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  • Fake and gay.

    Let's get this bloke in a cage.

  • 2:53

    LMAO I didn't know you could make a dude do a forward flip by touching his arm with your foot. Fake and ghey.

  • @BillORele You got a bit of a point, but hmm ... understand something about the situation. This is a demo and both know the techniques and how they feel, what the natural progression/flow is. Often the trained attacker will follow through and eventually "help" the flips/rolls/spins because he knows that a lot more pain would follow if he didn't. So ... more dramatic flying and rolling, but a lot less dramatic than tearing ligaments, breaking bones and landing on your spinal column..

  • @BillORele actually he kicks into his armpit and then pulls him forward flipping him. its not fake

  • here grab this arm..and Ill hurt you! I was in martial arts for 9 years and my instructors taught to never hurt your brother or sister but to show compassion for others and their abilities. Not to look degrade a fellow classmate no matter what your rank is

  • hurting a cooperative person is nonsense..

  • .... rrrrrrr lol 

  • A lot of that "pain" was for show.

  • Lol... 2:53 right.... like you can take him down that easly with your foot.... btw the guy taps out like a baby... I dont think he has nearly the amount of pain as it looks.... maby there some nice looking things in hapkido but plz...

  • @LouisWashington77, Chuck Norris was a world champion and good enough to be asked by Bruce Lee to co star in Enter the Dragon. He is for real. He began studying martial arts while in the service in Korea. Yes, he's also a veteran.

  • Someone needs to shoot that "master" in the face for being such a cunt. I doubt he could dodge a shotgun.

  • This shit just pisses me off, fucking stupid! Unbelievable

  • Well now, maybe faking is too harsh a word; he's just being respectful. (Besides, if the master really followed through with those joint breaks he'd have a flopping fish on his hands instead of a reusable student.)

  • I'd still prefer a baseball bat!

  • for some reason i aint scared

  • 222 scared little pussies.

  • Nice acting. It was almost as convincing as the North Koreans who were bawling for Kim Jong Il.

  • @Liberate006A The UFC is not real life either. In real life you have no gloves, matts or rules. The UFC is always 1on1. In real life you don't know when you will be in a fight and with how many people. The UFC doesn't allow headbutting, strikes to the kidneys, groin, spinal area, back of the head......

  • @mmmbeachlover If you control the person's wrist then he can't punch or block with that arm. And you have a degree of control over the guy's body, which could lead into an offensive movement/attack.

  • @JMarkJones You have a very good point. The master wouldn't do a joint lock on someone who had some training, he would kick the knee and punch the throat.

  • And thats why mma dosent allow small joint manipulations. Theres no fight it wouldnt be entertaining. No going to the ground. Its just snap and go home.

  • i did jiujitsu for 12 years, and tapping 3 times means you fucking LOOSEN YOUR GRIP, grand master or not!!

  • @resifr3ak shut it pussy

  • @resifr3ak this is not juijitsu lol

  • @resifr3ak Actually if your opponent is tapping 3 times it means you are doing it right, besides the student was still fully functional afterwards. The master knows what he is doing.

  • @bettydaw1970, a good fighter is certainly looking within his/her discipline or style, however, with 3608 techniques there is a lot to think about and remember. I would expect a master or (more specifically) a grand master be able to show the brutality of a given selected technique. Otherwise, why would they bother showing off? It's part show/part show "why this martial art?"

  • Don't forget that it's a DEMO. It should (by all means) have the appearance of pain. With that "appearance," there will be pain. ...not nearly as much as would be had he meant to really prove a point. These techniques are brutal...not always practical, but in the repertoire/arsenal of attacks would absolutely inflict pain and broken pieces parts.

  • ok, i get that he's an asshole... but did you SEE that last throw he did!? with a KICK!? im sorry, but that alone is enough for him to gain some respect from me!... i dunno about all you guys tho....

  • this is really dumb if he did that in real life he would get a fat punishment cause the other one just holds his hand^^

  • asshole

    

  • anderson silva would front kick this guy in his face and be done with him in 10 seconds..

