Jocko Podcast - 476: Dog Ain't Got Nuthin' For Ya. With Retired SEAL Harold "Dog" Underdown.
Episode Date: February 5, 2025>Join Jocko Underground<Harold Underdown (aka Dog) is a co-founder of Four Branches Bourbon, where he brings his 30-year career as a Master Chief Naval Special Warfare (SEAL) to the company. As ...a former Navy SEAL Command Master Chief and VP of the UDT/SEAL Association, Harold leads Four Branches Bourbon's efforts to support special operations veterans and causes. He manages collaboration ventures and giveback initiatives, promoting the company's message of Drink Honorably. Currently, Harold is working onboard at Baker's Bay Golf and Ocean Club in the Bahamas as a Security Training Consultant for logistics, safety, and security. He's always down for a good pour and cigar, fishing, shooting, and anything outdoors. Go Navy!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko podcast number 476 with Echo Charles and me, Jocko Willick.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
I was a new guy in the Seal Patoon, which means keep your mouth shut, keep your ears open.
I did that to the best of my ability.
Wasn't always the best at it, but I did my best.
And when you're in your first Seal Patoon, you get a lot of your DNA in your first Seal Patoon.
You're kind of watching what's going on.
You're watching what the old guys.
And by the way, the old guys are like 22 or 23 maybe for me.
I was 19, you know, so an old guy is 24, 25 maybe.
Your platoon chief might be 33, something like that.
But you're watching them how they're acting, what they're saying, what they're doing,
and you're modeling your behavior off them.
And when I was in my first platoon, we had the Corman of our platoon.
You know what a Cormon is?
Echo Charles?
Medic.
Medic.
Yeah.
It's a medic.
So the medic was a guy.
He was one of the old guys.
And he was a Southern man from North Carolina.
Call it North Kakalaki.
You ever heard that before?
Yes, sir.
Kaka Lacki.
All right.
So his name was Harold Underdown.
And in the SEAL teams, you're going to get a nickname at some point.
And I believe Harold Underdown, because your last name is Underdown.
Now, did you ever hear of a TV show called Underdog?
Yes, of course.
So that got, I believe, morphed into Underdog.
And then eventually that just became dog or doggy.
So he was an old guy at the time.
He was probably, I don't know, like maybe around 30, maybe.
He had an old school mentality.
And it became very clear what his attitude was like when someone needed medical attention.
Because as our platoon corpsman, if someone got sick or someone got dinged up or someone needed some kind of medical help,
dog would take a look at the individual you know look at the sprained the sprained ankle or the cut
hand or the the sick belly or whatever and he'd do an assessment and then he'd say dog he ain't
got nothing for you you know and that that was his way of saying if you got a problem you know
suck it up and if you got a problem you got to get that problem solved yourself dog he ain't got
nothing for you i'm not over here to fix you i'm not even you know to baby you
You gotta take care of yourself.
You gotta make sure you're good to go.
You gotta solve your own problems.
And that was a great attitude for me to see as a young guy,
and I definitely carried that attitude throughout my time in the teams.
As did Doggy, who went on to have a incredible career
with deployments all over the place, all over the world,
spent time at the Navy's J-Soc Special Mission Unit.
He deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan,
and he was the...
Master Chief of the command of SEAL Team 4.
It carried on to do other things in the SEAL teams,
and it's an honor to have him with us here tonight
to share some of his experiences and lessons learned.
Here he is. Doggy, thanks for doing us, man.
Wow, what a pleasure being here with you, Jocko.
And, you know, let's have some fun, right?
As we talk through this, you know, it was a heck of a ride.
Yeah.
Right?
You know, I ended up with 30 years in one month
after they took the, you know, they do the arithmetic of how many active duty days you had.
And I had eight years of National Guard, right, when I came in.
So I was 25, right?
I was one of the older guys at that first, you know, first platoon.
But they took the eight years, National Guard, and they couldn't calculate that before I retired officially.
And I'd call the lady, and I go, hey, can you tell me kind of a ballpark where that would be?
And she goes, no, Master Chief.
She said, we'll do the, we'll do the calculation at your retirement.
date, right? So once the retirement papers got put in, it came back. I had 28 years, 11 days,
active duty Navy at the time. At the time, they wanted me to leave the East Coast and go to the
West Coast, right, like the Group 1, Master Chief. And I just told the Force Master Chief at the time,
I can't do that because I'm going to lose about $300,000 of equity in my house. And it's just
not worth it at this time and point. So I'm going to bow. I'm going to bow. I'm going to bow out, right?
because at the E9 level, we only have so many Master Chief billets,
and that's the thing to do, right?
You need to move aside and let these other E8s come up to, you know,
promote the Master Chief.
But the lady called me back, and I remember I was sitting in my desk on a Friday.
She goes, the Master Chief, she said, I got good news.
I go, what's that?
And she goes, your final calculation for retirement is 30 years and one month.
Yeah.
And I went, Roger that.
That was great, right?
Because, you know, that's a full career, right?
So it was awesome.
Let's get back.
Let's get to how it started.
So you were born down, like I said, down in North Kakalaki.
And what was growing up like?
What'd your mom and dad do?
Oh, mom and dad were, you know, they were great supporters of my brother and I, Mike.
And basically, we lived in a little town there called, you know, Mount Holly, right beside Belmont, which is about 30 miles or, you know, 30 minutes south of Charlotte, North Carolina.
And so I grew up in a little small neighborhood, you know, running around.
We had this road cut up through the neighborhood called Hickory Grove Road.
And on Hickory Grove Road is where I met all my buddies, right?
You know, we would play all kinds of crazy stuff out in the woods,
and we would play basketball, football, you know, tackle football back then in the backyard, right?
Especially when it was muddy.
We had a lot of fun with that.
But growing up, my mom and dad were awesome.
my mom worked in a mill like a cotton mill for eons and my dad was a basically dad had an eighth grade
education but he could he could do anything mechanic carpenter plumbing you name it he could do it
but he worked for a utilities plant you know like a water utilities plant down in mcaddenville
a little town south of us and but you know it was just work work work and you know you
I think they paid $15,000 for the house that me and Mike grew up in one bedroom, right?
So you know we had a lot of wrestling going on.
But yeah, I mean, very modest, right?
Very modest.
Both parents worked and then supported Mike and I as we came up through school and got into sports and played Little League Baseball.
I had lots of friends that would come over to the house, would have barbecues in the back.
And it was very simple life, but very satisfying, right, as far as growing up under high.
And then, you know, they made us go to church, right, back when we were young.
But at a certain point in life, you know, my mom said, hey, you don't have to get up sunny morning go to church anymore.
So basically, she just turned the tables on us, right, and said, you don't, I'm not making you go to church.
So you make up your mind.
And we did.
And I've been going to church ever since, right?
because, you know, hey, if it's a part of your life, you're a believer, you jock up and show up, right?
So I'd jock up on Sundays and go to church.
But mom and dad, they worked their whole adult lives, right?
My dad passed about two years ago, and my mom's still with us, and she's still lives in that little small house there off Hickrard Grove Road.
Good thing is my brother Mike lives about probably about four miles away.
So Mike's always checking on her.
And Mike just retired.
He was with Freightliner.
Okay.
Built trucks.
So he had a great career with them about 42 years.
He just retired.
And he's enjoying it, right?
He's enjoying his transition, right?
But yeah, for North Carolina, I have great memories of growing up, going to high school, playing football,
had a wrestle for one year and understand the wrestling mentality right I mean it's uh you know
it's a long two minutes right or two or three right three yeah three I mean it's just long right
it seems like hours when you're going toe to toe with somebody your own weight class but uh you know
it it was awesome we had a great uh being kids coming up you know it's not like it was it is today
we'd basically leave the house and
we wouldn't come home until dark.
And, of course, mom always had food on the table and then just repeat, right?
When you got to high school, how good were you at football?
Were you playing like varsity or freshman year or anything crazy like that?
The first year, I mean, I did really well, you know, as a pee-wee ball and then midget ball played.
I was a running back.
So I was running back, and then I switched over to defense, kind of a defensive back.
So high school I went straight defensive back
because we had some really hardcore running backs
and really fast.
But I was fast enough to play defensive back
and they would move me up in a hawk position, they call it, right?
So the hawk position was good and bad
because the hawk means you had to go in
and if they run in a stampede run, I was the first one, right?
I'm the first one to try to break up that stampede
coming around the end and a lot of collisions, right?
And then back then we didn't really have the technology
as far as concussions go.
I mean, I remember a couple times
I could hear the birds tweeting.
And I was on the kicking team
and kick off.
I was receiving to kick.
So you get your bell wrong
when you're doing those type deals,
you know, at that high speed.
But I remember, you know,
I thought I was pretty good, right?
But it pretty much ended after high school.
I played a couple teams
who we picked up, remember the USFL?
Oh, yeah.
New Jersey generals and all that.
They had Herschel Walker.
We actually did a,
It was called Lincoln's Bandits.
And I was on the, I was a defensive back again.
Okay.
But I was tackling these running backs, and these guys were 220.
They looked like Herschel Walker.
And I was getting my bell rung, like, probably every other contact.
And I'm like, because nobody was making a tackle up on the line, right?
I remember the old saying, I remember our coach when I played high school.
He goes, guys, if a lineman misses a tackle or a linebacker is six yards,
if you miss a tackle is six points.
So he really taught us to face in, you know,
make sure you get the guy down, right?
Whatever you got to do.
So just get him to the ground.
So it was a lot of fun, but I think football, the team mentality of football,
and basically any sport in high schools and college,
it prepares you to go into something like a Navy SEAL program, right?
Because.
Now, what was your plan when you were going through high school?
Were you planning on going to the military?
What was the plan?
Well, I have an interesting story with that.
I was when I was probably
8, 9th grade, we were standing at the end of the road, right?
Hickory Grove, Hickr Grove Road.
And we had some firecrackers.
And we're doing stupid stuff, right, kids.
And we're throwing, my buddy said,
I'd double dare you to light this little blackjack,
you know, firecracker and throw it at a car coming by.
And I'm like, well, you know, that doesn't seem to it,
because we're behind hedges and then they ain't going to see us.
So sure enough, lit the firecracker, threw it on a car.
Uh-oh.
that car was a black and silver state trooper.
Oh, not good, right?
Bad timing, right?
So guess what?
The trooper goes down a block, turns, and he's triangulating the position, right?
I go running down the road and go into the woods.
Next thing I know, I'm standing, and all of a sudden I hear, whoop, whoop, and there's the state trooper sitting right on the road, and he was stepped, he stepped outside of his car, and he's staring into the woods looking right at me.
I go, man, man, that was quick.
How did that happen?
So I had a couple options, right?
I could either bag it, right, and run through the woods and double back around my house,
or I could walk out there and face the music.
Well, I chose to go face the music.
And I walked out, I came out and he goes, did you?
And I go, yes, sir.
And, you know, because there's another guy with me.
I could have said, no, it wasn't me.
It was Bobby.
Well, it wasn't Bobby through the, you know, the crash on the, on the,
patrol car. It was me. So I stood there and he goes, you know what? That's very dangerous.
And he says, you just happen to choose the wrong vehicle, but in a way, it was a good vehicle
because I'm just telling you, this is very dangerous. He said, I could put you in a car and I could take
you to your house and we could talk to your parents. Or you can take this as a learning experience
and have a great day. And I looked at him. I said, I choose to have an experience.
But he taught me one, right? I mean, this guy was square.
it was a black it was a black individual freaking squared away had a smoky bear hat on uniform
was freaking you know decked out so ever since that day that stupid move i wanted to be a highway
patrol state trooper because he was such a professional i mean it could have went really sideways
but he was he taught me a lesson and moved on right and uh i still i still think about that but
growing up through high school that's what i wanted i wanted to be a north Carolina highway patrol
And so then what was the path to that to make that happen?
Well, you had to take a test, a written test, and then they, I remember going up to
Lincoln, I think it was, and I had to go through their physical part of it, physical exam,
you know, eye test, all that stuff, and then you had to do the written exam, and then right
after that we'd go outside in a parking lot, and they had a highway patrol car setting there,
and they had a dummy, you know, one of these crashed dummies that was behind a wheel,
and it was seat belted in.
So one of the drills where you had to start about 50 feet behind the car
and they had you on a clock and they would say go,
you would run down to the side of the vehicle,
open the door, reach across the dummy as it was a passenger, you know,
in distress or whatever to wreck,
undo the seatbelt, get your arms underneath the armpits of the dummy
and you had to drag that dummy back to that about 50 to 60 feet behind the car, right?
That's a freaking good, realistic test.
Yeah, and that dummy was about,
you know, I'd say about 180 to 190 pounds.
So it wasn't anything small or light.
So you did that, and then you had to push a patrol car,
and then a couple other agility.
You think you had to run like a half a mile push-up, set up, stuff.
And then that was it.
So I'm just waiting then.
Once you finish all the tests, they either give you a thumbs up or thumbs down.
And I got thumbs up, and they said,
the Academy will be reaching out to you when it's ready for you to go to Raleigh,
North Carolina and go through the Highway Patrol Academy.
But for whatever reason, they had a hiring freeze.
They had some administrative issues or something.
They needed to hire people, but at the same time, the state was looking at it.
And from the state standpoint, they were like, look, we don't have diversity or whatever
was an issue.
And they had promotions.
People were quitting, so they were trying to figure out what was going on.
But that took about a year.
So here I am.
as I'm waiting on this.
And you had already graduated high school.
So now graduated high school.
I'm in a National Guard, right?
So you're already, when did you join the National Guard?
Join the National Guard in 79.
It was Army Guard out of Charlotte, North Carolina.
Did you do that in between your junior and senior year of high school?
Yeah.
That's such a good program.
Yeah, it is.
It is.
It's a great program.
You had all of the, you know, the GI Bill that you could use for college.
So what I did was since I'm rolling down this highway patrol path,
I go to a local college, Gaston College, community college, and I went after my criminal justice degree.
In the same time, I was doing night courses to be a medic, right, to get my medical, it was, I forget the actual name of the course, but it was, you know, first day.
You were squared away, other than hucking some firecrackers at the car.
Well, other than a bad decision doing that day.
That junior year going to the Army boot camp.
that's got to square you away as a young kid.
I went through that in Oklahoma, Fort Seale, Oklahoma.
And we were kind of artillery.
We were forward observers.
So we would be out there in the front
and we'd call in fire from 155 Highletters or...
So you're like 17 years old.
17.
Damn, that's so frigule.
And me and three of my buddies,
and we're still good friends today
because we lived through all of that.
And then about four years after that,
I joined the Air Guard, basically walked across the street
and got into a C-130 outfit that had medics,
flight medics. Okay. So I was on flying status and I was a medic. And the time you're just
wait, you're going to college and you're waiting for the for the call, right? Waiting on the
letter to say, hey, come and join us at the academy. But like I said, it just kept going and kept
gone. And then what your civilian, do you have a civilian job at this time? Oh yeah. I was working
from four in a morning until eight at UPS, you know. Doing what? Driving sword and what? I started out
unloading, unloading trucks. Then I started loading trucks and then I was a sorter.
Okay. Sorter is a job you want, right? Because you're
basically you stand there, they unload the truck, you read the zip codes.
And I'm still, I got zip codes my head today, right?
Colorado 80.
North Carolina is 280.
Just a state, you say Florida, 325.
I mean, I got that stuff in my head and it will not leave, right?
So anytime I see a mail, I look at the zip down, I go, I know where that's at.
But it just, you know, working and then trying to go to school, I sleep in half the classes, right?
Yeah.
So basically what I did was instead of the guard, gee, I don't.
bill, I said to heck with that, I'm not disciplined enough that I'm not spending their money like
this. This is ridiculous. So I stopped. And then I started paying myself for my classes and I finally
made it. But it took me six years, right? And remember the saying for that, right? Six years in
college for a two-year degree, it must be a doctor. Well, no, I'm not a doctor. I am a doc,
doing a corpsman, right? On the cornerman side of it, I'm a doc. But, but yeah, I mean, so that was some
being very patient waiting on the highway patrol thing, the Academy up in Raleigh.
And then one Sunday, I remember this like it was yesterday, there was a parade magazine inside
the Sunday paper, you know, the Sunday papers were really thick.
And I pulled that little parade magazine out.
And on the front cover of that magazine, it had one of the candidates and buds was climbing
underneath the barbed wire.
And what, I don't remember that, I don't even know what the name of that obstacle was.
I think it was just called the barbed wire.
You had to get down on your face, right?
And I saw the name was stenciled on his chest.
You had a nice haircut, right?
High and tight.
And I go, you know what?
And the caption on the front of that man, they said, are the Navy SEALs the toughest man of life?
So at the time, I had a girlfriend, and she wanted to get married.
And all I had seen was North Carolina and Oklahoma.
And the air guard, I got to go to Germany.
So I kind of got the bug.
I'm like, man, I like this.
traveling, you know, the Air Guard, you know, flying on C-130s and, you know, back in the day,
141s when we'd go over across the pond. But I really liked that and I go, and then when I read
that arc, I'm like, that's it. I'm done. I'm going to, I'm joining the Navy because I had two
choices at the recruiters, right? I talked to the Army guys about flying Apache's helicopters.
Well, they were going, hey, that's great. We'll get you at Rutger Flight School. But before
you go to Rucker, we want you to go to Army Ranger school. So I had a Ranger buddy of mine. I played
football with in high school.
And I called him and I go, hey, Jeff, what's the deal with the, they want me to go to
Ranger School before they'll sign me for a flight spot.
And he goes, don't do it.
He says, they get you in a Rainer, Fat, you're not leaving.
You're not going to leave for about four years or a couple tours.
And at the time, I was 24, 25, right?
And I'm like, nope, I'm not doing that.
Went straight into the Navy and said, hey, I want to be a seal.
They look at me kind of funny and go, can you swim?
And I go, yes.
and they went, all right, let's do this.
But back then, right, we didn't have contracts, right?
There was no guarantee.
So what you had to do is join the Navy, get a rate, right?
I think I was a boatsmaid at the time when I went in
because I just, you know, one of those deals where you just get in, they'll sign your rate.
So I was a boatswamee when I went through a boot camp.
And then comes to a point where you raise your hand, do you want to go seal, EOD, you know, diver, you know, you know,
all of those communities.
and I went, well, I'm signing up for seal, went through the process, and then the next thing,
you know, you get orders.
Did you train, like, once you made that decision, did you train any extra?
You just freaking, it's going to be dog.
You know what?
I just figured, you know, I played football.
I was lifting weights a lot, so I was probably a little more muscle than I needed to be.
If I knew what was coming, if I knew that being a sugar cookie was going to be on a daily basis,
saltwater is going to be part of you.
in pool too, right?
Because I've been in some pool situations where, you know, it just, it rips your heart out.
Doesn't it?
I mean, when they put towels in your hands and say, do the butterfly.
And I go, wait a minute, I can't do the butterfly without towels, right?
Well, do the best you can, shut up and jump in the pool, right, and get the towels going.
But that was something that was, you can't train for that, you know.
What year was it?
So what year did you join the Navy?
87.
May of 80s.
So at that point in time, I got a letter in the mail.
Once I shipped out to boot camp, I got a letter from the highway patrol.
But it was a month late, right?
That's right.
No turning back at this point, right?
So as I look back on that, you know, I could have been a highway patrolman and then, you know, done a long career.
But what would I have seen?
I'd have saw North Carolina.
I'd have probably moved around all different counties.
You got 100 counties in North Carolina.
So I'd have probably bounced around three, four, 10 counties.
and, you know, in a patrol car and whatever, right?
And I look back on my Navy career, and as you well know, we're global, right?
I mean, so, you know, out of North Carolina, you know, North Kakalaki is in the rear view, right?
But, you know, back then, though, Jocko, wasn't a lot of talk about Navy Seals.
You know, we didn't have any, like it is now, you know, with the movies and all of the
these series that are out about Navy Seals, the UBL mission, all of that.
And then now it's all like, you know, hey, what did you do as a seal?
And so people have a certain, you know, perspective of Navy Seals when you talk about it today.
But when I went in, you could say Navy Seal.
Yeah, no one knew that.
You know, when I met Lisa over in Guam, we said seal.
And she's like, what is that?
In the water?
The seals are in the water.
Yeah.
So they, you know, the public awareness at that time was like zero.
So, you know, Echo?
I mean, you know, I know, how are you?
47.
47.
So, you know, and now it's, it's all over the place, right?
Yeah.
Good or bad, right?
Yeah.
The good is that, you know, we still need people.
We need young men to step up and take on this ultimate challenge.
And the bad side of it is, is we don't want to be looked at.
is people that are not silent professionals, right?
Because when I was at SEAL Team One, it was all about being a silent professional.
Not about beating your chest when you go down to the bars and Coronado and go,
hey, I'm a Navy.
You know, you didn't say that.
No, right?
No.
Team One was definitely tight on that stuff.
That was a tight command, right?
That was a tight command.
I think that's what basically broke me from a haircut because I love haircuts.
Yeah.
And I started loving them when I was at Seal Team One.
So if you didn't have a haircut, you were going to be doing some push-ups.
When you went to Navy boot camp, how was the contrast like, because you already had been through Army boot camp, you must have been a Navy boot camp just going.
Oh, it was a cake walk.
And then I got, you know, since I was 25 when I went through, or 24 at the time, I believe, I was Arpac.
Okay.
So I'm not sure what.
Ardok stands for now.
It stands for recruit chief petty officer and it's still a thing.
Yeah.
Well, that's what I was and I had two of the, you know, the boot camp instructors that were
great guys and they just basically, hey, you got it, Arupac, I'm leaving.
