the fact that the old (some who are clearly out of shape) guys genuinely thought they’d be able to beat trained young men in their prime is astounding.
Oh Man, I thought I was the only one who noticed this. The idea than an older out of shape but wiser Martial Arts master will easily beat a younger opponent who is in better shape, will only happen in the old Jackie Chan movies.
@@ottz2506 Actually, even a heavy bag that can not punch back will easily beat these out of shape masters. I doubt if any of them can actually do 3-minute heavy bag drill.
In good ole CHYNA the idea of "saving face" is at the very foundation of society. Meaning, if you don't do those jumps, stands to reason your master (elder) isn't really a master and you made him lose face which is unacceptable to a degree Westerners don't really understand. On par with like hitting your parents in the face in public for no reason sort of thing.
@@Naeidea He probably was a real fighter, for one he were dressing appropriately and most important of all he didn't try using the jedi mind trick as the other frauds.
I did Karate for many years myself. The breaking bricks/boards trick is the bricks/boards are baked in an oven then cooled to make them very, very brittle.
@@Fee-Nix u got scammed then.the fact that they allow that kind of bs is kind of worrying.i mean whats the point of letting you break brittle bricks?cuz hell it doesnt even showcase strength and technique if the bricks will easily break in the 1st place.
I took american kenpo for years and never sparred once. Switched to muay thai and jiu jitsu and you're sparring and rolling on day number 1. That's the biggest difference. It's impossible to train to fight without fighting
every decently fit person ycould do this. there is no boing or mma training required to do this to them at all. the facts that they got a real mma fighter and boxers makes it so unbelievably unfair its not even funny.
Almost ten years ago, but it shows how these fake masters can be dangerous: I fell victim from a fake Aikido "master". In his first class, he broke my leg, rendering me disabled for almost two years. In his defense, he said to every single soul under the sun I was guilty for breaking my own leg, and even convinced some colleagues to go to the hospital to threaten me. But, I had a wonderfull Karate sensei who didn't believe a word he said, he is a world champion, knew me for years, was the one teaching me when I was an orange belt on a brutal karate style that specialized in kicks (kyokushin), so, he knew if I was anything in class, I was veeery careful, in special when it came to my legs. So, alongside with the doctor who took care of me (another one who got very angry at the fake Aikido "master"'s ridiculous vitriol and his colleagues threatening me when he was just reading himself to operate me for seven hours), he acted in my defense, got witnesses, and proved to everyone (including the other, truer, Aikido masters) the fake was lying. Turns out, when he was teaching me a safe fall, he purposely kicked my supporting knee, on the side, and it broke from the impact (not the fall, like he was stating). That one very strong and well-aimed blow snapped clean my patella, tibia and femur, and completelly blasted off all tendons but the one behind the knee, and that and my skin were the only motives my entire leg didn't fly over the dojo and I lost it forever. We ended on trial, but there was the funny part: HE was the one suing ME! There I was, in a weelchair and a giant spint on my entire leg, listening to him defending himself, his version getting crazier every time he told it. He started saying I just fell, but the thing evolved to the point even my parents he put there somewhere. He even said I had glass bones. And even more bizarre, he trully looked like he believed it, that it wasn't his fault. I didn't even need to speak, since my sensei and doctor spoke then, with all proof, and it was over. I still remember my doctor's words: - How the hell can he claim he didn't use enough strengh?! When she came to the hospital, her knee looked like it was stomped by an elephant! In fact, that was exactly what I asked her (he really did, when we saw the x-ray)! We won the cause, and at the end, I got some money (99,9% for medical costs and recovering, sadly) but lost my walking skill for two years... He, however, lost his master title, his job, his dojo, his house (where he had the dojo), his students and his reputation.
So he was a reckless teacher, made a big mistake and didn't admit doing it - that makes him a bad person but not a fake master like the guys in this video who could probably not break your knee even if you stood still.
@@Puschit1 No, he's a fraud. No legitimate martial arts teacher would ever injure a student like this. Even if they did, they would take responsibility.
