Just had a big brain moment
So you know the thing where people call others a one trick pony as an insult?? Its because in horse racing and where they do all the tricks and stuff? Forgot what it's called but you know right?!
Not many people like the horse who only jumps hoops, or just runs around right??
And in MHA when Aizawa says you can't be a hero with just one trick, aka 'one trick pony' he means no one likes someone who just masters one trick.
Yes Bruce Lee said 'I fear not the man who has practiced 1000 kicks, but the man who has practiced one kick 1000000 times'
But in this case 'Jack of all trades, master of one, though oftentimes better than master of one.' is what Aizawa was referring to in the USJ arc.
So what I'm trying to get as if you put the two (three?) together you master one skill, then move on to the next and master that one!
Or you can just follow 'Jack of all trades-' and become average at as much as you can and perfect the ones you feel will be most helpful in the future!!!
How does all this connect? No idea. BUT I was watching a TikTok about the full quotes and how much they make a difference, and like right now I'm rewatching s1 and I realized what the one trick pony meant, then I remembered that Aizawa could also be referring to Viktor Vicseck's (the guy who said 'jack of all trades-') quote.
BOOM!!!!!!
Sorry if you knew this already but I had to share and besides I bet you didn't know it was Viktor who said it