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  • Haka as done by a New Zealand rugby team

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    Brother Steve Todd sent this in.

    We watched natives do this at the Polynesian Cultural Center in Hawaii.  Pretty cool.

    The Haka (plural is the same as singular: haka) is a traditional ancestral war cry, dance or challenge from the Māori people of New Zealand. It is a posture dance performed by a group, with vigorous movements and stamping of the feet with rhythmically shouted accompaniment.  The New Zealand rugby team‘s practice of performing a haka before their matches has made the dance more widely known around the world. — Wikipedia

    More here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haka


  • The Science of the One-Inch Punch

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    { Brother Steve Todd sent this in.  Thanks Steve! }

    “The Science of the One-Inch Punch” – Popular Mechanics

    http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/health/nueroscience/the-science-of-bruce-lees-one-inch-punch-16814527

    The Science of the One-Inch Punch

    Physiology and neuroscience combine to explain Bruce Lee’s master move.

    By William Herkewitz

    Getty Images

    May 21, 2014 1:57 PM

    Forget all those broken boards and crumbled concrete slabs. No feat of martial arts is more impressive than Bruce Lee’s famous strike, the one-inch punch. From a single inch away, Lee was able to muster an explosive blow that could knock opponents clean off the ground. Lee mastered it, fans worldwide adored it, and Kill Bill “borrowed” it. But if you’re like us, you want to know how it works.

    While the biomechanics behind the powerful blow certainly aren’t trivial, the punch owes far more to brain structure than to raw strength.

    Biomechanical Breakdown

    To understand why the one-inch punch is more about mind than muscle, you first have to understand how Bruce Lee delivers the blow. Although Lee’s fist travels a tiny distance in mere milliseconds, the punch is an intricate full-body movement. According to Jessica Rose, a Stanford University biomechanical researcher, Lee’s lightning-quick jab actually starts with his legs.

    “When watching the one-inch punch, you can see that his leading and trailing legs straighten with a rapid, explosive knee extension,” Rose says. The sudden jerk of his legs increases the twisting speed of Lee’s hips—which, in turn, lurches the shoulder of his thrusting arm forward.

    As Lee’s shoulder bolts ahead, his arm gets to work. The swift and simultaneous extension of his elbow drives his fist forward. For a final flourish, Rose says, “flicking his wrist just prior to impact may further increase the fist velocity.” Once the punch lands on target, Lee pulls back almost immediately. Rose explains that this shortens the impact time of his blow, which compresses the force and makes it all the more powerful.

    By the time the one-inch punch has made contact with its target, Lee has combined the power of some of the biggest muscles in his body into a tiny area of force. But while the one-inch punch is built upon the explosive power of multiple muscles, Rose insists that Bruce Lee’s muscles are actually not the most important engine behind the blow.

    “Muscle fibers do not dictate coordination,” Rose says, “and coordination and timing are essential factors behind movements like this one-inch punch.”

    Because the punch happens over such a short amount of time, Lee has to synchronize each segment of the jab—his twisting hip, extending knees, and thrusting shoulder, elbow, and wrist—with incredible accuracy. Furthermore, each joint in Lee’s body has a single moment of peak acceleration, and to get maximum juice out of the move, Lee must layer his movements so that each period of peak acceleration follows the last one instantly.

    So coordination is key. And that’s where the neuroscience comes in.

    Martial Arts Neuroscience

    In a 2012 study, Ed Roberts, a neuroscientist at Imperial College London, compared the punching strength (at a range of slightly less than 2 inches) between practitioners of karate and physically fit people with similar amounts of muscle who do not practice martial arts.

    “The first thing we found was that karate experts can punch much harder than normal, untrained people. Which isn’t exactly what you’d call Nobel Prize–worthy work,” he says.

    But Roberts also discovered that for the karate practitioners, muscle alone didn’t dictate strong punches. Rather, when he used motion-tracking cameras to track the puncher’s joints, he found that strikes that synchronize the many peak accelerations in one complex move—like Bruce Lee’s—were also the most powerful.

    And when Roberts took brain scans of his study’s participants, he also found that the force and coordination of each participant’s two-inch punch was directly related to the microstructure of white matter—the substance that manages communication between brain cells—in a part of the brain called the supplementary motor cortex. This is important, because this brain region handles the coordination between the muscles of the limbs, which close-range punches rely on. The altered white matter allows for more abundant or complex cell connections in that brain region, Roberts says, which could increase the puncher’s ability to synchronize his or her movements.

    So Bruce Lee owes his master feat in part to a beefed-up glob of white matter. But that doesn’t diminish the grandeur of the one-inch punch one bit. Like his muscles, Lee earned his brainpower the hard way, with many years of practice. Roberts says the white matter changes in his study’s participants can be traced to the concept of neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to fundamentally rewire itself to cope with new demands. The more karate experts practiced these coordinated moves, the more the white matter in their supplementary motor cortex adapts.

    Of course, neuroplasticity diminishes with age, so it’s better if they start young. In the words of an ancient Chinese proverb, “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is now.”


