One of his black belts fought at the 1997 Oyama's Kyokuoshin tournament. As soon as we saw him me and my trainer asked "Does he know this a knockdown tourney?" as we started laughing. This is a full contact, no pads, and it is for serious fighters. Knockdown tournaments are for trained fighters and not point fighters. The Dilman BB drew Takinori from Japan. Takinori hit him with 2 leg kicks which Dilmans' BB didn't check, block but took them. The next kick was a round kick to the head. It landed perfect as he reached for the leg kick. He fell unconscious and was out for 10 minutes. They removed him by ambulance. Guys like Dilman are a cancer on martial arts.
Dude holy SHIT. Idk much about fighting competitively but that made me laugh, particularly the part about “he didn’t ‘block’ the kicks he just took them” lol
Bill Wallace it's to bad he didn't grow up in the UFC Era he would have been a Champion. He was ahead of the time, Kickboxing, Wrestling, Judo, With some Sambo & BJJ Bill Wallace would have been awesome. The Heck with Dillman he is a Cancer on Martial art's so is Steven Seagal. Combat Sambo 4 Ever 👍🙏
@@frankperrella1202 seagal is at least a legit aikido guy. His size and stature does work in his favour. Dillman is an actual bullshito. Seagal might be a lot of things, but his blood sweat and tears were earned in a dojo. He reinvented aikido in Hollywood thru his wifes father's dojo. Seagal was delusional, but he did attribute to martial arts popularity in the west just as much as Bruce Lee, maybe less impact as Bruce Lee literally introduced martial arts to the west, but seagal is from the 2nd wave. Like Van damm. Street karate lol
My grandfather recently passed away. He had really cool bar in his basement and I was told to take anything I wanted. All I wanted was a wooden sign on the wall that had this same quote. I saw it since I was very young and always loved it. I never knew where the quote was from. Your comment hit me hard lol
George trying to pass his methods off to women as self-defence is pretty terrifying. Imagine believing that you had some powerful tactics against an assailant … and then being confronted with the truth about George’s lies in the worst possible way 😬😬😬
It's worse when you're a guy. I tried to defend myself against a group of 🍉🍗🍉🍗🍉🍗 and was held down and gang r'd. I guess they had their tongues in the right position.
That's true for 99% martial arts, not just women. What karate gonna do when a big black monkey stands in front of u w a knife? What does jiu jitsu kungfu tai chi gonna do when someone starts throwing sucker punches at you? Nothing. Martial arts is a scam and FALSE self defense. TO MEN AND WONEN they walk away thinking they're terminators
Not so much try not at all these guys are B's I been in martial arts a long time and these guys with there so called technics would be knocked out or laughed right out of the dojo
@@mike2312p Those were the glory days. I hate where martial arts has gone. Everyone wants to do MMA. Well you know what? MMA is superboring. If you aren’t promising me a way to throw fireballs or something equally at home in Street Fighter 2 and/or Mortal Kombat, you just wasting my freaking time. And none of that was said ironically.
I just wish George Dillman was around when Count Dante was blowing up rival dojos in Chicago. That would have been a far better martial arts tournament than any Bruce Lee movie could ever dish out.
Dilman is thoroughly full of it & possibly insane. Though I will say Ali wouldnt have wanted to punch anyone in the street. His fists were too valuable & if he was to break his hand it would be a disaster. Stupidest thing a pro fighter could do is fight in the street. Especially if they aren't getting paid for it.
you know I was just going to comment in all seriousness, that he looks and sounds so convinced of what he is saying that I entertained the possibility of him having some sort of delusional disorder.
What are you talking about? Mechanics always work on random cars in the streets for free. And chefs always cook random things they find in alleyway dumpsters. Just last week, I saw a guy laying tile on the side of the road.
Bas Rutten respected his fists for the weapons god made them, and reserved them for the streets, bitch slapping livers, and jaws, off any body foolish enough to put em up, in the ropes. Maybe if Ali wasn't some prancy dancer he wouldn't have needed a bodyguard🤨 For real tho, watch some of Bas, or another, training palm strikes, if you ever work a bag, or like to train. A closed fist is very effective at certain strikes, but alot of boxing is based around the gloves, and some hooks place better with a palm, if you aren't all wrapped up. Can really grab the ground, turn in, and give it what you've got, without feeling like you may have permanently damaged uour wrist
Dillman had a school here in my hometown. I have friends who were students of his before all the pressure point BS. He was a very skilled karate practicioner and teacher. His students were beasts on the tournament circuit. Before he went off the deep end.
@Konservative Kirby XI My brother in Christ; there is literal footage of him trying it on someone not a student, no master just a random reporter, and nothing happens.
@Konservative Kirby XI lol. That pressure point crap is FOR SUCKERS. Karate got exposed by mma and boxing. Mma is the real deal. I can't believe there are people out there that still believe in Dillmans crap.
There was another video on a UA-cam a few years back that pointed out a lot of these people do seem to be knocked out. Either they’re great at selling or believe in it so much they convince themselves to be knocked out at a slight touch. Strange stuff right? Clearly Dillman can’t be paying all these people enough to play along and never mention it was all fake.
@@donkeysaurusrex7881 Just like a person that wants to be hypnotized by a hypnotherapist, his students desire to please him causes the manifestation of said symptoms. When the techniques fail on everyone but his students you know something is up.
Some scientists went and let Dillman try his No Touch knock-outs on them. They didn’t work. But his pressure point techniques do work and the scientists didn’t question those. If you question those pressure point techniques, and you have any balls, go let him try it on you. I’m sure you won’t.
I remember reading an article on this guy. The article was written by the late Erle Montague, who was an Australian practitioner and teacher of the internal arts (Tai Chi and Bagua in particular). He considered that Dillman's pressure point stuff was dangerous, but in the sense of "medically risky" rather than "martially effective".
No, I don’t think you can do better. You never went and let him or any of his millions of students try the pressure point techniques on you. And you never will because you’re afraid. That stuff is real and can kill you. His explanations of the techniques are extremely ignorant. But the physical techniques work. And I have karate experience over fifty years with masters of kyokushin, shotokan, goju ryu, and yoseikan, in the US and Japan. He’s a bit of a hillbilly, and his no-touch stuff is bullshit, but the pressure point stuff is real.
@@aikibaby please don’t try and come here and post this piss poor resume of fakeness claiming to be an expert on everything (rolls eyes). Sorry, it doesn’t work…at all. It’s nothing, there’s no secrets - nothing. I doubt you were ever even an athlete to spout such nonsense. Go to a REAL school and understand that real techniques require real training and things that appear to be nonsense are exactly that. Pressure points are a joke as is your training. Get out of here with that
@@aikibaby Don't know who your comment is aimed at, but the use of "let" is an interesting tell. "Let" him or any of his millions (sic) of students try the pressure point techniques on you. If they were or are that good, they'll be able to make it work in a proper situation. Not a "stick your arm out and let me locate this precise point so I can hit it" way.