So, you know, it's basically about, hey, just making sure people are squaring away their
gear, keeping a place clean.
And then if we go anywhere and make sure we're accountable and we check out every day, right?
And then when you show up to Buds finally, what was your first impression about?
buds. Oh, it's a rude awakening right. And you cross that quarter deck because as soon as you
cross a quarter deck, somebody's got, somebody's got you, right? They got eyes on. It's like this
place, got cameras all over the place. But them is instructors. You know, we had an old master chief that
was, you know, he was welcome aboard, you know, he says, you know, who are you? Where are you from?
Good, right? Go sweep the hallway or go do something menial. So it was an awakening, right? And then, of course,
you walk out on a grinder and you see all those helmets the classes are in front of you and i was
like thinking what what is that are those winners are there a reason that those helmets are laying
on the ground and all lined up perfectly nope those are not winters no those are quitters they go
home they decided to go home did you did you have any uh major issues at buds i i don't think so
physically i held up pretty good because you know you you have to you have to know when to go
and know when to hoe, right?
And you had to be clandestine when you're hoeing, right?
Because you get an instructor seeing you hoeing,
and then he's going to turn you into a go-go, right?
You're going to go to the surf, right?
So, but I did have one thing that, drown-proofing.
I know you remember drown-proofing.
I got rolled back on that.
Okay.
And it was a nightmare, right?
They tie your feet together, they tie your hands behind your back,
and then they introduce you to the pool, which was about, what, 20 feet deep on that deep end?
Maybe.
I think it's 15 feet, nine feet and four feet.
Yeah.
So there's no standing on your tattoos.
Might as well be 100.
I get right to say, it might as well be the abyss, right?
So doing that, I mean, I did it.
I mean, I would come undone.
I would get out of the ropes behind my back somehow.
I don't know how it did it.
You mean like panicking scenario?
Yes.
Like you were freaking out?
Anxiety.
Bad anxiety.
And I did that like three times in a row.
I came out of those ropes.
And one instructor said, you will never come out of this knot.
He said, this is a, you said, get your ass in back in the water.
So I go back in the water and I get halfway down the pool.
You know, we're doing the dolphin, doffin kick.
And I came out of them again.
And, um, full incredible Hulk.
So panic mode.
Panic mode.
So after drinking felt like half of the swimming pool.
I got out and they rolled me back, right?
So here I am now.
I'm setting in a barracks across the street on the amphib side,
waiting to get classed up with class 152, right?
So, and you're talking about some, you know, you're thinking about, hey, I want to be a Navy SEAL.
Now, now it's all about, you've got to be comfortable in the water and drownproofing is one of those evolutions that has been proven to, it seems like torture, but it's not torture.
It's just to get you to relax in the water and trust yourself with filling up your lungs, lungs being that buoy for you and doing that dolphin kick.
because he did it.
I think there were two or three of us that failed.
I think I was the only one that actually got rolled.
But that whole time, that six weeks, I was waiting on Class 152.
I would go over on the weekends and I tie myself up and I'd jump in the pool.
Well, when I was doing this, there was this older gentleman working at the pool at the time, retired seal.
And he goes, hey, underdown, you can't do that.
You're going to get me fired.
And I go, hey, Charlie, you know, Charlie.
I go, I got to do it.
I said, I'm getting ready to go through this again, and I said, I'm not failing this.
You know, so I'd get in there.
And I said, hey, just get your little, you know, he had a little hook on the end of a pole.
If need it.
He could pull my drowning ass out of water, right?
But we didn't need it.
I just kept doing it, kept doing it.
Charlie kept telling me, no, no, you can't do this.
You know, you're going to get me fired.
And I just worked through it.
And I remember the evening that we did drownproofing when I was in 152.
And I was like, man, I was leading up to this.
right. I said, I've got to do this. I got to get through this.
Passed it the first time.
Nice.
Because I was totally relaxed and had the confidence to do that evolution,
which is you start in the deep end, you dolphin kick all the way down to the shallow
side of the pool. And this is a 50 meter, right? 50 meter pool.
And then you turn around and you come all the way back down.
And then you had to do a amount of little ups and downs, right?
Up and downs. And then once the instructors are confident that you finished doing what you
needed to do, boom, you're out of the pool. You passed. So I passed and I got out and I remember
we were doing an evolution and we were down on the steel pier over amphib side, right? And we're
on her backs. We're doing flutter cakes. And of course, then again, you got your name stems.
Was this like, was hell week going on? This, I think it was hell week. Steel pier is definitely.
I mean, it's like part of hell week. It was a part of hell week, right? And I remember,
you may remember this. We had a lieutenant, um, thanks his, um, Thompson. But he had these, he's
glasses mirror glasses right he looked like he looked like somebody off of the movie of uh what's
steve mcqueen what's that movie oh uh shaking the tree boss shaking the you remember what i'm talking about
who you eat all those eggs it's a freaking classic movie yeah what is it well he looked like that guy
one of the prison you're to communicate that failure yeah well we have here's a failure to communicate
well that guy looked like him right looked like that prison guard and he says under down and he's
looking right down at me with them glasses and i look up at him and i go oh here's you know l t he's
He says, get up.
So I stand up.
And he goes, come up here.
He says, put the blanket on.
I go, I don't need a blanket.
You know.
He said, here, have some hot chocolate.
I said, I don't need any hot chocolate.
You know, and he says, he said, let me tell you something.
Let me tell you a story.
And he starts to talk and he's looking off into the distance, looking across the bay.
He's looking down at me.
And he goes, I'm disgusted.
And I'm like thinking, you know, what the heck is he disgusted about, right?
I ain't done anything.
You know, I haven't done anything wrong.
He goes, I have this neighbor.
my neighbor's name's
Charlie
and I go
uh oh here we go
he says
Mr. Charlie told me
we had an individual
a candidate
who was going over to the pool
on the weekends
and tying himself up
and jumping in
that's totally illegal
you cannot do that
Charlie may lose his job
he says
do you know what I'm talking about
and I look up at him
I go yes sir
and he goes
he says guess what
I go what
and he goes
I like it
it shows that you got a little bit of fire.
He says, you may, may make it.
He says, you may get through this.
And he said, now get your ass back down on the pier and join your class.
And I went, hoo-ya, who you are?
Good times.
But that was scary, right?
And they would always do that, right?
Where they're blowing smoke, they're smoking cigars and blowing smoke in your face and telling
you, in the unlikely event.
Yeah.
Until the day.
You make it.
Like when you're getting ready to graduate, when you're lining up, they're like,
well, hey, in the unlikely event that you graduate.
You're gonna have to have this admin stuff by done by the afternoon. I'm like what else is these people to do to me? Yeah, it's scary though like I failed pool comp
And when I failed pool comp like all of a sudden
Because you're on track you're like you think you're gonna make it you know you get you feel rail comp and it's like oh my entire life
Everything that I want in my life is is like at jeopardy. It's a nightmare. It's a lot of pressure
Like it's a crazy pressure
And you put it on yourself too, right?
Right, 100%.
You know, because once you fail something
And, you know, I talked to young men today
that want to be a seal, you can't really prepare them
for what they're going to go through.
You know, it's like a buzzsaw, right?
You just really, they just got to face it, right?
They got to face the deal.
Yeah, check.
So you graduate and so you get,
you go to orders the team one.
Did you pick West Coast?
I did.
How come you pick West Coast being, most guys, I mean, generally speaking, when guys are from
the East Coast, they pick East Coast, when guys are from the West Coast, they pick West Coast.
Well, growing up in North Carolina and then being out here in San Diego, Coronado,
you're looking at these beautiful palm trees.
I mean, it's beautiful, right?
So I'm just like, you know what, I want to be somewhere that I haven't lived my whole life.
Right.
So I chose West Coast.
Right on.
And got picked, you know.
Now, did you know anything about.
like team one.
Did you know,
did you know the reputation
or anything like that?
You just...
No, no, I just knew
they were one of the originals, right?
Them and Steel Team 2 were OGs, right?
As far as Seal Team 1,
Sill Team 2,
I think Sill Team 2 may have got commissioned
before.
I guess it's real close.
East Coast time or something like that.
Yeah, yeah, East Coast, West Coast.
But yeah, I mean,
walking across Quarter Deck,
I had no idea that Silt Team 1 was,
they were very strict.
Yeah, we used to call it Stalod.
Team 1.
And that was one other good name for it.
Anyways, yeah.
So actually, I think you're the person that originally told me, Team 1.
It's not just a number.
It's an attitude.
You took that shit serious, dog.
Team 1.
And I really enjoyed, looking back on my career, Seel Team 1, I had a lot of great mentors there, a great, a lot of hard.
Hardcore operators that I learned a whole lot from.
And, you know, like you said earlier, you got two years for a reason, right?
And that's the way it was at Steel Team One.
It's like, shut up, shut up and just, you know, listen and do what we say to, you know, and train.
So do you roll right into a platoon when you got there?
Or did you have to do STT?
I had to do STT, right?
Back then they called it Seal Tactical Training.
But it was kind of like SQT, but it was still the same.
You're basically, your trident is put in a box.
You know, command master chief's got the box or the platoon, right, has the box with your trident inside.
And you have to prove yourself basically for six months.
And you do the workup, you know, from cold weather training to combat swimmer to jumping,
land warfare.
And you go through all of those evolutions of training.
And then when you finish that six months, then they give you your, they have a celebration,
a little ceremony and give you your trident.
Yeah.
There's controversy because now when you get done with SQT, you get your trident.
And so then when those new guys started showing up with the team with their trident,
the team guys were like, oh, no, we didn't get your tritets.
And they took them off of them.
And that still happened depending on the team.
But then, you know, you can see the commands are like, wait, you're undermining, you know,
the authority of the-
53-26.
system. They already got, yeah, they've been awarded this. They've been approved by the SQT
instructors. Those are, you know, master chiefs and, and senior NCOs that are awarding them.
They're trying to. Now you're saying that they don't. So there's a little bit of controversy
around that about the way it goes down. Uh, you know, I was the same way as you. Like, when I
showed up, no bird. You didn't get your bird when you graduated. Do you, you, you went to your team.
You went through SQT. You got in a platoon. Then you did a board where you had to program radio
and assemble weapons and get asked a bunch of questions
and put tourniquets on and all this stuff.
And then you got your trident.
Exactly.
And you got your trident like punched into your chest,
which you punched my trident into my chest with the entire seal team.
The whole seal team lines up.
Yeah.
It's freaking,
it was. It was.
I remember that.
The old blood,
blood burden.
Yeah.
Blood burden.
So,
but,
but you know,
now the young guys now,
they think the platoons take them and they put them in a bird cage.
So they've got this bird cage in their space
And they got all these tridents
Hanging in these bird cages
I've seen bird cages
I've seen
Aquariums
They're all kinds of little things
I've seen them painted blue
Because it's inert
So you don't you know
You get a blue trident
It's not real
It's like a blue gun
A gun that's not real
They painted blue for training
I've seen a tritin's painted blue
Because it's inert
You don't really have it
Yeah
So they got all kinds of little
Little tricks they do to them
So when you showed up
You get into your first platoon
what year is it now is it like it's still 87 it's 88 88 i think it was august of 88 when i
checked in uh seal team 1 and how's how's being a new guy at till team 1 you know it's um
basically you know these older guys right uh seal team 1 members basically say you know just keep
your mouth shut and pay attention right and then we're gonna we're gonna train you we're gonna
mentor you uh i don't know if they actually said mentor at the time they just you just you just
do what you do, right? You show up for work, get a haircut, check to watch bill.
Yeah, Seale Team 1, right? What was your job? I, you know, I came in and I was still
Bosa made at the time, right? Which was, you know, back then you had to have a rate to be assigned
to you a job title, right, to be a Navy SEAL. So I was a seaman. I think I was just a
Seaman, E3. Did they make you a pig gunner in a platoon? I was. I was a 60 gunner. But what
happened early on I had a senior chief who had some time in Millington and knew a lot of people
in the detail shop and stuff. He says, dog, the best thing for you since you was a flight medic in
the Air Force, Air Guard. He says, you already got all the medical training because I had to go to
Shepard Air Force Base and get, go through the medical training, right, for the air guard.
So I already had the medical stuff, plus I was an EMT. And he goes, we're going to send you
to Corman School in Balboa. And you graduate Corman. I think it was six to eight weeks.
And when you graduate, we're going to reinstate you to E5.
That's awesome.
And I'm thinking, gee, I'm an E3 now.
That'd be great.
So I did it.
And you know what?
He kept his word.
I graduated Korman School.
And I was automatically promoted to HM2.
Damn, dude.
That was like, that was a blessing, right?
That was a blessing as far as being able to get promoted.
Because, you know, in the teams back then, your rate was your fate.
Yes.
Right.
If you're a certain rate, you may not promote as easily.
as a Corman, right, at HM.
And I was blessed with that rate,
and I had that all the way up to Master Chief.
It took me a while to make E6.
Had to do some crazy stuff for that.
I had to go to Florida and set through a week-long course
with this old retired Master Chief that was basically teaching,
teaching how to pass the test, right,
and how to do it effective.
And I actually scored like a 77 out of 80.
Dang.
It worked, right?
So I got promoted to, but I had to do that, right?
and Damnack paid that.
They paid me to go down to Florida and set down with this.
That's awesome.
I had a classroom.
So, so, where'd you go, where'd you go on deployment?
Like your first, were your first deployment?
Philippines.
Went over to P.I.
Anything go down?
Was that the volcano or anything like that?
You know what?
No, I think we were either before or right after that.
But it was still, it was fine.
You know, we would go outside the gate a lot.
Did a lot of training on the green beach, red beach, all of those beaches that would go
We shoot live fire and then do a lot of water work as well over in Subic.
But that was a great, great base.
But that was right after, you know, we shut that down, right?
Not too long after that.
So you did, was that when you got done with that deployment and then you did another one?
Where was your next deployment?
My next appointment was Guam.
With me?
Right?
Yeah, with you.
That was my second deployment.
Oh, okay.
I always thought that was your third deployment.
And then I did one more.
You were just a one cruise wonder.
Oh, you know what?
Hold on.
No, too.
That was right.
The third,
that was my third deployment because we did,
I did an ARG.
Got it.
Right.
So they needed a corpsman.
So I joined the,
the ARG platoon.
And basically I did back to backs,
right?
And then that's when I met you when we did that third deployment over to Guam.
Right?
Because I screened for Damnack and went to,
yeah,
went back to Virginia.
So when,
one thing I was thinking about when you were talking about that police officer that like
basically taught,
you a lesson was cool to you.
I was thinking about when you were,
you know, when I was a new guy.
And look, I was about as, you know,
new guys, a new guy could get.
Dude, I was freaking 20 years old and,
and, you know, young, dumb and full of motivation, as they say.
Oh, yeah.
And what I remember about you, though, is like, you wouldn't,
you weren't like, um, you were, you were trying to like help,
help us new guys be better.
You weren't just like, shut, you know, you said,
hey, let me show you to do this.
Hey, here's something to think about.
you you were you were truly like again you didn't use the word mentor but you were actually trying to get us good at being frogman not you weren't just hammer beating the shit out of us and being an asshole and there's plenty guys like that too you know um but yeah you were you were always like trying to help us and i think that makes a big difference i think it took me a while to find that for myself because i know i was a little bit of an asshole uh by the time i was in myself
second and third platoon, you know, myself and my runmates and a bunch of guys that were in that
platoon with us. You know, we, we were definitely hard, probably too hard on some of the guys.
But, you know, as I got a little bit older, I realized, oh, yeah, if you want these guys to be good
seals, you should be helping them. And you want to have a good relationship with the dudes, you know,
you don't want them to be mad about coming to work and you don't want them to not be able to come to you
and say, hey, how do I do this because they're scared they're going to get beat down.
Matter of fact, I remember one time, I forget, well, no, we were doing, we were doing shipboarding, just training.
And one of the other older guys started making a scene about some shit he's yelling.
And you were just like, shut the fuck up, man.
You don't know what you're talking about.
It was funny because you defended, it was actually me.
You were actually literally defending me to another guy because, you know, I had done something.
And, you know, what I did what I thought was right.
And you thought what I did was right too.
And this other guy didn't think it was right.
And he was having to go with me.
And what am I going to say?
I'm not going to say shit.
I'm going to say, Roger that.
But then you stepped in and I was like, Doug, dog, he just put out the word right there.
He's looking out for his boy over here.
Yeah.
Well, that's part of being a platoon, right?
We take care of each other.
But if we see somebody, you know, they always said, what, we're only as fast as our slowest man, right?
So we always had to work to make sure that slowest man understood.
Yeah.
He had to perform, right?
You've got to get up here, right?
You're slowing down this whole train, right?
Yeah, that's, that's wild.
Just how, how that, how platoons come together
and how you just so damn,
you're so engaged in being in a platoon.
You know, it's just such an awesome place to be
and you're trying to do a good job.
And it doesn't matter where you are.
I mean, I went everything from the new guy
to the platoon commander to tasking the commander,
it doesn't matter.
Like, you're still trying to do the best
you can possibly do that whole freaking time.
And, you know, we were talking here before to show about your reputation.
And I think there's no place like the seal teams when it comes to you are graded on your reputation, right?
Especially when you come, when it comes time for you to get orders and you go to another seal team,
all those people at that seal team want to know.
Yep.
Can he pull his weight?
Right.
And they get plenty of up.
They get plenty of intel, right?
It's just word of mouth, right?
Your reputation is going to precede you and you, you know, it's just very important.
And it's the same in business, right?
It's the same in business life as we transition out of the military.
Your reputation speaks for itself, right?
So, you know.
Yeah.
And we had like that platoon that we were in, dude, I mean, we was a pretty wild platoon.
We had some wild dudes in there.
I mean, I was wild as hell.
I'm actually
I would say I got wild as hell
because I wasn't old enough to drink
when I got in there
I was like a kid
and then we went on deployment
and it was interesting
because you mentioned
that the Philippines had shut down
so we were the first platoon
to deploy straight to Guam
like we didn't
because I think the platoons
before us deployed to the Philippines
and then they left and went to Guam
we deployed straight to Guam
and there was a lot of people look
the Philippines was like a great place
for guys to go
and a lot of guys love the Philippines
and guys would get stationed there
and they do multiple deployments over there
and we got sent straight to Guam
and there was a lot of people that were pissed
you know like they didn't want to be in Guam
they wanted to go to the Philippines
I didn't know any better
and some of the other old guys
like from other platoons or other teams
you know they're so mad
like they were literally mad like okay
I believe we're here this sucks
meanwhile Guam is like a tropical
paradise island there's surfing
there's a sick gym
there's there's you're getting per diem there's like you know we're young there's bars to go and
there's women there it's like kind of an awesome place then and so I'm like some of the older guys
from some of the other guys were mad I'd be like walking out with my roommate we'd be like walking out
and they'd be like you know where are you guys going going out they're like oh this place sucks
and I'm like okay if you're setting in the barracks right if you're sitting in the barracks it does
yeah that sucks remember they got the blue hole
there too, right? Remember the diving?
Blue hole, that place. That's unbelievable.
Yeah, this blue hole, like,
you can swim down to it at 65 feet.
I remember we had a, one of the
officers that worked there was like a
swim guy from the Naval Academy.
And so we all went out to the blue hole
and he swam down to the top of the blue hole
which was 65 feet and he just like sat
on the edge of it and looked up and waved
and then came back up, you know, all chill.
So I was like, of course, like, oh, now I got to
do this, right? It brought him.
That's deep.
I tried to try as hard as I could to look how.
Well, you know, you look down that hole and it looks like something that is like a laser cut, a circle.
I mean, it looked like a drum, right?
And it had that arch on the front of it.
And then it opened up to the ocean.
But on the other, when you got down to that bottom, it's 150, I think, about 150 feet down.
We did a bounce dive down there.
You can climb over the edge and look down.
And that's all you had time to do because you have to go back up, right, on your stops going back up to atmosphere, 66 and,
33 but when we were down there I climbed out over the edge of that clip and looked down that's
marianus trench like 30,000 that water went navy blue to black yeah that was just that was
scary that was a little scary so that's guam like you got all this cool stuff going on and and we did
we did like one trip as a platoon and then we didn't do any more trips and that was very early in our
deployment and so then we were just in guam so like we'd go shooting but
but you can only, like, there's only so much stuff that you can do.
You run through all your ammo.
Now what are you going to do?
Okay, we'll go jumping.
Cool.
There's no helicopters.
Like at a certain point, there's only so much you can do.
And then what are you going to do?
Well, you're a bunch of, bunch of freaking frog band hanging out at Tumom Bay.
Yeah, there's beaches.
They bars on the beach, which is, you know, that's not a good ingredients for seals when he cuts loose.
It's either not a good ingredients or it's the best ingredients when you're 21 years old or 20,
years old. And so that's what we were doing. And that's where you met your wife.
I met Lisa on the beach down at, you know, the beach would always go to, right? And, you know,
she was down here throwing football, you know, with this other girl, I think, she was, she was
stationed on the submarine tender. So her and Lisa hang, that's when Lisa goes, well, who's
seals? You know, what, and the girl goes, well, the seals are here.
And Lisa's like looking around going, where are they at?
I don't see any in the water, right?
She goes, no, no, no.
I'm talking about the Navy Seals.
These guys, they always, you know, would take over.
So as we hit the beach, you would plant a flag and go, this is it.
And I remember when you met Lisa just how, dude, you were hook, line, and sinker.
You were done training, bro.
It was game over for you.
