Mar 30, 2019
Mar 24, 2019
Mar 18, 2019
The wife of Takeda Katsuyori
“The wife of Takeda Katsuyori”(1897), Adachi Ginko (active c.1870-1908)
Print from the series : “Mirror of renowned women from ancient and modern times”
The wife of Sengoku period daimyo Takeda Katsuyori (1546-1582) is depicted carrying a naginata during an attack. Her husband was defeated by Oda Nobunaga and had to flee, his wife going with him. However, Katsuyori was resigned to die and prompted her to leave. She refused and committed suicide with her husband.
Mar 15, 2019
Mar 7, 2019
'Karate Kid' Actor William Zabka Lost 20 Pounds to Step Back Into the 'Cobra Kai' Dojo
(by Vinnie Mancuso menshealth.com 4-25-18)
The older you get, the harder it becomes to sweep the leg.
At least, that's the lesson William Zabka is learning as he steps back into the dojo for YouTube Red's Cobra Kai. As intense teenage martial artist Johnny Lawrence in the original Karate Kid, Zabka singe-handedly ushered in the quintessential blonde '80s villain, providing the perfect foil to Ralph Macchio's Daniel LaRusso and ensuring "sweep the leg, Johnny" would be drunkenly yelled at sporting events for decades to come.
But times have surely changed, both on-screen and off.
"You definitely have to work harder to keep the pounds off. It's not as easy to keep the muscles tight as it was when I was 18," Zabka told MensHealth.com at the Tribeca Film Festival premiere of Cobra Kai, which sees both Zabka and Macchio reprising their roles 34 years later.
When Zabka got the call, he immediately got to work on whipping himself back into Johnny Lawrence shape.
"I actually dropped about 20 pounds from the time I announced the show until we started screening it," he told us.
Looking for quick results, the 52-year-old partnered with Chad Landers of California's PUSH Private Fitness for a rigorous, high-intensity workout plan partnered with a high-protein, low-calorie diet.
"Chad whipped me into shape really fast," Zabka said. "About two weeks."
He added, "I took it really seriously. I looked at it as, 'What would Johnny be doing today?' And that was great, because I was able to get back into that mindset all over again and I'm back to where I want to be shape wise."
Zabka largely credits his ability to stay fitness-focused on the training he received from Pat E. Johnson, the award-winning black belt and Karate Kid choreographer who, Zabka says, "built Johnny Lawrence from the ground up."
"The mentality of Johnny was so instilled in me [by Johnson]," the actor said. "More than just the physicality of martial arts — it’s the mental part. It’s discipline. Martial arts instills so much incredible self-esteem ... That stuck with me for a lifetime."
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