  • the best fighters in the world take the best aspects of diffrent disciplines, such as wrestling, boxing, jui jitsu, thai boxing..if you toss in some genetics like great core strength with long arms and legs with great torque at the synapse of the strike like a jon jones, or an anderson silva, and sprinkle in a strong chin...

    (hgh and steroids will help a ton too, but i dispise their usage)

    NOW YOUR COOKING WITH BUTT

    ER!!!!!

    and

    now you are talkinabout a TRUE legend..

  • @bettydaw1970 a good fighter can win with his style and his style alone, but thats just my opinion

  • Ok! Everybody chill and be kewl...my master was like that...and so were the other Korean masters....the point of pain is to learn what you are capable of doing to another....you learn through pain...now if he hadn't...holy cow...half the class would have gone ape shit on people but when you learn that pain....you feel it...you know it...you respect it...and you don't do it to anyone else unless you are asked to teach, demonstrate, or defend yourself...because all in all...martial arts = defense

  • @ladynajera21 Nuff Said !!! :-)

  • @ladynajera21 perfect description

  • @ladynajera21 You don't have to know pain to be good at a martial art it's and art not a blood sport ,Technique will always prove to be more affective than learning threw 'pain' because you will always feel pain but great technique is rare.

  • @ladynajera21 except muay boran (y) which is what i learn hehee

  • damn, that old man could beat the shit out of me ;o

  • He's probably a top blackbelt student people he knows how to fall ....

  • I think there's a fair bit of play acting involved here. Someone who didn't know before hand what the grandmaster was doing would have been pretty badly injured on the first wrist throw. They don't go down like that on a resisting opponent.

  • Hapkido master? more like Hapkido jerk!

  • My Hapkido master, never hurt me and he could kill me if he so pleased!

  • i like all kinds of arts.i'm also doing now mma.the issues is some mma fighters think they are the shit and that mma is on the top of the food chain.its not true.sorry..... mma is not the best. learning diffrent styles is the smart way to go.

  • ok boys he wasnt hurting his student . the student was dramatizing to cshow what would happen if....

  • My reaction: ....... ouch

  • ...I don't know Korean, but I'm fairly sure I heard "Tap!" at least five times lmao

  • i'm guessing that was the student that pulled the last straw?

  • if someone grab my hand like that i would have just punched him with my other hand in the face...im doing 6 years muay thai and 3 wrestling...this techique is lame...it has so many oppenings...you dont need to have mastered a techique to defend...you just need comon sense...when you hurt you dont just stand shaking and waiting for the opponent to throw you down

  • @CkoNiS I have been thinking about getting into either wrestling or muay tai, which one do you think is better fighting style? If your wrestling coaches were to have an open match with your muay tai coaches, which team of coaches do you think would have more wins: wrestling or muay tai?

  • @adelpero12 listen all the martial arts are tie...there is no martial art that is betterthan another.it's all about the techiques that your coach will teach you and his experience...the videos you see in youtube muay thai vs box etc are an EPIC FAIL.The best fighter wins..my opinion is that wrestling is better and more usefull than muay thai.my coach teaches me both.wrestling is more gramples not deadly hits with elbows etc....but believe me its more usefull for self defense and street fights

  • @CkoNiS I have short limbs, which would be best for me to take? I know I am at a disadvantage, but which style would I have the least disadvantage?

  • @adelpero12 the most coaches are specialized to brutal martial arts like box,kick box,muay thai but they know some techinqs from wrestling or mma so they can teach you something more if you asked them

  • @CkoNiS Thanks for your response, so you feel that wrestling is a bit more effective for a real fight/self defense? Have you ever taken aikido. how would you rate wrestling/muay tai to aikido.

  • BulKaka >> Hapkido.

    Go home now.

  • Grand Asshole of shit that doesn't happen in real life. Well done.

  • "What a Grand Master of Hapkido can do to you"

    Sure - provided that I'm one of his student, offering no resistance.

    Pathetic!

  • I have a question: How would an Aikido master do against an Olympic Wrestler or a Muay Tai expert?