I really wish people would stop quoting that garbage. It really should be called "The Art of DUH!" You could easily just make a random Sun Tzu quote generator, full of completely obvious things that sound wiser than they are, and it would be indistinguishable from the real thing. Most of the people who quote it everywhere, haven't even read it. If they had....they'd be a lot less impressed with themselves.
*People often make the mistake to think that Dillman was once legit and slowly got downhill from there. This is not true. He's always been at best a very mediocre and unremarkable practitioner which is why he came up with the crazy BS, because his skills didn't match the expectations he had.*
He was a good teacher in the early days and was one of the first to actually study the medical side effects of kyusho. Unfortunately he let fame and ego go to his head and stomach😂
9:13 -- MMA and pro wrestling legend, Dan "The Beast" Severn! 😎💪 Also, your final thoughts on George Dillman, in my opinion, are a fair assessment of the man. A guy who was a legitimate martial artist, but knew he could get rich by slinging bullshido. And, fair play, it seems to have worked out nicely for the man, so I can't fault him in that regard. Still, I have to wonder how he would feel if his bullshido ended up getting some ignorant sap killed.
Love severns podcast, and his fights. Pretty sure bullshido has gotten alot of folk curb stomped, to finality. I've seen it take folk to my aid station, a life time ago. Real martial arts can aswell, pretty sure it's common knowledge now, but DONT TRY JUJITSU IN A BAR FIGHT. DONT GO TO THE GROUND IN A BAR FIGHT. IF PEOPLE ARE FIGHTING, AND STAMPEDING, AND YOU'RE ON THE GROUND, YOU MAY DIE.
@@Scp716creativecommons Yep, Severn is the man! Also, I think that's good advice to avoid the ground in many instances, like if you find yourself in a fight on hard asphalt or concrete, if the person you're fighting isn't alone, etc. I'd recommend Paul Vunak's self-defense videos (many of which can be found on UA-cam). He even has some videos that go over scenarios in bars. He never once goes to the ground in any of those videos.
@@Fluoride_Jones when i was a kid, in the 90s, my friends from more rural parts learned to use bb guns, and .22, in high school basement gun ranges, so they understood the danger, and how to catch a meal, if it ever came to it. Imagine if they just taught the basics of wrestling, and boxing, to school kids? No sparring, just bag, and pad work, nice and cheap, but then they'd at least have some understanding, just in case. It's funny, i probably recognize the names of dozens of bullshido mfers on the webs, but the guy you mentioned don't ring any bells, which makes me guess he's showing some actually useful things🤣 A phone with web access means we all carry greater knowledge than the whole library of Alexandria with us, but general ignorance allows the sparkly bs to seem possible, so there are still plenty of people who think Stegall is the apex of martial prowess. It's going the way of the dodo tho, folk like fighting, and the light of attention burns all that shadow play up
Back in the late 80's I periodically trained with one of Seiyu Oyata's senior students, the late Jim Logue. He was a great guy. When Dillman's name came up it was a very negative atmosphere. Oyata had no use for him.
I can vouch for Sensei Frog’s techniques. I was repeatedly knocked unconscious several times while watching his videos. The Punching Pepe is the real deal.
Same as uri geller who claimed to bend metal with his mind and you can see literally bending the cutlery with his hands and then saying "look how it just bent by itself".
Very true! Not many martial artists can do the splits (the vast majority can't), so this skill is very impressive for any age, and you're right, all the more so at his when this video was taken... Which makes it even more perplexing why he chose to go the way of the BS when he's clearly capable of developing and maintaining legitimate physical skills...!
I kept a straight face until he broke the board over his head while shouting in tongues. Then I couldn't stop laughing for at least 3 minutes. 😂 You, sir, have a new subscriber.
@@annjepsen1621 not to mention the ice was drilled to weaken it anyway. I laughed my ass off at his slip and reset on the first set of blocks. It only got better from there.
It certainly works! I've been walking around with my tongue to the side of my mouth for years and I've never been hit by a death touch! Explain that, skeptics!
You only did that when the wind blow from the west on a sunny day in june. If you had the guts to do that when the wind blows from the north on a rainy day in november, you would end up in a coffin.
As alluded to in the video, it's not just the touchless knockouts that are nonsensical. All of pressure point stuff is. Some techniques hurt or are annoying. Potentially, you can use painful techniques for pain compliance (this can be perfectly legitimate -things such as "joint locks") but the vast majority of the techniques taught as pressure point techniques cannot even be used in that way (or will work very, very poorly if you tried to). Like the video points out, there's a reason you don't see these techniques used in competition. Realistically, most of what these instructors teach will either have no effect or just annoy an opponent enough to piss them off. Curiously, these pressure point techniques will seem to work on most people in these kinds of workshops but this is more of a social phenomenon (being influenced by a pressure to conform -in some smaller number of cases maybe even being particularly suggestible) than an indication of their effectiveness. The people who seem immune to these techniques are simply not that special (I'm one such person). We just don't go along with the pretense of these things working.
It looks a lot like stage hypnosis to me. Have a look at clips of people doing a "handshake induction" and tell me it doesn't look like a pressure point knockout in different wrapping
Quite entertaining. I was intrigued by Dillman when I was a younger martial artist back in the 80's due to all of his coverage in Black Belt magazine. My view over the years changed and I see him as a huckster selling snake oil.
Went to a Dillman seminar he was doing no touch knockouts and moving people with chi. I got asked to come up to show the power of chi moving people, so I go to middle of hall floor with and he tells me he will not touch me but move me with the power of chi. I was thinking to myself 'ok now I will see if this is complete BS or not' and I was adamant that if he tried any tricks to get me to move I'd stay firmly in place and not move. So he is talking about chi / ki and saying what he is going to do, then I heard flatulence noise coming from him but it was quiet not loud noise, then he put out his arms to move me with chi, I stood there thinking I will not move but then a fierce pungent flatulence smell hit me, really pungent and nasty so I moved back to get away from it. Then Dillman said to seminar participants that is the power of chi, I'm thinking you dirty swine you broke wind and I moved to get away from the fierce smell but I did not call him out on it and then the seminar continued with us practicing this no touch move people with chi technique. I think Dillman is a legit Karate expert but the no touch stuff is nonsense and unproven under scientific conditions.
