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        "description": "<p>A Kung Fu Master proves to Richard Ambrose that you really can break two brick blocks with just your hand and without the use of trickery.</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "I Didn't Know That: Kung Fu Strength", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/science/weird-science-sci/idkt-kung-fu-strength/", 
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                    "url": "http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2011/03/shaolin-kung-fu/hoffmann-photography", 
                    "name": "Photo Gallery: Shaolin Kung Fu"
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                    "url": "http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/", 
                    "name": "More about Science"
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        "credit": "National Geographic", 
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        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/54215_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>RICHARD AMBROSE (V/O): Can a Kung Fu master really destroy a pile of breeze blocks with just his fist?</p><p>Or is it just movie trickery with specially rigged props?</p><p>Ian Armstrong is going to prove it's all for real.\u00a0 He's one of the few westerners to have become a Shaolin Kung Fu master.\u00a0 He's spent over 20 years training in this mystical art, regularly travelling to temples in Southeast Asia to perfect his techniques.\u00a0 Which is why you shouldn't try any of this at home.</p><p>RICHARD AMBROSE (SYNC - TO IAN): Is Shaolin Kung Fu similar to any of the, the things that we see on television at all?\u00a0 Like Bruce Lee or Jackie Chan?</p><p>IAN ARMSTRONG (SYNC - TO RICHARD): Most of the martial arts - and there's a huge diverse array of martial arts - most of them trace their origin back to Shaolin Kung Fu so -</p><p>RICHARD: Right so that -</p><p>IAN: - you know -</p><p>RICHARD: OK.</p><p>IAN: - more or less the different facets of Shaolin Kung Fu have branched out and and given rise to -</p><p>RICHARD: Right.</p><p>IAN: - many different martial arts.</p><p>RICHARD:So that was like the original form?</p><p>IAN: Yes, yes.</p><p>RICHARD: And it's all derived from there.</p><p>RICHARD (V/O)The key to Ian's incredible feats of strength has little to do with the size of his biceps.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): Ooo.</p><p>RICHARD (V/O):</p><p>It's all about his ability to channel his inner energies or Chi.</p><p>IAN (SYNC - TO RICHARD): Kung Fu is about converting the Chi into what we call Geng.\u00a0 Geng is power, yeah?</p><p>RICHARD (OOV): Yeah.</p><p>IAN (SYNC):</p><p>Chi is energy.\u00a0 Geng is power.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC - TO IAN): So can, can you demonstrate it?</p><p>IAN: So what I'd like you to do is put your hands over your body like this.\u00a0 Now these are acting as a little bit of a shield.\u00a0 This can be done from various ranges but I'm doing it with, without any pull back -</p><p>RICHARD: Right.</p><p>IAN: - which is the most difficult.</p><p>RICHARD: Is this effectively like a one inch punch, or?</p><p>IAN: Yes.</p><p>RICHARD: Right.</p><p>IAN: Yes - this is the, this is a no inch punch.\u00a0 You're gonna get a zero inch punch here.\u00a0 OK.\u00a0 So what I need to do, just relax my body and then I'm looking to channel the energy through my body into your body.</p><p>RICHARD: Oh!\u00a0 Eh.\u00a0 Is this a force of energy that I, I can harness I mean and break a block or anything like that?</p><p>IAN: Definitely.\u00a0 Yeah.</p><p>RICHARD: Yes?</p><p>IAN: Yeah.\u00a0 Although it's, it takes training.\u00a0 So obviously we've got to work on that one.</p><p>RICHARD: Shall we get some blocks?</p><p>IAN: Yep.</p><p>RICHARD: OK - great.</p><p>RICHARD AMBROSE(V/O): It took Ian eight years to train his you-know-what so he can draw them up into his pelvis.\u00a0 And ten years of Chi Geng exercises to train his skin to have the elastic properties to repel the axe.\u00a0 But he reckons he can teach me to chop a block in just one afternoon.</p><p>RICHARD AMBROSE (V/O): But first, to make sure the blocks were the real deal we went down to the local builders' yard to get some fresh ones.</p><p>RICHARD AMBROSE (V/O): My training started by learning the correct stances and punching techniques.</p><p>IAN ARMSTRONG (SYNC - TO RICHARD): When I do that.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): Relax.\u00a0 Go!</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): Right, I'm gonna go for it.\u00a0 Right - go. Wow.\u00a0\u00a0 Wow.</p><p>IAN (OOV): Do we want to do the block next?</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): What do you think?</p><p>IAN (OOV): I think so, yeah, I think so.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC):</p><p>Yeah?\u00a0 OK.\u00a0 OK.\u00a0\u00a0 Shall we do two?</p><p>IAN (V/O): Yep - definitely.</p><p>RICHARD (OOV): Yeah?\u00a0 You're comfortable if I do two?</p><p>IAN (OOV): You're gonna hit it in the middle.\u00a0 Same stance, same posture as before, same technique.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): And open palm again.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): Open palm.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): OK.\u00a0 Fine.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): But you're gonna have to hit it a bit harder -</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): Yes.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): - cos this one's a bit meaner.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): OK.\u00a0 Right.</p><p>IAN (OOV): Here we go.\u00a0\u00a0 One.\u00a0 Confidence is growing now, isn't it? There we go.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): Wow - wow.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): That easy.</p><p>RICHARD (SYNC): Thank you very much.\u00a0 Honestly was fantastic.</p><p>IAN (SYNC): Well, well done.\u00a0 No that was a good break.\u00a0 Well done.</p>", 
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