And she was, because she was a knockout and she was a, you know, we all knew immediately
she was a Seattle Seahawks cheerleader and she was a badass chick and all of a sudden dog
he's just he's just freaking hook line and sinker dog gone dog gone oh classic stuff yeah yeah that was
that was something else met met Lisa and I remember I ended up as we left of course Lisa went back
to Seattle after our deployment finished I think it was in July because I remember having the July
the fourth twice, right? And then, of course, Lisa was pregnant, so she went home off the work
site. She's working with her two brothers who were doing stucco work in Guam. They had contracts
on both the commercial side, and then they're looking at getting some Navy housing contracts.
So they were full-on busy. And so Lisa went back. I ended up flying back from Guam as we went
back to Seal Team One. And I remember it was crazy because we flew across the dateline, right? So we
celebrated the 4th of July in Guam.
I went back to San Diego and did it again.
Let's do it again.
Do Fourth of July one more time.
But we got married shortly after that,
and then that's when I got orders to go to Deb Group.
Lisa and Lisa's dad and I drove our forerunner,
and we had a Nissan Pathfinder.
Lisa had that over there.
So we drove that bad boy across country in a U-Haul.
And then we were pulling one.
vehicle and we'd drive the you know the forer and so what now it's like 1993 94 94 i checked in at
dev group uh january of 94 and and you you had already screened for that i guess prior to us going
on deployment so now you're out there going through selection um in 94 and how was selection
oh it was another there's another kick in a jimmy right just like anything else right and as soon as you
Thank you.
You got to a point, you know, I was a HM2 at the time.
Check in the damn like the same thing, you know, shut your mouth.
You guys are, we're supposed to be door kickers, right?
They brought in, I think there's 22 of us, 21.
And we all check in and when Master Chief came up in the classroom, he says,
guys, so I got good news and bad news.
And we're like, what's that?
And he goes, good news is you're at this command, you know, tier one command.
He goes, bad news is you're not going to be door kickers, you're going to boats.
so we went we were the first time that they'd pushed that many seals in the gray team right into the gray team where we have the 40 foot you know eight sacks go fast boats and uh they asked the question at the at the screen you know at the interview they said uh you like boats i mean what are you going to tell them i don't like boats yeah because you don't like boats guess what you're not you're not going to get ordered you know you're not going to get orders so uh i just but i really did i really liked boats and uh had a great time and those boats
And then they sent us all to Florida for a two-week course U.S. Coast Guard captain license.
That's awesome.
So we were all U.S. Coast Guard 100 tonne near coastal captain license, which is pretty awesome.
You know, it's a great certificate to have.
But yeah, that was it.
You know, I left the West Coast and went out there and I ended up finishing my whole career, you know, on the East Coast.
And in the 90s, again, it's like pre-9-11.
And what was the, like, what were you guys doing?
You guys were doing, uh, didn't you guys do stuff for Bush up in, up in Maine, up in
Kenny Monk?
Yeah, we did the, I did that three times.
When I was at trade at, we would go up there for basically, we were the water protection for
the president as he fished, right?
They were fishing off the coast up there in Kenny Buttport, Maine.
And his dad, 41, had a house on Walker's Point.
And we would go over to the house.
every day. They had these segways. They just came out, these segways. And they were riding these
segways around. And I remember the president, you know, 41. He came out, George Ais, and he goes,
guys, he said, I want you to ride these segways. I just got this as my birthday gift. And he says,
you guys can ride them around. He said, just don't hit the beast. And I'm thinking, what,
what's that? The beast? And he goes, yeah, that armored, the armored Cadillac, right?
Yeah. President's car. And we're like, Roger that, sir. We won't, we won't hit the beast.
So we were doing that, but we were mainly up there just to be protection as he was fishing with his dad, right?
So we had two presidents, we had 41, 43, and we would jock up in the boats.
We had pelican cases.
We had rifles and boats.
We had 60 guns in the zodiacs.
And I remember we're having a discussion, right?
So I'm up there as a master chief, and we got these two-way walkie-talkie.
He was just talking back and forth.
And I'm on the Secret Services.
They had a rib boat out there.
It's about a 45-foot boat.
but it was it couldn't keep up with the with the Bush's fishing boat because they had a they had a
fountain boat so that fountain boat was about a 36 footer and he had like three big time engines
on the back of it right and they would take off and I'd be on the the rib and I told the guy I said
doesn't make any sense you guys need to he said well we you know we'd like to have the hard boats
up here you know but damn that was no we're not bringing hard boats up to run around with the
president he's fishing but so we did the best we could and I remember that
They had a wedding on the peninsula.
So everybody was driving from Walker's Point over to this peninsula for the wedding rehearsal.
And we're all, we had the peninsula basically surrounded 180 security ring about a mile off the coast.
And we're just out there.
We had our weapons with us and we're just watching for anybody that would possibly break through the perimeter and get onto the rocks and climb up to interrupt or, you know, harm anybody.
So we were on the radio and remember the, this was 43, George W.
was in the car with his primary guy, right?
He's got the guy that's his pocket man.
And he was listening there to our chatter too
as we were talking around, you know, the perimeter.
And one of the guys in the Zodiac who was up against the rocks
who was, you know, near shore, he basically said,
hey, hey, dog, if one of the high-speed boat comes,
what do you want me to do?
And I go, well, you got a weapon.
I go, smoke it.
And when I said smoke it, of course, I didn't realize this,
but they picked it up.
in the beast, right, inside the president's car.
And George W.
looked over at the Secret Surgery guy and he goes,
you hear that?
Those seals are going to smoke something.
You know, he said, that's why those seals are up here, right?
He said, I feel safe.
But it was funny, you know.
But he asked me later, he said, which one of you said, smoke them?
And I went, yeah, that was me.
He said, that was a good answer, by the way.
He said, the president really loved that.
That's good commander's intent right there.
Dude, when I was, so my dad worked in a, in, I'm from New England, and my dad worked in a, in a camp, a summer camp in Kenny Bunk.
And so when I was a little kid, uh, vice president Bush was, you know, he did be the same thing.
Like we'd see the secret service up there.
And he gave a speech in, you know, the little town of Kenny Bunk, little Kenny Bunk, right?
Yeah.
He gave a speech in that little square.
And my dad took me.
And we had one of those little.
disposable cameras.
And my dad says, hey, you know, get a picture of him.
And there's a real big crowd.
And I said, okay.
And I said, well, I really can't see him.
And I climbed up on this window sill.
And so now I'm probably like, I don't know what the math is, but I'm probably eight, nine years old, something like that.
I had some kind of camera.
Anyways, I get up on this window cell.
So now I can see above the crowd.
And I have a really good view.
And Vice President Bush is up there.
And I'm a punk-ass kid.
And so I go, and it's, everyone's quiet listening to him.
And I go, hey, George, and I shit you not.
He like stops, looks over at me and I took a picture of him.
And my dad's freaking ganging me down.
You freaking disrespectful little idiot.
What the hell's wrong with you?
So, yeah, there you go.
That's my, that's my George Bush senior.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm surprised the Secret Service didn't freaking smoke me.
Oh, yeah.
You probably had a red dot on your chest and didn't know it.
Yeah.
And so you spend these years, it's like, so where are you when September 11th happens?
September 11th, we were at the command and we're in a classroom.
I can remember it like it's yesterday, right, like the space shuttle blowing up.
You know exactly where you were at and what you were doing when that tragic hit.
But when 9-11 hit, I was in a classroom where we were doing public speaking with an outside contractor.
And the guys flew into the room and said, hey, you guys have got to watch the TV.
so we went into the operational side where they had the big screens up and we could actually see the airplanes flying into the second tower I believe at that point and it was like looking at something like what what is this is this a movie I mean what you know doctored movie or what what's going on and then we you know sadly come to the realization that it was real and that both of those buildings were struck by airplanes and then the other one that went after the Pentagon I think hit the Pentagon and then they say the one that went down in the field and
and PA was targeted for the White House, right?
It was going to hit, I mean, it was just really bad.
And, of course, we went straight through the ceiling
as far as spin-up goes, and we kicked all the contractors
had to leave and all of that.
And we got, went on lockdown,
and then we started getting briefs right away.
And I think we had boots on the ground within probably two weeks,
you know, in Afghanistan when that went down.
And where were you in the Awe?
Well, I was still gold, right?
That was Gold Team.
So we were second, we were standby, right?
So they sent, I think it was Blue Team initially went out the door for that mission to hunt these guys down.
And we were just on standby to standby, right?
We already had everything off our bag for pack.
We're the flyaway package, right?
So we could go anywhere at any time.
But yeah, that's where it was at.
And yeah.
And then how long until you rolled out?
after blue came back then they sent red and then of course I you know I was gold but the feather
that I had in my hat was I was a Corman right I was a medic and at the time you know because I went
through independent duty Corman school which is a year long school over in Portsmouth the master
chief at damn like said hey all of you guys because they shut down the goat lab down at Fort Bragg
they rebuilt it so it was shut down for a year so during that year he looked at us and you guys
are all going independent duty corpsman school over in Portsman
then you're going to thank me later.
And we're like looking at him going,
because you know, you have to wear uniforms every day.
And we had fleet instructors, and they were hammering us.
So that was one year-long school, right?
Damn.
It was, but it, but it, like the Master Chief said,
I made, I made Chief first time, senior chief first time,
but not just because I was,
Independent Duty Corman had combat experience.
It was because of the, the way that,
went was you know you go to promotion boards right and they rank in rack and stack your you know
as far as score but a part of that being promoted too is you need to be in a position of leadership right
you know i was in a position as a leadership every time so it just worked out for me to get that
chief's job and then to get the senior chief job and then for master chief that's when i went over
to training command uh you know debt east coast you know trade debt and that's when i made picked up master
Chief, you know, the first time. But as I look back at the career, it was because I was in those
positions of leadership that helped me to get promoted. And also been to three promotion boards,
right? As a Master Chief setting on a promotion board, you really appreciate the process that we go
through. Reading records, I mean, we show up at 7.30 in the morning and we don't stop until five.
I mean, this all day long looking at a computer screen, reading people's records, right? Because
if I'm grading out Jocko, I'm looking five years behind you.
And then it brings me all the way to the point where you're up for promotion,
and we have to make the decision.
And we rack and stack it, and the computer does it for us.
After we grade you paper, you have five master chiefs and an officer on the board,
and probably seven of us total.
And then once we rack and stack you, the computer does the math for us,
and it builds a ladder.
It builds a ladder, and you get to the final part, say we've got 80 chiefs to promote.
we get down to 79s, 80, 81.
Then they start asking questions like,
well, why isn't Canada 81, not 80?
And why are you going to stop at 80 and promote 80 chiefs
or promote 40 senior chiefs or the numbers go down right as you go up?
And why is, you know, you're promoting 20 master chiefs.
How do you do that?
And then we have to stop what we're doing.
After we build a ladder out, we've got our top 20.
Now they start asking questions.
How about number eight?
18. Is 18 better than 20? It's 20 better. So it just goes back and forth. But as we build a ladder,
that ladder stands on it. So on, right? We've already did the work. We did the hard work of
ranking them, racking and stacking them. And then it's all that. But that's just another
education as you move into the leadership side of your career. You get opportunities to do that. And we
call that doing big Navy work because it is, right? Because we have to go down and we get to meet
a lot of good people, you know, good master chiefs and officers who, who is basically
taken, I think it's about a two-week process, but, I mean, two weeks, and you're in that,
you're in that office every day.
Just, just, and my pencils, I got number two pencils.
I actually kept them as trophies.
Now I've got them about two inches long with a little eraser on them.
I go, that right there, that's the pain.
That's administrative pain doing that job, right?
Yeah.
So it was, it was quite the experience.
So I was, you know, you were mentioning, you go on this deployment, I always tell people,
Like I was in the SEAL teams for 13 years before I actually shot my weapon at the enemy because I came in in 1990 and it wasn't until 2003.
So for you, it's even longer.
And you, you, what was it like?
Like, okay, now you're going to Afghanistan for the first time.
And by the way, the other interesting thing is, and I've thought about this a lot.
Like, no one had combat experience at this time.
Like, very, very, there were some people that did some snatches in Bosnia.
There's a couple people that did some stuff in Somalia.
maybe some leftover guys from either Panama or Grenada,
but broadly speaking,
you could be in a seal platoon
that had no one that had ever been in combat before.
And it was, that's not,
well, we all pray for peace, maybe,
but it's not great to have a unit
where people don't have combat
and they're supposed to be combat warriors.
So what was that like for you?
Well, you know, I did grow up, you know,
at Silt Team 1,
we didn't have anything going on as far as being in the arena, right, being a gladiator
or being shot at or engaging the enemy.
So when I went to Dev Group, I was there for about six months and then we got spun up for Haiti.
Remember the Haiti mission that went down?
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
We were going to go down and it was going to be heavy, right, because they had us on board
to USS America aircraft carrier at the time.
and that was the first time ever in Navy history
that they had an aircraft carrier solely dedicated for special ops.
They had gold team was on there.
We had red team and blue team.
I mean, this thing was loaded down with Tier 1 operators.
We had our Humvee, our mobility package on there.
We had the boats on there.
We had TF160 aircrafts on there.
We had Army Ranger Battalion on there.
I mean, this whole thing, but you couldn't look anywhere.
That's what happened.
You don't have war for freaking 20 years.
Yeah.
Everybody had pain on, right?
And we moved all the way to the part where we were test firing our weapons on the elevator of this aircraft carrier.
We had to hum Vs.
We was going to sling them with 47s side by side.
I remember we had boat fenders in between the vehicles, and they were going to hoist them up with these Kevlar straps and drop us off.
And the mission was fairly clear, right?
Hit the deck, assimilate ourselves.
Little birds come over.
We had a gunship up.
and then we had Black Hawk coming in with guns, right, guns on.
And we were going to roll straight from the pad that we're going to be dropped off on
straight to the president's palace.
And we're going to kill anybody that give us any resistance.
They had a weapon, basically drop them, right?
So we were going to do that.
But right at the last minute, after we'd already test fired and everybody looked at each other,
and we're ready.
And we're going up the elevator, actually, to come up and link up with the helicopter chalk.
And all of a sudden, we got to call to us.
stand down. And we're all looking at each other like, what? What's going on? And come find out.
It was President Carter and Colin Powell, who called the Haitian government at the time and says,
I want you to look outside your window. You see that aircraft carrier sitting out there.
And they went, yes, sir. Well, and he says, the 13 or 16 aircraft C-130s just left Fort Bragg
with 80-second airborne. And he said, in about two hours time, you're going to have to be.
have 80 second airborne dropping in and then you're going to have tier one forces on your back
door and we're not coming down there to eat MREs right so that was the deal but they shut it they
shut it down we immediately reconciledated we held out there for about a week I believe they sent us
back to the beach to stand up the package right there our blowout package but the rest of it one
of the teams stayed on that carrier and they rode the carrier home because it still could
have went sideways right and we'd had to go back in anyway
But it didn't.
The government kept it a word.
But, you know, Haiti's just a bad place.
And then, but so that's really the closest you got prior to 9-11?
No, yep.
Other than test firing our weapons, we didn't see anything with that.
And then when 9-11 hit, that's when we rolled over and took Blue Teams spot.
And it was 100 days.
I think we did 100 days in the theater.
But it was busy.
So, you know, I got on, I remember sending back a high-side email to my buddies back at the Gold Team.
And I said, hey, life is good on two-way rifle range.
Because really, that was the first time I'd been shot at, you know, doing these missions, you know, because they would, they would hear the helicopters coming in and they would run.
So we would have to chase the squatters.
And we were on the outside, you know, great team.
They used us for outside security.
assault force would blow the walls, the doby walls, and then they would go inside and looking
for this deck of cards of people we were looking for, the bomb makers and the bad guys.
So the outside, we got busy outside, right?
We had some squatters running around, trying to contact us, so we would light them up.
Then we had a gunship above us.
What a predator, I mean, the sky was stacked up, right?
Fast movers up top.
But that kind of opens your eyes to all of the training that we do in a SEAL team.
It's really amazing because we, when I hit the ground, when I rolled out of the back of the helicopter,
I picked up a position on my knee and there were two guys, I mean, fairly close, right, running away from me.
And I could tell one of them had a weapon, but I had an opportunity there to shoot somebody.
But I'm like, I'm not going to shoot a man in the back, right?
He could be a farmer, he could be a doctor.
Who knows, right, who he is.
It ended up being two bad guys because as we pulled back the security and perimeter around the house that was a target,
these two knuckleheads that I think I saw running away from us,
but we had nods, and I'm looking at them,
and there, all of a sudden I hear this snapping sound,
and I look up at one of my guys were standing up,
and I went, hey, you might want to take a knee,
or get some dirt on your chest,
because we've got incoming, and he looked over at me,
we're wearing Peltors, right, headsets,
but I could hear it clears day.
And I go, hit the deck, knucklehead.
So he gets down, and we back in,
I get into a ravine and I start engaging the target that was, you know,
because I knew exactly where they went to.
So I start lighting him up.
And then I call Cass.
I call our CCTV guy.
And he goes, he said, what's you got, dog?
And I went, hey, we got incoming over here.
These guys were in a ravine.
They must have went to their cachet and they're shooting back on the target.
And he goes, standby.
And he had hammer, you know, the gun ship upstairs.
And all of a sudden you saw all this, all this heavy.
I think they were 105 rounds.
Damn.
Straight to the 105.
They're coming down.
We're doing it.
It's early in the war, bro.
We get that chance to clear out those 105s.
It's calling in hot, boy.
105s and 40 Mike Mike.
Oh, hell yeah.
They were doing, then you could hear the minigun too.
It would wind up.
But that we never had anymore.
Those gentlemen were out of business.
They were out of business.
They closed their gun shop up.
But what I think the point was I was trying to make is, is all the training that we do
through our careers, you know, you don't want to ever, you know,
know, pray for war or run to war because when you get there, you know, you have the training
to be as calm and, I mean, I felt, I felt totally calm. Our technology with our weapon systems,
our lasers, our nods, and the way we communicate with each other, it's just unbelievable.
The type of lethality that we bring to the battlefield when we're fighting these guys who may be
farmers, they don't know how to shoot that well. And it's just a, it's a smoke show for us, right,
because we don't miss much.
You know, if we do miss, we miss small.
But it's just good to feel, though, right?
All the training that you've done,
it's like these football players that train and train and train
and never get to the Super Bowl.
But when they step on that Super Bowl field,
you don't want them to totally clam up on you, right?
You want them to be able to do their job.
And we did our job, right?
And every mission was different,
and I know you know this,
but you just have confidence in yourself.
And, you know, they say the performance,
or, you know, the tier one guys or, you know, where you were at in your career,
we see things slow, slows down for us.
Even though it may be chaotic as shit, people shooting RPGs and shit blowing up all over the
place, it just seemed like you can just, you know, we can take a wrap off, take a step back,
look at what's going on, make a call.
Yeah.
That's right.
That's right.
And it is because, I mean, even something going all the way back to like Hellweek,
there's freaking total chaos.
going on and like you have to learn to process what's going on and what to block out and get that
little portion of the job that you got to do which is you know moving camlights or you know moving
the boat over here you got to learn how to focus and get that thing done and then yeah you just get
fast forwarded that gets expanded on as you go through training you go through workup you know it's the same
thing that's going on in workup you know you got freaking explosions the trade act guys are putting gas bombs
all over the place there's artillery sims going off and they're down men and it's
It's total chaos and you learn to, okay, cool, what I got to do now.
Well, you know, getting back, and I want to say this real quick before we get going.
And we mentioned our wives.
I just want to put a thank you out to my wife, Lisa, who stuck by my side during all these deployments, you know.
And I remember like it was yesterday when I got the call that I was going to go with Red Team, right, you know, when the master chief said, hey, you know, dog, I want you to be an E5.
I'm like, hey, that's a good, that's good.
I like that.
I like being a good E5 because that means the leadership is taken away from you.
I just need to be a 60 gunner or a sniper or a medic all the time, of course,
but I'm going to go do that and won't do it well.
But my wife took me to the gates at the command before we were flying over to Afghanistan.
And she just kind of looked up at me.
She goes, I'm proud of you.
And I kind of looked at her, and I'm like, I'm proud of me for,
And she says, no, I'm proud because you're volunteering to go do this because you think you need to go validate yourself or whatever.
But she says, I'm very proud of you.
She says, don't worry about anything back here.
I've got this, right?
She's got the compound, right?
The home.
And I call her, she's in my phone, Homeland Admiral.
So when I call my wife, that's her basically in my, in my, you know, my phone, she's a homeland Admiral.
Yeah.
And she's really been a good one, you know, for that.
but uh yeah that's that's uh definitely you know i when when i would be on deployment you know
whatever was happening at home broken water heater flat tires kids getting in trouble kids sick what you just
you know uh any problem that was going on my wife never told me about it like it was just how's everything
she know i'd ask her everything's always everything's great you know there ain't no way you got three
freaking toddlers in a house in a 900 square foot house whatever that was built in 1940
And everything's great.
Like that ain't happening.
Like it's just zero chance.
But it's,
but you know,
um,
Bravo Zulu,
good job for them to be able to allow us to step away.
Yeah.
And not have to worry,
because you don't need to worry about that stuff.
No,
we got enough on.
I mean,
I've had that,
I've had that situation,
I was over in the Philippines on a deployment.
And I was walking home from,
uh,
being outside the gate.
And I came up to the backside stairwell and I walk up and I hear somebody
chattering.
And this is like two in the morning, right?
And I hear somebody chattering.
