B151 3 Elements for Floral Design 花藝設計三大元素
B151 3 Elements for Floral Design 花藝設計三大元素
花藝2000插花招生 ,查詢 95003123李太
Mr. Gordon Lee
Principal and Creative Director
Floral Art 2OOO
- Designer of Computer floral material CD Flower Piano
- Chairman of Creatics Floral Designers Union
- Founder of Creatics
- Former Director of Ideal Floral Design Centre
- Approved website designer Macromedia
- currently Creative Director of Floral Art 2OOO
- Floral Instructor of Instituto de Formcao Turistica Macao
- More than 24 floral works being posted on the international magazine : LIBETbI since 2013
- Columnist of Former Christian Channel City Telecom
- Frequently interviewed by Hong Kong Newspaper and Media
- Appointed as Chief Designer in the International Orchid Expo venue in 2004
- Established the 1st Cantonese floral art demonstrations YouTube channel in 2009
- Acquired over 38,300 worldwide Subscribers from Gordon Lee Channel and over 9,000,000 views
- Conducting more than 70 Floral Classes in Hong Kong churches
- 26 years of teaching experience , with more than 8,000 students since 1988
- Organised over 10 individiual exhibitions of floral creation since 1991
- Participated in Hong Kong Flower Show since 1990
- Currently appointed as Honorary Advisor of different Churches and flower shops in Hong Kong
- Website designer of flower2000.com.hk
please visit my Art Gallery and Facebook Fan Page
歡迎瀏覽Gordon Lee藝術館,更多精彩花藝作品...
Gordon Lee Fan Page
歡迎訂閱插花示範頻道
Subscription of Gordon Lee Channel
香港花藝設計大師 Gordon Lee
花藝2OOO校長兼創作總監李錦章先生(Gordon Lee)
- 電腦插花素材光碟「花琴」設計人
-「自學插花系列」電子書作者兼製作人
- Macromedia認可綱站設計師
- 花藝設計師聯盟CFD主席
- CREATICS 創意主流派始創人
- 前美意插花學校校長
- 現任花藝2OOO課程及創作總監
- 2013年於澳門旅遊學院擔任花藝導師
- 2013年有超過25件作品獲刊登於國際權威花藝雜誌
( LIBETbI ) flower magazine
- 曾任城市電訊基督教頻道花藝專欄作家
- 01年獲節目主持人顧紀筠小姐專訪 ecmind.com
- 03年獲東方報業集團太陽報專題訪問
- 04年獲TVB週刊專題訪問結婚花球製作心得
- 04年獲國際蘭花博覽會委任指定場館設計師
- 09年創立首個Youtube香港插花示範頻道Gordon Lee
- 12年成立首間虛擬藝術館 Gordon Lee's Art Gallery
- 99至2012年間共到過80多間教會開辦教會插花班
- 24年教花經驗,學生人數超過6,000名
- 由91年開始舉辦超過10次個人花藝創作展覽
- 由90年開始獲康文署邀請參展香港花卉展覽
- 現任多間教會及花店榮譽顧問及插花導師
- flower2000.com.hk及flowerworld.com.hk 網站設計人
花藝2000地址:
中文地址:
花藝2000
九龍太子運動場道21-27號
運泰大廈2樓 B3室
英文地址:
Floral Art 2000
Rm B3 2/F Right Time Building
21-27 Playing Field Road
Prince Edward Kowloon
電郵:info@flower2000.com.hk
Is China Socialist?
So is China socialist? Was it ever socialist? Is it building socialism? The answers might surprise you.
Probably won't though.
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Glossary:
Guomindang (GMD): Nationalist party established in 1919. Lost against the CPC in the Chinese civil war.
Communist Party of China (CPC): Chinese communist party established in 1921. Won the civil war.
Hukou: Residency registration system. A person can either hold rural hukou or urban hukou. Hukou is passed matrilineally. Rural hukou holders get access to collective land, while urban hukou holders get access to danwei.
Danwei: Translated to English as work units. It's supposed to be the provider of welfare provisions to urban workers (e.g. housing, food, etc). These provisions are given to the urbanites from the state through the enterprises.
Great Leap Forward (GLF): An economic and social campaign to accelerate industrial development, spearheaded by Mao Zedong. As such, it was heavily focused on building industries and infrastructure. It didn't go well.
Commune and Brigade Enterprises (CBE): Collective enterprises (essentially co-operatives) established during the GLF. The enterprises encompassed individual communes (about the size of a town) or brigades (about the size of a village).
