Citation Needed - Frank Dux
Episode Date: June 8, 2022Frank William Dux ( /ˈdjuːks/; born April 6, 1956) is a Canadian-American martial artist and fight choreographer. According to Dux, a ninjutsu expert named Senzo Tanaka trained him as a ninja ...when he was a teenager. He established his own school of ninjutsu called Dux Ryu Ninjutsu, and has said he won a secret martial arts tournament called the Kumite in 1975. He was all the way lying about this, but his alleged victory at the Kumite served as the inspiration for the 1988 film Bloodsport starring Jean-Claude Van Damme. Dux's victory at the Kumite has been disputed, as has the existence of both the Kumite he described and Senzo Tanaka.
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Dude, garlic bread is garlic butter on bread and then you bake it.
Okay, well then I'm making cheesy garlic bread.
You're making a pizza is what you're making man.
Dude, did they break?
Oh, they sure did Tom.
Incredible.
Dude, you have to teach us.
Someday, Grasshopper.
Someday.
Hey guys, what's you doing?
What's at the karate get up stuff? Okay. First of all, Grasshopper. This is a grasshopper and it's the mark of an ancient master of the martial art.
It says spirit of Halloween on the tag. Second, I was showing off my karate skills for Grasshopper and Grasshopper here.
Okay, it is awesome. He just broke 40 invisible bricks with a single
karate chop. Sorry, invisible bricks. Yes, Grasshopper. Yeah, Eli says they are the most
difficult bricks to break because you can't even see them. It's true. So your karate, karate.
Right. Okay. That's like super fast, lightning reflexes,
all that stuff, right?
Oh, for sure. I mean, if one were to try to attack me,
not Jack. Oh, right in the grasshopper.
I don't think he's using that term correctly.
Well, it could be. Hello and welcome to Citation Needed, the podcast where you choose a subject, read a single
article about it on Wikipedia and pretend we're experts because this is the internet.
That's how it works now.
I'm Cecil and I'll be the master of this kumate, but I'll need my contestants.
I'm going to chant that every time.
First up, creators of the Irish liver, keith and hum.
Sweet the keg. Swing the cake. You know, I do sometimes think about giving my liver a break, but mercy is for the week.
That's true.
Also, joining us tonight, two masters, one of blunt, forced trauma and the other of Eli. I know what they say. Hi. Yeah. Hi. Yeah.
Well, the chairs from the crowd are certainly nice. It's the patrons that really run this show.
We can't thank you enough for helping keep it going week after week. If you'd like to learn
how to join their ranks, be sure to stick around till the end of the show. And with that out of the way, tell us Eli, what person place thing, concept phenomenon
or event we'll be talking about today.
What we talking about Frank, do.
Okay.
Who was Frank do?
Well, depending on who you believe, he was either an international spy for the CIA, master martial artist, War Hero, the
first Western winner of the famous underground no holds barred martial arts tournament known
as the Gummite, and the last in the line of 40 generations of ninja.
Or he's a big ol' liar pants.
Either way, his story was the inspiration for the Jean-Claude Van Dam
classic blood sport. And he is a fascinating dude.
Okay, not that I don't appreciate you including any light, but the whole, maybe this is true,
maybe it's a lie thing is sort of assumed as soon as the audience realizes you're doing
the essay.
We know.
Every episode is someone's first episode. No, I'm helping out here.
I want to point out right here at the start that Frank do is still alive and still lows.
Karate maybe. So my official position, my position is going to be that of neutrality, but
any of the less wedgible members of our cast and our audience may feel free to draw their own conclusions. Please don't karate chop me. Frank do please karate chop me Frank do I will lose that fight. I
don't care. It would be a great story. I'm going to say dukes from now on the whole time
because that's in the movie. I am not at all worried. I've been carrying out pocket
sand for years for just such an occasion. Now, that is his weakness. So Frank William Dew was born on April 6th of 1956 in Toronto, Canada, but moved to California
with his family when he was just seven years old.
Okay, so that's, that's mid-60s.
Okay, I'm, I'm fine with him.
Karate Chopin, you know, too.
