USMC Boot Camp | Marine Reacts to Recruits

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  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2019
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Комментарии • 3,9 тыс.

  • @youmadbro7733
    @youmadbro7733 4 года назад +1477

    I remember our Drill Instructor smoked us because he found a can of dip in the barracks. He smoked us until someone admitted it was their’s. Then smoked us again because the recruit that said it was his was lying...... Because it belong to the Drill Instructure all along! (I mean really.... how would any of us smuggle a can of dip into the barracks in the first place!!!???)

    • @ASTRO_NAUTIKAL
      @ASTRO_NAUTIKAL 4 года назад +399

      Yoooo our drill accused someone of stealing his hat. We didn't crack we all believed each other. Got smoked to near death. He ended up admitting he made it up and he never seen a group with such integrity. Son of a bitch lmao.

    • @youmadbro7733
      @youmadbro7733 4 года назад +38

      Astro Nautik lol no shit!!! That must be a thing with them. When did you go?
      I was 1st battalion, Alpha co., platoon 1033. June - Sep 93

    • @renegade2556
      @renegade2556 4 года назад +12

      I almost regret the relation of this incident in light of the recent fatality of an unarmed black man,the similarities may be similar but This guy was off his bird and trying to kill me, and he was alive and breathing when the MP's dragged his lunatic ass away.

    • @renegade2556
      @renegade2556 4 года назад +11

      A long time ago way before most of you were born and I may be a boot to some but not a boot for a real long time.

    • @renegade2556
      @renegade2556 4 года назад +9

      Finding out this Recent inident the Toxicology report shows the dude was High on methamphetamines! A Sterling Cause For a Riot !

  • @mariekatherine5238
    @mariekatherine5238 4 года назад +2087

    Imagine nobody answers your call, so you call your recruiter and have to scream, “I love you. Goodbye.”

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +460

      that would be classic.

    • @robp4616
      @robp4616 4 года назад +445

      I couldn't remember my dad's phone number for some reason, so I just pretended I had him on the phone, screamed the script, then hung up and moved on.
      I learned later that a lot of people did a "fake call" just to get it over with.

    • @graceallingham
      @graceallingham 4 года назад +42

      It's a script 😂

    • @cnk64
      @cnk64 4 года назад +115

      You can’t say “I love you,” it’s not in the script. No matter what your family or whoever says you cannot deviate from that script. And as soon as you finish reading it you have to hang the phone up immediately. Because there are DIs watching your every move.

    • @austink4623
      @austink4623 4 года назад +19

      I mean who the hell answers random ass calls

  • @Daniel-36
    @Daniel-36 3 года назад +921

    “My recruiter is not answering sir!”
    The recruiter probably saw a San Diego number and was like ah he made it there my job is done😂😂😂

    • @dirtydan9775
      @dirtydan9775 3 года назад +28

      It’s MCRD Paris Island not MCRD San Diego

    • @AndresCastellanoslm10
      @AndresCastellanoslm10 3 года назад +5

      *Dirty Dan* there’s 2 MRCD’s, the Paris Island and San Diego.

    • @dirtydan9775
      @dirtydan9775 3 года назад +19

      Andres Castellanos I’m not that dumb I said that

    • @nitroxylictv
      @nitroxylictv 3 года назад +2

      @@AndresCastellanoslm10 the "real" mcrd is paris island

    • @Gingermorso
      @Gingermorso 3 года назад +18

      @@nitroxylictv says the guy whos not a marine.

  • @issiahrankin5926
    @issiahrankin5926 4 года назад +671

    I remember going through the whole swim week thing. I was probably one of the only black guys who qualified first time. The only other guys left in the pool were black guys and a black drill instructor whispers into my ear "Looks like a damn oil spill out there."

    • @harshbansal7982
      @harshbansal7982 4 года назад +53

      Lmfao

    • @mantis1977
      @mantis1977 3 года назад +22

      ohhh man! damn!

    • @spacecase7566
      @spacecase7566 3 года назад +4

      Bahaha

    • @matthewpieczarka3929
      @matthewpieczarka3929 3 года назад +16

      Lol were you allowed to laugh?

    • @swah25
      @swah25 3 года назад +26

      I failed all my swim quals, at boot and in fleet. I'm a white guy, so me and all the black guys would just hang out. A Sgt would always bring food for us to eat, while we watched the good swimmers get shit on for a few hours. lol

  • @justashibainu
    @justashibainu 4 года назад +1222

    5:16 "Some recruits arrive in better shape than others."
    Understatement of the century, that dude looks like he got injected with the Captain America serum at MEPS.

    • @4o5ive6ix
      @4o5ive6ix 4 года назад +59

      *this is the best comment*

    • @icetray2727
      @icetray2727 4 года назад +10

      That’s what I was thinking 😂

    • @wb6162
      @wb6162 4 года назад +101

      Heavy muscle is not good for callisthenics. Retired Marine is 100% right. Better to be fit and trim, not muscular.

    • @johnathonguach692
      @johnathonguach692 4 года назад +48

      The funny thing is, that kid was in my platoon and the muscles were just for show. This dude couldn't throw a punch for sh!t

    • @maximan1900
      @maximan1900 3 года назад +38

      Johnathon Guach Didn’t know having muscles automatically makes you gain the ability to throw a correct punch.

  • @chasethomas5826
    @chasethomas5826 4 года назад +2416

    I’ve only been in the marine corps for about 9 months, and boot camp was the hardest easiest thing I’ve done

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +650

      That is a good way to put it. At the time it seems hard because it's so foreign. Looking back it is easy after the fact.

    • @kennymatz.
      @kennymatz. 4 года назад +36

      Chase Thomas MCT was harder in my opinion

    • @chasethomas5826
      @chasethomas5826 4 года назад +57

      KENNY MATZ MCT was just sleep deprivation for me lol. Not really too hard

    • @kennymatz.
      @kennymatz. 4 года назад +8

      John Licon Marines

    • @kennymatz.
      @kennymatz. 4 года назад +5

      John Licon to me it depends what you want out of it long term

  • @tylerreid1789
    @tylerreid1789 4 года назад +544

    When I did the "confidence" chamber, I had bronchitis. It cleared that up pretty quick.

    • @RAZINCANE83
      @RAZINCANE83 3 года назад +107

      Yea I had similar upper respiratory issues and man that cleared everything up. After when I got to the fleet I begged to go every time I had upper respiratory infection or sinus issues. They thought I was crazy lol

    • @josephcofrancesco4123
      @josephcofrancesco4123 3 года назад +69

      In 1966 the gas chamber was a tent with a55gallon drum in the middle where they dropped the tear gas cannisters. I thought I was slick and dropped to the ground because gas rises .the instructor saw what I was doing and grabbed me and put the upper part of my body in that drum and made me inhale a few times .I had eyes on fire and snout coming out of everyplace.being slick doesn't work to well in boot camp because the Di's are the slickest of the slick.

    • @ryanespinoza7297
      @ryanespinoza7297 3 года назад +26

      @carpe diem the point is the build confidence in your gear. You first experience being inside with it and it’s not so bad, then you remove it. Yeah if you ever get gassed you’ll automatically run to a mask without being told after experiencing that. Confidence in your equipment

    • @emmanuelcastaneda6803
      @emmanuelcastaneda6803 3 года назад +4

      I have asthma

    • @biglitm7900
      @biglitm7900 3 года назад +8

      Lied about my asthma to get in, never had a problem ever again after the chamber lol

  • @josephbaker5780
    @josephbaker5780 3 года назад +182

    Remember when the lieutenant said "Drill Instructors, they're all yours." He left the squadbay, the door closed and it was like 5 bombs exploded all at once. The next hour was one of the worst days in your young life.

    • @kingsolstemp
      @kingsolstemp 3 года назад +15

      Mannnnnn! I still hear that door slam behind him!

    • @tufelhunden5795
      @tufelhunden5795 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for the memory!!!

    • @treadhead
      @treadhead 3 года назад +1

      BARKING DEVIL DOGS GETTING
      YOUR ATTENTION REAL FAST ,
      " NO STRESS CARDS ALLOWED " !

