Graham Family Reacts to What Army Recruits Go Through At Boot Camp

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 ก.ย. 2024
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    Graham Family Reacts to What Army Recruits Go Through At Boot Camp
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ความคิดเห็น • 482

  • @karenjayne24
    @karenjayne24 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +126

    My church buys MREs to hand out to those in need. Most do not have access to refridgerators or microwaves. It is a warm meal that they can eat when they want to.

    • @halicarnassus8235
      @halicarnassus8235 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      That's wonderful

    • @nikoknightpuppetproduction369
      @nikoknightpuppetproduction369 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      that is a wonderful charity that your church is doing.

    • @eurekasquared9853
      @eurekasquared9853 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Awesome! ❤

    • @LMmccallL57
      @LMmccallL57 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That's so cool. 👍🏽

    • @31Mike
      @31Mike 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      When I was in the Army (late 80's to early 90's), I had friends in low places (dining facility soldiers) who would give me leftover items when we were in the field. One time, I got a couple of cases of MRE's, which came in handy when I couldn't get to the mess hall in time for chow. I could break out an MRE and still have something to eat... I loved the "Turkey, Diced with Gravy", but the dehydrated "Pork Patty" was toxic!

  • @Bill-1370
    @Bill-1370 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +76

    I went through Marine Corps Boot Camp in 1980 (44 years ago) at MCRD San Diago California. Back then the Drill Instructors could still put their hands on you(Hit, slap, punch, use bad language). Today they are not allowed to be so physical during training. If you would like to get a look at what we went through during Boot Camp, I suggest watching the movie "Full Metal Jacket"

    • @jimthesnowboarder12
      @jimthesnowboarder12 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      In the Winter of 1969, I was sent on a top secret assignment in Southeast Vietnam. The objective: rescue Sgt. Four Leaf Tayback from a heavily guarded NVA Prison Camp. The mission was considered to be near-suicide.

    • @FakTorThis
      @FakTorThis 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jimthesnowboarder12 lmao shutup

    • @emmef7970
      @emmef7970 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@jimthesnowboarder12 From a military brat of a WWII veteran " Welcome home soldier". Glad you made it home unlike so many of your brother's in arms. Apologies that you didn't receive the respect upon your return you deserved especially considering most were drafted into service. Thank you for your service. And, I am still not a fan of Jane Fonda! lol.

    • @jimthesnowboarder12
      @jimthesnowboarder12 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@emmef7970 thank you. it was tough

    • @emmef7970
      @emmef7970 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@jimthesnowboarder12 I would say "beyond" tough. Unimaginable, for someone to comprehend if they have never experienced it. Thank you again!

  • @DamienWillis
    @DamienWillis 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    I can see how proud Jono is of those kids, and he's got every right to be! You're both raising a couple of great ones...

    • @denniskawa4412
      @denniskawa4412 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Osut is one mos, this is not everyone s job

    • @wishwise0
      @wishwise0 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@denniskawa4412 I think you may have responded to the wrong comment.

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He should be. I wish more kids were like his here in the States.

    • @emmef7970
      @emmef7970 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@denniskawa4412 Army - OSUT (One Station Unit Training). As other's mentioned, it appears appears to be on the wrong comment. Just clarifying your reference for those not in the know. :)

  • @JPG023
    @JPG023 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    At 4:04, the video shows Staff Sgt. Michael Edgarton. SSgt Edgarton was my Sgt at Fort Campbell Kentucky. I remember he had disappeared for a few months and everyone said he went to Drill Sgt School. Before he left, he was more calm and approachable. One day during PT, he randomly was back with us. I remember joking around during PT as we did a Ruck Sack March when he was near by. And he gave me a stone cold look and told me to stop fucking around. I noticed how much he had changed when he came back from Drill Sgt School. Still a good guy though.

    • @curtism-w6b
      @curtism-w6b หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      After my time, but Ft. Campbell? One of the worst 😂. 20yo drug addicts trying to marry you, nothing to do but go to Clarksville and get in trouble 😂

  • @mackey8813
    @mackey8813 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    The mre has a crazy shelf life. Around 50 years. I worked at the missike silos and we had pallets of them underground in case war fell out.

    • @sirmoonslosthismind
      @sirmoonslosthismind 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "50 years". not all of them last as long as they're supposed to. lowest bidder and all that.

    • @dilaudid69us
      @dilaudid69us 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      50 years? No not quite that long. Try again.

  • @g.gordon8117
    @g.gordon8117 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    A long time ago, in a place called Ft. Benning.1980 I went through basic, advanced infantry, Jump school (Paratrooper), path finder, Ranger school. Steel pots , (helmet) our hand to hand training was outside in sawdust pits. Then off to Ft. Bragg for 20yrs and SF. old and retired 18B now.
    Love y"alls reactions.

    • @michaelmorris423
      @michaelmorris423 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Ft. Knox '92. Sawdust pits were for hand to hand, and since there was one close to our barracks, it was also often used for getting smoked. Especially after supper on the days that the mess hall served cheeseburgers and baked beans.

    • @Fergusthecat0
      @Fergusthecat0 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Lackland 80.....

    • @BuckyBarnesATL
      @BuckyBarnesATL 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You had the same trail I did, I’m retired at 39. Salute and All the way! Grandpa was one of the first Delta Force guys but I wasn’t as badass as him.