Yes, but his father Alfred, according to Dew, fought against the Nazis as an agent of
both Mossad and a member of the infamous Jewish Brigade, and would, according to do, fought against the Nazis as an agent of both Mossad and a
member of the infamous Jewish brigade.
And would, according to do, play games with me to expand my awareness."
And quote, adding, sometimes he would throw things at me unexpectedly to improve my reflex
system.
I should mention here that author Robert Allison has pointed out that Frank's dad actually
couldn't have joined massage before the Second World War as the agency was a time travel
after as far as we know.
And that the Jewish brigade was not formed until several years after do said that his dad
was in it.
Spoiler alert, that's pretty much
the whole episode. So, you need a TLDR. It was that paragraph. When he threw shit at him
to test to improve their reflex, I hope my kids think of me this charitably like, you know,
sometimes my dad would just like close the door to his room for hours and ignore us. To teach me self-sufficiency.
Yeah.
So, do describe himself as a joke all through high school.
That is, until he was taken under the wing
of none other than Ninja Master,
Sanzo Tiger, Tanaka.
Last in the line of 40 generations of Ninja Masters,
who saw promise in a random high school
youngster and took him to the mountains of Japan for training in the deadly and ancient art of
ninja tsu mountain two got it
as as Frank writes in his autobiography quote
As Frank writes in his autobiography, quote, there, the boys outstanding ability shocked and pleased the Ninja community when he tested for the right to call himself Ninja.
He went to autobiography in the third person.
Look, yeah, it's not a legally protected tower.
You're going to be certified.
Okay, was all this before or after he threw his bike in the dumpster after failing
out of ninja classes at the Y. Now, this may shock you all to your very core, but none of that
appears to be true. No Frank claims that Tiger Tanaka died on July 30th of 1975 and was buried in California by a clan of
his closest ninja students.
State of California lists no deaths under the Tanaka name in the 1970s.
Grandmaster and ninja historian, Choto Tanamura, has said of the alleged Mr. Tanaka, quote,
there is not Mr. Tanaka in Japanese history.
Many crazy guys stand up as ninja masters.
Not adding Frank do.
I'm talking about Frank do right now.
Wait, you're saying shadowy communities
and ninjas on mountain tops don't exist.
I don't even know what to believe anymore.
Okay, just to be clear about what happened there
in this story, what actually happened.
Some random guy in California made up a fake name and took a child to a remote cabin in the mountains
of Japan. And when plan A didn't work out, the guy was like, oh, just kick that tree.
You're an engineer. You've just described the best case scenario. So according to Frank, these seeming holes in
his story is a cover up, of course, by the CIA, the other ninja clans and black belt magazine.
More on that in a second. Ah, yes, that famous synergy of conspiratorial cover ups the central intelligence agency and black belt magazine
but guys if there's no record of this dude yeah maybe he doesn't exist but also like
maybe he's the best ninja
maybe it's such a ninja thing to disappear even in death if you were a really well-known ninja, would you be a ninja star?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mountain Dew code red bell.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So there actually is a president you'd be ninja Biden.
I love that I got immediately.
So there is actually a record of a guy named senzo Tanaka.
It's a fictional character in Ian Fleming's James Bond novel, you only live twice.
Okay.
Where there's a ninja commander named senzo tiger Tanaka.
When Doe was questioned about this coincidence, he explained that that was because Fleming
based his characters on real people.
Oh, I based my faker person off of fake person that was based off a real person.
It's the rule of threes.
Look it up.
It's looped back around to real guy.
At this point, okay.
So anyway, yeah, I killed a dragon named Smog right after that.
Got in trouble.
A lawyer named Atticus.
I got up by Atticus. I'm the great
got me. I don't know what's happening. Pirate name,
Ragnar. In 1975, do enrolled in the Marines for those
paying attention. That was the year that the alleged
Mr. Tanaka allegedly died and his alleged final wish was for Frank to participate in the infamous underground martial
arts tournament, The Kumate.
So remember how I put a pin in Black Belt magazine?
Well, it was actually a guy named John Stewart's infamous article in Black Belt magazine that
Frank do first told the story of the Kumite
and that's where the world first learned about it.