So I walk.
into the laundry room that we had there at the barracks and here was one of our sailors,
SIL Team One Sailor, underneath a blanket talking on a phone and he was crying,
oh, I won't do that again. I just want to be with you, blah, blah. And he was going on and on and
on. And I'm like, dude, you can't do this. You can't do this. And he, he ran up like a $4,000
phone bill. That was back in the day. That our command had to engage. We had to engage in that
and pay that. Of course, he ended up having to pay, right? He paid, he paid his piece. $4,000.
her phone bill from talking from Philippines back to San Diego to his girlfriend or his wife.
And I'm like, dude, you can't do that.
You need to be locked in of what we're doing over here.
You can't just tell her you love her.
We'll be home in five months or whatever it was.
You can't get rolled into that.
And I think he learned a lesson with that.
Yeah, I think it's real important that like your, you know, your wife doesn't get jealous of the team of the platoon.
Because, you know, it's hard, you know, like here you are.
you marry a girl and then you go yeah by the way I'm married to you but I'm
spending all my time with these dudes over here exactly and when you call I might
answer when they call I will answer like when your work calls you're you answer the phone
if your wife if you're out work and your wife calls you may not be able to answer it so
yeah they're they got to have a a certain level of emotional independence and also just like
being a a stable person confident person that knows okay well you know you do what you got to do
and I'll be over here doing, I got the home front on lockdown.
Exactly.
And that just gives us the ability to just totally focus on what our mission is
because any given night, right, we step out the door.
We don't know if we're, but you know, that never crossed.
I wouldn't let that doubt in my mind at all.
I'm just like, hey, let's go kick ass on Target and let's come home and repeat, right?
Get the intel, go back out.
Find it, fix it, finish, right?
And we're the finisher.
So we got to get back out there.
So.
And then what did you do after after you got back from that deployment?
I got back after that deployment.
Basically, I already strapped in with orders, right?
So I ended up having to execute those orders to trade at.
Okay, so you went to trade it out.
Because back then it was like, look, we've got to get these tier one guys to come out of the tier one because I was already there for eight years.
So it's time to start rolling some of this subject matter expertise that we have.
And fortunately for me, I got that 100 days on the ground running operations and combat.
experience to go now teach the young seals and I was the senior chief in charge of assaults.
Perfect.
So assaults was CQC and military operations urban terrain.
We did a little VBSS, but that wasn't, VBSS wasn't my deal.
And we weren't focused on it too much at the time.
No.
Because then once that kicked off, it was like it was on.
Boots on a ground.
And would you, you know, I always found, I was real lucky because I was at team one,
I got to work in training cell.
And I found that I learned so much when I was in training cell,
number one, because you're teaching it.
And number two, because you're watching it
and you're getting to see like what a bad leader does,
what a good leader does, what a bad chief does,
what a good chief does.
And you start going, oh, okay,
I don't want to do what that guy just did
because that didn't work out too well.
But I see that this guy over here is doing it well.
Did you find that being in that instructor mode
running those trips, you just get better and better?
You do.
I mean, I think you just kind of hit the,
nail on the head. You know, when you're an instructor, you're teaching, right? And they send us
through, I went through Navy instructor school, right? And then I was a master, master trainer.
Oh, yeah, MTS. Yeah, MTS. Yes. MTS, right. So I got that. But, but you, but you're right,
when you're teaching something, I was, I was, uh, you know, I went through sniper school.
Then I went through, I was a sniper instructor. But when you're a sniper instructor, you really get to
take, because you, you know what the stresses are, the stresses with the crawls. You have to do,
the stalking, the shooting. The shooting.
aspect of it. And you're there to help people, right? You're, you know, watching people and,
you know, lots of times we have these civilian shooters come in and teach us. And, uh, but we're
just passing out information on, right? But, you know, from, from our standpoint, we're just
trying to make sure, looking into a person go, hey, does he have the field crafts? This, the, this,
the, it's a good shooter. But now can he take that being a good shooter and move into the stalking
side of the house, which means you've got to learn how you can basically crawl to a target within
300 yards or meters and then be able to make the shot, right, without getting caught.
And we're looking at you through a spotting scope.
So even with the gilly suits on and stuff, you get rolled out on a pool table.
We used to call it pool table because you'd get out on a piece of ground that was, you didn't
have any vegetation.
So you look like a polar bear basically climbing across a flat deck with a gilly suit.
on right we're going to catch you right we see you so we get to walkers over there pat you on the
head and go hey you got to do better than that so we'd send them back to restart but it's all time too
right you only have like three hours to make the shot so yeah that was fun that seal sniper school
is no joke that's that's a freaking great school yeah uh and then as you're running as you're
running at what's going on with your career did you make master chief when you got through you said i did
I made, once I checked in that trade ed, I was a senior chief in charge of assault sales.
So I had a warrant officer that was working with me and we got another chief from Damnack to come over and help.
But yeah, but, you know, checking that block being at senior chief for that training command, you know, being a trainer is another, you know, avenue that you need to really come off the seal team, right?
Quit being an E5 shooter and go do some of these jobs that we need you to go do.
Right. And then when you do those jobs, though, you get rewarded for it. And that's when, you know, I made Master Chief.
And then, you know, then I got selected to go to the command Master Chief Cobb training course up in Rhode Island.
How long is that?
That's about, I don't know whether it's two to six weeks. But it's where you learn all the resources that the Big Navy has. For you to be a Command Master Chief, you know, you have to be able to deal with these young sailors and their families.
you've got to get them resources like through the Navy College.
They got all these grants out there that you can help people with.
All the plethora of reasons why a sailor would come offline,
you know, whether it's self-generated or what.
They give us the resources to help with that.
And then, of course, for us, we're very fortunate because we got the Navy SEAL Foundation
who also has a whole lot of resources that they can throw at problems.
Yeah, no doubt.
And so you go to that school and then you go to SEAL Team 4 and now you're the command master chief, which for anybody that doesn't know what that is at a SEAL team, that's basically the free, that's basically God.
Like when you're a young SEAL and that command master chief, that's the senior enlisted guy.
He's the guy that has all the clout, has all the experience.
And he's the, he's a senior advisor to the commanding officer.
and he's really driving the enlisted troops.
He's making sure that the right enlisted guys are platoon chiefs.
He's making sure the right enlisted guys are leading penny officers.
When there's problems, he's the guy that sorts the freaking problems out.
He's the guy that's getting the phone call from the police.
He's the guy that's getting the phone call from the girlfriends, from the wives.
He's the guy that's making things happen.
And that's got to be pretty heavy weight when you're rolling into that position.
It is, you know, because you're selected by the other master chiefs.
that, you know, at the group level and Warcom, of course, you know, our top, our force master chief.
So they take that very seriously when they assign a master chief to be a command master chief.
That means you have to go to the command master chief.
Cobb, Cobb stands for chief of the boat.
So that's the cob.
Those guys go to be cobs of submarines, right?
So that's where you get to CMC Cobb.
But it's a great course.
And the cop on a submarine, same thing.
Like that dude's a god when you go on a freaking.
He's got a lot of experience.
But, yeah, as you step into that position,
and I stepped into it a little bit early
because I actually went down range with SIL Team 4
when they were in Iraq,
and we were doing that PSD mission, right?
So I was kind of a backup.
I was incoming.
I was the incoming CMC,
and they already had a CMC at 4, of course.
And then all I did it on that deployment was,
I had another Master Chief with me
and an officer who was a force protection,
officer. We were going around all of these ministers, houses where they put their heads down,
but we have protection on them 24-7. And by ministers, you mean the Irish. So this is the time
where the seals were in charge of protecting the senior political class, the senior political
appointees and officials of Iraq at the time. I think we had eight of them. Yes. And these guys
had to go to bed at night. And so you were at that point when you were, at that point, when you were
over there, you were checking out where they were living and sleeping and getting their
areas secured.
You know back and back earlier on, they, they tasked that with the State Department.
The State Department did a quick assessment and turned around and kicked it back to the DOD
and said, hey, we can't do this mission.
We don't have the skill sets.
We have armored cars.
We got a lot of resources, but we don't have the people that can do this mission.
Yeah, I heard that I don't know if this is true enough, but I also heard they like put it
out for contract and Blackwater came back and said like, oh, it's going to be $12 billion or
something like that. And the state department said, we got a cheaper solution? And someone said,
how about the freaking seal teams? You know, they've been doing so, so much with so little for so long,
they can probably figure this shit out. And that's what we did. We fit right in. And I remember
the day that I went back over as far as being a master chief of seal team four, we still had
that mission. And we got a Black Hawk inbound. And it was McChrystal, you know, general with his
Sergeant Major
Jody.
So he walks up to him
and he goes,
hey dog,
how you doing?
And I go,
a good sergeant major.
And he goes,
tell you guys to lose
the sunglasses.
And I turn around,
look behind me,
you know,
and here's all the
seal platoon
standing out there
and they all
wearing the Oakley
sunglasses, right.
So I walk over
to them first hand,
and say, all right,
guys, lose the glasses.
And I had one guy,
go, why?
And I go,
this is not a good time
to ask me why.
I said,
just shit can of glasses
right now.
So that's when
McChrystal came
into our little
talk,
area there and briefed us on this and he said basically this is we can't afford to have a one
scratch on any of these eight individuals who have been selected as a cabinet of this new iraqi
government he says you guys have the toughest mission in the country just do it he said only
he said you got it for a reason he says take care of these people i'm going to give you the
resources to make it happen so we had a full uh platoon of umps military police with uh up armored um
V's. We had, you know, they had all the weapons on the top, the turrants. We also had two of the
helicopters were flying Cobra's and Apaches. So the Army and the Marine Corps would rotate week to
week on who was covering us when we moved, especially with the president, because the president
at the point at the time, he lived outside of the green zone down by the Tigris River. So we'd have
to take him through a gauntlet, winded up cutting trees down, down that lane. We got to
a lot of pushback on that, of course, environmentally speaking, right?
Because you don't, but the trees were bad, right, for us.
I mean, we had to drive too close to them.
They're in the middle of the media.
So we took those things down so we didn't have, you know, a person with up in a tree
with an RPG or whatever he wants to take up with him.
So that mission was so, so stressful because every three days, I would go into the
platoons and say, hey, I want three of your guys to come out.
So I'd bring three of them out and I'd rotate it, right?
Every three or four days I'd pull three out, bring them back to just to let them breathe.
Let them have a beer and get some sleep and get out of kit, right?
Because they're wearing a kit every day, you know.
So get out of your kit, get in PT gear, have a beer, relax.
And then they'd relax for about 48 hours.
Then I'd bring them back in and bring them back out.
So I was mainly just dealing with that, right, just trying to keep the morale up because it was such a taxing.
You know, you think about it.
You know, you've got to wake these guys up and you've got to put them to bed.
Yeah.
Yeah, and plus you're on defense, which being on defense sucks, you know?
Yeah, it does.
A frogman wants to be on offense, wants to go out and do the kill and not the waiting
to get killed, which is what that job was.
That's right.
And, you know, for them, they got to be right once, right?
Yep.
We have to be right 100% of the time, which is stressful, right?
I mean, it wears you out.
And it was amazing looking back that no, none of those Iraqi officials got killed.
and because they got killed before we took over some several of them were killed everybody wanted
to kill them for you soon he's wanted to kill them the shia wanted to kill them like there was
they were just like it was a it was a disaster way it happened they never happened yeah they had
a target on her backs for sure and uh did you guys take over for team one is that who you guys
took over for it may have been three okay it could have been team three in there but but yeah but the
second time i went back uh for the master chief job we're we're at biop right so we're bagdad
International Airport and we were doing a lot of anti because the skipper, my skipper had a lot of
connections and the outside organizations who were tracking the influence from Iran and Iraq, right?
They would come in with their proxies and create havoc and then jump back across.
So we were trying to mitigate that.
And that was kind of a, it was a crazy thing that we were doing, but lots of intel driven heavy.
so I would stay down at the camp
at Baghdad where the seal team was at
and then the skipper had to go up to up north
and run that Iranian influence thing
What year was that?
That was probably
2005, 2006.
That was my tour at being a command matcher.
I was here from 05-07.
Okay.
So that was right in that window.
You got some trying to
I'm trying to think of because I was I was in in 03 and 04 I was in Baghdad and then in
06 I was in Ramadi and I'm just trying to think of when you guys rotated through
because we were there with 10 when we were when we were when we were in Ramadi we were 10 when
I was at team seven there was no one else there yeah and eventually the East Coast guys
started rolling in but what was when you're the match chief any you know you got you got
you know you're handling the operational side what about just when
guys do dumb shit. What's that look like? Well, I got a good dumb shit story. When I was before I was
actually in the command master chief job at Siltim 4, I was over. Like I was saying, I was over early,
right? I was doing half of the deployment. Then I would come back and take Siltim 4 and I'd have to
rebuild the Manning of the platoons. But as I was at Baghdad, you know, over in Iraq, we had some
young seals that were living in a house that was outside the green zone, which means, you know,
It's not really all that protected, right?
They had some issues where they took a suburban, a white suburban, out for a joyride,
and they blew through a Army checkpoint, and they got lit up.
So that's not good, right?
That's blue on blue, basically.
But the question was, why was one of our vehicles being driven outside of the green zone
and was contacted?
It doesn't make any sense, right?
So I got assigned to be the investigator along.
I had an officer with me.
And I believe we had that force protection officer that was with us too, so there's three of us.
We drove out to the house.
And before we got to the house, we stopped at the gate where we had Tennessee National Guard guys protecting that green zone gate.
That was an in and out for that one cabinet member's house.
And I stopped and got out of the vehicle and I looked at these Tennessee National Guards.
I go, hey guys, did anything weird happen last night between 12 and 3 o'clock in the morning?
And they went, yes, Master Chief, we had a white suburban come through here last night,
but it looked like it had been contacted.
It was shot, had some bullet holes in the back of the vehicle.
And this was an armored, you know, suburban.
So we drive through the gate, we go down to the house, and I get all three of these young seals.
I think there was two from seal teams west coast, and then one of our guys,
a still team poor guy was there.
And I noticed we were walking around in the house
just kind of observing, right,
and see what kind of lifestyle they're living
and went over to the trash can
and looked down and we had Red Bull cans all over the place
and vodka bottles.
So I'm thinking, I guess this new generation
likes to drink Red Bull with vodka.
So that looked like what was going on.
And when I set them down, I said,
okay, guys, this is your one chance to tell the truth.
I want to know was this vehicle that's sitting outside right now with bullet holes in it,
was you guys driving outside the green zone last night and was contacted by anybody.
So what happened?
And they're like, well, I would think we heard some shots last night.
Maybe somebody shot our vehicle.
I'll go, so somebody shot your vehicle as it parked outside.
So that's what I'm hearing.
So they stuck with their guns.
They stuck with her story.
And I went, okay, guys, I'm getting ready to leave.
And I want you to make sure that you understand this is your one.
chance to tell the truth. And they all kind of shook her. Yeah, yes, master chief, yes,
Master Chief. I was like, okay, have a good day. So I was already building the story, right?
And it didn't look like it was lit up by a local somebody out there shooting, you know,
celebrating a wedding. So I go back, I'm driving back through the gate and I get a phone call.
And they go, hey, Master Chief, we want, you need to come back. We want to tell you something.
We want a second chance. We want a second chance. You remember to give us one chance? Can we get a
Can we get one more?
Can we do a rerun?
So I go back to the house and I walk in and we we sat there with them and I go, okay, so what's the story?
And they go, we were driving last night.
We were a little antsy.
We were getting bored.
And I'm like, no, this is not sounding good.
And we went out and drove and we went down this one road called Michigan Road and we turned left and we went back through a gate.
And we didn't know it was a gate.
We had some army guys jump up and they shot at the vehicle.
And we kept going.
So I said, you didn't try to decomplect as you pulled up.
on these people that were basically guarding the gate.
No match chief, we didn't do that.
So, of course, we wrap up the investigation, and sure enough, they did that, and we're
thinking, man, that was stupid.
So we ended up doing a DRB in Iraq, right?
So a DRB is a disciplinary review board, right?
So I was in charge of the board, and we had a guy, Seal Team 5, CMC was on the phone with me,
and we basically said you guys were done, right?
where you can't operate like this.
You're lucky to be alive or, you know, this is blue on blue, right?
This is unsat.
So we process, our Steel Team 4 guy, we process him out, get him out of country as soon as we can
within the next 24 hours.
He goes back to Virginia Beach.
He had temporary orders over to a ship that was setting in Norfolk.
It was a LPD out ship, right?
And I don't like doing that.
Yeah, but no, but I mean, dude, you can't look.
Yeah. So we pushed him over to this ship. And I don't, you know, me, you talked about earlier, Jock, I don't like passing trash. Usually if somebody messes up and if I have to get medieval with them and pull their tritin off their chest, I'm ad sep in them, right? I'm administratively separating you from the Navy. We can do that very quickly. What happens, I'll pull your trit off. The admin shop basically does the paperwork to shut down all your special pays. So basically you're, that's a shot to the heart, right? Career ender.
And you're out of the community, right?
You're out of the Navy SEALs.
So this guy went over to the ship.
I finished out my three or four months with the SEAL Team 4 that was downrange.
I come back to take my duties as a command master chief.
And I'm sitting at my desk.
I think it was a Friday.
I get a phone call.
And it's the master chief on the ship.
And he called me and he said, I've got one of your boys over here.
He's done great things for me.
He went on for about two minutes of telling me how good this person.
person was doing and how squared away he was. He was teaching force protection on the ship,
teaching them small arms, shotguns, all of this stuff. And I go, well, that's good to hear.
You know, I said, let me come over and have a cup of coffee with you and we can talk through this.
So I get over there to the ship and I'm sitting down and at the mess deck. We go in a cheese
mess and we were having a, having lunch. And right as we were finishing up with lunch, he says,
I'm bringing Jared down. And I go, yeah, please do. I'd like to like to see him. So
Jared comes down, you know, and he's got his dungarees on.
And you know how, you know how bad dad is.
Did he have his trite in or no?
Did you pull his trite in?
No, you know what?
He didn't have his trident on.
So he, he stood there and he said, hey, you know, Master Chief, it's good to see you.
I'm very sorry, you know, for what happened.
I just wish I could redo it and blah, blah, blah.
So I just kind of thought it looked at, I was looking at him up and down, right?
He had nice looking clean, pressed uniform on, conducted himself really well, spoke really well of what he's done to help the ship, you know, the sailors on the ship, you know, with their training and stuff for force protection.
And I go, okay, I looked at the master chief and I go, I really appreciate you giving me a phone call.
And that's part of being a master chief, right.
We have to make decisions.
Sometimes they're not good outcomes, but sometimes you've got to see somebody and look them in the eyes.
and understand where they're at in their life.
So I decided when I got back, I told Jared I go standby.
And the reason I told him to stand by was because the master chief had shared with me
that he was getting ready to detail the boat.
So when he says detail the boat, that means everybody on that vessel was going by-bye.
And when they do that, they're getting detailed to the knees of the Navy.
The Big Navy don't care about you.
They ain't got an employee.
They're going to send you to whatever billet they need you to fill.
It doesn't matter whether it's in Japan or Italy.
It doesn't matter, right?
So I understood the gravity of that.
So I went back to Steel Team 4.
I got on the phone with their detail.
I go, look, I need this individual detailed back to 4 ASAP.
So when you say ASAP and I'm talking to the guy that's got his fingers on a computer, they make it happen.
Right.
So I said he belongs to me now.
So bring him to Steel Team 4.
as soon as you can.
So D. Taylor did their jobs.
I had him back the next week.
I had him in my office.
I said, hey, this is the reason I made this decision.
I said, now I really feel that you've learned your lesson.
So go be a good seal.
And I said, my door's always open to you, right?
So go be a good seal.
What would you pull a guy's bird for?
When we pull a bird, the guy was either,
mixing it up with law, you know, police officers or had a domestic dispute where he punched
his wife and actually shot himself in a hand with his pistol, said he was having a dream, he was
back in Vietnam, and I'm like, well, you're not old enough to be back in Vietnam, but I can tell
you one thing, you're stupid, you're dumb, right? So what I'm going to do for you is we don't need you.
This is a $1.5 million asset that I'm getting ready to pull his bird, right, because when you
Pull it, you're done, right?
Administrative we take it, you're done.
I'm sorry, it hurts, you know, it hurts, but guess what?
You did it.
Sometimes I give them three chances.
Yeah, but once you punch your life and shoot yourself in the hand and talk about
mom when you're 24 years old, you got some issues.
You need to shit that.
Well, and, you know, you feel for them too, right, because you don't want to totally derail
this person, right, because, you know, it's bad.
I always have the analogy when you have to clean somebody up, right?
Like if they've had something bad in their lives or their relationships with their, you know, being married, goes sideways.
It's hard work, right, because you're dealing with people and you're dealing with things that you don't really see, right?
You don't know what's going on behind the curtain.
It's like a train, when a train runs off to railroad tracks, it takes a lot of work to get those trains back on that railroad track, right?
Same when people do.
When people run through the briar patches, that's the way I refer to, when people have squirrels
in her sea bags, right?
You're supposed to be squared away, right?
We're taught in boot camp how to fold her underwear or skibbies in your t-shirts,
but sometimes I open up a sea bag and I got a damn squirrel in there, right?
You got a squirrel in a seabag because this guy's such a shit show.
Yeah.
So, and that happens in the military and it happens in civilian life as well.
And it's weird, too, because, you know, people think about seals and they
think, oh, they've gone through all this training and they've been weeded out and, you know,
this person, they got it, you know, they've been academically tested and physically tested.