    • @toddpeterson8909
      @toddpeterson8909 2 года назад

      @@treadhead Drill Instructors don’t call recruits Devil Dogs because they don’t rate the title.

    • @str.77
      @str.77 2 года назад

      @@toddpeterson8909 Ah yes, that old lie about "Devil Dogs" been some sort of merit. The fake German exposes that it's all a myth.

  • @Bill-1370
    @Bill-1370 4 года назад +338

    I remember what the first thing a DI said when we arrived by bus in the middle of the night, maybe you will be reminded.. The bus pulled up and you could hear a pin drop, the door opened and the dome lights came on, Then the biggest man I have ever seen walked onto the bus(And may I say he looked emasculate in his Charlie uniform with DI cover that shaded his face to almost total blackout), Then he spoke the words that are to this day still burned into my memory. "Welcome to United States Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego California, You are now United States Marine Corps Recruits, The first word out of your mouth will be Sir, the last word out of your mouth will be Sir, You will not speak until spoken too. You have thirty seconds to get off my bus and twenty-nine of them are gone. MOVE!!" LOL!! Good Memories.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +80

      I remember that well. Good ole days. Semper Fi.

    • @DBearIt
      @DBearIt 3 года назад +18

      Mine was kinda blah cuz it was a tiny female getting us off the bus. I mean she tough but still lol

    • @HarambeKojima
      @HarambeKojima 3 года назад +2

      I remember Parris Island very well. I absolutely miss it. I would love to do it again.

    • @Kyanzes
      @Kyanzes 3 года назад +10

      Twenty nine of them are gone. That's too funny. And if someone laughs then they get punished I guess...

    • @foxtrot312
      @foxtrot312 3 года назад

      @@marcuswellbie5957 I got the Recruit Petty Officer... what's the rest?

  • @kingkonvikzion11
    @kingkonvikzion11 4 года назад +1111

    If you think DIs dont touch recruits then go to bootcamp with cameras off.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +197

      I cannot imagine that don't. Recruits do the dumbing sh-t

    • @kojack635
      @kojack635 4 года назад +50

      Lol yeah. Like that one they put into a dryer and turned it on.

    • @edwinjlopez2708
      @edwinjlopez2708 4 года назад +125

      Fuck yea, it’s funny when it’s not you doe, my buddy got dropped kicked for putting his lock in his cargo pocket when we where told to put it away in our foot lockers 😂

    • @kingkonvikzion11
      @kingkonvikzion11 4 года назад +31

      Fox company 2101 before I got dropped to kilo and I seen both sides of the coin as far as DIs go when cameras are off and officers or investigators aren't around

    • @jarteaga1793
      @jarteaga1793 4 года назад +68

      A recruit got chokeslam day after requesting mast on a DI. He was a little bitch but damn I never seen such a skinny guy throw one dude so high with one arm!!!

  • @jackmoore9363
    @jackmoore9363 3 года назад +43

    Had one DI that never yelled or screamed. He would talk in a very low deep southern drawl, and it was more disturbing then the others DI’s that yelled and screamed.

  • @matthewcarroll3896
    @matthewcarroll3896 3 года назад +43

    My Dad was in the early 90’s and I enlisted in 2016. Made the phone and he laughed and said “Enjoy your stay at the Island”

  • @DomChuck21
    @DomChuck21 4 года назад +468

    Boot camp was the funniest of times when you couldn’t laugh

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +74

      I had a few times recruits did dumb stuff I wanted to laugh.

    • @keithpopko7068
      @keithpopko7068 4 года назад +25

      Very often DIs would say something quite funny, but we learned quickly not to laugh or break composure.

    • @1515ben1
      @1515ben1 4 года назад +7

      I went through in 1984 and I thought the same thing, about laughing, ever since.

    • @AnonYmous-bk2sh
      @AnonYmous-bk2sh 4 года назад +30

      I had a seargent that would let out the occasional laugh while cracking sticks. We would laugh as well cuz it was funny. And then we'd all get smoked. Good times

    • @averagecitizen8491
      @averagecitizen8491 4 года назад +9

      @@keithpopko7068 we had a DI who would always be sarcastic to try to make you laugh. We learned to bite our tounges

  • @canehdan
    @canehdan 4 года назад +451

    My senior DI was a small guy but when he had heard rumors about him having nothing but foam in his pack to make it easier to hike for him he shut everyone down when he came back and unloaded the 150lbs of weights in his pack it was mind blowing

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +107

      Wow. That is some real Sh-t/ .

    • @dvldgz6306
      @dvldgz6306 4 года назад +44

      I thought the same thing because they ran and jumped around. But when we finished the 2nd hike two of the drill instructors told me and someone else to stage their packs in front of the duty hut so they can slay the recruits that did bad. I picked it up and man was it way heavier than my pack.

    • @dvldgz6306
      @dvldgz6306 4 года назад +2

      @Justin McCoy no it was me and another recruit

    • @DBearIt
      @DBearIt 3 года назад

      I heard they put tp in their packs when I was in lol

  • @kaiserwilhelmthe2nd349
    @kaiserwilhelmthe2nd349 3 года назад +56

    I was in the army.
    I immigrated from Germany to America when I was 13 and after I got my citizenship I joined the army and I got the nickname Krauty because I would write letters in German and all my family members spoke only German so I would call my parents and talk to them in German.

  • @futt-bucker
    @futt-bucker 3 года назад +26

    My buddy was a marine and he said that if you were super muscular, you get hammered by the drill instructor. Kinda like a "your so big and strong then prove it" type thing

  • @hanscascante7933
    @hanscascante7933 4 года назад +125

    That mean bulldog of Drill Instructor at 2:03 was my receiving week Drill Instructor, Sgt Orofir. Man he was a tough SOB, but fair. Taught us the ropes to Boot. Made me the Guide cause I “looked like someone who could fuck up these hoes if they got stupid.” He came in on the night before our final drill and said that were the best platoon in the whole Company, left without saying another word, and I never saw him again.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +28

      Also nice to get anything but beat downs from a DI

    • @natetaylor1000
      @natetaylor1000 3 года назад +2

      He was one of my DIs on I believe his first full cycle. He actually handed me my EGA

  • @jayfox9349
    @jayfox9349 4 года назад +508

    Chow to chow, rack to rack, Sunday to Sunday Best tip to give

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +37

      That is good advice.

    • @jpayne1001
      @jpayne1001 4 года назад +12

      Now this will get you through it all

    • @warshipsdd-2142
      @warshipsdd-2142 4 года назад +17

      Yep, and don't sweat the petty "stuff" keep moving, keep motivated, and graduate on time.

    • @mrsilva234
      @mrsilva234 4 года назад +2

      Facts

    • @mariorogan6142
      @mariorogan6142 4 года назад +8

      Jay Fox THIS DID NOT WORK FOR ME 12 WEEKS FELT LIKE 12 YEARS🙁

  • @tomcollins8877
    @tomcollins8877 4 года назад +58

    Oh the gas chamber. The guy next to me grabbed the DI's shirt and calmly said help me drill sgt I can't breath. He got knocked on his ass.

    • @matthewb774
      @matthewb774 3 года назад +6

      In Navy boot camp, our RDC's as I recall said something like "If you can talk, you can breathe" during our gas chamber exercise. For those who never been in the military, the purpose of the gas chamber is largely to orient recruits to hazmat gear.

    • @mattr.9167
      @mattr.9167 2 года назад

      Help him? He made him go in. 😂🤣

  • @rookincharge2780
    @rookincharge2780 3 года назад +58

    "Some recruits arrive in better shape than others."
    *pans to a Marvel superhero*
    Also, I've def met guys that lost their muscle mass through training so this is spot on. Running is huge.

  • @claytongibson2474
    @claytongibson2474 4 года назад +521

    I lost 120 pounds to get into boot camp. Then lost another 30 while in boot.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +127

      Wow. Now that has to be a record.

    • @rusty7984
      @rusty7984 4 года назад +6

      Holy Jesus I have to lose 40 pounds

    • @Peayou...
      @Peayou... 4 года назад +2

      Wow congrats

    • @vinyllproductions9254
      @vinyllproductions9254 4 года назад +8

      I lost around 30 to get Into it and 40 while I was in, I've gained about 30 back and been steady around it since lol

    • @ckbun
      @ckbun 4 года назад +1

      clayton how many pounds overweight were you when you went in? height and all? i’m in the same shoes you were in haha

  • @iced8798
    @iced8798 4 года назад +502

    I’m going into the army, but I respect the marines so much

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +84

      Get after it. You will enjoy the ride.

