I've witnessed Master Kenny beat some great practitioners while dancing the entire time. Master Kenny is true and efficient to his practice even at his older age
@nihongochopsocky8083 ай бұрын
If he only had a card!I'd asked him to sign it!😂 Als from Hawaii like me! I saw Al while he was visiting Richard Bustillo at his 2nd or 3rd last seminar before Richard passed away. Al also did a testimony and demo at my church. I recently saw an interview with him on a KZbin channel and got to read a back issue of IKF spotlighting him. I didn't know he met James Yimm Lee! I hope to meet him soon..
@charlespapp70983 ай бұрын
RIP Sifu! Wonderful times and great memories of our time in S.Calif.
@roscoehall45544 ай бұрын
There you go teach those white people how to kick our ass
@-yasmean-6 ай бұрын
This guy is my hanchi
@truprophetsliveforever4536 ай бұрын
its like that cause they had to hide what they were doing
@emanuelcain90247 ай бұрын
I love how he disrespectfuly throws the weapon at 1:30. That's the beauty of this video...
@krombopulosmichael85358 ай бұрын
RIP Mr. Carlton
@RICARDOLOPEZ-pq3kp8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info.
@josephlinden16309 ай бұрын
You waste so much energy and time dancing you’ll be tired before you even get knocked out.
@AmericanDestroy9 ай бұрын
Te conoci en una imagen de youtube pegándole a un hombre con cara de enojada
@tonmikecarn Жыл бұрын
OK This 1 I made his document with missing footage and some better quality added.Look much better. I do have color versions as well. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bpO9aX2LpNukjckfeature=shared
@tonmikecarn Жыл бұрын
Ok, MY turn Now see from my achives,Footage. From the Backyard and privote.with Coburn I restored lost lost footage,edited what I said. If I can't see the fame.Blurry film.Will not be on this. Many JKD have been passed this.I worked hard as my master was lost,In the Calif fire. This is the best I can get from .Multi gen,to being restored.And closing with what a document hadn't thier end. Enjoy 47mn.From the original 60min that was to blurry or just not worth it. kzbin.info/www/bejne/f4K0gZ-ibJacbLMfeature=shared
@mikalrahman Жыл бұрын
Man this man is a real gem
@heatherlandau48 Жыл бұрын
Am I in the picture of your JCC 1996 class?
@MatrixHealing Жыл бұрын
I am forever appreciative of my Sifu, Dr. Kam Yuen.
@365wingchunkungfu3 Жыл бұрын
I was in Michigan and looking for a new Wing Chun studio to train in. As a student. I checked out this studios website and i'd like to leave a critic. I was highly turned off when your bio says "Wing chun was created by Bruce Lee." As soon as I read this I was absolutely like "Nope" didn't go there. I'd love to find a spot, I've been without training for a year and I'm so addicted and dying for more workouts. I'd love to find a spot, but I gotta see some sparring and chi sao. I'm dying over here for some training lol. I started in 2013 , had 18 years of Jujitsu and absolutely quit when I was devastated by a Wing Chunner doing things that appeared super human. I love this style but I'm looking and in Michigan. I'm not trying to hate on your school at all. I'm just saying the opening bio was way off with the Bruce Lee claims.
@kevingundelach8753 Жыл бұрын
I thought that was a great answer I like that side stepping issue kind of like predestination looking down the road at what might be and not being there instead.
@Th0ughtZ_ Жыл бұрын
RIP. Very interesting person.
@barbdouk86118 ай бұрын
Did he pass?
@Th0ughtZ_8 ай бұрын
@@barbdouk8611 He did indeed.
@barbdouk86118 ай бұрын
@@Th0ughtZ_ I just found his work. RIP! Blessings!!
@D_Dougie Жыл бұрын
As someone that has trained in the African Martial Arts under the late, great Ahati Kilindi Iyi, I will attest that the Ahati had Brother Kenny assist and teach in many of the classes. What you see in this short clip is just a glimpse in the authenticity of this man's skills! I am honored to say that I have trained with this brother!
