I think we need a whole episode just on recruitment ads. The good ones, the bad ones, the awful ones (looking at you army pr person who thought that cartoon one was a good idea)
There was a behind-the-scenes production about how they made Stripes. The director, Ivan Reitman, said that working with the Army was a director's dream come true. The Army assigned a liaison officer to help coordinate the scenes. One of the most challenging was the marching scene at the beginning of the movie because of all the background action; crane shot with tanks rolling down the street, other formations marching by, buses, etc. One of the actors screwed up their lines meaning they had to reshoot. Reitman was pissed because of the amount of time they were going to lose resetting everything. He explained to the liaison that they had to start over so all those elements would have to get back to their starting positions. A few minutes later while Reitman was talking to the actors the liaison approached him and explained that everything was ready to go. Reitman was stunned that it was reset so quickly!
The water tower in the old Basic Training area at Knox still had some of the "Russian" paint on it as of 92-93 when I was in OBC and worked at the Armor School.
The grenade range scene from In The Army Now brings back memories. I went through Warrior Transition Course at Ft Sill. Evening before the grenade range one of the Drill Sergeants was going over the rules amd safety info. He finished with the greatest line I've ever heard. "Tomorrow on the grenade range if you blow yourself up it's your own fucking fault, Hooah."
Yes!! I was just singing this to myself after seeing the Be All You Can Be commercial. We don't ask for experience, we give it. You don't read it in a book, you live it!
Those barracks in "Stripes" were the standard Army WWII barracks there & many other places in the US. I slept in the same type at Ft Knox reception station in 1983, and at Ft Chaffee Arkansas at my last NG summer camp in the mid 90's- began and ended my Army time in those mid-century relics.
My Dad went through basic & served in the army close to the time frame portrayed in Stripes. From his experience he said Stripes was reasonably accurate in mindset & attitude during that time until Bill Murray's character said "That's a fact jack." After that it went downhill from that point on. He also said this was at a time when the army became "This man's Army" and you could basically call your drill Sgt an a$$hole as long as you put it in a sir sandwich lol.
Stripes was one of my favorites because I went to basic at Ft Knox and knew the different locations in the movie. We did have to avoid Abrams and Bradleys driving around.
The punishment with potatoes comes because they are slightly grainy and grainy and they contain moisture which means that your skin will start to do that wrinkly thing it doesn't the pool. The grit that comes with the potato will start getting in your skin and and you will have little, what they call berries, birds underneath your skin that hurt like hell and turning to open sores
I went through Ft Knox reception in '86 just a few years after Stripes was filmed there and it still looked exactly the same, especially sitting in the big room with all the unit emblems on the wall where SFC Hulka give hsi big "Your Mama's are not here to take care of you now" speech, the SGM we had just yelled at us to "wash your fuckin ass!" The best part for me was the barber who shaved my head had a pic of him shaving John Candy's head from the movie stuck to his mirror.
46th AG Station, I got sent there for boot in 1990. Those barracks were still there when I entered service and the only thing I kept thinking about was "this is where they filmed Stripes".
Grandpa was there in around the time they just finished, I went there in 02... Apparently when he was there, he made a big crater in front of regiment HQ, when they realized I'm the grandson of the man who blew up the front lawn... I had to swear not to do the same...
Drop the pin throw the grenade... The line in the army now, was told to me before I went to basic training, now couple days ago, I told that line to my nephew who ships out in couple of weeks for basic... Gonna be a tradition :)
My basic started just a few days after they wrapped up filming Stripes. We stood on the paint, and got our hair cut and gear from the same people in the movie! The best part was that our 19D training unit was the exact same as in the movie (it was only mentioned in the uncut version) which was also the first movie we saw going into AIT. We felt pretty good about being at Ft. Knox even getting torched on Agony & Misery! It was a fun, hot summer! Thanks for the flashback!
Stripes…. Is the reason I joined the Army! That basic training bay in, In the Army now does look just like Sand Hill, Ft Benning….. good times! I remember strippers in the NCO club on Sandhill back in 1987. Good god man, I was just 17 years old then. I also remember seeing Rangers at my graduation in OD Greens, I swore I’d be a Ranger…..two years later I was back at Benning, going through RIP. Two months after RIP….. Just Cause.
We had open bay barracks and "community" latrines, and some were still made of wood. When you were dropping a deuce, you were a whopping 6" from another set of cheeks.haha. Good times.
When they get off the bus at their battery with the long walkway is where my battery was lol. I was watching it and I was like “hold up that field and sidewalk looks familiar”
Did Basic and AIT on Sill in the Summer/Fall of '91. 13N (Lance) Oh the memories of the Bowling Alley during AIT. And the F*cking Cattle Cars sucked MUCH ASS, we didnt have benches, we were crammed in there like Sardines.