    • @Nine-Ball
      @Nine-Ball 4 года назад +15

      Welcome to the HOOAH Army brother

    • @phil9334
      @phil9334 4 года назад +23

      Just don’t say that at basic, everyone will shit on you.

    • @nakedsnake4248
      @nakedsnake4248 4 года назад +1

      Same here.

    • @nakedsnake4248
      @nakedsnake4248 4 года назад +5

      @Patrick Reilly
      I been inspired everyday I am gather as much information as I can about how things work in the Army. I am training every day. Im getting there.

  • @mitchelbramlitt794
    @mitchelbramlitt794 3 года назад +19

    The DI at 6:00 was one of mine. At the time of the business insider recording this, he had switched to a different company being this one. He left us when we were in BWT and was able to come back for the EGA ceremony after the crucible and actually gave me mine. It was awesome to hear from him that I became a lot better because he was the most critical of me and ITd me the most.

  • @sherdax
    @sherdax 3 года назад +7

    This brought back memories. I went to PI in mid Aug 73. The 1st day with the permanent DIs was horrific. They were insane. That night my only thoughts were how to escape, find the recruiter and then severely harm him. During the training they didn’t have the crucible back then; we had sand fleas, Elliot’s Beach, the confidence course and PFT.

  • @LowkeyLoveall
    @LowkeyLoveall 4 года назад +617

    That’s me with the yellow helmet and black shirt on the repel tower.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +97

      Getting after it.

    • @nutshooter12
      @nutshooter12 4 года назад +25

      im not in any military, but i always think this at the back of my mind, i understand the break em down and build em back up, but has anyone ever tried to lash out at any of the instructors out of stress or anger? and what happens to them?

    • @lordofwar9638
      @lordofwar9638 4 года назад +54

      Wolfy NutHead
      Yes, someone always does it.
      They learn pretty quick that’s a bad idea.
      You got an issue, you get smoked....

    • @boozer216
      @boozer216 4 года назад +41

      @@nutshooter12 yes sir. A buddy of mine got tired of the DI being in his face so he tried to swing. DI blocked the punch and swept my buddy's legs out from under him and got smoked out of existence

    • @keithallen5670
      @keithallen5670 4 года назад +15

      @@nutshooter12 it does happen quite frequently, when i was at MCRD SD the recruits that would attempt to throw hands with a DI or another recruit were usually arrested.

  • @phoenixkinghorn5233
    @phoenixkinghorn5233 4 года назад +169

    Marines are true warriors. My highest respect to them

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +23

      The Corps has done a good job producing very similar warriors over the years.

    • @billyreynolds4749
      @billyreynolds4749 4 года назад +19

      I respect ANYONE who has the testicular fortitude to join the United States Armed Forces, whether it's Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, or Coast Guard!

    • @flextapeclear9383
      @flextapeclear9383 4 года назад +7

      David Kelly 😂😂😂 “testicular fortitude”

  • @MrSquirrels
    @MrSquirrels 3 года назад +6

    Some of my most fond memories of boot camp include the time I ended up with two left gofasters for 3 days after we had all of our footlockers and racks dumped into the middle of the room after preparing for initial drill. Our Senior Drill Instructor had one of the recruits (last name Wood) stand outside the head after we all had our morning piss... We all had to walk by him on our way back to our racks and greet him with "Good morning Wood". And of course when I ended up with double pneumonia at Pendleton. It was all good times.... 12 years ago now.

  • @ml9465
    @ml9465 Год назад +3

    I got a son that is about to graduate from boot camp for the marines. He graduates on December 21st. He wrote us a letter telling us that he loves his platoon because they all get along and treat each other like family and helps each other.

  • @1_Acre_Empire
    @1_Acre_Empire 4 года назад +375

    i was the last company on Paris Island to shoot with iron sights

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +77

      I have no opinion on it except it's different. I do better then with irons than I do now with an Acog. What 30 years does to eyes.

    • @VermilionMk.1
      @VermilionMk.1 4 года назад

      Hotel Co?

    • @AntiSocialMachine
      @AntiSocialMachine 4 года назад

      Year?

    • @Kareem180
      @Kareem180 4 года назад +4

      And I was the first platoon to shoot with RCOs!

    • @VermilionMk.1
      @VermilionMk.1 4 года назад +1

      @@Kareem180 Must've been 3btn Mike co. Hotel Co was the last to shoot irons on PI. Mike Co was a week behind us and got the fancy gear. December 2011 - March 2012

  • @igorpoliwoda5154
    @igorpoliwoda5154 4 года назад +151

    Phone calls are the worst. Just made me sadder but it did insure my parents that I was all good

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +18

      That is what i was thinking. We did not have them and I think it was for the best. That would have been tough. I recall that told us a basic outline for a letter on our first one. Like hey I made it to Parris Island, SC etc.

    • @igorpoliwoda5154
      @igorpoliwoda5154 4 года назад +10

      Jameson’s Travels gotcha. I’m in the army and went to basic training in Fort Leonard Wood. I know i sound like a pussy for saying this but out of our 4 phones calls, I only didn’t cry on the last one lol. Tough being away from home and people that you care and love.

    • @ronniearmstrong5977
      @ronniearmstrong5977 4 года назад

      What phone call????

    • @ronniearmstrong5977
      @ronniearmstrong5977 4 года назад +1

      @@igorpoliwoda5154 then u should have went jarhead lol!!

    • @rkf2746
      @rkf2746 4 года назад

      LoL!!!! What phone call? I get the feeling boot-camp has been watered down. P.I. May-'69, Plt. 182. SDI GySGt Dotson

  • @arnoldnguyen7630
    @arnoldnguyen7630 3 года назад +55

    You get a whole new perspective on sleep when you attend bootcamp training and get beaten down to shit and then sit in a quiet dimly lit classroom

    • @victuz
      @victuz 3 года назад +1

      Basically you value sleep and rest much more in your life.

    • @loki219
      @loki219 3 года назад

      If you're lucky you learn to sleep with your eyes open while standing at attention, those micro catnaps can save your ass

    • @randyyazzie4712
      @randyyazzie4712 3 года назад

      Sleep was good . you learned to sleep standing up with one eyeball on your drill instructor. Ha ha

  • @rasdawg9
    @rasdawg9 3 года назад +11

    Parris island 2013. For upcoming recruits just know that "corrective action" isn't "physical abuse".😂

    • @rasdawg9
      @rasdawg9 3 года назад

      Also what happens in the squad bay says in the squad bay. Lol

  • @towelietowel4513
    @towelietowel4513 4 года назад +113

    When my dad went through boot camp the Drill Instructors were allowed to push and hit people. He ended up breaking his ankle while marching and he was literally pushed to get through it. Not only did he get a great medical deal out of it years later, it made him a man. We need to bring those good old days back

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +52

      Broken nose here. Part of it.

    • @MIGUZI
      @MIGUZI 3 года назад +2

      with all the shit going on now a days they dont want broken items coming out of bt specifically with all thats happening between china and the us and other un forces, shits getting worse and worse. stuff can pop off at any time.

    • @mikebenchoff4232
      @mikebenchoff4232 3 года назад +18

      Physical contact with recruits has never been allowed. R. Lee Ermey talk about it in a interview. He said it wasn’t allowed, but boot camp was shorted because of the Vietnam War so he didn’t have time to yell at everyone so a punch to the stomach got the point across quicker.

    • @towelietowel4513
      @towelietowel4513 3 года назад +8

      Michael Benchoff Yeah it was never technically allowed, but you could get physical motivation

    • @LegendofLaw
      @LegendofLaw 3 года назад +1

      @@mikebenchoff4232 you're joking right?

  • @LFSeniorFitness1
    @LFSeniorFitness1 4 года назад +185

    I went through boot camp at San Diego (hadn't heard the term "Hollywood Marines" until now) in 1956. We had M1 rifles. Ancient history. I'm 83. Many of the D.I.s "got physical" in those days if you made a mistake. They laughingly called it "maltreatment." Otherwise the experience looks about the same today, but of course with more modern gear. I'd say the Full M
    etal Jacket boot camp comes closest to the reality I remember.

