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Thread: Crazy English founder, wife-beater Li Yang converts to Buddhism, promises to teach...

  1. #1
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    Crazy English founder, wife-beater Li Yang converts to Buddhism, promises to teach...

    Crazy English founder, wife-beater Li Yang converts to Buddhism, promises to teach monks English



    Apparently deciding that Islam wasn't his cup of tea, crazy Chinese founder and shameless wife-beater Li Yang has converted to Buddhism, acknowledging Shi Yongxin, the Buddhist Abbot as his master. Somehow we doubt that donning new robes will help him discard old "habits."

    Li was renamed "Yan Yi" at Dengfeng Shaolin Temple in Henan Province on July 26, ifeng says. Li Yang told his Buddhist Abbot that he was willing to give the monks English training to help promote Shaolin culture in the Western world. He also donated 10,000 English books to the Zhengzhou Charity Federation.

    Li Yang's actions have unsurprisingly stirred the internet pot.

    "The English version of Buddhist Scriptures is going to be published, and the future English textbooks are Buddhist Scriptures." web users草原狼郑强 mocked.

    小小小西下 said: "I'm not attached to this guy at all. He used to come to my senior high school to cheat us to buy his books. After he got the money, he left and forgot all he promised to do for us."

    "Is he going to create a 'Crazy Shaolin'?" 屠龙刀的围脖 asked.

    "Shi Yongxin's Shaolin Temple becomes a shelter for a gangster."让自由做主 wrote.

    Carmeronaldo added, "In the future, Shaolin Temple has one more monk who hides himself in the trees and recites his Buddhist crazily.

    Unfortunately, it seems that in the eyes of the public, Li Yang will always worship at the "Church of Douchebag."

    By Lucy Liu
    Good move, Yongxin! Just the kind of guy you need on board to bolster the Shaolin image.

  2. #2
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    Good find, LFJ.

    Of course, if legend is to be believed, Shaolin has a longstanding tradition of being a refuge for 'gangsters'.

    Too bad that wasn't written by the celeb Lucy Liu. That would make this story really amusing.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  3. #3
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    more

    Anyone know anything more about Crazy English beyond what has been mentioned in these reports?

    Amway even?

    Scandal-hit Li Yang announces plan to combine kung fu with ‘Crazy English’
    PUBLISHED : Monday, 18 August, 2014, 4:56pm
    UPDATED : Monday, 18 August, 2014, 5:23pm
    Chris Luo chris.luo@scmp.com


    “Crazy English” founder Li Yang (right) posts for a photo with Shao Lin Temple abbot, Shi Yongxin. Photo: SCMP Pictures

    “Crazy English” founder Li Yang has announced plans to combine kung fu with language classes as he aims to make a comeback from a series of well-publicised scandals.

    Li plans to run a programme that would allow students to hone their English skills while learning martial arts at the same time, The Beijing News reported.

    Li also said that he is considering offering Chinese-language classes to foreigners and would charge a tuition fee of 30 yuan for every Chinese character learned, the paper added.

    The unorthodox educator announced last month that he had converted to Buddhism. He posted pictures online of himself at the Shaolin Temple with the abbot, Shi Yongxin.

    “Everything is about business, just like converting to Buddhism. Crazy English will have a long-term cooperation with the Shaolin Temple,” Li was quoted as saying.

    Li could not be reached for comment on Monday.

    Born to a grass-roots family, Li learnt English mostly by himself and became an English-language talk show host on Chinese television in the 1990s. He started promoting Crazy English, which places heavy emphasis on practicing the language orally and in a loud way, in 1994. He claims at least 20 million people have learned English through his methods.

    Crazy English is believed to have more than 2,000 employees. The company helped make Li an idol to hundreds of thousands of China’s post-80s generation, as he became a household-name across the country.

    Li drew much criticism after his former wife, Kim Lee, posted pictures of her being abused by him on social media in 2011. Li admitted to committing domestic violence, and his wife divorced him on those grounds last year. A Beijing court ordered Li to pay 12 million yuan (HK$15.1 million) to Lee in compensation as part of the divorce settlement.

    Li also sparked controversy when he briefly joined the US direct-sales company Amway last year as a sales representative. The firm uses a variety of multi-level marketing techniques to sell home and beauty products but critics in China have frequently accused it of being a pyramid scheme.

    Li wrote on Weibo last month that he planned to “build the world’s biggest kung fu and language promotion centre” in Dengfeng, where the Shaolin Temple is located. He said the first Shaolin kung fu Crazy English winter camp would be held at the temple next year.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #4
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    Odd article

    Wasn't sure where to post this but figured it mentions Li Yang and is just crazy enough...

    Kung fu helps kick-start careers in assertive way
    2014-08-25 09:22 China Daily Web Editor: Qin Dexing


    Young people from across China come to study kung fu at Shaolin Temple during the summer holiday. [Photo/China Daily]

    Corporates use martial arts skills to gain competitive business edge

    Back when he was a poor migrant worker sleeping in railway stations and under bridges, Lin Min had one unlikely skill he relied upon to survive and build a business empire.

