Personal Growth Riches


Videos for: lee

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Head Tracking for Desktop VR Displays using the WiiRemote

Using the infrared camera in the Wii remote and a head mounted sensor bar (two IR LEDs), you can accurately track the location of your head and render view dependent images on the screen. This effectively transforms your display into a portal to a virtual environment. The display properly reacts to head and body movement as if it were a real window creating a realistic illusion of depth and space. By Johnny Chung Lee, Carnegie Mellon University. For more information and software visit http://johnnylee.net
From: jcl5m
Views: 5703273
20572 ratings
Time: 04:45 More in Howto & Style
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david lee roth(Just a gigolo)

Song by David lee roth
Views: 392576
900 ratings
Time: 06:14 More in Music
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Bruce Lee - Long lost footage of "Game of Death" PART 4
All other parts are up once again. This is the original footage that Bruce Lee shot for the "Game of Death" as it is seen in "Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey". Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEUDRKRX1Eg And: Bruce Lee: 1.71 m (5' 7½") Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: 2.18 m (7' 2") ...
From: Targetius
Views: 1503584
2141 ratings
Time: 09:59 More in Film & Animation
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John Lee Hooker - Hobo Blues

Live 1965 At American Folk Blues Festival
Views: 403471
1222 ratings
Time: 02:42 More in Music
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Best Bruce Lee Music Video Ever! Tribute to the master!By AJ

http://www.mikestackleshop.com Credit for this video goes to AJ. I did not make this. I am ust sharing the video with as many people as possible. Has clips from Way of the dragon, Enter the Dragon and Fist of Fury as well as the footage from Game of Death and The Big Boss. The video is called "Lose Control" but the song is called "Hero" by Sevendust. (Thanks Godspeedf24). His movies were and still are awsome. Especially when you look at everything else that was coming out in the late 60's and early 70's. He was 30 years ahead of his time. When you look at how bruce lee trained through his books (not his movies) he was actually a well rounded mma fighter. In his own series of books he displayed a knowledge of wrestling skills, boxing, judo (he trained with gene lebell). He had everything from a proper fighting stance to take down defences which he called "Tackle Defence". To sum it up. The guy was 40 years ahead of his time. And that goes for making movies as well as Martial Arts. Every Martial Arts fighter or fan across the planet owes him a lot. Support this Bruce Lee forum here: http://z3.invisionfree.com/BruceLeeForum/index.php?act=idx If you have a bruce lee wesite that you would like linked then PM me. I am always up for supporting the Bruce Lee comunity
From: h4eafy
Views: 2112784
4573 ratings
Time: 03:48 More in Sports
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Jerry Lee Lewis - Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On (1957)
As a pianist, "The Killer" Jerry Lee Lewis always complained because he had to sit down during his shows. Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash suggested him to stand up. Jerry Lee accepted their advice. So he started to kick the chairs, to go up on the keyboards and even to burn pianos.
Views: 771935
1502 ratings
Time: 02:00 More in Music
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Jerry Lee Lewis-Great Balls of Fire

One of the greatest songs in rock'n'roll history!! You shake my nerves and you rattle my brain Too much love drives a man insane You broke my will, but what a thrill Goodness, gracious, great balls of fire!! I laughed at love 'cause I thought it was funny You came along and moooved me honey I've changed my mind, this girl is fine Goodness, gracious, great balls of fire!! Kiss me baby, ooooh it feels good Hold me baby, wellllll you're gonna let me love you like a lover should Your fine, so kind Got to tell this world that your mine mine mine mine I chew my nails and then I twiddle my thumbs I'm real nervous, but it sure is fun C´mon baby, you're drivin' my crazy Goodness, gracious, great balls of fire!! Wellllll Kiss me baby, ooooh it feels good Hold me baby, let me love you like a lover should Your fine, so kind Got to tell this world that your mine mine mine mine I chew my nails and then I twiddle my thumbs I'm real nervous, but it sure is fun C´mon baby, you're drivin' my crazy Goodness, gracious, great balls of fire!!
Views: 1273171
2719 ratings
Time: 01:49 More in Music
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JOHN LEE HOOKER - BAD LIKE JESSE JAMES