    • @keithpopko7068
      @keithpopko7068 4 года назад +17

      Semper Fi, Logan Franklin.
      I went through boot camp at San Diego, starting in January of 1970. 'Maltreatment' at that time was pretty much gone when I went in (or was supposed to be), but there were instances where it still happened. My platoon picked up a recruit who just came out of the hospital because his DI got rough with him, slamming him against a wall and fracturing a vertebrate. As far as my DIs were concerned there were three of them, a SSgt Senior DI and two others who were both Sgts. I learned later that each DI was assigned a role: one was an outright asshole 'bad cop' in how he treated us, another was 'neutral' in his treatment and the third was the 'good cop', but all of them were tough as hell. Then when they picked up a new platoon they'd be given a different role, and they'd keep rotating that way in order not to be locked into permanent behaviors. In retrospect, when hearing that it certainly was true in my platoon. What I learned early on was when they threatened us with something it was never an idle threat. I remember thinking that they'd never actually do what they just threatened ups with, but they did - there was never a threat made that they failed to administer.
      But I didn't witness anything underhanded in my training, though we were regularly punished with calisthenics whenever anyone screwed up - never less than 100 repetitions of push-ups, bend and thrusts (as a civilian I knew them as burpies - those were the worst), side-strattle hops (jumping jacks) or whatever it was and we had to make sure we did them in unison. Oftentimes we'd get to 95 or 96 reps and were made to start over. We once did 300 bend and thrusts in a row. The other punishment was holding our M-14s above our heads and running in place or just standing there with it held over our heads for long stretches of time.
      After boot camp route stepping up the mountains at Camp Pendleton during infantry training wasn't much fun either. We kept hearing about Mt. Motherfucker and were dreading the day we had to go up it. One mountain was especially bad one day and we knew Mt. Motherfucker was still to come so that seemed to make it even worse, only to be told after getting to the top that day we had actually just finished going up it. It was from up there that we had our class (I think it was on reading a terrain map).
      I agree about Full Metal Jacket - that movie depicted the 'flavors and smells' of boot camp realistically - it sure brought back a lot of memories. Of course that was largely due to R. Lee Ermey's outstanding job depicting head DI GSgt. Hartman since he was actually a DI at one time.

    • @westerngroovetv
      @westerngroovetv 4 года назад +2

      Thanks yall.

    • @Naviral
      @Naviral 4 года назад +4

      Thanks for your legendary service brother.

    • @scottmarshall4996
      @scottmarshall4996 4 года назад +7

      @@10MinutestoRouletteFortune I disagree about kids getting yelled at by parents. Parents aren't and shouldn't be drill instructors. Childhood should not be a mini-boot camp. I'm not saying children don't need discipline, because they do. I'm saying military discipline is not healthy child-raising. Military discipline serves a specific purpose, which is to develop a fighting force that takes the hill when it is told to do so. Not every child needs to be inoculated against the brutality of combat. Discipline is what matters in child raising, not just volume. I can get obedience out of my kids without yelling. My kids need me to show them love in ways that their Drill Instructors cannot and should not. I can still use my experience in boot camp to help my kids prepare for the military should they decide they want to join.

    • @scottmarshall4996
      @scottmarshall4996 4 года назад +7

      ​@@10MinutestoRouletteFortune "I don't think I mentioned anything about parents being drill instructors."
      You specifically said "yell", as in parents don't yell at their kids anymore. If you meant "parents don't DISCIPLINE their kids anymore", you didn't state so, and that is different from being yelled at. There was nothing in what you said initially to make someone believe you actually meant discipline. Drill Instructors yell at you in boot camp. You made the claim that kids are soft because they aren't "yelled at" before they get to boot camp, therefore implying that parents should yell at their kids like a drill instructor so they're used to it when they get to boot camp. You didn't say, "Kids these days are undisciplined".
      "What I was trying to communicate is the soft liberal approach most parents have with their kids."
      Ok, that's different than "Yell at your kids at home so they don't cry in boot camp".
      "The political correctness of raising kids today without discipline and being tough when they do mess up is essential to success in the service."
      I agree; discipline is essential, and having no discipline growing up can make boot camp and beyond more difficult. Some people do actually thrive when exposed to discipline for the first time though, as it gives them structure they may have been seeking. To your original statement as written (maybe not as you intended), discipline is not always yelling. The reason for yelling in boot camp is acclimate you to the fog of war.
      "If they haven't been disciplined because the parents are soft, boot camp will be a COMPLETE culture shock that will cause many to look for a safe place that doesn't exist."
      I lived in a very disciplined household growing up, and boot camp was still a culture shock. It's because it's a different kind of discipline.
      "There is a reason why there are always 3-4 in first phase that break and write home to mommy or spend too much time in sick bay.
      There is a reason why most kids in the services of the Army and Marines come from Republican families. They can hack it because their parents are though on them more than the liberals that mostly join the Navy and Air Force."
      Not everyone struggles in boot camp for the same reasons, and I really doubt your assertions that the other services are full of "liberals".
      I suspect it's just Marine hubris. It's ok, I know where it comes from.
      "If your parents are Democrat/Socialists and soft, I can understand why you might have responded as it proved my point.
      "
      My parents were Republican, far from liberal, far from leftist, and far from easy on me, and I still cried myself to sleep some nights in boot camp because it was still a culture shock for me. While I am not quite as conservative on some things as they were, I am very much not a leftist. Looking back, it wasn't that hard, but it was still something that I had not experienced up until then. I had a successful military enlistment after that.
      To summarize, you either meant parents don't yell at their kids enough, or you meant they don't discipline their kids enough. If you mean kids lack discipline, fair enough. However, if you meant litterally "yell at your kids more", that's garbage, ineffective parenting.
      "

  • @joerobbins6318
    @joerobbins6318 3 года назад +4

    It's been 30 years and I can still call on my brothers and they will be here a bond that can never be broken

  • @derrickowen8162
    @derrickowen8162 3 года назад +5

    Yep. I still vividly remember that first day meeting my real drill instructors, and experiencing my green belts the moment my senior drill instructor left us. The epitome of intensity.

  • @victorrobles6017
    @victorrobles6017 4 года назад +221

    I got destroyed but I would do it again

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +26

      Make it even that much sweeter.

    • @Reflextive7034
      @Reflextive7034 4 года назад

      Mr Always Flexin you didn’t make it??

    • @chancegarguilo5502
      @chancegarguilo5502 4 года назад +13

      Sebaztian Alcantar he made it he’s just saying it was hard but he’d do it all again for the experience

    • @mikuXmindu
      @mikuXmindu 4 года назад +1

      I agree brother I am 6 foot 6. I got picked on because of my height. I made the mistake and told my kill hat that I was screaming instead of saying aye sir.... boy did I regret that moment.

    • @mikuXmindu
      @mikuXmindu 4 года назад

      @FaZe Megafaggot I did I'm out now a medically retired

  • @NosMan96
    @NosMan96 4 года назад +577

    Not to sound like a rude comment but my brain can’t figure out how old he is. Looks young and older and the same time

    • @uncharted7againblackking256
      @uncharted7againblackking256 4 года назад +5

      At the sametime yep

    • @nutshooter12
      @nutshooter12 4 года назад +34

      i think its like that with most people who have had it rough, but still live with it, me for example, i always get a surprised reaction when i tell people im only 24, people think im like late 30's at the highest, idk if its the face or the size of me, but whatever works

    • @willwolf8436
      @willwolf8436 4 года назад +44

      The Corps makes you age by 30 years.

    • @ThatGirlJD
      @ThatGirlJD 4 года назад +12

      In another video he said he went to boot camp in 1990.

