Definitely still watching, your amazing. Too bad there aren't enough people who are impressed with thousands of hours of work, and only care about cheap but flashy gimmicks. Where do you get all of your props, juggling clubs, cigar boxes etc, I want to learn all of your tricks, but I don't know where to get quality juggling props.
Tennis racquets are more difficult as they have an extra dimension them that clubs don't have and the handles are fatter and the face of the racquets are wider which makes them collide more easily. Check out "Renegade juggling supplies" their clubs are great I use them and they have nice bean bags and all the other props. Juggling rules .
@@JuggleMan I appreciate your response, I am still in school and just want to learn juggling for fun, is there a cheaper option to get some of these props like cigar boxes, clubs, rings, hats etc. Juggling is really fun and all, but I don't want to drop hundreds of dollars just yet.
@@JuggleMan Have you ever heard of firetoys? have you bought props from them? can you do more tutorials and moreproduct reviews with links to the products in the description?
In the 2003 historically accurate HBO 4-part "Napoleon" (unlike the terrible, fictionalised Ridley Scot production) Napoleon's brilliant foreign minister was, elegant, charismatic Prince Maurice Talleyrand (John Malkovich). Talleyrand was lame, having been born with a right club-foot -- he always walked with a stick. When Napoleon (given to tantrums in ministerial meetings) gave the final coarse insult to his amoral but peace-loving foreign minister, dismissing him as Grand Chamberlain, Talleyrand -- always the cool-headed, calculating courtier -- does not condescend to answer him. He merely twirls his cane insolently, turns his back on the Emperor and walks out the door with aristocratic dignity. Pure class. Malkovich (like political genius statesman Talleyrand) steals every scene he's in; and seems to channel the "the lame devil" (as he was called by his enemies) with suave style. The cane-twirl was the perfect expression of nonchalance in the face of Napoleon's fury, and failure to intimidate him. The 4- part 2003 "Napoleon" is available free on RU-vid and makes Ridley Scott's recent film look like the shabby Hollywood-ized fiction it is.
Please make a video showing an actual walking cane without letting go of the cane and not using individual fingers so that it becomes mainly a wrist exercise. Thank you.