>>“艷照”用英語(yǔ)怎么說(shuō)?

陳冠希道歉發(fā)布會(huì)(視頻+雙語(yǔ)文本)>>

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ANJALI RAO: Edison this is your first return to Hong Kong since the height of the scandal. Why are you speaking to us now?

EDISON CHEN: Well, now legally I'm allowed to speak about it because the trial's finally over and honestly there's been a lot of talk through the past year and a half about this or that and a lot of rumors, a lot of hearsay, and I feel, you know, I've kept quiet just to kind of respect everyone and respect the law and hopefully that when the trial ended I could finally speak and I guess this is my chance now. I have a lot to say and I think I'm only gonna say it once so I think that it would be best to say it here with you.

RAO: I appreciate that. Talk to me about what the experience has been like for you of coming back to Hong Kong.

CHEN: I thought about coming back to Hong Kong for a long time. I've wanted to come back for quite a while now, so I'm actually quite happy. I'm elated that I'm back. This is my home. I've been away from home for too long, you know, I feel like a nomad. I've been living out of a suitcase for a year and a half it seems like. And to be back with my family, to be back with my friends, where my companies are, where I live, where everything that I've known in the past 8, 9 years, you know, it's in Hong Kong.Of course it's nervous, it's nerve-racking, because I don't really know how people can accept me. I don't really know with all these threats and all this stuff around, I really don't know what to expect to be honest with you, but I can't live my life scared always or in hiding.

RAO: There was a point though where you seemed to suggest that you were going to stay out of the public eye indefinitely. Since then you've had your movie, The Sniper, out. Do you really think though that you can still resurrect your career?

CHEN: It is good that you said this point because a lot of the media, especially the Chinese media, have said that Edison says he's quitting the entertainment industry forever. I actually said indefinitely. Now maybe some people don't understand what indefinitely means. It can mean 5 minutes, it can mean 2,000 years. I never said forever. You know I mean I'm not telling you it's going to be an easy thing, that overnight it's just going to be like an overnight celebrity thing, cause it's not. And I'm gonna have to go through a lot of the things that I went through coming up in the beginning as well, but I think that if I have a passion for what I do, I'm willing to go through that.

RAO: You mentioned that there has been a threat aspect to all of this and a bullet was sent to a TV station with a message warning you to stay out of the limelight. Do you fear for your personal safety?

CHEN: I'd be lying to you if I said that I'm bullet-proof and I'm not afraid of anything. I'd like to say that, but yeah, you know, it's.I never thought I would ever ever have a death threat. Why would someone want to kill me I thought, and at the same time right now I still don't quite understand it, but I have to get over it. I have to live my life. I had a death threat a year and a half ago and I had a death threat just before the release of my movie.

RAO: Since you have had two death threats, I mean, how does that affect you as a person?

CHEN: The first one I was afraid. I was afraid. I was afraid to go anywhere. I was traveling around when I was still in Hong Kong in trunks of taxis, like literally, just to get to places because, I mean, I wasn't going to get food, I was going to meet my lawyers and meet my management company and it wasn't fun, you know, like I had to be in the trunk for 15 minutes. I didn't even know if I had enough oxygen to be honest with you. Even when I had left Asia and I had went to Canada and America, it took me 3 months to really get out of the shell that I had put myself in. I mean, I was in darkness for 5 days. I had my drapes closed and I didn't even want to go anywhere because I was in America then, you know, and I was really, really afraid of just people and a sudden car movement, you know, I was afraid of motor bikers when I was driving because I was just afraid of everything.

RAO: Did you have any idea where the threats were coming from? For example, were you worried about organized crime?

CHEN: Wow, you know, I wish I knew. I mean I would love to sit down with those people and really talk to them and really, in my terms, squash the beef, you know, like kind of level things out because I don't really believe that it has to go to that extreme. I think that there's a lot of things that whoever it is, or whoever these people are, we can talk it out. I don't think that a life has to be taken. I could go on thinking 'til I'm 50 and I will never know, which is why I'm a little bit more carefree in that way and I just put it in God's hands basically to let him do what he wants with me and at the same time hopefully I can live my life.

RAO: You were a highly visible presence in this part of the world until the scandal really blew up. What have you been doing with your days since it happened?