Exaptation: The co-opting of traits to serve other functions unrelated to the original function.
Workpoints: A way to track how much labor a person has done per amount of time. Exchangeable for grain, goods or cash.
Cultural Revolution: A social movement meant to uproot the remaining capitalist elements from Chinese society, but ended up also repressing other parts of the populace.
Henry Kissinger: A goddamn war criminal.
Household Responsibility System (HRS): An agricultural production method wherein groups or individual households were contracted to produce a certain amount of grain based on quotas set by the government. Whatever surplus the farmers produce could be sold on the market at an unregulated price. The quotas were set really low such that farmers could sell almost all of their grain to the market.
Township and Village Enterprise (TVE): Enterprises on the level of townships and villages. Essentially, a renamed CBE.
State Owned Enterprise (SOE): Enterprises run by the government. In this instance mostly in urban areas.
Special Economic Zones (SEZ): (Urban) Areas where (mostly foreign) capitalist enterprises were allowed to operate, mostly in coastal cities. Usually with better tax incentives and lax regulations.
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References:
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[30]
the rest:
Hong Kong's 8FIVE2 Is the One Destination for Skate Locals and Legends
No new name to Hong Kong’s street culture landscape, Brian Siswojo has long frequented our webpage as both a contributor and host. As the founder of 8FIVE2, his output hasn’t fallen short either, taking form as collaborations with Vans, Nike SB, Girls Skateboards, in addition to a limited edition T-shirt with HYPEBEAST during the site’s formative years. Whether he’s introducing brands like Fucking Awesome! and Hockey to local retailers via his distribution company or running workshops and events at SK8FIVE2 (an indoor skatepark he founded in 2012), Brian Siswojo is instrumental to the city’s creative growth.
In our latest HYPEBEAST Spaces episode, we visit the new and improved 8FIVE2 store located a stone’s throw away from its last location on Jaffe Road. The marble floor space opened its doors this summer and boasts a clean interior with a selection that balances the necessities of a quintessentials skate shop — in providing skaters with hardware and decks — with the lifestyle elements of a fashion select store (carrying the likes of Palace Skateboards, Dime, Thrasher and the 8FIVE2′s own Know1edge).
Get the latest from HYPEBEAST TV by hitting the SUBSCRIBE button!
Following yet another successful presentation during Copenhagen’s recent fashion week, HYPEBEAST, along with founders Jannik Wikkelsø Davidsen and Tim Faith Hancock, were given an exclusive tour of Han Kjøbenhavn’s flagship store and showroom space on the city’s sought after Vognmagergade. Heavily influenced by Denmark’s rich design culture, Han Kjøbenhavn’s space lends itself to the dated, yet still relevant, work of Arne Jacobsen, Finn Juhl and Poul Kjærholm. The space has ultimately fused inspirations of now world famous Danish furniture and architectural design, with Han’s contemporary fashion vision. Having inhabited the space since 2012, the brand’s four year relationship with Copenhagen has not only modeled itself as a viable partner in the city’s fashion scene, but also incorporated century-long design culture into a cohesive product that resonates across a much larger scope than originally planned.
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???????? Inside Chollywood: China's Movie Industry | 101 East
In 2006, when Tang Long made the long journey from rural Hubei to the Hengdian World Studios in eastern China, he had one dream in mind – to make it as an actor.
Arriving at the largest outdoor film set in the world, where hundreds of productions take place every year, he knew nothing about the film industry and no one in it. Tang started out as an extra, and was paid $4 a day to be part of a large crowd in the background of a scene.
The next step up would be what the industry calls a contract extra, where he gets a close-up shot, possibly with a line if he is lucky.
I never made it, says Tang, who stands at about 1.6 metres tall. I don't have the physique and there was just too much competition. Everyone here is dreaming of stardom and trying to show off their talents.
To feed himself, Tang took on any behind-the-scenes role that came along. As a tea boy with a can-do attitude, he quickly impressed and worked his way up to managing location runners.
I don't have to be a star; I just want to be in this industry. I'm passionate about it, he says. Many foreign filmmakers are eyeing the massive Chinese market, they want to shoot here. Hollywood professionals spend a lifetime accumulating heaps of experience. We can learn a lot from them in co-productions.
Co-productions are a gold-class ticket for Hollywood into Chinese cinema, the world's second-largest movie market, that has been growing at 30 percent a year over the past decade.
The boom lured an A-list Hollywood cast to China recently, to celebrate the launch of an $8bn movie metropolis, built by China's richest man, Wang Jianlin. It will be completed in just four years, and will provide world class facilities for 100 local and foreign productions a year, boosting China's global cultural influence.
