Bruce...

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i think Bruce Lee was attractive bloke. anyone agree?[/QUOTE]

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[url]http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18221684&highlight=attractive[/url]

edit: He would have aged well and developed his school :D
edit2: damn you LOAM!
 
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Seagal physically is now a fat chump in any movie I've bothered to watch him in.
I could never see Bruce Lee ever surrendering his lean body shape within the limits of his own natural aging. The guy was dedicated beyond belief.
 
Considering how much cannabis he was consuming i imagine he would have ended up looking like an asian version of 'The Dude'.

(For those of you that don't know how he died you may want to look it up)
 
Considering how much cannabis he was consuming i imagine he would have ended up looking like an asian version of 'The Dude'.

(For those of you that don't know how he died you may want to look it up)

He died from an acute cerebral edema due to a reaction to compounds present in the prescription painkilling drug Equages.

Peter Wu, who you refer to retracted his statement on cannabis use.
 
He died from an acute cerebral edema due to a reaction to compounds present in the prescription painkilling drug Equages.

Peter Wu, who you refer to retracted his statement on cannabis use.


Peter who, and what reference? I know this will always be contentious but it was the coroner himself who reported the find of cannabis during the autopsy. The previous incident that landed him in hospital was no great secret among his friends and neither was his drug use.

Death by misadventure was what the coroner ruled the death as and is also the title of the documentary covering the revelations. Well worth watching if you can get hold of a copy.
 
Peter who, and what reference? I know this will always be contentious but it was the coroner himself who reported the find of cannabis during the autopsy. The previous incident that landed him in hospital was no great secret among his friends and neither was his drug use.

Death by misadventure was what the coroner ruled the death as and is also the title of the documentary covering the revelations. Well worth watching if you can get hold of a copy.

Peter Wu was that Doctor. There was no cannabis found in the autopsy, only the substance Equagesic, which was a painkiller, was present. He did not die from cannabis use, that is all a conspiracy perpetrated by Don Langford (Lee's personal Doctor) and Peter Wu (the neurosurgeon on Lee's first collapse several months before).

Donald Teare, the forensic pathologist (scotland yards cannabis expert) bought in to do the autopsy, found no suggestion of their claims and Peter Wu retracted the claim in light of this.

Whether Lee used cannabis or not is immaterial, he did not die from cannabis use, but a reaction to a drug found in Aspirin. Not that uncommon.


Bruce Lee, dressed in the traditional Chinese outfit he wore in the movie Enter The Dragon, was laid to rest in Lakeview Cemetery in Seattle in late July of 1973. But long before Lee's sudden and tragic death in a Hong Kong apartment at age 32, rumors were rife throughout the Orient that he had been wounded or killed in fights.

"One day, I got a long-distance call from Hong Kong's largest newspaper," Lee recalled. "They asked me if I was still alive. 'Guess who you are talking to?' I replied."

Thus, when Lee actually did die, speculation abounded as to the cause. The rumors ranged from Lee being killed by Hong Kong triads (gangsters) because he refused to pay them protection money - —something that was common for Chinese movie stars to do at that time —to his being killed by an angry martial artist's dim mak (death touch) strike. Some people claimed Lee was cursed—he had just bought a house in Hong Kong that was supposed to be haunted—or that he had died while mking love to actress Betty Tingpei, or that he had angered the Chinese martial arts community by teaching foreigners, and that he had been killed in a challenge match.

Many Chinese believed Lee was the victim of too much gum Ilk (intensity) in his training, while others cited drug use as the cause for his sudden demise. Still others believed that Lee's fate was sealed at birth, that it was in the stars. And, finally, there are those who think Lee's death was staged, and that he is merely waiting for the right time to return to society.

The facts of the case are this: Lee died after falling into a coma. The coroner's report was inconclusive, and medical authorities came up with five reasons for Lee's untimely death. However, they all agreed that it was caused by a cerebral edema (a swelling of the brain caused by a congestion of fluid). But what caused the edema became a matter of speculation. For the most part, the course of events on that fateful July day in 1973 can be pieced together. According to Lee's wife, Linda, Bruce met film producer Raymond Chow at 2 p.m. at home to discuss the making of Game of Death. They worked until 4 p.m., and then drove together to the home of Betty Tingpei, a Taiwanese actress who was to also have a leading role in the film. The three went over the script at Tingpei's home, and then Chow left to attend a dinner meeting.

A short time later, Lee complained of a headache and Tingpei gave him a tablet of Equagesic—a kind of super sapirin. Apart from that, Lee reportedly consumed nothing but a couple of soft drinks.

At around 7:30 p.m., Lee lay down for a nap and was still asleep when Chow called to ask why he and Tingpei had not yet shown up for dinner as planned. The actress told Chow she could not wake Lee. The ensuing autopsy found traces of cannabis in Lee's stomach, but the significance of this discovery is debatable. Some believe the cannabis caused a chemical reaction that led to the cerebral edema, but the coroner's inquiry refutes this theory. In fact, one doctor was quoted as saying that the cannabis being in Lee's stomach was "no more significant than if Bruce had drunk a cup of tea that day."

Dr. R.R. Lycette of Queen Elizabeth Hospital viewed Lee's death as a hypersensitivity to one or more of the compounds found in the headache tablet he consumed that afternoon. Although his skull showed no injury, his brain had swollen considerably, from 1,400 to 1,575 grams. None of the blood vessels were blocked or broken, so the possibility of a hemorrhage was ruled out. All of Lee's internal organs were meticulously examined, and the only "foreign" substance to be found was the Equagesic.

Chow came to the apartment and could not wake Lee either. A doctor was summoned, and he spent 10 minutes attempting to revive the martial artist before sending him by ambulance to Queen Elizabeth Hospital. By the time he reached the hospital, Lee was dead .

Foul play was immediately suspected as having a role in Lee's passing. Chow appeared on television to try to settle the public furor that quickly developed. He explained what happened, omitting only the fact that Lee had not died at home. The press soon uncovered the truth, however, and demanded to know what Chow was trying to cover up. R.D. Teare, a professor of forensic medicine at the University of London who had overseen more than 90,000 autopsies, was called in and declared that it was basically impossible for the cannabis to be a factor in Lee's death. In Teare's opinion, the edema was caused by hypersensitivity to either meprobamate or aspirin, or a combination of both. His view was accepted by authorities, and a determination of "misadventure" was stamped on Lee's death.

Strangely, an early death was a conceivability that Lee had contemplated with surprising frequency. According to his wife Linda, he had no wish to live to a ripe old age because he could not stand the idea of losing the physical abilities he had strived so hard to achieve.

"If I should die tomorrow," he used to say, "I will have no regrets. I did what I wanted to do. You can't expect more from life."

source:http://www.allbrucelee.com/index.htm
 
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East asian people tend to age well, not always but they tend to look younger than their years, less pro-inflammatory genes, however, with that can come an over tolerant immune system.
 
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