It's quite easy to get suckered into some of these 'Qi (chi)' moves if you practice a traditional martial art. I trained in JuJitsu for several years and most of it was awesome, joint locks, throws, chokes etc but now and then the instructor would throw in some random $hit which felt a lot like larping. An example was this move where you have a person stand next to you either side, then they each take hold of your wrist and you walk with them forwards then suddenly bring your arms up forwards and in a circular motion wheel down and behind you. The two stooges were supposed to go into a forward role either side. It was an awkward moment, a few of us did it as we were prompted to but some just immediately stood their ground and didn't play along. I just did it because it was just good flexibility to go into a roll and I guess conserve momentum or some crap but it felt exactly like some of this fake $hit on here. I also remember feeling invincible at school because I trained Shotokan karate and we were never supposed to use it outside because it was lethal and could kill people. I ended up getting into a fight in town with this kid once and he just overwhelmed me. He didn't stay stationary in front of me, he kept running at me, arms windmilling. I tried to run back to get space for kicks but it was useless. We never trained any other punches other than those ridiculous straight punches where your other arm is cocked ready at your opposite hip. The whole thing was f%&king embarrassing, people saw me running away and it really knocked my confidence. I have a feeling this false confidence 'it's too lethal to spar' attitude and 'I'll only use it in a real fight' is really dangerous because you think you have an edge but the reality you got a whole lot of nothing. I honestly think 6 weeks of boxing would have been more beneficial for my confidence than 12 years of bs oriental martial arts. Was my fault for idolising Bruce Lee and his movies and ninjas as a kid 😁
Bruce Lee actually encouraged blending different systems of martial arts to make up your own system that was tailored for you. Hence the creation of Jeet Kune Do.
No, Bruce Lee was very legit. The problem here is mystifying martial arts, seeing it as some form of "magical exotic orient chinaman thing" that is "so full of mistery and secret deadly buddhist ninja knowledge" or whatever. That's what the fools who fall for those martial charlatans like dillman obviously believe
One of his disciples lives about 15 min away from me. He’s pretty high ranking and deaf. He had some article about how he made some of his sign language into martial arts moves, it was a horrible article and it was local way back in the day. I looked him up again like 10 years ago. I was really into martial arts and really wanted to call his business (I think he just taught privates) but really just felt sorry for him.
In the late 90s, one of my Jujitsu friends went to his seminar and volunteered to be his test dummy. When his pressure point techniques failed on him repeatedly, he then said something to the effect that my friend's qi was too strong and that's why the techniques didn't work.
As a 15 year old ju-jitsu-ka I remember that sometimes the instructor (who was legit) would demonstrate a technique on your that didn't really work. You would play along with it, because you didn't want them to look bad. It isn't such a massive stretch from that to the bullshido masters. See also 'cognitive dissonance'.
Anyone who’s ever been in any martial arts knows those boards break supra easy. They’re like balsa wood and whatever wood you use is cut opposite the grain so the boards break right at the line.
The conclusion was accurate I think. A good martial artists for his day. The chi stuff appears to be a sort of insanity and also a con. Martial arts students in the pre UFC days did seem to have cult like tendencies often pronouncing instructors with nary a documented actual fight as the baddest man on the planet. So when hit with projected chi the power of suggestion made students go down. It would have been funny to see a Dillman project his chi on someone like Tank Abbot. lol
When I was 10 years old, and living at my grandpas house, my friend next door and I, started messing around with the power tools in the basement. We had the bright idea of sawing boards in half, gluing them together (like really crappy glue that had only dried like 10 minutes), then we took that board, found the nearest adult, and proceeded to astound them by karate chopping the board in half. We did this to my grandpa, and with a flat look on his face, said, ok, now turn the board the other way, against the grain. Well of course that didn't work. And he yelled at us for running a bunch of good lumber screwing around. When I see Dillman chopping boards in half, with the grain, all I can think of is this: 'I was better than that at age 10, and my grandfather would kick your ass for ruining perfectly good lumber' Dillman? More like Dill-hole-y-cow.
I misread that as the "Benny Hill" of martial arts, and immediately thought that the video would be improved by playing "Yakkety Sax" over some of the footage. But yes, the comparison to Hinn is apt.
This one is sad. I remember as a kid reading about him in the magazines. He was legit. But somehow strayed. I also remember him marrying his student Kim Fritz. She was way younger then him. If memory serves me she was 13 when she started training under him.
I know a student of Seyiu Oyata. That old Okinawan was legit. They used Bogu Kumite - full contact free sparring with protective equipment. Heard nothing but good things about Oyata.
Yes, and Dillman took his teachings, wrapped fantastical stories around them and sold them. But I know that the way Dillman teaches Oyata's techniques are meant to confuse rather than clarify. The accupuncture points were never a part of the Kyusho Oyata taught - Dillman invented the connection because the maoist-made TCM system fit the oriental-exotic bill well and enabled him to basically sell every single point separately, rather than the far more intuitively and practical system that Oyata was doing.
It's pretty easy to build a tolerance to it though. In fact massaging that point is part of a common mewing technique. Imagine your pressure point technique not working because the other guy does jawline exercises to look like handsome Squidward.
The art of the con is tell people what they want to hear. If you a nerdy kid who weighs 100lb soaking wet, do you want to be told that you've to do years of strenuous training or that you can just watch a video about pressure points?
You tell people that behind door A, they have to sweat, have their ego and body battered, and they'll learn that nothing is certain, something can always go wrong, but their skills will be legit, and behind door B, they don't have to sweat, they don't have their ego and body battered, they'll learn that their techniques will work 100% of the time, but they'll never get to test them (and possibly get their ego and body battered)...which door do you think most people will choose?
Bushido is not the same as Bullshido. Dillman was a good martial artist. When he was younger. I think the fame just got to his head and he found a way to make money out of suckers.
I agree, he was a legit martial artist (various Japanese arts) in the early 1970s but that was 50 years ago. He got caught up in non-contact chi nonsense and overemphasizing the importance of pressure points at the expense of traditional kick and punch techniques. The result is that at age 80, he is widely considered a martial arts fraud.
Hitting pressure points does in fact hurt a lot. It won't knock someone out though. Those kinds of strikes are also extremely precise to actually hit. The easiest points to hit are also some of the easier to defend because all you have to do is move a little. If you have the time to hit someone in a pressure point, you have the time to hit them a few times in a way that doesn't require such insane precision and also much more effective anyway.
your explanation is actually really precise and makes allot of sense, I feel like allot of this masters fail to mention this simple details about pressure points
And you know what martial art has mastered pressure points to perfection? Boxing. In TMA it's just a circle jerk that looks cool and has no legit value because it's not pressure tested. Most so called pressure points in TMA don't work but liver, kidney. Or solar plexus are highly effective if a boxer is trained
@@nobodynoone2500 easily defeated by a high pain threshold... My buddy was studying Tai chi and would test the pressure points joint locks on me. they didn't really work and it would have been better if he just punched me in the face.
I’ve been behind him and heard him take over 600 zombies and make them disappear before anyone ever showed up. When I opened my eyes there were absolutely none around.
My dad was a boxer in the 80s and did rough work for drug dealers. One time my mom put me in a bullshito mcdojo. Dad came a bit early to pick me up and watched for a minute then started laughing and chirping on the instructors and lipped them the whole time. The instructor grew frustrated and asked him to stop to which my dad replied by just stepping to him and asking if he thought he could make him. The instructor just went quiet and finished as my dad kept chirping for the last 15 minutes. I went to like 3 more classes and there were less students each time.
@@jasonrose6288 lol I never said my dad was a nice guy. He was however always honest and straight forward and would call out fake people when he saw them. I think it is worse to sell a bull class to people who don't know any better.