The article, as you can imagine, was widely spread, even beyond the, you know, divorce
dads that usually make up Black Belt magazines.
And that, along with a letter of recommendation from the author of the article, is how Frank's
story ended up being the topic of a Hollywood movie.
With a letter of recommendation from the author about the article he
authored to whom it may concern. Yep, that happened.
So, literally, the guy who got paid to say that it happened. Yeah.
Literally that. Yeah. So, here's how that article in Black Belt magazine
begins, which by the way, you should absolutely read. It's everywhere and it's fucking
batshit. Here's the first paragraph. For years, the rumors have circulated. Those with an
ear to the ground have heard fantastic tales of an invisible organization, an organization
that sponsors an international no no-hold-spark
tournament, pitting dedicated martial artists of all arts against each other in bare knuckle
Huma Tay.
What?
What's the grapevine where you would put your ear to the ground and hear that?
Just playing it against a locker and karate class?
Do you guys hear about any flex. No, man, we're seven year olds.
Any of you fat kids who your dad is really hoping getting shaped from this activity?
You're about to come and say lately.
All right, I'll see you later.
You like, okay, continuing.
According to the whispers, this kumatay takes place at a secret location once every five
years.
Teams from thousands of countries are alleged to be transported to a secluded location
to compete against other martial artists of all styles, providing feedback on new techniques
and putting traditional favorites to a very real test.
And for a variety of reasons, including legal reasons, the organizers are said to extract a written promise of silence
from each participant. Regardless of the outcome, competitors are not permitted to talk about what
they saw and experienced. The first rule. None of them do. Fantastic exaggeration, perhaps,
totally impossible. Not at all. Because one member of the organization has received permission to talk publicly about
such an event.
The martial arts world may gain an insight into the reality that has fueled these continuing
rumors.
And although it may come as a shock to some that these rumors have a basis, in fact, the
actual truth is not so startling as it would seem at first.
And Quoam. truth is not so startling as it would seem at first and quom.
And guys, I know this sounds like a conspiracy theory,
but I have cute level comments to talk about it.
Okay, why would they have that exception for the one guy?
Yeah, they're just like reading their own bylaws.
Okay, yeah, so okay, don't fight.
Don't talk about if I club got it,
but rule number 37, if a guy ninjas really hard,
he could do one article.
Who would that be?
Why would that? She says it's a lot of different. 37 if a guy ninjas really hard you can do one article
She says I'm never a good sign when your entire opening paragraph is filled with variations on I know it sounds like I'm Full of shit, but hear me out
I like that he is the phrase very real
Or he negated totally impossible partially partially impossible, sure, not totally possible, though.
So it's at this point in the article that Black Belt magazine introduces Frank, who is described
in that article as quote, having compiled a distinguished military career in Vietnam,
pin in that.
And Frank describes the tournament in excruciating detail.
He talks about the rules, the playing surface, the tactics the competitors had to use.
Even the organization behind the tournament, the international fighting arts organization
or the IFAO or the IFAO or the IFAO pin in that as well.
Wait, the playing surface.
Was that not the ground?
The ground?
Okay, guys, it says here we are fighting to the death
and then bloody hand-to-hand combat,
but oh, it's actually in a dance club filled with bubbles.
That's a nice touch.
Okay, if you've seen the movie, you know it's the movie.
He's like, I can't.
For no reason.
It's like a big craftmatic adjustment bed that everybody fights on.
But here's the best part.
And then when you fall, the gaffer scrub it.
But I didn't include this, but according to the article, they do it on a different surface
every time.
So like one year it was in mud and the other year it was on a roof.
Yeah. surface every time. So like one year it was in mud and the fire it was on a roof. Yeah,
so like like that's why he describes he's like, yeah, no, it was a it was a fucking
numb dramatic bad this time, but trust me before it was on a roof. Wait, so they like
pulled a curtain and everybody's like, oh my god.
Like I'm like, I am just in order to fight on an air mattress full of chinchillas. Holy
shit. What?
Yes, it's it's karate chopped.
Okay, you got to read this article. So going to Frank, he was the first
westerner ever to win the Kumite, which is probably why they let him talk
about it. Kale Ken, he also set world records during that
Kumite, including the most consecutive knockouts, 56, and the fastest punch with a knockout,
0.12 seconds.
