Military Experts Rate 70 Military Battles In Movies And TV | How Real Is It? | Insider

Some of the top experts across the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines rate battle scenes in movies and television shows for realism.
Dakata Brodie flew for the US Coast Guard for 13 years as a search-and-rescue helicopter pilot and the US Army for eight years as a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter pilot. He breaks down several Coast Guard rescues.
Former Royal Marines Commando Gareth Timmins dissects "Jarhead," "Sicario: Day of the Soldado," and other desert-warfare scenarios.
Nicholas Irving, a former special-operations sniper and an author, rates the realism of sniper shots from "The Last of Us," "Extraction," and more.
Former United States armor officer and tank historian Nicholas Moran discusses tank scenes in "All Quiet on the Western Front" and "Band of Brothers," among others.
Lamont Christian served in the US Army for 33 years as a combat infantryman and retired in 2018 as the command sergeant major of Fort Jackson, the Army's main training center for basic combat training. He looks at various drill sergeant scenes.
Retired US Army officer and researcher John Spencer analyzes tactics in "Black Hawk Down" and other urban-warfare clips.
Nicholas Moran
@TheChieftainsHatch
Nicholas Irving
@ToughShooter
Gareth Timmims
linktr.ee/garethtimmins
Lamont Christian
/ christian555
John Spencer
www.johnspenceronline.com/
00:00:00 - Intro
00:00:40 - Drill Sergeant
00:20:21 - Tanks
00:41:09 - Sniper
1:01:53 - Bomb Disposal
1:23:37 - Coast Guard
1:40:17 - Urban Warfare
2:00:41 - Desert Warfare
2:18:15 - Credits
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• Military Tank Expert R...
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Military Experts Rate 70 Military Battles In Movies And TV | How Real Is It? | Insider

Пікірлер: 808

  • @oldsteve4291
    @oldsteve42914 ай бұрын

    Captain Richard Flaherty, 'The Giant Killer', 4'9", 97lbs. Silver Star, 2 Bronze Stars, 2 Purple Hearts and yet wound up homeless. How does a country let that happen to it's heroes?

  • @Menuki

    @Menuki

    4 ай бұрын

    We don’t have the greatest attitude towards mental health today much less the 1950s. Add in an even more intense concept of toxic masculinity. There was nothing there if he had any inkling of PTSD. Then there the layer of fame and hero worship. Possible imposter syndrome. That tears down ppl in entirely different ways. Survivors guilt? It that era, how were they going to fix something that’s isn’t supposed to exist

  • @eddeddeeddee6491

    @eddeddeeddee6491

    4 ай бұрын

    Because that costs money and the US has other priorities apparently

  • @dergin38467

    @dergin38467

    4 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately there is not a lot of profit to be made in helping people. If there was, nobody would be living on the street.

  • @joshbull623

    @joshbull623

    4 ай бұрын

    To be fair, like usual, while all that was going on with him, Congress made sure they got their pay raise successfully and on time. Expanded their tax payer funded government healthcare and increased the budget for their taxpayer "privileges" like travel. Another big push I have seen though mostly at state levels is the push to pull from veteran benefits and privileges to give to ILLEGAL immigrants, that has been fun to watch. In NY they denied an increase in college tuition aid to dependents of fallen military in duty and a month later, they created a program with an increased budget proposed for children of ILLEGAL immigrants to go to school instead stating when I asked my representative "Military and Veterans already have so many resources to pull from(BS by the way, just look up the horrible and corrupt history of the VA) that the impact would be minimal for military and their families but substantial for the children of these innocent 'refugees'." Don't feel bad, having trained and deployed with both UK, Canadian and Australian military, I have kept in touch with many veterans there and they are going through the exact same things. Governments love shytting on their used up and tossed away military, the days of Ancient Greece and then Rome where military merit and service is respected, rewarded and honored is long over.

  • @joshbull623

    @joshbull623

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@eddeddeeddee6491 We spend more time letting other nations use us in place of their own defense, forcing us to fund European and Asian nations security while they pour that money into social programs, that yes, we don't have much left to take care of our own among other reasons. Same situation with medical research and study, academics, and trade. This recently has bitten at least Europe in the behind now that they see first hand NATO and the US cannot effectively guarantee their safety with multiple conflicts kicking up and they are all struggling to catch up now with many things like simply obtaining Gen5 aircraft that cannot be produced fast enough even as Gen6 is on the horizon, but it is what it is. Our only hope is to tell the UN, NATO, EU and everyone else to go F themselves and focus on recovering and getting out of debt before reentering the international BS of the world, but that will never happen because Europe, Asia, and Middle East will politicize it as some betrayal(Just look at the Flak UK got for leaving the European Union) and US politicians will argue against it because it makes them so much money and why make millions in office when you can make hundreds of millions.

  • @gurumagoo
    @gurumagoo4 ай бұрын

    My dad said the scene from Forrest Gump, where they were grilling outside with the palm trees, and the Hueys were flying overhead in Vietnam gave him goosebumps. Whoever put that scene together was there too, and it was perfect.

  • @crisnmaryfam7344

    @crisnmaryfam7344

    4 ай бұрын

    scenes like that happen when the technical advisors of movies are honored and paid attention to. What happens when they dont, is stuff like " Danger to Manifold , and the floor pan falling out" of Brians Eclipse in The Fast and Furious. Funny how both some how end up making iconic scenes, just for Very different reasons lol

  • @MaxPower-vf8kt

    @MaxPower-vf8kt

    2 ай бұрын

    @@crisnmaryfam7344one of the most aggravating things, to me, is movies/shows that show the most unrealistic flying/plane, scenes. There are so many wild and crazy TRUE flying stories, there is no need to egregiously create such horrible fiction. 39:14

  • @AddaStineMusic

    @AddaStineMusic

    28 күн бұрын

    They filmed that scene in my hometown Beaufort SC.

  • @SuperJusSaiyan
    @SuperJusSaiyan4 ай бұрын

    I love that. “People didn’t like what I rated it before, but F that. Fury gets another 9”.

  • @wrestlerecap1324

    @wrestlerecap1324

    3 ай бұрын

    And the F is for Fury

  • @mummeliini123

    @mummeliini123

    Ай бұрын

    @@wrestlerecap1324 It's good to keep in mind the experts are rating individual scenes, not the whole movie and also might miss vital context that they weren't told.

  • @westinclinton21

    @westinclinton21

    20 күн бұрын

    @@mummeliini123🤓🤓🤓🤓

  • @mummeliini123

    @mummeliini123

    20 күн бұрын

    @@westinclinton21 ?

  • @mikkovilhu8977

    @mikkovilhu8977

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@wrestlerecap1324if good tempered civil workers are available

  • @Toucansam46
    @Toucansam463 ай бұрын

    The tank guy is just the best. I mean he just loves tanks so much it’s infectious

  • @godsavethequeen5783

    @godsavethequeen5783

    3 ай бұрын

    He has a youtube channel, it's called "The Chieftan".

