Pellius if you followed any type of martial arts and action movies then you know the name Michael Jai White---he played Mike Tyson, he has played Spawn, and he should play Luke Cage or Black Panther...
And he is good friends with Troy Alves...his training vids on YouTube are helpful.
I'm not sure I see the connection. Martial Arts and movies are two different thing. Was this guy ever a MMA fighter or is he primarily an actor like Van Damme was?I started Jiu-Jitsu training in 1991 at the original Gracie Academy where my first private lesson was with Royce. I took once a private lessons with Rickson for over two years. I was at the first two UFC events back in '93 and I've seen every single event since then, I'm on a MMA board everyday, I once said "Hi" to Chuck Norris as he walked past me at Machado's Jiu-Jitsu and got to hand Dan Inosanto's Escrima sticks to him, I picked up, carried the luggage and loaded it in my truck of Carlos Gracie Jr. (son of the founder of Gracie Jiu-Jitsu) when he arrived in LAX so he could go to Denny's with his real friends. I can recite the entire dialogue of Enter the Dragon and once executed the technique shown at 10:10 in the accompanied video where you go from a front snap kick right to a round house. This was back in 1977 and after I practiced this one move over a 1000 times (20 times per day, six days per week, for three months), I've been involved in Martial Arts since I was 7 years old when I ordered Count Dante's "Dim Mak" course from the back of a Spider Comic book and attended my first Aikido class when I was 9 years old. I got beat up last year in a MMA match.
I haven't attended a movie in years and the only TV I watch is Bill O'Reilly while I'm eating at night. It's not a stretch for me to have never heard of Michael Jai or seen any of his movies.
Seriously, scroll to 10:10. This would work in MMA. Just practice at least 1000x before trying it. That was my general rule for an advance technique. Practice it 1000x before trying it for real.
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