One thing, what George Dillman does is better described as "bullshido" than bushido. Bullshido is the ancient martial art of conning marks out of their money. It's a legendary art practiced for millennia.
Pressure points work in the dojo, but in a real fight against a determined opponent, not so much. However, there’s a “pimp chop” video where a martial arts teacher KOd an actual pimp with a shuto uki strike to the carotid artery in a real street confrontation. It’s fkn hilarious.
Back in school, I once got punched right to the solarplexus from a classmate with whom I got into a little fight. It was one of the most frightening experiences I ever had in my life. I couldn't breath right for over an hour after I got punched, and had to lay flat the whole time. These weak points are no joke.
I don’t think anyone says pressure points aren’t real. Anyone knows that some points hurt more or cause reflex reactions, etc… it’s just that 1) it’s really hard to hit them in an actual fight and 2) they aren’t magic.
Yeah, but there’s an actual known medical explanation for what happened to you. You can Force all the air out of someone’s lungs in a way that it takes time for them breath again. And it is terrifying the first time it happens to you because it frightening and causes every fiber of your being to cry out that you’re about to freaking die.
I ve boxes for 6 years and know that when you get a ko you don’t go down like any of these guys. Your legs give away immediately and you fall very awkward. No movie like fall
oh as well!! congratulations on a million channel views :D it'll be cool to see when the algorithm starts picking up ur really good back catalogue and properly recommends them !!! ❤❤
Please note a mistake in the video. Dillman was born 23rd November 1942 and I mistakenly said 1972 👍
Yeah , I think MLK was killed in 72. I know he is a bullshido master but 1 year old in the army is a stretch even for him.
I was just about to post this lol. I was thinking wow that’s a rough 50 years old
Thank you because I was just about to post that oh my god he's only 5 years older than me! He looks FKN TERRIBLE for 50!!😂
@@deankilminster5430 All that Chi takes it toll on the body.
@@wakazuzu very true. That explains it
If Rodney Dangerfield was a martial artist.
+🦔OuchMouse🦔
Makes sense, considering Dillman gets no respect! 🤣
Hahaha I knew he reminded me of someone
i get no respect im telling ya!
Oh that's not Dangerfield man it was very very funny .
AAAAAHHHHHHAAAA 😂😂😂😂😂😂
One of his black belts fought at the 1997 Oyama's Kyokuoshin tournament. As soon as we saw him me and my trainer asked "Does he know this a knockdown tourney?" as we started laughing. This is a full contact, no pads, and it is for serious fighters. Knockdown tournaments are for trained fighters and not point fighters.
The Dilman BB drew Takinori from Japan. Takinori hit him with 2 leg kicks which Dilmans' BB didn't check, block but took them. The next kick was a round kick to the head. It landed perfect as he reached for the leg kick. He fell unconscious and was out for 10 minutes. They removed him by ambulance.
Guys like Dilman are a cancer on martial arts.
I can see him going "DEUGH!! DEUGH!!" as the kicks come his way 😂
That’s sad on so many levels
Dude holy SHIT. Idk much about fighting competitively but that made me laugh, particularly the part about “he didn’t ‘block’ the kicks he just took them” lol
Bill Wallace it's to bad he didn't grow up in the UFC Era he would have been a Champion. He was ahead of the time, Kickboxing, Wrestling, Judo, With some Sambo & BJJ Bill Wallace would have been awesome. The Heck with Dillman he is a Cancer on Martial art's so is Steven Seagal. Combat Sambo 4 Ever 👍🙏
@@frankperrella1202 seagal is at least a legit aikido guy. His size and stature does work in his favour.
Dillman is an actual bullshito.
Seagal might be a lot of things, but his blood sweat and tears were earned in a dojo. He reinvented aikido in Hollywood thru his wifes father's dojo.
Seagal was delusional, but he did attribute to martial arts popularity in the west just as much as Bruce Lee, maybe less impact as Bruce Lee literally introduced martial arts to the west, but seagal is from the 2nd wave. Like Van damm. Street karate lol
“If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, then baffle them with bullsh*t”. - W.C. Fields
I never heard of that quote, but it is an something we’ve seen done countless times everyday in the News, and sometimes in person.
He definitely took that second part to heart. lol
You are saying bullshido. Not bushido right?
My grandfather recently passed away. He had really cool bar in his basement and I was told to take anything I wanted. All I wanted was a wooden sign on the wall that had this same quote. I saw it since I was very young and always loved it. I never knew where the quote was from. Your comment hit me hard lol
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." -- Albert Einstein 😂
At least he admitted that Ali would beat him in the ring. Steve Seagal would be like "can I laugh in your face?"
American! They always are😂
George trying to pass his methods off to women as self-defence is pretty terrifying. Imagine believing that you had some powerful tactics against an assailant … and then being confronted with the truth about George’s lies in the worst possible way 😬😬😬
That's the point when his shit stop to be funny - 🥶😭😭😭🤮
It's worse when you're a guy. I tried to defend myself against a group of 🍉🍗🍉🍗🍉🍗 and was held down and gang r'd. I guess they had their tongues in the right position.
That's true for 99% martial arts, not just women. What karate gonna do when a big black monkey stands in front of u w a knife?
What does jiu jitsu kungfu tai chi gonna do when someone starts throwing sucker punches at you? Nothing. Martial arts is a scam and FALSE self defense. TO MEN AND WONEN they walk away thinking they're terminators
Very true, it’s entertainment not self defence
don't be sexist! EVERYBODY KNOWS WOMEN ARE JUST AS STRONG AS MEN! YOU BIGOTED SCUM!
I can't look at George Dillman without thinking of him as some sort of character being played by Rodney Dangerfield.
Well, he definitely gets no respect. Not that he deserves it.
They do look alike.
American! They always are😂
If I ever met George Dillman in a dark alley, I'd keep my two big toes raised, just in case.
😂😂😂😂😂
I do this all the time now #StayReady
When I started studying Karate in '76, Mr. Dillman was a respected Master...Nowadays, not so much...
Time has most definitely not been kind to sensei dillhole. God I wish I was around back when you could convince people you were a wizard.
Not so much try not at all these guys are B's I been in martial arts a long time and these guys with there so called technics would be knocked out or laughed right out of the dojo
When someone get drunk too many times reading about Qi-gong loosing the capability of distinguish reality from the misunderstanding.
That’s because people didn’t know any better in ‘76
@@mike2312p Those were the glory days. I hate where martial arts has gone. Everyone wants to do MMA. Well you know what? MMA is superboring. If you aren’t promising me a way to throw fireballs or something equally at home in Street Fighter 2 and/or Mortal Kombat, you just wasting my freaking time. And none of that was said ironically.
I’m a sucker for fake martial arts, some of the funniest shit of all time. Easy decision to subscribe to your channel. Bravo sir
The bull$hitters can always rationalize it with the, “My style only fails in MMA, but would work in a real fight” line.
It’s funny until an uninformed female student of his tries to use his bogus techniques on a rapist and it doesn’t end well for her.
