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Pop culture has definitely changed the martial arts and not for the better.
Something I'd like to throw out for discussion...
Do you think pop culture has changed martial arts...especially since the 50s and 60s?
Do you think its changed for the better? For the worse? Some of each?
Yay Sox... ARRRRGGGH
Carol, what do you think?
I think the Rockies were outmatched, you guys had a lot of heart though, my hats off too ya.
Oh...you mean about the topic...
I do, think they have changed them...in a good way and a bad way.
On the positive side, I hear stories from Hawaiian fighters that say that back in the 50s, people that fought using martial arts were thugs, gangsters, and the like, and I think martial arts TV and movies have made many of the fighting arts more accessible to more people.
At the same time, I think the hype has gone to far and its lead to some systems looking like they've become a parody of themselves from schools that have diluted their school's belt value in response for demand for rank over substance.
What do you think sir?
First I think it would have been nice if the Rockies had even shown up!
Oh, you mean your question.
One: With any change you will always have the same three responses -
- resistance
- passive
- acceptance
Two: Every generation will have all of the above
Three: What makes anyone think that these questions (or ourselves) are so special, or different from the genereations that came before. We're not as they asked themselves the same questions we have!
As with anything we have become better and worse at what we do. The problem is thinking we can weed out the bad. (Never happen). The best you can hope to do is show the bad for what it is and lead people to the good!
But a weed will always flourish!
Something I'd like to throw out for discussion...
Do you think pop culture has changed martial arts...especially since the 50s and 60s?
Do you think its changed for the better? For the worse? Some of each?
I can't speak to the 50's & 60's but I can to the 80's and 90's. I think in the 80's ALOT of the martial arts movies were to thank for the growth in martial arts and dojo enrollment. I know Karate Kid and the various van dame movies, primarily Blood Sport got me into it. Still to this day without meaning to I still make references mentally. For those in the 90Â’s IÂ’m sure the hit Mortal Kombat had a lot of sway on younger martial artists. With the fast pace movement of the movie and the hyped sound track a lot of kids and teenagers were hooked.
I canÂ’t say whether or not the promotions are good or bad but I can say a lot of todayÂ’s misconceptions with martial arts are built on them.