Japanese Classical Martial Arts①

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  • Опубліковано 7 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 180

  • @leftyfourguns
    @leftyfourguns 6 років тому +9

    Alright, you had he at the giant hand cannon thing

  • @soukighan
    @soukighan 6 років тому +3

    For the people interested in this show, it still airs new episodes on NHK TV Channel

  • @-_bao_-9369
    @-_bao_-9369 3 роки тому +6

    2:25
    Covid: Ima just stop you right there

  • @shawnmartin1289
    @shawnmartin1289 6 років тому +4

    That dudes suit is awesome.

    • @Taatris
      @Taatris 5 років тому

      he is a machine gun

  • @S_Gaiseric
    @S_Gaiseric 4 роки тому +1

    Open minded Japanese are the best ! Thank you for this channel

  • @marcooliveira9335
    @marcooliveira9335 5 років тому

    Thank you for this presentation of the Japanese culture and people.

  • @RG7621
    @RG7621 8 років тому +2

    I went to the 2016 even. It was really cool.

  • @Isyrawr
    @Isyrawr 8 років тому +45

    Damage: 44
    Hit rate: 86%
    Crit rate: 22%

  • @ronbird121
    @ronbird121 6 років тому +4

    greeting from the hema athlets.

  • @Hiro04
    @Hiro04 3 роки тому

    Wow so much hope back then

  • @Jeikx_Perseidx
    @Jeikx_Perseidx 4 роки тому +1

    Woman on 2:25 saying "I hope everything be better at 2020" ......you don't hope enough xd

  • @87654321j
    @87654321j 3 роки тому

    And we all have Jin Sakai to thank for being the first to introduce these new fighting styles 😃

  • @good_night522
    @good_night522 4 роки тому +6

    2:26 Bruh lmao

  • @erichardric4795
    @erichardric4795 6 років тому +8

    I wish I could move to Japan and learn Kendo

    • @jantalipun8529
      @jantalipun8529 6 років тому +2

      Eric Hardric why dont do it.or do it your homeland.i do

    • @erichardric4795
      @erichardric4795 6 років тому +3

      OtakunTV I hope I can one day!

    • @baldieman64
      @baldieman64 6 років тому +1

      You can. You simply choose to prioritise other things.

    • @smallboto
      @smallboto 5 років тому

      Try and go to Google maps and find for kendo dojos in your area

    • @dominusmilans5478
      @dominusmilans5478 4 роки тому

      I'm learning Kenjutsu!

  • @Cookiesdiefrombehind
    @Cookiesdiefrombehind 8 років тому +7

    This man looks like a badass.

  • @田中ぽんつく
    @田中ぽんつく 7 років тому +2

    吹き替えかと思ったら普通に英語しゃべってるよw
    かっこよすw

  • @elWieslaw
    @elWieslaw 6 років тому +4

    a lady in the studio running the program is very beautiful..... Interesting, which martial art she likes......

  • @marvinraydalida7118
    @marvinraydalida7118 6 років тому +4

    4:08 so badass

  • @Eandrews763
    @Eandrews763 8 років тому +56

    I wish I could live in a Japanese style home. Lots of room and clean floors. =_= *evil voice* Take off your shoes . . .

    • @dannenoob
      @dannenoob 8 років тому +9

      +Emily Andrews Yeah, no other culture has room and clean floors...

    • @MrAwsomeshot
      @MrAwsomeshot 8 років тому +2

      just clean ur house slob

    • @Eandrews763
      @Eandrews763 8 років тому +4

      it's time to stop. k? I said a Japanese home, not 'I want to be Japanese.'

    • @aManWhoWantsEverything
      @aManWhoWantsEverything 8 років тому

      Emily Andrews 1

    • @Per4uXYv35
      @Per4uXYv35 8 років тому +5

      i feel you, i really want a japanese styles property myself, i am not japanese and i never will be, but that doesn't mean that i can't wish to live like them. So i feel you, i hope your dream comes true, friend!