I just wish George Dillman was around when Count Dante was blowing up rival dojos in Chicago. That would have been a far better martial arts tournament than any Bruce Lee movie could ever dish out.
LMAO!!! bro, you are KILLIN' me!!!! lolololol!!!!!!
Dilman is thoroughly full of it & possibly insane. Though I will say Ali wouldnt have wanted to punch anyone in the street. His fists were too valuable & if he was to break his hand it would be a disaster. Stupidest thing a pro fighter could do is fight in the street. Especially if they aren't getting paid for it.
Fair point 👍
you know I was just going to comment in all seriousness, that he looks and sounds so convinced of what he is saying that I entertained the possibility of him having some sort of delusional disorder.
What are you talking about? Mechanics always work on random cars in the streets for free. And chefs always cook random things they find in alleyway dumpsters. Just last week, I saw a guy laying tile on the side of the road.
Some people just like to fight
Bas Rutten respected his fists for the weapons god made them, and reserved them for the streets, bitch slapping livers, and jaws, off any body foolish enough to put em up, in the ropes. Maybe if Ali wasn't some prancy dancer he wouldn't have needed a bodyguard🤨
For real tho, watch some of Bas, or another, training palm strikes, if you ever work a bag, or like to train. A closed fist is very effective at certain strikes, but alot of boxing is based around the gloves, and some hooks place better with a palm, if you aren't all wrapped up. Can really grab the ground, turn in, and give it what you've got, without feeling like you may have permanently damaged uour wrist
Dillman had a school here in my hometown. I have friends who were students of his before all the pressure point BS. He was a very skilled karate practicioner and teacher. His students were beasts on the tournament circuit. Before he went off the deep end.
@Konservative Kirby XI *was
so do you think his pressure point stuff was legit?
@Konservative Kirby XI My brother in Christ; there is literal footage of him trying it on someone not a student, no master just a random reporter, and nothing happens.
@Konservative Kirby XI yikes 🤣
@Konservative Kirby XI lol. That pressure point crap is FOR SUCKERS. Karate got exposed by mma and boxing. Mma is the real deal. I can't believe there are people out there that still believe in Dillmans crap.
"Somebody help me revive this fake knockout victim." -- George Dillman
There was another video on a UA-cam a few years back that pointed out a lot of these people do seem to be knocked out. Either they’re great at selling or believe in it so much they convince themselves to be knocked out at a slight touch. Strange stuff right? Clearly Dillman can’t be paying all these people enough to play along and never mention it was all fake.
@@donkeysaurusrex7881 Just like a person that wants to be hypnotized by a hypnotherapist, his students desire to please him causes the manifestation of said symptoms. When the techniques fail on everyone but his students you know something is up.
Somebody better know fake CPR
Some scientists went and let Dillman try his No Touch knock-outs on them. They didn’t work.
But his pressure point techniques do work and the scientists didn’t question those.
If you question those pressure point techniques, and you have any balls, go let him try it on you.
I’m sure you won’t.
@@aikibabyAs stated in the video, pressure points can be sore - being headbutted on the nose or kicked in the balls is worse.
I remember reading an article on this guy. The article was written by the late Erle Montague, who was an Australian practitioner and teacher of the internal arts (Tai Chi and Bagua in particular). He considered that Dillman's pressure point stuff was dangerous, but in the sense of "medically risky" rather than "martially effective".
It’s nonsense and won’t do anything to anybody
No, I don’t think you can do better. You never went and let him or any of his millions of students try the pressure point techniques on you. And you never will because you’re afraid. That stuff is real and can kill you. His explanations of the techniques are extremely ignorant. But the physical techniques work. And I have karate experience over fifty years with masters of kyokushin, shotokan, goju ryu, and yoseikan, in the US and Japan. He’s a bit of a hillbilly, and his no-touch stuff is bullshit, but the pressure point stuff is real.
@@aikibaby please don’t try and come here and post this piss poor resume of fakeness claiming to be an expert on everything (rolls eyes). Sorry, it doesn’t work…at all. It’s nothing, there’s no secrets - nothing. I doubt you were ever even an athlete to spout such nonsense. Go to a REAL school and understand that real techniques require real training and things that appear to be nonsense are exactly that. Pressure points are a joke as is your training. Get out of here with that
@@aikibaby Don't know who your comment is aimed at, but the use of "let" is an interesting tell. "Let" him or any of his millions (sic) of students try the pressure point techniques on you. If they were or are that good, they'll be able to make it work in a proper situation. Not a "stick your arm out and let me locate this precise point so I can hit it" way.
@@Kungfuking505 the art of " attack me in this way " is surely the only art one needs
“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War
"Sneak into that hole."
-George Dillman
@@dakistle 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I really wish people would stop quoting that garbage. It really should be called "The Art of DUH!" You could easily just make a random Sun Tzu quote generator, full of completely obvious things that sound wiser than they are, and it would be indistinguishable from the real thing. Most of the people who quote it everywhere, haven't even read it. If they had....they'd be a lot less impressed with themselves.
"buffet table is open"
- George Dillman
that is not what he meant. LOL ..
For the ladies who took his defense class I feel sorry if you were ever in trouble and figured out he wasn't going to fly off of you.
All this dude wants to do is squirt his chi all over peoples’ faces…
I couldn't stop laughing about the edditing and the plain stupidity of some things :D
*People often make the mistake to think that Dillman was once legit and slowly got downhill from there. This is not true. He's always been at best a very mediocre and unremarkable practitioner which is why he came up with the crazy BS, because his skills didn't match the expectations he had.*
Absolutely!
Great video. You don't need to be a martial arts master to see all the sadness behind that guys face.
I'll bet 3.5 million dollars buys a lot of happiness, 😀
@@robertodell9193 all it cost him was his credibility and reputation
@@robertodell9193money doesn't buy happiness , personal experience that's currently experiencing right now
Sadness? The dude has bulging pop out eyes. Disgusting not sad
Sneak in to that hole. 😂 that edit was amazing I can’t stop laughing 5:31
"I don't know if I should say that on film" Yeah George you shouldn't have....
He was a good teacher in the early days and was one of the first to actually study the medical side effects of kyusho. Unfortunately he let fame and ego go to his head and stomach😂
It's a sad testament about our culture in that this is how he got rich!
He was a conman, nothing more...
@@BadCase Correct!
The big potato Dillman has the stomach so big because of all that magical chi in it.
Ego happens to so many American men in small towns. Think they're bigshots but it's all in their own mind
9:13 -- MMA and pro wrestling legend, Dan "The Beast" Severn! 😎💪
Also, your final thoughts on George Dillman, in my opinion, are a fair assessment of the man. A guy who was a legitimate martial artist, but knew he could get rich by slinging bullshido. And, fair play, it seems to have worked out nicely for the man, so I can't fault him in that regard. Still, I have to wonder how he would feel if his bullshido ended up getting some ignorant sap killed.
He was a traditional martial artist. He did kata n nonsense.
Most karate is nonsense
Love severns podcast, and his fights.