Shi Chuan, a film professor at Shanghai University, explains the boom: Nearly 80 to 90 percent of Chinese had never been to cinemas, which were only found in bigger cities. The current growth is happening in the second and third tier cities where there used to be no cinemas. Therefore there's massive potential.
To cater to Chinese taste, Hollywood is adding Chinese elements to the plot. Shi cites this year's blockbuster Iron Man 3 as an example. The Chinese release had four minutes of extra footage with China-related elements, mostly deleted for the international version.
Hollywood also made the latest James Bond film Skyfall 'China-friendly' - a Chinese security guard who was killed in the original version did not exist for viewers in China.
Well-known Chinese director Zhang Yuan says local filmmakers get a much more rigorous time from the censors. His latest film, Beijing Flickers, explores marginalised communities in Beijing and he says it was held up by the authorities for over a year before its release in early November this year.
Zhang says censors stifle creativity.
Before government censorship, we were already self-censoring when scripting, shooting and editing, he says. A flood can flush away the White House in a Hollywood film. Which Chinese film dares to do the equivalent?
Meanwhile, the Chinese box office is booming - 10 new cinema screens are added in China every day and box office revenue has exceeded $3bn this year and is expected to surpass that of North America in just six years.
In 2013, for the first time, domestic films sold more tickets than imported ones. To protect the domestic industry, China only allows 34 foreign films a year to screen in cinemas. Local productions also get a bigger share of ticket sales, making it even more tempting for foreign studios to work with them.
Bona Film Group is China's leading privately-owned film producer and distributor - its ambition is to find a happy marriage between East and West.
In 2012, it signed deals with Universal Studios and Fox International Productions. Bona is now working with Fox on their first co-production to be released next year.
Its CEO, Yu Dong, says Hollywood will benefit China with its established global distribution network.
Chinese cinema needs to enter the English language market in a hurry, says Yu Dong. Hollywood products can enter any market in the world, be it Chinese, Arabic or anywhere else. So co-productions with Chinese film companies will propel its films into the English language market.
But as more Chinese filmmakers enter the industry to ride the boom, film professor Shi Chuan says production quality has fallen compared to the 1980s. Out of more than 700 films produced this year, three quarters were deemed not good enough for theatrical release.
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【Hong Kong Walk Tour】Left Mongkok → West Kowloon → Jade Market → Kowloon Station
1. This video is made by (1) Gopro 7 Black mounted on shoulder strap (2) PowerDirector editing apps US$ 35 per year
2. Please support me, or (where your name and amount will appear on the Live Streaming.)
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My name is Dennis. In 2009, I opened this channel to record or document this city. I know something is being changed in next decade(s), or I felt the change have began since 2003, no later in 2046. I want to, at least, save some kind of city life in video form instead of taken photo or written in words. I strongly believe that motion picture and sound recording are much better way to preserve and present in the future when young generation want to get know of Hong Kong.
In May of 2018, I wrote the following statement in below:
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Hi everyone, thank you for supporting me in fulfilling my childhood dream of making videos.
My parents had always taken a tolerant attitude toward my “capricious”: whether my work is feasible and sustainable... and they never complained about it.
As my father just passed away in May, I am left with no choice but to give up my video making venture.
In Hong Kong where the cost of living is sky high, youtube video making is simply not sustainable by google adsense alone. The revenue produced is way too insufficient for affording a domestic helper, and I must look after my mom all by myself - this is why I must stay very close to her at all times.
Unless my revenue is closed to market rate, or my income can cover a domestic helper, otherwise I can hardly justify any video-related works.
Therefore, from now on everything video will be postponed in terms of year(s).
Thank you, and hope to see you all again in the future.
..............................................................
Because I am the only son of my mother in Hong Kong, and I have to take care of her at home. I almost give up this channel because of high consumption of time and living cost. But I found some extra time.
I live in Fanling, north part of New Territories, so it will include my showtime of traveling back and forth. Because of home care to my old mother, there will be no time other than 9:00 to 16:00 because my mother is staying at the senior daycare center, so before and after that, I will NOT able to do filming.
I understand most of you are looking for high quality of video, e.g. 4K or 8K. But hardware is so important at this post-production, that is, the higher quality video, the higher powerful computer to render video. In recently, I solved matter by paid for PowerDirector apps to make 4K on my Pocophone F1, 1 hour of 4K video = 2 hour to make, besides, the convert 4K file time is around 24 hours......
