home | shop | weblog | contact
the veggiedude explores kung fu - the tv series
 > about veggiedude <
PermalinkDavid Carradine narrates WWI documentary
Inecom Entertainment Company announced that David Carradine has completed narration for the upcoming production "World War 1 - American Legacy." The 112-minute high-definition documentary vividly tells the many forgotten stories of the American men and women who served in the Great War, reminding viewers of their impact that can still be felt today...

...Preorders are being accepted at Amazon.com and other Internet retailers. The DVD will be on sale at video stores, Internet retailers, educational and institutional distributors and large retail chains on December 5, 2006.


David Carradine Completes Narration of "World War 1 - American Legacy," Set for December Release
0 comments

 
PermalinkShaolin martial arts practitioners in China today
Shaolin martial arts practitioners perform during a grand ceremony to greet guests from home and abroad to the second World Traditional Wushu (martial arts) Championships (WTWUC) near the Shaolin Temple in Dengfeng City, central China's Henan Province Oct. 17, 2006. On both sides of the 1,500-meter-long road leading to the gate of Shaolin Temple, the birth place of Chinese martial arts, 15,000 local martial arts practitioners showed their Kung-fu skills during the ceremony on Tuesday...



15,000 martial arts practitioners show Kung fu skills
0 comments

 
PermalinkKung Fu Meets Physics
The BBC has a piece on how physics has everything to do with martial arts...

BBC NEWS | Magazine | Kung Fu? Meet Physics
0 comments

 
PermalinkIn Bruce Lee's Shadow
Asians Struggle to Create New Hollywood Images
"'Before [Bruce] Lee's time, Asian men had been largely depicted as emasculated and childlike -- coolies, domestics, etc. -- in American popular culture,' said Hye Seung Chung, a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Michigan. 'Lee proved that the image of the Asian man can be tough, strong and sexy. However, the Bruce Lee craze of the 1970s created a new stereotype of the Asian man: namely, the martial artist, which still permeates in Hollywood cinema.'"

ABC News: In Bruce Lee's Shadow: Asians Struggle to Create New Hollywood Images
0 comments

 
PermalinkShaolin kung fu to apply for world's intangible heritage
Preparations have begun for Shaolin kung fu's application to be placed on the World Intangible Heritage list, a cultural official of central China's Henan Province said Thursday.

An official with the Henan Provincial Cultural Bureau said thatthe listing application has to be approved by the Chinese Ministryof Culture before a final submission is presented to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Shaolin Temple, built in 495 in the period of the Northern and Southern Dynasties (420-581) and located in the Songshan Mountain area in Henan Province, is the birthplace of the Shaolin kung fu.

The ancient Shaolin transcripts documented 708 groups of "kung fu", 545 groups have survived...



Xinhua - Shaolin kung fu to apply for world's intangible heritage
0 comments

 
PermalinkTibetans trying to kick the meat habit
[since 1959] a subtle change in the Tibetan people's mindset has taken place. There are comparatively younger Tibetans who are opting for a vegetarian diet today. Even among the older generation there are efforts to change the age-old meat-eating habit. His Holiness the Dalai Lama has spurred this effort through his public advice for people to adopt vegetarianism. Many Tibetan monasteries in exile, which used to serve meat to the clergy in the Assembly halls during prayer sessions, have now stopped doing that. Some monasteries run vegetarian restaurants. The Tibetan Department of Health even organized some cooking workshops on vegetarian meals. A vegetarian Tibetan has even come out with a hard hitting documentary on the slaughterhouses in an effort to discourage the Tibetan people from meat eating.

The Times of Tibet - Why Be Vegetarian?
0 comments

 
  Kung Fu - the TV series on DVD!  
visit the veggiedude store
"Get the first two seasons of Kung Fu on DVD at 32% off at Amazon.com."

"All creatures - the low and the high - are one with nature. No life is insignificant. If we have the wisdom to learn, all may teach us their virtues.... Life sustains life and all living creatures need nourishment. Yet, with wisdom the body learns to sustain in ways that all may live."
- Master Kan
Go Veg!


Browser Compatibility
This site was created to run on Firefox and Safari web browsers. Use Internet Exploder at your own risk. To switch to Firefox, click here.



"Maybe happiness is a fragment of existence, but with better packaging."


This site © copyright 2006-2010, the veggiedude
'Kung Fu' images and material is the property and copyright of Warner Brothers.