  • @Kilo3Cav19K

    @Kilo3Cav19K

    2 ай бұрын

    Also The Chieftan Nicolas Moran is still a serving US Army Armor Officer. Currently a LT. Col of the 1st Armored Division. 24 years of service thus far.

  • @PaleHorsePodcast

    @PaleHorsePodcast

    2 ай бұрын

    Rrrt😅

  • @antonronnback2847

    @antonronnback2847

    25 күн бұрын

    😅

  • @antonronnback2847

    @antonronnback2847

    25 күн бұрын

    ​@@Kilo3Cav19K😊😊

  • @ac6418
    @ac64183 ай бұрын

    A sniper known as 'the Reaper' and he says 'I'm scared of bugs'. Sir, you made my brother's day. He's retired military and was watching this with me, and the laugh he gave as he agreed with you was just precious. Thank you all experts for your service and sacrifice and just for your expertise. Movies should be hiring you guys to get their movies right.

  • @harry9392

    @harry9392

    Ай бұрын

    The reaper said if it moves shoot it but a guy who is a medic you don't shoot. He said he would have taken that shot. Instant war-crime don't shoot medics even as the Germans and Japanese did it, we do not, and all sniper weapons have floating barrels Bollix some do but some don't I fired the British L96 hit targets at 1000yds and I ain't no sniper as on operation banner and a home service Royal Irish regiment and Ulster Defence Regiment's we didn't have snipers but we did have COP teams witch I was a member of the first one in my regiment.

  • @Mini_Hayley

    @Mini_Hayley

    Ай бұрын

    @@harry9392I have a weird theory that sniper guy they have on here is stolen valor. He was on another video saying that a 50 cal beretta would “take your arm off if few within a few feet of you.” Spoken like someone who’s never touched a rifle in their life.

  • @Skaffa_Duck

    @Skaffa_Duck

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@harry9392Honestly in the movie Mr Doss couldn't easily be identified as a medic And medics are allowed to be shot if they carry weapons (Wich Mr Doss of course wasn't) And the whole floating barrel issue I have honestly no knowledge on

  • @harry9392

    @harry9392

    Ай бұрын

    @Skaffa_Duck hacksaw ridge excellent movie medics were not to be engaged by the enemy , if a medic is shot it would be a war crime, but that was the Japanese in WW2 Didn't care about the Geneva convention. A good friend was murdered by the IRA on an attack on Musgrave Park Military hospital in Belfast, they didn't care who they killed,

  • @harry9392

    @harry9392

    Ай бұрын

    It vibrates and moves freely during the shot process in a normal manner without interference from the stock, therefore allowing performance to be more consistent and accurate by letting the barrel process that shot naturally and not be held back by any hard contact during the shot process There fore more accurate

  • @maxp4573
    @maxp45735 ай бұрын

    I love how I was like 11 or 13 when Band of Brothers came out and it was immidietly my favorite Show for Years and Years and YEARS and that it still holds up so accurately after almost 20 years and always get's a NEAR perfect rating just goes to Show how much Love and Time went into that Show. Everything about it was great. The Warscenes, The dialogues, The Actors. All of it.

  • @Dwendele

    @Dwendele

    4 ай бұрын

    You should check out it's companion show, "The Pacific"

  • @behindthen0thing525

    @behindthen0thing525

    3 ай бұрын

    It's not that realistic it was Hollywood hype

  • @nonyabiz2777

    @nonyabiz2777

    3 ай бұрын

    Generation kill is a must see series. It’s Band of brothers for the Marines. Pacific is the best one I have seen for the pacific theater in W.W.2

  • @behindthen0thing525

    @behindthen0thing525

    3 ай бұрын

    Band of bozos

  • @darthmong7196

    @darthmong7196

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@behindthen0thing525 I mean the veterans were on set for it to ensure accuracy but whatever

  • @haemmertime
    @haemmertime5 ай бұрын

    because you mentioned older fuses, in germany we even to this day run quite often into remains of WW2, the worst thing to encounter are bombs with chemical fuses. They use an acid to break membrane, however when this didn't happen on impact or as planned these bombs stay in the ground and could potentially go of every second, it's why they have to be exploded on the spot. To minimize damage they get covered in straw and rubber mats and the area gets isolated with shipping containers to prevent shrapnel and burning bales to fly to far of.

  • @nothanks9503

    @nothanks9503

    21 күн бұрын

    Why not cover them in water

  • @haemmertime

    @haemmertime

    19 күн бұрын

    I have to guess, but to stop shrapnel from a bomb you need a lot of water. Imagine a bomb found in a city not too deep in the ground, you'd have to build a dam around it to get the water deep enough. And when it breaks you flood the neighbourhood. But I am no expert, so this could be completely wrong😂

  • @Menuki
    @Menuki4 ай бұрын

    I feel like R. Lee Ermey is pretty unassailable as a DI. His behavior might not follow protocol or be of its day, but it was authentic considering it really was his job. He became the inspiration for so many.

  • @Studawg30

    @Studawg30

    3 ай бұрын

    Your argument falls apart when you put one ounce of thought into it. He isn’t being critiqued by a military historian

  • @Menuki

    @Menuki

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Studawg30 Historian…..as opposed to actually doing the job he depicts in the role Tacitly getting carte Blanche from the director to perform the role as he see fit? Ermy was a DI during the Vietnam war, that’s not a historian who studied the event, he lived it

  • @stevievannailinpalin4583

    @stevievannailinpalin4583

    2 ай бұрын

    That whole first scene of insults. Was half stuff he’s said to recruits before and other lines he came up with on the spot. He actually was hired as a consultant. The guy in the chopper shooting civilians was originally picked for the role. So Ermy made moves to convince Stanley to pick him for the role. Imagine being that helicopter actor. Thinking you’ll be a major part of a Kubrick movie. Then get reduced to one scene, where you are killing innocent farmers.

  • @Menuki

    @Menuki

    2 ай бұрын

    @@stevievannailinpalin4583 yea, but then you see Ermey in the role….how pretentious would you have to be to think you’d do better as a civilian

  • @stevievannailinpalin4583

    @stevievannailinpalin4583

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Menuki very true. But was just putting myself in that guys for a second. Being framed up to be a major part of a gigantic Kubrick movie to a passing moment. You’d most likely see it worked out for the best a while after everything panned out. But that initial week or longer is gotta be tough

  • @sublimesubaru2857
    @sublimesubaru285724 күн бұрын

    This is why I love KZread premiums, almost 2 and a half hours of good ad free content. Don't need Netflix or the hundreds of other sites anymore, at least for myself.