I will continue to run this channel as long as the time is fit-on-me or I don't see any kind of video job could fit me.
I hope this is clear to everyone.
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HongKongMap:
Cwalk Around Asia - Hong Kong, China - PART 1
happy chinese new year =) sorry to those who wanted to see part 2 of seoul, korea. i got back from hong kong on feb 1 and was supposed to finish editing/uploading seoul, korea part 2, but i decided to edit/upload this one instead because chinese new year was coming up. but yeah, a bit late for that lol :( took me a while to edit still exhausted from crappy flight.
hehe i wasn't really looking forward to flying to hong kong after a string of two bad flights (tokyo -- seoul and seoul -- manila), but the plane decided to be nice for a change. most of the flight was smooth, no real turbulence, and landing was perfect - didn't feel it. so yep, that was definitely a great start on our journey through the land that made more than half of everything in our home (and probably also yours ;D)
hong kong... they have some crazy street food here haha. one thing i remember trying was pig intestine. it was chewy and it smelled like piss, and if i can remember correctly, it tasted a bit pissy too. that was something different.. i guess. LOL.
very crowded. often find myself getting dizzy from all the people walking past so fast. :D maybe because we were there in the period before chinese new year, i don't know.
when the train comes, it's a race to the seats. many times people literally run to a seat. nevermind the people getting out of the train, move b!tch i'm goin in, i'm goin in! ahahaha. no racism meant. just something funny i noticed.
heaps of markets here. you can find anything and everything in these markets seriously clothes and so much more.. it's just a bit awkward sometimes when you walk past some shop full of dildos and vibrators and you see some old men looking at the goods. but yeah i found myself buying the most random things like lasers, household items, etc.
had many fun times with the sales people in markets. some lines i often heard from them were good idea (after demonstrating what their product does), very cheap for you la. it's also fun to bargain with them. they quote you 100 hk$ and you say 100$ no goot. 50$! happy new year sometimes they smile and say ok la. if not they just give you a long noooooooo with a matching o_o face :D haha i just find them cute lol. most of them. just negotiating with them will make your day!
was really glad i got to go with whole family this time around. just me my mum dad and sister. nothing much else to say except that it was a great experience and i would recommend hong kong to anyone.
well hope you like the video :) and yup, the walk is still lacking. but i think i did a bit better than in korea. oh well lol. enjoy and expect part 2 up soon!
The Works:Picturing Asia Brian Brake & Steve McCurry, Porcelain by Yuet Tung China Works, Danh Vō
We hope that you’ve had at least some chance to relax, to exercise your creativity, or at least to appreciate a little of the creativity of others, during this summer. The Works may have been on a break, but that doesn’t mean nothing has been happening on the arts scene. In this week’s show, we’ll be catching up on four exhibitions that have got under way in recent weeks, including an exhibition of hand-painted porcelain from one of the oldest porcelain manufacturers still operating in Hong Kong: the almost nine-decades-old Yuet Tung China Works. And we’ll be looking at multimedia works and installations by a filmmaker who has moved from the big screen to the art space. He’s acclaimed Thai filmmaker, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, best known locally for his supernaturally themed: “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.”
From the second half of the 19th century, as the art of photography developed, many photographers travelled to this part of the world from other countries to turn their lenses with fascination on what was then often referred to as ‘”the Orient”. Among those photographers are such impressive image-makers as John Thomson, Felice Beato, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Capa, and Marc Riboud. An exhibition currently on show at the Asia Society features the work of two relatively recent and distinctive photographers Brian Brake and Steve McCurry.
Born in Vietnam, artist Danh Vo became one of the Vietnamese “boat people” at the age of four. After taking to the sea in a homemade boat, his family and around a hundred other refugees were eventually rescued by a freighter belonging to the Danish Maersk shipping company. Denmark gave him, his family, and many of the other refuges, a new home. He now lives in Berlin. His work often reflects on a complex personal relationship with the land of his birth, the countries that have adopted him, and issues such as colonisation and identity. These threads are all in evidence in his on-going site-specific installation at the White Cube gallery in Central.
Although a strong sense of respect, and affection, for the past was long an important aspect of traditional Chinese culture, it can be really hard to look around and find many examples, if any, where that respect doesn’t take second place to more commercial desires. Many traditional crafts have fallen by the wayside. One that is still surviving here, by the skin of its teeth perhaps, is the tradition of hand-painted porcelain. Established in 1928, Yuet Tung China Works was the first porcelain factory in Hong Kong to specialise in hand-painted “guang cai” or coloured ceramics. We visited the workshop in Kowloon Bay and talked to the company’s owner.