  • @kimikolee7313
    @kimikolee7313 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    My grandfather (who we lovingly called “Grumpy” like the dwarf from Snow White) was a marine post WWII but pre Vietnam. We called him Grumpy because he was tough, but also loved us. If anybody fucked with the family, even if we kids screwed around too much, the Marine came out and NOBODY wanted that. He was very well respected and loved in the community, and to this day I get people who say “you’re one of Grumpy’s girls”. My grandparents were very well known, I miss them both every day. Cancer took them both a few years apart ❤
    I feel like it’s also important to note that our first military men way back during the Revolution were trained by Prussians. Friedrich von Stueben was a Prussian military officer and helped George Washington train his troops one winter. Through years, the American military cultivated and developed Prussian technique, making it our own. So, thanks former nation of Prussia, for your military training 💛

  • @danmiller7667
    @danmiller7667 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I started basic training in August of 1969 at Fort Polk Louisiana. There was a place on base called Tiger land, which was a simulated Viet Nam village for infantry training, because it was hellishly hot and humid in the summer like Nam. Training was much more violent in those days. As bill_1370 says, "they could still put their hands on you (Hit, slap, punch, use bad language). Except for the fact that I was in the Army rather than the Marines, my basic training experience was almost identical to the movie "Full Metal Jacket" , including recruits committing suicide. Coincidentally, my first week of basic training was the same week that Woodstock happened.

  • @foltzenlogel
    @foltzenlogel 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    After the basic training is over the soldiers will advance on to AIT (Advanced Individual Training) where they will train in their MOS (Military Occupational Specialty).

  • @curtism-w6b
    @curtism-w6b หลายเดือนก่อน

    They told us to flap our arms, and one drill said, "Fly, fly my little seagulls!" 😂

  • @shimmjaxxs1210
    @shimmjaxxs1210 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    i was in the United states Navy and i was in for 3 months in boot camp but you guys should watch the marine boot camp video

    • @CDRhammond
      @CDRhammond 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Good old RTC great lakes :) ya the USMC bootcamp is defiantly the hardest to get through for sure.

    • @teeM4n96
      @teeM4n96 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You spelled Great Mistakes wrong 😂 ​@@CDRhammond

    • @CDRhammond
      @CDRhammond 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@teeM4n96 For some it can turn out to be their greatest mistake.

  • @theJuLYheat
    @theJuLYheat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Fort Benning is not the only OSUT base. I did OSUT at Ft. Leonard Wood in Missouri. We called it fort lost in the woods misery. I was a combat engineer and drove a bradley tank for my unit. Freakin fun times man. Big guns, big tanks & bigger bombs. Loved every second of it. I was injured before i could deploy. I'll never claim what i didnt achieve.

    • @nursegryffindor8512
      @nursegryffindor8512 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hey my brother was a combat engineer out of Ft Leonardwood as well!

    • @theJuLYheat
      @theJuLYheat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @nursegryffindor8512 What year did he train there? Also, thank him for his service.

    • @nursegryffindor8512
      @nursegryffindor8512 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@theJuLYheat thank you for your service as well. My brother was there 06-07 for basic and AIT. What about you?

    • @theJuLYheat
      @theJuLYheat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@nursegryffindor8512 I was there in 08. From May to Sep.

  • @Stepperg1
    @Stepperg1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    My husband ate C rations from WWII in Vietnam! Can you imagine? It wasn't all the time but food has come a long way since then. He used to call the bread and crackers "weevil bread" because it has real bugs in it. Protein is protein, I guess! Out in the jungle there wasn't a lot of cooking going on so a 20 year old can of something was better than nothing....or not. His favorite was beanie weenie. That man! If he ended up with Lima beans it was going right in the trash.

    • @Dumaski
      @Dumaski 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I thank you for your husband's sevice.

  • @loriblair4913
    @loriblair4913 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I love watching your family react to American things. You have a beautiful family. I am from a huge military family and have family members that have fought in every war going back to the Revolutionary War. There are many family members that went through their basic training there at Ft. Benning.

  • @shuckaby2564
    @shuckaby2564 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    MRE's ranger pudding: put coffee creamer in coco packet (you can add the instant coffee packet and/or sugar) add just a touch of water and stir till it mixed up and thick. too much water ruins it. MRE's are good and a lot of trading goes on for favored items (trading apple sauce for cake for example). if someone is over weight or out of shape, then they get special attention. when we ran in formation and someone fell out and couldn't keep up, we would have to turn around go back and pick them up and continue the run (2 miles sometimes more). nobody gets left behind. you are made to push yourself beyond what you thought you were capable of. biggest motivation was that you didn't want to get yelled at by the Drill Sergeant.

  • @adamromero1072
    @adamromero1072 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    They are not yelling at them they are speaking in a voice so everyone hears 🤣

  • @unklebacon44
    @unklebacon44 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I believe that the one for the Marines is the most brutal, ought to find that for them.

    • @brucew7062
      @brucew7062 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Sadly the videos showing Marine Corps boot camp (basic training) are tamped down from how they really train us when the cameras are not around. Tough, but it needs to be that way. I appreciated every bit of effort the drill instructors put into training us.

    • @jojodelivery5916
      @jojodelivery5916 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i'm in the Army, my basic in 2018 at Jackson was more intense than this but there's no cameras. I can agree the Marine Corps bootcamp looks the most intense tho

  • @jbs454
    @jbs454 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    My son is a Indiana state trooper and the training is very tough they teach you hand to hand combat, firearms, they choke till you black out and when you wake up you continue fighting, driving skills training they teach you to fight in a car and lot book work on law enforcement his training was 6 months long but he loves his job he is on their dive team doing body recovery also. I worry about him every day in today’s climate. Oh and your tased and pepper sprayed too

  • @theJuLYheat
    @theJuLYheat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The cheese tortellini MRE is bangin dude. It's got the hooah bar and cappuccino and whatnot. MREs were the only time in basic that we were allowed to eat candy without getting in trouble.