CHEN: I've been doing a lot of things. It took me a little while, but you know, with the constant support of everyone around me, you know, my family especially and my girlfriend. I kind of got through that shell again. I kind of got through this I'm nothing and I'm done and I might as well give up stage and, you know, started to see what I could do that was valuable in the area that I was in. And I was in America. I was in LA and New York mostly. I've always wanted to either direct or produce movies so I, you know, decided to take some crash courses, follow some producers and try to learn the game of production. Not only did I have time to do some of the things I enjoyed, um, some of the things that I dreaded at first like doing my laundry or throwing out the garbage or going to the grocery store actually became something that really grounded me, and really gave me a different perspective of life because I've been working in the entertainment industry since I was 19. Very young.

I didn't really have a great outlook on life to be honest with you. I was just out of school. It was like a party. You know, every day was like a party. I kind of got accustomed to that life where everything was taken care of, where I thought I was a pretty good person, and then I went back and I kind of had to do all these things by myself and I kind of reflected on the way I treated people and the way I saw things, and I got a lot more grounded. And I am thankful for that, you know. I mean, everything, I believe that everything happens for a reason.

RAO: Let's talk now specifically about the scandal. Sounds like a simple question, but why did you take the photos in the first place?

CHEN: Well, you know, when you're young you do a lot of things that you don't quite comprehend. You think it's fun, you do it, you don't really think about the outcome or what would happen if this or what would happen if that, and I think that you know, I mean, every every. when you're a teenager and when you're young and when you're a celebrity, and you have this and that, I think maybe you go overboard a little bit. And I think that maybe, you know, I just went a little too overboard, a little too wild I guess maybe. I don't take those pictures anymore and I had ceased to take those pictures for actually quite a long time. All those pictures that were released were taken pre-2004. It was 2008 when these photos were released so it was like a lot of people were seeing 'oh that's Edison.' That was actually the old Edison. Those photos were from 4 years ago. It's just, you know, I had even.I was in a serious relationship at that time. It was my first serious relationship. ever. I was in love. I'm happy. And, you know, when you respect someone and you really love someone you tend to care about how those people feel and when we had like deep intense talks, we talked about our past and, you know, I had actually told her that some of these things had happened before and she was quite upset and actually told me to delete them.

RAO: Why didn't you?

CHEN: I did. I did. I did delete them and.

RAO: -All of them?

CHEN: Yes, all of them. All of them. 6 months later after I had deleted these photos off my computer, my computer broke down. I had insisted, I mean, I had asked my assistant to go and bring the computer to go and get it fixed. Now, what I actually found out after returning to Hong Kong and assisting the police was that they had copied my whole hard drive and then they had recovered my memory. I had no idea that there was such a thing before. I thought that if I had put it in the trash bin and said empty trash bin and it goes [makes noise] and it's gone... forever, but no, it wasn't.

It's strange because I'm actually very happy that I had this talk with my girlfriend before and that she knew that I had deleted them because at least the person that I care for the most in this world knows the truth and will stand by me, because I don't know if I hadn't talked to her and I really didn't do that in front of her face if she would still stand by me through all of this. And, you know, she's been a very strong and very supportive girl even though she's very young.

RAO: You're still together?

CHEN: Yes yes, it's amazing.

RAO: How has she handled all of this?

CHEN: She's like a warrior.She's like superwoman, you know, like to me because while I was sitting indoors hiding, I mean, I don't want to sound like a coward, but it was deeply intense for me, but she'd be going to school every day.

RAO: Were there photos of her?

CHEN: Umm yes, yes, but very few.

RAO: Some 13 hundred were leaked onto the net. Do you know how many there were in total?

CHEN: Umm no, I didn't sit at home and count them, to be honest with you.

RAO: Are we talking hundreds? Are we talking thousands?

CHEN: I would say there were a few more. There were a few more, but that was already enough. Thirteen hundred is way enough already. I never spoke about these photos to anyone. I never.

RAO: You never showed them to anybody?

CHEN: No, I never showed them to anyone. The only people that might have seen them were the people who took them, where'd they be like can I look at what you just took? and I'd show them. I would never parade them around.