They've been through some kind of psych eval.
And they think that that's just because of guys a seal, like, he's good to go.
No.
No, they never mind.
Squirrels, they might have raccoons and freaking bobcats in that sea bag sometimes.
This is a freaking disaster.com.
Oh, it is.
It is.
And you just have to clean it up, right?
We've got to clean it up because we're all responsible.
And I remember when I took that job at CL Team 4, I had them all in the classroom.
We had all of our new guys in from Buds.
We had everybody in the classroom.
I told them, I go, look.
I said, I want you to look yourself in a mirror because be accountable for your individual actions.
Because if you're not, that's when I get involved.
So be responsible for your individual actions when you make decisions.
And I go, when I say this, I'm looking at you and I'm looking in a mirror to myself.
I said, I can go out and get a DUI with the best of them.
But I'm choosing not to do that.
Because as soon as I do that, my command master chief job is gone, right?
You're done, right?
So there's decisions that you can skirt around and be okay,
but there are some decisions that when you make those bad decisions,
your career is stopped.
Yeah.
I know when I was in leadership positions, you know,
sometimes I'd say, hey, listen, you guys know, I'll take care of you guys.
in these events over here, you give me some something.
I don't mind being the senior guy with a secret.
I don't mean saying, yep, yep, you did that with stupid.
You know, here's your little punishment.
I'm going to give you.
You're going to stand extra watch out at Nileland or you're going to, I got that.
I go, you do some of these things over here.
There's nothing I can do for you.
Doesn't matter whether I like you or not.
It doesn't matter what you're my number one guy.
If you do some of these things over here, there's nothing I can do for you.
And I'm not going to do anything for you.
And I think it was very important that.
that people understood what, hey, I got your back.
Doggy, I got your back.
You work for me, if I'm the skipper
and you work for me, I got your back.
If you make a mistake, I got your back.
You do something, you know, okay, that wasn't the best move.
I got you back.
Now, if you do something that is like illegal,
immoral or unethical, there's nothing,
doggy ain't got nothing for you.
You don't got nothing for you.
That's right.
There's nothing I can do for you.
And I remember I had a guy who,
I'll abbreviate the story,
but you got into a fight and left his wallet at the scene.
and came to me, you know, with his chief and said, hey, boss, here's what's going on.
Guy got in a fight, you know, in a public place and left his wallet at the scene.
And I said, all right, well, here's what we're going to do.
And I had my master chief in the room with me.
I said, here's what we're going to do.
I said, if you're lucky and no one pulls up this wallet and no one pulls up security cam and comes back and says, you know, oh, we have this guy, here's who did it.
If we don't hear about this again, no factor.
I said, if the police are knocking on my door, come and looking for you, we never had this
conversation.
Isn't that right, Master Chief?
My Mass Chief said, Roger that, sir.
And so I didn't mind saying, hey, look, I, you made a mistake, but, you know, and it
wasn't like some grievous thing, got into a little scrap outside of whatever bar, you know,
like, okay.
But he knew, and also him and his chief knew, oh, this could come back because idiot dropped
his wallet.
So they gave me the heads up of saying, hey, look, boss, this makes.
come at you. Now, if it had been something like, oh, you got arrested, cool. I already know what's
going to happen. I'm calling the Commodore. Hey, there's not, that's coming back 100% and I'm not
going to let my boss get blindsided by this group. So you got to make sure, and I think that's
another important thing when I talk to the younger guys today, you got to have the damn
courage. If people are doing dumb shit to say, we shouldn't be doing this dumb shit, stop what you're
doing. I'm not going to do that. You shouldn't do it. We shouldn't be doing this. You
have to have that kind of courage to do that.
Because otherwise what you get is you get a little mob mentality, right?
Like, oh, we're doing some dumb shit.
Like, okay, hey, my, you know, I'm a new guy.
My LPO is doing something that's, I know is stupid,
but I'm not going to say anything because I'm just, you know,
I lack the courage.
And I look back at my own career where I had that happen to me.
You know, I was telling you earlier,
I was in a situation.
I was a new guy in our platoon.
And one of the guys was going to drink, was going to drive drunk.
And I hadn't drank at all.
And I said, hey, you know, boss, it wasn't the officer, but it was like,
senior guy said, hey, dude, I can drive.
You know, I haven't been drinking all.
He's like, no, I'm driving.
And instead of me having the courage to go, hey, negative, like, give me the keys.
Instead, I was a new guy.
I was like, Roger that.
And here I am, letting a guy drive drunk with me in the vehicle.
This is a total idiot, like a total idiot.
Never should have done that.
And, but I did.
And that's the kind of thing.
I look back.
And it was just, you know, being a new guy, not having the, not having the courage to stand up and say, hey, dude, no, you can't drive.
You've been drinking for eight hours.
You're drunk by any measure.
Give me the keys.
I'm going to drive.
And instead I was more, well, you know, don't want to make a ruckus here.
I'm a new guy.
I get in line because that's what you get told.
Yeah, your new guy keep your mouth shut.
Okay.
And that's what I did.
And so little situations like that, if when you're in a subordinate position, you still got to have
the courage to go, hey, no, this is stupid.
We're not doing it.
And what was interesting is even as I became more senior,
like there was issues that would come up where I know that me saying something
was I was the only person that was going to say something.
You know, like I was the only person that would be able to say,
hey, we're not doing that thing right there.
Stop.
If anyone else, you know, because I was the boss.
And not only the boss, but I was like a prior enlisted guy and I trained Jiu-Zitsu.
And I was like, I won't forget.
Joke your ass.
Wrap your ass up.
Yeah, exactly.
And so that does make an impact.
And so, yeah, when you get with your, you know,
that just makes me think when you take over as the command master chief and you're like,
hey, you better be doing the right things.
And if you're not, there's going to be hell to pay.
And that's all there is to it.
And listen, you make a mistake.
Cool.
I got you.
You do some dumb shit, illegal, immoral, and ethical.
I ain't got nothing for you.
I'm not going to be able to help you.
And I don't want to help you.
So good leadership lesson.
there. And, you know, I think with whether you're in a seal team or whether you're Tier 1 or
regular seal team or in a business environment, there's times when we have to, you know,
we have to set back our course, right, our course of direction, which is a professional course,
right? So I refer to that as snapping a blue line, right? The old carpenters use that, right,
snap the blue line. So I say, it's time to snap the down blue line, right? And I'll also refer to the Coast Guard
And the Coast Guard rules of the road, right?
You take that test, rules the road.
You have to know the buoys.
You have to know everything out there at sea that you navigate off of.
And you have to make an 80-some point.
You miss like one or two questions.
You failed the test.
So that's how much you need to know that, right?
So the Coast Guard says when entering a harbor, you shall.
Instead of May, right, you shall pass port to port, right?
port to port port and starboard right port to port so when i have a situation going on in a seal
team i said i look at my xo or my skipper and go it's time to snap the damn blue line and they
just look at me and go oh yeah i'm with you because it is time to snap the blue line and let's make
it clear guys you cross this freaking line right here and your ass is mine right or you shall
be responsible for your individual actions you shall this is this is coast guard
I'm going Coast Guard rules on your ass, right?
Because that's what keeps people safe, right?
That's what keeps people in the deal.
Yep.
Get rid of the gray zone.
I remember, I got a story for you.
And this was a good one.
Setting in a Jumpmaster brief, right?
You set in these Jumpmaster briefs,
and this was a double-stack boat drop in Guam.
I think you may have been on that.
So this is a twilight drop, right?
It's almost dark.
You know, we try to get out of the bird before it's totally black.
You know, we've got a little bit of sun simmering on the horizon.
A little bit of visibility.
And this night was a double-stacked boat drop.
We had two of them, right?
So we had two C-130s, you know, drops.
Or we may have had both boats, you know, both boats rigged up inside the 130s.
So it's a platoon drop, right, with four boats.
But I remember setting in a jump brief and they were talking about if you, unlike, you know, unlucky a counter,
if you go face-to-face with a paratrooper, both of you turn right, right?
And that way you miss each other, right?
And then another one was, if you find yourself entangled in a parachute, if a jumper comes right at you and goes below you, but your feet hit the parachute, you bicycle kick across that parachute.
And I remember listening to that and I go, that shit ain't happening.
That don't happen.
Well, guess what?
That night drop, I left that aircraft and I got about, you know, because we're following the duck.
We got Kim lights on top of our boats and the parachutes are all up, you know, the G11s or whatever we had on there.
And no shit.
I look up and all I saw, the sky was night, a little bit of sun, you know, the daylight or coming, light was coming from the stars.
And I saw a canopy.
I mean, it was right, I mean, right at my freaking face.
And I'm going, oh shit, here comes this Jumpmaster brief.
I've got a canopy on my freaking face.
And I'm, and I start bicycle kicking.
And I know, shit.
I walk all the way across this parachute.
I went across the apex.
And I couldn't believe it.
I saw the apex on my feet and I go, holy shit, I'm actually running across a parachute.
And I got to the other side and boom, my parachute inflated.
And we hit the deck and hit the water and we went over and we're derrigging a boat.
And I go, boy, was that something?
So you just never know, right?
You never know.
So that's why you have to pay attention.
Yeah, and follow those basic rules, man.
I know. That's that blue line, right?
There's certain things that, you know, you've got to pay attention to
and you got to be able to react when something happens, you know,
when something goes sideways.
And when you, so you get out on that deployment,
now you're the command master chief seal team for.
And did you guys do, was it PSD for that whole deployment?
No, this one, this was more of a, a,
regular operational deal where we were running missions to try to find these bomb makers.
Oh, that's right.
You started doing the counter-Iranian.
And then the counter-Iranian thing was a little more high-speed, right?
Because they had Tier 1 units were taking care of some of that, right, because it was so intel-driven.
And back where I was at with the SIL-Team platoons that was at Baghdad International Airport,
we were pretty much executing most of the bombers, right, the people that were building the bombs, the IEDs.
Do you guys have an Iraqi partner force at the time?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
And that was comical, too, trying to teach those guys how to shoot.
And they were, it was unbelievable, like teaching third graders how to, how to shoot, right?
As soon as you thought they could hit something, they, they were still in bullets.
And I'm like going, why he's still in bullets?
They said, well, like, we can sell them.
And I go, don't do that, right?
You can't do that.
Did you guys have the Iraqi force that had like M-4s and U.S. weapons, or did you guys have,
did you, we were straight just Iraqi jundies with AK-47s?
You know what?
I think they just had the AK-47s, which are damn.
dangerous.
Yeah, yeah.
Right. Some of them were China, you know, built in China and they were pieces of dunk.
And they're just rusted, like, sites.
Just they're not going to hit anything.
No.
No, but that's a powerful round, though, as you know, right?
That's 762 by, what was it, 69 or 39, 39, 39.
Yeah.
And how was the op tempo was good for those guys that were out there getting after it?
It was.
It was, they stayed fairly busy.
You know, I was having to try to keep the CB's.
alive because the seals wanted to kick them off the island right and I'm and had a meeting with
them and I'm like what what are you talking about they go those guys don't do their job master chief
you know we go out on these operations at night and we come back and I go do you do a post op of
your vehicle before you turn it over to the two CBs that are here working through tonight to try to
whether it's a half shaft that's broke you know this is freaking serious work right and these two
CBs were freaking putting out because why do I know that because I stay up when these when these
seals are finished with their mission they
take their, you know, they clean their gear first, right?
It's always team gear, personal gear, and then you finally get to take a shower and go to bed.
So they're in the bed.
These two CBs are cranking in this little, you know, shanty garage they've built, and they're
replacing half shafts.
I mean, this is a major operation, right?
So they didn't know that.
So when I'm in the tent talking to them, the senior chiefs got them pumped up, right?
And I was into his backside, too, because I go, don't ever get your platoon fired up.
up and I said, this is horseshit.
I said, you should be focused on operating.
And your guys, when they finish a mission,
should come in and turn over a good post-op to these CB
so they know what's going on with their vehicles.
And that's part of it, right?
That's part of responsibility of being a mobility.
You know, when you use these vehicles to go hit targets,
you're not in a helicopter.
You're in a freaking Humvee.
So I just had to tell the seniors,
look, you're making my job difficult.
So when you make my job difficult,
I'm going to put some pressure on.
on you being a leader, right?
Because I don't need to hear this shit, right?
You're telling me that I need to fire the two Cbees that are with us.
What do you want me to do?
Let me pour some water in a bowl and generate two more.
I said, because they don't have anybody to send.
You know, the battalion or, you know, back at Logsou, I called them.
They got, Marat Sheep, I don't have anybody.
And by the way, the two guys we had were doing great.
It was just the seal's getting on a, you know, a little tantrum.
And I told them to shut the hell up.
I go, the next time you bring this to me, I said, I'm going to have all of you in a garage.
You're going to be fixing your own shit.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
I mean, my CBs, dude, we had, I think we had 17 generators, just generators, something like 22 air conditioners, 30 something plus vehicles.
Like, and I had six CBs.
You know what I mean?
These guys were working.
Oh, they're badass.
The maintenance schedule alone is not, you can't do it.
to work 24 hours.
They were just busting their house the whole time.
And my guys knew it.
I mean, it's just like that you rely on.
I mean, those vehicles are a life-saving piece of equipment.
You know, that thing goes down in the street.
You're screwed.
So those CBs were freaking awesome.
I'm glad you took care of your Cs.
Yes.
I'll tell you what, man.
CBs, I've always, you know, I've always took care of them because they just work.
They did work.
They'd come in.
They build our fobs.
They build anything.
They fix anything.
Like you said, whether it's a generator or a Humvee or, you know, whatever.
Yeah, they get it, they're bad asses.
As you get done with that seal team for, what's next for you?
What was next?
I get moved over to LogSoo.
So that's when I really had a liking to the CBs, because I had a lot of CBs working for me.
LogSoo is a logistical command that supports the Sill teams.
and I got to work with sailors, right?
Regular sailors.
And it really brings out the Master Chief training that I got when I was up at the academy.
Because, you know, you have to – and we had some issues with those guys, too, right?
We had this one CB.
He hadn't been coming to work.
So had the Master Chief come over, the Master Chief CB that we had, you know, running the shop over there at the mechanic shop,
comes over and says down with Mr. Master Chief, I want to kick this guy out of the Navy.
I go, what's you got?
He goes, well, he's not coming to work.
His uniform looks like slept in it, blah, blah, blah.
Just rent down a whole list.
And I go, well, let's bring him in.
Let's do a DRB.
Let's find out where his headspace is, right?
Because that's what you need to know, right?
And I wasn't trying to step on the Master Chief.
The Master Chief is, you know, he's very capable Master Chiefs.
So I knew if he's got an issue, there's problems there, right?
So he brings him over.
We get in the conference room.
We have the front table set up.
and there was about seven of us.
You know, so I was a master chief that was chairing this.
I had the CB master chief sitting right beside me,
had a senior chief CB right here on this side of me,
had another chief pair rigor from the pear shop,
and had another chief down here that was with me.
And I was only seal.
I was only seal on the panel.
So the mastered arms at the time,
who was the popo police of the military,
escorts this guy in.
So when master arms escorted him in,
I was kind of, you know, I kind of sat back in my chair like going, what we got here?
That's an indication.
You know, is this a, what we got going on here, you know, if he has to have an escort by, by mastered arms.
So he sits down in his seat and all of a sudden he's, the senior chief beside me, uh, started, they started going off.
They said, you know, you look like, you slept in uniform, you look like, blah, blah, you have it shaved.
You're freaking, uniform's a mess.
He's wearing, uh, cracker jacks.
You know, the old white sailor.
uniform, but it looked like it was almost beige.
It wasn't white.
So I'm looking at him and I start, you know, after they, they've been firing off some
salvos on him, you know, calling him a dirt bag and all this stuff.
And I kind of like said, okay, okay.
I said, let's stop, stop this a second.
I said, I need a cup of coffee.
And I told him, I said, master arms, I said, take, take the sailor, you know, to my office.
And I go, stand by.
I said, just taking him office and stand by.
So he gets him up, parades him, you know, he's walking right beside him like he's a prisoner,
takes him to my office, and I'm sitting there with the panel, and I told the guys, I go,
guys, I appreciate your motivations, you know, I appreciate you.
I said, but we're being really hard on this individual, and I said, what I want to know is,
what's he got going on?
What's going on, you know, behind the uniform as, you know, speaking?
So I told these guys, say, hey, just take the,
take the day off as this thing this thing's done i said this guy's got problems that probably go
a little bit far than we sat here and chew his ass all day long but he ain't going to make a bit
of dinner because he didn't have one impression on his face the whole time we were going at it right
these guys were basically attacking his integrity and his uniform and and uh him not being at work
you know he's got problems so i get in the office and i'm sitting there and the master arms
i said you can leave i said just i said just be outside i said you know you know
I want you to escort him back over to the C.B.
The garage area, right when we're done.
But I started, I said, hey, I said, talk to me, man.
I said, talk to me.
I said, you've got some shit going on.
You got squirrels in your sea bags or raccoons or something in the bag.
I need to know what I'm dealing with here.
And he started, he had a couple tears, started crying.
And I said, calm down.
I go, I said, everything okay at home?
You know, he said, yeah, everything's okay.
He said, my marriage is not going all that way.
And he said, I've got five cars.
And when he said, he's got five cars.
I go, why do you have five cars?
He goes, well, I like them.
I like cars.
He said, I rebuild them.
So he said, I'm kind of in debt with the cars and the people at work.
He says, I'm not getting any sleep.
You know, we're having some issues with our youngest kid.
And it just went on and on and on, right?
As far as he's got problems at home.
He's got financial issues because he has five cars.
And you know, you can't support five vehicles, right?
I mean, I know how expensive vehicles are paying insurance and all that.
So I said, what can we do to help you?
And I said, you know, you know, I said, your uniform.
I said, you want me to?
I said, I can get those uniform cleaned up for you.
I said, how can we help you?
And he just said, you know, I need some help financially.
I need to consolidate these vehicles.
I need to be a better dad.
I need to be a better, you know, husband.
You know, I need this, I need that.
So I'm like, okay, we're going to do that.
We're going to take care of that.
And I said, I want you to go back over to your garage and talk to the master chief.
And I want you to take a couple days off because, you know, we're not fighting.
You know, we're not, we don't have people shooting out of us back at the beach, right?
And I go, take a couple days off.
And I go, let me find somebody that can help you with the vehicles.
And I've got some resources that Navy resources here on base that we can help you with, your finances.
We get you a financial advisor and try to get this squared away because right now you just can't,
you can't deal with these vehicles.
And I don't know what kind of problems you have in with your wife and all, but we've got people that can help you with that.
So basically give him a couple days off.
And then I told him, I said, next week I want you to come back in for the DRB.
but I want you to understand the gravity of this.
I said, you need to be squared away.
I said you need to have the right command rocker on your uniform.
Your uniform needs to be cleaned like in dry cleaned.
Your shoes need to have some kiwi, you know, polish on them.
Give us some effort.
And let me see that you're doing what you're going to do.
And I said, I'll give you everything we have.
We'll throw resources at you and we'll get this cleaned up.
That takes work, right?
So I talked with the Master Chief Seabee, who was a great guy.
I still run into him
and sometimes back in to P he's a great guy
and I told him I said it, this is going to be hard work
but this is going to be a little project
a little pet project to see if we can
get this train
out of the woods, out of the briar patches
and get it back on the railroad tracks
and see if we can save this sailor.
I said we may not be able to
but I said the big
part of this is going to be how he presents himself
next week.
If he comes in
and he looks good.
I said, I don't want to turn into a little shouting.
I just want him to open up to us and tell him what he needs so we can set some resources up to help him out.
So he came back in that next Monday.
Totally different.
Diled in, squared away?
Diled in.
I think he even bought a new set of Cracker Jacks.
Had the right rocker saw it on.
His ribbons were a quarter inch.
You know, I know all that shit about the uniforms, right?
So I just looked at him, had a brand new T-shirt on, had a brand-new shirt on, had a brand-
new white hat.
Check.
I mean, shoes had Kiwi.
Yeah.
Effort was made, right?
To bring a different presence.
So we sat there and instead of yelling at him, we listened to his story and he taught us
something, right?
We don't know what's going on with our employees or our sailors or our Marines or Army
soldiers and all of this, right?
But it takes leadership, if you do it right, it's a little work, you know, other than
chewing somebody's ass out.
and kicking them out to the curb and say, you know, you messed up, go square your shit away,
and then never engage again.
So we engaged with him on that second time that he came in.
He looked a lot better.
And then we continued to follow up with the finances dealing with the vehicles and stuff.
So I think we have a success there.
Hopefully that guy figured out what auto trader was.
Well, he needed.
He started dumped in some of those vehicles.
I mean, he had all muscle cars.
These cars were 20 to 50,000.
You know, one of them, I think he said he paid $100,000 for I'm thinking, damn, how are you paying $100,000 for a Cheval? Yeah, E5. Yeah, he wasn't paying $150,000. He was running up credit card. He was. He was. That's chaos. But that was a success story. Yeah, it's always, yeah, it's always what's his other person got going on, you know, what's going on in their world that's making them do this. And that's why it's important to get to know your people too so that you can go, oh, there's something going on. Hopefully you can pick it up on the.
second or third car and not the fifth.
You know, once it's in the fifth car, so you're done.
Yeah, we got issues.
You're done.
So you, didn't you end up, you did some time as an ops master chief at a group?
Yeah.
Well, when I left Logsu, I got a phone call from the force master chief and he goes,
dog, I need you to go to Sox South.
Okay.
So when he said down in Florida.
Well, that's what I said, right?
