What is Xingyi Kung Fu? COMPILATION
34:51
Why I Chose Judo over BJJ
6:16
10 ай бұрын
Why Zuckerberg vs Musk Matters
9:10
Are Chokeholds Canceled?
6:46
10 ай бұрын
The Martial Arts of Batman
15:39
11 ай бұрын
Kempo in MMA With John Hackleman
15:50
Colors of Combat!
1:01
11 ай бұрын
Martial Arts as a Blind Practitioner
26:10
Kenpo 5.0 Challenges
16:33
Жыл бұрын
The Zen of Kenpo: 2023
11:55
Жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@kresimirsijerak6260
@kresimirsijerak6260 43 минут бұрын
Hard-soft, long-short, long round-short round movement, straight and round in it, and everything in between. It is called karate and in the end it is just expresion of an individual👍
@albertomendoza5142
@albertomendoza5142 3 сағат бұрын
Kenpo. Need. Sparing. All. The. Time's🎉❤. And. They are. MMA. Champions. Like. Wander boy. Kenpo. MMA
@user-rq4xh5bs9p
@user-rq4xh5bs9p 8 сағат бұрын
I'm a Godan in Shotokan Ryu Karatedo I prefer the more traditional ways I'm also a Godan in Japanese Jujutsu and a Aikidoka
@jasonmaclean719
@jasonmaclean719 14 сағат бұрын
Clearly you never attempted to enter Master Ken's dojo. Your groin would have been powder and you wouldn't be with us today.
@carmenBlonde3107
@carmenBlonde3107 20 сағат бұрын
Benflick😂😂😂
@1683clifton
@1683clifton 22 сағат бұрын
It was always the ground.
@michaeltaylor8501
@michaeltaylor8501 Күн бұрын
I've had some training in two of the splinter groups that came to the U.S.A. following Funakoshi's death: a school formed by Nishiyama (sp? whose school symbol was a water buffalo) & a school formed by Ohshima (which I've apparently mis-spelled for years as Oshima & whose school symbol is that tiger which you've shown in this video series)... I found Nishiyama's method to be more upright in spine, more low-stanced, & much more stiff in its movements - as a result of the above - than the Ohshima school. In my experience the better freedom of movement promoted by Oshima's school made moving more natural in its feel, much more quick, & its delivery of techniques felt as if they might well be more powerful than in Nishiyama's school.* * = Note: I did see some exceptional individuals who could pull off Nishiyama's way with both speed & power, but these strong karateka were more of a rarity than a common sight (from what little I saw). I wouldn't want to be struck squarely full-on by any of most techniques from either school as I saw them taught (as both Karate methodologies do focus on doing maximum damage with one strike 😬... which is something that not all martial arts do). My experiences with these schools were brief as I spent only about 6 months or so with the Nishiyama group under Lou Mikelson (originally at Golden West College) & only a few sessions at best with the Ohshima group under Dan Dupree (sp? while I was at CSU Long Beach); so, this is by no means an opinion of an "expert" karateka. Note: I like the Okinawan training approach of small & informal classes & I especially like instruction tailored to each individual as opposed to trying to force everyone to fit into one strict way on each & every aspect of an art. Plus I'm a believer that self-defense training ought to be available to all generally non-violent folk, not just stellar athletes hoping to win sport competitions.
@chachiarcola3208
@chachiarcola3208 Күн бұрын
I started martial arts in my 40’s, and am still going at 61. The biggest challenge is finding a dojo with instructors who realize that you can’t teach people over 50 the way you teach teenagers.