Pretty sure bullshido has gotten alot of folk curb stomped, to finality. I've seen it take folk to my aid station, a life time ago.
Real martial arts can aswell, pretty sure it's common knowledge now, but
DONT TRY JUJITSU IN A BAR FIGHT. DONT GO TO THE GROUND IN A BAR FIGHT. IF PEOPLE ARE FIGHTING, AND STAMPEDING, AND YOU'RE ON THE GROUND, YOU MAY DIE.
@@Scp716creativecommons Yep, Severn is the man! Also, I think that's good advice to avoid the ground in many instances, like if you find yourself in a fight on hard asphalt or concrete, if the person you're fighting isn't alone, etc. I'd recommend Paul Vunak's self-defense videos (many of which can be found on UA-cam). He even has some videos that go over scenarios in bars. He never once goes to the ground in any of those videos.
@@Fluoride_Jones when i was a kid, in the 90s, my friends from more rural parts learned to use bb guns, and .22, in high school basement gun ranges, so they understood the danger, and how to catch a meal, if it ever came to it.
Imagine if they just taught the basics of wrestling, and boxing, to school kids? No sparring, just bag, and pad work, nice and cheap, but then they'd at least have some understanding, just in case.
It's funny, i probably recognize the names of dozens of bullshido mfers on the webs, but the guy you mentioned don't ring any bells, which makes me guess he's showing some actually useful things🤣
A phone with web access means we all carry greater knowledge than the whole library of Alexandria with us, but general ignorance allows the sparkly bs to seem possible, so there are still plenty of people who think Stegall is the apex of martial prowess. It's going the way of the dodo tho, folk like fighting, and the light of attention burns all that shadow play up
Ain’t his fault some dude had both his big toes raised.
His most deadly move "the crazy eye"
i think its great that someone with learning disabilaties gives it a go,good on him i say!
😂
Back in the late 80's I periodically trained with one of Seiyu Oyata's senior students, the late Jim Logue. He was a great guy. When Dillman's name came up it was a very negative atmosphere. Oyata had no use for him.
Great documentary. One of your best work so far. Keep up
Thanks 😁
I can vouch for Sensei Frog’s techniques. I was repeatedly knocked unconscious several times while watching his videos. The Punching Pepe is the real deal.
He sure hits a lot of people with his no touch knock outs😆
Same as uri geller who claimed to bend metal with his mind and you can see literally bending the cutlery with his hands and then saying "look how it just bent by itself".
Him doing the splits and touching his head to the ground was actually impressive. In particular for his age!
Maybe the only legit skill he achieved in his martial arts journey
Thats the one legit thing that did impress me too
Very true!
Not many martial artists can do the splits (the vast majority can't), so this skill is very impressive for any age, and you're right, all the more so at his when this video was taken...
Which makes it even more perplexing why he chose to go the way of the BS when he's clearly capable of developing and maintaining legitimate physical skills...!
Yeah, but just pander to his ego - ask him to do that then kick him in the nuts & the head.
Not such a savvy martial artist now are we, George?
The best conmen are experts in their field
That belly bump at 9:56 literally has me wheezing ,holy shit thats hilarious
I kept a straight face until he broke the board over his head while shouting in tongues. Then I couldn't stop laughing for at least 3 minutes.
😂
You, sir, have a new subscriber.
Welcome 😁
For me it was his inability to break all the ice blocks, so he just shoved them over while yelling 😂
@@annjepsen1621 not to mention the ice was drilled to weaken it anyway. I laughed my ass off at his slip and reset on the first set of blocks. It only got better from there.
YEHE YEAHAHA OHYEAHH 🤣
you have my total respect. if you survived listening many hours of his seminars you are made of stronger stuff than all the masters!
One lecture is all it would take for me to tap out!
I can see he started on the good path then got astray with his no touch...
I'm sure he was always a scammer.
No touch is basically the perpetual motion machine of martial arts.
@@donkeysaurusrex7881 no my friend. No touch is just that no touch. Stop talking rubbish. Common sense before book, dude. 😒
It certainly works! I've been walking around with my tongue to the side of my mouth for years and I've never been hit by a death touch! Explain that, skeptics!
You only did that when the wind blow from the west on a sunny day in june. If you had the guts to do that when the wind blows from the north on a rainy day in november, you would end up in a coffin.
*From clown to laughing stock would be a more accurate title!*
Indeed it would!
*the amazing part is how so many volunteered to be his accomplice*
this
As alluded to in the video, it's not just the touchless knockouts that are nonsensical. All of pressure point stuff is.
Some techniques hurt or are annoying. Potentially, you can use painful techniques for pain compliance (this can be perfectly legitimate -things such as "joint locks") but the vast majority of the techniques taught as pressure point techniques cannot even be used in that way (or will work very, very poorly if you tried to).
Like the video points out, there's a reason you don't see these techniques used in competition. Realistically, most of what these instructors teach will either have no effect or just annoy an opponent enough to piss them off.
Curiously, these pressure point techniques will seem to work on most people in these kinds of workshops but this is more of a social phenomenon (being influenced by a pressure to conform -in some smaller number of cases maybe even being particularly suggestible) than an indication of their effectiveness. The people who seem immune to these techniques are simply not that special (I'm one such person). We just don't go along with the pretense of these things working.
It looks a lot like stage hypnosis to me. Have a look at clips of people doing a "handshake induction" and tell me it doesn't look like a pressure point knockout in different wrapping
I bet i could beat Jon Jones with some pressure point stuff tho
So he was born in 1972 but started martial arts in 1961....
Reincarnation?
He meant to say 1942, not 72.
So what, I took up martial arts before I was born😎Saved me lots of time
😂@@fasterman3
George Dillman has a bear skin rug on his floor, it's not dead or anything just afraid to move..😁
Quite entertaining. I was intrigued by Dillman when I was a younger martial artist back in the 80's due to all of his coverage in Black Belt magazine. My view over the years changed and I see him as a huckster selling snake oil.
God I love this channel. Your random insults are always so unexpected, but also exactly what everyone else is already thinking. Top tier stuff!
Thanks 😁
For sure, just got recommended this by the algorithm and his vids are top tier
Went to a Dillman seminar he was doing no touch knockouts and moving people with chi. I got asked to come up to show the power of chi moving people, so I go to middle of hall floor with and he tells me he will not touch me but move me with the power of chi. I was thinking to myself 'ok now I will see if this is complete BS or not' and I was adamant that if he tried any tricks to get me to move I'd stay firmly in place and not move. So he is talking about chi / ki and saying what he is going to do, then I heard flatulence noise coming from him but it was quiet not loud noise, then he put out his arms to move me with chi, I stood there thinking I will not move but then a fierce pungent flatulence smell hit me, really pungent and nasty so I moved back to get away from it. Then Dillman said to seminar participants that is the power of chi, I'm thinking you dirty swine you broke wind and I moved to get away from the fierce smell but I did not call him out on it and then the seminar continued with us practicing this no touch move people with chi technique. I think Dillman is a legit Karate expert but the no touch stuff is nonsense and unproven under scientific conditions.