  • @Michael-n1d7n
    @Michael-n1d7n 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I can tell you one thing, watching the videos of how basic training is now, it is a lot more laxed than when I went through Ft. Benning, now known as Ft. Moore. When I went through back in '94, it was a lot more stressful. Once we finished with the in processing at the 30th AG, we went down range to our actual training battalion. Once we got of the cattle truck, yes it was like what you would see hauling cattle, we were met with the shark attack. That is when all the Drill Sergeants would come out of no where and start yelling, screaming and cussing at you from all angles. It was constant from day one of getting yelled at. I was with the 2/58th training battalion 4th Platoon. That Battalion was known as the house of pain, and it stood to it's name.

  • @LancerX916
    @LancerX916 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    My dad was a Marine, they are on a whole other level with their training.

    • @ragedmayhem1
      @ragedmayhem1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Not really 😂

    • @ac1888
      @ac1888 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      My father served twenty eight years in the army and was a member of the 75 Ranger Regiment eleven of those years. I can assure you that Rangers can Run circles around any Marine.

    • @Silky808
      @Silky808 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Civilians cannot talk about any kind of military training of any branch, if you have never served in your life.

    • @ac1888
      @ac1888 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Silky808 Just because I am commenting as a civilian, doesn’t mean I never served. As a matter of fact I gave Uncle Sam seven years of my youth. 13k, 87-93, and yes that includes Deserts Shield/Storm. So yeah, as a civilian and a veteran, I can comment and I stand with my previous post about Rangers running circles around any Marine.

    • @atomicwedgie8176
      @atomicwedgie8176 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ac1888 Comparing Rangers to regular Marines... nice try. smh Try comparing Rangers to Marine Raiders. ALL special forces, of each branch, are great, just different mission parameters.

  • @LarryRota-mh1gc
    @LarryRota-mh1gc 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    Training doesn't end after boot camp your always training and learning

  • @daniellehuston7959
    @daniellehuston7959 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Hello Graham family!! It's so great to see all of you together, again!! Ms D : )

  • @Beans-1111
    @Beans-1111 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When my father was the in 1969 the training was so much harder. He said no matter how much you train, nothing can prepare you for war. During thee Vietnam War he was an engineer and was sent in before other marines to clear the mine fields using only their trench knife. He was sent to a place in the jungle called The Iron Triangle where they were low on food and ammo they had to fight hand to hand combat. He was in a horrible battle for 5 days with no sleep and no backup. He said he had to kill 3 Viet Cong with just his trench knife because he ran out of ammo.

  • @georgerutledge9581
    @georgerutledge9581 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The graduates are going to their base assignments. Some assignments are in the United States of America (US/ USA), some assignments are overseas (Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Puerto Rico, etc.). These moves are called Permanant Change of Station (PCS). If the assignment inside the USA, this is known as Continental United States (CONUS). If the military assignment is outside the USA, it's known as Outside Continental United States= Overseas (OCONUS).

    • @CDRhammond
      @CDRhammond 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They have to go to the schools for each of their MOS's first. After that they will go to their first command.

  • @dilaudid69us
    @dilaudid69us 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The difference between the beginning and the 11th week Soldiers is that they have "Graduated" from the Basic Training portion of OSUT and while they are still in training it's a little bit more "relaxed". They will still get dragged through the mud if they "step on their cranks" but it's a bit easier "mentally" for them.

  • @xv6701
    @xv6701 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Most people don’t realize that MREs are basically Chef Boyardee in bag form. They aren’t as bad as people make them out but they obviously aren’t the best long term. Some are downright tasty if you can mix and match well. They’re made to pack calories into a slim form factor and they do it well. There are better rations out there but these are logistically very easy to produce, move, and distribute.

  • @Cali_Livin_916
    @Cali_Livin_916 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I definitely came out a different person. These guys got it a lot easier than we did back in the 80's.

  • @31Mike
    @31Mike 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In the Army, we didn't call it 'Boot Camp', that's the Marines. We called it 'Basic Training' or 'Basic Combat Training' or just 'Basic' for short.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Back in 1986 I went through Ft. Benning Infantry Basic Training, Infantry, and Airborne School. Back then it was one week for processing then 8 weeks of Basic Training, 2 days for rest and refit, then 5 weeks of Infantry School. Once Infantry School was done you graduate and go to your Army wide assignment all over the world. For me it was Airborne School to qualify to be a Parachutist for 3 weeks and 5 jumps from an airplane both day and night. Once I graduated I ended up to Army world wide assignment because the Army tends to train more soldiers to become parachute qualified. Two years later I went to an Airborne Infantry Battalion to be a Paratrooper. My adventure went on for 23 years with combat in Panama and Iraq. Those long years were short when I looked bat at what I went through.