@Monkey-Boy2006
@Monkey-Boy2006 Күн бұрын
I've trained in Wing Chun for 7yrs and currently train in Okinawan style Karate. The Karate Kid film got me into it because the style looked so much like Wing Chun! It's great and feels natural to me, problem is I often get the two styles mixed up. The positive is....they're so similar it doesn't matter too much. LOL
@user-ov1kf4fy8n
@user-ov1kf4fy8n Күн бұрын
弥助が侍なんて日本人の誰も認めてないけど。Most Japanese people do not consider Yasuke as samurai.適当なことは言わない方がいいですよ。
@AGC828
@AGC828 Күн бұрын
Funny which films motiated certain people to wanto t take up MAès. Even silly films that are nothing more than jut 'entertainemtn' an didnèt have any quality MAès. No actual champions or pat champions. Or guys , like Bruce Lee, who weas just an 'entertainer'. (just dabble in MAa, didnèt stick around in any ne martial art long enough to get a black belt and had no competition experience).)...why would any one want o be like Bruce LeeÉÉ Vs an actual undefeated world champion.. There are so many MA films made that were 'good quality' and had action world champions starring or guest starring e.g. Best of the Best--PhilipéSimon Rhee, James Lew...Chuck Norris films--Bill wallae, Richard Norton, .Joe Lewisè films---Jaguar Lives and Fore Five...had Rhichard Nrton, Bebny Urquidez, Bng soo Han, ..legends durng the 'golden era of M' (i FEEL WAS THE 70ÈS 80ÈS)... aMAZES ME TO THIS DAY THAT THERE ARE THOUSDNAD TUDYING jkd....lol...A STYLE CREATED BY A MAN WHO HAD WEAK CREDENTIALS, WEAK BACKGROUND IN m (didnèt have 6 7th degree black belts for example...) and never competed....so he was never any kind of champion. Who also talked a lot of smack--claimed he didnèt beleive in 'styles' heh yet he created one, that Chiense Kung Fu 'is a classical mes'--yet he studied Wing Chun, Tai Chi and several others briefly..contradicting himself.... Why would guys like Steve Mcueen, James Coburn...etc. want to train with soemone who wasnèt a championÉ They bought into the IMAGE of Bruce Lee, nootoriety...heh....ièd rahter learn from someone that actually had 'been there done that' e.g. Bill Wallace., Benny Uriquedez, Philip Rhee.....etc.
@cubes2861
@cubes2861 Күн бұрын
after watching these videos its so hard for me to figure out wether my dojo (that i also work at) is a mcdojo or not. ive been a student there for 6 years and got my black belt in 5 years. my dojo doesnt do most of the things on this list but it does some that are seen as big red flags but then also ive looked at other lists comparing mcdojos and legit dojos and my dojo also does things that are seen as a big green flag.
@cubes2861
@cubes2861 Күн бұрын
oh btw i got my black belt when i was 15 years old. i started training when i was 10
@xtream5productions56
@xtream5productions56 Күн бұрын
The Scene with Master Po touched me because is a Master talking to His Student , because when a master had a student for a long time is pretty much like family " You dont see half of the things I taught you , you only a Tiger, taught you the dragon you don't see it "
@THEWEIRDOGOTHVAMPYREWITCH
@THEWEIRDOGOTHVAMPYREWITCH Күн бұрын
Oh hell she has always been my idol and still is
@JotheAnimator
@JotheAnimator 2 күн бұрын
White Woman Final Boss
@nathanscottstearns
@nathanscottstearns 2 күн бұрын
Amazing video! I've been watching a lot of your videos to brush up on the Art of Kenpo and fill in my lack of understanding when it comes to history and the different lineages! I'm about 2 months away from testing for my first degree black belt in Chinese Kenpo Karate, which my sensei derived from the Tracy School of Kenpo. Thank you for making such awesome and informative videos! Your work and contribution to the martial arts world is appreciated and noted in the day and age of the internet for sure! 🙏🏻
@christianbrady8585
@christianbrady8585 2 күн бұрын
All arts work. They all come from a reason that was addressed. Depending on the method of teaching. It can be easily transmitted per student or not as easy. All depends on your own abilities to take the time, break it down, then decipher it for you and what you are going to be mainly dealing with. Just my ideas guys.
@pathfinder7614
@pathfinder7614 2 күн бұрын
This is so old you probably won't see this lol. But here we go First, as far as military, in the Marine Corps we trained boxing to a point. They put us in these tiny tarp boxes face to face and had us slug it out lol. I have black belts in Taekwondo and Karate. I currently train at a MMA academy where we focus mainly BJJ and kickboxing. Even in the kickboxing, it's 85-90% boxing training. I know this because I boxed AAU for several years. Finally, I recently started training Hapkido as well. The club I go to is affiliated with the CPD Judo club so we do alot of throws and takedown (something woefully lacking in BJJ). Now Hapkido is largely self defense based, so in a class while we were doing (basically bunkai) I put my hands up in a orthodox boxing stance to throw a punch. Of course I was stopped immediately. I was looking threatening. And to "show" me that it was ineffective because they could "read" the telegraph, the senior BB told me to throw a punch at him. I knew what he was wanting to do, so to be respectful I went about 50% speed AND threw a cross rather than a jab to give him time to react......yeah. my fist stopped right next to his head. He said, "No no. Throw the Punch how you would ACTUALLY throw it on the street" we repeated with exact same result. As a boxer I learned, worked on, and drilled NOT telegraphing my punches. In MMA I learned how to throw them from deceptive angles to limit how much someone sees them coming (why it is so important to keep hands up, cover chin with shoulder while punching, etc. It's not the punches you see coming that get the KO). I will keep going for awhile because it's fun and the throws and joint locks can supplement my jiu-jitsu. But I could throw all of my BB away or take someone that has only trained boxing for....hmm let's say 3 months, and they would flat KO most black belts in TMA. SO is it a "battle art"? Absolutely. Karate as we know it has only been around for.....maybe 120 years give or take? The ancient Greeks had boxing in the Olympics. Thousands of years ago. Boxing predates even Chinese martial arts.....by a good bit. As far as sport... .BJJ, Karate, TKD. .. ..they are all sports now. Unless that BJJ is part of an MMA curriculum that deals with striking and stand up fighting .....BJJ will get you killed on the streets. Literally. So I wouldn't just say boxing is A martial art ....it is THE martial art. Add wrestling and it becomes a complete martial art. Everything else is just frosting. Good stuff. Great add ons. But not the cake.