He was born 1942. When I heard you say he was born in 1972 I was shocked he looked so old. Hurt my feelings since I was born in 73!!!
Yep. I was like how did he do all this stuff in the 60s if he was born in 72
@@donkeysaurusrex7881 Secret Bullshito techniques...
I remember him being on all the covers of the eighties martial arts magazines.
Rodney Dangerfields lesser known sibling!
People have been faking photos since the beginning of photography.
It's quite easy to get suckered into some of these 'Qi (chi)' moves if you practice a traditional martial art. I trained in JuJitsu for several years and most of it was awesome, joint locks, throws, chokes etc but now and then the instructor would throw in some random $hit which felt a lot like larping.
An example was this move where you have a person stand next to you either side, then they each take hold of your wrist and you walk with them forwards then suddenly bring your arms up forwards and in a circular motion wheel down and behind you. The two stooges were supposed to go into a forward role either side. It was an awkward moment, a few of us did it as we were prompted to but some just immediately stood their ground and didn't play along. I just did it because it was just good flexibility to go into a roll and I guess conserve momentum or some crap but it felt exactly like some of this fake $hit on here.
I also remember feeling invincible at school because I trained Shotokan karate and we were never supposed to use it outside because it was lethal and could kill people. I ended up getting into a fight in town with this kid once and he just overwhelmed me. He didn't stay stationary in front of me, he kept running at me, arms windmilling. I tried to run back to get space for kicks but it was useless. We never trained any other punches other than those ridiculous straight punches where your other arm is cocked ready at your opposite hip.
The whole thing was f%&king embarrassing, people saw me running away and it really knocked my confidence. I have a feeling this false confidence 'it's too lethal to spar' attitude and 'I'll only use it in a real fight' is really dangerous because you think you have an edge but the reality you got a whole lot of nothing.
I honestly think 6 weeks of boxing would have been more beneficial for my confidence than 12 years of bs oriental martial arts. Was my fault for idolising Bruce Lee and his movies and ninjas as a kid 😁
Bruce Lee actually encouraged blending different systems of martial arts to make up your own system that was tailored for you. Hence the creation of Jeet Kune Do.
@IRunWithTheDead ! Bruce Lee was genuine though, a real fighter, unlike these other systems
No, Bruce Lee was very legit. The problem here is mystifying martial arts, seeing it as some form of "magical exotic orient chinaman thing" that is "so full of mistery and secret deadly buddhist ninja knowledge" or whatever. That's what the fools who fall for those martial charlatans like dillman obviously believe
Ur calling "traditional martial arts" like ju jitsu and karate bullshit? Lol.
these trad martial arts aren't bad per say, they just need to be stress tested. i mean look at George St Pierre or Lyoto Machida.
I bet ive watched this video 30 times already. Commentary is hilarious.😂😂😂😂
He missed his true calling, should have been an evangelical TV preacher. I've seen them doing the no-touch knockouts too
George Dillman The Art of Dil-Do
lol. very good
@@paulbagnall5910 Cheers lol
Chef's kiss 👌
Ahhh, yes, the rare art of bullshido.
70's and early 80's , featured a few times in blackbelt magazine....that s why I always put no credence on the publication's so-called hall of fame.
This guy could write for Soldier of Fortune magazine.
One of his disciples lives about 15 min away from me. He’s pretty high ranking and deaf. He had some article about how he made some of his sign language into martial arts moves, it was a horrible article and it was local way back in the day.
I looked him up again like 10 years ago. I was really into martial arts and really wanted to call his business (I think he just taught privates) but really just felt sorry for him.
12:20 Moves like a true ninja. Such grace, yet so powerful at the same time.
lol. he is a comedian without realising it!
Another great video mate, thanks!
Anyone know the intro song please ? Cheers 👍
It's always the smallest men who tell the tallest tales...
I came here for the neck-slaps...WHERE ARE THE NECK-SLAPS
In the late 90s, one of my Jujitsu friends went to his seminar and volunteered to be his test dummy. When his pressure point techniques failed on him repeatedly, he then said something to the effect that my friend's qi was too strong and that's why the techniques didn't work.
Always an excuse.
Like when he told the reporter after hitting her that she didn't believe so it didn't work on her.lol
"It's not a lie if you believe it." George Costanza ---Seinfeld
This guy always cracked me TF up!
I always think the best way to describe him is a hypnotist.
come on man. why do these people play along with this? they aren't the ones making the money.. this is absolutely insane human behavior.
As a 15 year old ju-jitsu-ka I remember that sometimes the instructor (who was legit) would demonstrate a technique on your that didn't really work. You would play along with it, because you didn't want them to look bad. It isn't such a massive stretch from that to the bullshido masters. See also 'cognitive dissonance'.
Anyone who’s ever been in any martial arts knows those boards break supra easy. They’re like balsa wood and whatever wood you use is cut opposite the grain so the boards break right at the line.
The conclusion was accurate I think. A good martial artists for his day. The chi stuff appears to be a sort of insanity and also a con. Martial arts students in the pre UFC days did seem to have cult like tendencies often pronouncing instructors with nary a documented actual fight as the baddest man on the planet. So when hit with projected chi the power of suggestion made students go down. It would have been funny to see a Dillman project his chi on someone like Tank Abbot. lol
Well who’d want to tell folks their master wasn’t the baddest dude in town?
Wasn't there a few dojos in like LA or something in the 70s that literally went to war with each other? Deaths and all?
He's never been remotely good, only mediocre at best, I'm sorry to say.
When I was 10 years old, and living at my grandpas house, my friend next door and I, started messing around with the power tools in the basement. We had the bright idea of sawing boards in half, gluing them together (like really crappy glue that had only dried like 10 minutes), then we took that board, found the nearest adult, and proceeded to astound them by karate chopping the board in half. We did this to my grandpa, and with a flat look on his face, said, ok, now turn the board the other way, against the grain. Well of course that didn't work. And he yelled at us for running a bunch of good lumber screwing around. When I see Dillman chopping boards in half, with the grain, all I can think of is this: 'I was better than that at age 10, and my grandfather would kick your ass for ruining perfectly good lumber' Dillman? More like Dill-hole-y-cow.
Y'all come back now, ya hear?
George Dillman the Benny Hinn of Martial Arts !! Knocks you down without even touching you !!👍😀😀😀🥋🥋
I misread that as the "Benny Hill" of martial arts, and immediately thought that the video would be improved by playing "Yakkety Sax" over some of the footage. But yes, the comparison to Hinn is apt.
*Even at his "best", the guy was only a mediocre "martial artist". He never was a master in anything, and never will be.*
The fact that he actually convinced some people his b.s work😂
I was going to sign up at a kempo school, until the teacher said he travels around the country to study pressure points with Dillman. What a joke.
George, the menace 🙅🙆
Great master, 15' dan in 💩jutsu
The narration is spot on, I love it 😀
This one is sad. I remember as a kid reading about him in the magazines. He was legit. But somehow strayed. I also remember him marrying his student Kim Fritz. She was way younger then him. If memory serves me she was 13 when she started training under him.