  • @tripatomz3441

    @tripatomz3441

    16 күн бұрын

    Same I haven't watched conventional cable or any streaming sites in like 5 -6years now

  • @P-J-W-777
    @P-J-W-7775 ай бұрын

    My father was a Marine who served in Vietnam told me a lot about his experience at basic and their reception when they got home but wouldn’t go any further than that. Unfortunately he passed away due to pancreatic cancer a few years ago rather quickly and I never got the chance to talk to him about it anymore. He did say boot in the Marines was brutal back then. They took a young boy and turned you into a Man. He spoke about a big guy in boot who was a mouthy bully to some of the guys. One day he was called away and returned later a different person. Later they found out he had been beaten pretty badly when they noticed all the bruising to his body but the only thing he would ever admit is that it was a training accident. But everyone knew. My Uncle served in WW2 in the 101st Airborne 501G He’s been in several books and even received several additional medals years later during his funeral issued by then President Clinton. He never talked about his experiences either but I was young at the time and didn’t understand. A few years after his passing I got to read his memoirs which some were included into published books as well as watched some interviews with historians and such for movies, other books and so on. He was even asked to be a part of the making of Band of Brothers but declined. He came home after the war became a farmer and lived the rest of his life in peace. He was an amazing man and gentle but he wasn’t to trifled with either.

  • @jackthorton10

    @jackthorton10

    4 ай бұрын

    He lived one with distinction…. And that should not be forgotten, may he rest In peace

  • @P-J-W-777

    @P-J-W-777

    4 ай бұрын

    @@jackthorton10 Never forgotten! Thank you very much! Semper Fi

  • @louiswolff9382

    @louiswolff9382

    3 ай бұрын

    There is seldom a more dangerous animal on earth then a man who’s been to war and just wants to live the rest of his days in peace and solitude, when you force him to get involved in something he has no interest in getting involved with, never underestimate the quiet old vet who sits in the corner trying to keep to himself.

  • @P-J-W-777

    @P-J-W-777

    3 ай бұрын

    @@louiswolff9382 without a doubt. Both my dad, my grandfather and uncle were that way. I’d only ever seen my dad get into on fight and that was due to my aunts (his sister) boyfriend had beaten her and my dad confronted him about it and the dude got hostile and mouthy. Needless to say dude got his rear end handed to him and never touched my aunt again. My uncle had found a diary belonging to a German officer and brought it home with him because he found a picture and an address to the person in the picture within the diary. He sent it to the woman who replied back asking how he had gotten it. Anyway he found out the officer made it out alive and was the one who responded. They became very good penpals over the years. The crazy thing about it is that my uncle kept trying to get him and the officer had put a reward out against my uncle. It’s so awesome knowing that two people who were actively to kill the other for almost a year became very good friends after the wars end. I’ve been very honored to hear some of the stories from my father (Vietnam), grandfather (WW2 Pilot Japan and Korean War) and my Uncle (WW2 Europe and Japan). Thank you for your reply and for your service! It’s still my biggest regret to this day that I didn’t get to do my part and serve like my family and so many others before me. God Bless!

  • @jeffsanders79
    @jeffsanders794 ай бұрын

    You're bringing back memories... When I was in basic, we had one D I almost everybody looked up to, maxed out every PT test. Well, he had a distinctive voice that I could mimic, I probably don't have to go further. But one of my buddies had glasses like his, we stole his brown round and I went room to room imitating him for morale, we had a rough week or so. I get to the last group of guys to prank, walk in the room, everyone that saw me, at ease, I went into my spill, got a laugh, and heard, at ease, stop stop, I said, we've done that already. After lookin at the fear, mostly for me, on all of their faces, my heart fell to my feet. Needless to say, I got a workout of a lifetime. In that process, he told me how he felt about me putting my grubby lil private hands on his brown round. He also told me, he respected why I did it, afterwards

  • @AddictedToJeepsCom
    @AddictedToJeepsCom4 ай бұрын

    Thank you for putting all these experts together into one video! Bravo!

  • @Unseengenie
    @Unseengenie5 ай бұрын

    When I went through boot camp at Paris island, the Drill Instructors were some of the funniest people I ever met. But you couldn’t laugh other wise they’d haze the soul out of our bodies.

  • @OutlawCaliber13
    @OutlawCaliber134 ай бұрын

    I went to a mostly Marines reform boot camp when I was 17 as an attempt to get me out of the life I was spiraling down into. There were a couple Army guys, and one Air Force, but the majority of the DIs were Marines. It was completely ran in the military format, minus weapons, and all the fun stuff. I don't ever remember cursing, or touching. There was the brim of the round cover when you were getting swarmed, but that was about it. Unfortunately, I didn't learn the lessons I should've at the time. Cleaned me up for a couple months before I ended back up with the same friends, doing the same stupid stuff. Took me a few years to figure it out, and clean up. Funny enough, the lessons I should've learned back then didn't come to me until afterwards. I still remember the Drill Instructors, name and face. Some really good dudes that actually gave a damn about us youngsters, and misfits.

  • @HiPickle
    @HiPickleАй бұрын

    "them paintball bullets, they hurt?" had me laughing so hard

  • @PanhandleFloridaMan
    @PanhandleFloridaMan2 ай бұрын

    Gunship guy here, we knew exactly how to take care of a VBIED

  • @reds815
    @reds8154 ай бұрын

    My only criticism is the ripsaw tank is actually as sick as it looks and can do what he was saying it couldn't on ice. They are made in my state and ive seen it in action personally and its nuts!

  • @shawnhuff7304
    @shawnhuff73045 ай бұрын

    For the bomb defusal with the stethoscope, it's entirely accurate. I work on vehicles and diagnose problems. And sometimes in order to determine what is going wrong, such as a clicking noise or a mechanical failure, we have a form of a stethoscope that we can use to find what part(s) are clicking, rubbing, or just mechanically functioning incorrectly. So I'm glad that it was talked about, as well as it being shown in MASH even though in the film was shown as a gag.

  • @TzunSu

    @TzunSu

    4 ай бұрын

    Uh, what? You tinker with cars, so you think you know that you use a stethoscope to defuse a bomb lol?

  • @mildly_miffed_man1414

    @mildly_miffed_man1414

    4 ай бұрын

    @@TzunSudude just shut up

  • @anubispup4760

    @anubispup4760

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@TzunSuMate, go pound sand.

  • @rossington1680

    @rossington1680

    2 ай бұрын

    Tools are tools…. Most have multiple uses, except the tools that car companies make for that “one” bolt that just had to be different. Moral of the story….. don’t be a dick just because you don’t know what you’re talking about.😎

  • @Dwendele
    @Dwendele4 ай бұрын

    In the 80s, in the Army, they called the O-course, a "confidence course". It built confidence in yourself when you were able complete it in good time.

