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PitBlackBelt
Добавлен 25 июл 2010
PitBlackBelt you channel is for the everyday student, and martial artists looking to learn more. You can find videos by Adrian Iriarte, a black belt under The Pit Martial Arts founder John "Pit Master" Hackleman.
Twitter: @AdrianIriarte AdrianIriarte
Facebook: adrian.iriarte.56
Twitter: @AdrianIriarte AdrianIriarte
Facebook: adrian.iriarte.56
The First MMA Martial Art?
In this video I asked Pit Master, John Hackleman if KaJuKenBo is the first MMA martial art.
Просмотров: 237
Видео
John Hackleman Talks About KajuKenBo .
Просмотров 5 тыс.Год назад
In this video John Hackleman talks about his days training in KajuKenBo in Honolulu Hawaii. Please like share and subscribe.
What Makes Hawaiian Kempo Different?
Просмотров 847Год назад
In this video, Pit Master John Hackleman descibes what makes his system of Hawaiian Kempo different. Please like and share,
What is Hawaiian Kempo?
Просмотров 4,2 тыс.Год назад
John Hackleman, the founder of the martial art system that is Hawaiian Kempo, describes what his system style is based on. Please like, subscribe and share.
The last week of my father Guillermo Iriarte.
Просмотров 394Год назад
The last week of my father Guillermo Iriarte.
Red Room Jiu-Jitsu 19: Chad Jackson, Tony Cuna, Marco Barajas, and Junior, rolling live.
Просмотров 76Год назад
Live sparring in the Red Room, at The Pit Martial Arts.
Red Room Jiu-Jitsu 18: Dalton Nettleton vs Christian Ramirez
Просмотров 74Год назад
Dalton Nettleton and Christian Ramirez grapple no gi jiu-jitsu at The Pit Martial Arts.
Red Room Jiu-Jitsu 17: Tony Cuna & Bo Carvahlo
Просмотров 1022 года назад
Tony Cuna and Bo Carvahlo Sparring Jiu-Jitsu at The Pit Martial Arts in Arroyo Grande.
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 16: Christian Ramirez & Bo Cavalho
Просмотров 882 года назад
Christian Ramirez and Bo Cavalho spar jiu-jitsu at in the Red Room at The Pit Martial Arts, in Arroyo Grande.
The Low bar Back Squat. 143 kg
Просмотров 1132 года назад
“There is simply no other exercise, and certainly no machine, that produces the level of muscular stimulation and growth than the correctly performed full squat.
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 15: Gunner Tillema and Nathan Moore
Просмотров 872 года назад
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 15: Gunner Tillema and Nathan Moore spar jiu-jitsu at The Pit Martial Arts in Arroyo Grande.
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 14: Gunner Tillema and Lauren Illif
Просмотров 4942 года назад
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 14: Gunner Tillema and Lauren Illif
Jiu_Jitsu Red Room 13: Lauren Illif and Samantha Azevedo
Просмотров 1872 года назад
Jiu_Jitsu Red Room 13: Lauren Illif and Samantha Azevedo
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 12: Christian Ramirez and Gunner Tillema
Просмотров 582 года назад
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 12: Christian Ramirez and Gunner Tillema
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 11 (NO-GI): Christian Ramirez and Marco Barajas
Просмотров 972 года назад
Jiu-Jitsu Red Room 11 (NO-GI): Christian Ramirez and Marco Barajas
Teixeira MMA & Kajuaz Black Belt Promotion.
Просмотров 3503 года назад
Teixeira MMA & Kajuaz Black Belt Promotion.
Teixeira MMA Black Belt Testing Day 2
Просмотров 3383 года назад
Teixeira MMA Black Belt Testing Day 2
Teixeira MMA Black Belt Training Day 1
Просмотров 3613 года назад
Teixeira MMA Black Belt Training Day 1
Phenomenal video!🥋👍🏽
Kenpo and its offshoot are scam. Look at Sambo, dominate in ring and street. Kempo are joke 😂
@@vuquanghuy3441 Hawaiian Kempo has had two UFC light heavyweight championships. Facts
@@PitBlackBelt champ against sambo? Let see how kenpo can even touch the high of sambo
@@vuquanghuy3441 UFC.