    • @basicbodybuilding
      @basicbodybuilding 4 года назад +5

      Will Wolf i did 4 years and still get told im 18 looking

  • @cgm4675
    @cgm4675 4 года назад +5

    I was 3rd battalion at San Diego in 1990, my son Liam is 3rd battalion in San Diego right now in 2020. I've never been terribly nostalgic about the Marines. I loved the experience as a grunt but I put it in my rearview mirror and I've rarely looked back, now I'm feeling a definite nostalgia. I keep thinking about my son and what he is going through and I'm totally shocked how much I'm remembering that I haven't thought about in decades. My advice to him before he left was to label all his gear in receiving and keep everything in the laundry bag with the pin closed when he was picked up. I remember trying to reattach my footlocker lid to the body after the greenbelts when spaz apeshit on everything. I never found all of my gear.

  • @kennycubensis8152
    @kennycubensis8152 3 года назад +8

    Making the phone call was the first thing we did, there was a script to follow and you read the paper and hang up. No talking

  • @itzsquidd
    @itzsquidd 4 года назад +168

    I’m navy but half my friends are marines, respect the hell outta what y’all do, Semper Fi

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +27

      Thanks for the comment. All Marines love the Navy. I got a real eye opener to the Navy on deployment seeing some of the big Chief lifers. SOme big fellows but they served an important role on the ship

    • @donsvideos1985
      @donsvideos1985 4 года назад +2

      I was Navy Also Boiler Technician on a Gator Freighter.

    • @itzsquidd
      @itzsquidd 4 года назад +1

      Don Lucero I’m and Airframer, on a shore duty squadron

    • @amirdasmoker5256
      @amirdasmoker5256 4 года назад

      Aw you’re big daddy. But #GoArmyBeatNavy

    • @Naviral
      @Naviral 4 года назад +6

      No truer words spoken from Jameson, we loved our naval buddies. When I got to the fleet, I went to the gym and asked the biggest dude, I had ever seen in my life (wearing a naval shirt) what the hell he did to be so swell. He was the gentle giant with a deep voice and introduced himself as the R.P.

  • @georgereed8259
    @georgereed8259 4 года назад +32

    I went thru boot camp in 1976. It took me awhile to adjust to the mayhem. My brother gave me some great advice. He told me to remember that there was a reason for everything they had me do. No matter how confusing it seemed to me. I learned a lot about myself. I also learned to help those who were struggling. We learned to look out for our fellow recruits not ourselves. The Corps helped me to be responsible for my actions. God bless the Marine Corps.

  • @PowderBlueML
    @PowderBlueML 2 года назад +3

    After watching this video, I have serious respect for The Marines. Thank you for being so dedicated to serving our country.

  • @Sogonrei
    @Sogonrei Год назад +1

    Watching this just makes me respect and thank the Marines and all Armed Forces Branches and you for your sacrifice for our country. I already feel thankful, I have had family and friends enlisted, some have passed on. Thanks for your time, I love your personality. Unfiltered, honest, direct, intelligent, witty.

  • @pattydub115
    @pattydub115 4 года назад +50

    You reacted to my company during boot camp. Just graduated on the 13th. Semper Fi, sir.

  • @matthewpayne3359
    @matthewpayne3359 4 года назад +167

    FYI: DI's gear way down when cameras are rolling.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +49

      Ain't that the truth.

    • @aaronneptune2469
      @aaronneptune2469 4 года назад +6

      Absolutely. Just like they do when the Company/battalion officers are present. My company Commander was a Mustang. Previously enlisted, 2nd Marines Recon with previous Drill duty... HE was always turned up.

    • @Riceball01
      @Riceball01 4 года назад +13

      Not to mention that these videos almost always show mostly first phase training with a bit of second which is when the DIs do the most yelling. They never show third phase much because there's a whole lot less screaming and yelling by then and doesn't make for as shocking a video.

  • @willthompson6193
    @willthompson6193 3 года назад +7

    There's a guy in my hometown who's a regular at the local American Legion outpost who joined the Corps at the end of Korea and the beginning of Vietnam and if you're not a marine he won't even pay any attention to you. He goes in there and he knows who all the Marines are and will just look directly at you and know if you're a Marine or not.

  • @oleymorgan3635
    @oleymorgan3635 4 года назад +6

    I hit the island, August 1st 1969 both my grandfathers and father we're Marines. I thought I had a pretty good idea of what to expect. WRONG!!! I wasn't there 10 seconds, and I thought I was in the Twilight Zone. You talk about chaos my mind was a total state of CLUSTER F*** until a week before graduation. I wish I could do it again tomorrow. God bless Chesty Puller and God bless my Marine Corps.

  • @MrDJBoss22
    @MrDJBoss22 4 года назад +567

    Hikes are the worst in west coast

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +52

      Agreed was station briefly at Pendleton with 1/5 humping those hills. Good times.

    • @dillonquick3508
      @dillonquick3508 4 года назад +18

      Ah nothin like them hikes up north and hiking 60+ miles for the crucible definitely will never forget it sadly we got rained out and couldn’t do the reaper so we did the hell hike instead

    • @blakebonner1152
      @blakebonner1152 4 года назад +13

      24k sloth you didn’t miss much. The reaper is not hard at all. The hike to the reaper was harder than climbing it

    • @fmfdocbotl4358
      @fmfdocbotl4358 4 года назад +10

      Mount MF'r I humped that damn thing many times

    • @days2155
      @days2155 4 года назад +3

      @@dillonquick3508 Alpha co?

  • @nathannguyen3814
    @nathannguyen3814 4 года назад +73

    Left the Island 4 days ago, 3rd Batt. Kilo Co. 3093. Recognized some of the people in the video from church on Sunday!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +5

      I found out about church after I spent a few bad Sundays in the squad bay. Church as a good way to escape the DIs

    • @E4Mafioso
      @E4Mafioso 4 года назад

      I dont see anyone from my deck but i think the kid that wanted to try again got dropped for failing the pft or the cft

    • @sixswordfilmsus
      @sixswordfilmsus 4 года назад +1

      I was kilo 3060 and graduated in August! Sgt Medina, sgt Castro, Sgt lennan, Sgt Smith, sgt Lee

    • @nathannguyen3814
      @nathannguyen3814 4 года назад +1

      @@sixswordfilmsus ​what a small world. I don't think I met a Sgt. Smith while I was there, but I know everyone else you mentioned.
      (I believe) Sgt. Medina became a SDI in Lead Series, SSgt. Castro became SDI for 3092 on 1st Deck (I was 2nd), Sgt. Lennan was Knowledge Hat for 3089 and Sgt. Lee was also working in 3092. Sometime during or after BWT, he left, apparently because he was being investigated for threatening a recruit or something along those lines

    • @sixswordfilmsus
      @sixswordfilmsus 4 года назад

      @@nathannguyen3814 Cool stuff! Send me a facebook- Levi A. Strzepek

  • @samz.4968
    @samz.4968 3 года назад +4

    As someone who’s hoping to join in February I really appreciate your workout advice and commentary. I’m both excited and nervous about boot camp. Hopefully getting in better shape beforehand will help. Thank you for your advice and service!

  • @another_car_guy_
    @another_car_guy_ 3 года назад +8

    Oh shit Ssgt Thompson?!? That was my DI in bootcamp that makes me so happy

  • @erikramirez7414
    @erikramirez7414 4 года назад +409

    Ship out to Paris Island July 20, 2020 cant wait!!

  • @johneverett4549
    @johneverett4549 4 года назад +97

    When I entered the Corp in 1957, female Marines were called "Bam's", Broad Ass Marines.
    They were mostly in clerical position's. We were required to run through the tear gas hut
    without gas mask's. Shooting was with M1 Garand's out to 500 yards, iron sights.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +33

      Thanks for the comments. John - you may be the most senior devil dog here. Outstanding. I have heard the bam term from some senior nco when I was in. Flash back.

    • @BlackNoiseCat
      @BlackNoiseCat 4 года назад +6

      They should’ve stayed that way

    • @j.liddle7580
      @j.liddle7580 4 года назад +3

      My grandpa joined the Navy in '65 or so, mentioned a few years ago that female Marines were called BAMs. Wouldn't say what it stood for though...

    • @TexanUSMC8089
      @TexanUSMC8089 4 года назад +1

      LOL

    • @k5abuser
      @k5abuser 4 года назад

      Big ,broad ,beautiful ass Marines

  • @robertstanson7866
    @robertstanson7866 3 года назад +10

    Phone calls! I barely had enough time to read a letter.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  3 года назад +4

      exactly. I am glad we did not have phone calls. Letters come once a week or so. You respond about the same. easy.