I was stoked to join the Army and what got me going to the recruiter was that 1983 commercial! Then I saw the M1 Armor Crewman video in the office and thought, "THAT'S IT! I want to do that!!" LOL Little do they tell you that 90% of your year is in garrison pulling PMCS, guard duty, and in the boring classroom. LOL
Went through basic in '93, Fort Gordon. We had those same bays, just with a lot more space in the middle (which of course meant a lot more buffing every weekend). My Senior Drill was a female airborne typist (her words) with two gold teeth in the front. Probably the most badass soldier I ever encountered in 7 years of active duty. KP actually *was* the best time I had in basic. Companies were still single sex at that point, but our battalion had two female companies in it. For the first few weeks, until the battalion filled out, KP duty was co-ed. The drills didn't exactly leave us alone, but they couldn't be everywhere all the time.
I was in (Army) from 90 to 94. There was a sergeant who was in the unit the coffee guy was in. The day after the commercial aired or was taped, don't remember which one, he said that guy got kicked out for drugs.
I joined the US Army one slogan before " Be all that you can be ". My slogan was " Join the people who've joined the Army. You can start living your tomorrow today. "
"We do more before 9am than most people do all day" because we never went to sleep from the night before. Army Infantryman 86-95! "KUTF"! The barracks in Stripes were WW2 era and still used at Ft. Benninng in 86 at Harmony Church.
I took Basic at Ft Knox a couple of years before Stripes was filmed there. The old WW2 barracks, the Barber Shop, the Reception Bldg and the Confidence course I knew well. When I went to Permanent party at Ft Devens, the barracks next door were the 10th Mtn Green Berets (nice guys after you got them to stop eating things off of the ground), they taught me how to repel on our off time. My Unit (46th Combat Support Hospital) treated the Black Hawk Down casualties set up in the Somali embassy, straight from the battlefield, years after I ETS'd...
Artillery King of Battle and it’s super fast paced with 11-9rs and just artillery in general you have to be face with in placing shooting and moving and it’s epic seeing an entire line of guns goings off shooting on the same target supporting whoever needs it best and worst job I ever had
Ok I have a very stupid basic training story that truthfully happened to me. I enlisted in Apr 73, with a very low SS#, after getting thrown out of HS, with the dean of students notifying my Draft Board. So instead of waiting to get drafted as a HS Dropout, or running to Canada, I enlisted under a new program for the new volunteer Army. But I was born with bad flat feet, I thought was going to keep me out anyway, but the jokes on me, I was accepted!! But guaranteed state side duty for 18 out of 36 months and an MOS I could live with, truck driver. So anyway being a fairly fit looking 6’ 185 lbs, I was also made a squat leader in the welcome center, that was great till I got to my basic training unit and found out running three miles was not an issue, but walking the daily 10 miles was HELL on my feet! I went on sick call the next day and was given a Profile! That landed me in what was called STC, special training company, or as the troops called it, Shirley Temple Company, that was actually trucked from training center instead of marched, so I had plenty of Hand to Hand, Live Fire Range, with everything from Shotgun to.45, M16A1, M60 and sniper rifle, because I honestly shot 95/100! That was three missed in day fire, 2 in night fire! But what a time we had! But we , a complete company of 60 trainees, who were billeted in the oldest WWII wooden barracks with totally open floor plan, including the head, with a center section of the floor between both sides of bunk beds, that you never walked on with boots on! That was so highly polished! That was at Ft. Dix, N.J. From April 30- June 30, 1973. Then I had a one week leave before AIT at driving school at Ft. Dix, till my first choice of permanent party, Ft. Carson, CO. Came up after AIT! That was the best and worst time of my life!
The Shirley Temple Company does fit in with the short-sighted logic of other Vietnam ERA policies like Project 100,000 (aka McNamara's Morons) and the many restrictions on the bombing of North Vietnam. I'm guessing that all those flat footed troops had a non-combat MOS like truck driver. It seems like sometime after this the Army disqualified individuals with flat feet. However, in 2016, this policy changed. Now, flat feet are only disqualifying if they cause pain, impair function, or affect an individual's ability to meet physical fitness standards. I have flat feet but when I was a teenager I could do 10 and 20 mile marches (although a fellow Boy Scout said it was painful to watch me walk). But I'm pretty sure after a few days or a week or so of basic I would also need to be trucked around to continue. When I did the week long summer football camp put on by a local college, by the end I could barely walk after spending 8-10 hours a day running and walking around in my cleats.