Okay, arguing about this punch is like 300 hours of my childhood.
I was like, fuck whether or not it's true.
What would that even mean?
Okay, my friends thought it meant like we would time each it.
So it'd be like, okay, I'm going to start, I'm going to start my punch, you guys time it. And it was like, one to three, go, one to three, go, and it was like, I time each it so be like, okay, I'm gonna start
I'm gonna start my punch you guys time it and it was like one to three go one to three
I was like I was like I was point eleven. No, it's point eleven. I did it
So he offered his proof of the Cumete paper work of the IFFO and
Referred press to fellow competitors at the tournament who verified his story
He even had a trophy that he was awarded because the secret underground martial arts tournament
is the winner of big trophy.
Yeah.
And the trophy says Michigan man of the year.
I spent just some guy only had 55 consecutive knockouts.
It's like, oh, me, come on.
Kicks the dirt, shuffles away, hands in his pockets.
It's just stupid.
My year, we had to do it in an old country buffet.
So there are a few holes in this story.
A few you said.
Oh, I mentioned three of point them out.
Many pointed out that keeping a giant mixed martial
arts tournament where people regularly die, a secret seems unlikely. Even if the competitors
all kept their pinky promise, it seems unlikely that all the hotel managers and venue owners
and caterers and I don't know fucking blood wipers would do the same. Kenneth Wilson, a spokesman for the Ministry of Sports in the Bahamas, where the Kumite
that Frank attended was supposed to have taken place, said of the tournament, quote, we have
no recollection of such a tournament.
We would know, no, never.
It can't happen."
End quote.
Yeah, we would know.
I mean, obviously they'd need to register their illegal blood
sport with the ministry of sports or we wouldn't be able to order
commemorative beer coosies.
So, right.
We would know.
Also, remember the IFAO?
Well, when the LA Times looked into that organization, the only
member of foreign of contact they could find for it was Frank
do.
And the trophy that he was allegedly awarded was made in San Francisco Valley and ordered by you guessed it, Frank do.
And the trophy maker is a few blocks away from his house.
Oh my God.
And he's done interviews about this.
He claims that all makes sense because the FBI raided his karate school at one point
and they destroyed the base of the trope, just the base of trophy.
And then he got it rebuilt and the trophy guy who happens to be a few blocks from his
house, norked on him to the
LA Times that he ordered a trophy for himself.
But it's real.
He just had to fix the base.
It's just fixed.
Because the FBI had a vested interest in destroying the bottom of his throat.
But you might be asking yourself, okay, but what about the fellow competitors who verified
Frank's story?
They didn't quite shake out either.
Here's a quote from the LA Times, quote, Richard Robertson said he met Doe in the Bahama. He said that Frank fought in the
heavyweight class and that he fought in the 135-pound division. Robertson said he was invited
to the competition because he was a good street fighter and an undefeated wrestler for three
years at Lower Mary and High School in Philadelphia. When told later that the school's athletic officials
didn't remember him. Hey, man, you got a really good Hadookian for high school. We do this
murdered. When told later that the school's athletic officials don't remember him and that he
doesn't appear in team. He didn't even score the three touchdowns in a single game?
To a Robertson first rise.
Yeah, Robertson first said that he was ill the day the pictures were taken.
Then when he was told he could not be found in the school's yearbook for any of the
years, he was a lovely at high school.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
He said, again, I'm continuing the quote here.
All right, I don't know what to say.
Why is this movie so important to you anyway?
Frank was a buddy of mine when I was in LA.
And quote,
Wow.
Well, while we come through the NYU year book
to look for Eli's picture,
we're gonna take a little break for some apropos of nothing.
Okay everyone welcome to the Kumite!
Okay, everyone. Welcome to the Kumite!
Now, we have gathered you, the roughest, toughest fighters in the world, brutal murderers, assassins, masters of the deadly arts, to pitch your skills against each other in a no-holds-barred fight!
To the finish!
To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To the finish! To thered fight to the finish.
To the finish.