  • @misogobs
    @misogobs 6 років тому +4

    13:34
    キャラと武器が合いすぎて

  • @ГалинаТолстова-ы3л
    @ГалинаТолстова-ы3л 6 років тому

    Очень хорошо,что люди в Японии сохраняют традиции и боевой дух.Американцы это показали,как умели(на"декоративном"уровне(

  • @6400loser
    @6400loser 6 років тому

    Ah yes, the classical martial art of a giant fucking gun

  • @CarlosSanchez-my7zg
    @CarlosSanchez-my7zg 7 років тому +24

    first of all, samurai were originally archers/horsemen. and swords were carried more for distraction. samurai often used shields, because of archers, and there is a school that even teaches using umbrellas and pot lids. martial arts grew from many traditions. even kono yoshinori(sensei) recognizes russian forms. and lets not forget that knights and such were also martial artists. history isnt black and white. and everyones comment on this page is relevent. just not the whole picture.

    • @capscaps04
      @capscaps04 7 років тому +12

      you are talking pure bullshit.

    • @thatfishdude789
      @thatfishdude789 7 років тому +3

      Carlos Sanchez Thank you for sharing this information.

    • @jervill1
      @jervill1 6 років тому +6

      Swords carried for distraction? Not at all. During battle, it was a secondary weapon. During peace time, it was a status symbol. The history of samurai is long. The word samurai was first used in the 8th century denoting someone who served a noble. Military service was not specific... Only later did it specifically mean service to a lord as retainer. Mounted archery was popular during the kamakura period but was declining by the Sengoku. How samurai were originally is complex.

    • @DerMessiasderSatire
      @DerMessiasderSatire 6 років тому +1

      Carlos Sanchez Not Samurai,nono

    • @jantalipun8529
      @jantalipun8529 6 років тому +1

      good comment.But in.In the beginning samurai didnt even used katana because it was not invented yet.They carried tachi wich is a sword that was slightly longer than katana.they didnt carried them as a distraction.they where used.But the main weapon was still the yumi(bow).

  • @GMAN_INK
    @GMAN_INK 7 років тому

    is that an MMA ref from Pride FC??

  • @AlbertChyn
    @AlbertChyn 4 роки тому

    No more 2020 olympics?

  • @spartan113ish
    @spartan113ish 9 років тому +1

    Oh that's my uncle!

  • @benbowers6619
    @benbowers6619 6 років тому

    yo 2020 olympics is gonna be in Tokyo

  • @deadby15
    @deadby15 2 роки тому

    At least Japanese openly admit they learned such and such from China.

  • @jadekayak01
    @jadekayak01 6 років тому +1

    why mention koryu or traditional JAPANESE martial arts and KARATE in the same article.
    KARATE really means china hand and was only i troduced to japan in about 1920 in the form of shotokan.
    the teacher changed the name to karate-empty hand(same sou ds different kanji) because if the racist tendancies of japanese towards chinese that would have doomed the art.
    karate was ADOPTED by the japanese but it is really a chinese/ryukyu fighting system

    • @manicmute9440
      @manicmute9440 6 років тому

      It comes from Okinawa and was developed from a form of Wushu and Jujutsu.

    • @jadekayak01
      @jadekayak01 6 років тому +1

      Two Feet no.
      it comes from ryu kyu islands pre japanese invasian in the 1600's by satsuma clan.
      already existed before japanese contact so its not possible it came from jujutsu.
      it stemmed from shaolin long fist,tiger,crane,5 ancestors kung fu(wu shu) combined with pechan martial arts.
      just because the place is NOW called okinawa and is japanese does not mean it always was.
      once again,karate(china hand) was INTRODUCED to japan around the 1920's by G Funagoshi as shotokan.