BRCC should spoof that last "Be All You Can Be" commercial. Corny 80s coffee jingle, ending with a big ole grinning dude drinking some coffee. Hit me up, I'll write it for you.
That old school airborne be all you can be commercial was amazing. There was a Ranger one that had him getting out of a private jet at the end after all the cool stuff. Great video if you can find it.
That Be All You Can Be campaign is what got me to join, and a year later I was standing in a 3rd Batt formation as the very first CCo 3rd Herd 2nd squad grenadier. We wouldn't be declared combat ready for another year.
I was living on Fort Devens in Massachusetts when Stripes came out. Everybody loved that movie because the army wasn’t really that much fun post Vietnam. The public was not very supportive of the military, Congress had cut budgets for military stuff kind of as a reaction to Vietnam, pay was terrible for enlisted guys, really terrible, etc. After Vietnam, when the draft ended, the military had a hard time getting people to join. So judges were giving guys the choice of going to jail or going into the military. My dad was an officer and a lot of officers were getting out of the military at that point because they were essentially being turned into babysitters and having to put up with a bunch of crap from lowlifes who chose the military over jail. So stripes was a very popular movie because it was funny but it also had a touch of realism to it. It was about this time that Saturday night live did a pretend ad for the Navy where they showed this poor schmuck mopping the deck of a carrier. It wasn’t until Reagan became president that they started throwing money at the military again and trying to change the public’s perception of what being in the military was like. That “ be all you can be” ad was really popular.
In the Navy, we didn't call them drill instructors, they were called RDC's, recruit division commanders. I was one for 3 years and one time I had a recruit that didn't get up at reveille, I went down to his bunk and yelled at him and kicked the bunk, he looked up at me, eyes open, and rolled over and pulled the blanket over his head. My next move was to grab the bunk bed and flip it and him up on its end. Dumping him out on the deck. Never had a problem with anyone being in their bunk after reveille after that.
i've seen in the army now at least 100 times. it was one of the few movies that played on early satellite tv lol. i remember waiting for the dish to rotate over and pick up the satellite that was broadcasting it...
I want to see review of the Rangers driving Polaris quads in an open field with mini guns firing at nothing. It was like a copy of a Russian Paratrooper ad.
Rangers, If you want something funny that you will absolutely love commenting on, look for the 1989 Army recruitment/ranger school video. It's on TH-cam. And comment on the intro song. Now aside from a few things and The Choice of music, it is a pretty solid video to get people an idea how far the regiment has come, but it's still hilarious still hilarious the Music Choice and I can't get over it
Holding Out for Hero, cheesy but great music choice! Even though it reminds me of the tv series "Cover Up" that actor Jon-Eric Hexum was staring in when he died as a result of firing a .44 loaded with blanks against his temple when he was joking around after a long day on the set.
I was in a group that did Fire Spinning, and we spun wooden rifles with flaming bayonets. So much fun! I choregraphed a couple of formations, but then we went into the Boom Shakalala like Stripes
“In The Army Now” has authentic aspects of the Army because it was filmed at Ft. Sill (Lawton, OK). They completely filmed it on an active Army training base.
I’ll never forget basic training at Fort Dix in 1987 when my drill Sgt climbed into the cattle car and actually said, “Your mama’s are not here to take care of you now”! Of course I started laughing cause I couldn’t believe he actually said it. Shit got real immediately when he climbed over the top of everyone like a spider monkey to get at me! I swear it was like a scene out of a horror movie, and his face! A lifetime of anger and rage condensed into that one split second when I knew he was about to kill me. Man, those were the good ol days!
We had 4 shitters on opposite walls facing each other. We decided to get a small table and put it in the middle and play cards as we were dropping logs.
Tbh. "In the army now" is one of THE MOST realistic army movies about basic training ever. That shit is SPOT on how dumb everything is. 9/10 only because some of the scenerios are silly.
I used to work with an old school Army guy, anytime someone mentioned the Army, he would sing, "Be, all that you can be! Get a fucked up life, and an ugly wife, in the Aaaaarmy!"
17:35 Hello everyone! I'm retired military and I found this commercial funny as hell. Love the fact that none of the soldiers in the field at the end have one drop of sweat or dirt on them. Dont get me started on the soldiers unbuttoned chin strap.🤣
5:53 100% agreed. Went through basic back in 2002 at Ft. Jackson and I remember how hyped all of us were to throw a live grenade. Felt more like a cross between Disneyland and Viagra. 10 minutes in line for less than 30 seconds of pleasure. And it still sucked.
Right before the end I thought about the 1983 recruiting ad where the Sargent is drinking the coffee. Then bam there it was. It kinda shows how effective that ad was.
