Articles
All of my articles, collected for your amusement.
| 11 | A Conversation with Kickboxing Pioneer Jeff Smith | Black Belt | Jun 1992 | |
| 2 | Dolph Lundgren Muscles in on Hollywood | Black Belt | Oct 1991 | |
| 13 | Guardian Angels Co-Founder Ambushed and Shot in Predawn Attack | Black Belt | Oct 1992 | |
| 8 | Kung Fu: The Legend Continues: | Black Belt | Mar 1992 | A sidebar to the David Carradine interview, detailing what little we knew of Carradine's new television show. |
| 12 | Meet The Real Batman | Black Belt | Aug 1992 | |
| 15 | Nightmare on Western Avenue | Black Belt | Oct 1992 | My coverage of the Los Angeles riots that followed the verdict in the OJ Simpson murder trial, slanted toward the martial arts, of course. |
| 14 | Ninja Invade Atlanta | Black Belt | Oct 1992 | |
| 16 | Norris 1, Drugs 0 | Black Belt | Nov 1992 | |
| 17 | Political Rivalries in the Martial Arts | Black Belt | Dec 1992 | |
| 4 | Shojiro Koyama: Defender of Traditional Karate | Black Belt | Feb 1992 | |
| 10 | Shotokan Karate?s Fantastic Four | Black Belt | Jun 1992 | |
| 9 | The Dirty Dozen | Black Belt | Apr 1992 | |
| 5 | The Greatest Karate Man of All Time | Black Belt | Feb 1992 | |
| 7 | The Return of Caine | Black Belt | Mar 1992 | I loved my interview with David Carradine. Unfortunately, the best parts of the interview never made it to print. Ask me about them sometimes. Hi-larious. |
| 1 | Thomas Ian Griffith Returns to the Screen in "Excessive Force" | Black Belt | Mar 1993 | |
| 18 | Van Damme is Hot Property | Black Belt | Oct 1992 | I created a little side-kicking icon that I called my VanDammeter, and rated each film with 1-5 VanDammes. My wife never let me forget that I forced her to rent watch every Van Damme film ever made to "research" this story with me. She put it to great effect whenever she wanted to watch a chick flick. |
| 6 | Wall Challenges Seagal to Face "Dirty Dozen" | Black Belt | Mar 1992 | When Black Belt favorite Bob Wall issued his Seagal Challenge, we wanted to jump on it right away, mostly because executive editor Jim Coleman had no love lost with Seagal, and enjoyed this storyline immensely. We ran this short, and then expanded it into a much larger piece (see my Apr 92 article, <a href="articles.aspx?id=">The Dirty Dozen</a>. |
| 3 | What Ever Happened to Jim Kelly? | Black Belt | Nov 1991 | |