I said, where's that at?
He goes, Homestead, Florida, which is right on top of the keys, right?
Homestead is right below.
Homestead, it's called Harb, right?
It's Homestead Air Reserve Base.
But T-Soc sets there, right?
So what a T-Socc is is a theater special operations command who is run by a one-star.
This was, you know, Hector Paghan, one-star general, Army Triple Tabor, right, special forces guy.
So he was the, you know, the commanding officer or general.
And then we had, it's a joint command, right?
So you have Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps.
and we had some Coast Guard people that we were helping train with them down in Miami area for VBSS.
But I went down screaming and kicking, right?
I'm like, Force Marcia said, this is not a, you know, I'm not, this is orders, right?
Orders or orders are not imitations.
So I took them within two weeks.
I was down in home.
Do you move the family down there too?
This was a geo batch.
So Lisa stepped up to the plate once again and said, I got this.
I got the home, you know, the compound.
you go do what you have you need to do so I went down there screaming and you know
this this sucks you know blah blah blah I just got back so I go down I I meet a group of sergeant majors
first time I've ever really worked that close with special forces guys squared away guys
we had three or four different seal officers down there working in the j3 shop I was the j3
master chief nice which is a very important job right we haven't filled that job within probably
10 to 20 years. So when I got to call from Force Mars chief, he said, we got to get senior enlisted
people like yourself outside of NSW, Navy Special Warfare, and go down and do these T-Soc jobs because
I need people setting in those seats to help me understand how we can deploy our seals better, right?
And the Special Forces guys. It's a good call. So what the T-Soc does is basically we, we en-brief
all of the teams that are going south and Southcom, right, into the Southcom theater.
whether it's Panama, Columbia, Chile, or Honduras, any of those places down south.
And so we had still teams roll through, and we would brief them.
These are your rules of the road as far as what you shall do and what you shouldn't do.
And then when they go due to deployment, whether it's a 30-day deployment or a two-week deployment,
they come back to the T-Soc at Homestead and debrief us, you know, give us actions, you know, after actions.
So we can build, we build these folders up.
So we understand who we're training down there.
Is it the Panamanians?
What is that?
Is that security around the Panama Canal?
Or, you know, what are we dealing with?
The same with Bogota.
You know, Bogota, you have all the drugs and all that stuff to be concerned about
and, you know, kind of stabilizing their government and working with their military personnel.
The same with Chile, Argentina.
but it was really a good job for me because I would set every Friday would have a call with the generals
three, four stars at Socom.
Socom would talk directly to us since we're a T-Soc, you know, we're down here doing special operations in the southern, what is it, operational?
Theater.
Theater, right?
So it was very educational at the high level, right?
I'm sitting right there with a one-star general.
and I remember we were at a meeting
and we had a three-star general
Keene was talking
Army, another Army triple tabber
Special Forces. He said
Hey, Master Chief, good to see you, good to see
Colonel. You know, I worked for
Fulberg Colonel. He was the J-3.
I was the J-3, you know, Master Chief.
He goes, why are you two guys setting here?
And I, you know, we're always setting there, right?
So I look at the screen at the end of the table
and I'm looking at General Keene
and I look over to Colonel
and I go, you want to answer that or
should I answer that? And he goes,
he says, you got this dog?
So I look at the screen and I tell the
general, I go, General, we're always here
at this meeting for situational awareness.
And he goes, no, no, no. He says, that's not what I'm talking about.
He said, I just sent a C-130 down to pick you
and Colonel up. You're going to Haiti.
This was after the earthquake in 2010.
Damn, okay.
So I'm just looking at the Colonel like going
and I look over at the one star sitting at the table with us
and I got in to know we were going to Haiti
and he goes, I didn't either.
So here, he said, you guys can leave.
You know, General King said, you guys can leave.
Go pack your stuff.
I want you on the ground within 24 hours.
We're going to bring in the assets.
He says, we already got a hospital ship down there.
The country just suffered a huge earthquake.
We got tons of bodies all over the place.
How many Richter was that earthquake?
You remember?
It was seven.
I think it was a seven three initial, right?
Because you had the 7-3, then the follow-on aftershocks.
So here we go.
We're loading the C-130.
We already had one seal officer in the field down there.
So we fly down into 130, and it was a complete shit show, right?
We show up on the tarmac.
We got the air traffic control was down.
We got a CCT Air Force guy calling air traffic control down there.
You got Jimmy Buffett on his seaplane.
You got Bill Clinton landed in a 757.
so we got all of this shit going on everybody's been in over backwards what did jimmy buffett
come down there for just help he just wants to hand out some t-shirts and some i don't know flip
some flip flops so so we're down there and we're seeing this shit show at the at the airport so we get
out of the airport we go up to link up with our seal who had who had set a flag in the ground for us at
a christian school a bunch of missionaries up there and had doctors from around the world right the
the docks that travel all over the world.
They were in.
They had all these medications.
They had these tents.
So here comes the Cbees again, right?
So the Cbees came down from Virginia Beach, and they built these temper tents because they
had to have the medication and the temp controlled environment, right?
Because it was hot, you know, even in January, it was hot down in Haiti.
So we were looking around.
They had, you know, like I said, they pretty much cleaned up most of the bodies that were
crushed, you know, with these parking decks were like, you know, 10 stories high.
They were just pancake.
Damn.
Right.
So the stuff that you saw was just unbelievable.
And the education I took away from that was,
and me and Colonel would go to a meeting every day in this big tent with General Keene running the show.
And we had USAID, World Food Organization, the World Health Organization.
I mean, all these three letter acronyms, you know, other than, right, the ONGs of the world, were all there.
and it was just crazy.
So we'd go to meetings after meetings after meetings.
And our job from a Navy SEAL and Special Forces deal was we had helicopters.
We had 53s off of one of the LHAs that was down there.
We were moving food and water and bunks to these field hospitals that they already tried to establish.
And it was interesting, right?
Because we had Sean Penn down there.
Sean Penn was running around and I remember we was getting on a 53 to fly up to one of these hospitals.
but you know what
God bless him
he was working
he had his little entourage with him
but he was working
and I remember one day
we're loading up a 53 helicopter
to fly up to one of these field hospitals
he was smoking a cigarette
and I walk up to him
and I go hey
hey Sean
and he looked at me
you know and I go
you need to shit can that cigarette
I said you're standing way too close to this
I mean we're right outside of rotor wash
right and I go see all that slick shit
on the back of that ramp of that 53
he goes yeah and I said
that's either hydraulic fluid
or fucking go get
or whatever, right?
And I said, you don't want to smoke anywhere near this thing.
So he put it out on the boot, but we were doing that.
But the experience you take from a national disaster, right?
I mean, it's just crazy, right?
Because I learned so much, and we're having a meeting with the world food guy.
And I said, hey, I noticed we've been on the deck for about three days.
And he sat down at the table with us.
And he came across from Dominican Republic, right, Don Rep.
He came over to a mountain, come down.
And you can see Haiti because they deforested their mountain, right?
They don't have any trees.
It's mud.
It's the freaking shit show.
So he comes over.
They fly them down, seven group guys.
They landed in Domrep.
They had five Humvees.
They brought them over to a pass, and they came down to link up with us.
And they were going to be a part of the deal where we were looking for displaced people up in the hinterlands of the upper.
The epicenter was down at Port of Prince, down by the port.
and the earthquake it was devastation.
So we go up and we're looking for people who need medical help or medicines,
and we're having meetings with all these local mayors that were around these little towns.
And so when the guys showed up, I met him at the gate at midnight one night,
and they come in and they get out and when a major gets out, major special force of major guy,
he kind of remind me of you, you know, he's freaking hyped up.
he was he had Copenhagen in drinking a red bull and he was smoking a cigarette and i go can you get
anything else going on man i said you got caffeine you got nicotine gone i go i said he said dog
he said i got one question and i go what's that sir and he goes why is the damn special forces
and navy seal sitting in freaking haiti ain't nobody down here to kill he said this is not our mission
and i went well i said it is now i said you need to go talk to colonel stoltz because you know
you know you got to go do that I said you know but he was a he was a hard hitting dude
and we got the mission done right I mean that's uh we stayed down there for about 50 some
days damn before we we got relieved and it was uh it was educational but man it was it was
something oh yeah and then what was after that where'd you go next after the t-sock I did
deaf for about two years and I got a call from Master Chief at Group, Group two at a time.
Britt. So Britt said, hey, dog, I need you to come home. And he said, I'm bringing home a month
early and I go, I don't have any problem with that, right? So, so we were pretty much calm.
You know, after we finished the Haiti mission, really, you know, we were just doing normal debriefing
and end briefing to the guys going down south. So I'm like, okay, I'll come back to Group 2. So I was a
Group 2, Master Chief.
No, right on.
So I did that for two years, and then after that job, and then that's when they wanted me to come to the West Coast, and I was like, negatory.
So I went to, I did the senior enlisted job at ATC.
Got it.
Advanced Training Command, and we moved to Command from Little Creek to Fort Story.
Oh, yeah.
And that was me and John.
Oh, awesome.
Me and John did that.
You know, John was coming off of his deployments and stuff over at Dev Group, and basically it was our, our, our,
You know, that was it for us, right?
We were outbound.
That was a twilight tour.
That was a twilight tour for us.
But it was a great job, you know, back into the training side again, right?
So it was good.
And so then you retire, what was your first, what did you do when you retired?
Well, when I retired, I was, I made connections with people from the Navy Steel Foundation.
I met these basically five guys.
And I call them high, very high,
They're just very talented people and they're very, you know, successful.
I had a little acronym for them, but it was highly successful individuals.
But they were good, right?
But they plugged me into some positions.
So I got my first job when I got out was I went to work for a security company out of Roswell, Georgia.
And we had about 50,000 security officers who would watch, watch, you know, they were in corporate 500 companies, right?
Coca-Cola, Hollywood Squares, we had a 9-11 museum, we had the Empire State Building.
So I'd go all over to the United States, and they hired me as a senior vice president
to run the professionalism, professional training, and leadership with security officers.
Got it.
So, you know, the difficulty of that is, is, you know, we pay these security officers
who watch front doors and lobbies and manned a desk at these big businesses about $10 to $15 an hour.
So how do you motivate somebody like that to increase your retention and decrease your turnover?
So that's big money in between those two things, right?
So I worked with our training academy, which was in Roswell.
We pushed out a lot of courses, active shooter, first aid, just security courses, right?
And we built a library up and had some very talented people working down in Roswell at this little academy.
we had. So what I come up with was, I go, look, you know, security officers, they have a
uniform. I'm just going to give them a metal. So I come up with this metal. It's about the size
of jump wings that went right over top of their pocket, right? I could put it right on the top of a
pocket. Quarter inch? Quarter inch, quarter inch above that pocket. Yeah. Quarter inch above the
pocket. And we had five stars. You could earn a star, right? You had that little silver plate and his red,
white and blue had security stars on it.
And then above that, we put stars.
So if you finish your five courses, initial five courses,
which were active shooter,
hazardous waste, you know, medical courses,
you would get, you'd earn your first star.
And then we would just up to Annie.
We'd have, you know, active shooter number two,
a little more in depth about what you do
other than run, fight and height, right?
Or, you know, run, hide, fight.
So we did that and we'd get it up.
So I got to about two stars in that program,
and we really saw retention go up and our turnover rate was going down which is that's
where you find a margin of money did they get anything besides the the the metal they've got
the metal but we dialed in get them a raise or anything like that we did okay yeah once you
had the two stars you got a raise so there you go right so there you go that's that's what it
all boiled down to right and uh I would travel all over the country and I'd do these pinning
ceremonies so when I would show up all them get their blood wings they would get their blood
wings, but you know, it was working because they would see me on social media out in the
field, whether it was Coca-Cola headquarters in Atlanta, or I was in, you know, Sunoco Fuel out in
Texas, or I'm at a walk of stars out in Hollywood. They would see these ceremonies going on.
And all these other people, all these other managers of all around the United States were saying,
I want dog, we need dog. We need dog to come in and put the pens on my people. So I was doing
that and I were running ragged.
man because I'll tell you I'd wake up in hotel but you know where I was at. I'm like I have no
idea where the heck I'm at. I had to look out the window and go oh yeah this is New York City.
But it was a great job. We did meet the goal at doing that. So about three years into that,
we got acquired. But we set the company up for success, right? And we got acquired. We sold to
Allied Universal, which is a huge security company. And a part of that was my contract was you either
keep the senior vice president's on board or you severance them out one year one year pay
severance right so they kept me on board for about eight months and they didn't adopt the security
starts program because they they didn't see the value in it I really thought it would
work but they just didn't see the value so they said hey you know dog we're paying you this amount
of money we can hire three people to do that you know we're going to give you a severance and I
want thank you bye bye so I was making you know making you know making
good money and then I got that and I got to go home plus my master chief pay right so I you know
I don't how doggy was eating good I could have probably bought five cars if I wanted to but I wasn't
I'm not I'm not into buying that many cars but um so that happened I'm setting at home relaxing
because I'm the mailbox is full of money right so I don't I don't need to do a whole lot but you got
to have a purpose so I get a phone call from one of our captain I'm sure you know captain
and Bam Bam. Captain Bam
calls me and goes, dog, I got
an opportunity for you down in the Bahamas.
And I go, hmm, I go, what? I said, what? I said, what
you got? He goes, well, we have a resort down there. It's a
high-end resort. It got hit by a
catfob hurricane. This happened in 2019, September
to 1st, 2019. It sat on top of this
Abakos region of the Bahamas for about 36 hours.
About 200 mile an hour of
of stained winds, tornadoes, race through, just D, just took pine trees and just, and houses
and roofs and just shat, I mean, just blew it out.
It looked like a J-dam hit.
Just some houses were somewhat intact.
Some houses got totally blown up because the, you know, the, you know, these trees
flew through or wood from another house, you know, broke the windows and once that happened,
it overpressured and just blew up.
So they said, hey, we want you to fly down and take a look at it.
And if you want, they want to bring you down and you can run the workforce for the restoration project to rebuild this island.
And that's going to take, that's job security, right?
Because that's about a two to three year dealio, right?
So I went, okay, I'll fly down.
So I go down to Fort Lauderdale, meet one of the partners of the company that builds these resorts around the globe, right?
It's a beautiful place called Baker's Bay,
golf and ocean club down in Abaco's.
So I go down and take a look at it, and it was jacked.
I mean, you know, we had debris all over the place.
We had houses that were totally blown up,
some houses that were okay,
had water damage, a lot of tarps on roofs and all that stuff.
So they brought in a vessel that it was in a barrack.
It was a barracks.
It used to be an old machine shop vessel, right?
So that was the barracks.
And then we brought in 130 Hispanic workers come from Cabo St. Lucas, Mexico, because we have a property down there.
They brought these guys in to expedite the work being done.
And these guys were like, these were top.
I mean, these guys were master carpenters.
You know, they can do it all right.
They built a house from the ground up.
So they brought these guys in and we worked them.
They stayed on this boat, right?
This little boat.
We had them isolated over there, but they were great people.
I actually speaking some Spanish, not a whole lot.
Damn.
I was kind of saying, I'm going to take advantage of this, right?
And I'm going to try to learn some Spanish.
I'm going to talk to these guys and befriend them and help them, you know,
because I know they're doing most of the work here.
So we did that.
I did that for about two years.
We ran into COVID.
That's right.
Boy, that was an interesting time because four of those supervisors on that boat were sick.
So I got Jay, Jay was the golf.
superintendent he spoke he's uh spent a lot of his time in costa rica so he speaks really well
spanish so he came with me i said jay asked this guy why does you have a fever how's he feel and he
said i feel like shit you know what that they got probably got covid right so we we shook down the whole boat
but we stopped it we actually had to have a fire line right we're saying okay these supervisors
are up on the front bow up high in their living quarters we took up we took down all of those rooms
we quarantined those guys in RVs and put up Yala tape.
I mean, we'd bring them meals every day.
But we had to do that.
Then we had to go in there and spray all those rooms down
and basically sanitize all of those rooms on the Ford part of that boat.
And then, but we saved that ship.
That ship would have lit up.
Yeah.
We'd have lost that workforce for a month or two before we could recover
and get back, you know, get back the rebuilding the property.
But we pulled through that.
I took a you know my dad passed away so I came home to take a take a knee for about a year
and I got bored and my wife looked at him and said you need to do something so I called back
down didn't burn any bridges right I called back down I said we got we we got a great job for you
come down here and be the logistics guy on our pier when we they get all these 40 foot containers
20 foot containers flat racks of palm trees they get they get 20 foot mill vans full of food
reefers, you know, refrigerator.
So I went down and learned how to move freight.
And I had to open the boxes up to inspect them because they were losing money.
They lost $300,000 for like people taking high-end wines, you know, tomahawk steaks, just disappearing.
I might be disappearing to tomahawk steak.
Well, I know, I know.
So they put me down there.
I went down and I put up a camera.
Well, a camera didn't work right.
I didn't have any feet
They didn't know that
So I put up a camera
I got some lights on the pier
And I was on there
Every time I boat pulled in
I was on that pier
And I was asking
What's in that box?
What's in that box?
Check this box
And then when a box leaves the pier
I opened a box
So as soon as I started that
The theft shit stopped
Because they knew that
They got somebody
Paying attention
Don't get the chops
Right
Don't get the
Tomahawks
Leave those tomahawks
For me
That's right
Oh, those things were awesome.
About that thick, you know the deal.
Yeah.
All right.
So then this bourbon comes into play.
Four branches bourbon.
How did you get, how'd this whole thing get initiated?
Well, this is, it's all started back at Bahamas, right down at Baker's Bay, where I met Rick Franco.
Rick's a VMI graduate, Marine Corps officer.
and then he transitioned over to the CIA,
CRS contract world.
And now Rick is a security,
head of security for Trubador Club,
which is another one of these beautiful resorts
that they, you know, Discovery Land Company has them all over the world.
But during my time down there,
I got to spend, you know, me and Rick both lived in a house
that was affected by the hurricane back in September 1 of 2019.
So the owner of the home, the member of the club there, said,
hey, I want security to stay in my house to make sure, you know, that it's taken care of.
And, of course, you have security people living in your house.
So you feel pretty safe that nobody's coming in and doing anything to your house.
Because dog, you'll smoke them.
That's right.
We'll smoke you from a ways off.
But I met Rick.
We, you know, Rick was doing like a 60-day rotation that another person would come in for 60 days and, you know, just contractors back and forth.
And during that time, you know, after about two years, you know, Rick came to me after having a conversation with Mike.
Mike Trott is the Air Force.
He's the Air Force founder.
And Mike is really our managing principal of the business.
And he's very hardworking, attention to detail Mike and his wife, Cheryl.
And so Rick, Rick came to Mike and I and said, hey, I want to be.
to do a barrel of bourbon and pay tribute and honoring our men and women that we've all worked
with and it's in the shadows hadn't got the accolades that some some of the people do the operators
and stuff and I go, that sounds good. And he says, yeah, I want to do a barrel, you know, do a barrel,
buy a bottle, simple bottle, slap a sticker on it, you know, a label and sell it on Facebook.
So Mike and I were looking at each other and I go, well, Rick, you know, I don't, you know, there's lots of
regulations with spirits, you know, brown water.
And each state is different.
So I said, you can't do that, right?
You probably can't sell it on Facebook number one and number two.
It's kind of a half-ass approach of, you know, by just any bottle.
So we kind of put our heads together and said, let's, let's create a brand.
So this was when it got very interesting and it was a lot of homework was done, a lot of being
on fire hose. So we reached out. Rick reached out to us several distilleries around our country.
We got about 300 distilleries that produce bourbon in the United States. So he started calling
and nobody would pick the phone up. So we were thinking, you know, this is this is kind of tough
right off the get-go, right? We're trying to communicate with people and they're not entering
their phones or they're not getting back to us. So Rick finally made a phone call and this person
calling him back and this was Barstown Bourbon Company in Barstown, Kentucky.
Barstown, Kentucky is considered the capital of bourbon, the creation, you know, where it started.
So we took that phone call and then we made a trip out to Louisville, Kentucky, because we were meeting with savor glass, which is the company that we purchased our bottles from.
This particular bottle here is called a diamond bottle.
It's a premium bottle, which means, see how thick it is at the bottom.
So it's a really nice, sturdy bottle, premium bottle because it's got four sides to it, right?
Four sides align with four branches, right?
Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force.
You didn't mention RJ.
He's the Army guy.
RJ Casey is Army.
So you got you, Navy.
RJ Casey is Army.
Mike Trott is Air Force.
And then Rick Franco, that's Marine Corps.
You got the four branches of the service.
Yeah, four branches of the service.
And we're reaching out to Coast Guard.
and also Space Force because we don't want them to think that, you know, we're just about four branches.
It just so happens that the four of us as friends who've worked together and our boots have crossed the same pass over in Afghanistan, Iraq, and across the Asia, you know, Pacific.
It's four branches because that was the brand that we started to build, right?
So with the walk on this was find a bottle.
We found a bottle.
Then you go, okay, what's the label going to look like?
We started out with a tree, with four branches coming out of the tree, kind of coming together like a spear, almost like a Socom spear.
We kind of, we shik-kand-at, and we're like, you know, that's, that doesn't, we didn't want to, we didn't want to have an eagle, you know, on the bottle.
We don't want it to scream, you know, military, right?
Because we look at it as we want to cast a larger net for customer base.
We want to, we're reaching out to all patriots of the United States.
States, which is everybody that's got a, you know, that's in the United States as a patriot as far as I'm
concerned.