Stevie left when he found out what he was doing was fake lol
Grew up right next to the pit, great spot
Gerry Scott may be the name he’s trying to remember.
How terrible if this is actually believed to work.
He moves great
I dont like Kata also!
I bet his punches are like bricks
"You want a black belt? OK, fight Chuck Lidell..." 😄
If you are in South Carolina, take some time to visit Young's Kajukenbo in upstate South Carolina. The Professor there is phenomenal.
Watch Mike Tyson doing footwork where he does this box stepping type of movement. It's very similar.
Getting hit by Chuck Liddell and being trained by John Hackelman are both honors.
Love the culture here too! I loved the kata though.Ronnie here from Delta Kajukenbo. I did it for 10 years under Frank Wholer. Gave me patience perseverance in all my life's experiences. Thank You Frank .RIP.
My dad was my instructor in Hawaii. He was a black belt under Emperado. Had his own thing going for a while at Makakilo elementary. Good times
If I lived in California I would definitely train with John. He's a legend.
I know what I’m doing for a finisher today! Need to get the pushups back up. Thank you!
Ninja vanishing defense 🤣
The shooting star disarms samurai automatically 😊
Thank you.
❤❤❤
Nobody quite like him ever again. Rest in Love Professor.
Back in the early mid 80's I studied under Jerry Henson. Great man Great teacher.
wow , this is awesome ,, wish u were in long beach , ca ,, i remember doing techniques in horse stances for like 30-45 min ,, memories ,, ole school teachings love it , not like today , wussified teaching,,
So no relationship with Ed Parker’s Kempo?
Only the uniform lol
@@tongpomegatron From what I've learned since, there actually is some relation to American Kempo or Ed Parkers Kempo, but it's just a small part of the system. The system comprises of Tang Soo Do, Boxing, American Kempo, Judo and Jiu JItsu *edit I'm referring to Kajukenbo but in reality they are pretty much the same thing
My instructor was Bob Anderson, who learned Kajukenbo from Al Reyes and Kempo from Walter Godin. He explained that grab arts, punch tricks, etc weren't sequences you would do in a real fight. They built muscle memory for how to move in various scenarios.
Bob was my instructor too! He's so good
His wife is the real ninja I wouldn't cross😂
Kempo stinks.Cant grab while sparing.💩💩Pepper spray works best.Kempo💩💩Kempo the rules💩💩
Awesome drill
Every kind of competitive industry is like this. Not only Hollywood. Competition is evil
How would you say Hawaiian Kempo is different from Kajukenbo?
Many thanks MGrandMaster, Less is often more and beetter! To my understanding one solution at three levels of difficulties. -Part 1 more about avoiding sideways and a double blok to take full control of hands while avoinding forward ----Part 2 -the previous added by a lowering centre of grawity, adding a waist stop to end by throwing -Part 3 - the previous, tenka ashi then an armblok and using gravitational pull on ground. Prerequisites: Reflexes, gradual coordination of legs (tenkan or tenka ashi from Aikido, gradually starting from Shoulder level, then Waist level and finally at three levels using gravitation to force the attacker down on his belly. Paul, 68, retired instructor of Karate.
Grandmaster Stephen K. Hayes is right in offering basically a sidestep against a linear combination of hand attack.The safer way is to step off the line to the beginning, thus the attacker first hand is becomes a barrier to the second one. The same applies to fighting a group, where escaping sideways yields only on enemy to face making him a shield against the others. Hopefully thatś not all.However good reflexes are needed. Paul,68, retired instructor of Karate.
Agree with John 100%! Took up KajuKenBo while in Kalifornia in the 80's. I worked with a Hawaiian who earned a black belt in Hawaii in the 1960s from a 'Professor' (don't recall the name - 'Emperado'?). I drummed up some interest from young guys at work and I talked him in to teaching us after work in the cafeteria. I left for the Marines but a few of the guys I started with stuck it out to black belt. Our instructor and his brother (who had black belts in several styles like goju-ryu) told us stories about their old school KajuKenBo training days - hardcore! I'm sure the katas we were learning weren't the 'pure' KajuKenBo they learned but the 'tricks' (choregraphed moves) and the way we applied them were. Good days!