@@Puschit1 i have no skill whatsoever in amrtial arts anmd i can break any of your limb easily if i tell you to get into a compromising position and then apply force on a weakpoint. i am also strong but you need very little force to break a bone if its in the right angle.
I don't think the guy in the talent show was trying to bullshit anybody. Look up the full clip, he's actually disabled and it's pretty wholesome how the judges cheer him up for doing his best despite his circumstances.
That’s even worse then 😂. If the guy was disabled why would the judges let this poor disabled man humiliate himself like that. If anything they were trying to profit off this poor disabled person for views and hits. Wow what people do nowadays for attention and fame 🤦♂️
@@markoworricker9291 how would they know he would humilliate himself? Maybe they thought what he was gonna do was impressive. Should they just exclude disabled people, yeah good one pal.
@@markoworricker9291 , though you mean well, but you got it wrong. The athlete got a platform to show his talent but sadly it went all wrong. It was nobody's fault. Every sportsman, by looking at this video can tell that the performer was strong. But it just wasn't his day..
as a kid in the 60s, this stuff seemed fascinating. Then I took up TaeKwon Do. Master He Il Cho, came from Korea a 6th degree, korean national champion. He hosted one martial arts tournament in Providence Rhode Island. While hanging around the school one afternoon some of his real master buddies were practicing and giving some ad hoc demos. Unbelievable stuff that was real. Cho's Taekwon Do was old school man. Taught me well. There was this other flash school chain around that ran ads, etc. No traditional legacy, all hype. But they got the punks from the city to go there and think they were good. Sure some were naturally strong and good fighters. But Martial artists? Hardly. We used to do demos as part of the New England Tae Kwon Do demonstration team. Really could jump over the hood of cars. To this day, Tae Kwon Do gave me leg strength and explosive power that saved my life as I recovered from near paralyzing back surgery at the age of 14.
My buddies mom is a 5th degree black belt. He was trained all his life. I think, if he got certified, he would have been 2nd or 3rd degree.. But, anyways. He grew up with us scrapping in on the streets in the late 90s and early 2000s. He did some crazy shit, he incorporated some tae Kwon do stuff with street style fighting. One of the best fighter I've ever seen
I was part of A.I.M.A.A. too and met Cho briefly when he lived in Albuquerque New Mexico for my brown belt test. Cho's a little different than most TKD grandmasters in that he also was a fairly accomplished boxer as well. His style is definitely closer to ITF instead of WTF taekwondo. I trained under Scalise who was a student of Cho when I was 10-18 years old and the stuff certainly works. I once kicked a bully in the head twice without putting my foot down lol. The main key was strength and conditioning, my sabonim would always say the better conditioned fighter will in most cases beat the superior fighter (as far as striking is concerned). Later in life I would learn basic grappling/take down defense and a little boxing to update the style a little since taekwondo was primarily made to fight karate guys during the japanese occupation of korea but Cho's TKD is an excellent base because not only did I learn the kicks but how to place them for maximum effect in a fight. (a few inches can mean the difference between a K.O. and just slapping an opponent with your foot)
I was taking Wing Tsun in Fla. in the 80's I was in my mid 20's I was only a regular student... through one of Fred Villari's karate students (black Belt) through some hedges and told him to get his money back.. :)
I just don’t understand why if you know that you’re a fraud you’d put yourself in a dangerous position like having a real fight? I guess a distorted sense of self power comes with the territory.
@@stormryder4305 its hard watching the older men, its like watching an old man at a nursing home getting pummeled by a monstrous care taker. That shits not funny.
Why? The Karate master just has to kick or punch the wrestler before the wrestler gets him on the ground. Plenty of wrestlers have been knocked out in MMA by strikers.
@@carlosdelacadiz6658 kicking against a wrestler is a BAD IDEA!!! Most wrestlers wait for you to make a move before they counter into a grab and a leg kick is perfect for them. You have to feint them and deliver a nice punch or find a opening and knock them out
@@lightingthief4482 If being a great wrestler is all it took then Chael Sonnen and Dan Severn would be UFC champs indefinitely because they are great wrestlers but fact is there's more to fighting then tossing an opponent on the ground.
