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Guardian Unlimited -
15 hours and 9 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/78946?ns=guardianpageName=Music%3A+Under+the+radar%2C+over+the+topch=Musicc3=The+Guardianc4=Electronic+music%2CAlexis+Petridis+on+pop%2CCulture+section%2CClubbing+%28Music%29%2CMusicc5=Pop+Music%2CNot+commercially+useful%2CElectronic+and+Dancec6=Alexis+Petridisc7=2008_12_05c8=1128673c9=articlec10=GUc11=Musicc12=Electronic+musicc13=c14=h2=GU%2FMusic%2FElectronic+music"
width="1" height="1" //divpChristine looks about 15. She is wearing a pair of vertiginously heeled
ankle boots that make her both tall and a little wobbly and which form the basis of a pretty
remarkable ensemble. She is also wearing fluorescent tights, a clashing fluorescent tutu, a T-shirt
that she appears to have accessorised by snapping a glowstick in two and splashing its luminous
contents over herself, a pair of lens-less glasses that also glow in the dark, and an expression of
profound suspicion. The suspicion is aimed in my direction. "You," she says, narrowing her eyes,
"don't look like a raver. What are you doing here?"/ppThis is a question I started asking myself
the moment I walked into Aberdeen's AECC Exhibition Centre, where the second Clubland Live arena
tour of 2008 is in full swing. Ignored or derided as the apotheosis of cheesy, worthless pop by the
mainstream media, Clubland is nevertheless Britain's "biggest-selling dance brand" - Clubland and
its parent label, All Around the World, have spawned 21 No 1 albums, millions of record sales,
sellout tours, and their own TV channel - and the place is accordingly thronged with kids: primary
school children accompanied by parents wearing weary expressions, gangs of adolescent girls
striding around arm in arm, boys playfighting and getting each other in headlocks, and older
teenagers whose unsteady gait suggests Grampian police's rigorous attempts to stop underage
drinking before the event have met with only partial success. /ppRegardless of age, everyone is
going berserk. The uproar is continuous. Everyone screams at everything all the time - the
performers onstage who do their 20 minutes and scuttle off; the DJs who fill in between them
playing thumping hardcore remixes of Katy Perry's I Kissed a Girl, the Sugababes' About You Now
and, most startling of all, Cascada's unlikely cover version of Patti Smith's Because the Night. At
one point, an announcement about the venue's regulations regarding flash photography comes over the
PA, and goes down like the Beatles at Shea Stadium. When the fans really like something, they
express their approval by pelting the stage and each other with glowsticks. The really big acts
appear to be performing under a kind of neon hailstorm./ppIf Clubland's audience isn't
discombobulating enough to an outsider, there are Clubland's stars to contend with. If you're over
21, it seems highly unlikely that any of their names will ring much of a bell, unless you've been
paying very close attention to the album charts or glued to Clubland TV: Kelly Llorenna, September,
Eyeopener, Cascada, N-Force, Darren Styles. You won't have heard them on Radio 1 - the station will
have little to do with them. Clubland's architects, Matt Cadman and Cris Nuttall of All Around the
World, claim that at one juncture they were told by a station representative that they weren't
interested because All Around the World released "music for kids who live on council estates".