  • Fight Quest : S1 E10 – USA (Kajukenbo)

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    Season 1 Episode 10
    Aired date: Feb 29, 2008
    Location: Bay Area, Calif.
    Masters: Charles Gaylord, Greg Harper
    Features: Hands, feet, throws

    Kajukenbo is a street-fighting martial art comprised of the most deadly moves from karate, kung fu, and other fighting styles. In this episode, Jimmy and Doug travel to the roughest edges of the S.F. Bay area to uncover why some Americans live to fight.

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  • I wish I could down-vote a video to infinity

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    This guy’s lineage corrupts the KAJUKENBO name and pays respects to Ed Parker on top of it!!

    It looks like he wants to train in Wing Chun, at least when he grows up.

    I feel insulted by this clown.  Why can’t you give a YouTube video about 50 “Thumbs Down” votes?!

    I would like to show him what we do so he knows what REAL Kajukenbo is…

    To See is to Disbelieve, To Hear is to Doubt, But to FEEL is to Know!

    I see 2 of Parker’s IKKA logos and a picture of Ed but they call this… Kajuken…grrr…


  • The 25 Most Lethal Martial Arts Ever Created

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    A joke video discussing “The 25 Most Lethal Martial Arts Ever Created”

    Several systems we practice and are related to make the list, including Bill Underwood’s “Combato”, Kajukenbo (Emperado Method), BJJ & Lua.

    It starts out interesting and appears to be a serious discussion at first but gets progressively more dumb the closer it gets to #1.

    I am curious where an evolving RBSD (Reality-Based Self Defense) Kajukenbo system would have landed on his list if he was not being ridiculous.

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  • What is Kajukenbo? – intro video from the Expose the Root Project

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    There may be a documentary in the works about Kajukenbo.

    It is in the fundraising stage now but you can see more here at the Expose the Root Project: http://exposetheroot.com/

    The video is not bad.  GM Emil Bautisa and a few others get a quick cameo in the video.

    Apparently GM Emil Bautista, GM Andrew Torok, GM Philip Gelinas and more than 120 others have been interviewed for it.

    Impressive goal… http://exposetheroot.com/interviewed/


  • Fight Quest S1 E9 – Israel (Krav Maga)

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    Title: Israel (Krav Maga)
    Air Date: February 22, 2008

    Location: Netanya, Israel

    Masters: Ran Nakash, Avivit Oftek Cohen

    Features: Everything that hurts

    The Israeli military is one of the most highly trained and skilled forces in the world, and their secret weapon is Krav Maga. In this episode, Jimmy and Doug train with the Israeli military and learn the secrets of this murderous fighting fighting style.

    { Typical marketing hyperbole. Funny how they always get stomped when they compete in MMA.

    Remember: If it is not the IDF then it is NOT “real” Krav Maga.

    It is nothing special, mostly just “techniques sourced from boxing, savate, Muay Thai, Wing Chun, Judo, jiu-jitsu, wrestling, and grappling” anyway — Wikipedia }

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  • Fight Quest S1 E7 – South Korea (Hapkido)

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    Korea (Hapkido) Season 1 Episode 7

    Aired date: 

    Location: Seoul, South Korea

    Masters: Kim Nam Je, Bae Sung Book, Ju Soong Weo

    Features: Feet, hands, throws

    Hapkido is Korea’s gift to the world of martial arts and in this episode Jimmy and Doug learn the ins and outs of this deadly defensive art.

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  • Fight Quest S1 E6 – France (Savate)

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    Fight Quest: Location: Marseille, France (Season 1, Episode 6)

    Masters: Christian Robert, Frank May, Frederic Baret, Laurent Bois, Patrick Gellat

    Features: Hands, feet

    Jimmy and Doug are off to the hard-scrabble port of Marseilles to learn France’s contribution to the world of kickboxing – Savate, an elegant but brutal fighting form with kicks so dangerous they’ve been outlawed.

    Title: France (Savate)
    Air Date: February 01, 2008

     

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  • Fight Quest: S1 E4 Mexico (Boxing)

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    Fight Quest Season 1 Episode 4

    Mexico (Boxing)  (18 Jan. 2008)

    Masters: Ignacio “Nacho” Beristain, Tiburcio Garcia
    Features: Hands

    Jimmy Smith and Doug Anderson head to Mexico City to learn the rough and tumble world of Mexican Boxing.

    Training at over 10,000 feet above sea-level, Doug’s stamina is tested to the max while Jimmy is overwhelmed by the fact that he has to train alongside Olympic champions.

     


  • Fight Quest: S1 E3 Japan (Kyokushin Karate)

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    Location: Tokyo, Japan
    Masters: Shihan Yuzo Goda, Shihan Isamu Fukuda
    Features: Hands, feet, smashing things
    Date: 11 Jan. 2008

    Jimmy and Doug journey to Tokyo to learn the brutal bare-fisted fighting style known as Kyokushin Karate.
    After five days of intense training, Doug is injured and Jimmy exhausted, but both fighters must fight five black-belts – one after the other – in a tradition known as a “Kumite.”

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