Finally this week, in 2010 Thai film-maker Apichatpong Weerasethakul won one of cinema’s highest honours, the Cannes Palme d’Or, for his 2010 feature “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives”. “My country is run by superstition” he has said, and his films, sometimes labelled surrealist, are known for creating a world in which spirit creatures and ghosts are no less real, perhaps more so, than the events his characters may watch on television. But although his movies may seem fanciful, underlying them is often a critique of the militaristic and nationalistic elements of Thai society. And that mixture of critique and mythology extends to his art works other than full length movies, many of which you can currently experience at his first exhibition in Hong Kong: “Apichatpong Weerasethakul: The Serenity of Madness.”
Ep. 1 - The Cinema of Wong Kar-wai
Wong Kar-wai is one of the greatest exponents of Chinese and oriental cinema. His work has influenced several acclaimed films around the world, establishing him as one of the most recognized and admired auteurs in contemporary cinema.
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SOURCES
Contemporary Film Directors:
Cinematic Hong Kong of Wong Kar-wai:
Christopher Doyle: Filming in the Neon World:
Wong Kar-wai at the Museum of Moving Image (2008):
FILMS
Chinese Shadows (1908) (00:06 - 00:10)
Enter the Dragon (1973) (00:10 - 00:14)
Dragon Inn (1967) (00:14 - 00:21)
Farewell My Concubine (1993) (00:21 - 00:25)
Red Sorghum (1987) (00:25 - 00:28)
Yi Yi (2000) (00:28 - 00:33)
Lust, Caution (2007) (00:33 - 00:36)
Hero (2002) (00:36 - 00:44)
Lost in Translation (2003) (00:57 - 00:59)
Moonlight (2016) (00:59 - 01:02)
Final Victory (1987) (01:26 - 01:39)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) (04:32 - 04:38)
MUSIC
Growing Up (00:00 - 02:02)
Drive Me Home (02:06 - 03:50)
Auburn Flowers (03:53 - 05:44)
(Intro) Sorry About What Happened Last Night (05:47 - 07:00)
I Miss Having Sleep Overs (07:03 - 09:12)
Missing My Ntpp (09:15 - 11:08)
Y Did U Say Tht (11:11 - 13:02)
Am Am Am (13:05 - 16:22)
Cinemabreak is a channel about film form. I make video essays about the filmography of a director, focusing on cinematography, art, design, colors, sounds and other elements that are involved with the composition of a film.
For educational purposes only.
2,000 Years of Chinese History! The Mandate of Heaven and Confucius: World History #7
2,000 Years of Chinese History! The Mandate of Heaven and Confucius:
Crash Course World History #7
In which John introduces you to quite a lot of Chinese history by
discussing the complicated relationship between the Confucian scholars
who wrote Chinese history and the emperors (and empress) who made it.
Included is a brief introduction to all the dynasties in Chinese
history and an introduction to Confucius and the Confucian emphasis on
filial piety, the role the mandate of heaven played in organizing
China, and how China became the first modern state.
Crash Course World History is now available on DVD!
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3 FREAKIEST Chinese Urban Legends Of All Time
★ 5 SCARIEST Japanese Urban Legends Of All Time:
★ 5 WEIRD Chinese Beauty Trends on Social Media:
★ 4 SCARY Japanese Commercials That Will Give You Nightmares:
Available Subtitles: ENGLISH, FRENCH
► Help us with subtitles in your language!
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3 FREAKIEST CHINESE URBAN LEGENDS OF ALL TIME | HALLOWEEN SPECIAL
It's Halloween month so it's time for another scary, creepy or freaky video from us. Last year we did a video on scary Japanese urban legends ( this time we'll go over Chinese urban legends.
1. Bus 375 (also known as Midnight Bus)
Two passengers get on Bus 375 late at night. Little do they know it may be their last ride....
2. Oxtail Soup
A girlfriend frequently delivers her delicious oxtail soup to her boyfriend in the college dormitory. Exam week is coming up and they decide not to see each other until after the exams, but she says she will still deliver his beloved oxtail soup. They enter exam week...
3. Single Braid
Single Braid Road is a real road next to Hong Kong University. Named after a girl with a traditional Chinese single braid who decades ago was an illegal immigrant from the mainland trying to start over in Hong Kong. However, things don't go according to plan...
Which was your favourite freaky Chinese urban legend?