@OliverYalong Жыл бұрын
Devastating
@TheSubwaysurfer Жыл бұрын
Dans book American freestyle Karate, is the quintessential Karate manual for Americans. Asians come from a culture where they are instructed to do things repetitiously and then the understanding comes. Americans always need to know why and how and then ounces both of those questions over and over again in this groundbreaking book I feel that it should be a part of every instructorsMartial arts library and it should certainly be a part of every competitors library
@TheSubwaysurfer Жыл бұрын
When I discovered Dan’s book American freestyle years ago, it tied up one of those “loose ends“ that he talked about. I always knew there was a reason a definable methodology why and how certain people excelled at sparring but nobody could explain it other than to say “he’s just good.“ Dan’s book was eye-opening comprehensive and gave me the necessary “how to‘ S“ of sparringAnd although I never became a regional or national champion I was a respected dojo fighter competing against other dojos am I own classmates. Dan’s Footework concepts were revolutionary and much better explained in my opinion than even Jo Louis did. I understand what he meant about becoming a martial artist when he discovered the Filipino martial arts I had the same epiphany myself. I was a karate bumUntil one day my friend came into our college club swinging two sticks like propellers on a plane, and I was mesmerized. My only disappointment is just finding out now at 63 years old that Dan wrote more than one book! Had I known that I would’ve bought them all
@azlaroc12 Жыл бұрын
RIP Kam Yuen. You taught us a lot and your selfless contributions will live on. Carry on!
@carlalbright6790 Жыл бұрын
RIP. You will be missed.
@Drakonian-gz2nq Жыл бұрын
You students need more ginga
@dabunnyrabbit2620 Жыл бұрын
Cuz you always walk around with a knife in your hand....
@annanowacka5327 Жыл бұрын
This man take money online and have no respect for people like clients. He do absolutly nothing for they. Be carefull!
@SachinGopalkrishnan Жыл бұрын
Why would you say that? I had a very good experience.
@xandervalltessa3685 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating bulshido art 😂😂
@montucombat82 Жыл бұрын
god bless you i hope that one day you can learn something from the brother instead of making stupid comments on things you have no knowledge on.
@tatumergo39313 ай бұрын
@@montucombat82. What part of Africa does this come from? What country, region, culture, tribe? I would really like to know, for I'm of yoruba & lucumi ancestry.
@dabunnyrabbit2620 Жыл бұрын
What makes a good teacher (everything he just said and) for any martial art is to train your students for the savage brutality of the real world. Understand that they may need to use this on the street one day and against someone that wants to put you down fast, will what you are teaching work under pressure. And example- kzbin.info/www/bejne/jpPFh5Z3d52LnLc Do you train for anything like that👆 Most guys/girls martial arts or no, get reduced to gross motor movements, thats where you have to understand in training, an example of a teacher pressure testing a student- kzbin.info/www/bejne/e2eUm6GAmsRkias That👆 is martial arts vs a realistic confrontation. Im my HOP being a good teacher means your students will survive. Or at least have a better chance.
@jelanimckenzie49 Жыл бұрын
Where in MI is this located?
@MartialArtsProject Жыл бұрын
KSK Martial Arts is located in Lansing.
@Wagyu_Jubei2 жыл бұрын
Cool show it under pressure.
@TheSolidheroes2 жыл бұрын
Bruce was a great human being who happened to be an amazing genius level martial art master.
@avelinomayoral76702 жыл бұрын
In Okinawa if the Gold Belt is being working it certainly not common. The Okinawan stripes are not belt ranks. These stripes open seen on a black belt throughout the world mainly in America are representing the degree black belt the practitioner is at. Never in Okawan karate do they use stripes to indicate the black belt rank a practitioner is at. Actually the stripes are for teaching levels: Renshi, 4 and 5 degree, ONE stripe, Kyosh is a two strip belt and is a 6 and 7 degree black belt, a Hanshi is a three strip Belk belt which is the practitioner of 8, 9, 10 degree black belt. The Okinawans see what the American's and other countries have did with the marking of stripe to show rank. However, the above Okinawan stripes used to indicate teaching levels should never be confused with the American method of stripes used to show rank.
@alawady84722 жыл бұрын
😘😘😘
@Lessonswithsenseimatt2 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@S0l402 жыл бұрын
This is not a throw. This is closer to ballet lift than a throw. Super embarrassing if this was supposed to be your evidence that’s it’s not useless against real fighting styles. Capoeira is a beautiful art, but when a wrestlers shoots on that girl and she’s in a hand stand it’s not going to be anywhere near as pretty and your “attacks” could never be done at a love tempo, which means your students can’t drill to use these things in a life-like situation.