  • @mattewdiaz8341
    @mattewdiaz8341 3 года назад +4

    i’m a few hours away from going into bootcamp and this video actually helped me a lot to have a good mindset of what’s about to come my way i’ve always wanted to join the marines and now i get the chance to prove to family and friends that i have the courage to go through bootcamp and earn the title

    • @LvoZee05
      @LvoZee05 3 года назад

      How is it man?

    • @guitardzan5641
      @guitardzan5641 2 года назад

      So...One year later....How was it?

  • @tooltech2847
    @tooltech2847 4 года назад +136

    Platoon 249, 1963, Parris Island. Wood barracks, July. M-14, iron sights. Outside of the rifle, equipment was WW II era. About the only thing I recognized was the parade deck. Many hours were spent drilling. Unforgettable experience, wouldn't trade it for the world. Semper FI!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +11

      Tooltech great to see salty devil dogs sound off here. My grandmother can to my grad and my uncles in 66 and she said it seem similar (parade deck). Semper Fi brother.

    • @GySgt_USMC_Ret.
      @GySgt_USMC_Ret. 4 года назад

      1970: M-14, serial Nr. 211326.
      Semper Fi.
      Fair winds and following seas to all.

  • @thamomentum
    @thamomentum 4 года назад +38

    Best advice ever about not hitting the gym. It seems counter intuitive but I went to BMQ - Basic Military Qual. In Canadian Forces after being muscular. Learned quickly how wasteful and non effective "muscular padding" is... Efficient workout routine are better. Build effective working muscles

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +11

      I was a pretty big into powerlifting when I went. Benching 350 squatting 600 in highschool That hurt me since I lost so much weight from lack of food. I was fine but I would train for the job not for muscle to show. The muscle will come.

    • @jameswallace6227
      @jameswallace6227 4 года назад +2

      This! My parents were unbelievably supportive and bought me a bunch of sessions with a personal trainer while I was a poolee. Never had the heart to tell them it was all for naught, haha!!

  • @semperfi6288
    @semperfi6288 3 года назад +4

    Two scariest moments in boot camp. D.I. gets on the bus and Yellow footprints, and When the Senior Drill Instructor left the quarter deck. It's an OH SHIT moment.

  • @titosgamingshow4514
    @titosgamingshow4514 3 года назад +7

    I got caught trying to sneak in a number 2 while cleaning the head with some other guys amd man I never pushed so hard when i heard my DI coming through those doors 😂😂

  • @garroncollins3775
    @garroncollins3775 4 года назад +48

    I went back in January and we did arrive in the middle of the night. I don’t know why these were different.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +19

      Probably for TV.

    • @AsianP3rsuAsianist
      @AsianP3rsuAsianist 3 года назад +3

      Usually the plane gets delayed and they would arrive in the morning taking the first plane available. That's why they got off from the van, not the bus.

  • @zombiesniper2468
    @zombiesniper2468 4 года назад +76

    I’m leaving for boot camp in a week. Can’t wait for the opportunity to become a Marine!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +16

      No slace and get after it. Corps is what you make it.

    • @tsivilay
      @tsivilay 4 года назад +16

      Every day you'll want to quit. But every day you have to remember what you told your friends and family you enlisted for. Every day you get stronger and form bonds with your platoon through the camaraderie of blood, sweat, and yes, tears.
      I cried like a baby when my Senior Drill Instructor handed me my EGA, because of how hard it was. Nothing that's worth it is never easy. Pride. You'll walk with it every day for the rest of your life. When people ask me what branch I served in and I say, "I am a Marine.", they look at me with a sense of Awe and say, "You know what? That explains a lot!"

    • @thebubbclub
      @thebubbclub 4 года назад

      Rip

    • @zombiesniper2468
      @zombiesniper2468 4 года назад +9

      usmc 03retired No. they medically discharged me because my arms were going tingly and numb and didn’t want me to get paralyzed or something.

  • @anonymous_sheriff2789
    @anonymous_sheriff2789 3 года назад

    Thank you for your service Jameson’s. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @andrebordeaux5700
    @andrebordeaux5700 2 года назад

    I was in from 75-79 and went to PI in the summer. Arrived in the middle of the night. First night we sat down in a row with the next guy between you legs and had to try to get some shut eye. All the drill instructors were Vietnam vets. To deter us from trying to get off the island they showed us pictures or past recruits that tried to swim the channel and the crabs had eaten their faces. Welcome to PI! During combat training I can remember that as I did the low crawl my elbows and knees were bloody from trying to maintain a low profile. 1/4 sticks of TNT were going off to simulate mortar explosions. I enjoy your reviews. Semperfi my friend.

  • @ryleewhittaker8539
    @ryleewhittaker8539 4 года назад +30

    Only 12 turning 13 in 3 days and I've been planning to do the marine corps for years, my dad was a marine in the gulf war he said that it was one of the greatest moments in his life and the most worse at the same time.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +10

      I served at the same time as your father. By times flies.

    • @ryleewhittaker8539
      @ryleewhittaker8539 4 года назад

      @@JamesonsTravels Oo thats cool :o XD

    • @naava8569
      @naava8569 4 года назад

      Keep going you will make it there on day!!!!

    • @jlg2527
      @jlg2527 3 года назад +1

      I admire your determination. However, please allow me to respectfully say this... you don't "do the marine corps" you BECOME a Marine, a change that is forever. Good luck and Semper Fi

  • @jonlipton9079
    @jonlipton9079 4 года назад +40

    I graduted bootcamp in july of 2019. Not alot has changed. Ivors put hands on me alot. I lost over 40 pounds in boot camp. I would not trade it for the world honestly. So many memories.

  • @danmiller7079
    @danmiller7079 2 года назад

    I’m a “Hollywood” Marine. First day, or should I say night, at M.C.R.D. was September 23, 1974. Arrived there at 2200 hrs. then began initial issue, haircuts, chow hall for late chow (gave us about 5 minutes), then documents, contraband search and speech, showers, etc. Got into the rack at about 0400 then up at 0525. Woke up to a shitcan flying through the air and D.I.’s yelling and screaming, knockin over racks. My father served in the Marines during WW2 in the pacific and he told me it was going to tough AND a head game. That little bit of advanced warning was appreciated. I entered service weighing 165 at 6’0” and graduated at 135 at 6’1”. Lost 30 lbs. in boot camp but gained a lot of physical AND mental strength which helped me throughout the rest of my life up to this point. A proud member of the “ slow, shaky, and deaf semi-old farts battalion”. But mentally and marksmanship wise STILL a hard charging Marine who is STILL an absolute terror in a gunfight. Semper Fidelis gents, and raise a cold one for all our Brothers and Sisters that never made it home.
    Uhhrrrrraaaaahhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!

  • @marcacurso7756
    @marcacurso7756 2 года назад +2

    I had a to ton of prep time. I was in the DEP so I had a year to get ready. I was put on a running program and Gunny Rose gave everyone their book of knowledge before going to boot camp, she was only supposed to give it to graduates but she wanted to prep us as best she could. It was a huge advantage to know everything they taught to you in the classroom ahead of time. I couldn't imagine being physically exhausted and trying to retain first aid, general orders, history and the drill manual. I had it completely memorized by Day 1 of boot camp and it made life a lot easier.

  • @Nathen_Hari
    @Nathen_Hari 4 года назад +107

    Im a junior, planning to join the marines after I graduate. I am sincerely hoping i'm ready to go through with the challenges ahead. Wish me luck.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +46

      Get after it. Make your own destiny.

    • @nitroxylictv
      @nitroxylictv 3 года назад +6

      Same here man were both juniors.
      Hey maybe we might run into each other lol, best of luck bro

    • @Nathen_Hari
      @Nathen_Hari 3 года назад +4

      @@nitroxylictv hopefully so brother

    • @sxumsxunq8559
      @sxumsxunq8559 3 года назад +4

      @@Nathen_Hari same here im a junior been wanting to join since freshmen year

    • @Nathen_Hari
      @Nathen_Hari 3 года назад +1

      @@sxumsxunq8559 I wish you luck

  • @warmonkey3216
    @warmonkey3216 4 года назад +29

    Just a year ago I went through army basic training. Most miserable experience of my life. I'd do it all over again though.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +16

      It is a kick in the crouch. Coming out the end it’s better

  • @dougcounts3383
    @dougcounts3383 2 года назад +1

    Pretty cool listening to your memories.Thanks for your service and the video.