@@carlosdelacadiz6658 by strikers who have trained lots of wrestling to defend against wrestling. Even then if you haven't trained it well your'e in for trouble.
The exchange between the "master" and the ref starting at 6:30 is solid gold. He's like 'HE KICKED ME! IT REALLY HURT! can he do that?" and the ref is like "wha...? yeah he can... wait this is crazy, FIGHTS OVER!"
@@TheGuyCalledX Totally. Early on, I sparred. SPARRED. With a young Thai kid. They're just built different there. His leg kicks were insane. And that was an outside leg kick... get an inside leg kick and you've never experienced it... your leg just doesn't work anymore. You're limping for a week.
@I_leave_mean_comments Your comment reminds me of the movie “Kickboxer” with Jean Claude Van Damm where he is just kicking the banyan tree until his shins break. I can totally see pro Muay Thai fighters doing that for training. Especially starting at a young age you would end up developing iron shins.
Ways to tell who is the " master". 1. No muscle 2. Backing up from first second of fight. 3. Zero coordination 4. Blocks punches with face 5. Is on the canvas within 30 seconds
When I was 13 I was allowed to join a Kung Fu club in a town near me, I was blown away by the skills our Sifu possessed throwing people around like rag dolls. It was weeks and months of doing exercises and stretches with very little in the way of 'fighting', I couldn't believe he chose me to fight him but all he did way throw me around for five minutes, when he said, "come at me" I was expecting to be thrown around again, only I broke his nose with my first punch and a kick broke a rib. I got kicked out not because of what I did to him but for exposing him as a total fucking fraud.
@@gandalfdawhitekid913 Karate is Japanese or Okinawan. Yes, I did notice, which is I why I tried pointing out that he only fights Tai Chi guys and guy's with no fight experience. Sorry, it was implicit
@@junyangthang "He didn't scam anyone"? where did you get that? He makes about $200,000 dollars per year by teaching his "fighting skill" to chinese people. There is a whole industry chain in China to scam people in the name of martial arts.
🎶🎵 ...and everybody was kung fu faking... 🎵🎶 'Only in their own minds are they masters' - I don't know how I came across this one, but I needed a good chuckle today.
The truth is that you can never master anything. Including martial arts. My kung fu instructor says:"you will never master anything, mastering something isn't a thing. The more you live the more you learn. Even as a teacher, I keep learning stuff. Even by my own students."
thats actually what skilled fighters do. Ever seen a winner with swollen eyes or forehead? they take it deliberately to avoid getting clipped in the chin= k.o.
I will never not be fascinated and delighted by these videos. Imagine being the student of one of these "energy master" type guys, spending years of your life and thousands of dollars to learn what is essentially "fighter cosplay." The reality check when they attempt to use their "bullshido" against literally *anyone* who isn't playing along must be mind-shattering
Bro i was in that situation💀💀 i trained for like 6 years. Now im 16 and do boxing. 4 moths of boxing has made me a better fighter than 6 years of aikido.
This reminds me of when I would use the game genie on super punch out to become invincible. I'd forget to turn it on sometimes and get surprised when I would get hit. The Taichi master seem to be just as surprised when they get hit. I guess they've faked being invincible for so long that they forget too. Until they get hit again. 😪
The story of the MMA fighter in the first clip is actually pretty sad. Chinese government destroyed his social credit and made his life hell for challenging fake masters
That first clip is I think Xu Xiaodong and he's a fine MMA fighter, but has really made a career out of debunking fake martial artists. He's a modern-day hero.
@@elcidcapricorn8820 Obviously this doesn't have to do with anime, well in a way as a lot anime specially the fighting ones revolve around this extraordinary fantastical feats of power/ki that is BS in real life, The joke is this guys take their fantasy to a whole new level of ridicule and brag about it been real while reality kicks them in the face and makes them fall hard on their butts and then they can't take it once they are exposed and still make up excuses to explain why Chi-t didn't work. I really think I didn't had to explain it as it's quite obvious what I ment with my comment.