@Islandfist2 жыл бұрын
Many african tribes encorporated dance with fighting techniques (Zulu). The acrobatics, music and dance were used for recreation, disguise and culture (not fighting). What we mostly see today is a santized version of capoeira to make the Brazilian government comfortable in an effort to make it legal. Real capoeira is not an art made by soft people in soft circumstances. If you want to learn capoeira for fighting purposes you have to study multiple african fighting systems (as they were most likely mixed with arts like Dambe, Laamb wrestling and other montu arts), and not just what looks cool from media. Then you have to understand what they were fighting for. Capoeira is full of rich history and was not meant for human dog or rooster fighting for people to place bets.
@payasonbg77822 жыл бұрын
I wonder who’s the one that blew him off… anyone know
@outlander2342 жыл бұрын
Maybe Joe Lewis.
@Aridzonia12 жыл бұрын
Sir, what is the name of the Okinawan organization that started the belt system you are discussing?
@GhostWriter_3692 жыл бұрын
That was nice..🤭😂
@GhostWriter_3692 жыл бұрын
When was the audio editor born..😂 i mean what the f* man.. damn impressive..💜👌
@GhostWriter_3692 жыл бұрын
*13years ago lol
@dabunnyrabbit26202 жыл бұрын
a forearm with nothing but skin, is not a shield.
@markwilliams44892 жыл бұрын
There's actually a LOT in this video, so might help you if you watch all of it very carefully. He's not using his forearm as a shield against the knife, that would be just silly. He's using it as a deflector against the attacker's LOWER ARM. Yes this video moves quite fast, and doesn't really show everything that's going on all that well. Also note he's not using the front of his arm to deflect, because that exposes the arteries and tendons to possible knife cuts - he uses the BACK of his lower arm. A cut there is going to hurt, but not be fatal or debilitating. I would not suggest watching this video 100 times and then think you can defend against a knife attack. Especially seeing as he's using a knife as part of his defense. In my country (Australia) if you did that and caused an injury, you'll be the one going to jail. But that deflection can then be used as part of a disarm of the knife from the attacker. Watch some more good videos, but better still, find somewhere that teaches genuine self defense, like this guy is clearly capable of teaching, and not a teacher that teaches overpowering violence. In my humble opinion, the best forms of defense are: 1. Not to be there in the first place 2. De-escalation 3. Self defense
@dabunnyrabbit2620 Жыл бұрын
@@markwilliams4489Dude I used to be a bouncer/door man Deflecting or what ever this is complete baloney. In a real knife encounter he would be cut to ribbons. This is real world training kzbin.info/www/bejne/nouciJWhZ6Z6bMk
@dabunnyrabbit2620 Жыл бұрын
@@markwilliams4489 See how many times you can pull this off on a all out no holds barred sparring session.
@markwilliams4489 Жыл бұрын
@@dabunnyrabbit2620 i learn Krav Maga, and most of the time we do knife training, i would be killed, or at the very least badly cut. We usually use real knives that have been blunted, but still "accidents happen" and there's been bruising and cuts. I probably need to learn for several more years to have some chance of surviving a knife attack. And you're right, it's still staged, and we know what's going to happen. It's not like that attack in the video you posted but then deleted it (I watched it first ;) ) which is seriously scary. But still, I'd rather have some chance of surviving by learning defence, than no chance of surviving.
@camrondirossi32492 жыл бұрын
Dan, was that fighter who ignored you chuck norris?
@itsgleneaton48832 жыл бұрын
What a difference. Steven Segal was approached by a young man who asked him what’s the meaning of zen and he picked him up and threw him. But the point is Bruce was more then just a great fighter and film star. He was a human being who was constantly growing and appreciating all of life. And that’s a quality we all must do to. Thank you for your story and your open heart.
@JoeyBeeWon2 жыл бұрын
Well this is bullshit. Don't fight with a knife EVERYONE gets cut in a knife fight
@dabunnyrabbit26202 жыл бұрын
I used to be a bouncer, and handling someone with a knife (still got the scar) is nothing like this.
@dabunnyrabbit26202 жыл бұрын
of only he would have taken this class.... :discretion is advised: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jIm0lWibmayZqdU
@dabunnyrabbit26202 жыл бұрын
give me one of those fake knives VanCise and I'll come at you like a real attacker. up to it??? didn't think so.
@dabunnyrabbit26202 жыл бұрын
let me be in one of these classes please!!! I will dispel all this B.S. and hopefully save a few lives.