Thanks for watching! And if you enjoyed this video, don't forget to LIKE, SHARE & SUBSCRIBE ^^
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Why China Is so Good at Building Railways
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Animation by Josh Sherrington
Sound by Graham Haerther (
Thumbnail by Simon Buckmaster
Special thanks to Patreon supporters
Alec Watson, Andrew J Thom, Braam Snyman, Bryan Yip, Chris Allen, Chris Barker, Connor J Smith, Daddy Donald, Etienne Dechamps, Eyal Matsliah, Hank Green, Harry Hendel, James Hughes, James McIntosh, John & Becki, Johnston, Keith Bopp, Kelly J Knight, Ken Lee, KyQuan, Phong, manoj kasyap govindaraju, Plinio Correa, Qui Le, Robin Pulkkinen, Sheldon Zhao, Simen Nerleir, Tim Robinson
China airspace time-lapse courtesy FlightRadar24.com
Air China 747 landing shot courtesy ZurichAirportSpotter
China Eastern 737 takeoff shot courtesy PDX Aviation
Tibet railway shots courtesy Steven Chen and PK Long
Music by
Select footage courtesy the AP Archive
300 Years of Hakka Kung Fu
“300 Years of Hakka Kung Fu ( is a special kind of book: a scholar's book, a collector's book, a lineage-holder's record. This is NOT a training text. It is also a catalogue of a special exhibition on 300 years of Hakka Kung Fu, held in Hong Kong. This beautifully bound hardback edition acquaints us with the Hakka people, The nomads of China.”
We celebrate the release of this book by compiling some live Hakka style demonstrations, taken from the remarkable two-disk collection “An Evening of Martial Arts.” (
Taken for the record it is meant to be, this is an extraordinary compilation. The photos of the teachers are done with intensity; the stories of their martial associations cross all the borders—family, social, traditional. Most of these masters have 10 or fewer students at this point in time. And this scholarly work draws from each of them their tightly bound relation to lifelong practice. If you know something about Hakka boxing technique, and want to expose yourself to its stories, dreams and heritage coming from a people famous for mathematics, astrology and storytelling, this will be a text you will return to over and over.
PLUM PUBLICATIONS ( is the address for thousands of DVDs, books, articles and video tutorials focusing on the traditional Chinese Martial Arts.
LỖ TRÍ THÂM THẦN LỰC PHI THƯỜNG TAY KHÔNG BỨNG GỐC CỔ THỤ | THỦY HỬ ANH HÙNG TRUYỆN
LỖ TRÍ THÂM THẦN LỰC PHI THƯỜNG TAY KHÔNG BỨNG GỐC CỔ THỤ | THỦY HỬ ANH HÙNG TRUYỆN | CÂU CHUYỆN VỀ 108 VỊ ANH HÙNG LƯƠNG SƠN BẠC | PHIM HÀNH ĐỘNG VÕ THUẬT
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Phim Tân Thủy Hử – All Men Are Brothers (86 Tập Cuối) Full trọn bộ thuyết minh, trải qua bao nhiêu thăng trầm lịch sử vẫn luôn được coi là 1 trong các tuyệt phẩm của Trung Quốc bên cạnh Tam Quốc Chí, Hồng Lâu Mộng, và Tây Du Ký. Mặc dù dựng trên hình ảnh của 1 cuộc khởi nghĩa nông dân nhưng Thủy Hử và các anh hùng Lương Sơn Bạc luôn đại diện cho tiếng nói và niềm khao khát tự do. Bến Lương Sơn, đầm Lục Nhi đã trở thành nơi hội tụ của hào kiệt và tráng chí bốn phương. Mãi cho đến sau này, anh hùng Tống Giang – một lòng vì quốc muốn đem cái tài của 108 hảo hán ra để giúp nước mà đồng ý chiêu an, tụ lại dưới cờ triều đình. Tống triều khi đó bị bọn gian thần lũng đoạn, cử 108 anh hùng Lương Sơn Bạc đi đánh dẹp Phương Lạp, lần lượt bọn họ hy sinh, số còn lại trở về cũng bị hãm hại cho đến chết.
“Thủy hử” là 1 trong tứ đại kỳ thư của văn học Trung Hoa cổ, sức ảnh hưởng mạnh mẽ rộng rãi không chỉ dừng lại ở phạm vi nội địa. Mặc dù nhiều lần được chuyển thể, khai thác thành nhiều loại hình nghệ thuật khác nhau nhưng chưa khi nào khán giả có cảm giá nhàm chán.