Now, a quick reminder, please don't tell literally anyone about this.
Not your family, not your friends, not other martial artists, nobody in the world can know.
Okay, but what about you guys who run it?
Yeah, we also promise to never tell anyone about it also.
Also, please destroy your plane tickets, your trophies,
I don't know what we gave to you,
your hotel receipts, any evidence whatsoever
that you're here really.
We need to keep this a secret.
A question, question.
Yeah, go ahead.
What if we die?
Like, aren't people gonna notice
when I think like a significant percentage
of the world's toughest dudes vanish without a trace?
Don't some of us have like families and toe joes and stuff?
Oh, honestly, it'll be fine.
I think nobody will really notice or try to investigate
like ever ever no and no one will ever invest. Yeah, never last question. Yes, go ahead. Yeah, yeah. So I want to write an article
for a martial arts magazine about every single detail of this. Can I do that?
Yes, nice. Awesome. Oh, okay, well, now I'm confused.
Yeah, no, I'm confused. I have a lot of questions now.
When we left off, we were searching for a secret underground fisticuff murdering tournament
that happened on a community of ninjas high on a mount top.
What happened next, Eli?
Sounds realistic.
It turns out that the Kumite was the least of Frank's inventions.
In spite of the rumors that circulated about his stories not adding up and pretty damning
expose by
the LA Times in the late eighties the black belt magazine article along with his role as
the fight director and subject of blood sport propelled him to martial arts startup.
So in 1996 he wrote a book called The Secret Man whose cover reads as follows this is
the cover of the book.
He was the CIA's finest covert operative, the subject of the martial arts film Blood
Sport, a bridge to international organized crime, a legend on both side of the Iron Curtain.
His true identity always concealed from the people he served.
He was the secret man.
The secret man. He was strong enough for a man but made for a woman
Woman not actually included
So in his book Frank claims that the Central Intelligence Agency director William J. Casey met him once at a urinal
He introduced himself as the quote, head of the fucking CIA and
recorded him as a covert operative. Frank states that Hasey was his personal handler and
that no one else in the CIA knew he was working for the agency.
Okay. Point and do his favor here. You better be the fucking head of the CIA if you strike up a conversation with me at the journal.
Okay.
Yeah, it is not the job offer I'd expect from a paper at the urinal.
Yeah, right.
Right.
So like, I've, like, this is almost certainly just something he made up, but I, I feel
like everybody he knew was dying to do this to him, right?
Just walk up.
Absolutely.
Walk up to that guy at the urinal, tell him you're with the CIA.
He'll totally believe
it.
Yeah. So Frank describes several missions. He performed for the CIA between 1981 and 1987,
including destroying a fuel depot in Nicaragua, being part of a joint CIA KGB operation known
as Delphi 9, which investigated the Sphere Delosk anthrax leak.
And he claimed to be the only survivor of a five man high altitude military parachuting
teams failed attempt to destroy an Iraqi chemical weapons plan during the Iran Iraq war.
Okay.
It is nice that he throws a failed mission in there though.
I mean, you don't want it to seem unbelievable.
Right.
Yeah. He also retells the story of Akumatane's book, of course, adding
in that version that he was granted a ceremonial ancient sword for his victory as well. According
to Frank, he sold that sword to give money to pirates for some purpose. What are you saying?
Can you hear you? I just need to say a sentence again.
From the front, he sold the sword that he won in the super secret fumete for money to
give to pirates.
For some orphan.
Well, and then guys, he personally trained them as a martial arts striker team and he
called them the mighty orphan power.
So this is what he had to say about the sword orphans to the LA times.
Well, I sold my sword.
I have no regrets for it.
It went for the street.
The street bought the sword from, please say he bought the sword around the corner. It went to buy kids out of slavery who were on pirate ships.
They do is these local chiefs, if you would, on Menondo and stuff, take these kids who are
orphans and they put them on these ships and go out to the South China Sea.
These ships were crowded and uncomfortable.
I'm talking what we call a normal bunk.
They have four or five kids squeezed into that thing,
they live out in the open elements, they die. And the Philippine government just turns a blind eye.
What? Okay, but now I want to know about the secret orphans you're hiding. Right, right?