RAO: Did all of the women involved know that their photos were being taken?

CHEN: Yes, definitely. Definitely. I have to say that, you know, everything was mutual. It was all consensual, all consensual. I don't know exactly how they view what had happened or what they tell people, but I know the truth. I'm only here to say the truth because I believe that there's too much lies going around and too much controversy and too much hearsay. And I'll tell you right now that, you know, if I have a camera in front of your face and there's a flash, do you know that I'm taking a photo of you? That's as simple as it is.

RAO: Let me just ask you about the computer technician who was involved. By hacking into your files, it does sound like a deliberate attempt to target you personally. How do you feel about him?

CHEN: Umm the way I feel about him today and the way I felt about him 8 months ago is totally different. I've forgiven him and he's going to, you know, he's going to jail. He's got judged and he's passed judgment already and he's doing what he needs to do to redeem himself, but I don't exactly know if the person who stole the photos and that distribute and put them on the internet are the same person, but I definitely think that these people had something malicious towards me. It was a malicious act. It was purposefully done to hurt. No money was involved. No nothing was involved. People ask me, the police ask me, have people been blackmailing you? I was like, no. They're like 'wow' are you sure? I say definitely, I would know if someone was trying to blackmail me.

RAO: The public was furious at the time. Did you expect that sort of a backlash?

CHEN: Uhh...No,No, because I believed I was a victim. I believed that I was hurt by this a lot. I believed that.I knew that I had nothing to do with the spreading of these photos.

RAO: You don't believe you did anything wrong?

CHEN: I can't say I didn't do anything wrong. I own up to my mistake of being careless and not really, not really understanding something before I would allow something to happen, something to happen you know, I didn't really understand that. I admit I was wrong. I've admitted that I was wrong and I wouldn't say sorry if I wasn't wrong.

RAO: Tell me about the moment that you realized that these photos were everywhere.

CHEN: I was shocked. I was in disbelief. Someone called me. I was sleeping in the morning.

RAO: What'd they say?

CHEN: She said have you checked the internet yet? You should go check the internet. I go, man, I'm just sleeping please just. you really need to go to this web site and look at it right now. I looked at the website and I almost.I don't even know how to put it in words. I don't even know how to put that feeling in words. It was like everything just got sucked out of me and I was like looking and I was like 'wow' this is so.Where?! What?! When?! How?! Confusion, like, what to do? Oh my god my family! Oh my god my girlfriend! Oh my god my career! Oh my god the girls! Oh the press is going to have a field day. I have to fix this problem as soon as possible. That was the first day when 2 or 3 photos were out only, so imagine by the 800th photo how I was feeling. It was like a nightmare that never ended. It never ended. I would go to bed and I would pray, I would pray please, please God, today please be the last day. I pray I'll do anything. You know. Anything. Please today.

I'm not the person to ever commit suicide though, so I've never been there. I think that committing suicide is giving up on not only yourself, but the people that love you, and at that moment I had so many people caring for me that that was never an option. Never.

RAO: Cecilia Cheung accused you of being a hypocrite and a fraud. She said that you turned your phone off and that you ignored her while this whole thing was going on. What would you say to her now if you had the chance?

CHEN: I would, you know, I don't really want to have a back and forth with her, which is why I didn't really comment on what she had said before. I hope that she can understand that, you know, I really do feel sorry. I really am sorry to her. I'm sorry to everyone involved, but you know,at a certain time and a certain point in everyone's life you get caught up in things. And I was just caught up in the whole mix. I was at the center of the storm. What she wants to say I'll let her say it because in a certain sense some of the responsibility is in my hands and maybe in her world I'm the only one who was wrong.

RAO: When was the last time that you spoke to any of them?

CHEN: Umm...I can't recently.

RAO: Before the scandal?

CHEN: Definitely before the scandal.

RAO: You haven't spoken to any of them since?

CHEN: .

RAO: Because you couldn't find them or because you didn't want to?