We had two guys who while they were in boot camp that dropped the grenadine with the drill instructor in the pit, it was the same drill instructor months later after he recovered. Those guys were never issued grenades in our unit.
I broke my collarbone at the start of my Canadian army cadet corps year-end inspection obstacle course demonstration, when I was 13. Finished the 30' long single rope bridge, boosted the other 2 guys onto the armory's 7' high storage shed, then jumped and got hauled up by one arm. Hopped off the other side, did a PLF and had to get taken to the hospital by my folks after the applause ended.
I actually met Pauly Shore in Hawaii when I was with the Marine Corps. Met him outside a club that was having a concert with Danzig. What's awesome is this movie came out while I was in the Marines... I just remember him and three of his Buddies in a white Jeep.. only spoke to him for about a minute and a half
Hey they joke about the tanks but I nearly had an M1 crush my car at Fort Carson. He came off of a dirt trail onto the hardtop in front of me and I had to slam the brakes to avoid the accident. I learned that day that tanks always have the right of way.
At 6:09, I hadn't seen this in years and I agree the grenade explosion wasn't bad. I watched several go off in the Army and they always seemed to throw out a very light brown or purple cloud for some reason. NO flash I ever saw and you never saw the shrapnel unless it hit something and you saw it raining down after
when it came to the team tower climbing... I fell from the top, knocked myself silly on the shredded tires ground... The other two didn't hold allowing me to fall... They got SMOKED for it.
What movies do you wanna see us react to next?
13 hours
The Expendables
Marvel vs DC Movies
Bob the builder!!!
Or something else...... My kids have messed me up in the head!
Predator!
I think we need a whole episode just on recruitment ads. The good ones, the bad ones, the awful ones (looking at you army pr person who thought that cartoon one was a good idea)
Great Idea!
WOOHOO!!! DRESS BLUES WITH A SWORD!
International ads to, UK, EU, etc.
There going to love the Navy's Gender pronouns training video .
Then, get the chaps together, give them a few beers and a budget, and get the guys to make their own recruitment videos for their respective units
There was a behind-the-scenes production about how they made Stripes. The director, Ivan Reitman, said that working with the Army was a director's dream come true. The Army assigned a liaison officer to help coordinate the scenes. One of the most challenging was the marching scene at the beginning of the movie because of all the background action; crane shot with tanks rolling down the street, other formations marching by, buses, etc. One of the actors screwed up their lines meaning they had to reshoot. Reitman was pissed because of the amount of time they were going to lose resetting everything. He explained to the liaison that they had to start over so all those elements would have to get back to their starting positions. A few minutes later while Reitman was talking to the actors the liaison approached him and explained that everything was ready to go. Reitman was stunned that it was reset so quickly!
The water tower in the old Basic Training area at Knox still had some of the "Russian" paint on it as of 92-93 when I was in OBC and worked at the Armor School.
The grenade range scene from In The Army Now brings back memories. I went through Warrior Transition Course at Ft Sill. Evening before the grenade range one of the Drill Sergeants was going over the rules amd safety info. He finished with the greatest line I've ever heard. "Tomorrow on the grenade range if you blow yourself up it's your own fucking fault, Hooah."
G shit.
Pick a service, pick a challenge, set yourself apart ARMY NAVY AIRFORCE MARINES what a great way, what a great way of life.
For real, dude. Well said, indeed.🤘🏻
Yes!! I was just singing this to myself after seeing the Be All You Can Be commercial.
We don't ask for experience, we give it.
You don't read it in a book, you live it!
Too funny......my era
always look forward to the monthly vets react videos! love in the army now and Stripes . classics
Classics for sure.
Those barracks in "Stripes" were the standard Army WWII barracks there & many other places in the US. I slept in the same type at Ft Knox reception station in 1983, and at Ft Chaffee Arkansas at my last NG summer camp in the mid 90's- began and ended my Army time in those mid-century relics.
Still at Fort indiantown gap, in Pennsylvania
Stripes was filmed at the Fr. Know reception area
My Dad went through basic & served in the army close to the time frame portrayed in Stripes. From his experience he said Stripes was reasonably accurate in mindset & attitude during that time until Bill Murray's character said "That's a fact jack." After that it went downhill from that point on.
He also said this was at a time when the army became "This man's Army" and you could basically call your drill Sgt an a$$hole as long as you put it in a sir sandwich lol.
We don’t even know the dude, but we can picture his face.😂😎
Life in the dawn of the VOLAR.
The Jack Carr nod for the hero's journey killed me
The Navy Accelerate Your Life ads were awesome. Made everyone think they could be a SEAL, SWCC or a pilot.
Did my basic at Ft. Knox and got back there for my last year as a trainer. 76-80 Tanker, then Cav.