    As a young man, Lin had studied Shaolin-style wushu, or martial arts.

    The former kung fu kid-turned boardroom bigwig single-handedly created a business from scratch that now has annual turnover of 500 million yuan ($81 million). He is among a group of financially successful Chinese who say their martial arts skills helped them fight their way to the top professionally.

    More than just fodder for Hong Kong and Hollywood movies with millions of fans globally, martial arts in China is making millionaires.

    Li Yang, founder of the Crazy English education brand, which uses a shouting technique to help Chinese students learn, is the latest in a string of high-profile businesspeople and celebrities to become disciples of Shi Yongxin, the abbot of Shaolin Temple.

    Cryptically, Li is reported to have said the move was pivotal to the future of his business, which has already netted him a big fortune.

    Western professionals, who are looking for an extra edge, also are starting to jump on the corporate kung fu bandwagon. Executives from US tech giants Google and Apple were among those who received abbot Shi's wushu wisdom this year. Other foreigners from a range of backgrounds are making the pilgrimage to study under martial arts masters across China.

    Danish corporate social responsibility consultant Pernille Son Paulsen, 32, says the skills she's learning at the Beijing Scientific Ving Tsun School are transferable. "Martial arts help you develop a kind of assertiveness that also helps you in your professional life," she says.

    Other foreigners, such as Clive Parkinson from the United Kingdom, have turned kung fu into their business.

    The 59-year-old former kung fu world champion, who studied martial arts in the south of China for two years, began his first training school in the United Kingdom in Birmingham 30 years ago. He now has several clubs in various British cities and has trained more than 4,000 students.

    "I do make a profit from my classes," he says. "I do both one-to-one teaching and group teaching.

    "Chinese kung fu makes me a better person. You gain better confidence in yourself."

    Lin, the former migrant worker who is now chairman of the Jiangxi Dehe Group, was born in a small village of Quanzhou in Fujian province. The self-described naughty boy performed poorly in school.

    In 1990, when he was 16, the avid Bruce Lee fan began learning kung fu after enrolling at a martial-arts-focused school belonging to the Zhengzhou Shaolin Tagou Education Group, situated in a mountainous area near Songshan mountain in the western part of Henan province.

    The two years he spent there were hard.

    "At that time, the conditions and facilities were very harsh," Lin says. "We got up at 5 am and practiced at least eight hours a day."

    Looking back, though, he describes this experience as "precious and key" to his stellar career.

    Keen to make his mark, Lin sought opportunities in Jiangxi province in 1993. With no savings or business connections, he worked on construction sites and as a truck driver on the graveyard shift.

    Now, 20 years later, his company's revenue is about 500 million yuan a year.

    "My classmates and I go back and visit Tagou frequently," Lin says. "The experience there had a very big impact on us. Without the hard training we received, I may not have been able to be persistent in the harsh working environment I experienced when I was starting out. Learning kung fu cultivated our hardworking spirit, made us fearless and able to bravely face difficulties, which is very important in business."

    Lin likened the management style at his former kung fu school to that of the military. This determined and disciplined approach to running an organization, which he says he has adopted with great success professionally, is something he values more than books.

    Liu Haiqin, headmaster of the Tagou Education Group, which is the biggest chain of kung fu schools in China, says the benefits of martial arts go beyond the mere physical.

    "Many of our students become successful businesspeople later, and even now, they come back frequently and practice just like ordinary students several months a year," he says.

    "Learning kung fu means you have to practice in the hottest summer and the coldest winter, which makes people more energetic and confident, and is very helpful for businesspeople who face a lot of pressure and changeable situations."

    Tagou, founded in 1978 with just a handful of people and a few rudimentary buildings, now has more than 32,000 students nationwide.

    It is one of China's most famous kung fu schools, offering martial arts as a core syllabus subject, along with a standard primary and middle school education. More than 380 world kung fu champions and more than 700 national champions have been cultivated by the institution. Every year, hundreds of foreign students also fly in from all over the world to learn the Tagou brand of kung fu, which was developed by a family with strong links to the Shaolin Temple.

    In addition to martial prowess and personal discipline, kung fu is also about self-improvement and a highly developed sense of social consciousness that closely aligns with what's expected of modern businesspeople and corporations.

    So says Chen Jian, 39, another Tagou graduate-turned professional success story.

    Chen, who owns a garment company in Yueqing, Zhejiang province, says kung fu's "chivalrous spirit" makes an impression in the business world and helps with professional networking.

    Chen, having studied at Tagou for a year, continued learning kung fu and went on to win titles at several national championship events.

    Lin also agrees that kung fu teaches the importance of giving back to society.

    He says his company, Dehe, builds schools in poor regions, pays for poor students to study at college and donates to support national disaster relief.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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