CHEN: Umm...you lly it was because I couldn't find them. Secondly, it was because I didn't really know how to approach and really what to say to be honest with you. I would have liked to call them and say sorry, but at the same time, you know, I hope that when the trial was over they would actually know I didn't do this on purpose. That's why I waited for that trial to end for forever. It was like a calendar mark that had no day, you know, and umm, you know if I can see them. I don't wanna...like speaking on the phone. I feel like it loses a lot of the integrity of the emotion. I think that like it's like some people say, you know, we break up over the phone it's one of the worst things, right? And I feel like if I apologize over the phone it might not seem sincere and it might not seem real.

RAO: Well careers are in shreds and engagements been broken, some would say even lives have been ruined. If any of the women were to come to you and say, listen, I wanna talk about this, you know, I wanna just get this all straight. Would you be open to that?

CHEN: Definitely. If we're going to sit down as two adults and really suss it out, I'm open, I'm open to it, but judging from the way they've done their interviews I don't think that, you know, they have every right to be angry. I don't want this to come across as I'm saying something about them, but I don't think that they're, they can sit down and have a constructional conversation with me quite yet.

RAO: Do you think this time in your life will always stay with you?

CHEN: Even if I didn't want it to, it would. I've tried to move on with my life and I think that, you know, it's kind of like forgive and not forget, but it's like I want to forget too. Cause I've had to forgive myself, I mean you know, the person I was angry at most was myself, you know, I was most unhappy with myself. I had to learn to deal with myself. I had to go home and look at myself in the mirror and see what kind of man I am. And, you know, I come to learn to come to terms with myself. I feel more comfortable as the Edison now than I was the Edison before, and I don't know how that makes people feel, but you know, I'm just being real and I'm just being honest.

RAO: Edison, it really can't have been easy for you to talk so openly about this, so I do thank you very much indeed for sitting down with us today.

CHEN: Thank you.

  - End-

中文報(bào)道:

鬧得滿城風(fēng)雨的藝人艷照事件男主角陳冠希日前接受CNN電視臺(tái)獨(dú)家訪問(wèn),他透露全部艷照均經(jīng)女方同意拍攝,并坦承拍攝過(guò)的艷照不止1300張。

陳冠希今年2月就艷照案在加拿大作供后,上周三忽然從美國(guó)洛杉磯返港,連日在尖沙嘴及中環(huán)等旺區(qū)出入。原來(lái)他此行還接受了由AnjaliRao主持的CNN節(jié)目《TalkAsia》訪問(wèn),再次談及艷照風(fēng)暴之余,還會(huì)解釋為何拍艷照,也首次向艷照女主角之一的張柏芝道歉,節(jié)目長(zhǎng)約30分鐘。

據(jù)港媒報(bào)道,陳冠希當(dāng)日穿上筆挺西裝錄像,主持人問(wèn)他為何選擇接受CNN訪問(wèn)時(shí),他以英語(yǔ)說(shuō):“在法律上,我現(xiàn)在才可以談及此事,因?yàn)榘讣K于完結(jié)。老實(shí)說(shuō),一直以來(lái)有太多的謠言,我有很多的說(shuō)話要說(shuō),因此我認(rèn)為最適合在這里一次過(guò)說(shuō)清?!?/p>

提到當(dāng)初第一張艷照在網(wǎng)上流出時(shí),陳冠希猶有余悸,他說(shuō):“我到哪里都感到害怕。當(dāng)時(shí)我還在香港,坐的士也要躲在車尾箱中,還要待在那里15分鐘。”

事件爆發(fā)后,陳冠希撇下其它艷照女主角潛逃美國(guó),但即使如此,他的心情也未能平復(fù),他說(shuō):“就算我離開(kāi)了亞洲,到了美國(guó)及加拿大,我要用3個(gè)月時(shí)間才將事件慢慢放下?!?/p>

他又說(shuō):“我認(rèn)為我是受害者。我不能說(shuō)我沒(méi)有任何錯(cuò)失,但我同時(shí)認(rèn)為我不是罪犯,我也為此事受到極大打擊?!?/p>