Stripes was one of my favorites because I went to basic at Ft Knox and knew the different locations in the movie. We did have to avoid Abrams and Bradleys driving around.
The punishment with potatoes comes because they are slightly grainy and grainy and they contain moisture which means that your skin will start to do that wrinkly thing it doesn't the pool. The grit that comes with the potato will start getting in your skin and and you will have little, what they call berries, birds underneath your skin that hurt like hell and turning to open sores
I went through Ft Knox reception in '86 just a few years after Stripes was filmed there and it still looked exactly the same, especially sitting in the big room with all the unit emblems on the wall where SFC Hulka give hsi big "Your Mama's are not here to take care of you now" speech, the SGM we had just yelled at us to "wash your fuckin ass!"
The best part for me was the barber who shaved my head had a pic of him shaving John Candy's head from the movie stuck to his mirror.
The Fire Hydrant Larroquett trips over "Have that removed!" was real, and right there where you get off the bus.
46th AG Station, I got sent there for boot in 1990. Those barracks were still there when I entered service and the only thing I kept thinking about was "this is where they filmed Stripes".
Grandpa was there in around the time they just finished, I went there in 02... Apparently when he was there, he made a big crater in front of regiment HQ, when they realized I'm the grandson of the man who blew up the front lawn... I had to swear not to do the same...
Drop the pin throw the grenade... The line in the army now, was told to me before I went to basic training, now couple days ago, I told that line to my nephew who ships out in couple of weeks for basic... Gonna be a tradition :)
Loved the movie Stripes. It was one of my first rated R movies. Loved Sgt. "Big Toe" Hulka and John Candy.
My basic started just a few days after they wrapped up filming Stripes. We stood on the paint, and got our hair cut and gear from the same people in the movie! The best part was that our 19D training unit was the exact same as in the movie (it was only mentioned in the uncut version) which was also the first movie we saw going into AIT. We felt pretty good about being at Ft. Knox even getting torched on Agony & Misery! It was a fun, hot summer! Thanks for the flashback!
I was there then, but our drill sergeants wouldn't let us be extras. But Murray and the rest are my old Army buddies.
@@donaldpepera2928 👍🏼We’re you 19D or tanker?
@@SuccessisTheGoal 71Q.
Stripes…. Is the reason I joined the Army! That basic training bay in, In the Army now does look just like Sand Hill, Ft Benning….. good times! I remember strippers in the NCO club on Sandhill back in 1987. Good god man, I was just 17 years old then. I also remember seeing Rangers at my graduation in OD Greens, I swore I’d be a Ranger…..two years later I was back at Benning, going through RIP. Two months after RIP….. Just Cause.
"I want to be a Nascar driver" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
We had open bay barracks and "community" latrines, and some were still made of wood. When you were dropping a deuce, you were a whopping 6" from another set of cheeks.haha. Good times.
I went through basic at Ft. Sill Oklahoma where they filmed "In The Army Now". OMG! The flashbacks!
When they get off the bus at their battery with the long walkway is where my battery was lol. I was watching it and I was like “hold up that field and sidewalk looks familiar”
Did Basic and AIT on Sill in the Summer/Fall of '91. 13N (Lance) Oh the memories of the Bowling Alley during AIT.
And the F*cking Cattle Cars sucked MUCH ASS, we didnt have benches, we were crammed in there like Sardines.
When I was in army basic in the 70s I loved riding in the cattle truck, no seats standing room only but it was way better than a forced road march.
I was stoked to join the Army and what got me going to the recruiter was that 1983 commercial! Then I saw the M1 Armor Crewman video in the office and thought, "THAT'S IT! I want to do that!!" LOL Little do they tell you that 90% of your year is in garrison pulling PMCS, guard duty, and in the boring classroom. LOL
Would love to see you guys do reactions on recruiting commercials the good the bad and the ugly
Went through basic in '93, Fort Gordon. We had those same bays, just with a lot more space in the middle (which of course meant a lot more buffing every weekend). My Senior Drill was a female airborne typist (her words) with two gold teeth in the front. Probably the most badass soldier I ever encountered in 7 years of active duty.
KP actually *was* the best time I had in basic. Companies were still single sex at that point, but our battalion had two female companies in it. For the first few weeks, until the battalion filled out, KP duty was co-ed. The drills didn't exactly leave us alone, but they couldn't be everywhere all the time.
Please do a BRCC recruiting ad. "We do more before 9am than most people do all day".
Yeah, those cattle cars are semi trailers with benches.............and 150 guys stuffed in it. It has benches, that you aren't sitting on.