Like, you see how you made it worse, right? Like now there's like a level that I need to check
the next thing. Yeah, no, that sounds way worse when you add
So I bought them at the end
Okay, but According to Frank the money wasn't enough and then the pirates went back on their agreement
again, well
We took up arms and fought boat pirates
And we got these kids free
Many of them are now in the United States. I'm in touch
with some of them and they love me to death. And I'll tell you, I've got one kid who's about 15
years old. All I have to do is look cross-eyed at one guy and he'll kill for me and quote,
okay. Now I want to know about your secret team of murder orphan assassins. You got it, you got to chop the lie. The lie
has to end. And there's not questions at. Yeah. So I'm pretty much like fagin, but for
child soldiers, why are you covering your drink? So as you may have surmised based on our
story so far, none of that is true. No, quote,ote from Wikipedia here. C.I. spokesman Mark Mansfield
said the book was, quote, sheer fantasy, adding that it was unusual for the C.I.A. to comment
on such matters. Though, Frank's claims were so preposterous that we had thought it was necessary.
Also stating that it was convenient for Frank that C.I.A CIA director Casey, that's the guy he met at the
urinal, was dead and unable to refute the book himself. And quote, from what Frank even the urinal
doesn't even remember you. Okay. So what did Frank actually do in the military? Well, not much.
The Marine Corps says that Frank served from 1975 to 1981. And there's no indication that he ever left the United States at all.
Ever. In fact, his military medical file says that on January 22nd in 1978, he was referred for psychiatric evaluation for expressing flighty and disconnected ideas.
In 1978, we were like, we need to do some mental health.
Yeah, just to be clear.
Because in spite of the fact that he was a member of the reserves,
he insisted to several people that he was working for an intelligence agency.
But only every other week.
Well, I remember that distinguished Vietnam career he had in the article.
Well, I remember that distinguished Vietnam career he had in the article. I if you're confused on the timeline, yes, the Vietnam War did end in 1975, right?
So that does the level of fact checking black belt magazine.
Just doing it.
That's right.
Yeah.
His military records also indicate that there was a follow up medical evaluation at a military
psychiatric clinic in Long Beach on April 18th of that year.
He was found to be normal, but it clarified that he was not, in fact, involved in intelligence
work.
So Frank claimed in his book that he received military decorations after pressuring
the military to authenticate his heroics.
One day, he says in the book,
he received a phone call and went to an address in West Los Angeles
where he was handed a paper bag filled with medals,
what?
Including the Medal of Honor that he wears in a photo from the book.
What?
Where's the paper bag?
I don't know, I said,
I sold it to the Smithsonian.
They put it in there. It was
to pay for my cold fusion machine that I had. Okay. Then I've lighted my boot and came
to my house and stole the bottom half with fusion. It's not the cold part. I had I had him murdered by an orphan in the... So I've had some questions.
A paper bag.
Uh, well, we can't have a ceremony for him
since he is a spy, but he did earn
the Captain Crunch Super Decoder spy whistle
fair and square, so I guess put it
one of our spy metal lunch bags we have.
Yeah, again, from the LA times on the issue of the metals,
well, Marine Lieutenant Colonel John Shotwell in Washington
said Frank's military file shows there's no indication
in there anywhere that Frank received any military
awards after seeing a picture of Frank in uniform with his medals, the one that's in the book,
Lieutenant Colonel David Popsky in Los Angeles said that several ribbons are worn out of
sequence.
Based on that and other discrepancies, Popsky has said that he seriously doubted the
medals and ribbons were Franks.
As to the Medal of Honor, Popsky said, I don't believe there's ever been an instance of a medal of honor
being bestowed secretly.
What? But how would you know?
He also pointed out that the medal Frank is wearing in the photo in his book
is an army medal, not a marine man Jesus Christ again, from Wikipedia, quote,
questioned about the photograph in 1988. Frank told John Johnson from the Los Angeles Times
He was not able to get the military to explain why he was awarded a medal from the wrong service
Though in later years he changed his story to say that the uniform was just a Halloween costume
And
Okay, he went as a better marine than
Okay, if he went as a better Marine than he went as a Marine going as an army guy who got an award.
