The second season is less satisfying than the first, but the show still has a lot going for it—surprisingly dimensional characters, a broad landscape of multiple ethnicities and classes, and a bracing, almost cynical view of how young men solve their problems (often, the answer is violence!
Martial arts came naturally, not ball. So, to impress his obsessed father, he made up for what he lacked in natural ability by becoming an amateur analyst. “I had to learn everything there is to know about the game,” he says. “I realized my memory was pretty exceptional when it ...
more like "If this abuse does not stop I will have your children arrested".<BR><BR>I'm guessing parents of kids like that either have no control or don't care, but it's the only thing I can think of short of "put the kid in martials arts classes" or "have h...
As a kid, Geping always wanted to learn martial arts but his family didn’t have enough money to send him for classes. So he would often watch the Shaw Brothers’wuxiafilms and imitate the moves from there. He even tried to imitate the late actor-martial artist Bruce Lee. Geping used ...