"That was one of our favourites," Cadman says. "In fairness, the people at Radio 1 have changed
since then, so you can't really pin that one on them, but I think that statement still has an
underlying truth to it. It's perceived Clubland doesn't reach the kind of people Radio 1 wants to
attract." Clubland TV, meanwhile, was set up in response to the lack of interest other music
channels showed in playing that kind of music./ppTellingly, Cadman says All Around the World began
in the early 90s, releasing big northern rave anthems like Love Decade's Is This a Dream? and
Control's Dance With Me (I'm Your Ecstasy) - "records that no one else understood, that were
popular in the north-west, but no one knew about in London and that remains true to this
day"./ppCertainly there's still a noticeable regional bias to Clubland's appeal (this tour goes no
further south than Birmingham, although the cancellation of a date in Plymouth apparently had more
to do with logistics than a lack of demand). And since the release of the first Clubland
compilation album in 2002, Cadman and Nuttall do seem to have constructed a genuine youth
phenomenon out of the most unlikely ingredients: a selection of thunderingly uncool sub-genres of
dance music that seem to have a peculiar appeal to teenagers too young to go clubbing - bouncy
scouse house, happy hardcore, pop trance - and a stable of artists that you suspect wouldn't get
past reception at any other record company. /ppThere is Ultrabeat, two Liverpudlian DJs called
Chris and Mike. Chris and Mike are funny, friendly and charming and have a string of hits to their
name, notably the 2003 smash Pretty Green Eyes, but, with the best will in the world, more closely
resemble plumbers than pop stars, a fact rather underlined by their videos. These usually feature
Chris and Mike looking a bit lost while women in suspenders lasciviously gyrate around them. "We've
had things before where channels have gone, 'Oh, we don't want to play the Ultrabeat video, I don't
like the guy in it.' But I'm slightly bored with the celebrity thing where everybody's got to look
a certain way," Cadman says. "We're going, 'This is the guy who made this record,' and I think
people relate to that, rather than some good-looking faccedil;ade." As if to prove his point, no
sooner do I sit down with Matt and Chris than a lady asks for their autographs for her teenage
daughter. "Nice to be nice, innit?" says Chris when she departs. "We're all normal people,
everyone's the same, aren't they?"/ppThen there is Blackout Crew, Bolton's faintly terrifying
tracksuit- and hair-gel- heavy progenitors of a genre called donk, whose last video, Put a Donk On
It, has thus far racked up more than 3m hits on YouTube. There is Darren Styles, a former happy
hardcore producer who finds himself, at 34, a slightly baffled teeny pin-up, purveying music that,
on the basis of his Clubland live set, often sounds not unlike a Coldplay piano ballad sung in an
Essex accent and inexplicably retooled with thumping 160bpm beats. "It's a bit daunting for me, to
be honest," he says. "I enjoy it, but you spend 12 years standing behind the decks then you're put
out in front of a huge crowd in a spotlight with a microphone, and it's completely out of my
comfort zone." /ppAnd, most successful of all, there is Scooter, a novelty German rave act who
emerged in the early 90s and managed to spin out their expected 15 minutes of fame into 14 years.
Imagine if the people who made Sesame's Treet had gone on to release 13 albums and sell more than
14m records worldwide, and you get some idea of the sheer improbability of Scooter's career,
although to really grasp how bizarre it is, you need to be conversant with their oeuvre, which is
nuts. Scooter have variously released rave versions of Soft Cell's Sex Dwarf, Marian by the Sisters
of Mercy, Hava Nagila, and the theme tune to Miss Marple. /ppThey've also recorded a medley of Shut
Up and Dance's 1991 hardcore hit Raving I'm Raving with a bagpipe rendition of Scotland the Brave,
and not one but two songs inspired by the work of forgotten mid-80s John Peel favourites Stump.
Their current big thing is jumpstyle, a sort of synchronised hopping dance popular in the
Netherlands, which Scooter have promoted with singles called Jumping All Over the World and Jump
That Rock, a collaboration with Status Quo. If you feel like sniggering at this as precisely the
kind of thing that causes British music fans to feel vastly superior to their clueless continental
counterparts, it's worth noting that, with minimal radio play or media coverage - though there was
a video clip shown on Zane Lowe's MTV show Gonzo, which the excitable Kiwi claimed was evidence
that "music is finally dead" - Scooter's last album entered the British charts at No 1, knocking
Madonna off the top spot. /ppBackstage in Aberdeen, their dressing room features plenty of rock
star trappings, including a cooler full of vodka, a watchful manager there to ensure I don't
overrun my allotted 15 minutes of face time, an immense PA system that apparently forms part of
their pre-gig ritual - "for one hour, very loud music, a few drinks to get you in the mood" - and a
certain bullishness about the derision their music attracts. They have, they tell me, recently been
the subject of a series of paintings by a German artist called Albert Oehlen, who on his website
claims to be "fascinated" by Scooter, "because they have no content, only form". Nevertheless,
questions about Scooter's longevity are met with a shrug from frontman HP Baxxter, resplendent in
skull rings and Black Sabbath T-shirt. "We never stop," he offers. "Nearly every year there is a
