The Joe Rogan ExperienceJRE MMA Show #73 with Jean Jacques Machado
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Jean Jacques Machado Explains Jiu-Jitsu’s Roots, Reality, and Longevity Secrets
- Joe Rogan and Jean Jacques Machado dive into the history and evolution of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, from the early Gracie era in Rio to the global explosion after the first UFC. Machado details the family dynamics, the Gracie vs. Machado naming split, and how jiu-jitsu established itself through real fights, rivalries with Luta Livre, and events like Abu Dhabi. They explore how training philosophy, movement, breathing, and connection to nature shaped legends like Rickson Gracie and guided Machado’s own transition to no-gi and long competitive success. A major focus is on jiu-jitsu as a lifestyle and mindset—using the art to build resilience, humility, health, and longevity on and off the mat.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasTrain for self-defense first, sport second.
Machado’s generation in the 1980s trained primarily to protect themselves, with very few tournaments each year. He argues that modern jiu-jitsu often overemphasizes sport tactics that don’t translate well to real fights, especially when strikes are involved.
Develop elite defense before chasing endless submissions.
He describes Rickson Gracie’s real superpower as almost impenetrable defense—letting people mount him or take his back and still escaping, then finishing them. Building this kind of defense massively reduces injuries and panic, and makes your offense far more effective.
Use movement and angles to neutralize size and strikes.
Concepts like constant flow, changing angles from guard, and closing distance are central to surviving ground-and-pound and bigger opponents. Staying flat on your back is “being a target”; you either must close distance or shift your hips and legs to create safe angles.
Introduce leg locks later to protect development and health.
In his system, students don’t learn leg locks until blue belt so they can build a solid guard and understanding of base first. Taught too early—especially in no-gi—heel hooks and other leg attacks often cause serious injuries and can stunt broader technical growth.
Train for longevity: control, not chaos.
Machado attributes his relatively injury-free career to always staying in control, avoiding forcing techniques from dangerous positions, and being willing to abandon a submission attempt rather than risk his neck, knees, or back. He emphasizes smart partner choice and not mirroring tense, frantic energy.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesJiu-jitsu is a healthy way for you to be bullied by someone.
— Jean Jacques Machado
When you’re tired, your opponent is dead.
— Jean Jacques Machado (quoting an old samurai saying he lives by)
When we say jiu-jitsu is a gentle art, we mean that. Jiu-jitsu gives you the choice to hurt someone or not.
— Jean Jacques Machado
Anybody that I want to train, I would never, and I refuse, I never give a belt to anybody unless they deserve the belt.
— Jean Jacques Machado
The family is the most important family in the history of martial arts by a long shot. It changed the world.
— Joe Rogan, about the Gracies
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