So with the label, we went to another artist and we got, we said, hey, we want a four, the number
four on here, but we want that four to represent each one of the branches, Army, Navy, Marine
Corps, Air Force.
And what we did with it here, you can see at the bottom, we drew this line here.
It looks kind of like a hill.
or a ridge line on a map grid lines.
That's the U.S. Army.
And that's the foundation of this four
because U.S. Army was the first founded,
DOD service right back in 1775.
The centerpiece coming up in the middle here
kind of looks like a Navy mast
of a ship from a shoreline
or a submarine con coming out of the water.
Yeah, it does.
U.S. Navy.
U.S. Navy was the second founded.
Coming across horizontally,
you got this horizontal piece
that looks like a Bannette knife.
or a sword.
That's U.S. Marine Corps,
because they're the leanest
and me, I tell Rick,
I'm going to say this anyway,
but Marine Corps are leanest and meanest.
And then,
you got to support the Marine Corps.
Oh, you got to support the Marine.
Once the Marine, always Marine, right?
So then the swoop up into the sky here
with this four is Air Force,
because Air Force provides air power
for our air cover for all of us, right?
Cover.
And then you see it's got a black spear
comes down in the middle
to create the opening inside of four.
And what that spear is,
is half of it you can see,
the piece that you can see is honoring our men and women
who are still fighting for our freedom around the globe today,
the piece that's missing is for our fallen.
So after all the thought that went into this,
each piece of this bottle,
whether it's a label or whether it's the colors,
and moving up to the neck here,
a lot of thought in this, right, because we're thinking,
you know, we've got to put a bottle on a shelf
that not only is going to catch the eye of someone,
but also looks very clean, right,
and doesn't scream,
because lots of people see four branches of a thing, what, four branches of a river, four branches of a creek, a tree.
So they don't really tie it in until they see some of it. And this is like our neck tag on here that kind of shows, you know, this is a, and we're the, we're the first company in the spirit world really to have all four founders be four branches of the military, right? There are a lot of bourbons out there that are, you know, created by veterans, but it's a one service type of deal. Right. It's not all.
all four branches like we are.
And then the top, you see our labor,
the top's got four branches on it,
and then below it's got this ring here
that has serve honorably and drink honorably.
And we use that, you know,
we've all served honorably.
Everybody serves a community or whatever it is.
We want you to serve honorably.
We want bartenders to serve it honorably.
And more importantly, we got, you know,
drink honorably,
not to replace drink responsibly
because that's been around for, you know, decades, right?
But we still have issues with military personnel, veterans, suicide, 22 a day or up or down, whatever that number fluctuates around from time to time.
Still concern the buyers.
We don't want to say, hey, you know, we want you to buy a great bourbon.
It tastes great, but we don't want you to drink it down to the bottom as fast as you can.
We want, you know, instead of drinking to forget, the ethos of our company is, we don't want you to drink to forget.
We want to start sipping to remember.
And we always are going to remember our fallen.
Not a day goes by that I don't remember one of my friends,
one of my comrades that didn't come home.
It's just there, right?
It's with us.
But on the other hand, there's lots of victories in life that we should sip to remember.
Our promotions, weddings, babies, victories, right?
We can't let the, you know, the negative stuff that's happened to us, you know, drag us down a certain path.
We've got to stay positive.
And, you know, when I do this with a cigar or just having a bourbon, I try to understand the process that it took to get this liquid in this bottle.
And it's a long process and it's a beautiful.
And you always hear, you know, trust your process, right?
Whether you're shooting sporting clays or whatever it is, jujitsu, trust a process, right?
because if you don't, you're going to start getting out of bounds and it's just not going to go well.
So with this bourbon, this juice, what we've done instead of building a distillery,
because for us to build a distillery, it would cost $40 to $200 some million.
There's already $300 out there.
So for us, we acquire, right?
We resource.
We go out for sources.
We've got people in the bourbon business, whether we've got a, we got a, we got a,
really good friend of ours now that we build a relationship with for the last couple of years.
His name's Jeff.
Jeff is out of Nashville, Tennessee.
He happens to be a bourbon broker.
So what that means is that Jeff has acquired hundreds, thousands of barrels.
And he's setting on them just like gold, right?
Liquid gold.
Every year when this juice ages, the price goes up on that barrel.
It's just like oil, right, a commodity.
Does that happen indefinitely?
like if it's sitting in a barrel 10 years 15 years 20 years it goes up every year it goes up it goes up a little bit
does it ever go bad well there's um i'm probably not uh i think it does i think after 20 25 years you
people people who and of course you know you're going to have angels cut right because the evaporation
of that liquid after years and years and years you may only have a quarter of that barrel left
after sitting there for 25 years okay because that wood that juice
is going in and out of those American white oak saves, right, the saves in a barrel.
And it's getting that color from the wood, is taking it out of the wood, right?
And I'll talk about the charring the barrels and stuff and what that does.
But this juice here is the age statement on our juice is about six years old.
Six years is really good, really good juice.
We purchased about 50-some barrel from MGP.
MGP is a distillery out of Indiana.
We brought those 50 barrels down to Barstown Bourbon Company,
and then we purchased some wheated barrels that was about seven years old,
and we got that from Wilderness Trail Distillery or Green River out of Kentucky,
and we bring those two together at Bars Town to blend.
Now, we were very blessed by being at Bars Town when we started putting our Mast Bill together.
Your mash bill is basically your ingredients of what you're putting into the cook, right,
because you bring in the elements of it.
You bring in your grains.
You got corn.
Corn is where you get your sweetness from.
And then you have rye.
Rye is spicy.
Spiciness, right, from cinnamon to peppers.
And then you have your malted barley.
Malted barley is like oatmeal.
You can put it in your mouth and chew on it.
Flavorings like oatmeal.
Smells really good aroma.
And then we brought in wheat because we were talking with Steve Nally,
who's a master distiller at Bars Town.
bourbon company he used to work with Maker's Mark for 30-some years so Steve's a
Hall of Famer so why we were in this room it looks like a chemist lab and we were working with
Dan who's the master blender at Barsdown and Steve walked in we thought he was just coming in just to
shake our hands and meet us he heard that there was four veterans there starting a business
a brand so he just wanted to come up and say hello we figured he'd come in a room shake her hands
and leave he's busy but he didn't he stayed with us
He goes, guys, so I heard your story.
I want to help you with this.
I want to help you, you know, with the match bill.
And he was the one who really said a four branches, four branches military,
why don't you guys have four grains?
Let's go with four grains.
So we're looking at each other like, wow.
Why didn't we think of that?
Yeah, why didn't we think of that one, right?
So basically he said, let's, he was talking to Dan.
Dan's, he's the blender.
He's over there having.
He's got these little cups and he's blending this stuff up.
He says, put 5% wheat in.
Put 5% that 7-year-old wheat we got.
Put that in there.
He put that in there.
We taste it.
We're like, ooh, boy, that's really good, right?
So the guys were beating me up and they probably should because they mixed this thing.
Took them about 30 minutes or so to mix this 5% weeded that we were tasting.
And I looked at it and they handed it to me and he said, and before that happened,
he said, this is for all of you.
But I want you to give it to me, right?
I said, Harold, try this.
So I look at this little
It looks like about an ounce and a half or something, right?
It wasn't even two ounces, I don't think.
So I took it and went,
I dumped it back, right?
And all the guys are looking to me going,
what are you doing?
You know, damn it, you know, Harold, you know, what?
You just took the sample that we wanted to taste.
And I'm like, I'm sorry, man, you know,
it wasn't that much, you know.
But anyway, they still give me a hard time about that.
But we ended up staying in that room with Steve for about two hours.
And Steve said, hey, let's go 10,
percent on the wheat aged wheat right so we put the 10 percent in there we're like man that's really
good it's got it's got the sweetie notes to it it's got vanilla it's got caramel it's got the spiciness
of cinnamon and some peppers it's got that oatmeal aroma you know of oatmeal the barley and the wheat
really kind of rounds it off right so it kind of rounds it off it softens it's like butter right
and that's what i refer to this juice it is it is kind of like butter but but that's damn
dangerous though, right? Because it's 96 proof. And we toyed with that, right? We're working on that 80%. We started in a range of 80% proof or 120-some proof, right? And by the time we hit about 95, we're thinking, oh, boy, that's about right. Because, you know, if you get up into the higher, higher deal, it starts to taste like race car fuel. You know, it'll kick you in the butt. But it depends on if you can tolerate. If you can tolerate the higher alcohol proof, you know, some of us really good juice. But this is 96. The reason is, the reason.
we landed on 96 was is in the military you have 96 weekends right 96 hour so when you get a
third your friday saturday sunday off that's a 96er there you go we like 96ers right we get to go home and
relax but so so that's how it that's how it all came about we got some a little more of our
story on the back of the bottle talks about the age of the juice and stuff but boy what a process
this has been about three years three and three and a half years into the making from the marketing
standpoint. We've got a great marketing team down in Nashville, Tennessee, double diamond.
They're really family. And we got we got the the brokers that help us to acquire the right
barrels, not just any barrel, but the right barrel to meet our standards here with this
four grain, six year blend, age, and being 96 proof. And I think they're running today.
I think they're running a batch today to back it up, right? Because you've got to have inventory.
Yeah.
When did you start really getting into bourbon?
Well, you know, I had a bad experience with brown liquid when I was in high school.
I drank about a fifth of it.
It's not good.
It took me about three days to pull out of that.
And I couldn't even smell it.
It made me sick to smell it.
But as I got older, and especially my tour down in the Bahamas working down there at the resort,
we'd have scotch.
You know, we did doer, scotch and cigars.
And then we started migrating over to bourbons.
And we were drinking some bourbons, wood for reserve, and Basil Hayden, some of the other
bourbons, we'd get our hands on down there.
And most of the guys had them on their yachts.
So we'd go to settle on the back of a yacht with one of the members and we'd have whatever
they had, right, Angels Zambi or whatever.
So, and then I started learning the process of what it takes to make a barrel bourbon
and what you're tasting when you pull this bourbon from a thief.
You know, you stick the thief down in the whole, you know, the port-hole,
boom, pull it out and then taste that.
And it's probably 120 proof, right, because it's barrel strength.
But understanding that the corn goes in for the sweetness,
the rye is for the spice, malted barley is like that oatmeal rome I was talking about,
and then the wheat kind of rounds everything off.
And then when you drink it, you can taste those notes.
some palettes are different
some people say I didn't taste
and then some people kind of shoot it
you know you don't shoot that right
you don't shoot bourbon
just like you don't really shoot
tequila you know because you know
we did right
and you just shoot tequila
you're trying to get it to the
we shot everything bro
come on doggy
you're trying to get it to the bloodstream
ASAP
you're not waiting on it
you're not we're not we'll be an IBM
that stuff
but
but now the process
is really interesting
and you know in bourbon
bourbon has rules to it right so to be a bourbon you have to be at least 51% corn in your
match bill in the ingredients 51% it has to be laid down rested in American white oak barrels
you have to have a certain char and charers go by numbers you know that that is when they
they stick the flames inside the barrel and they turn the barrel and they burn they burn the barrel
right they burn those oak saves and what that does is is I was thinking that that that
burned part of those saves inside the barrel when they toast it or either they char it.
So if you, this is about a three char in this.
But, but you would think that you would have a smoky taste or something like that, right?
Like, you know, like scotches, you'd smoke like peat.
But you don't.
All that, all that charcoal does, that black, when you burn those, that first layer or so of
that quarter of that quarter inch into the wood or whatever, that acts as a filter, a natural
filter, the impurities out of the juice, out of the burglary.
it. And as it sets there for two, three, four years, five years, six years, whatever it is,
the more that fluid moves in and out of those wood saves, and that's where you get your caramel,
your vanilla, your color. See, this has got really good color to it, right? So it's six year juice,
so it should have a good color. You get a little bit lighter than that. You get two,
two year stuff, and it's lighter. It's just not, it doesn't have the darker tones to it
when you look at the juice.
but a lot goes into it, you know, from marketing to finding investors, to then getting, we call liquid to lips.
And that's when you go out to the stores, you go, when you call it on-premise, off-premise, right?
On-premise is where you can actually drink the juice where you're at, restaurants, bars, hotels.
Right?
That's on-premise accounts, they call it, and sales.
Off-premise is where you go to the liquor store.
Whether it's a liquor store, mom and pop shop,
or a chain liquor store in certain states,
or in control states like Virginia, it's all ABC stores.
So that's off-premise for us, right?
And we're in Virginia, ABC store, about 205 stores.
And you go to the liquor store, you pick up a bottle, you take it,
and you're moving off-premise.
You can't drink it at the store.
But unless I'm in there doing a tasting,
then you can have liquid lips with me.
Right there in the store.
And I tell the story, right?
I tell the story, so I probably told this story, I don't know how many times, right?
But the more you tell it, just like being an instructor, right?
You're teaching.
I just did one Friday before I came out here.
And I had a special agent, DEA agent, came in, and he said, tell me your story.
And I told him the story, right?
And he goes, he said, boy, he's really, he said, you own this?
And I said, yes, sir.
He said, you talk like you do.
He said, I didn't figure somebody they hired to do a tasting would know as much as you do.
And I went, well, thank you for that.
But that's what it takes, right?
Attention to detail.
And we chose purple on the top for joint.
Since we're a joint, you know, joint colors purple.
Yeah.
Right.
So we chose the purple up there.
And plus, you don't see purple on many American spirit bottles.
You do see them, Crown Royal, you know, Crown Royal has purple.
But you don't see it.
So that's just another factor we weighed in since I said, I catcher.
you know something something different right and what's you what your experience been with like
because this is as I'm sitting here thinking about this is your first business right this is your
this is my first business as far as being a founder a lot of stuff going on in there being
responsible for your investment monies yeah um understanding the um you know profits and you know how much
money does it take for marketing? How much money do we spend for meta ads? You know, we pay a PR firm
out of Phoenix, Arizona. But you know what? They've been hitting home runs for us. They got us on
today show this past Veterans Day. Our sales went, you know, ballistic. So we were on a nice little
level, and then all of a sudden, boom, straight up. So we've been very blessed with the people we have
around us. We have in our dugout, our panel. We got Nick in Kentucky. We got Johnny,
who lives in Dallas. Tim is, I think Tim's in Florida. And, you know, Jeff, of course,
he's in Nashville. We got Angela who does our marketing. And Claire is our PR person. But, you know,
it's just a team, you know, and we communicate. We try to over-communicate because you need to
in this business because if you're not out there, you know, creating new customers,
it ain't going to sell itself, right?
The distributors will put it on a shelf for you, but they're not telling a doggy story, right?
They're not talking about four branches.
They'll say four branches of veteran on, and that would get you for a little bit.
Yeah.
You know, people really appreciate it.
I think people in our country love veterans, but if it's, if it's, if it don't taste good,
if this tasted like swamp water,
we wouldn't see the cells that we have right now
because we're putting quality juice in the bottle.
And like I was saying earlier, it's like butter.
It's really good.
It's a good bourbon.
We'll continue to do that.
We had an LTO we released shortly ago.
It's Black Ops.
Black Ops was a book written by Rick Perado.
Rick Perado was a 10-year-old little boy down in Cuba
when Castro started taking over.
So basically Castro took his family's businesses, took his dad's coffee shop, his grocery store, his little hardware store.
And he said, now these belong to me.
You work for me now.
So they saw the riding on the wall.
They got Rick out of country, flew him to Miami.
America was doing flights to get the kids out.
So Rick went to Miami.
Then he was moved to Denver, Colorado at an orphanage.
And he lived in an orphanage out in Denver about a year.
and then his mom and dad made it to Miami
and bought a home,
started to get, got jobs,
and that first thing he did was sent for Rick,
brought him home.
Rick was growing up in Miami,
figured he's going to get in trouble on the streets.
He joined the Air Force and became a pari jumper,
a par rescue man.
Right on.
He spent about 10 years of the par rescue guy,
then he was recruited by the CIA.
He ran a lot of operations down in Honduras and Nicaragua,
and he just retired,
I think it was last year,
after 32 years of service.
And we did the,
bottle for you know to pay tribute to him and his career and the book and we sold the book and the
bottle of black ops uh and the black ops was a hundred proof and it was nine year old nine year
juice yeah it was awesome it was really awesome how many bottles did you run of that we ran 183 cases
we sold so it's it's pretty much gone yeah supposed to you know he was supposed to come on the
podcast at some point rick prado was it's just you know this like all it's all scheduling
unfortunately this well unfortunately unfortunately this isn't my like job you know what i mean i have a lot
of other jobs and so sometimes just getting synced up with somebody but i'm sure we'll get it done at
some point oh yeah yeah because he's got a great story well like i said earlier i really appreciate
this opportunity to be on here with it because it took us a while oh yeah no that's a great case
and point you and i you and i linked up at the freaking new ysile foundation thing back in i couldn't
tell you when probably over a year ago yeah and we we swapped them
numbers and then it was like oh yeah let's do it and then here we are a year of something that's
right then i saw you i saw you at army navy game oh yeah that's right about of time yeah yeah
that was my first ever army navy game it was my second moment and made my third that was that was
a that was a bucket list freaking check off what a what a what a experience i mean that was just
beautiful you know what's funny i was in a car because i was out there the Travis mannium
foundation and dudes walking down the sidewalk and i'm sitting there and someone you i hear like
hey jaco and i didn't know who it was
and it wasn't because you had sunglasses on a hat
I couldn't really see you and that was Rick I think
Rick Franco said hey that's Jocko and I go
you kidding me yeah and then I didn't know who you were
I go hey how you doing man good to see you
and you go what's up Jocko and I said as soon as I heard your voice
I was like dog hey yeah it's uh it was kind of
pretty cool and then I just call you I'm calling you
trying to get this thing set up man it's just you know
we're busy right everybody's busy
trying to get stuff done but
But, you know, the bourbon thing is, you know, the business is another reason, you know, for me to be engaged, right, to have a purpose.
And our purpose is to build a badass brand and put good juice in the bottle.
And then hopefully one day somebody would go, hey, I like this, I like the story, I like what you guys are doing, they come in and help us, right?
Whether it's just big investors that want to see us be successful and they help us.
They help us with the monies.
Of course, you know, that's on us, right, to build this brand where it's attractive enough for somebody to be interested in partnering with us so we can blow it up a little bit.
Because right now it costs so much money to go into a market, right?
We're in seven markets now.
We're Tennessee, Kentucky, Arizona, Florida, Virginia, D.C. and Maryland.
and we're really only starting to scratch the surface, right?
So what our subject matter experts, our panel people tell us with all these years of Brown Spirit's experience,
we're saying, hey, be careful not to, you know, you don't want to be an inch deep and a mile wide.
Let's just take it easy.
Let's be methodical about where we want to grow.
Florida, we just went into 50-some stores, ABC.
So Florida is kind of a hybrid.
they're controlled at ABC stores,
but they also have a lot of liquor stores
that are privately owned.
Virginia is just ABC.
You don't move brown liquid,
you've got to go through ABC, right?
But Florida's a multi-prong type of deal,
and we're into the NEXs,
and we're going into A-Phee's down there.
So it's mainly monies to put boots on the ground
to help us with the liquid of lips,
you know, the tastings telling our story,
and just, you know, wash and redo, right?
and just go, go, go, but it requires a lot of, a lot of traveling, a lot of thought,
because when we all four to get together, we want to go do bottle signings and, you know,
and then we give back, too, I mean, our give back was over $400,000.
I mean, unbelievable.
For a company starting, you know, back in May of 23 until the end of calendar year 2024,
we have raised over $400,000 and giving back to $16 or so,
nonprofits.
That's awesome.
Organizations, right?
We're trying to balance that because we're getting a lot of people reaching in now,
wanting to, they want to ride, ride with us, and that's fine.
But we have to figure out we want to go four pillars.
You know, let's give to four of our primary pillars, right, Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps.
And then we find out these other organizations that are out there doing some incredible work,
like Samaritans Purse and Red Cross that are taking care of the flood victims up in Western Carolina
and the fire are out here in California.
We want to get,
and we gave money to some organization.
I think there were firefighting organizations for that, right?
So we're trying to really give back to our veteran communities
and our other, you know, organizations that are helping our communities
and, you know, to give to them.
We sent a truckload of Jocko fuel up to the firefighters up in L.A.
And sweet.
Yeah, it's pretty.
awesome. We sent them hydrate and we send them energy, go. And pretty, pretty awesome that we were able
to pull that off. And a bunch of people, actually was the guys I'm making a movie with. So Chris Pratt and
Mick G. and Ben Everard. And they live up there, right? They live up in the L.A. area. And so they hit
me up like, hey, because when we were making this movie, everyone's drinking this stuff, you know? So
they're like, hey, we should get some of the stuff for the firefighters. So I talked to my
team at Jocco Fuel and they jumped on it.
And then our logistics partners sent it all out there for free.
You know, big giant was 21 pallets worth the stuff.
It's a lot of stuff.
It was gone, but it was great.
Ben was up there filming like their firefighters just walking out with the stuff
on their shoulders to take it out to the front lines.
It was awesome.
That is awesome.
So it's good to be able to help.
When you're,
when you're successful and you can help it really matters.
And it goes beyond us, right?
And that's what we say with our give back is beyond the branches.
and I went up to Boston to do a we had a bottle that we donated and a case we had this beautiful wooden case built I sent my trident up there they put my trident in the box that we had a rip stop cammy shirt that was that was placed you know we cut it of course and it was the backdrop and we had it was John Conner's officer that was killed in Panama yeah yeah so a close friend of his Tom Tom is doing a fundraiser for John to to erect
a life-size statue up in his hometown.
