@@PianoMeetsMetal I always love it when i hear young people singing songs from my youth. I may not always like to new covers but I am always greatfull. Young people always think the old stuff is out of date and doesn't belong anymore no matter what generation they are. im not just talking about today's youth. some songs movies books ecetera have wonder meanings that hold true forever. Those also tell our historiesof who we are and how we felt. and i love when old stories are revisited like using a song from the past in a tv comercial. it introduces to the next generation. it's a good way to keep those who have passed alive in our harts and minds.
i just realize that the lyrics of this song was quite funny and paired it with Gura's iconic voice I was laughing so hard i needed to go to the toilet because my stomach was hurting it is either from laughing or because of what I ate for dinner🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂
这是哪个版本,跟我熟知的歌词不一样诶 我记得应该是 Everybody is Kunfu fighting Your mind becomes fast as lightening Although the future is a little bit frightening It's a book of your life that you are writing 这样的
@@sharksongsroaster Definitely. Back to Kung Fu training camp for you! It's okay, though. I sang those parts very loudly, for my kids. They enjoyed it.
cats was 70s slang usualy associated with the black community and for some reason there seemed to be more black american martial artist in ckung fu movies then. ironicaly the rythmic pattern of disco realy seemed to mach the rythem of the dance like flow of martial arts.
The kung fu panda version of this song changed some of the lyrics up so you might be thinking of that version. Gura is performing the original version.
@@ozairchishti1264 I know the lyrics were changed, Gaura wouldn't be able to find the kung fu panda version for karoke. Carl Douglas is the only person cedited for the song.
@@ashrimpcalledhank lol I was responding to the OP who thought the lyrics were different and was merely offering him an explanation as to why he might remember them differently.
so no one was surprised by the use of the word "china-men" I was listening to this song after watching kung fu panda, and I was like 0_o woah there hol' up. I know it's accurate but that's a slur.
@@Asertix357 wdym? i'm not sjw or anything like that, but imma stop ur gundam- ass right there. calling someone a china man (came from California 1870s goldrush) is a slur, and idk if you remember but the United States signed a law banning asians from immigrating for a while because we felt there were too many asians. . listen I think china-man is a pretty accurate slur, and not as bad as it could be, but it is a slur that comes from a time when people legally banned asians from America... and I think it's mostly offensive when a Japanese or Korean is called a "chinaman"
@@professorpick That's the same logic people use to claim "trap" is an anti-trans slur, even though trans people are saying they don't see the word in that way. Too many white folks having a savior complex, believing that they need to speak up on behalf of minorities who they believe don't have a voice to speak with for themselves. They need to mind their own business and stop poking their noses in other people's business who didn't ask them for help in the first place.
@@Asertix357 Yes it is. It very much is. But this is a song from the 1970's..... That was a long time ago, and they weren't exactly culturally sensitive, back then. But yes, while this song is a lot of fun, it was made from the point of view of a very stereotyped view of Asian culture, particularly the way the Kung-Fu genre of film was seen by the American audience in the 70's. However, the song was written and performed by a black man, so at least I think we can appreciate how this was a bit of harmless fun performed and written by another member of another marginalized and oft-stereotyped race.... So I think it's fair to really just sit back and enjoy it without taking undue offense. Times change.