    • @manicmute9440
      @manicmute9440 6 років тому

      As Karate never existed in the 1600's everything you've just said is irrelevant. When Karate was createdd the island was known Okinawa, martial arts already existed there and then the Japanese introduced Jujutsu, and from them Karate was formed.
      Claiming that Karate is Chinese is like claiming all martial arts are African, and equally ridiculous.

    • @jadekayak01
      @jadekayak01 6 років тому

      Two Feet p.s. all central asian martial arts can be traced back to INDIA,including japanese arts

    • @manicmute9440
      @manicmute9440 6 років тому

      And your point is?
      That doesn't make them Indian.

  • @azizhanyn417
    @azizhanyn417 5 років тому +1

    What I don't really like about this video is seeing Japanese people whose talking about their culture are using an other language to do so.

  • @犬山犬侍
    @犬山犬侍 6 років тому +3

    これアメリカのNHKの番組だね
    にしても、あの人英語喋れたのかww

  • @AnggaR19
    @AnggaR19 3 роки тому

    Japanese origins of mma

  • @haibuiphuoc4442
    @haibuiphuoc4442 6 років тому +1

    I have to say this, yes, i have to say it out loud, these Japanese's English is so good :^O , welp, good bye "san-kyuu" shit and welcome back "thank you" :^)

  • @SoldierDrew
    @SoldierDrew 3 роки тому

    Martial literally translates as Military. Martial (military) arts, both historically and currently, are always weapons based arts. Unarmed military combatives, historically, and currently are grappling/wrestling based. . . . Aikido and kara te have never been military/martial arts. Okinawan Kara te was a civilian self defense art, not military art. . . .Aikido according to it's founder is the physical excercise of his shinto based pacifist cult that he joined after his Japanese-Russo War experience. Read: Art Of Peace by Morehei Ueshiba. Read: Invincible Warrior the biography of Morehei Ueshiba. . . . Kodokan Judo, a form of Japanese Jujutsu, aka Kano Jiujutsu, was an actual martial/military art taught to WWII Imperial Japanese troops during military training and Imperial Japanese children in school. Judo was taught to WWII U.S. Army Alamo Scouts, WWII U.S. Marine Corps Raiders and Vietnam War era U.S. Army green beret Special Forces Group as well as to the original U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 members. Many civilian unarmed dueling arts & civilian unarmed self defense arts are incorrectly categorised as Martial/Military arts when they're not born from military arts at all. Tell a lie long enough it becomes accepted as fact.

  • @sonphan8174
    @sonphan8174 4 роки тому

    Kendo World Championship...99% Japanese competitors?
    How many countries actually compete in Kendo? I am not familiar with this.

  • @masgkickmas0n821
    @masgkickmas0n821 6 років тому +2

    Judo practitioner XD 😂😂😂 that’s kyuudo judo is what I practice it is a grappling art

  • @darkwraithknyack126
    @darkwraithknyack126 6 років тому +11

    Why no mention of the world's strongest karate, kyokushin! Kyokushin challenged every single registered dojo and won. It is undefeated and used in Russian American and Japanese martial arts. All three of these countries military are known for being strong because of it.

    • @darthclone7
      @darthclone7 6 років тому +4

      To much brainwashing

    • @billgober2
      @billgober2 6 років тому +5

      Kyokushin isn't classical it was made in the 1900s by Mas Oyama who was actually a Korean who lived in Japan most of his life.

    • @baldieman64
      @baldieman64 6 років тому +4

      Nor is it Japanese. Karate is Okinawan (Japan annexed the entire Ryukyu archipelago in 1879) and Karate developed well before then.