@Aman Lool Fanatics as a whole in every aspect of any media, culture ect when taken into an extreme are mental, you can have fun with whatever you enjoy but when you take that enjoyment, idolize it and get addicted to it in a sickening way then it becomes a problem, I wouldn't go as far to calling them all like that lol lets not generalize as there are good people between them that know how to differ fantasy from real life.
@Aman Lool Agree on that in some degree but the term weeb refers to people who take a culture( in this case japanese) way to seriously, it doesn't equal lo li fans.
It’s sad to see these “masters” trying to portray Tai Chi as a martial art made for defensive or fighting purposes, when in reality it’s pretty much an entirely mental martial art, it’s made to strengthen the mind and muscle memory to better implement fighting skills in other martial arts, like Karate or Jiujitsu
I love how these fights are usually like grandmaster Raijin of the legendary traditional lethal school of the golden piss, who can use chi to manipulate his opponents and explode them, going against bobby from next door’s gym who just does a 1-2 punch and knock them out in seconds
The 2nd guy was a pure savage constantly attacking the guys fist with his face even tho the guy was wearing gloves to protect his fist and then headbutted the ground with the back of his head and went to sleep he made it all look so easy legend
@@indefenceofthetraditionalma is all BS man, fancy movement like these chinese martial arts are useless in real battle. even guys like Bruce Lee knew the BS why cant modern day people understand it.
@@afwdawdawdwadw1595 combat involves lots of movement. Check out movement coaches who work with top mma fighters. The difference is that a lot of tai chi teachers think that that’s how you fight. Bruce Lee realised that in terms of pure fighting, then there’s a lot of filler in traditional martial arts. At the end of a day, a punch is a punch, a kick is a kick and a take down is a take down. When you see real tai chi practitioners fight, it will look like any other fight
The saddest thing is that tai chi, kung fu and aikido could've been valid martial arts that degenerated over centuries of consensual training with no resistance and lack of sparring against other martial arts. Like, look at channel "Martial Arts Journey" owned by a former aikido black belt that picked up MMA and see the recent video in which he tries aikido moves with his BJJ teacher that actually modified those techniques after seeing them, showing the idea behind the move is decent but modern application sucks.
Dude in first video is actually disowned by his own culture or family dont quote me i was watching his stories along time ago, but because he was exposing these people, he couldnt get matches and what not. Its not hard to find his story
His name is Xu Xiadong and he exposes fake martial artists and yes, he's gotten death threats and he is mostly dislike by his culture because he "isn't doing it the traditional way"
@@nononsensegames Well, traditional fighting techniques aren't inferior, just if you're a martial artist who never fights or spars, then guess what: you don't know how to fight. Look at fighters like Wonderboy or Bas Rutten they are 90% traditional martial arts.
To be honest, I'm not convinced that the students knocked down with no contact had been paid off. It could have been the power of suggestion and group dynamics acting on people who really wanted to believe they were learning some secret supernatural power, like being "slain in the spirit" at pentecostal rallies.
but they, the so called masters, pretend their actually doing fighting, right..? as well as the bullshit art you´re referring to. Until they meet someone that actually can fight, like mma fighters. So they really are fake.
They did not. I never even heard of an adult man who was so delusional, but changed after collision with reality. They usually have crisis of faith for a while after experience, but they always bounce right back with a bullshit excuse for their failure. But, interestingly, kids do much better in such situations and outgrow their delusions far more often though. So I think the main point of exposing such charlatans always should be helping their younger students realise that their "teachers" are full of bullshit
@@ОлегБочаров-щ8кBullshito is a real art form practiced by many but it won't save your ass in a real fight. I frankly don't feel sorry for the masters that practice this "art" when you consider how many people they ripped off or put in real danger because of over-confidence in situations where getting away would have been the smarter option.
The craziest situation isn’t when the students are knowingly in on some kind of scam - but when, through a combination of psychological manipulation, anticipation, and genuine belief, play into the BS. Like the ones who react to the no-touch martial arts and would swear it’s real. Our minds can play crazy tricks on us.