housing market, but U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff threat might blunt the effects of today's rate reduction on household budgets.

‘The Rookie’ Star Jenna Dewan on Having Real-Life Fiancé Steve Kazee Play Her Abusive Ex and Touring With ‘Idol’ Janet Jackson
SPOILER ALERT: This interview contains spoilers from “The Mickey,” the Season 7, Episode 7 of ABC’s “The Rookie.”

1 sector that stands to gain under the Trump administration — and 2 that could lose
Listen and subscribe to Stocks in Translation on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.

Montreal Dominates Midseason PWHL Award Choices
With Montreal playing its 15th game of the season, the last team to do so, and with no more breaks before the World Championship, I thought it was a good timing to put out my version of the mid-season awards.

Police arrest suspect in 2021 killing of young man in Lowertown
Ottawa police have arrested and charged Haybe Farhan Aden in a 2021 killing in Ottawa's Lowertown neighbourhood, police say.

家賃相場が安い東京の地域や駅ランキング~格安物件の見分け方~

US official says South Korea's watchlist status due to mishandling of lab data
By Hyunjoo Jin and Josh Smith

Singapore’s Chocolate Finance Engaging With MAS on Customer Withdrawal Issues
(Bloomberg) -- Singapore’s financial regulator said it is engaging with an online robo-advisor operated by Chocfin Pte. and independent fund custodian Allfunds to ensure all customer withdrawals will be met in an “orderly fashion.”

Advertisement