  • @smitlag
    @smitlag 2 года назад

    Thank all of you for your service

  • @tommypiening9848
    @tommypiening9848 4 года назад +72

    I got PTSD when you mentioned Scuz brush races...

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +17

      LOL. For those that missed scuz brush races they missed a great learning training experience. Good times. Semper Fi

    • @fearplug6027
      @fearplug6027 4 года назад

      Jameson’s Travels what was the dumbest thing a soldier said to a drill Sargent

    • @zwinmar21
      @zwinmar21 4 года назад

      Them and roadrunners

    • @leholen381
      @leholen381 4 года назад

      It’s been a little over a year since I joined and scuz brush online still haunts my nightmares

    • @mercsan117
      @mercsan117 4 года назад

      @@leholen381 man, I got out 13 years ago and it still haunts me.

  • @Kilo_Charlie626
    @Kilo_Charlie626 4 года назад +25

    For anyone going in the spring, summer, early fall, hydrate hydrate hydrate. You dont want to be a heat case. And stretch every day.

    • @ryanharmon389
      @ryanharmon389 4 года назад +2

      Hydrate during winter too, you can still go down when it's cold

    • @Kilo_Charlie626
      @Kilo_Charlie626 4 года назад

      @@ryanharmon389 yea we had a heat case in December

  • @TheGunnyUSMC
    @TheGunnyUSMC 4 года назад +1

    I went to Paris Island in 1984 the steam pipes always stuck in my mind.

  • @williamdooly4111
    @williamdooly4111 3 года назад +1

    The airplanes taking off and landing was the worst torture in mcrd San Diego

  • @tomwillard8560
    @tomwillard8560 4 года назад +9

    It's been 20 years, but I will never forget the Heavy DI marching our platoon down the recruit highway then crashing himself into a telephone pole! We all caught the sight out of the corner of our eyes, and I swear it seemed the whole platoon erupted in laughter! We all got the quarterdeck later, but it was HILARIOUS!!

  • @mr.joseph7806
    @mr.joseph7806 4 года назад +63

    We drank water til someone puked. Pugil sticks I kicked ass because I was short and would explode on the tall guys.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +17

      Been there. That was DIs fav. Or make select recruits drink lots of. milk then the pit.

  • @tizzytank579
    @tizzytank579 4 года назад

    Thank you for service sir and hope you stay safe and enjoy every day

  • @gelhead4life
    @gelhead4life 3 года назад

    Getting ready to goto MEPS soon and should be going to boot in December, my family has all served, and now it’s time for me to take up the torch they kept lit. Thank you to all those who have served and continue to serve this great country. 🇺🇸

  • @graceallingham
    @graceallingham 4 года назад +52

    I got home a month ago and was on Parris Island for 10 months. I broke my hip twice during training, first time was range week and the second was during the crucible. They honorably discharged me but the feeling that I'm a failure doesn't go away. It's really hard to adjust to civilian life after being isolated there for so long. I'm forever thankful for what I learned while I was there, the training is invaluable. But I'll always wish I could have served my country.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +29

      No regrets. You worked hard and gave it everything. We can not control injuries. The transition must be tough after being on the PI for that long. Semper fi.

    • @mysticalcarter3987
      @mysticalcarter3987 4 года назад

      I feel you. But I learned some good stuff too.

    • @xianglingisthebest1047
      @xianglingisthebest1047 4 года назад

      Grace Allingham what’s your sc

    • @AnonYmous-bk2sh
      @AnonYmous-bk2sh 4 года назад

      RSP eh?

    • @godflame52
      @godflame52 4 года назад +2

      How did you break your hip on range week? The crucible I can understand if you fall from those taller obstacles.

  • @stevenspizzirri9507
    @stevenspizzirri9507 4 года назад +130

    I loved the video. At the time you posted this video I was in San Diego for bootcamp. It's been a week since I left MCRD now and I am still happy I'm out.
    I would have to say, the first 48 hours of no sleep sucked... by far the worst. I specifically remember at position of attention sitting in front of the dental office for about 5-6 hours.
    Also, it isn't scared to call someone at bootcamp initially because you are not allowed to get IT'ed for the first 2 weeks.
    Repel Tower:
    For us Hollywood Marines we've done it 10 within completing bootcamp.
    Pugel Sticks:
    All of the legal events you named I have seen. The red end is suppose to be the bayonet side.
    Also, I swear I remember seeing some drill instructors betting on which recruit was going to win.
    Martial Arts Program:
    We have something called MCMAP (Marine Corps Martial Arts Program) It is very basic
    Range:
    The range was much further in bootcamp than swim week because we had to go to Camp Penalton. If you unk you are required to redo, if you finally pass, you will pass as the worst score for Marksman.
    P.S.
    It really is weird how they keep the culture and keep everything in the trainning the EXACT same as if it were 10... 20 years ago.
    Lastly:
    Thank you for your service, I very much appreciate it.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +20

      Awesome comment Marine. Welcome to the club. The Corps is awesome at Building the worlds finest warriors and biggest fraternity of brothers. Semper fi.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +23

      Steven:
      Do you have time to do a Q&A about your recent boot camp experience. Like to add it to the channel

    • @stevenspizzirri9507
      @stevenspizzirri9507 4 года назад +12

      @@JamesonsTravels I could provide a writing Q&A but I do not have the equiptment for a recorded one.

    • @matthewdeforge4689
      @matthewdeforge4689 4 года назад +11

      Boot

    • @bloodraven1190
      @bloodraven1190 4 года назад +2

      Welcome to the gun club. What Company were you.

  • @kimpparkhurst8771
    @kimpparkhurst8771 3 года назад +1

    The training was just as tough in San Diego. I went in 1977, had crazy Di's from the Vietnam era. Still respect them today.

  • @msway836
    @msway836 4 года назад +4

    Bring back Army Flashbacks, I loved the Repel wall, we use to repel from a Cliff only a few of us were allowed to Repel from the Cliff, cause most guys were afraid of way too much heights...

  • @JamesonsTravels
    @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +17

    All devil dogs and devil pups, Please Subscribe and Share the Video on FACEBOOK! Help a jarhead brother out. ruclips.net/video/_syipPUuXZA/видео.html

  • @mariekatherine5238
    @mariekatherine5238 4 года назад +67

    Rappelling looks like fun. The gas chamber, maybe not! The range looks like fun, as does the pool and obstacle course. Some of the DIs, though, they’re actually comical. But if I laugh, my platoon will get smoked and I’d live to regret it.
    My Dad was in the Navy when we were young kids, so we learned early how to make a rack. In fact, it was a little strange when I first went to a public school with civilian kids. I discovered nobody there knew what a rack was!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +13

      The DIs can make something which appears fun from the outside miserable. Most of it is on the recruit being dumb or just f-g up. Range week and the position you had to sit in for hours on end to be ready for quals was like crazy yoga for me.

    • @bigd6709
      @bigd6709 4 года назад +7

      Gas Chamber was fun...lol. 2 Things... try not being the last one out of the chamber...
      .. 2. don't be the idiot who panics, runs out the chamber n tries decking 3 instructors on the way out... never saw him again . lol..

  • @gorilla4761
    @gorilla4761 3 года назад

    I got to Paris Island on Nov 8 1999. With 2 others. Only 3 of us in a white passenger van with a driver, all the way from Richmond, VA MEPS. We arrived, it was dark, VERY clean outside, crisp clean LCPL gate guard salutes us on base. ODB’s “Baby I got your money” was playing on the van’s radio. We stop at the main building. Black Female Marine SSGT walks out to the van and BOOM......it started. Looking back on it. I am so glad i served. It has opened up so many doors for me. Still buddies with everyone i served with. Amazing time. SEMPER FIDELIS!

  • @Justinewichael
    @Justinewichael 3 года назад

    That setting you’re in is very nice keep it up!

