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楼主 |
发表于 2006-6-28 16:20:44
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老外的评论有点意思,比较中肯客观,大部分认为黄健翔疯了
啤酒喝得太多!
http://www.danwei.org/sports/cctv_football_commentator_out.php#comments
Comments on Crazy CCTV football commentator;
Fictional foreign news?
Huang has deeply hurt the feelings of the Australian people. We're all going down to the Chinese Embassy in Canberra to throw rocks through their windows.
Posted by: zhuanjia | June 27, 2006 07:02 PMThe Chinese commentary standard generally is abysmal....so many errors in names of players, facts and so on, plus an incredible lack of knowledge and expression...at least this guy was showing a bit of passion! My top two CCTV commentary bits:
Germany v Poland, 92 minutes, Germany snatch a late winner....we see the goal, get three replays, all the while the dude is screaming BALLACK! BALLACK!! INCREDIBLE!! BALLACK!! Problem was, Michael Ballack didn't get the goal, it was Oliver Neuville.....
Holland vs Portugal, 70 minutes
A dirty game, but very entertaining - alas the commentator was unimpressed by the play. After Deco hacks down a Dutch player, the commentator, in the most sneering way possible, says "Chinese fans want to see exciting play and excellent teamwork, not such violence'.....pah! U ever seen a taxi smash mate??? There is nothing that the Chinese love more than gawking at a couple of guys going at it bell and whistle!!!
I've been so amazed and impressed by how my Chinese co-workers have got into this World Cup, such interest and enthusiasm....I guess ignorance of decent coverage is bliss.
Posted by: Angus | June 27, 2006 08:05 PMMy fiancee and I were watching the broadcast this morning and it was definitely way over the top and didn't pay any respect to the good efforts of the Australian team. I would be able to understand if he was commentating on the Chinese team, but why does he have to favour one foreign team over another? You can refer to my blog to see our comments: www.whitepage.com.au/chinamachete
Posted by: Xiao Zhu | June 27, 2006 08:22 PMEveryone is biased, that's not a problem; but Huang's a bit hysteria this time, even a neutral Chinese soccer fan like me felt been insulted by his words. I follwed up the related postings in tianya.cn nearly all day today and found the opinions of the netizens very polarized. My own analysis of Huang's evolvement is in the beginning of his career he followed the British commentators' style trying to show more restraint, but now he might have changed his mind to pursue the more enthusiastic Latin style instead;-) Only the simulation this time is ugly with wrong occasion.
Posted by: william | June 27, 2006 08:24 PMIs this what we can expect during the Olympics?
Posted by: michael | June 27, 2006 09:06 PMwilliam: Huang is typically fairly decent, I think, but he's been criticized this World Cup for being a bit lackluster, like he's been under the weather - some people have suggested that this outburst was meant to answer his critics...
Angus: Ironically, Chinese fans seem to enjoy those kinds of mistakes - Han Qiaosheng is one commentator notorious for his errors, and seems to have made a career out of it: http://pianpian.160.cc/yourindex/aindex/a0001.htm
zhuanjia: Not only has Huang hurt Australia's feelings, but it's been suggested that his hatred is due in part to a grudge China carries against New Zealand for running up the score against Saudi Arabia 25 years ago to force China out of the qualifiers - all you Oceana teams are all the same.
Posted by: Joel | June 27, 2006 09:12 PMWhat's the big deal?
Actually, it's nice to hear someone in Chinese media who is not afraid to express his opinion.
Posted by: beautiful game boy | June 27, 2006 09:18 PMAnd it is the Year of Italy in China after all, no.
Posted by: Stronzo | June 27, 2006 09:26 PMhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/worldcup/2006/06/my_soul_is_crumbling.html
The BBC blog also refers (but does not link) to the "AP's report".
Posted by: LfC | June 27, 2006 10:24 PMAnother possible explanation: on January 1st 2006 Australia joined the Asian Football Confederation. This gives Australia a better chance of qualifying for future world cups (without an automatic qualification spot, the top Oceania team needs to qualify by winning a play-off with a runner-up from another federation). This threatens China’s already shaky chances of qualifying for future world cups.
Posted by: Aussie sympathizer | June 28, 2006 12:22 AMthat huang guy should be lynched. cctv should really get proper commentators instead of the current bunch of f**ktardos. couldnt agree more with angus...every time they those schooboy mistakes, it makes me cringe. i'm sure anyone of us make better commentators than those morons. i'm angry. and i'm not even australian.
Posted by: scott | June 28, 2006 01:15 AMThat Huang guy acted in a crazy way. I think probably he was trying to be passionate to get higher ratings for his programs and more fame for himself. As a Chinese, I feel sorry for Australians who are offended. But at the same time I really don't think this is a big deal in the sense of the relationship between Chinese and Australians. I do suggest people to ignore that Huang person.
Dafei
Posted by: Dafei | June 28, 2006 07:23 AMDo Chinese really believe Australians give a f*** what some unknown TV commentator thinks about them? [But I must admit Australian commentators are hardly open minded].
Posted by: dave | June 28, 2006 08:19 AMHas it not occured to anyone that, as with other CCTV employees, Huang probably bet on Italy winning?
The notion of conflict-of-interest is alien to Chinese and probably this situation is no exception.
Posted by: Figures of Speech | June 28, 2006 08:20 AMTwo Things:
Can 30 Australians really surround an embassy?
Commentary in Australia of any sport is hardly what you could call unbaised, and rightly so, sport is about passion. Its not as though Huang changed the result or kicked the penalty.
Posted by: Ben | June 28, 2006 08:36 AMThing is we'd all understand if it was the Chinese team playing - sports reporters are pretty much expected to be pro their own country's team - but Italy? Either there's an ulterior motive or the man just got caught up in his commentary, which is at least a bit more exciting than the "hao qiu" "hao qiu" nonsense which seems to pass for commentary on CCTV.
Posted by: Ivory | June 28, 2006 09:09 AMto dave:
ummm, yes Aussies do. The story is on the top of Sydney Morning Herald's site this morning: http://www.smh.com.au/news/aussie-update/i-dont-like-australians-indeed/2006/06/28/1151174235245.html
this might bring on more anti-Chinese sentiment, all because of some bad piece of football commentary.
my own thoughts: Australia was robbed. That was a shit game.
Posted by: wen | June 28, 2006 10:27 AMHuang Jianxiang has apologised for his commentary. TV host Zhang Bin read out his apology last night. Looks like a face-saving exercise since there's no real explanation about what sent him crazy, besides a fondness for Italy.
Posted by: Xiao Zhu | June 28, 2006 10:37 AMI don't think that people would have been quite so upset if his reaction had been limited to hysteria after the goal was scored and the game was won. But he started calling Grosso a hero when he fell in the box - if he's not cheering the guy for taking a fall, then he's calling someone a hero merely for drawing a penalty. Either way, it's poor form.
Posted by: Joel | June 28, 2006 10:41 AMPlease don't talk about lynching Huang: it's just a football game after all.
It is difficult to believe that Australians could be so sensitive to such twaddle.
Just deny his kids a visa when they try to go to school in Sydney!
Posted by: No lynching please | June 28, 2006 10:47 AMI was most confuised when he started screaming 'happy birthday maldini!!!" maldini who is not even in the Italy squad that is.
the guy went way, way over the top. I can't understand his reaction. Maybe he underestimated the strength of the german beer he was supping at half time. It ain't tsingtao you know.
Posted by: mike | June 28, 2006 11:18 AM |
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