new album. Maybe that's the reason why we've lasted so long." /ppThen again, bafflement at your own
success is very much a Clubland trademark. Despite the success of the albums and the TV channel,
Cadman and Nuttall managed to convince themselves the first Clubland tour would be a disaster: it
sold out. Darren Styles says he thought his debut solo album would sell around 20,000 copies. It
sold 22,000 in a week and entered the charts at No 4. "Coldplay were No 1, then Duffy, then Neil
Diamond, then me. It was absolutely bizarre."/ppPerhaps their surprise stems from the fact that
everything about Clubland seems somehow wrong: it's as if it exists in a hermetically sealed
bubble, apart from the rest of the music industry, where all the usual rules are turned on their
heads. The artists are clearly huge stars despite the media blackout. (Styles actually thinks they
might be successful because of the media blackout: "Maybe the fact that it's not so in your face,
it's not all over TV and radio accounts for it's appeal - it seems a bit underground, it's not
something that your mum and dad are listening to.") The TV channel is a huge success, despite
disobeying the most basic principles of a music channel. "If the video's a bit average, music
channels in general go, we love the track, but video's a bit cheap, so we're not going to show it,"
says Nuttall. "We would have a completely different view from that because if the track's brilliant
and the video's a bit average, not big budget, who cares? Kids don't sit there watching TV going,
'Oh, they must have only spent a hundred grand on the video, I'm not watching it.' They like the
tune, pure and simple."/ppAnd the All Around the World label sells vast quantities of CDs to
precisely the audience that everyone assumes never buys CDs. "If you're a 15-year-old and you can
work a computer, you can go and get a track you want in 30 seconds, it's really not that
difficult," Cadman says. "So singles have become less valuable because people just steal them or
Bluetooth them to each other in the playground. The value then becomes in the album. If the album
genuinely is good, if there's not one tune and nine fillers, if there's three or four singles on
it, the pound;8.99 in Asda or Tesco starts to seem like a bargain. For pound;8.99, I'm not going to
download it all, I might as well pay for it. You've just got to encourage the value for money, and
then records will sell physically. Clubland compilations have 60 tracks on them, take us months to
compile, and sell for 10 quid. People trust us, because me and Chris genuinely love the music. It's
not cool or perceived to be cool, but it's what we love. We'll sail with it and no doubt we'll go
down with it when it stops selling."/ppBut there's no sign of that happening for the foreseeable
future. The crowd in Aberdeen don't look like they'll be changing their allegiances any time soon.
As Scooter take the stage, the hail of glowsticks grows denser than ever: HP Baxxter never flinches
or falters, despite the surprising number of them that hit him squarely in the face. They play
their medley of Raving I'm Raving and Scotland the Brave, but no one other than me seems bemused.
They play Jumping All Over the World, and a crowd of boys at the back of the hall break into a
delighted synchronised jumpstyle routine. Christine wobbles past again on her high heels: "You
still here?" I ask her if she's having a good time. "Are you kidding?" she grins. I start to ask
her what she likes about Clubland, but but she doesn't hear - the screaming again -and she wobbles
away into the crowd./ppa href="http://www.clubland.fm/"Clubland.fm/a/pdiv style="float: left;
margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/electronicmusic"Electronic music/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/alexispetridis"Alexis Petridis on pop/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/clubs"Clubbing/a/li/ul/diva
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2008 | Use of
this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
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href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/M0rCGLsKbCYwSjNC2am_vyeOyZI/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/M0rCGLsKbCYwSjNC2am_vyeOyZI/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/p

|
Boing Boing -
17 hours and 50 minutes ago
A site about restoring an old Lombard Industries Centaur folding motor scooter to pristine
condition. Although I have never actually seen one before, I have been looking for a Lombard
Industries Centaur folding motor scooter for about ten years. Designed for use by private pilots
and boaters, this neat little unit will run 35mph using a Clinton engine, and folds up to a large
suitcase-sized package that weighs about 50 lbs. This particular scooter was in a friend's garage -
he had bought it from another TRAACA club member, but decided he didn't want to mess with it.
Lombard Industries Centaur folding motor scooter (Thanks, John K.!)...br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/

|
Boing Boing -
18 hours and 52 minutes ago
A site about restoring an old Lombard Industries Centaur folding motor scooter to pristine
condition. Although I have never actually seen one before, I have been looking for a Lombard
Industries Centaur folding motor scooter for about ten years. Designed for use by private pilots
and boaters, this neat little unit will run 35mph using a Clinton engine, and folds up to a large
suitcase-sized package that weighs about 50 lbs. This particular scooter was in a friends garage -
he had bought it from another TRAACA club member, but decided he didnt want to mess with it.