  • @gurumagoo

    @gurumagoo

    4 ай бұрын

    In the late 90's, you had the O-course and the Confidence course. The O-course is meant to be fast. The Confidence course is dangerous and done slowly.

  • @rickeycallen

    @rickeycallen

    Ай бұрын

    It was still the confidence course in 2010 when I went through.

  • @runfoo2795
    @runfoo27955 ай бұрын

    To Mr. Moran While training at NTC back in the early 80s we did indeed attach grappling hooks /w rope to our tracks(M-113 type). The plan was to drive up to the wire toss the grapple over the wire drive back taking the wire with us opening up a gap for the rest of the company.

  • @robbiepemberton

    @robbiepemberton

    3 ай бұрын

    Combat engineers would absolutely do that. infantry or cav, not so much

  • @runfoo2795

    @runfoo2795

    3 ай бұрын

    @@robbiepembertonA co/ 5th BN /16 Inf

  • @wesleymoore3693
    @wesleymoore36934 ай бұрын

    So the navy’s final test is called “battle stations” and it’s held on a simulation ship that can test all aspects of casualties that would happen on a ship in battle. And as for the sailors, we aren’t fighters first, we are firefighters first.

  • @Apillis124
    @Apillis1245 ай бұрын

    57:38 My dad, who was a Master Gunnery Sergeant often said it was typically easier to teach and train women to shoot at the range than it was guys, because typically women would listen more carefully to what they're being told/taught and were more patient about taking their shots. Furthermore, he said the criticism that women tending to second-guess themselves more than men is an asset for women in regards to accurate shooting, because if you think you can do a better shot than what you're dialed in at at that time, you should absolutely reassess rather than just going for it, and sharpshooters, snipers, what-have-you are experts at doing that--obviously far more than your typical person who knows how to shoot a firearm.

  • @2shy1151

    @2shy1151

    5 ай бұрын

    Interesting! I couldn't win an arm wrestling conest when i hung out with my guy buddies, and I knew it. My inability to match them physically made me focus on sports that i felt put me on a more even standing. I put so much effort in perfecting my aim that i excelled in anything with a target involved to the point where even I was surprised. We all need to find our strengths and use it to whatever advantage we can to contribute. Your dad is a gem for spotting people's strengths and interpreting it to such an analytical degree.

  • @DroneStrike1776

    @DroneStrike1776

    4 ай бұрын

    When was the last time you see a guy read the instructions for anything? I built a galvanized steel shed, 10x12 in the summer heat. Built a base with 2x4 and plywood, I winged the entire thing. Had to backtrack a few times because I didn't read the instructions thoroughly.

  • @DroneStrike1776

    @DroneStrike1776

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@2shy1151 not in 2024. Women are just as strong as men now. There was a street interview and they asked women if a woman can beat Floyd Mayweather in a boxing match. The women said yes, if they were the same weight. This is Floyd, the undefeated boxer, regarded as one of the best boxers of all time. I was 135lbs at 19 and was bench pressing 180lbs. Waiting to see a 135lbs woman do that. But you're right, find what you're strong at and focus on it and not try to have a pissing contesting at every chance.

  • @clydecraft5642

    @clydecraft5642

    4 ай бұрын

    this is literally evolution, women are more precise and men have more burst strength. basically men can hit really hard really fast, and women were really good at throwing spears and dealing precise death blows, if you want to get into the loadouts of ancient cavemen and women@@2shy1151

  • @clydecraft5642

    @clydecraft5642

    4 ай бұрын

    to add on im not saying women were the only ones good at it, because humans in general evolved to throw things, but historically women had more precise eyes, for distinguishing tiny details in plants that lead to life and death, picking berries, and likely had better precision because men are designed to be hardy and heavy compared to the same size woman

  • @53cards92
    @53cards924 ай бұрын

    50:27 are you telling me that my battlefield k/d ratio was in double digits because I was setting up and moving like a real sniper?😂

  • @richardstevens7547
    @richardstevens75474 ай бұрын

    Hazing was alive and well in '89, but not until you got to your unit. About 92 some guys got hurt at the 82nd and the Army said to stop, but it went on for years.

  • @richardstevens7547

    @richardstevens7547

    4 ай бұрын

    And I can vividly recall the shark attack because at reception bn some guys were rough housing and gettin mouthy with the female DI. So she said, "okay you MFers" and called over to the basic training company in front of everyone. She goes, "I got some hard headed jack asses coming to you who need corrective training." Then looks at the ring leader and says, "Especially Jackson. He thinks he's all that." Hangs up the phone and walks away humming to herself. And 3 days later... Man, we got off that bus and it was pitbulls on raw meat. Lasted about an hour I think. You knew you weren't in Kansas anymore after that.

  • @Toolazyfornewname

    @Toolazyfornewname

    3 ай бұрын

    Some pretty brutal hazing still goes on in the 82nd to this day, regardless of what big army says.

  • @averagegardener4266
    @averagegardener42664 ай бұрын

    I'm 45 years old and I still hate the fact that I can't serve my country because of my Disabilities. I begged my dad to enlist me when I was almost 18 but was denied because I have Scoliosis and a weak left knee. Still to date I think I could have worked in the Bay cleaning or kitchen cooking. That really hurts. It really sucks on a every day basis.

  • @datmurphey965
    @datmurphey9652 ай бұрын

    In navy basic, they still teach the bow line knot for stuff like line handling when porting a ship

  • @dagnrl215
    @dagnrl2152 ай бұрын

    You can thank USMC Captain Dale Dye for so many of these movies and shows scenes historical and realistic accuracy that he was a technical advisor on. He was the baddest of the bad, three tours in ‘Nam, a Bronze Star w/ Combat V recipient, multiple Purple Hearts.

  • @johnpitman4447
    @johnpitman44475 ай бұрын

    MEPS in 83 had us strip down in a large room. No privacy. And we duck walked as a large group.

  • @seanharris8419

    @seanharris8419

    4 ай бұрын

    It’s changed a lot then. MEPS in 2015 and I duck walked with like 10 other guys in our underwear and then they brought us to a back room where a doctor checked every square inch of us.

  • @roaminanderson9951

    @roaminanderson9951

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@seanharris8419 03 probably around the same 10 to 15 of us

  • @jamesg1974a

    @jamesg1974a

    Ай бұрын

    Same in 92.

  • @MarvRoberts
    @MarvRoberts3 ай бұрын

    My drill sergeant made me do 100 push-ups for putting a MK-19 grenade launcher back together before he said to. It was a fairly simple device. I don't understand why he got so heated over it.