  • @armymikeoif
    @armymikeoif 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    When you use the heater in the mre do not do it inside your house but outside

  • @nursegryffindor8512
    @nursegryffindor8512 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I had emergency abdominal surgery 2 days before my brother graduated Basic Training. I still went 5 hours each way just to make sure I didn’t miss seeing my brother

  • @SeanP7195
    @SeanP7195 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I did US Army basic and AIT in Fort Benning Georgia in 1992. After completion I was sent to the 10th Mountain Division. I will never forget my first day. For morning PT they stated we would do a “ruck run”. We had never heard of this and they told us they typically do it once or twice a week for PT. You go down to formation in full combat gear, your weapon and a ruck sack filled with whatever the “packing list” was. Thinking since we had just finished boot camp we were more than capable of anything. Guess who was wrong? So, the idea is simple. You run 3 miles down this long road going down, and then run it back again going uphill. The faster you do it, the better chance you’ll get a good spot in line for breakfast (before food ran out and you were left with little). The guys who had already been there for a year or more were basically running backwards and having pleasant conversations with each other. Us new guys were on the verge of death lol. It was also below zero degrees as well. It was at that moment, the very first time I realized. I joined the Infantry, not the Boy Scouts. Several new guys “fell out” and had to be helped. They even started sharing their gear to make it easier and were motivating them by saying. “Come on man, they’ll be out of omelets”. LMAO. God the infantry sucked. Some of the older guys were even smoking during it and one was even reading (I swear).

  • @rafehr1378
    @rafehr1378 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yo. Joined in 1970. Navy, Seabees for Vietnam. In BootCamp San Deigo. My regular job in Advance BC was SP helper. SP Chief BM told us to get Irons & Chains loaded up one day. We went next door to the Marine BC to pick up some Navy BC deserters. 2 guys and boy did they cry, sobbing. Marines said they were keeping them. I ended up in, NMCB 10. We were banned from the Clubs at Camp Pendleton. That doesn't include the minor Gunfight there either.

  • @smith2002100
    @smith2002100 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As an young man who was raised under an army family it’s was rough at times but at the end was good very tough

  • @ashleyk9370
    @ashleyk9370 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Let me break it down a bit, it's now Ft.
    Moore. Many bases were renamed because the bases were mostly named a confederate generals
    Ft. Benning was renamed because of General Hal Moore who was the father of 227 Aviation Regiment, the exact unit of 1st Air Cav Div of which I indirectly was a part of twice in my 8 years in the US Army as a Blackhawk crewmember and crew chief. Same as Ft. Hood for a good number of my 8yrs in the US Army. In fact 1st Air Cav Div was my unit during the Iraq War during 2006-2007. Now their under Ft. Cavazos in TX. Their deployment is now Europe as we speak. So this video is specific to Ft. Moore as it's Home of the infantry. They train and learn their most after basic making it OSUT or One Station Unit Training

  • @patriciawilliams1416
    @patriciawilliams1416 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My son was at Ft. Benning becoming a part of the 101st Air borne. Screaming Eagles

  • @peterkozak9212
    @peterkozak9212 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I went through Army Basic Training, Officer Candidate School, Airborne Training ( jumping out of airplanes), and Military Police Training what amounted to about 10 months of training before I went to my first duty station where I served as a 2nd Lieutenant, Platoon Leader in a Military Police Company. I was a young female fresh out of college and had grown up as the child of a military officer and wanted to serve my country. I served for five years with one year overseas in South Korea. It was one of the best experiences of my life!

    • @wolfdesikan1766
      @wolfdesikan1766 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That's way more than ten months worth of training LT.

  • @Cookie-K
    @Cookie-K 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I think most moms turn into "Drill Sergeants" ...we have to sometimes in order for us to be heard 😊

    • @Dumaski
      @Dumaski 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      God knows mine had to. There were 4 of us boys, 5 years between us all.

  • @rharper768
    @rharper768 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a vietnam infantry vet, basic and ait taught the basics. the finishing school was at the unit you were assigned to.

  • @larrycraker3935
    @larrycraker3935 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The first day at Ft Benning Georgia was hell I was there in 1983 before I got out I visited many countries I became a Sargent in 1987 it was an amazing and scary life changing moment in my life

  • @garygemmell3488
    @garygemmell3488 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Even with the updated rules in boot camp involving physical contact and verbal abuse, the 10 week basic course in the Army is second to that of the U.S. Marines. The last 54 hours of Marine boot camp are called "The Crucible". 54 hours of no sleep and constant challenges that force each recruit to think as an individual and as part of a team at the end of a 12 week course, the longest among our services. You can perform brilliantly during boot camp, but if you fail during The Crucible, you will never be called a Marine. Those who survive The Crucible are awarded the Globe and Anchor and are address as a Marine for the first time. Before that they are addressed as "recruit". I am the son of a Marine, the nephew of two other Marines, the uncle to a Marine, and the cousin of a Marine. And proud of every one of them.
    Basic training length:
    U.S. Marines, 12 weeks
    U. S. Army, 10 weeks
    U.S. Navy, 8 weeks
    U.S. Air Force, 8.5 weeks
    U.S. Coast Guard, 8 weeks
    The course they are talking about here is after basic training is completed and every recruit from every branch attends a training course after basic training to train them in their assigned job. The length of that training depends on the job. I looked into joining the Navy as a nuclear reactor technician after high school and that training was a 6 month course followed by actual training on live nuclear reactors. From basic training to being certified to run a nuclear reactor aboard a ship or submarine was a 2 year process.

  • @Neeneros
    @Neeneros 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Basic training breaks you down as individuals and builds you back up as a team...that's the point.