Xuất phát từ yếu tố này, cá nhân đạo diễn Cúc Giác Lượng cho rằng thành công đầu tiên khi nhắc tới “Tân thủy hử” phải đặt vào sự dũng cảm dám đối đầu thử thách, vượt qua sự so sánh với những phiên bản kinh điển trong quá khứ. Chính sự mạnh dạn sáng tạo và không ngừng vươn tới hoàn mỹ này sẽ góp phần làm phong phú thêm cho tác phẩm gốc. Mỗi đạo diễn, mỗi nhà làm phim, mỗi phiên bản với phong cách, phương thức thực hiện khác nhau có thể khai thác thêm những yếu tố mới mẻ chưa được “khai quật”.
#huyhu #phimvothuat #phimhanhdong
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TAAO KROSS @ 1/3 ONE THIRD · BEIJING (CHINA) AUGUST 2019
TAAO KROSS @ 1/3 ONE THIRD · BEIJING (CHINA) AUGUST 2019
El artista TAAO KROSS nos presenta en esta ocasión un video resumen tras su paso por el exclusivo club de Beijing “1/3 One Third” catalogado durante varios años como uno de los mas importantes del planeta y en 2019 posicionado como el Nº60 según la prestigiosa revista DJ MAG en su TOP 100 DJ MAG CLUB.
Taao Kross que anualmente completa más de 80 shows en más de 20 países diferentes a lo largo del año muestra en este mini documental grabado en primera persona, como son sus shows desde que aterriza en la ciudad hasta que concluye su actuación… todo resumido en unos segundos donde a buen seguro si eres amante de la electrónica y te fascina este mundo te va a resultar divertido además de interesante por su contenido.
Taao Kross es DJ habitual en macro festivales y clubs por el mundo. Esta grabación está basada en los últimos días de agosto donde ha vivido 12 días de autentica locura entre los shows que ha realizado por las ciudades de Río de Janeiro, Vitoria, Shanghai, Tokyo, Beijing y Chuangzhou cerrando así un mes trepidante y en ascenso tal como viene siendo su carrera en los últimos tiempos.
Los clubs y festivales que ha realizado entre los días 23 y 31 de agosto son: White Festival, Búnker festival, First club, 1/3 one third, W, Wrap. Entre los que se encuentran algunos catalogados en la actualidad como TOP100DJMAG CLUB en el mundo.
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TAAO KROSS: A BLOW OF FRESH AIR!
Taao Kross is a Dj and Spanish producer with greater international projection. His long career has led him to perform in 2018 before more than 1,000,000 people in a total of 17 different countries with more than 70 shows in 4 of the 5 continents. To these numbers we must add a total of 19 performances at his summer residence in Pacha Ibiza with big heads such as Calvin Harris, Alesso or David Guetta on 15 times in the prestigious party F ★★★ ME! I'M FAMOUS.
His spectacular staging and a breakthrough direct makes his show a brutal show that has been presented in recent months by the UK, Brazil, Qatar, France, Italy, Switzerland, Malta, China, Greece, Holland or Hungary among other countries. Included in the Lineups of some of the best festivals in Europe such as Balaton Sound or Summer Park in Amsterdam and for the second consecutive year has closed the prestigious and massive Tomorrowland Unite in Malta.
He currently combines his shows with his studio hard work, where he is producing his new music along with world-renowned artists such as Chris Willis, with whom he has prepared a track that, together with the rest, will be released in 2019 by a renowned record company.
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Sky100 Hong Kong View - Day and Night from Sky100 Hong Kong Observation Deck
Review from Sky100 Hong Kong observation deck. I have visited the SKY 100 in day- and nighttime to give you the best Hong Kong view from the highest building in Hong Kong. Get your SKY100 tickets with my discount tip!
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The SKY100 Hong Kong observation deck is located at the International Commerce Centre in Hong Kong. The International Commerce Centre is close to the Kowloon MTR station and the Elements Mall.
SKY100 is a 360-degree indoor observation deck on the 100th floor of the International Commerce Centre, in West Kowloon, Hong Kong. The deck offers views of Hong Kong Island, Victoria Harbour, the Kowloon Peninsula and Tai Mo Shan.
Learn How To Sing the Chinese New Year Song gōng xǐ gong xǐ
Playing Chinese New Year songs is a key element for Chinese people to celebrate during Chinese New Year/Spring Festival. The contents of Chinese New Year songs are played with similar instruments. More, all the songs share similar meaning such as wishing to have a better year or wishing to have a prospective and health year.Let's learn how to sing a Chinese New Year song and learn some vocabulary in Mandarin Chinese.