  • @Grim67894
    @Grim67894 6 років тому

    Waiting for people to call this "weeb" in the comments

  • @RG7621
    @RG7621 8 років тому

    *event

  • @daswordofgork9823
    @daswordofgork9823 8 років тому +7

    Samurai using shields, whaaaaaaaa! :14

    • @KoinzellGaming
      @KoinzellGaming 8 років тому +4

      Shields weren't used due to the terrain and battle locations. You can't set up a proper front-line with shields and spears in the types of war they had. Not to mention the impact it has on mobility, which was important. Although shields were used initially during wars when bows were the primary weapons, but war changed so the use of shields wasn't as vital.
      People think that katana's were primarily used during wars, but that's incorrect. Samurai's and foot soldiers in japan have always primarily used spears. In case the spear breaks or the environment isn't beneficial to use a spear in, they changed to a katana. Katana's weren't really a tool of war in japan at all.
      The primary weapon in a war was a spear.

    • @haochaotsiminh6193
      @haochaotsiminh6193 7 років тому

      zzzzzzzzzzz

    • @aaroncranor7090
      @aaroncranor7090 7 років тому +1

      Da Sword Of Gork I think thats just his armored helmet he used as a shield

    • @rins_revenge
      @rins_revenge 6 років тому +1

      The earliest samurais used shields as they used Chinese warfare and weapons such as the double edged sword

    • @rins_revenge
      @rins_revenge 6 років тому

      KoinGaming wat a shame u didn’t add the early samurais in ur long essay

  • @Onyx-nv9uz
    @Onyx-nv9uz Рік тому

    2:26 oh um about that😅

  • @hazardous0887
    @hazardous0887 6 років тому +1

    I don't like to be "that guy" but you don't fire an arrow, you loose one ...

  • @gabrielzeratul
    @gabrielzeratul 8 років тому

    "Aii caralhooo" at 00:22

    • @Yogkkhgh
      @Yogkkhgh 7 років тому

      gabrielzeratul f

  • @rins_revenge
    @rins_revenge 6 років тому +1

    They got one important thing on women martial arts wrong women didn’t Train in secret they were enlisted samurais called the onnu bugaisha and trained just like their male counter parts
    -naginatajutsu and/or yarijutsu (yari and/or naginata)
    -kenjutsu (Musashi fighting and earlier)
    -they sometimes fought using a yumi(bow) but little evidence shows that

    • @jwgoon
      @jwgoon 5 років тому

      The correct word is Sojutsu for spear fighting. Not Yarijutsu.

  • @uraBTBTB
    @uraBTBTB 6 років тому

    外国人から見れば神秘的で魅力があるかもしれないが、強くなりたいならキックボクシングや総合格闘技の道場に行った方が近道なんだよな。精神修養や武道の歴史を体得したいのなら古武道もいいのかも。

  • @walasmelo
    @walasmelo 5 років тому

    Oi moro no brasil meu nome é walas queria uma espada katana do japoneza aço

  • @DGE123
    @DGE123 6 років тому +1

    this guy has a black belt in tele-promter reading lol

  • @yanisazizov
    @yanisazizov 6 років тому

    развлекательное шоу

  • @snoom9503
    @snoom9503 6 років тому +1

    pull up with ak

  • @holmganghamburg
    @holmganghamburg 6 років тому +1

    Jujustu: HAAAAA HUUAAAAA HEEYAAAAA!!!!! why?

    • @TheSilence1
      @TheSilence1 6 років тому +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiai

  • @henneko9598
    @henneko9598 6 років тому +2

    武道館の中でぶっ放すなんてw。

    • @けん太郎-l4h
      @けん太郎-l4h 6 років тому

      むかし武道館で見たよ。耳を塞げって言われるけど、敢えてリアルな音を聞きたくて耳を塞がなかった。いや、ほんとすごい音だった。「ばーん」とかじゃなくて「どん!」っていう鈍い音だったね。

    • @nazrin7505
      @nazrin7505 5 років тому

      空砲だから平気平気

  • @赤坂龍之介-s9i
    @赤坂龍之介-s9i 6 років тому

    日本の文化もだんだんと廃れていく…悲しい

  • @mr.random369
    @mr.random369 6 років тому

    Nothing against Mongolian..lol..

  • @ompmgcrasta
    @ompmgcrasta 7 років тому +5

    GOD IS GREAT.