@dominickfagan4050
@dominickfagan4050 2 күн бұрын
I'm Irish have never had a problem with the English people. In all our struggles it was against a government. We share so much culture sense of humour and history. The way it is going at the moment it's divided and conquer. Was shocked and ashamed when the Irish government said we had to apologise for being to white. They are saying we have to welcome everyone as we emigrated all over the world. Where do the Irish go usually to what is part of the old empire. They talk English might have a friend were they can sleep on the sofa until they get a job and get up and running nothing free. Watch Kevin Sharkey great at getting his point across. Keep up the good work 🇮🇪👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@albertomendoza5142
@albertomendoza5142 3 күн бұрын
I got tired of people winning by points and not buy a real sponge or real knockout
@albertomendoza5142
@albertomendoza5142 3 күн бұрын
I practice kenpo. 4. Years. I got tired and I'll be able to wrestle the guy
@albertomendoza5142
@albertomendoza5142 3 күн бұрын
I. Practice kendo. Many years. Butt. I. I see somebody fighting. On.the. Street. The. Karate. Taiwando. Don't. Have. The. Upper. Hand against. Boxing. Wrestling. Most Martial arts classes are watter down
@VaughnWilson-go3xx
@VaughnWilson-go3xx 3 күн бұрын
The Real Sonya Blade ♥️♥️♥️ gorgeous lady ♥️ Queen. 👑 Martial arts yesss😊
@marcomolinero5877
@marcomolinero5877 3 күн бұрын
That dude looks like Chael Sonnen
@assoverteakettle
@assoverteakettle 3 күн бұрын
The thing I hate about these Art of One Dojo exploring all these different martial arts: It makes me want to take them all up! So many martial arts, and not enough time for them all. 😥 The one well known, but not often discussed in the mainstream, martial art I would love to see Art of One Dojo cover is kendo - Japanese fencing. Especially it's historical roots, the armor, the traditions and ceremonies, the rules and the scoring system.
@steveohellno
@steveohellno 3 күн бұрын
Everyone is gonna be like the Kenpo family that talks it all up. The fact this guy is doing chemo and they don’t support it kinda wild. Lol
@stephenhans189
@stephenhans189 3 күн бұрын
Always the master of kicking 🐻
@TheSin3331
@TheSin3331 3 күн бұрын
Sry this is not 100% correct. This is the explanation and Interpretation of a christian practitioner. The circle represents the whole, the Universe, which can be translated to Harmony in this context. And in japanese culture, especially in Shinto, the white dove is a symbol for Hachiman, the god of war. Don't forget Wado Ryo is derivated from Shindo Yoshin Ryu or Shinto Yoshin Ryu, which is an art of war but also a Shinto sect / side arm. So there is no peace in this meaning.
@ArtofOneDojo
@ArtofOneDojo 3 күн бұрын
This video is not from a Christian view at all (I'm not a practitioner). The information used in this video came directly from Wado Ryu sources and organization main sites.
@ArtofOneDojo
@ArtofOneDojo 3 күн бұрын
Hachiman is a god of war, yes, and the dove is his spirit animal, but that does not translate to the dove standing as a symbol of war. Across Japanese culture the dove is a symbol of peace or new beginning. Wado Ryu is only partly based on Shinto yoshin Ryu, it is also heavily an off shoot of Shotokan. In the context of Wado Ryu, the white dove stands as a symbol of peace. That is directly from the art founding and history.