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Chinese New Year Culture
The Story of Nian
Chinese New Year Song gōng xǐ gong xǐ
Chinese New Year Song - Wish You All a Happy New Yew
Chinese New Year Song - New Year Greetings
The Year of The Horse in Chinese Zodiac - 2014
Learn How To Say The Greeting Phrase gōng xǐ fā cái in Chinese
Learn How To Say Happy New Year in Chinese
Lady Niguma's Yoga, Part 1 of 3 (2010, Hong Kong, Geshe Michael Roach)
Here's a video of Geshe Michael Roach teaching about Lady Niguma's Yoga at the Asia Yoga Conference in May, 2010. Taught in English and interpreted in Mandarin Chinese.
Lady Niguma was a female yogi ('yogini') from India who lived a thousand years ago. She was the partner of renowned Indian master and yogi Naropa, and the yoga she created is the first known series specifically designed by a female yoga master.
The series is special because it is designed to work inside and out -- both making the body fit and strong, but also systematically targeting the energies inside the body to help us reduce our negative emotions, like anger and confusion, so that we can be happier and more productive in our lives both at home and at work.
The Knowledge Base ( is an ongoing project to preserve and publish the life work of Geshe Michael Roach. The Knowledge Base Archive currently contains over 10,000 hours of teachings by Geshe Michael Roach and more than 12,000 pages of original translations, books and course materials.
Geshe Michael is the first American to have been awarded the degree of Geshe, or Master of Buddhism, after more than 20 years of study in Tibetan monasteries. He has used this training to become a prominent international teacher, businessman, philanthropist, author, educator, public speaker, and textual scholar.
The Knowledge Base features thousands of classes and thousands of pages of translations.
Wu Tang Collection - Super Ninja
Director: James Wu Kuo-Ren
Cast: Alexander Lo Rei, Eugene Thomas, Doris Lung
The incredible Alexander Lou teams up with martial arts master Eugene Thomas in this amazing martial arts action extravaganza! Lou is a masterful modern-day Ninja, who must defeat dozens of enemies ranging from killers to corrupt cops! Extremely violent and filled with over the top, Rambo-like explosive action, Super Ninja is super cool kung fu fighting! Wild film!
Please visit our website: worldcinemacentral.com
Go to #WuTangCollection
China Steals U.S. Designs – China’s increasingly sophisticated military technology
China Steals U.S. Designs – China’s increasingly sophisticated military technology - China's intellectual property theft of both civil and military information is no secret.
From alleged attempts to hack into Swedish telecom provider Ericsson to the theft of information related to the F-22 and F-35, there are several instances of China gaining access to foreign technology or trying to do so.
There are also examples of Chinese military systems looking suspiciously like US systems — the F-22 and the MQ-9 Reaper drone among them. Other elements of those Chinese systems — the software, technology, and manpower used to operate them — aren't on par with the US military yet.
But they might not be far behind, according to Defense Secretary Mark Esper. At the Department of Homeland Security's National Cybersecurity Summit on Sept. 19, 2019, he warned that China is perpetrating the greatest intellectual property theft in human history.
Esper told attendees that he had cautioned European allies against allowing Chinese companies to build 5G cyber networks in their countries, warning that to do so would risk sensitive national security information.
Every Chinese company has the potential to be an accomplice in Beijing's state-sponsored campaign to steal technology, he said, highlighting China's integration of civil and military technology, an area in which Beijing surpasses the US.
China has systematically sought to acquire US technology both through traditional espionage means, as well as through legal investments in companies, Daniel Kliman, director of the the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, told Insider.
The United States very much still retains a military technological edge, but it's clear that edge is eroding, Kliman said.
Read on to see how China's carbon copies stack up to US weapons systems.
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Food waste is the world's dumbest problem
Eat your peas! It’s the easiest way to fight climate change.
This is the fourth episode of Climate Lab, a six-part series produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by Emmy-nominated conservation scientist Dr. M. Sanjayan, the videos explore the surprising elements of our lives that contribute to climate change and the groundbreaking work being done to fight back. Featuring conversations with experts, scientists, thought leaders and activists, the series takes what can seem like an overwhelming problem and breaks it down into manageable parts: from clean energy to food waste, religion to smartphones. Sanjayan is an alum of UC Santa Cruz and a Visiting Researcher at UCLA. Check back next Wednesday for the next episode. Visit for more.
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The University of California is a pioneer on climate research, renewable energy and environmental sustainability. UC is dedicated to providing scalable solutions to help the world bend the curve on climate change. UC research is also paving the way for the university to meet its goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2025. Read more about our commitment at
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Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app.
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