I was in (Army) from 90 to 94. There was a sergeant who was in the unit the coffee guy was in. The day after the commercial aired or was taped, don't remember which one, he said that guy got kicked out for drugs.
These guys are great. Been seeing Jariko all over the interwebs lately. How about "Renaissance Man" with Danny DeVito on an upcoming vid?
Jariko is a good dude. We are stoked that he is a major part of our team.
In my day..those flashlights….they were what we had…used them in the DMZ South Korea….glad they’ve been replaced by better gear….but we made them work
I joined the US Army one slogan before " Be all that you can be ".
My slogan was " Join the people who've joined the Army.
You can start living your tomorrow today. "
"We do more before 9am than most people do all day" because we never went to sleep from the night before. Army Infantryman 86-95! "KUTF"! The barracks in Stripes were WW2 era and still used at Ft. Benninng in 86 at Harmony Church.
Hey, great episode and will you react to the Expendables
Okay, Okay we see you. We will even give your Expendables two votes ✌️
I took Basic at Ft Knox a couple of years before Stripes was filmed there. The old WW2 barracks, the Barber Shop, the Reception Bldg and the Confidence course I knew well. When I went to Permanent party at Ft Devens, the barracks next door were the 10th Mtn Green Berets (nice guys after you got them to stop eating things off of the ground), they taught me how to repel on our off time. My Unit (46th Combat Support Hospital) treated the Black Hawk Down casualties set up in the Somali embassy, straight from the battlefield, years after I ETS'd...
I remember seeing the "Be all you can be" commercials when I was little. Those, and that badass USMC "Crucible" commercial got me hyped as a kid
17:36 " 'Be all you can be?' I made COFFEE through Desert Storm."
IYKYK
Fun fact... I ran that obstacle course in Stripes before it was retired at Ft. Knox.
Have to get together a Couple of Air Force Opinions on
" Private Benjamin"
Once again! From a MARINE Vet! Nice to see the Light side of military Humor
saw stripes for the first time at Ft Lost in the Woods when i was on a 4 hour pass in basic. that was 1982.
as always great vid brothers.
Soldier with Kurt Russell would be great to see, or Wind River shoot out scenes
I like to see yall do "The Great Raid" Movie about the rescue of POWs in the Pillipines near the end of War 2
Artillery King of Battle and it’s super fast paced with 11-9rs and just artillery in general you have to be face with in placing shooting and moving and it’s epic seeing an entire line of guns goings off shooting on the same target supporting whoever needs it best and worst job I ever had
Ok I have a very stupid basic training story that truthfully happened to me. I enlisted in Apr 73, with a very low SS#, after getting thrown out of HS, with the dean of students notifying my Draft Board. So instead of waiting to get drafted as a HS Dropout, or running to Canada, I enlisted under a new program for the new volunteer Army. But I was born with bad flat feet, I thought was going to keep me out anyway, but the jokes on me, I was accepted!! But guaranteed state side duty for 18 out of 36 months and an MOS I could live with, truck driver. So anyway being a fairly fit looking 6’ 185 lbs, I was also made a squat leader in the welcome center, that was great till I got to my basic training unit and found out running three miles was not an issue, but walking the daily 10 miles was HELL on my feet! I went on sick call the next day and was given a Profile! That landed me in what was called STC, special training company, or as the troops called it, Shirley Temple Company, that was actually trucked from training center instead of marched, so I had plenty of Hand to Hand, Live Fire Range, with everything from Shotgun to.45, M16A1, M60 and sniper rifle, because I honestly shot 95/100! That was three missed in day fire, 2 in night fire! But what a time we had! But we , a complete company of 60 trainees, who were billeted in the oldest WWII wooden barracks with totally open floor plan, including the head, with a center section of the floor between both sides of bunk beds, that you never walked on with boots on! That was so highly polished! That was at Ft. Dix, N.J. From April 30- June 30, 1973. Then I had a one week leave before AIT at driving school at Ft. Dix, till my first choice of permanent party, Ft. Carson, CO. Came up after AIT! That was the best and worst time of my life!
The Shirley Temple Company does fit in with the short-sighted logic of other Vietnam ERA policies like Project 100,000 (aka McNamara's Morons) and the many restrictions on the bombing of North Vietnam. I'm guessing that all those flat footed troops had a non-combat MOS like truck driver. It seems like sometime after this the Army disqualified individuals with flat feet. However, in 2016, this policy changed. Now, flat feet are only disqualifying if they cause pain, impair function, or affect an individual's ability to meet physical fitness standards.
I have flat feet but when I was a teenager I could do 10 and 20 mile marches (although a fellow Boy Scout said it was painful to watch me walk). But I'm pretty sure after a few days or a week or so of basic I would also need to be trucked around to continue. When I did the week long summer football camp put on by a local college, by the end I could barely walk after spending 8-10 hours a day running and walking around in my cleats.