  • @josephclark2268
    @josephclark22684 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy Nicholas Irving’s analysis and stories. Not taking anything away from the rest of the folks. I just find the sniper analysis fascinating and I’ve heard other stories from Irving before. He does a great job! These videos are great and I enjoyed everyone’s analysis! Thanks for putting this together. Happy New Year and God bless…

  • @Patriot46426

    @Patriot46426

    3 ай бұрын

    He's also perpetuated a lie about the .50 that it could take your arm off with out hitting it.

  • @josephclark2268

    @josephclark2268

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Patriot46426 - Oh. Okay.

  • @arniorgumundsson3782

    @arniorgumundsson3782

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Patriot46426 no he dint you saw a small clip edited by another guy specifically to discredit Irving if you watch the full video he was talking about the perception of the weapon in movies and TV shows not the real thing

  • @svnpointsixtwo1436
    @svnpointsixtwo14365 ай бұрын

    Shark Attack was way better than "the first 100 yards." Speaking as one who recieved the shark attack in 2010, and as a D.S in 2021; our recruits did worse discipline wise with the first 100 yards.

  • @mikebrase5161
    @mikebrase51615 ай бұрын

    A buddy and I got pinned down by a sniper in '04 off Route Grizzlies Sadr City. Luckily for us a Bradley counter sniped him with 2 rounds of HE from the Bushmaster.

  • @DeathDealer1825

    @DeathDealer1825

    4 ай бұрын

    That is wild homeboy got misted by an autocannon lmao i respect you guys more than words can describe id love to see a bradley in action one day

  • @mikebrase5161

    @mikebrase5161

    4 ай бұрын

    @@DeathDealer1825 during this battle that lasted 18hours our Platoons Bradley's went through three basic loads of HE. We killed around a hundred or so of Al Sadr's Mahdi militia. It got a bit harry for a bit as we were completely surrounded.

  • @DeathDealer1825

    @DeathDealer1825

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mikebrase5161 nothing but respect glad you made it out safe brother you guys are badasses

  • @Toolazyfornewname

    @Toolazyfornewname

    3 ай бұрын

    @@mikebrase5161 Was a gunner on a Brad for 5 years, got pretty good at it. Thanks for sharing man, stay safe.

  • @mattomite9097
    @mattomite90972 ай бұрын

    The guy that was a sniper gave me more information than I’ve heard before. The best part was he did all while being a super cool guy!!!!

  • @Mini_Hayley

    @Mini_Hayley

    Ай бұрын

    There’s something off about him, he was on several other videos saying things that were verifiably false and would be easily known by an actual sniper.

  • @justinbressette1286
    @justinbressette12864 ай бұрын

    The tumbler wasn't designed as a Frontline attack vehicle. It was designed as an Engineering vehicle. The jet engine was equipped on it for jumping rivers and pulling anchor lines for putting up bridges for actual tanks to cross. They even go into detail about its actual use in the movie.

  • @theoxygen.559
    @theoxygen.5593 ай бұрын

    This is how a real blog or vlog commentary should be done, listen and learn

  • @manuelschneider1105
    @manuelschneider11055 ай бұрын

    *sees the lineup*... well, I ain't going nowhere for the next two hours and 18 minutes

  • @michaelmangan7963
    @michaelmangan79634 ай бұрын

    Yes! More reviews with multiple operators! This is good

  • @josephmcdonald764
    @josephmcdonald7643 ай бұрын

    I had very little, if any, drill and ceremony at Tigerland, Infantry AIT in 1967! It was most double time everywhere, loaded down with weapons and equipment in the blazing heat and humidity. And, if you got there early, you would double time in place!

  • @stallingfortime2334
    @stallingfortime23343 ай бұрын

    With reference to Segment #1, Timestamp 20:01 - "Every Soldier receives hand to hand training and Pugil Stick Training" THAT IS A LIE!!! I was VERY tiny for my age and was born in early November of 1961 and started Kindergarten in 1965. May 16th near the end of my Sophomore year in High School - The Lehighton Area School District in NE Pennsylvania conducted their annual height and weight recordings and I was a WHOPPING 4"8" tall and weighed 84lbs! I didn't even start puberty until I was 16 1/2 years old! I was bullied ALL THE WAY THROUGH SCHOOL even by the girls initially! No matter how many times I complained to my parents; their oblivious attitude was, "Oh it can't be that bad or we would've heard something from your teachers". I remember this like yesterday and I'm in my 60s! In Third Grade; Mary Hunsicker (straight A student), and her cousin Leslie Hunsicker (also straight A student), their cousin Laura Rebold (troublemaker), and their Tom-boy friend Susan Haas (daughter of my Cub Scout master - also a troublemaker) would gang up and pick on me during EVERY recess hitting me best as little girls could and chased me all the way home from school one day which ended directly in front of my house 4 blocks from the Third Ward Elementary School and I finally had enough! I turned and faced them and issued a challenge. "I know where every one of you lives and you'll always win a four against one, but I can probably beat any one of you one on one. I want you to decide which one of you will fight me and if you win you can keep on picking on me, but if I win, you have to stop because if you don't, I'll hunt every one of you down one at a time and beat you worse than you've ever beaten me. They chatted and put Susan Haas forth as their champion and we began to fight. I put everything I had into it and had Susan down on her back on the sidewalk with me sitting on her while straddling her stomach and repeatedly hitting her for everything I was worth waiting for her to give up. My mother heard the commotion and came out and grabbed me by my hair and dragged me into the house and gave me the worst beating I had ever received for the simple fact that she saw me hitting a girl. Well at least those girls stopped bullying me; but the bullying still continued from all of the boys at school. Because of my tiny size, I always ran from fights because I knew I didn't stand a chance to win. Because I always ran from fights, I never really learned to fight! I joined the Army in December of 1978 with 10 months of Delayed Entry for two reasons (#1 -with 7 kids in the family, I wanted an education in Electronics and didn't want to burden my father with college expenses & #2 - TO LEARN TO FIGHT!) and went on Active Duty for Basic Training at Fort Dix, New Jersey. My Basic Training was the FIRST CO-ED Basic Training at Fort Dix where women and men would be trained side by side AND THOSE BASTARDS IN THEIR INFINITE WISDOM, REMOVED ALL HAND TO HAND COMBAT TRAINING AND TRAINING WITH PUGIL STICKS TOO because they didn't want to get anybody hurt (the women obviously)!!! WHAT THE HECK WERE THEY THINKING??? I started Basic on Sept 3rd of 1979 at 6 ft tall and only 117lbs! If you only weigh 117lbs, it really doesn't matter how many times you get dropped for pushups. - there isn't enough weight there to really build any muscle besides the fact that I stayed out of trouble best I could and rarely got dropped. Even though I needed to eat much more than what we were served for meals, I got treated the same as everyone else in that regard. I barely met the minimum weight requirements for graduation on Oct 31st at 6ft tall and 131lbs with a FULL WAIVER by not taking a crap or even peeing everything I had in me that morning and drank as much water as I could at the water fountain in the barracks hallway before I was checked for height and weight because if I didn't weight 131lbs I was going to have to repeat Basic Training! If I ever had to go into battle and it ever came down to hand to hand combat I WAS DEAD! I've been in only one real fight in my entire life (if you can call it that) and that fight was with Susan Haas when I was 7 years old (I started Kindergarten at age 4).

