Lessons learned from 29 martial arts youtubers

The most valuable lesson I have learned from martial arts youtubers: 0:00 introduction 0:34 Rokas: 100% sacrifice and honesty 1:10 Sensei Seth: how you teach and how you actually move are often very different (Joe Rogan’s side kick analysis) 3:27 Red Chucks: Real life superpowers through consistent hard work. 4:14 Matt (Reality Check Self Defense): videos on the same topic from different people can be amazing 5:57 Icy Mike: how to win every sparring session 6:54 Gabriel Varga: no matter how good you are, no matter how many world titles you have, the YouTube trolls still come after you 8:30 Bazooka Joe Valtellini: charisma- stand and deliver 9:47 Sensei Ando: appearances are deceiving 11:02 Jesse Encamp & Chewey Nick Albin (Chewjitsu): you can be both the nicest guy and the baddest man in the room at the same time. 11:40 Fight Bible, Joe and Brad: the triumph of the human spirit over the soulless machine of the YouTube algorithm 12:16 Nick & Si Collier: judo is more awesome than you realize 13:18 The Punch Professor: you actually can make real friends on the internet 13:42 Kwon Kicker: forgiveness 17:23 Master Wong: his first name isn’t really “Master” 19:32 Stephan Kesting: life beyond BJJ (kayaking in the Arctic) 21:27 Tony Jeffries: no matter how good you are at fighting, and how many medals and championships you have, the most interesting thing you have to offer is you. (Please make more vlogs) 22:22 Firas Zahabi: the skill, the humility and willingness to learn from his student who visited my gym told me everything I needed to know about Firas. 23:33 Eddie Bravo: you can learn a lot while sitting on the toilet 23:55 Robin Black: you can fit quality content into a single minute without rushing or speed talking. Sometimes less is more. 24:55 Fight Commentary Breakdowns (Jerry Liu) - he posted, and popularized some of the worst moments, not just of my fighting career, but of my life, for the world to see over and over again. Resentment of these moments are something that pushes me to move forward. 30:05 Sergio Pérez (Practical Combat Martial Arts) : never underestimate anyone. 31:04 Rener Gracie: don’t limit yourself to one thing, expand your horizons inside and outside of martial arts 31:56 Keenan Cornelius: the best armbar finish ever that no one is using. (He’s more than just the worm guard) 33:11 Giga ovgod (Uguru): courage to publicly and unapologetically express your truth 34:11 Shane Fazen: a white board is an invaluable piece of equipment for both training and YouTube video making 34:39 Grandmaster Jesse of Mexican Martial Arts: your style can be like other styles, but better! 34:58 Jedi Does Jiu-Jitsu: jiu-jitsu videos don’t have to be boring! 36:26 Cary Kolat: show the move first! 37:03 Coach Anthony: be the best coach you can Ramsey Dewey is a MMA coach and ringside commentator for Kunlun Fight Combat League, based in Shanghai, China. Ramsey Dewey is a retired professional MMA fighter and kickboxer. If you have any questions for future Q&A videos, please leave your questions in the comments section below. Thanks to my channel sponsor: Xmartial: catering to all kinds of combat sports athletes from BJJ, MMA, Muay Thai and more. Use my code RAMSEY10 for a 10% discount on everything at https://www.xmartial.com/?ref=AyJ_EjP... This video features original music by Ramsey Dewey Follow me on Instagram at:   / ramseydewey