  • @わたなべ-v4t
    @わたなべ-v4t 7 років тому

    やっぱ砲術はトリでなきゃ(^O^)/

  • @r.m.hidden6660
    @r.m.hidden6660 6 років тому +1

    kind of bullshit tho

  • @ishygddtfr
    @ishygddtfr 4 роки тому

    2:25 yikes

  • @polarbear6752
    @polarbear6752 6 років тому

    아이키도는 진짜 세계 제일의 사기꾼들이네 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ

  • @yanisazizov
    @yanisazizov 6 років тому

    Смешные вы люди )))

  • @KenLives333
    @KenLives333 2 роки тому

    Covidlympics... sad.

  • @mauriciomatuichuk8909
    @mauriciomatuichuk8909 6 років тому

    05:03 hahahahahahahaaha

  • @zakariyyarashid7434
    @zakariyyarashid7434 4 роки тому

    Sad new olempics lol

  • @ohmalub
    @ohmalub 6 років тому

    카쿠다 노부아키 영어 잘하네 첨 봤어 ㅋㅋㅋ

  • @yanisazizov
    @yanisazizov 6 років тому

    Вы не бойцы!

  • @yanisazizov
    @yanisazizov 6 років тому

    У вас нет ВОИНОВ!!!!

  • @dimetryorgulis7004
    @dimetryorgulis7004 6 років тому

    another trifling thought - 50% of Japanese Martial Arts is the ornamental bulshit and legends and the rest 50% - hard, hard, hardest work! It's up to you to decide which side to chose.

  • @nobbytang
    @nobbytang 6 років тому +3

    The perfect arrow has already been fired ..by a English longbow man 700 yes ago !.,

  • @R.Sakurai
    @R.Sakurai 6 років тому

    眼鏡は変だ。太った侍はいなかった。

  • @omegagilgamesh
    @omegagilgamesh 6 років тому

    "I think the Olympics are a great opportunity for Japan."
    Here in America, we see it as an opportunity mostly for Trump to make vaguely racist remarks and tweet up self aggrandizing segues/lies.

  • @JDGage
    @JDGage 6 років тому +1

    Traditional martial arts is dead. No one knows those styles anymore. They are all world wide watered down into sport and entertaining. The gun has changed that. Laws changed that. Sport changed that.

    • @NinjaKid1985
      @NinjaKid1985 6 років тому

      It is up to you and what you do with your art my friend!!! ;) Comes down to your mentality and the style you chose. I love MMA. But it's obvious that you will not find much tradition in pure MMA gyms. If you are up for this, than you have to find a proper Karate, Judo, Jiu Jitsu, Kendo, Kenjutsu, Aikido etc. Dojo. And i mean a PROPER DOJO not a class in a schools club. Will be a bit more pricey but it is worth it, in my opinion. Coming back to MMA though, I meet a lot of cool people coming from traditional arts, teaching MMA these days but with tradition in mind! ...check out Lyoto Machida for example, to point out a famous one. I could name man more but mostly from Asian region because I'm not that much involved into the european and american scene. Shooto is Ichiban! And that's what i support, promote and work for. SHOOTO!!! ;) ^^

    • @JDGage
      @JDGage 6 років тому

      Dave Lee but sadly as a new person you have no idea what you're getting into as the dojo locks you into a contract and fools your for a free month

    • @NinjaKid1985
      @NinjaKid1985 6 років тому +1

      True. But we live in a time where google exists and where you can talk and speak with people before you sign anything. There are more than enough MA Forums in every country where they can help you for shure to find the right one in your region. But if you are to lazy, not smart enough, or interested enough than maybe traditional martial arts are nothing for you in the first place!

    • @RonJeremy514
      @RonJeremy514 5 років тому

      Do you imply that using guns doesn't require any technique or discipline? Every weapons require someone who is trained to sort out all the potential of it.

  • @jinny8801
    @jinny8801 6 років тому

    we all know the Japanese bow sucks