Lombard Industries Centaur folding motor scooter (Thanks, John K.!)...br style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5p=1img alt= style=border:
0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5p=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=c11d2a0a5036f7c712e1f785cfb8d8f5 style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/
|
Toutelatele.com -
1 days and 2 hours ago
img src="http://www.toutelatele.com/IMG/arton13794.jpg" align="left" width="210" height="150"
hspace="4" vspace="4" Installé depuis ce mercredi 3 décembre sur les planches du
théâtre du Rond-Point, Moustic invite sa chaîne de prédilection à
le suivre dans les coulisses. br /Moustic en Gro(Madaire) propose ainsi, ce jeudi 5 décembre
à 23h20, de s'installer dans les loges du théâtre, où les
téléspectateurs croiseront, entre autres, Edouard Baer, Jean-Michel Ribes,
Jean-Pierre Foucault, ou encore une star interplanétaire : Scooter, la marionnette velue
rouge. br /A noter que Jules-Edouard Moustic, jamais à bout de souffle, envahit
également non (...)
|
TechCrunch -
1 days and 6 hours ago
E-commerce juggernaut eBay is under fire because of
a holiday giveaway contest gone awry. On Tuesday 25 November, eBay announced its $1 Holiday
Doorbusters deals promotion, giving away 100 gifts ranging from jewelry, clothing, digital
cameras, GPS devices to a brand-new Chevrolet Corvette for a $1 fixed price on a daily basis.
The only catch is that there’s no announcement on when these items are released or in which
category they will be in.
But cheaters came up with a clever way of winning deals on an automated basis by running scripts
to continuously bid on items for $1. That way, they’re gaming the system and winning
hundreds of auctions before the items are even available to the public. As evidence, angry eBay
users point to a number of closed auctions where the visitor counter shows zero users have
actually visisted the item’s page before it was won. That way, an electric scooter worth
$1,000 was won by a bidder before anyone visited the page last weekend.
Honest eBay users are evidently unhappy with the
whole situation, and the eBay Forums reflect that.
Meanwhile, bot scripts are being offered on RentACoder for $20 and
even free of charge here
and there.
The terms and conditions for the contest states:
Sponsor reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to cancel or suspend part or all of this
Promotion at any time without notice, if in the Sponsor’s opinion there is any suspected or
actual evidence of electronic or non-electronic tampering with any portion of the Promotion, or
if virus, bugs, non-authorized human intervention or other causes corrupt or impair the
administration, security, fairness or integrity of the Promotion or for any other reason in its
sole discretion.
With that in mind, MSNBC reporter Bob Sullivan interviewed a couple
of eBay representatives about the issue, and found out that they’re unable to provide a
clear explanation of what kind of automation is allowed and what is prohibited, even
contradicting themselves about the issue of using automated tools to bid for items during the
contest.
So eBay, if you’re reading: do handy programmers have the right to overrun contests by
automatically bidding for items without even visiting the listing, or not?
Crunch Network: CrunchGear
drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


|
Open"Source::critere -
1 days and 22 hours ago
Une étude menée par Pierre Kopp, professeur d'économie à
l'Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, met en évidence les
bénéfices du boom de la moto et du scooter dans Paris intra-muros au détriment
de l'auto et des transports en commun. Interview vidéo
|
Gizmodo -
2 days and 2 hours ago
pobject width="494" height="410"param name="movie"
value="http://www.youtube.com/v/c27dVYZS32Ihl=enfs=1"/paramparam name="allowFullScreen"
value="true"/paramparam name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"/paramembed
src="http://www.youtube.com/v/c27dVYZS32Ihl=enfs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="494" height="410"/embed/objectModerately
musical little person Scooter Smiff has helpfully demonstrated, point by point, how emnot/em to
endorse gadgets in your music video./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_43.jpg" width="200" height="150"
/strong1. Get a company's flagship phone/strongbr / I understand that Scooter Smiff's audience is
probably as young as he is and probably doesn't need a massive smartphone, but if you've got to
shill for a BlackBerry, hope it's not the a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5062473/blackberry-pearl-flip-review"Pearl Flip/a. Mattmdash;notably a
gadget blogger, not a rappermdash;said it was kind of uncool, looked inconsistent, and even called
it a "fatass". Next time beg for a a href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/storm"Storm/a, or at least a a
href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/bold"Bold/a. /p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_44_01.jpg" width="200"
height="150" /strong2. Don't include an incredibly boring product/strongbr / So imagine you're a
tween, just browsing YouTube, and you notice Scooter Smiff's teacher grading his paper on an a
