Logo

Welcome to KB24

Login or Signup to meet new friends, find out what's going on, and connect with others on the site.


Sign Up Now

Registering for this site is easy. Just fill in the fields on the registration page and we'll get a new account set up for you in no time.

Forgot Your Password?

A new password will be e-mailed to you.

Member Login

Archive for May, 2010

Lakers win again to make series 2-0 (124-112)


Game 2 of the Western Conference finals Wednesday at Staples Center was a great follow-up to the demolishing first game against the Suns. With Gasol scoring 14 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter, Bryant having 21 points and 13 assists, the Lakers beat the Suns in the fourth quarter and ran away with a 124-112 victory. "We're shooting the ball very well, moving the ball really, really well," Gasol said. "Our bench is playing at a high level, and we're all stepping up." After shooting 58 percent in Game 1, the Lakers converted 57.7 percent in Game 2 on Wednesday to display their forceful offensive power. Odom, who had 17 points and 11 rebounds for the Lakers. "When we get four or five guys going offensively, it seems like our defense steps up. We do a great job of using our quickness, cutting guys off and making it hard for teams as well as putting that offensive pressure on them." Ron Artest scored 18 points for the Lakers, who have moved within reach of a Finals showdown with the Boston Celtics. For the second straight game, you can hear the fans roar from throughout the Staples Center: "We want Boston!" The Suns recorded six turnovers to the Lakers' two and were outscored 34-22 in the final quarter. "We exerted so much energy getting back into the game," Hill said. "We have to play better in the first half and do a better job in the first quarter." The Lakers and Suns now head to Phoenix for Game 3 on Sunday.


Continue reading

Students get a kick out of the martial arts


latimes.com / May 16, 2010



The students at Richard Merkin Middle School in South Los Angeles had not heard of Hu Jianqiang before they met him. They hadn't seen the movie "Shaolin Temple," in which he performed with Jet Li. But one demonstration of his lightning-fast fists and the butterfly kick in which he throws his body off the floor light as a Frisbee and the Chinese kung fu master was a celebrity in their eyes — maybe even more than the person whose money helped bring him to them. Thanks to intercession from Kobe Bryant, a $25,000 donation pays for the two-time Chinese national champion in martial arts to teach students at this school and two others how to kick, punch and roll — and in the process speak some Mandarin. "Kobe has a particular affinity for China," said Doug Young, the spokesman for the Kobe Bryant Family Foundation. "The Beijing Olympics was a formidable experience for him. It magnified his interest in using sports as a way to foster cultural respect." The Lakers star is so popular in China, Young said, that his basketball jerseys are consistently top sellers there. And as someone who spent part of his childhood in Italy and speaks Italian and Spanish, Bryant particularly appreciates the growing importance of the Chinese language — and thinks inner-city kids should be exposed to it. "Martial arts seemed like an exciting way to get kids interested," said Young. The martial arts classes are part of a pilot program run by the nonprofit After-School All-Stars. "Our goal is to keep the kids on campus, so they will be in a safe environment to do their homework and engage with something that is interesting and meaningful," said Ana Campos, executive director of program's L.A. branch. "Mr. Hu is a real champion martial artist. We are lucky for him to be willing to take this project on." Hu, 51, began his career as a gymnast at age 10 and switched to wushu, Chinese for martial arts, because his teachers thought that's where his best promise lay. He won numerous awards as an all-around national champion famous for his speed, power and agility. His big break came with "Shaolin Temple" in 1982. Since then, he's appeared in more than a dozen martial arts movies. Hu and his wife, Zong Jianmei, a fellow wushu master, left China in 1992 and came to the U.S. after a stint in Buenos Aires. In 1997 they started their own martial arts academy, the Shaolin Wushu Center, in Connecticut. They opened one in L.A. in 1998. So far, about 100 students have signed up for Hu's after-school sessions. "Try it! It's fun! It's easy!" the students holler at first-timers as Hu asks for volunteers to roll around on the rug with their legs folded like pretzels. "He makes us laugh," said Eve Louis, 11. "He shows us how to do the windmill with our arms. It's really fun." When the students kick their feet in the air, or stretch their legs on the floor, they count out loud from one to eight in Chinese: "Yi er san si wu liu qi ba." Hu asks them to bend their legs into a horse stance — legs wide, knees bent as if on horseback — and then to hold the pose. "One more time!" Hu tells them just as they begin to collapse from the tension. "Zai lai yi ci!" the students repeat after him in Chinese. The students had a wide range of reasons for wanting to learn from Hu. "I want to take this class because me and my mom watch a lot of soap operas where men are mean to their wives" said Sari Hernandez, 11. "I think we should learn to defend ourselves." Cristal Cardona, 11, said it was great to learn a little Mandarin. "I want to be a doctor when I grow up," she said. "It helps me to know Chinese because in the hospital, if Chinese people come, I'd know what to say."Continue reading

Kobe on Modern Family


Kobe will be making an appearance on the hit show Modern Family's season finale this week.  Check out the sneak peak below.Continue reading

Lakers take Game 1 of West finals 128-107


Bryant scored 40 points, Lamar Odom added 19 points and 19 rebounds, and the Lakers opened the series with ruthless offensive efficiency in a 128-107 victory on Monday night. Even with a sore knee and a list of additional aches and pains, Kobe is still among the most dangerous postseason scorers in NBA history, and he had no problem giving Los Angeles an early leg up in the Western Conference finals. Just being aggressive, playing my game," Bryant said. "Got shots, took them. Got lanes to the basket, took them." Lakers, who won their seventh straight playoff game and snapped the Suns' six-game streak with a phenomenal second half, highlighted by Bryant's 21-point third quarter. "I practice so much during the season," Bryant said. "In the offseason, I work a lot. To take a week off, I'm not going to lose all the work I put in prior to that." Amare Stoudemire scored 23 points and Steve Nash had 13 points and 13 assists for the Suns, who hadn't lost since April 24 Both teams swept their second-round series to earn their third postseason date in five years, but the Lakers didn't allow a week off to affect their remarkable execution. After a 62-point first half for the Lakers, Bryant alternated jumpers and strong drives while Los Angeles pulled away, making a 13-2 run in the third quarter. His 13-for-23 shooting performance included three 3-pointers and 11 free throws with just one miss. "Kobe carried a lot of the offense tonight, no doubt," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "I will say he was going to shoulder the game. He was going to take it on. He's been very optimistic through the whole week. He felt like he had the amount of rest and shooting he had to have. He was attentive and involved [in practice]." Game 2 is Wednesday night at Staples Center.


Continue reading