  • @christopherwanamaker828
    @christopherwanamaker828 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm a 13 year Army Veteran, I was a Quartermaster Supply Sergeant for 9/13 years, and I conducted 3 different deployments during my time as a Supply Sergeant. I did a year in Baghdad Iraq with a Field Artillery Battery in 2009-2010, a year in Central and Eastern Afghanistan with a Aviation Maintenance Unit that worked on Blackhawk Helicopters, and 3 months conducting a Humanitarian aid mission to Liberia Africa helping with the Ebola outbreak at the end of 2014 to the beginning of 2015. I'm going to give you a better Basic Training breakdown for you all. When you first signup at a recruiting office they conduct a background check, you might conduct a pre-APFT test to measure your physical fitness, you'll take the ASVAB test that covers several category areas to test your overall basic knowledge and education level and what score you get on the ASVAB test will determine out of 150 different MOS career paths you'll be able to enlist for. After that, as long as you didn't fail horribly on anything, you then report to a nearby MEPS station, usually around airports for a thorough medical evaluation. If you pass everything, you'll be given your option choices of jobs and possible future duty stations if you pass all your training. Then you'll get your Basic Training start date. Where Basic Training and AIT (Advanced Individual Training Military Schooling) will be located and how long they are will depend on what MOS job did you choose. You just watched the video on Infantry Soldiers being trained at Fort Benning GA. When I signed up I got a 109 on my ASVAB test, which was 3 points away from the cutoff to be able to choose from any of the 150 different MOS jobs. They first tried to sign me up for laundry and I was like hell no give me a job with a little more dignity and respect so they said okay how about Quartermaster Supply? Which turned out to be the second oldest job in the U.S. Army, Infantry is only one day older then Quartermaster, so its pretty dang important. I went to Fort Jackson SC in Summer 2003 and graduated on my 18th Birthday! Basic Training for me was a total of 10 weeks. One week of in-processing, receiving of uniforms, basic training portrait pictures, shots, understanding basic military etiquette, etc. Then the real basic training fun began. Three weeks of Red Phase which is more about being yelled at, screamed at, being smoked, and being broken of all our mental, emotional, psychological immaturities, pushing us to our limits to include our physical limits. So they break us of our stupidity, selfishness, fears, cowardice, being undisciplined, and just overall immature. Wherever our parents went wrong with us, the government takes over as our parents and breaks us of all piss poor bad habits and weaknesses. At this point we are not allowed to think or decide anything for ourselves, the government and Drill Sergeants think for us and tell us how to do nearly everything. Then after hell Red Phase comes three weeks of White Phase, which mainly has to deal with marksmen shooting ranges and this is where the Drill Sergeants begin to lighten up mainly for the reason on not wanting soldiers with firearms to snap on them while under intense pressure and turn their firearms on the Drill Sergeants or other fellow comrade soldiers. Then after White Phase comes three weeks of Blue Phase which has a couple of different parts to it, they take everything you've learned over the past seven weeks and implement and test you both as an individual and can you work in a team effectively. You'll do different challenging obstacle courses like Victory Tower, you'll hike out several miles sometimes longer with full gear to something called Victory Forge where you'll conduct a 72 hour out in the field military camping, digging foxholes, conducting patrols, missions, night fire range exercises, maybe even a game of capture the guidon flag from other nearby platoons. Then pack it all up and ruck march hike several more miles to a bus stop, get back to your basic training barracks, clean all your gear, then get some rest. One of the final things in basic training will be to take your APFT Fitness test and pass. Back when I was in the APFT fitness test only consisted of 2 minute push-ups, 2 minute site-ups, and a timed 2 mile run. Now the new ACFT fitness test since 2 years ago covers 6 different categories two of them are still the 2 minute push-ups and 2 mile run, but the other 4 categories are new that started in April 2022. If you pass everything you graduate Basic Training. Then you get on a bus and most move onto AIT (Military Schooling) which is somewhat similar to Basic Training but its more of a school like college environment with some restrictions at the beginning and more privileges the further along you progress and how long your AIT lasts is completely determined by your MOS job you signed up for. Quartermaster Schooling was another 9-10 weeks for me. But some MOS's can take up to an entire 6-12 months. After you graduate AIT schooling you get sent to your first assigned duty station and that can change from what you signed up for because now the government owns your butt and you go where the Army tells you to go. Because so many Americans are obese they've recently started a Army Fat Camp Program for those who still want to volunteer but they have to go through the Fat Camp Program until they get down to Army Regulation Body Fat Standards. At the end of each cycle if they didn't make it the Soldiers can choose to either quit and go home or be recycled through another round of Fat Camp and this can happen several times before the government says enough is enough. Once you pass Fat Camp they'll proceed to in-processing of Basic Training and continue on. Just so your aware there are currently 24 different flavored MRE's, the Pizza one is fairly new, they've been trying to get that one right for 50ish years and I haven't even tried it yet. The only MRE that is horrible is the Veggie Omelet because no Omelet is good if its not fresh, but all the others are pretty good and all the little goodies inside of MRE's are like a form of currency while in training with other Soldiers. I hope this gives you all a better understanding breakdown of Army Military Basic and AIT Training!

  • @davidhardy5656
    @davidhardy5656 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Happy Easter Graham Family ❤️.
    Keep The Video's Coming.

  • @kevgmor
    @kevgmor 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You both are doing a wonderful job as parents :)

  • @NatPat-yj2or
    @NatPat-yj2or 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are a good father. You should be proud, because you've raised a good family and it was a good idea to do this channel because you've given them so much new opportunity with this. I hope you realize this.