  • Actually @jsphotos and @101wrenth im from Korea and my grandfather is a Hapkido Master and the student were taught to over react and such so it looks like the techniques are powerful.

  • they left out the second half of the title, "if you let them"

  • If you have trained properly with all your heart, then the "pain" should be inconsequential. I can assure all the nay-sayers in the postings that a real enemy on the street will not be as kind to you as your teacher.

    Remember: "That which does NOT kill you, makes you STRONGER."

  • @DevilTC finally a post that makes sense!

  • This is a great demonstration, the student will feel a bit of pain(which he should be used to at his grade) but the throws and lands are all practiced and co-ordanated for effect. I study kuk sool won and we get taught falling technuiques and how to land when being fliped over. There is no real intent to cause pain here just a show of how effective this technuique could be in real life from a professional.

  • Your observations are poor if you don't see that this guy was in real pain.

  • oversell.

  • i wonder if this was acting or staged, and if the student's reaction was for effect. if not that's kind of mean lol

  • 2:18 I think he tapped out gerk!!!! but nooo!!! hold him for another second!!.... asss....

  • they should rename this video: "what a grandmaster of hapkido can do to you... if you let your asshole teacher show how manly he is by using his impractical rehearsed techniques on your crash-test-dummy body."

  • it actual takes far more skill and control to do these throws WITHOUT injuring your opponent...but i guess thats what aikido is for...

  • you can tell the student is faking, sooo obvious -_-

  • I studied this style in Korea... I was also close friends with the demo team... the student is FAKING. Yes it can be painful, and as part of the art, you SHOULD feel what you will be doing to your opponent, but for DRAMATIC purposes, the student is exaggerating... Just sayin...

  • Well of course the one guy is losing, he just woke up, look he's still in his pajamas

  • those bicycles up front....they prizes or something?

  • @helsinki It this was inside an airplane, that would be parachutes. Great analogy, huh?

  • In any martial art , pain is part of the game. No Pain no gain! If you are a sissy or allergic to pain, it is not your field - you are not even qualified as its spectator. If you are a fighter, you fight without mercy because of your basic fear to die. Should you hesitate to injure or kill if need be, chances are you will get defeated.

    Ecnivoel, Dallas, Texas (Fear keeps me from dying)

  • @ladle7 True if need be, but if you have no mercy you are no better than a dog.

  • so funny reading all the crap comming from people who don't understand the art they are watching,such as this video.

    Why watch youtube just to leave negative and disrespectful comments, if u don't like what u see then keep it to your fu@#en self......makes me laugh......

  • all the idiots on here complaining about inflicting immense pain etc., the student/dummy is trained to take the pain and knows how to move the body (react),

    And because of this, the student/dummy acts most of the pain to the audience to show how affective it is. Yes it is a contact art, but the grandmasters have total control over what they are doing while the dummy acts out the so-called immenseness of the techniques

  • Those of you who are saying the its sad to see the students pain....obviously you are confused and not involved in any combat sports. These two are considered professional and through hard work and pain they have made it to where they have. ITS A COMBAT FUCKING SPORT, like I say to my students in full contact karate here in L.A..., you can always take dance or piano lessons if you don't like it!

  • Alot of people on here with disrepectful attitudes to other martial arts outside of there own; sad really. All are good and effective in there own right, and most do have a self defense aspect that is either not taught or most never see because they stop training and learning because of there status.

  • real grandmasters don't show off, especially at the expense of causing one of his STUDENTS immense pain

  • @QuestionableVids my master makes it painful in order to make us understand fully how dangerous hapkido is and how our opponent would feel under these techniques. I think it is the good way to learn. But if you are too soft to handle it - quit it and do something else like taekwondo.

  • @borissmyslov i do taekwondo actually :) coming up for my black belt in a few months. My instructors push also twist more to make it painful but in order to show us the power. they dont make us scream. that is just showing off

  • @QuestionableVids In Hapkido, with pressure point techniques, pain is a necessity. Without it, it'd just be an act.

