Showing 72 of 263 videos
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1:47

Guo remembers how he disappointed his father as a child.

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1:44

Guo gets creative in his attempt to get his father's memory back.

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2:16

Guo appeals to his audience for assistance in his plan to get his father's memory back.

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1:41

Guo's father appears to be on the brink of recovering his memory.

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2:12

Guo's father appears to recognize his son for the first time in a decade.

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2:34

Guo's father may not recognize his own son, but there will always be a place in his heart for him.

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3:14

Not a Common Day: It all starts with a simple greeting on a beautiful morning... Learn the vocabulary of a very basic introduction in this video.

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3:52

On their first date, Tim asks Nini about her family background and life.

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2:50

Nini learns that Tim is a music composer and Tim shares a song he created with her.

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2:18

The idiom, "Cheng ren zhi mei," is explained through a story. It essentially means that we should help others succeed rather than pointing out their faults.

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2:26

The antagonist of the story, Wan Renxian, still hasn't learned to "Cheng ren zhi mei," laughing at his neighbor when he injures himself. However, when he is given another golden opportunity to do a good deed, the question becomes, will he finally take it?

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2:22

When Wan Renxian comes through at a time when he is most needed, his neighbors' reaction to his kindness isn't quite what he expects. Like "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," no one is willing to believe that this time, he is really telling the truth.

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0:58

Having discovered Wan Renxian's act of kindness, his neighbors apologize and thank him. Just as with the old fortune teller, Wan Renxian should be given a chance to right his wrongs. Such is the meaning of “Cheng ren zhi mei.”

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2:35

Learn the story behind the idiom, "To exhort people to do good."

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1:56

Learn the story behind the idiom, “To exhort people to do good.”

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2:16

Learn the story behind the idiom, “To exhort people to do good.”

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1:06

Learn the story behind the idiom, “To exhort people to do good.”

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2:38

A tale which demonstrates the importance of not judging others’ strengths and weaknesses in accordance with our own and doing unto others as we would have done unto ourselves. Part 1.

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2:10

A tale which demonstrates the importance of not judging others’ strengths and weaknesses in accordance with our own and doing unto others as we would have done unto ourselves. Part 2.

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4:28

A tale which demonstrates the importance of not judging others’ strengths and weaknesses in accordance with our own and doing unto others as we would have done unto ourselves. Part 3.

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2:15

Confucius explains to his disciples what is good and what is evil, but there are also right and wrong ways to be good. How can good be right or wrong?

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2:36

A year has gone by and the scoundrel is still up to no good. However, when his evil deeds finally culminate in his capture, the Prime Minister does not rejoice in this news.

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1:13

Confucious teaches his disciples that just as benevolence can bring about evil deeds, so can malevolence lead to good ones.

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2:16

Confucious explains to his students that there is wrong in right, but also right in wrong and that they must understand this in order to understand good and evil.

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