  • @melissaeckel6311
    @melissaeckel6311 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Once they finish boot camp, the go to where they are going to serve. Once there they get specialist training.

  • @Shattereddemon300
    @Shattereddemon300 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am in the United States Air Force auxiliary, known as civil air patrol, or CAP, people at the age of 12 and over can join, we are not a form of military power, but we’re are in the air force just not swarn in.

  • @johnwilson8895
    @johnwilson8895 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    MRE actually means: Meals Refusing to Exit. This is because they are very dehydrated and if you don't drink plenty of water when eating them, you will back up.

  • @thumper7047
    @thumper7047 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Depends on what your specific Job will be. I was Navy, but I am sure the Army is similar. If you are going to be a radio operator, they send you to a school to learn how to operate the radio, teach you codes, etc. To drive a tank or work on repairing tanks helicopters, etc. These people are "Basically" trained. They will get more advanced training at the next level, but it is more like a professional school, no more drill sergeants yelling at you, etc. It all starts in High School when you volunteer to take the ASVAB test which is like an SAT but more specific to military needs. I took mine, scored very well and was offered working on a Nuclear Sub. But then found out I was claustrophobic, so I ended up working on airplanes on Aircraft Carriers (USS Midway, Uss Kitty Hawk, VF-32, FWATD)

  • @montanawife4851
    @montanawife4851 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I loved MREs❤ one of my favorite memories of basic😊

  • @davidcopple8071
    @davidcopple8071 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As tough as this seems. It's still dialed back from when I went through this. Back then the Drill Sargent's would cuss you out up and down all day long and you and your platoon would do on average five hundred pushups a day.
    The gun I carried through training was an M-16A1 And stamped into the barrel were the words M16-A1 Experimental. Our drill sargents never did " dial it down" like they did in this video. We were yelled at for nine weeks straight and then since I was becoming an MP, ( military police) , my law enforcement training continued for sixteen more weeks under the same Drill Sargent at the same facility. Fort McClellan Alabama. It's closed now. But it's a time I'll always remember with pride and nostalgia.

  • @sebastianshades4
    @sebastianshades4 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    OSUT is for infantrists. US Army Basic training is 9 weeks before they go off to their AIT to learn their jobs, whereas recruits training for infantry stay there as part of One Stop.

    • @bruss529
      @bruss529 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think alot of the combat arms MOS's do OSUT. I know tankers and cav scouts (19 series) used to at Knox.

    • @jonh7480
      @jonh7480 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It actually stands for (OSUT) One Station Unit Training. It's for for more than just "infantry". Please read up or educate yourself. I'm still in the Army (19+ years) and I know this...

    • @regulator18E
      @regulator18E 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@jonh7480 🤓

    • @28dirtj
      @28dirtj 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      More than just one MOS. its all 19 series and 11 series mos' going there for One Station Unit Training for at least 22 weeks. Everyone does basic training, which is an automatic 9 weeks. The mos determines weather you're doing Advanved Individual Training or OSUT. Anything non combat will have AIT. Which can be an up to a year of extra training depending on mos. Such as Military Police or K9 Handlers. They have AIT for 52 weeks

  • @thomascameron7004
    @thomascameron7004 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I had my basic training at Fort Dix,New Jersey and became an expert in grenade throwing.Learned to fire the M-16 rifle and a 30 caliber machine gun and a portable anti-tank weapon.I qualified with my M-16 rifle as a marksmen.

  • @NamiMakimono
    @NamiMakimono 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    9:41 The way that drill instructor’s neck and face are turning red, makes me wonder how his blood pressure is.

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Growing up, my older brother and cousin were both in US Army during Vietnam. Scary being younger and your draft number coming up! The HS class one year older were the last classmates who were drafted, so I wasn't forced to serve ;-)

  • @hawkuser604
    @hawkuser604 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was at the 30th AG in 1991 at 17 yrs old. I turned 18 a week after I got there and was in the 2/58th Infantry for 13 weeks or so. It was a bit more brutal than these guys go through now. After that I went to the Airborne school and earned my jump wings. Pretty tough back then, but I regret nothing. Over 30 years ago mow and retired after over 26 years of service with the Army. Served in the 82nd Airborne and later on to aviation crewing UH-60 Black Hawks. Eventually had to retire due to medical issues with my back and neck. This does bring back old memories!

  • @helensarkisian7491
    @helensarkisian7491 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    If you can, watch “COPS”. Real police action. I’m always amazed with the excuses the suspects make up. I’m also amazed that an officer won’t accept an explanation that sounds perfectly reasonable to me. It usually turns out that I’m wrong.
    Police work isn’t just being an officer. One can be on the forensic team, dispatching, or the dreaded paperwork. One of my brothers is a forensic photographer. He loves photography. He sees some awful things, but he knows he’s helping to get bad people off the streets. That’s what drives him to get the best photos he can. His photos tell the story of what happened.

  • @raymarshall6721
    @raymarshall6721 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I hear benning and i get flashbacks 🤣 that place sucks. Then theu sent me to fort drum (upstate NY), i never knew so much snow could fall in a single day

  • @XxAverageJoexX
    @XxAverageJoexX 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Boot camp was so much fun after the first phase (red phase). Where all the yelling and adjusting to physical exercise subsides.

    • @SeanP7195
      @SeanP7195 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That’s a good point. Basic was miserable for the first few weeks. I remember once I got caught up in the running part and adjusted sleep, it wasn’t so terrible. Loss of freedom sucked though. To be honest, if you’re in good shape it won’t be bad. Also, damn we ate good in basic. We got scraps to eat in our unit but basic they have ample food.