    Therefore this performance isn't the slightest of showing off. Also doing performances in front of your fellow club members is NOT showing off, otherwise that would mean every martial arts club worldwide under your words is "showing off".

  • @teeLcomplex ok i see your point. fair enough i was wrong in some respects but i still think that when someone taps out a lot like that he might be going a little far

  • Walk on road hmmm

    Walk right side safe

    Walk left side safe

    Walk middle, sooner or later "squish" just like grape.

    Now show me sand the floor.

  • It's a show, don't believe the act that his student is putting on. Hapkido guys in Korea do this all the time for the effect. Of course no one on the street will be grabbing your wrist with both hands?!!!

  • For you guys that have been training in any art for a long time, ever notice that most older instructors and senior members have bad backs, knees, shoulders, wrist and elbows...This is why....I never trained like these guys and I still have some very sore body parts from many years of traditional SBD training...

  • this master is a sadist...there's no need to inflict that much pain on your student for the sake of a demo.

  • @VirtuousRebel People want to see blood. Then you gotta bring it to sell. Marketing strategy.

  • Not really impressed, the times I've seen myself in a scrap they sure as hell never attacked me that slow. A lot of these guys would get a rude awakening.

  • What an idiot! It' a DEMO, asshole. Stop trying to injure your students; it just shows you only know how to hurt someone who is LETTING you. Coward!

  • @jsphotos hapkido is targeting joint........how can actually can make it not hurt you idiot....the way they make it less hurt by following the flow of the technique....that just show how deadly hapkido is..

  • Once in a lock grip, you listen. Such kind of pain is unbearable, especially when the limit is sought.

  • What utter bullshit

  • @davbay100 ummm ok...

  • Looks really good for the training partners joints :\ Showing off for a crowd is an excellent way to injure someone.

  • Why am I under the impression that all Korean martial arts aside from traditional Taekkyon are complete bull shit?

  • @AndyRaslan Modern arts like Hapkido and Taekwondo are not combat tested and are mainly for sport (hence Taekwondo is Korea's national SPORT). Most of what they do is either ineffective or just for show. Taekkyon is one of the few remaining combat tested arts.

  • wow this guy is gettin fu@ked up

  • So a couple of guys came there by bike?

  • Velho FPD!!! Faz isso com o chuck norris que eu quero ver!!!! kkkkkkkk.....

  • НЕ БЕРИ ЗА РУКИ!!! БЕЙ СРАЗУ В ГОЛОВУ!!!

  • "What a Grand Master of Hapkido can do to you"

    Anyone can kick your ass if you let them. You dont have to be master at anything.

  • I got here from the vid where Bruce Lee kills the Hapkido master in Game of Death lol.

  • what kind of fcking master is this? -__-

    poor guy, he must hate his job

  • When I go to Hapkido we ALWAYS let the opponent go when he slaps the floor because that's his way of telling us he is in pain and anymore pressure will cause injury. So why does he not let go quickly?

  • @daniel121212121212 because the instructors get a hard on from this stuff lol.... squirm you useless worm.....observe my mastery

  • Comment removed

  • A few years ago, I practiced Hapkido in a different style then this grandmaster. At one time, I had the change to attend a seminar given by him. His techniques where the most painful that I had ever experienced. Part of it IS show because it's a demo, but believe me, the pain is real. Grabbing the wrist is a basic application in Hapkido, but that's just the tip of the iceberg.

  • Yep over acting, a real blackbelt wouldn't show pain... but I don't come from hapkido so maybe its different in that art.

  • I will say this....there seems to be a lot of over acting. If he's really applying that much pain to his uke he's no master....which is a term/title I hate to see attached to anyone's rank personally. It feeds the ego.

  • @LeungTingWT of course his partner is going to move with him, this guy's about 90 years old

  • I have yet to see a street fight ever ever ever in the entire history of the world where a compliant individual casually grabbed someone by the wrist.

  • @hosmanc The wrist is the extreme of the arm which is why it's practiced like that and it gives those learning a chance to do the technique in a wide circular motion and then get smaller as they get better. The techniques that you see done as a wrist grab work just as well anywhere on the body. It's just a demonstration.