Born near Clarksdale, Mississippi on August 22, 1917 to a sharecropping family, John Lee Hooker's earliest musical influence came from his stepfather, Will Moore. By the early 1940's Hooker had moved north to Detroit by way of Memphis and Cincinnati. Hooker found work as a janitor in the auto factories, and at night, like many other transplants from the rural Delta, he entertained friends and neighbors by playing at "house parties". He was "discovered" by record storeowner Elmer Barbee who took him to Bernard Besman, who was a producer, record distributor and owner of Sensation Records, Besman leased some of his early Hooker recordings to Modern Records. Among Hooker's first recordings in 1948, "Boogie Chillen" became a number one jukebox hit for Modern and his first million seller. This was soon followed by an even bigger hit with "I'm In The Mood" and other classic recordings including "Crawling Kingsnake" and "Hobo Blues." Another surge in his career took place with the release of more than 100 songs on Vee Jay Records during the 1950's and 1960's. When the young bohemian audiences of the 1960's "discovered" Hooker along with other blues originators, he and various he and others made a brief return to folk blues. Young British artist such as the Animals, John Mayall, and the Yardbirds introduced Hooker's sound to the new and eager audiences whose admiration and influence helped build Hooker to superstar status in the mid - 60's England. By 1970 he had moved to California and worked on several projects with rock musicians, notably Van Morrison and Canned Heat. Canned Heat modeled their sound after Hooker's boggie and collaborated with him on several albums and tours. During the late 1970's and much of the 1980's, Hooker toured the U.S. and Europe steadily but grew disenchanted with recording, through his appearance in the Blues Brothers movie resulted in a heightened profile. Then, in 1989, The Healer was released to critical acclaim and sales in excess of a million copies. Today the "The King Of The Boggie" is enjoying the most successful period of his extensive career. In the past ten years Hooker's influence has contributed to a booming interest in the blues and, notably, its acceptance by the music industry as a commercially viable entity. Hooker's career has been a series a highlights and special events since the release of The Healer. In addition to recording his on albums Mr. Lucky, Boom Boom, Chill Out, and Don't Look Back for Pointblank / Virgin, he contributed to recordings by B.B. King, Branford Marsalis, Van Morrison, and Big Head Todd and the Monsters and portrayed the title role in Pete Townshend's 1989 epic, The Iron Man. His influence on younger generations has been documented on television with features on Showtime and a special edition of the BBC's 'Late Show' as well as appearances on "The Tonight Show" and "Late Night With David Letterman" among many others. John Lee was invited to perform The Rolling Stones and guest Eric Clapton for their national television broadcast during The Stones' 1989 Steel Wheels tour. In 1990, many musical greats paid tribute to John Lee Hooker with a performance at Madison Square Garden. Joining him on some or all of these special occasions were artists such as Bonnie Raitt, Ry Cooder, Joe Cocker, Huey Newton, Carlos Santana, Robert Clay, Mick Fleetwood, Al Cooper, Johnny Winter, John Hammond, and the late Albert Collins and Willie Dixon. Hooker's 1991 induction into the Rock n' Roll Hall Of Fame was fitting for the man who has influenced countless fans and musicians who have in turn influenced many more. Honors continue, with recent inductions into Los Angeles' Rock Walk, The Bammies Walk Of Fame in San Francisco, and, in 1997, a star in the Hollywood Walk Of Fame. John Lee's style has always been unique, even among other performers of the real deep blues, few of whom remain with us today. While retaining that foundation he has simultaneously broken new ground musically and commercially. At the age of 80, John Lee Hooker received his third and fourth Grammy Awards, for Best Traditional Blues Recording (Don't Look Back) and for Best Pop Collaboration for the song "Don't Look Back" which Hooker recorded with his long time friend Van Morrison. This Friendship and others are celebrated on Hooker's newest Pointblank / Virgin album, The Best Of Friends. The album also celebrates a return, exactly 50 years later, to Hooker's first hit, Boogie Chillen and serves as a perfect bookend for Hooker's first fifty years in the business
From: dhphotog
Views: 425927
796 ratings
Time: 05:20 More in Music
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LEE MORGAN - I REMEMBER CLIFFORD

Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers Lee Morgan,Benny Golson Bobby Timmons,Jymie Merritt dvd"live in '58"
From: sukapura
Views: 158248
502 ratings
Time: 05:25 More in Music
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Tags: jazz Music




Me: Girl takes pic of herself every day for three years

Official 2007 Webby nominee Music by Nathan Melsted: http://www.myspace.com/nathanmelsted Los Angeles International Short Film Festival 2004 Silver Lake Film Festival, Los Angeles 2004 Film Fest New Haven, New Haven CT 2004 Light Plays Tricks 6 Short Film Festival, Canada 2003
From: ahreelee
Views: 4756241
14021 ratings
Time: 01:07 More in Film & Animation
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Amy Lee,Seether-Broken

you got to love this girl
From: malurosu
Views: 832048
2243 ratings
Time: 04:26 More in Music
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David Lee Roth - California Girls (Music Video)

Music video of "California Girls" of of DLR's 1985 EP "Crazy From the Heat".
From: jonboy122
Views: 506425
1068 ratings
Time: 04:30 More in Music
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