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd263735 ай бұрын

    They're the best at expressing their own insights. They always got something informative to say.

  • @supermike3529

    @supermike3529

    5 ай бұрын

    But many forget these are just films meant to be fun

  • @TimOshay-bb2ux

    @TimOshay-bb2ux

    5 ай бұрын

    @@supermike3529but the whole point of this show is to asses how realistic the movie/show is

  • @shaun5047

    @shaun5047

    4 ай бұрын

    @@supermike3529I’m going have to respectfully disagree. It’s very obvious in many of these films that they put in a ton of effort to be realistic. It’s pretty clear that most hired veterans to get the best insight. lol However at the end of the day the film has to be entertaining so things get changed because it’s Hollywood. Personally I don’t mind.

  • @supermike3529

    @supermike3529

    4 ай бұрын

    @shaun5047 well then we agree mt friend mt comment is in agreement that the hollywood changes can be for fun

  • @richmcintyre1178
    @richmcintyre11784 ай бұрын

    I went through Parris Island in 1969 and the boot camp scenes from Full Melat Jack brought back memories that made me laugh today but during training, there wasn't any laughing going on.

  • @MrJohnchatfield
    @MrJohnchatfield4 ай бұрын

    How you gonna say hazing had never been accepted? It definitely has. After the 60's or so, it might have been not so tolerant, but it was tolerated when needed. How do you explain IT in the Marines and otherwise

  • @MrJohnchatfield
    @MrJohnchatfield4 ай бұрын

    I went to boot camp in 1996 and we definitely had foot locker inspections, as well as bunk and hygiene

  • @jacobcasmus1882
    @jacobcasmus18822 ай бұрын

    The EOD guy said if they didn't have time they would just get it as far away as possible..... that's wild. I know soldiers are kinda supposed to not know if they are coming back.... but like running a bomb as far away as you can get it and knowing you probably aren't coming back.... Damn.... just Damn.... What's even more crazy is there's a lot of people who have sacrificed themselves for other people/buildings/ important stuff (for lack of a better word). Jah Rest Your Hero Bones! R.I.P. Brothers 🙏

  • @tylerbonser7686
    @tylerbonser76863 ай бұрын

    So interesting, always enjoy listening to soldiers and their experience and knowledge.

  • @BoilingDietCoke
    @BoilingDietCoke4 ай бұрын

    saw it, had the OG speakers surround sound...good thing, ty Grandpa's & Grandma's.

  • @GB-TX
    @GB-TX5 ай бұрын

    I LOVED this. More content like this please!!!

  • @ozzy7109
    @ozzy71093 ай бұрын

    They even showed us Band of Brothers in basic training (2005)

  • @michaelkclark6981
    @michaelkclark69814 ай бұрын

    Fantastic video… I am not sure if it’s the Specialities or Age , but the rating given each movie was very interesting and informative…

  • @syndicateproductionstarana4925
    @syndicateproductionstarana49254 ай бұрын

    Great breakdown.I was really hoping youd look at the movie ' Enemy at the Gates' in the sniper section.And Cross of Iron' - Sam Peckinpah movie.Good to see a clip from M.A.S.H in there.I used to love that show.Keep on pumping out the good content.I havnt seen any Saving private Ryan and ' The Thin Red Line which is my favourite war movie and of course Apocolypse Now and Platoon.Lock and load from New Zealand.

  • @johnscott2758
    @johnscott27583 ай бұрын

    You are wrong on the “foot lockers” In the time period of Full Metal Jacket all the way through the 80s when I went and on into the 90s we had Sea Chests. and the movie very accurate.

  • @Pablanguillas
    @Pablanguillas5 ай бұрын

    They always bring highly interesting people 😂❤

  • @patrickmulholland7496
    @patrickmulholland74964 ай бұрын

    Hacksaw ridge is a fantastic movie 🙌🏼

  • @denissavgir2881
    @denissavgir28815 ай бұрын

    When I did initial training @ ft Jackson Jan-May 2003, the final event in basic training wasnt called the forge. We called it the ftx (field training exercise)

  • @ericstearns170

    @ericstearns170

    4 ай бұрын

    Forge is the new thing, changed in the 20teens, I think.

  • @SLIDESPOT
    @SLIDESPOT5 ай бұрын

    If Douglas Murray were a Tank expert he would be this guy…..love this Tank expert.

  • @zDerezzed

    @zDerezzed

    5 ай бұрын

    I've watched many of his videos, superb content.

  • @shaun5047

    @shaun5047

    4 ай бұрын

    He reminds me of a few Warrant Officers I met in the Army. Technically they were SOA (Subject Matter Experts) so they were really knowledgeable on the systems we used. However a few of them went ridiculously deep into the material. lol Picture yourself making a comment about something cool you noticed on a design and then this guy going giving you a random lecture about the history of the system. 😂

  • @duncant99
    @duncant995 ай бұрын

    I've heard so many army DS talk about how much they hate the fact the army got rid of the shark attack. Weird to see the face of the guy that so many DS hate.

  • @Dwendele

    @Dwendele

    4 ай бұрын

    Right? And no cussing?

  • @SirBartolomew
    @SirBartolomew2 ай бұрын

    Only a man with 33 confirmed kills is confident enough to admit he's afraid of bugs.

  • @gunnerbhb50
    @gunnerbhb50Күн бұрын

    Cursing WAS very much the thing when I went through basic training, also "woody woodpecker" (drill sergeant getting in your face and tapping the bridge of your nose with his Round Brown), we also did platoon compatition which was Drill and Ceremony (marching in formation and facing movement along with rifle drills )

  • @Philbert-ex4zr
    @Philbert-ex4zr5 ай бұрын

    My boy Lee being shown during the Marine drill instructor. YAT-YAS

  • @73joebrant
    @73joebrant4 ай бұрын

    Thank you Veterans in this!

  • @pleappleappleap
    @pleappleappleapАй бұрын

    Don't shoot the flare at the helicopter. Good advice.

  • @simonpierrelauzon3845
    @simonpierrelauzon38455 ай бұрын

    there's a sniper scene in Ghost in the shell Stand alone complex season one...around the mid season where Saito meets the major for the first time.... It'd be cool to get the sniper's reaction to that scene

  • @CFootprints
    @CFootprints4 ай бұрын

    Did mister Lamont Christian just casually drop that he sang the hard work cadance? The same one AngryCops uses as his end card music? The one that gives me goosebumps when I hear it, even though I live almost halfway across the world from the USA? Cause that would be amazing.