  • @ronin2167 Yes, A demonstration of impractical techniques that have virtually no functional carryover to a real life confrontation.

  • @hosmanc You only focused on my comment about it being a demonstration and disregarded why it's practiced this way. I don't study Hapkido, I study Aikido and Judo and we teach beginners this way to get them use to the movement and the principles involved. Occasionally I'll take a student who seems to be missing the point and show them how it would really be done and it's application. I then get that look from them that a light bulb just turned on, followed by thanks for explaining it.

  • @hosmanc But they have to learn to crawl before they can walk. Kata is not reality. It's the study of a waza and a set of principles.

  • after the first one i would have been like o fk this 

  • I respect all forms of martial arts, but I dont like this demonstration. This 'Grand Master' clearly hasn't mastered himself if he feels the need to cause one of his students immense pain in front of an audience. Also, I dont see how the scenario applies to modern life. Who attacks someone on the street by grabbing one of their wrists with both hands these days?

  • @101wrenth Great comment and observation. If somone attacks youby grabbing your wrist with both hands they deserve to get their ass beat. This "grand master" under whelms me.

  • @101wrenth I'm pretty sure it doesn't matter since they're in South Korea but if they were in the U.S. this wouldn't be allowed

  • @101wrenth It´s just a one demonstration.... not all the tegniques and i assure u that the student doesn´t feel that much pain, hes used to it because of a lot of training that he has had to do...

  • @tommimensonen I'm sure the techniques are effective if applied correctly. I just don't like this demonstration.

  • @101wrenth The wrist grab is only a platform for the move to take place, all of the joint locks can be applied off of a punch as well.

    As for causing his student pain, it's most likely a show for the audience to enjoy. While the techniques do hurt if applied correctly, you'd be kicked out of a dojang the first week if you didn't learn self-control and respect for your opponent.

  • @SkwurlSkwurl good to know. Thanks

  • @101wrenth I totally agree with you. I took up tae kwon do after taking go ju ryu years ago and I was out sparring many of my masters top students. I was a white belt out fighting brown belts and a couple of black belts. Then one day during sparring he had his top student punch me in the kidneys hard and then he fought me and hit me in the same spot. I left but, shortly after leaving one of my fellow students said that they did that because I was making the top students look bad.

  • @katanakeith Goju ryu eh? Thats my base style too. Thats a shame they got all upset about being challenged. They should of seen it as an opportunity to learn and adapt. Hope there was no blood in the urine haha ;-)

  • @101wrenth this isnt true pain. the flips and falls are stunt coordination. this is a demonstration of the masters skills and the students talent as well. Hapkido is rich in tradition and self defense. even though most people dont grab by the wrist now, there are different techniques for different scenarios. I study Hapkido and Taekwondo. This was a very professional demonstration with amazing talent and skill.

  • @ktigerjoe I didn't realise that he pain was just show. I have never studied any korean styles personally so I am unaccustomed to this type of demonstration, or the traditions involved. I meant no disrespect to Hapkido, It appears to be a great form.

  • already written story, funny people clapping....

  • I would seek compassion in a 'grand master', not a person intent on proving himself by holding the lock after the 'student' has tapped out. Just a demo? To much ego! The student is set up to take the 'fall' that's his job. How sad, that a grand master has to prove himself or his system in this manner.

  • poor bastard must've pissed off his master for him to land this shiy job!! lol

  • Nice theatrics. 0:30 Hard to take seriously though.

  • what about,, what an Ak-47 can do to you??

  • nice theatrics, asians are bad actor slol

  • I like how the grandmaster taps the guy after he wrenches his arm as if to say, c'mon get up, I've got a few more moves that are gonna make me look good. Like one of the previous comments posted mentioned, when you are not expecting a punch from somebody who knows how to throw them, you are not gonna have the time necessary to show off the joints locks and throws.

    By the way, I believe Hapkido is a great form of martial arts.

  • @locohunter1 yeah..when you're body's that relaxed, you can be knocked out cold. however some martial artists are so tense/aware that its difficult to catch them offguard. its an awareness that kinda builds up with experience.