Richard learning lessons from Jack is the best ,like and child learning from their dad
Apart from the "torch" discussion. It's a god damn moonbeam.
BRCC should spoof that last "Be All You Can Be" commercial. Corny 80s coffee jingle, ending with a big ole grinning dude drinking some coffee. Hit me up, I'll write it for you.
Gotta do the Duke one day, Sands of Iwo Jima, Flying Leathernecks,The Fighting Seabees the list goes on.
Being wheeled about in a wheelbarrow in The Longest Day hahaha
That old school airborne be all you can be commercial was amazing. There was a Ranger one that had him getting out of a private jet at the end after all the cool stuff. Great video if you can find it.
That Be All You Can Be campaign is what got me to join, and a year later I was standing in a 3rd Batt formation as the very first CCo 3rd Herd 2nd squad grenadier. We wouldn't be declared combat ready for another year.
Front - Back - Go, those barracks looked liked fort sill and cattle trucks. Memories
I was living on Fort Devens in Massachusetts when Stripes came out. Everybody loved that movie because the army wasn’t really that much fun post Vietnam. The public was not very supportive of the military, Congress had cut budgets for military stuff kind of as a reaction to Vietnam, pay was terrible for enlisted guys, really terrible, etc. After Vietnam, when the draft ended, the military had a hard time getting people to join. So judges were giving guys the choice of going to jail or going into the military. My dad was an officer and a lot of officers were getting out of the military at that point because they were essentially being turned into babysitters and having to put up with a bunch of crap from lowlifes who chose the military over jail. So stripes was a very popular movie because it was funny but it also had a touch of realism to it. It was about this time that Saturday night live did a pretend ad for the Navy where they showed this poor schmuck mopping the deck of a carrier. It wasn’t until Reagan became president that they started throwing money at the military again and trying to change the public’s perception of what being in the military was like. That “ be all you can be” ad was really popular.
In the Navy, we didn't call them drill instructors, they were called RDC's, recruit division commanders. I was one for 3 years and one time I had a recruit that didn't get up at reveille, I went down to his bunk and yelled at him and kicked the bunk, he looked up at me, eyes open, and rolled over and pulled the blanket over his head. My next move was to grab the bunk bed and flip it and him up on its end. Dumping him out on the deck. Never had a problem with anyone being in their bunk after reveille after that.
i joined during the be all you can be campaign 💪💪💪💪 rumor has it the first sergeant in the video at the end went to levenworth due to cocaine abuse
i've seen in the army now at least 100 times. it was one of the few movies that played on early satellite tv lol. i remember waiting for the dish to rotate over and pick up the satellite that was broadcasting it...
I want to see review of the Rangers driving Polaris quads in an open field with mini guns firing at nothing. It was like a copy of a Russian Paratrooper ad.
Rangers, If you want something funny that you will absolutely love commenting on, look for the 1989 Army recruitment/ranger school video. It's on TH-cam. And comment on the intro song. Now aside from a few things and The Choice of music, it is a pretty solid video to get people an idea how far the regiment has come, but it's still hilarious still hilarious the Music Choice and I can't get over it
Holding Out for Hero, cheesy but great music choice! Even though it reminds me of the tv series "Cover Up" that actor Jon-Eric Hexum was staring in when he died as a result of firing a .44 loaded with blanks against his temple when he was joking around after a long day on the set.
I was in a group that did Fire Spinning, and we spun wooden rifles with flaming bayonets. So much fun! I choregraphed a couple of formations, but then we went into the Boom Shakalala like Stripes
“In The Army Now” has authentic aspects of the Army because it was filmed at Ft. Sill (Lawton, OK). They completely filmed it on an active Army training base.
Ritchie Valens' brother from "La Bamba." 🤣
The flashlights at 6:56 we're referred to as the Lackland lasers in BMT when I went through Air Force BMT in the late 90's
I’ll never forget basic training at Fort Dix in 1987 when my drill Sgt climbed into the cattle car and actually said, “Your mama’s are not here to take care of you now”! Of course I started laughing cause I couldn’t believe he actually said it. Shit got real immediately when he climbed over the top of everyone like a spider monkey to get at me! I swear it was like a scene out of a horror movie, and his face! A lifetime of anger and rage condensed into that one split second when I knew he was about to kill me. Man, those were the good ol days!
adding to the realism. I love the contraceptive prescription glasses his rocking.
BCDs rule!
We had 4 shitters on opposite walls facing each other. We decided to get a small table and put it in the middle and play cards as we were dropping logs.