  • @jmi967
    @jmi9673 ай бұрын

    The immediate drop to a prone position is good to drill into the head, but that may change as drones become more prevalent on both sides. Going prone provides a restriction to movement and provides a larger area for attack from a weapon controlled by someone who isn’t going to get killed if someone shoots back. It's going to become a difficult situation for sure as there is no go to tactic at that point.

  • @BarryBear58
    @BarryBear585 ай бұрын

    When I was in basic training back in mid '70s I saw a drill sergeant strike a trainee once. He was from Korea and a former rok infantryman. And at the very beginning of basic training one drill sergeant slap him several times and it got all of our attention. I talked to someone later on and they said it was something he probably expected after being in the Korean infantry.

  • @shaun5047

    @shaun5047

    4 ай бұрын

    I served active duty army in South Korea around 2017. There’s a program where every platoon has one ROK soldier aka a Katusa. Apparently that sort of stuff still happens to this day. All the katusa’s say the way we live is nice. 😂 A lot of the ways they work is still very old school. Their army also has a lot less money so they often go without many of the “luxuries” us Americans do.

  • @CubeInspector

    @CubeInspector

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@shaun5047 KATUSA - Korean Augmentee to the US Army

  • @CubeInspector

    @CubeInspector

    4 ай бұрын

    When I went through basic in p5 my DS slammed a dude and pushed several of us over the course of training. The official line was no touching but it still happened and no one said anything

  • @shaun5047

    @shaun5047

    4 ай бұрын

    @@CubeInspector That’s dumb imo. It’s not like putting hands on recruits did anything good. The Drill Sergeant that I respected the most barely even yelled at us. lol I’m the type to be much more motivated if I disappointed my leadership rather than be scared of them.

  • @jamesg1974a

    @jamesg1974a

    Ай бұрын

    The ROK army doesn’t have our rules. In the mid 90s when I was there , a katusa would be bawling if they screwed up and were going back to the ROK. The things they did to soldiers was not pleasant.

  • @HistorysRaven
    @HistorysRaven5 ай бұрын

    At 8:21, and I've made this comment to CSM's original video, the only thing wrong with that scene in my experience is that the potential trainees were standing in the room still clothed. Now, granted, I went through MEPS in 2008 in Upstate NY, so things may have changed or it may be different depending on the state, but we were told to walk into the Duckwalk Room and strip to our underwear immediately before sitting down and waiting for the other potential trainees. I don't remember how many of us were in the room, but we definitely didn't all duckwalk at the same time. They had six or seven us of line up and duckwalk back and forth once.

  • @shaun5047

    @shaun5047

    4 ай бұрын

    lol I went through MEPS in 2013 and I have to be honest the only thing I remember was everyone in our underwear in one big room. Then (I hope) in private having to spread my butt checks for the doctor. 😂 I think at one point he checked our junk out too. I assume to make sure everyone were legitimately males?

  • @michaelg4931

    @michaelg4931

    3 ай бұрын

    @@shaun5047 "he checked our junk out too" He was checking for hernias.

  • @benwade462
    @benwade4624 ай бұрын

    The Reaper is scared of bugs…. I’m callin BS 😂😂

  • @trissadowski5092
    @trissadowski5092Ай бұрын

    “the 50 is so powerful that even when missing somebody you can take there arm off”

  • @andytheislandpirate9637
    @andytheislandpirate963716 күн бұрын

    We are still taught the bowline knot in navy bootcamp. Its the only one taught for tying knots for throwing lines.

  • @the_cackling_kobold
    @the_cackling_kobold2 ай бұрын

    Ive always wondered why no one has attempted a ballistic suit with a neck brace connected to the torse with a swivel mount they keep talking about neck taking the load of the impact but the only way I see that being fixed to to stabilize the neck to the torso

  • @peterklein8355
    @peterklein83555 ай бұрын

    I always knew that Rambo and Baywatch were realistic

  • @slumpmachinegaming
    @slumpmachinegaming2 күн бұрын

    "I'm scared of bugs", says the Army Ranger sniper with 33 confirmed kills. I feel you Mr. Irving.

  • @ace_ofchaos9292
    @ace_ofchaos92924 ай бұрын

    The CSM is more concerned about hurt feelings than preparing the soldiers for the chaos of war. I wonder if the soldiers will thank him for not mentally preparing them for war. Needless to say if you can’t mentally withstand a shark attack you aren’t fit for combat.

  • @Toolazyfornewname

    @Toolazyfornewname

    3 ай бұрын

    Infantryman here. Completely agree...

  • @JJ-nu8qi
    @JJ-nu8qi4 ай бұрын

    That's funny because that's pretty much exactly how it was at meps when i went through minus the drill sargent.

  • @gageschmidt3208
    @gageschmidt32083 ай бұрын

    15:39 was my AIT company doing DNC. Never thought I’d see them on KZread.

  • @understandthis4634
    @understandthis463417 күн бұрын

    Pugil fight was conducted after Bayonet training to use the bayonet skills (Butt strokes or stab). However the Army did away with bayonet training early 2000’s and replaced with Army Combatives (similar to Brazilian jujitsu) but we kept pugil fights to teach confidence, courage, and yes- it was fun to watch

  • @SeekanDestroy03
    @SeekanDestroy03Күн бұрын

    The first Guy was Great🤙. Positive, and straight to the point also super cool he has ties to the 506th.

  • @williammaxwell1919
    @williammaxwell19192 ай бұрын

    One problem with WW1 and early WW2 tanks were rivets (Grants being a case in point). An explosion on the outside of the tank would send the rivet ricocheting around the inside of the tank

  • @kieranedwards8559
    @kieranedwards85594 ай бұрын

    If drill sergeants were so good at what they did why aren’t they fighting why have they trained for so many years but are so contempt at being in charge of recruits now, surely after years of training you want to do something more

  • @crisnmaryfam7344
    @crisnmaryfam73444 ай бұрын

    See the volume / Sound reverb and such on this video vs the cut up one I seen on this channel is two different worlds. That other one was nearly unwatchable. The other video was a short section of Nicholas "Reaper" Irving's stuff. Some of this same stuff, but it seemed like it was recorded in a empty warehouse with cellphone mics.

  • @russellhenningertimetraveler
    @russellhenningertimetraveler17 күн бұрын

    No longshoreman were involved here. Line handlers association did that work. I'm glad to see the MV Carmen got out. She's the last ship we worked on Monday the 25th.

  • @johnconquest9898
    @johnconquest98984 ай бұрын

    I came into the Army August 1983, this was the end of beatings, but the beating happen ever once in a while. Cussing was still part of the basic training.