  • @AmphibianStudios Thank you, finally an INTELLIGENT martial art comment on here!! I started my martial art training in 1982. Your comment hit the nail right on the head......Thank you very much !

  • I think that is a problem with alot of the Arts these days, your being taught that "THIS IS HOW THE ATTACK WILL TAKE PLACE". So the student gets super comfortable in the dojo. When that suprise comes and they get one laid right on the nose, alot of that training goes right out the window

  • @locohunter1 you would be suprised about what any body thats trained in hapkido can do to you they have counters for punches and there is a easy way to block a full out random punch see what you do is the random guy coming up to you throws the punch and there is acctually a few things you can do here as sson as he throws that punch you knock it out of the way and as you do that you come up with your other hand use there momentem against them to snap there arm.

  • this is gay-er than 8 guys blowing 9 with a dick left over for the ear

  • The live action shows at disney land are more dangerous for the actor's then these guys or these "stunts".. lame..

  • That leg thing has got to be a joke. I've never seen something so dumb in my life.

  • Whoa!

  • Looks like there's a bicycle for every grandmaster.

  • if someone grabbed my arm in that wide horse stance..id kick him in the nuts,fight over!

  • i meant without punching you etc,

  • that what the hell i said...do they grab you .sit there and let you do all of those move s with punching you in the face.tacking you or anything..please,

  • LMAO! That was a complete JOKE!

  • yeah its easy when you give somebody your hand if this guy where to actually fight back different story. Its near to impossible to catch a punch by the way

  • yeah i made a few typos its late...dont trip.

  • dude im not some unimformed on looker....in a kunfu master.....damn..who in the hell is gonna grab you and not throe a punch or follw up with a tacke or whatever.a mrtial artist tech .should work against any style..would feel safe teaching that shit to a female member of your family.. i hope not..esp that last tech.!

  • dude demo or not still bullshit....whats with all the acting..bullshit nobody grabs you like that anymore.update your art man

  • @superstar1218 Nobody grabs you like that anymore?????????

  • Grand master of Fake.Korean not respect Japan and stole Aikido.

    Prove it in Thailand If Hapkido is real.

  • @jariworld Many martial arts "borrow" techniques and make their own from them. Just like Japanese martial arts come from southern china which uses more hand technique whereas the high or more kicking styles such as Tae Kwan Do can be traced back to northern china and even that traces back further. Asians arent the only ones that invented martial arts. Look at ancient greece and greco roman wrestling and boxing. Martial Arts are all one in the end. The concept of Jeet Keep Do was founded on this.

  • It sounds funny when an Asian or Mexican (depending on the voice, like the guy from Nacho Libre who was Jack's right hand man) when they scream :P

  • @JaredThinks asians or mexicans huh? Tell you what, i need you to bend over as far as you can and literally FUCK YOUR OWN FACE. Jaredthinks my ass....

  • @anicajj Right on anicajj, I agree !

  • prearanged bullshit..great acting though

  • @superstar1218 dude its not a fight its a demonstration

  • I bet that student is like "FML, I hate this job"

  • @Caeis it's bloody painful but a hell of a lot of fun.

  • @KSWninjaAmy Hella fun to be a cannon fodder? :O

  • @Caeis For this sort of thing. Hell yeah.

  • these are fake moves. i can twist my arm the same way as what happens in this video. u should probably take tykwondo or pankration, cuz its 10x better than this.

  • I don't know what it is about the korean arts... just seems like a demonstration of brutality to me.

  • That student is a grand master in acting!

  • Hapkido is pretty much an offshoot of Aikido with a little more pain applied.

  • I can understand demonstrating pain - to a degree - in the old school teaching methods of martial arts, but this is, in my personal opinion, a little extreme.

  • How would you like to be the guy that volunteers to get his ass kicked.

  • This so-called 'Grand Master' is only as good as his partner allows him to be. 98% of that shit wont work in real life. He (the Grand master) has already choreographed what was going to happen. Sorry folks, this isn't real self-defense.