@TheSin3331
@TheSin3331 3 күн бұрын
@@ArtofOneDojo The Dove is a symbol for Hachiman and translates to something like luck or success in war. Many Wado schools rever to that peace thing, but it is simply not there. Harmony yes, but not peace. And I have been corrected on that several times myself by japanese Masters. So this is what I can Tell you. ;)
@ruiseartalcorn
@ruiseartalcorn 3 күн бұрын
Great video! :) In my opinion, both were right ;)
@videovagrancy8526
@videovagrancy8526 4 күн бұрын
Still got my old VHS copy of The Perfect Weapon. Jeff Speakman should have been a bigger action star back in the 90s.
@steveohellno
@steveohellno 4 күн бұрын
Make a dojo, next to the dojo where you got your black belt. Claim your dojo is better than the original dojo. Lmao jk
@user-sz5dt9ih7f
@user-sz5dt9ih7f 4 күн бұрын
Really respect John Hackleman!!!
@ishudshutup
@ishudshutup 5 күн бұрын
The most important aspect of any art is pressure testing it, without that, hitting the air isn't doing much. And unfortunately 99% of TDK is practiced this way with sparring that has too many rules of engagement.
@user-gs6hk7go7b
@user-gs6hk7go7b 5 күн бұрын
I have a signed photo of him. Awesome kenpo teacher very knowledge.
@TheSuperGringo
@TheSuperGringo 5 күн бұрын
Kata simply means pattern. I do patterns all the time. Such as jab, jab, cross, or jab, cross, hook, or a inside outside block, trap, front snap kick, low side kick, palm heel to the elbow. I just learned a block, two kicks, different targets, and a hand attack.
@michaelwitham1220
@michaelwitham1220 5 күн бұрын
Long fist and short fist another term north south
@ryanchothia8830
@ryanchothia8830 5 күн бұрын
Very informative . I thank you .
@ryanchothia8830
@ryanchothia8830 5 күн бұрын
Thank you for giving praise whe
@llorenstorrespr4409
@llorenstorrespr4409 5 күн бұрын
One of the worst martial arts films ever made.
@magicodam
@magicodam 5 күн бұрын
The hand to hand training in army combatives is MMA, stop. Nothing more nothing less. If we talk about weapons is another question
@stephenhans189
@stephenhans189 5 күн бұрын
Always study the same techniques as side stance and speed =power 58 now those have never let me down 😁
@1683clifton
@1683clifton 6 күн бұрын
You got the pine tree right! Thank you.
@1683clifton
@1683clifton 6 күн бұрын
If kenpo could hit vitals in mma people might die.
@1683clifton
@1683clifton 6 күн бұрын
Tracy's is a secret ehh?
@richardike2342
@richardike2342 6 күн бұрын
She was famous in Asia, not the West. Long kick the Queen?
@ArtofOneDojo
@ArtofOneDojo 5 күн бұрын
She was famous in North America too. There are very few martial arts fans that don't know who she is.
@BlownInterceptor71
@BlownInterceptor71 6 күн бұрын
I trained in the Vallari system for about 10 years. Then I came across Grand master Jim Brassard, his form of Kempo was pretty much the same as Villaris. But when I started with GM Brassard, he changed the techniques from the Vallari system that actually is much more practical, things like moving backwards then moving forward and the biggest thing is box steps. Personally, I think GM Brassard's style of kempo is hands down the better American kempo styles. My nephew goes to Villaris in CT and they are teaching the same old BS techniques that will never work in a real-world situation. great vid, been watching them for a while now.
@Hookandhalf
@Hookandhalf 6 күн бұрын
I’m Brazilian jiu-jitsu through and through and I really respect how you were looking for a certain puzzle piece! Love that vibe. 🙏🏼
@ikecreates
@ikecreates 6 күн бұрын
Grew up watching her with my dad. Definitely one of a kind. HIGHLY skilled martial artist, hence the reason she was good enough to film Hong Kong style films.
@TheSuperGringo
@TheSuperGringo 6 күн бұрын
As a former Army NCO, we would use combatives as a type of physical fitness training. It can be trained anywhere, any time, with any equipment. You want a workout, put on some body armor, an ACH (helmet), get a rubber rifle, some training knives, then do two minute rounds. I was a level two instructor.
@calisthenicsfun7612
@calisthenicsfun7612 6 күн бұрын
If there is a MC"before a Name this must be sh-..t