    • @XxAverageJoexX
      @XxAverageJoexX 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SeanP7195 yeah we got our phones for 1 hour on Sunday (most of the time). I was on remedial PT so I was a really good runner by the end of basic, then I messed my knee up on an obstacle course. It hasn’t been the same since. Still though, good times! Afghanistan was fun as well, lol.

  • @christopherbolinger6863
    @christopherbolinger6863 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The breakdown is a complete tear down is rough but once down , when you get to training its not that bad . You have to pass a physical exam 70 push ups sit-ups running a mile .

  • @scGD10
    @scGD10 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It’s fun you have 4 members in the family.
    You don’t have to worry about where the other 3 daughters and 2 sons are. Haha
    I mean this is my struggle as the oldest brother in the family. My mom currently has 7 months old son. I have only one sister. She is in her final year of high school. So I don’t want to disturb her. Me in my early twenties have to take good care of my 5 year old brother while my father is at work. My other 2 brothers who are older than the 5 year old, they both kinda live on their own. When time comes they do what they have to do. I gave them a schedule for study times and for gaming. It’s easy with them because when they are hungry they eat what ever is at the table.

  • @katherinedinwiddie4526
    @katherinedinwiddie4526 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They leave there then go to AIT for MOS training. It is an experience you will remember forever.

  • @rudebadger12
    @rudebadger12 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Basic can be from 9 to 22 weeks depending on your job. After basic you start AIT (advance individual training). More have a 12 year life span.

  • @MrDellasc
    @MrDellasc 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They tear you down, then build you back up.

  • @damianh4510
    @damianh4510 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video! It was a treat to have this channel recommended to me. I stumbled upon it by chance. I would love to answer any questions you may have about the Military in general and specifically Infantry ones if you have them.

  • @TheReelMcCoySC
    @TheReelMcCoySC 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My most cherished memories are from Ft. Benning HOOOAAAH!!!!!

  • @GardeningWithKyle
    @GardeningWithKyle 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Glad to see garin back in the video hope he feels better

  • @angrygrim1394
    @angrygrim1394 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Drill sgts don't yell. they speak in a loud voice to make sure you hear and understand the order.

  • @easymoneyrad
    @easymoneyrad 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I can tell when they get older, garren will be tall & comedic & layah is will become more strict & disciplined than her mother if they stick to their professions.
    Should be proud of both.

  • @mikeadair3341
    @mikeadair3341 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Way different than my Navy boot camp. It was only suppose to be 2 months but took me 5 because of a bit of an aditude I had as a young guy.

  • @doobiedave9686
    @doobiedave9686 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I didn't have the opportunity to volunteer for the Army, I had no choice, I was drafted when I was 18 and, after only 8 weeks of basic training, I was in the jungles of Vietnam when I turned 19.

  • @ejtaylor73
    @ejtaylor73 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The U.S. does still have conscription, every male has to register for the draft at 18. But the chances of being drafted are very slim because there are people like these and myself that volunteer. TSgt., USAF, Ret.

  • @jake51515
    @jake51515 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a soldier myself, i went to sending for infantry training, and I don't miss that place one bit. Especially their version of a sugar cookie LOL

  • @carlosellis4932
    @carlosellis4932 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I went there back in 2013. My training was 14 weeks. It was ruff and hard but I made it.

  • @seekexplorewander
    @seekexplorewander 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Check out the video about what Marine Corps recruits go through. Makes this look easy.

  • @michaelmmcintyre
    @michaelmmcintyre 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    That Barber at minute mark 7:52 shaved my head in 1988.

  • @jourdanashley2245
    @jourdanashley2245 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Basic training in the Army is actually only 13 weeks, depending on the job. What they are describing here is combined basic and on the job training. People who join for medical corps and what no do not go through this. I was in the army as a Medical laboratory technician. From basic to active duty, it was 13 weeks basic training and 52 weeks from job training. Just wanted to put it out there that what this video is describing is infantry training. Your training experience is based on the career path you choose in the Army.

  • @TubE-tr8yi
    @TubE-tr8yi 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I just want to say you have awesome kids, you have done a remarkable job when you raise kids with those type of aspirations, my hat's off to you 🎩...

  • @ac7ivesleeper610
    @ac7ivesleeper610 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    About the question asked by mom (or as you say mum).
    Speaking as one who this almost happened to. I couldn't do a part of my fitness test called the serpentine. Running around barriers with arrows pointing alternating directions within a time limit. Couldn't do it to save my life.
    My drill sergeant came to me and said "private I'm going to give you one week to pass or you're getting recycled.
    Recycled means you have to go through training all over again.
    You see it all comes down to money. By the time my drill sergeant gave me the ultimatum.
    The United States government had alread
    y spent a million dollars just training me. I belonged to the United States army now. It didn't matter where I worked for them.
    If I had to spend another six weeks training again or graduating and be stationed at my next post, it didn't matter to them.
    So, on my own and in my free time I ran the serpentine over and over again till I was able to pass the test with time to spare.
    If at any point a soldier isn't strong enough to pass any physical test even after training. A soldier will take a physical examination by a doctor and upon passing that he or she will begin training till they can pass.