"Professor Emperdo" could punch spikes into a board and pull them back out.
You Internet-Blackbelts keep forgetting this is the same man that trained one of the most badass UFC Heavyweight Champions to ever strap on the gloves. Mr. Chuck "Iceman" Lidell.
Have you seen the black belt test? It is in person and grueling. Not easy at all
If I ever get attacked in slow motion, I will use these teachings.
Every martial art I have taken shows technique at a slower pace and then sparring is at a faster pace with resistance.
@@dicaeopolis8522 Its always at a slower pace, and doesn't work.
I didn't know if they ever went full speed full power or not.
@@dicaeopolis8522 They don't, its a scam. I have trained with Hayes, its always faith based. The amount of money I wasted is in the thousands. It disturbs me that people continue to believe such things, without evidence.
I find the technique looks really cool, but I always question anything that takes 2+ movements against the attackers 1. As soon as your right hand parrys the jab the guy is already coming in with the cross while you're trying to now put your left hand on the jab. If you can parry the jab with your right then you can also shoot that same hand up to his eyes in a single forward motion.
All martial arts must be applied to be of use. Even the v more effective scientific arts of the West need to new adapted to the individual. I've used things i learned rpm his books in real-world application
why invent new styles all the time? this sounds like hapkido
I realize I'm late to this party, so as an instructor I'll give my honest take and breakdown. First, is it real? Kinda, it's a martial art that claims a pedigree of being quiet old. As kata forms it seems just fine at the very basic level. The dojo martial arts modernized this art and the instructor seems quite honest. So that brings us to the second, the techniques and will they work? As they are demonstrated, no. If you take the fundamentals, I would say yes. Kata are situation based, a perfect moment in time for teaching a specific thing (to put it simple). I see this art as kata forms from a different time that really wouldn't be effective now without modern tailoring, kind of how aikido doesn't work unless you add strikes and also don't do aikido. In short, it's fine, just don't buy into the hype. Take a realistic approach to any technique and keep the fundamentals in tact like any kata form, learn some ju-jitsu arts and some striking arts and you'll be just fine.
😋 'Promosm'
If Stephen Hayes has not figured out what a ninja is by now then the chances of him ever knowing must be beyond his understanding. Stephen Hayes will go to prison for his crimes against innocent people or war will be declared.
Dude wearing one boxing shoe lmao
so much bullshit.
But does John like doing kata?
Most people don't like doing Kata in my experience, me personally I'd rather shadowbox
@@harrygreb3457 having one or two kata is ok, but not too much
So it's Kajukenbo? 😂
I remember looking like I spent the day trying to catch golf balls at the driving range after taking KJKB classes. "Tenderizing" they called it. Those cats will hit whatever is in range just to hit it. Couple shots to the bicep and suddenly that arm doesn't want to participate anymore .
You came up with Hawaiian kempo....haole boy that's bull crap! Street fight kempo is what it's really all about or Polynesian Kung Fu I hate when you haoles use our culture to prop your weak a$$ style! We take the fighting style you got and put real street fighting tecniques to it! No Hollywood gay high kicks like van dam !! Also a close style that we respect and also use is Arnis de mano.
👏
So is this a form of kajukenbo? I saw kenpo and Hawaii and that's the first thing I thought of.
The Kenpo Karate family tree is... Complicated. See Kenpo's core is eclecticism, so each form of Kenpo was founded based what each Master believed Kenpo was. You have the original Ed Parker system, Kajukenbo, Shaolin Kenpo... But essentially, all Kenpo is "Hawaiian" Kenpo since that's where the first Kenpo Grandmaster, Ed Parker is from.
@@IntergalacticPirateRadio This is incorrect
@@IntergalacticPirateRadio Kajukenbo actually predates Ed Parker's training. Parker started training under Chow in 1951, a year after Kajukenbo started being taught publicly. Adriano Emperado was Chow's first black belt, and founded kajukenbo along with four other martial artists in the late 1940s.
👊🏻🤙🏻