All posts tagged: Kung

What Chef Jon Kung Swears By in the Kitchen (2026)

What Chef Jon Kung Swears By in the Kitchen (2026)

When I ask influencer chef Jon Kung to name the purchase they regret most, there’s no deliberation. “In my early twenties, I bought this used SMEG fridge,” the 42-year-old Chinese American TikTok creator tells me. “It’s got this giant British flag on it, and I still have it. I’ve stuck Sex Pistols, Ozzy Osbourne, and Spice Girls stickers on the sides to try to make it a little better.” It’s become a conversation piece at the dinner parties Kung hosts at home. Every holiday season, Kung whips up their Chinese takeout feast; it’s a seven-course spread that maps their upbringing across Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Toronto, and Detroit—mapo tofu, pumpkin and lotus root curry, superior stock wonton noodle soup, crab rangoons, Balinese crab fried rice, mushroom lo mein, and, for the grand finale, Cantonese roast duck with cherry duck sauce. And, obviously, dessert. That layered, third-culture palate is exactly what has made Kung one of the most compelling food personalities of his generation, with over 2 million online followers. (They also published a cookbook, Kung …

Count Dante, Dim Mak, and the Kung Fu Death Touch

Count Dante, Dim Mak, and the Kung Fu Death Touch

Arguably both a legend and an embarrassment in the martial arts world, “Count Rafael Dante,” the self-proclaimed “world’s deadliest man,” is best known today for flashy comic book ads hawking a mail order booklet that promises readers will “fear no man” and learn “Dim Mak, the kung fu death touch.” Born in 1939 as John Timothy Keehan, the son of a prominent Chicago-area, Irish American bank president, he eschewed a normal career path. His life was marked by problems with authority, eccentric behavior, and the pursuit of martial arts study and violence. In 1967, he adopted the Count Dante persona: he dyed, groomed, and trimmed his hair and beard immaculately and offered a completely fictional biography. His background, he claimed, included descent from Spanish royalty. He claimed violent adventures and amazing accomplishments in “the Far East,” such as having beaten up Bruce Lee, winning multiple martial arts tournaments of all kinds, and being master of a wide variety of martial arts—which he claimed to have studied under extremely famous people. Dante claimed to have killed …