TMI my dude...Well you are K9. As we were.
When you guys do army veterans for another episode do clips or action scenes from band of brothers
👍
If Evan Seal was a Ranger, where there ever a Bob Ranger that was a SEAL ?
My Basic & infantry AIT was at fort Polk, LA summer of 1972 in old WW2 barracks
Tbh. "In the army now" is one of THE MOST realistic army movies about basic training ever. That shit is SPOT on how dumb everything is. 9/10 only because some of the scenerios are silly.
Thanks for your service 🙏
I used to work with an old school Army guy, anytime someone mentioned the Army, he would sing, "Be, all that you can be! Get a fucked up life, and an ugly wife, in the Aaaaarmy!"
I went to Fort Jackson for basic in 1992, when Renaissance Man came out in 1994 it made me chuckle
17:35 Hello everyone! I'm retired military and I found this commercial funny as hell. Love the fact that none of the soldiers in the field at the end have one drop of sweat or dirt on them. Dont get me started on the soldiers unbuttoned chin strap.🤣
Ok dork
First thing they told us when we got to reception station at Ft. Knox was "They filmed Stripes here."
5:53 100% agreed. Went through basic back in 2002 at Ft. Jackson and I remember how hyped all of us were to throw a live grenade. Felt more like a cross between Disneyland and Viagra. 10 minutes in line for less than 30 seconds of pleasure.
And it still sucked.
Right before the end I thought about the 1983 recruiting ad where the Sargent is drinking the coffee. Then bam there it was. It kinda shows how effective that ad was.
We had two guys who while they were in boot camp that dropped the grenadine with the drill instructor in the pit, it was the same drill instructor months later after he recovered. Those guys were never issued grenades in our unit.
That 1983 commercial was so played over and over I considered joining when I graduated high school in 1985.
Yes!!! need one with only the military recruiting commercials!!
I broke my collarbone at the start of my Canadian army cadet corps year-end inspection obstacle course demonstration, when I was 13.
Finished the 30' long single rope bridge, boosted the other 2 guys onto the armory's 7' high storage shed, then jumped and got hauled up by one arm.
Hopped off the other side, did a PLF and had to get taken to the hospital by my folks after the applause ended.
I actually met Pauly Shore in Hawaii when I was with the Marine Corps. Met him outside a club that was having a concert with Danzig. What's awesome is this movie came out while I was in the Marines... I just remember him and three of his Buddies in a white Jeep.. only spoke to him for about a minute and a half
Were they in a white Jeep while you were in the Marines?
@@cletusspucklerstablejeaniu1059 y
I loved that 1983 commercial too.
Please do a video dedicated to reviewing old/current military recruitment commercials! All branches!
Bruh Jericho made me laugh out loud. What a legend. Bring him on more. Especaly at 1:20, that was so funny.
Hey they joke about the tanks but I nearly had an M1 crush my car at Fort Carson. He came off of a dirt trail onto the hardtop in front of me and I had to slam the brakes to avoid the accident. I learned that day that tanks always have the right of way.
Your comments were 🤣😂😅! Love it and thank you for your service! 👍🇺🇸♥️
At 6:09, I hadn't seen this in years and I agree the grenade explosion wasn't bad. I watched several go off in the Army and they always seemed to throw out a very light brown or purple cloud for some reason. NO flash I ever saw and you never saw the shrapnel unless it hit something and you saw it raining down after
when it came to the team tower climbing... I fell from the top, knocked myself silly on the shredded tires ground... The other two didn't hold allowing me to fall... They got SMOKED for it.
14:27 Damn. Billy dropped out and became a cop huh
That Ranger commerical was badass.
The recruiting ads you showed were bad ass.
Same exact thing happened to me with the rib,but I wasn't about to go to sick call and get recycled
The flashlights are demolitions rated, so they're a touch above your standard bic pocket light :P
I only watched this because you had stripes on it. Love that movie. Because I'm old.
I noticed @17:45 that the paratrooper landed with his feet apart, under a seemingly T-10 canopy.
i get to peel a pile of patatoes instead of doing a 15 mile march in the rain at 6 am?
oh no, the horror.
I drive past BlackRifle coffe co everyday I’m headed to habitat. Cheers from Tooly
The first movie… that was me and my friend when we went in.
How about Invasion USA with Chuck Norris? And have Matt Best and Tim Kennedy review it.
I ran across the same O course log that John Candy fell on.
Right on - my oldest son is in one of the earliest photos.
Holy Shit, the 80's recruiting commercial with a gama goat! Those were just getting phased out when I went in. Still kind of want one.
Denman Didn't know what Sgt Hulka's Combat patch was? 1st Cavalry Division. 11:07