How could you take seriously a guy that looks like he could be blinded by a light breeze.
I know a student of Seyiu Oyata. That old Okinawan was legit. They used Bogu Kumite - full contact free sparring with protective equipment. Heard nothing but good things about Oyata.
Yes, and Dillman took his teachings, wrapped fantastical stories around them and sold them. But I know that the way Dillman teaches Oyata's techniques are meant to confuse rather than clarify. The accupuncture points were never a part of the Kyusho Oyata taught - Dillman invented the connection because the maoist-made TCM system fit the oriental-exotic bill well and enabled him to basically sell every single point separately, rather than the far more intuitively and practical system that Oyata was doing.
That spot behind the ear will absolutely turn your lights out tho fr
It's pretty easy to build a tolerance to it though. In fact massaging that point is part of a common mewing technique.
Imagine your pressure point technique not working because the other guy does jawline exercises to look like handsome Squidward.
My question is, how can he convince so many people to go along with all those fake moves?
The art of the con is tell people what they want to hear. If you a nerdy kid who weighs 100lb soaking wet, do you want to be told that you've to do years of strenuous training or that you can just watch a video about pressure points?
Apparently, when a person really believes his own bullsh1t and talks to others loudly and convinci gly, he gets attention and followers.
Just drink the punch
It should be a reality check how just how many people are actually that gullible... That alone is the only shocking factor of this man's story.
You tell people that behind door A, they have to sweat, have their ego and body battered, and they'll learn that nothing is certain, something can always go wrong, but their skills will be legit, and behind door B, they don't have to sweat, they don't have their ego and body battered, they'll learn that their techniques will work 100% of the time, but they'll never get to test them (and possibly get their ego and body battered)...which door do you think most people will choose?
I like when people go unconscious with standing up, the chi lets them fall back safely.
Bushido is not the same as Bullshido. Dillman was a good martial artist. When he was younger. I think the fame just got to his head and he found a way to make money out of suckers.
I agree, he was a legit martial artist (various Japanese arts) in the early 1970s but that was 50 years ago. He got caught up in non-contact chi nonsense and overemphasizing the importance of pressure points at the expense of traditional kick and punch techniques. The result is that at age 80, he is widely considered a martial arts fraud.
"No Touch."
Those two words explain EVERYTHING! Yes, this guy is a joke.
Hitting pressure points does in fact hurt a lot. It won't knock someone out though. Those kinds of strikes are also extremely precise to actually hit. The easiest points to hit are also some of the easier to defend because all you have to do is move a little.
If you have the time to hit someone in a pressure point, you have the time to hit them a few times in a way that doesn't require such insane precision and also much more effective anyway.
your explanation is actually really precise and makes allot of sense, I feel like allot of this masters fail to mention this simple details about pressure points
And you know what martial art has mastered pressure points to perfection? Boxing. In TMA it's just a circle jerk that looks cool and has no legit value because it's not pressure tested. Most so called pressure points in TMA don't work but liver, kidney. Or solar plexus are highly effective if a boxer is trained
I mean yeah, but it's just nerve pain. It's not some secret art.
@@nobodynoone2500 easily defeated by a high pain threshold... My buddy was studying Tai chi and would test the pressure points joint locks on me. they didn't really work and it would have been better if he just punched me in the face.
I’ve been behind him and heard him take over 600 zombies and make them disappear before anyone ever showed up. When I opened my eyes there were absolutely none around.
My dad was a boxer in the 80s and did rough work for drug dealers. One time my mom put me in a bullshito mcdojo. Dad came a bit early to pick me up and watched for a minute then started laughing and chirping on the instructors and lipped them the whole time. The instructor grew frustrated and asked him to stop to which my dad replied by just stepping to him and asking if he thought he could make him.
The instructor just went quiet and finished as my dad kept chirping for the last 15 minutes. I went to like 3 more classes and there were less students each time.
Sounds quite rude, to be honest.
@@jasonrose6288 lol I never said my dad was a nice guy. He was however always honest and straight forward and would call out fake people when he saw them. I think it is worse to sell a bull class to people who don't know any better.
@JAC1982 Kids karate isn't really intended to be full blown street fighting, is it? It's about exercise, fun, discipline and so on.
@Lupita Familia some kind of karate. Just stupid air punches.
@@jasonrose6288 All "club karate" is about exercise, fun, discipline. It's an energetic social activity.
I stayed at his home in 93 he talked me into buying all his videos after time I lost faith as when asking a question his answer was buy another video
One thing, what George Dillman does is better described as "bullshido" than bushido.
Bullshido is the ancient martial art of conning marks out of their money. It's a legendary art practiced for millennia.
That is exactly what this whole video is about captain obvious
He was born in 1972, and yet won trophies between 1961 and 1972? Hmm.
Pressure points work in the dojo, but in a real fight against a determined opponent, not so much. However, there’s a “pimp chop” video where a martial arts teacher KOd an actual pimp with a shuto uki strike to the carotid artery in a real street confrontation. It’s fkn hilarious.
You had me at pimp chop
it works on some people as it quickly changes the blood pressure.
It is said that Master Dillman is second only to the legendary Sensei Seagal
Back in school, I once got punched right to the solarplexus from a classmate with whom I got into a little fight.
It was one of the most frightening experiences I ever had in my life. I couldn't breath right for over an hour after I got punched, and had to lay flat the whole time. These weak points are no joke.
I don’t think anyone says pressure points aren’t real. Anyone knows that some points hurt more or cause reflex reactions, etc… it’s just that 1) it’s really hard to hit them in an actual fight and 2) they aren’t magic.
Yeah, but there’s an actual known medical explanation for what happened to you. You can Force all the air out of someone’s lungs in a way that it takes time for them breath again. And it is terrifying the first time it happens to you because it frightening and causes every fiber of your being to cry out that you’re about to freaking die.
@@donkeysaurusrex7881 Knocking the wind out of someone is more akin to a shot to the jaw, groin or nose than it is anything pressure point related.
You said it, you were punched: not gently poked with a fingertip.
@@francesco245 yea that's right, but it wasn't a hard punch either, and it still had this dramatic effect.
He dont even manage to do clean maegeri!
Should wear barely yellow belt as highest. 😂
The fact that he has been able to pull off this bullshit for so long is really impressive.
Great video, I was going to say he looks not that good for someone only 10 years older than me! 🤣
I ve boxes for 6 years and know that when you get a ko you don’t go down like any of these guys. Your legs give away immediately and you fall very awkward. No movie like fall
oh as well!! congratulations on a million channel views :D it'll be cool to see when the algorithm starts picking up ur really good back catalogue and properly recommends them !!! ❤❤
Thanks I didn't even know id hit a million 😅
The energy he puts into his katas should make the wood paneling smolder, he must have coated it with protective chi.
I can’t get enough of this channel.
He looks like one of those stress squeezers where you squeeze it and the eyes pop out super huge.
I would not believe this guy if he swore he was lying.