In fact, for what we can find, the only injury Frank sustained during his time in the military
is the time he fell off a truck that he was painted.
You got to duck and roll as the key.
So you're probably asking yourselves,
how does Frank explain all this?
Well, easy.
It's all the work of his Ninja Master rival,
Jesus Christ, Stephen Hayes.
Sure.
Oh, I thought it was gonna be Stephen Seagull.
I was gonna get some.
Oh, no, although there is a Stephen Seagull connection,
which I left out at the essay.
Stephen Hayes is a white guy from Ohio
who is also a ninja master, take it serious,
who is Frank sworn enemy.
All right.
We're going to Frank.
Hey, the CIA, the ninja clans,
his defeated opponents from the Kumite
and the United States military
have planted these things to discredit him.
And may I say, they've done a fantastic job.
You may.
If you had to summarize what you learned in one sentence,
what would it be?
When I said I keto isn't real,
I implied that any martial arts were,
and for that I apologize to everybody like this.
That's from my heart.
How are you right for the quiz?
It's ready as a cross-eyed orphan.
Pfff. All right, Eli, what is amazing about this story is that it actually makes other martial
arts liars we've done episodes about seem more credible.
That said, which of our previous episodes about nunchucks liars would win in a fight?
Hey, Andrew Thornton the second from the Pablo Escobar episode.
B. Steven Segal, a keto master and inventor of the term Jodo.
C. Frank Doe.
D. It's not Frank.
B. Steven Seull, Sheriff Deputy.
Sure, whatever.
All right, I've got one. And you already alluded to one of the answers here.
Here you go.
You like which of the following is not an actual claim that Frank do continues to make
to this day.
Hey, that he holds the record for fastest kick in the IFAO Kumite at 72 miles per hour.
All nice guys are real big.
Yeah, they have very good.
Every kick.
B, that he won 66 tug of war matches, we're standing on one leg.
See, that he once started an assassination attempt on Steven Segoal
That he is the first and only human being to ever punch through bullet
No
His fucking web. It's insane. It's a bad shit ever.
There's a video of him trying to do the,
he's the tug of war thing on one leg.
It's a magic, right?
And there's a video of him trying to do it.
To a guy who knows how it works,
which is fucking crazy.
Oh, man, it's fucking piss.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Who was trying to kill Steven Seagull?
That's Steven Tyrell on the right. That's Steven Painsky. The Hainsky from Ohio is trying to kill Steven Seagal? That's Steven Pains guy.
The Hains guy from Ohio is trying to say arch.
Now he's going to do it.
What do you know?
Listen to him.
He was trying to do it himself and then he thwarted himself.
Jesus.
Just an orphan in the background, mouthing the word no.
But the single figure for you, huh?
You like I want more for you.
Yeah.
What's the best conspiracy based fighting style?
Oh, the world.
Hey, men in black belts.
He showed a contrail.
See, kill builder, Berg.
D, 5G, Ticundo.
He, Popeye Kaiser Soze. 5G TKundo I hope your kaiser shows it
Jet Lee doesn't burn that hot
G
Krav Maga
I gotta go with G Krav Maga
No, actually it was Jet Lee doesn't burn that hot
It's pretty fucking good
Oh, well heaths you were anachiever, see you win this week.
The Tastik next week, let's get Noah up there.
Alright, well for Noah Eli, Tom and Heath, I am Cecil, thank you for hanging out with
us today.
We'll be back next week, am I done?
Noah will be an expert on something else.
To me now, and then you can listen to all our other shows, you can find the links at our
website.
And if you'd like to help keep this show going, you can make a per episode, the nation
of patreon.com slash citation pod.
Or leave us a five star review every where you can.
So if you get in touch with us, check out past episodes, connect with us on social media
or check the show notes.
Be sure to check out citation pod dot com.
Well done, Frank.
You won the most karate punches.
Yeah, remember? Please keep this tournament a secret forever and ever. We will all do the same.
Okay, uh, can I show people my trophy?
Yeah, of course. Draw. Nice.
See, now I'm confused again.
I'm also still confused. Me too!
I'm also still confused!