  • @ravex24
    @ravex244 ай бұрын

    I actually got in a little trouble in bootcamp because I had a DI slap me. I then called them out on it and had a discussion with my DIs about what happened. I told the other two DIs assigned to us that the other DI had slapped me and that would not be accepted by myself or my fellow recruits moving forward. One of the other DIs told me that I better watch what I say and check my tone. I told them that the one DI needs to watch and check their hands and my tone will correct itself if that happens. I left and nothing more was said or done. I finished 3rd in my class out of an original 82, btw.

  • @nicholasdefranzo6962

    @nicholasdefranzo6962

    3 ай бұрын

    You sound like the dude in the platoon everyone wanted to sock party lol snitch.

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot4203 ай бұрын

    Say what you will about the realism of Stripes, it is a comedy. But it is still a great movie. That parade bit shown here actually impressed my father. He served 2 tours in Vietnam then became an instructor when he came back. He was impressed given that those were actors doing it. Obviously it is sloppy compared to the people you see in military and civilian competitions. But given the limited time to learn the movements, he thought they did a pretty good job (even with it being a movie and all that comes with it, such as multiple shots). addendum: Off the top of my head I do not know the details about what my dad did as an instructor. What I do know is that it was special forces stuff as he was a Green Beret and the training had to do with that... As soon as I was old enough to want to know about his time in the Army, I also understood not to ask a lot about it. He told be a bit about the time after he came back from Vietnam years and years ago when I was young. So my memory about it is fuzzy.

  • @jomorken4853
    @jomorken485318 күн бұрын

    When I took my hunter's license ( it takes a full year) When shooting a side moving target, you follow through your motion while and after squeezing off. Then you don't have to hold in front or anything. Just move with the target while squeezing off and not stopping the rifle until after you shoot. Smooth movement. Follow through the motion even after squeezing off. So much more accurate

  • @MrLu777
    @MrLu7774 ай бұрын

    Cleaning the head ( bathroom) with a toothbrush, I do remember that. Yes, you used to get hit, and have a good marksmanship skill was over emphasized when I went to Parris Island.

  • @Incognito1786
    @Incognito17864 ай бұрын

    When the first guy said AIT being 6 months or longer, i thought about intelligence AIT and training being something like "50 weeks at an undisclosed location", back in the early '10s when i was looking at that kinda MOS.

  • @kristophermann8249
    @kristophermann8249Күн бұрын

    This drill sergeant is describing a boot camp that is WAY different than the one I remember

  • @louiswolff9382
    @louiswolff93824 ай бұрын

    Somebody needs to tell that CSM that hands off on recruits might be something new but it definitely was not “frowned upon” in the mid 80’s, I watched the drill Sgts on more then one occasion take a recruit “behind the barracks” for some intensive “hands on” training, another one we were about a week out from graduating and this one kinda heavy kid just gave up, he refused to get out of his rack in the morning, there were 4 Drills’ one on each corner of his bed, they lifted the bed up over their heads with him still in it and flipped it causing him to drop about 7 foot straight down on his head on that tiled concrete floor, at which point they ordered us out and to form up on the drill pad, we never did see him again, by the time we got back after morning PT his rack was empty and wall locker cleaned out, it was good times though, I happened to be the only kid from NY, Long Island to be exact, and everyone else was either from the Midwest or south so every morning they gave me a sentence to say while standing in front of the whole platoon to laugh at my accent, that didn’t bother though any, I took it all in stride lol

  • @jerryrichards8172
    @jerryrichards81725 ай бұрын

    I couldn't believe how highly regarded the hurt locker is after i watched this movie. I have nothing to do with bombs and i knew it was ridiculous.

  • @robert04872

    @robert04872

    4 ай бұрын

    They also stop mid-movie to go sniping for some reason, like bomb disposal experts also go sniping enemies regularly.

  • @q-man762

    @q-man762

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah, when he was ripping wires out of the car bomb like he could read the bomb makers mind I totally knew that was Hollywood bs.

  • @user-hl6fw8ct3t
    @user-hl6fw8ct3t23 күн бұрын

    I was in the Marine corps went through training on Parris Island and we did stand on the foot Lockers. Now this was 1971 when I went through there.

  • @lukeskywalkermod3686
    @lukeskywalkermod36862 ай бұрын

    29:42 “It has a tank so I’ll give it a one” lmaooo

  • @jefftucker9225
    @jefftucker92255 ай бұрын

    When I went to (MEPS) in 1986, they had a full big room like that with 30 to 40 guys strip completely naked, then had to bend over as a Dr. walked past each of us and checked for I don't know what because they never told us, but a few guys got called out of the room after he he walked by and took a look

  • @jonathanlockwood8851

    @jonathanlockwood8851

    5 ай бұрын

    Echo that! 96

  • @seanharris8419

    @seanharris8419

    4 ай бұрын

    I went to MEPS in Idaho in 2015 and I did the duck walk in the underwear in a probably 300ish square ft room with like 10 or 11 other guys and then they brought us into a tiny little doctors office that was through a door connected to that room one by one to check us. And yeah they checked every square inch lol.

  • @jasonbutler1996
    @jasonbutler19964 ай бұрын

    Son of an Army Ranger, Korea. I never served, but he had lessons that can not be ignored. 100 mile, 100 lb.....know your friends first before your enemies....sleep on high ground.....protect your 'brother'!

  • @InjunAli
    @InjunAli2 ай бұрын

    Your are pretty intelligent, i love your content, thanks for your efforts

  • @natesmith5778
    @natesmith577814 күн бұрын

    A tank would be a huge morale boost. Morale is critical in military and business

  • @mikemurphy5898
    @mikemurphy58984 ай бұрын

    "foilage"?? 😂 you mean "foliage?" ... I'm just kidding man, please don't sh00t me!

  • @sleepy3d
    @sleepy3d5 ай бұрын

    "but it's Tom Cruise so it's probably really accurate". This guy is great and I fear him (the reaper).

  • @thomaspamelawashington1397
    @thomaspamelawashington1397Ай бұрын

    Marine Corps Recruit Depot, 1971 was very close to the script. The Drill Instructor looked both ways before making an “adjustment” on you. If you were smart you knew he was about to slam your face with the m14 (he called you to present arms for a reason), we had “chrome domes - helmet…when he went to slam your face you had better lowered that helmet real quick or get a face full of barrel. He accessed my response meant I wasn’t totally stupid and let me be.🤗. Ended up doing well in the Corps.

  • @user-em1sj5ph6h
    @user-em1sj5ph6h4 ай бұрын

    I think I’ll look again but in Full Metal Jacket, didn’t Drill Sgt Hartman have a single Windsor knot in his tie? Hanging offense when I was in BCT at Fort Lewis. I was butt stroked in my helmet while wearing it during a lecture. I once witnesses an E4 instruct an E1 to punch another E1. Not sure that was a lawful order. Done even remember a day in the first week w/o a shark attack.

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