href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/touchsmart"HP Touchsmart PC/a, with her fingers. emThis is the least
exciting thing you've ever seen./em It doesn't even make sense in contextmdash;it's like HP just
edited a few seconds of their press materials into the video. Same goes for the inexplicable
printer cameo./p pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_45_01.jpg"
width="200" height="150" /strong3. Refrain from using devices that make you look even more like a
child/strongbr / Riding a miniaturized Cadillac Escalade will not help you look older, and will
probably make those few people who actually have a toy like that return it as fast as they can
drive it to Sotheby's. See also: catcalling obviously older girls. /p pThis song might not be as
embarrassing as the iPhone's prominent role in a a
href="http://gizmodo.com/383312/first-music-video-featuring-iphone-interface-has-the-unfortunate-title-of--smell-yo-dck-nsfw"certain
inauspiciously-named/a (and NSFW) track from earlier this year, but a different difference here,
and an important one, is that HP and BlackBerry actually wished this on themselves. [a
href="http://crackberry.com/blackberry-pearl-flip-dominates-scooter-smiff-video"CrackBerry/a]/p br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=cWQy6DvJ"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=120" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=19IulxJs"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=41" border="0"/img/a a
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~4/6Y5JEFfzB8A" height="1" width="1"/

|
Gizmodo -
2 days and 2 hours ago
Moderately musical little person Scooter Smiff has helpfully demonstrated, point by point, how not
to endorse gadgets in your music video. 1. Get a company's flagship phone I understand that...
|
Gizmodo -
2 days and 2 hours ago
Moderately musical little person Scooter Smiff has helpfully demonstrated, point by point, how not
to endorse gadgets in your music video. 1. Get a company's flagship phone I understand that...
|
Gizmodo -
2 days and 2 hours ago
pobject width="494" height="410"param name="movie"
value="http://www.youtube.com/v/c27dVYZS32Ihl=enfs=1"/paramparam name="allowFullScreen"
value="true"/paramparam name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"/paramembed
src="http://www.youtube.com/v/c27dVYZS32Ihl=enfs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="494" height="410"/embed/objectModerately
musical little person Scooter Smiff has helpfully demonstrated, point by point, how emnot/em to
endorse gadgets in your music video./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_43.jpg" width="200" height="150"
/strong1. Get a company's flagship phone/strongbr / I understand that Scooter Smiff's audience is
probably as young as he is and probably doesn't need a massive smartphone, but if you've got to
shill for a BlackBerry, hope it's not the a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5062473/blackberry-pearl-flip-review"Pearl Flip/a. Mattmdash;notably a
gadget blogger, not a rappermdash;said it was kind of uncool, looked inconsistent, and even called
it a "fatass". Next time beg for a a href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/storm"Storm/a, or at least a a
href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/bold"Bold/a. /p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_44_01.jpg" width="200"
height="150" /strong2. Don't include an incredibly boring product/strongbr / So imagine you're a
tween, just browsing YouTube, and you notice Scooter Smiff's teacher grading (UPDATE: fabricating,
more like. Scandal!) his paper on an a href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/touchsmart"HP Touchsmart PC/a,
with her fingers. emThis is the least exciting thing you've ever seen./em It doesn't even make
sense in contextmdash;it's like HP just edited a few seconds of their press materials into the
video. Same goes for the inexplicable printer cameo./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/12/Picture_45_01.jpg" width="200"
height="150" /strong3. Refrain from using devices that make you look even more like a
child/strongbr / Riding a miniaturized Cadillac Escalade will not help you look older, and will
probably make those few people who actually have a toy like that return it as fast as they can
drive it back to Sotheby's. See also: catcalling obviously older girls. /p pThis song might not be
as embarrassing as the iPhone's prominent role in a a
href="http://gizmodo.com/383312/first-music-video-featuring-iphone-interface-has-the-unfortunate-title-of--smell-yo-dck-nsfw"certain
inauspiciously-named/a (and NSFW) track from earlier this year, but a different difference here,
and an important one, is that HP and BlackBerry actually wished this on themselves. [a
href="http://crackberry.com/blackberry-pearl-flip-dominates-scooter-smiff-video"CrackBerry/a]/p br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=b9aba378176e5ab1656ef63c4e610091" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
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Scoopeo En attente -
2 days and 3 hours ago
Taiping, Taïwan - Une femme en scooter a été mise en joue car elle ne portait
pas de casque.Une voiture de police aurait demandé ......
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