  • @rodange5456
    @rodange5456 4 года назад +20

    I was in the 3rd battalion H company and it was similar to your experience. the DI's could get away with a lot because we were in the boonies. My senior was a force recon Marine and one of the toughest Marines if ever met in my career and that's saying a lot.
    Paris Island was tough but I remember seeing the recruits on Camp Pendleton I could see it was not a cakewalk for them. But P.I. wins because of the sand flees. I was convinced that the sand flees understood the call to attention because that's when they would attack.
    I don't think it matters how you serve just that You do. I never had an issue with any of the branches. Thank You all that have served and are serving. I will never forget the Marines I had the honor to serve with.

    • @Naviral
      @Naviral 4 года назад

      Did you ever have to bury one? We did. You got to eat and so do they. You kill one, be prepared to dig a grave for it. A deep one.

  • @joblow626
    @joblow626 4 года назад +37

    You mentioned how you can see MCRD from Interstate 5... From inside MCRD you can see the city of San Diego and the airport is right next door as well. It was really weird knowing civilization was just right there but not being able to go out there. It was like dangling a carrot in your face lol. Good times!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +4

      First time I saw MCRD San Diego I was going to pick up a buddy who got assigned there as a DI when I went to Pendleton coming from the East Coast. That was weird.

    • @williammuster6532
      @williammuster6532 4 года назад +1

      In this respect I'm glad I was at PI

    • @brown-eyedman4040
      @brown-eyedman4040 4 года назад +1

      Running at the PT area or standing watch and seeing planeloads of civilians landing in San Diego for vacation!

    • @whitemaniagaming6942
      @whitemaniagaming6942 4 года назад +1

      @@JamesonsTravels It drove my rack mate mad. Everyday he made it clear that he would be on one of those planes the minute we graduated. Also the sound of recruits crying at night from homesickness was crazy. Plt 1034 Bravo Co. Nation!

    • @joblow626
      @joblow626 4 года назад

      Whitemania Gaming We stayed on the 3rd floor facing the airport and we would get caught staring at the planes all the time lol. Depending on the time of day we would either hit the quarter deck or they would make you run all the way to the airport fence.

  • @FrontLineMarine84
    @FrontLineMarine84 3 года назад +1

    Climbing the reaper, we were all motivated and gung ho, we were passing up other platoons and recruits falling out. Remember passing a recruit who was laying curled up in the fetal position with an apple. One my kill hats walks up to him shakes his head and says "well if he dies at least he had his apple". Boot camp was the funniest place i wasnt allowed to laugh. Semper fi to all my brothers and sisters.

  • @sgt.majornoob5732
    @sgt.majornoob5732 3 года назад +3

    Came across this video in my suggested as I was researching MOS options that I would prefer, I have my uncle getting out a month before I go to speak with my recruiter. He explained in great detail how miserable boot camp was and how when they got to the top of MT motherfucker they were in tears, he explained that the most rewarding thing from basic was when the man or woman that had been tearing you down for weeks congratulates you and gives you your title. My uncle was one of the guys that went in buff and muscular when we saw him ad graduation he was scrawny and said that cardio and running is 100x more important than what you can lift. Great stories though

  • @madymay2654
    @madymay2654 4 года назад +20

    My husband is navy and we live on PI. We’ve seen some interesting stuff just from driving around on PI. Funny from the outside but probably not funny to recruits. My husband says the family tours they have treats the base like a zoo lmao.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +6

      That must be interesting seeing PI from that stand point. As a recruit and even going back I still have flash backs to it being a 17 year old kid. It's funny to recruits looking back but at the time seems like serious stuff. Thanks for watching.

  • @CoolbreezeFromSteam
    @CoolbreezeFromSteam 4 года назад +10

    I really enjoy the fact that you provide genuine reaction videos like these, and that you don't have the qualms some other uploaders may have about sharing your genuine opinion, even if someone might think it insensitive. Glad I found your channel, and I hope the content you put out doesn't change when your channel becomes much bigger in the future, it's perfect.

  • @gameislife3081
    @gameislife3081 3 года назад +3

    I remember when we were a day or two before graduation and we started to get too loose and easy going, some kid had his portholes on backwards and the DI Chavez our kill hat came out and made the now marine stand on top of a chest and spin around so we could observe his stupidity. The importance of this moment was we had moved on to a new form of punishment instead of eating dirt and getting yelled at. We were embarrassed. We definitely felt like Marines at this point.

  • @chrisgreen177
    @chrisgreen177 2 года назад

    I was a wrestler, track star, never smoked, never drank, never had a girl, but was considered "Popular" in high school. I graduated and three days later was at MEPS. I was in the Delayed Entry Program for a year prior to graduating. My friend who was a year ahead of me in school and in delayed entry before I joined delayed entry wrecked his motorcycle in front of the school the last day of final exams and died from his injuries the next day. His name was Jeffery Stark, Hamilton High School, Milwaukee, WI. 1989.
    Pugil sticks and boxing back when I went through Marine Corps BootCamp Training in 1990 was an experience I would NEVER forget. That whole thing was a course of my life I will NEVER forget!
    I destroyed every recruit that stepped on that bridge in bridge over troubled waters (when there was an actual moat under the bridge). It's normally, you get up there and battle then either take a swim because you got knocked off or walked off because you defeated your opponent. Well, I was the victor and it was easy. Instead of me walking off the bridge, I was given another opponent and I made light work of him too. After the third, I could hear the drill instructors betting on me with other drill instructors while calling the next recruit to the bridge to challenge me. It was great, and I just kept taking them out. It was like my training with a bow staff in martial arts (which the DI's had no idea I knew).
    Boxing was the same experience, and this post is already too long, but my point is that as hard, challenging, demanding and mentally difficult USMC BootCamp was, I think that the upbringing, and support with sports that my parents provided for me growing up (without even realizing it) made my experience mentally and physically not as difficult and challenging for those other recruits.
    22 years after that with all the friendships made, wars deployed to and fought, humanitarian missions deployed to and fought, Up's and Downs, successes, promotions, demotions, mentoring and being mentored, was a life time of experience that could not be replicated in a law, mandate, social experiment.
    Blessed to be retired in one piece after all that. Thank God!

  • @NolaGB
    @NolaGB 4 года назад +13

    My son and grandson are Parris Island Marines. I was there for both graduations and also through an educators program ... all during summer months. I'm in TN and it gets hot/humid here, but NOTHING like Parris Island!! You should have given a light history of why the Marines are at Parris Island.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +1

      I might. I was not sure how well it would do on the channel. Take a look as a Marine parent I would be curious your take on it. Thanks for watching.
      ruclips.net/video/qMF3JDMQZo0/видео.html

    • @NolaGB
      @NolaGB 4 года назад +1

      @@JamesonsTravels I meant why Parris Island was given to the USMC. It was because no one else could do anything with it. If I remember right (I'M old), they got it for nothing. ... no $$.

  • @GySgt_USMC_Ret.
    @GySgt_USMC_Ret. 4 года назад +15

    In at 140lbs, left at 160lbs. PFC grad. 1st Bn.,Plt. 1011, Co. B, Parris Island. 28 Sept. 70 - 5 Dec 70. Fair winds and following seas to all. Ooorah!

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  4 года назад +2

      Always was amazed at the recruits who gain weight in boot camp. I was a football guy and lost muscle and fat. The Corp got me to the proper wiry figure. Ready to deployment and the fleet. Semper Fi.

    • @rickojames
      @rickojames 4 года назад +1

      Gunny - I had the same 20 lb weight gain in 1975. Entered at 155, and left at 175. That averages out to 1.5 lbs of muscle we added per week.

  • @donbrown2391
    @donbrown2391 4 года назад +4

    I went to PI in September of '73. I got choked out by assistant drill instructor Sgt Kaiapo in Indoc, elbowed in the solar plexus at the rifle range by my Sr. drill instructor Ssgt Mills (because another private fucked up) and kicked in the middle of my back by assistant drill instructor Sgt Scouten somewhere in Phase 3. I fucking loved it and would'g trade that experience for anything. We were told we were the first series to train with the M16A1 in bootcamp too, btw. And... good night Chesty Puller wherever you are....