海外の反応
・選手の動きが早くて多分誰も気づいてないとは思いますが…
・早いシャッタースピードで撮影するためにはより明るい高度なフラッシュが必要です
・群衆の中に変なのが一人いました
・そういう趣味の人が集まるサイトに写真を売ったのでしょう
・気持ち悪い
・ナディア・コマネチ 今76歳です
・当時は14歳でした
・フラッシュモードのオフにするのを忘れた時
・あの距離を考えるとフラッシュはあまり効果がないかもしれません。
・彼女の演技の邪魔をしようとしたのではないでしょうか
・最低だな。カメラのフラッシュくらいで目がおかしくなるとは思わないけど少々危険だ
・すばらしいタイミングだ。その道のプロだな
・フラッシュの光強すぎてビームだわ
・カメラのフラッシュをあの会場で焚くのもやべーだろ
・うしろの赤い服を着た人が足を開いたことは誰もコメントしないの?
・どこにそんな人がいるの?
・演技してる彼女に隠れて見ずらいが後ろ席に座っている
・彼女の演技を頭に叩き込んでいるんだな。でないとこんなにタイミングよくしゃたーボタン押せないよ。
・最高の写真が撮れたんだろう
・フラッシュをオフにするのを忘れました
・彼は今ごろ後悔してるかもしれない
・これは別の板に投稿すべき動画ではないか
引用元
We’re human — we’re human. My memory was stimulated, and when I looked at the saved data, I found that the lines were written down in the author’s 20 year-old interview notebook.
The performance of “white fairy” Comaneci, who scored 10 out of 10 at the 1976 Montreal Olympics (July 21, 1976)
After his Olympic glory, Comanetchi lived a turbulent life. “I’m a human being before I’m a gymnast. It’s not perfect.” = Photo taken in 2017
”Before I’m a gymnast, I’m a human being.”
The memo is titled “Nadia Comaneci Interview at the Gymnastics Academy in Norman, Oklahoma.” Comaneci, a 14-year-old female national team in Romania at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, was one of the first gymnastics legends in history, dressed in white leotards, and won three gold medals.
After returning to Romania, Comaneci is awarded a medal by the state and loses his freedom while gaining honor. Under then-President Chaushesk’s dictatorship, gymnastics was used for national prestige and propaganda, and powerful people who feared fleeing closely monitored Comaneci. Just moving to the laundry room at the training camp was reportedly questioned by a government official who served as a watchdog. Overseas travel is not allowed after retirement, and surveillance becomes more severe. In November 1989, he defected to the United States imagining a free life.
Comanecchi revealed in an interview. “I can’t tell you all about it here. All I can say is that I didn’t leave the country impulsively… I mean, I’m a human being before I’m a gymnast. I was called “Perfect” (with 10 points), but it’s not perfect. It’s never strong. The charity effort was so much help from so many people that it was the least they could repay. When I returned to Romania for the first time (after my exile), everyone welcomed me warmly. I was happier than anything else because you understood me.”