到今年2月,張柏芝接受有線訪問(wèn)談及艷照事件時(shí),狂罵陳冠?!柏埧蘩鲜蠹俅缺?,又指事件爆發(fā)后陳冠希從沒(méi)向艷照女主角道歉,就連手提電話也關(guān)掉,對(duì)此陳冠希在訪問(wèn)中首次回應(yīng),他辯稱是警方不許他談及柏芝,他說(shuō):“其實(shí)我不想跟她糾纏下去,也因此而沒(méi)有響應(yīng)她的言論……我不能跟她對(duì)話,因?yàn)檫@是警方的要求,再者他們也在調(diào)查我,而這件事已令我非常困擾……我真的感到抱歉,我真的對(duì)她感到抱歉。我希望有一天她能夠原諒我,以及明白我也有自己的困難及苦況。我真的,真的不希望此事發(fā)生在任何人身上,而我仍尊重她?!?/p>

他又指自己不是故意冷對(duì)一眾艷照女主角,他說(shuō):“起初我找不到她們,然后,我真的不懂得怎樣去接觸她們。”

去年警方曾搜出1300張艷照,當(dāng)中涉及6名女星,陳冠希早前在加拿大作供時(shí),也承認(rèn)艷照女主角包括阿嬌、陳文媛及張柏芝。外間盛傳可能還有另一批艷照,甚至有指拍攝艷照的女藝人最少有14人,陳冠希在CNN的訪問(wèn)中坦承艷照不止1300張,又說(shuō)全部艷照均經(jīng)女方同意拍攝,他說(shuō):“全部都是雙方同意下拍攝的,試想想我拿著相機(jī)在你面前拍照,燈光一閃,你可會(huì)不知道我在拍你?就是這么簡(jiǎn)單?!?/p>

作為艷照事件始作俑者,回想去年2月在港舉行記招公開(kāi)道歉的情景時(shí),陳冠希說(shuō):“我當(dāng)時(shí)很無(wú)助,我知道我做錯(cuò)了事,但是事情鬧到我們都無(wú)法彌補(bǔ)的地步。最初我真的不明白為甚么事件會(huì)引起這樣強(qiáng)烈的憎恨和爭(zhēng)議,可是過(guò)了一陣子,我開(kāi)始明白他們的感受……我的意思不是這樣公不公平,而是我明白到中國(guó)文化的本質(zhì)、社會(huì)的想法和感受?!?/p>

事件后一眾艷照女主角立即潛水,陳冠希則飛往美國(guó)避鋒頭,他說(shuō):“我一個(gè)人在SantaMonica的海灘,獨(dú)自哭了很久,直到氣息平定,我慢慢開(kāi)始想以后該怎么辦。我在想,已經(jīng)過(guò)去的錯(cuò)我無(wú)法改變它,但是我不斷思考我可以在未來(lái)做些甚么正面的事來(lái)彌補(bǔ)?!?/p>

對(duì)于有傳他曾自殺,陳冠希矢口否認(rèn):“我那時(shí)真的很低落,但從未想到要自殺。自殺是不負(fù)責(zé)任的表現(xiàn),我不會(huì)笨到丟棄生命來(lái)逃避而不去彌補(bǔ)過(guò)失。盡管有些人恨我,但世界上仍然有很多愛(ài)我的人……我絕不可能做這種事?!?/p>

陳冠希身邊一直不乏女伴,但經(jīng)歷此事后,他與女友Vincy彷佛共歷生死,他說(shuō):“這段時(shí)間,我感受到人間的冷暖,但是女友讓我了解到愛(ài)的意義,這種真愛(ài)的力量很大,我似乎成了一個(gè)全新的男人?!?/p>

離開(kāi)香港后,陳冠希暫居洛杉磯,他形容這是人生的低潮期,但卻找到更多人生價(jià)值,他說(shuō):“我自己開(kāi)車煮飯,一個(gè)星期去健身室4次,可以自在的閑逛。有心事我就跑去海邊發(fā)呆,任意大叫狂踢都不會(huì)有人在意。我感受到自己活得像個(gè)真實(shí)的人,這是金錢(qián)買(mǎi)不到的踏實(shí)感覺(jué)。”

一年多過(guò)去,一眾艷照主角紛紛嘗試返回工作崗位,陳冠希在訪問(wèn)尾聲再一次道歉說(shuō):“很對(duì)不起,但是我們都該正面的往前看。我會(huì)做很多事來(lái)彌補(bǔ)我以前做的錯(cuò),但愿這世界最終會(huì)讓我們重拾自己的生活?!?/p>