  • @danjordan6387
    @danjordan6387 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Should definitely check out the Coast Guard video and the US Marine video that they do they are also interesting to see how the training differ from branch to branch of the military

  • @Haventmetmydad
    @Haventmetmydad 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Funny enough, this video made me realize that my coworker is shown at 4:25 of the original video

  • @FirstOfTheMagi
    @FirstOfTheMagi 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video guys, would love to see y'all react to a Marine Boot Camp video!

  • @Tbone1492
    @Tbone1492 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Lala should take a intern job at Yellowstone Park. That was the best job i ever had. Working as a Rangers assistant. Summertime beautiful nature and learn something🙏

  • @douglasostrander5072
    @douglasostrander5072 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I signed up at 17, served four years mostly in Germany. I was there when the wall came down. Signed back up after 911, sixteen years after I got out to served in Afghanistan. Although my body is broken now, I don't regret it.

  • @lnytita6763
    @lnytita6763 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Aloha! Tip for the youngsters: learn to speak loud "from your diaphragm"... think "shake the walls", not "break the glass" (eye-twitching high-pitched shriek). 😄 I'm a 5-foot-nothing female who joined the service at 35-1/2 years old, the same age as my recruiter and senior Drill Sergeant (DS). Being able to sound like a DS was a cool skill to have and very effective with unruly fellow recruits who mistook me as a tiny-quiet little girl... it even entertained the DS's (and later, the other SGT's) because they didn't believe that sound was coming out of little-ole me 😆. If you're mentally prepared, it's mentally easy. My dad was actually a DS, and his basic training tip to me was to remember that DS's are just stand-up comedians dressed in green (my Dad is a funny guy at home, too, albeit strict when necessary). Let me tell you, the hardest part about Basic Training was NOT laughing... I would save it until I was facing away after the (funniest) DS would say, "GET AWAY FROM ME!!" cuz he secretly wanted to laugh, too. ~Good Times~ LOL. I also shook the hands of all my DS's at the end of training and said, "Thank You for all you do." After all, I saw the sacrifices my Dad made to be a DS, and I know how much care and knowledge he strived to give to his recruits, and he told me that DS's never get thanked. That one's for you, Dad 😄

  • @darrinna9784
    @darrinna9784 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Basic training is just the introduction to the branches. The real training starts after basic training.

  • @noblegreen2692
    @noblegreen2692 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    You guys should react to the marine corps boot camp videos, they are great

  • @TGProduction220
    @TGProduction220 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    also to answer your question each rct has to go through a physical of sorts to make sure their bones and what not can handle what’s about to happen, also they give smaller recruits double rations for skinny recruits during training rather than normal rations for avg recruits, for heavier recruits they cut meals

  • @aarobbins99
    @aarobbins99 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yeah im going to sound like an angry old man but when I went through boot camp drills could still put their hands on you. Over the years the army has been pussified.

  • @michaelantrim3123
    @michaelantrim3123 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I went to Fort Benning for basic training. It was tough but I wouldn’t trade it for anything

  • @toreyhassenfelt8448
    @toreyhassenfelt8448 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My son is the tall blonde one at second 19-20 in the video and is now in his 5 th year and is a staff sergeant or SSG . He also graduated ranger school

  • @careyjones98
    @careyjones98 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    After basic training they go to something called AIT advanced individual training were they train in their specific jobs for another 6 to 8 weeks and then they are assigned to their first actual duty station or if they're in the guard they go home until they have to go to their weekend training

  • @georgerutledge9581
    @georgerutledge9581 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They stress out the recruits to ensure that they can handle the stress of combat. Combat is terrifying. Yes, you can hold the seabags for 20 mins.

  • @sandygrunwaldt1780
    @sandygrunwaldt1780 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've watched you do reactions to Jolly. Well they do a video trying Army rations. Very funny 😂

  • @erianle123547
    @erianle123547 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    An important part of all the yelling and stress they put the recruits through, is because as soldiers they need to know how to operate, how to follow orders, and how to listen to each other in the middle of combat. Having a Drill Sargent who yells at you and hurts your feelings is nothing to being shot at, people screaming while dying, and explosives going off.
    Also, as to where those newly minted soldiers are going, most of them will be sent to other bases to receive advanced training in whatever specific role they will be serving in. It just kind of depends, usually when you sign up for the military, and this is true of all the branches, you get to pick a few jobs you want to do from a list, based on that and what is available, the military will try and assign recruits to those duties if they can. Not everything is included in the lists however, and during your basic training, or even after should you develop the skills, Drill Sergeants are trained to spot recruits that might fit into more advanced service roles.
    Sniper training for instance, isn't something you can just sign up for most of the time. If you show the proper marksmanship skills during basic training, a Drill Sargent might pull you aside and ask you if it's something you would be interested in. Even after you complete basic training, if your commanding officer notices you have the right skills and mentality for it, they might ask you as well. Training to join the Special Forces is usually the same, depending on the branch or the type of service, some you can choose to sign up for, others you have to be recommended for.

  • @lindsayruiz3789
    @lindsayruiz3789 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think it's wonderful that she wants to be a police officer! My brother was a Marine and then became a correctional officer. Now he lives in Pigeon Forge Tennessee. It is a Tourist destination in the Smokey Mountains. He is a Park Ranger, responsible for checking on hunting cabins. The United States is the best place in the world to be a police officer. Especially if you live in a safe/quiet area.

  • @BuckyBarnesATL
    @BuckyBarnesATL 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This channel needs more followers. I need his email and this vet will try to send him some MREs.

  • @sonicriser699
    @sonicriser699 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    please do the marine corp boot camp