That's awesome.
And we were a little part of that, but that bottle sold for $15,000.
That bottle and that box went for $15,000.
And I sold, I was down in Florida.
We had 15 bottles, and we had all the veterans there.
We had these chefs from in town in Stewart, Florida.
We had four chefs that came in for restaurants.
And with each one of the chefs, they placed a military cook with them.
a ship military chef,
because I think the military
is trying to transition
over to civilian sector
jobs, right, titles, right?
Help them transition.
So we had all those military chefs
come over, Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard,
and they signed the bottles
that were being auctioned off as a package.
It was a $5,000 purchase,
but your $5,000, you'll get a bottle of signed
four branches, bourbon by all those veterans
that was there plus a handmade knife.
That was beautiful.
And it went to,
children's scholarships.
And that was $75,000 just for that one evening.
Amazing.
So, you know, people are getting behind it.
And, you know, is it difficult?
Because, you know, you think if you go out to a liquor store,
you see all the many bottles of bourbon.
So we're in a crowded space, right?
But, you know, how do we stand out?
How do we continue to be loyal, you know,
and well what it sounds like to me is doggy's finally got something for you and what dog he's got for you
finally he's got something for you it's a little four branches bourbon and if you have some aches and pains
and you know you just got knocked down just just go out and set out and you know have you a cigar
be with a great friend or two or three your wife or whoever it is and and enjoy some of this
bourbon i would enjoy it neat which is just in a glass
I use a small rock sometimes because you don't want to water down too much, but the water, the cold water and the ice cube helps pop some of the flavors.
That's good.
It'd be good.
Check.
But now.
And can people get it online or is that not possible?
Yes, sir.
They can get it online through our DTC, which stands for direct-to-consumer.
We shipped about 32 states.
So all you have to do is go to 4BrBr Branches.com, which is F-O-U-R-Br branches.com.
And you'll see a little drop-down window.
You can say purchase near me or purchase, and it'll take you right through what you need
to it and they'll ship you a bottle right to your porch.
And there it is.
And there you.
And there you.
And there you.
Right.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
After all those years, I finally do have something for you.
Does that get us up to speed?
Is that where we're at?
We're good?
I think so, man.
We're.
And just just so people can find you.
So it's, it's, you got four branches.
dot com you're on facebook four branches bourbon you're on instagram four branch at four branches
bourbon you got a youtube channel which i checked out some of these youtube videos uh good real real
uh good behind the scenes of how you guys put it together that's the youtube is at four branches
bourbon and then you have your own instagram i do and your own facebook that's amazing isn't it
which is at harold dot underdown so that's where people
people can find you. Yeah. Echo Charles, you got any, uh, you got any questions? Quick question.
Yeah. So I know you had the special dish for this. Um, do you, uh, plan on how, you know,
how there's like different ages, you know, you got the 18 year and the, you know, the, the,
like, what's your thoughts on that? Well, looking, looking forward, we just had our, our two day
meeting in Nashville, Tennessee, where we talked about those, uh, uh, off the bow, right, off the
bow, about looking forward, you know, where are we headed. We're going to continue to drill down with this
founders plan. This is our one skew that we have right now that are in the seven markets
and in online sales. The LTOs will continue. That's the limited time offerings. We did the
black ops now we're thinking this coming year we have something for you. We got a little
surprise for you. We're working on that project right now. We're looking at doing some barrel picks,
doing a single barrel delivery, and we're working all that through DTC, our direct-to-consumer
vendor.
And also, we're looking at a different skew.
We're looking to bring the price down a little bit.
The price on this Founders blend is called this six-year-old juice.
It's about $89.99.
You can get $10 off sometimes in an EX and APs is about $78.49.
But this is really great juice.
We're looking at maybe coming out with another skew that's going to bring the price down.
So we're going to have it like enlistment or something, you know, entry.
So we're going to get you on the entry level.
The E1 beverages, the E2 beverages.
That's right.
We're going to get you on the entry level.
Recruit.
And we want you to come on up to founder.
So I'll have something for you.
No matter what, no matter what pay grade you are.
That's right.
We got you covered.
Then you have to come out with the Admiral's blend.
That's going to be $230.
Maybe that's 14 years old over here.
Did I answer your question?
Yes, sir.
Yeah, yeah, very much.
So, yeah, a lot of times when those numbers get higher, that's the more special a dish.
Oh, well, it really is.
And depending on the age statement, of course, and then, you know, if it's a pappy or something like that, it can get really crazy, expensive.
But people don't, you know, people that like bourbon and they're hunting for, and I didn't realize this, but there are so many collectors out there.
I mean, people that don't drink, they don't drink at all, but they collect.
They collect these special bottles and special bourbons.
If they like it, they'll continue to do that.
That's good to know.
It is good to know.
Did you have any football questions?
Normally he's got any football related.
I think, you know, respectfully, I think like we have different generations
because you were talking about like the hawk and all this stuff.
I was like, bro, I never heard of the hawk.
The hawk position.
Yeah.
Well, the hawk position was for me when I played kind of like an outside linebacker.
So what I had to do is I had to break whatever they ran at us.
I was basically going straight to the ball.
The freaking hawk, man.
Like strong safety kind of?
Strong safety.
Okay.
So they wanted me to, and I would float, right?
Yeah.
I would read the formation wherever their split out would go.
I would usually go to the split out side.
Yeah, yeah.
More than likely they come that way, right, with their runs.
And I was supposed to be the, you know, kind of like the breaker, the icebreaker.
Yeah.
And I felt it a lot too because I had a lot of birds twerping in my head sometimes.
I'm like, boy, that wasn't smart.
Yeah, so it's probably just different terminology because, yeah, strong safety is kind of, I mean,
I think you're describing it's strong safety, essentially.
Yeah.
It's like could be an outdoors.
outside linebacker, but could be a straight up safety, you know.
True.
Makes sense.
Makes sense.
Right on.
Cool.
Yeah, no, no, no.
That's the only thing I was wondering, football-wise.
And floated, right.
I was floating around a little bit, so that was good.
Stop to run.
Anything else, Echo?
That's it.
Good to meet you, sir.
Nice to meet you, Echo.
Closing thoughts, brother?
Well, closing thoughts says my prayers go out and to the people in North Carolina
and to California for the devastation, the law.
of homes and stuff.
Prayers will definitely be,
continue to go up with that.
I pray for our government.
You know, we just had a change in administration.
I just hope that people can be adults.
They know that we have a great country,
but we have a lot of big decisions to make, you know,
moving forward.
We've got to square away our borders.
We got to make sure our economy can get on track.
What does that look like, you know,
because American people are, I think we're getting fatigued a little bit
with the people.
pointing fingers at each other.
We just need you to do your jobs, you know, before we have to come up and do it for you.
You know, get some seals and firefighters and police officers.
We'll come up and run a place, right?
But I don't want to do that.
I trust these men and women that we have an office.
They love our country.
They just need to quit to pointing fingers and let's just get, you know, take care of business, right?
Take care of business so doggy can drink some urban and smokes of cigars.
So I can have something for you.
But I really appreciate the time, Chaco.
Yeah, man.
It's awesome to see you, brother.
And Echo, really appreciate it.
Yeah, thanks for coming down.
Thanks for joining us.
Thanks to Lisa, man.
Oh, yeah.
It's so cool because when I saw you guys at that New York thing,
I probably hadn't seen Lisa in 25-something years.
And it was just like, it was like we were all on the beach in Guam again,
just having a good time hanging out.
She's such a great, great woman.
It's awesome to see that you guys stuck it out for all those years.
And that she stuck by your side.
It's awesome.
And, you know, thanks your service to the country.
to the Navy, to the teams.
Thanks for pushing me in the right direction as a young new guy.
Appreciate it.
And thanks for continuing to represent the teams in a positive light, man,
and setting a great example for America and for Americans.
And thanks to all of our service, men and women out there today that are protecting us.
We really appreciate you.
No doubt about it.
Awesome.
Awesome.
Thanks, Doggy.
Yeah, man.
Thank you.
And with that, Harold Doggy, Underdown has left the building.
Now, I'm not going to be able to judge things because I just don't really like the taste of alcohol.
Sure.
You tasted the four branches.
Four branches.
What's the assessment?
Yeah, it was all.
Yeah, it was all that he explained it to be.
Here's the thing.
I don't know if there's a good thing or bad thing.
Both.
I don't know.
Two things can be true at the same time, by the way.
Just be careful, is what I'm saying.
You could get yourself in trouble because, yes.
So, like, okay, so there are weaker.
bourbons out there, many, that taste.
Weaker in terms of alcohol content.
That have way more of like a burning edge to it, which is the bad thing, by the way, for tasting.
And they're weaker and they have more of a burning edge to it.
This has less of a burning edge to it and it's stronger.
So you see how that can be a problem if you don't watch out.
So I would say watch out, but yes, it does taste very good.
And I'm like, can you taste like the notes?
You can taste them.
Yeah, yeah, fully.
I think I'm one of those people that just doesn't have a.
a good palate for tasting things.
Okay, so did you know there's a technique to tasting shit?
No.
Yeah, there's a technique.
Well, okay, here's my technique.
Open my mouth, put it in.
That's what I do.
Exactly, right.
So, yeah, fully.
And, you know, not to go too deep into it.
It's like you can't just pound it.
Sounds like you're about to.
But you can't just pound it.
You got to take a little bit.
You can do it like certain thing.
I don't explain, but you can do a certain thing with it like in your mouth.
And then you swat and then you kind of breathe out with it.
It's like a technique or whatever.
And then that's when you can taste the,
most but yes certain people's palettes are more refined than others for sure but yes I could taste
yeah I mean to me this would there's no sense of me tasting it yeah just because I won't be
able to judge it number one I can't even judge anything when it comes to taste or at least I'm not
that great at it yeah but you smelled it like yeah yeah no part of it like it does it does smell
even when I smelled it I was like oh this smells smells pretty good a little so you know
smells pretty good yeah so there you go good work four branches bourbon if you want to
get in on that and you know what's another thing you're going to need to get in on getting after
it yes sir you know look you're going to drink some bourbon you better be working out to make up for
it you also better get some clean fleet fuel in your system yeah i recommend jocco fuel hey go to jocco
fuel dot com check out what we got going on there we got we got we got energy drinks we got hydration
we got protein we got time war we got joint warfare super we got everything that you need to make you feel better
Make you healthier, make you stronger, make you faster, make you smarter.
We got it.
So go to joccofuel.com, check it all out.
We're also in Walmart.
We are in Wawa.
We're in vitamin shop, GNCs, military commissaries, Afees, Hanifords, dash stores down in Maryland,
Wake Fern, Shoprite, H-E-B down in Texas.
Yeah.
Meyer up in the Midwest, Wegmans, out on the East Coast.
Harris Teter on these kids.
Publix. You know what Publix is?
Publis is like the big, the big one down in the southeast.
So we just got into Publix, crushing you in Publix.
So if you're down there, we appreciate it.
Crushing it. Just crushing it.
Making the good clean fuel and y'all are utilizing it.
So thank you.
Lifetime Fitness, we're in there.
We're in Shields.
And we're in a bunch of small gyms, no matter what kind of gym you got.
You got a Jiu-Jitoo Academy.
We're in there.
We got a powerlifting gym.
We're in there.
No matter what you got.
We're there.
So if you were not there, you can email J.Fsales at joccofuel.com and get it in there.
Also, origin USA.com.
That's what we got going on.
We got American made.
Boots, jeans, hoodies, t-shirts, shorts, hunt gear, jiu-jitsu gear, belts.
Did you get your black belt yet?
Well, yeah, no.
I saw them, though.
I saw an email, you know, the emails come through and I see them all.
I'm like, oh, bro, I need one of those.
I got one of those.
What should I do?
Give me some advice.
Because you know,
I have one black belt that I've had since I got my black belt.
Yeah,
I know.
It's all ratty and old.
I got you.
But now I have a nice,
beautiful new origin made in the USA,
made by origin belt.
Made by jiu jitsu people.
Yep.
It's a big difference.
Yeah.
Like the people that made my original black belt,
they weren't jih Tzu.
It wasn't a jiu jih T person.
It wasn't a jih Tijuana.
Yeah.
It was like,
oh,
we're a martial.
What's company?
Who knows?
Yeah.
Let me know where it's from.
Yeah.
But how do I make the transition?
I got you.
What do I do?
What's your recommendation?
So one is the functional belt and one is the media belt.
So one is like it's built for use.
That's this whole purpose of its existence.
So when you're rolling ghee, you use the used one because it's for use.
I was going to go opposite.
Well, you could, but here's the only reason why.
And at the end of the day, it's probably not a good idea.
This is why.
Because that's what that one is originally for.
It's the original one.
If it gets more worn out and ugly, it's kind of like, boom, that's part of the gig.
That's part of his purpose.
So you'm saying?
Then this new one, the origin one, bro, let's face it.
It looks good.
Looks way better.
It has the leather on the end, the other end.
It's like, cool, you can use that 100%.
Probably use it, but that's not comparatively.
Or if you want to differentiate, like, its purposes, it's not what it's for.
I'm going to throw this out there.
I don't, I think you're wrong.
Now that you've presented your case and the facts of your case, I'm going to let's think you're wrong
because I don't want a wall hanger.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
Have you ever seen me hold on?
Let me get my media t-shirt out.
Has that ever happened?
Have you ever seen me hold on, let me get my media flip-flops out for a picture?
No.
Have you ever seen that from me?
No.
Have I ever said, hold on, let me get my, let me get the haircut going.
Does that ever happen?
No.
Okay.
But there's a lot of things that I've never seen you do say, you know, until you did them, set them, and, you know, showed them.
Okay.
Well, I don't think I got a jiu-jitsu belt that's made to wear around.
a ghee so I can hang it on my wall or only wear it during media shoots.
That's up to you, bro.
That's up to you.
You know you're wrong now.
You know as soon as I finished that last sentence.
You're like, I'm wrong.
You know you're wrong.
So you're saying you should never do it because you've never done it?
Is that always saying?
I'm saying I have a jiu-jitsu belt.
Yes.
That is made to wear on a jiu-jitsu ghee.
Sure.
That is made to do jiu-jitsu in.
And what you're telling me is I should take pictures only with that thing.
You see you wrong.
Oh, man.
Okay.
There's more to it.
There's more to it.
Credit.
You help me through the case.
Okay.
You help me through the case.
You help me see the light by presenting an adverse scenario, which would be me going,
hold on, photo shoot.
It's not adverse.
Let's do a media photo shoot.
Okay.
Okay.
Look, here.
Okay.
You're correct in that little, like, but the bigger picture, I'm correct.
Look, at the end of the day, that's the choice that only you can make, not me,
for you.
That doesn't make sense.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Look, you probably, maybe you do.
Maybe you don't.
I don't know.
Maybe you're different.
Maybe you're the same as all of us.
But a lot of us have more than.
than one gie, maybe more than two, maybe more than three.
Guess what?
You know how many of them are not being used for jihitsu?
How many?
None of them.
Okay.
Well, some of us have a ghee that's like, you know what?
This is a good ghee, right?
This is a good ghee.
It looks better when it's like sparkling new and it looks better in pictures.
See what I'm saying?
So it'll be like the media geese.
Not freaking what do you call.
Not now the truth comes out.
Echo has a freaking media game.
I'm saying I do.
I'm saying some of us do.
When I say us, I mean us, the people.
See what I'm saying?
May I may not refer to me.
Yeah, see what I'm saying I'm just saying that's a thing you're not like a four-time world Jiu-Jitsu champion with Ghee and you have a media geese. I question your scenario. First of, I'm not saying I have a media guy. I'm not saying I don't, but I'm just saying I'm saying I'm saying as a principal. I'm saying I'm anti-media geese belt. Yeah. So I guess at the end of the question is why is that seems saying, but hey look like I said, it's not my question. That's not my question. Yeah. What about a media kettlebell?
You got like a nice clean kettlewell for the media.
It's different.
It's different.
Okay.
But either way, hey, look, like I said, look, at the end of the day, here's my answer to your question.
Thank you for asking, by the way.
That's only a question you can answer.
Yes, I just did.
OriginUSA.com.
Get yourself a jiu-jit-to belt.
Get yourself a ghee.
Get yourself whatever you need.
Don't use it for media.
Don't use it for photo shoots.
Use it to train.
Use it to hunt.
Use it to work.
that's what we're doing.
Ors USA.com.
I say use them for both.
Use them to work, whatever.
But bro,
when the camera comes out,
bro, represent.
You see what I'm saying?
Dude,
that's totally different.
That's all,
yeah,
that's all I'm saying.
You're changing your tune.
That's all I'm saying.
That's all I'm saying.
That's all I'm saying.
Anyway,
also,
Jocko's store called Jocco store.
Jocco store.com.
Say, look,
whether the camera's on,
off, you're out in the wild,
you're at home,
by yourself.
You're in your home gym.
or commercial gym.
You want to represent when you're on the path.
This is where you get your stuff.
Joccalcstar.com.
Discipline equals freedom.
Good.
Stand by to get some,
by the way.
We just restocked that.
A lot of people were hitting me up to stand by to get some,
you know,
some sizes off.
Hey, boom,
we're back.
Also, we have these hoodies.
Look at you just right on top of stuff.
We got these hoodies,
they're quick flip hoodies.
They turn magically into a drawstring backpack.
Yes, exactly right.
We're out of a lot of those sizes.
Boom, we back.
We're back.
We're back in the game.
What do they say on those ones?
Discipline equals freedom, of course, all day.
Jack, I love it.
Yeah, yeah.
So anyway.
What about those little like wind jackets?
Oh, yeah, the windbreaker ones.
Those are, those, we're getting more of those into.
Some sizes are sold out.
You know, hey, look, we love them.
We love them.
But yeah, we're getting them back in.
A lot of stuff on there.
Go to jocco store.com.
What about, don't, if only you had a subscription thing.
Yeah, yeah, different designs.
Yeah.
Like every month or something.
Okay, okay, good.
Good news.
There's something called the shirt locker.
Same thing,
jocco store.com.
There's another top right shirt locker.
Boom.
Check it out.
It's a subscription scenario,
new designs every month.
A little bit different from some of the main designs.
But yeah,
people seem to like them.
So check that out as well.
Right on.
Also, primalbeef.com,
Colorado craft beef.
com.
You need steak in your life.
You need steak.
You need some beef jerky from primal beef.
You need some meat sticks from Colorado craft beef.
You need beef bacon, steak bacon.
That's Colorado Craft Beef right there.com.
Primalbeef.com, that's what you need.
Go check those out.
Great companies, great steaks, great people.
Check those out.
Get yourself the steak that you need.
Also, subscribe to the podcast.
Also, jocco underground.com.
Also, YouTube channels.
There's one for Jocko Podcast.
There's one for Jocco Podcast.
Clips.
Yeah, of course.
There's Jocco Fuel.
And there's Origin USA.
So check those out.
psychological warfare you can get in on that we got a bunch of books
I've written a bunch of books so
check them out leadership strategy and tactics
final spin
weigh the warrior kid check out the kids books you don't have to wait for the movie to come
out there's a movie coming out by the way it's already been filmed it's it's
wrapped yeah right all things rap which is a big deal
because when you're making a movie anything can go wrong and now of a sudden you don't
get it wrapped you see what I'm saying like oh you're making a movie the funding gets
cut. Oh, you're making a movie. Your star
breaks his leg. Oh, you're
making a movie. Like, there's
fires in the set. And like, you see what I'm saying?
Yes, I do. And these things are
severe
problems. And maybe you never get that
movie made. Yeah. Well,
the day you get it done, you're like,
all right, we're done. This thing is going to be done.
It's a huge step.
So, you don't have to wait for it, though.
We don't know when it's coming out.
But until then, we got a bunch of
books, kids books.
Way of the Warrior Kid 1, 2, and 3, and 4, and 5.
Check those out.
Also, Miking the Dragons.
Also, Eschlamfront, we have a leadership consultancy.
We solve problems through leadership.
Go to Eshlamfront.com for details.
We do have some seats left in San Diego for the muster.
February 23rd through 25th.
If you want to go get there quickly, go and register.
We got some seats left.
Go get in there.
FTX council.
a bunch of events.
If you want to come to one of our events,
go to ashlandfront.com
or if you need help in your organization
from a leadership perspective,
go to ashlandfront.com.
And we will handle it.
We will help you handle it.
We will teach you how to handle it.
That's what we're doing.
Also, we have online training,
Extreme Ownership.com.
That is where we provide these skills
through an online training program.
So go to Extreme Ownership.
and check that out.
Also, if you want to help service members active and retired, you want to help their families.
You want to help Gold Star families.
Check out Mark Lee's mom, Mama Leach, got an amazing charity organization.
If you want to donate or you want to get involved, go to America's Mighty Warriors.org.
Also check out heroes and horses.org.
Micah Fink up there in the mountains.
And then Jimmy May's organization, Beyond the Brotherhood.
dot org check all those out and if you want to connect with four branches and you want to connect
with doggy the inner webs four branches dot com facebook four branches bourbon instagram at four
branches bourbon youtube at four branches bourbon and then doggy he's also there on
on instagram and on the facebook at harold dot underdown and for us can check out jocco.com
you can also find me on social media i'm at jocco willing can echoes
I'm sadical Charles.
Just be careful because there's an algorithm there.
It'll try and ruin your life.
Thanks once again to Harold Underdown Doggy
for joining us tonight.
Thanks for sharing your experiences,
your lessons learned.
Thanks for your service to the country and to the teams.
And thanks to all our military personnel out there right now,
keeping us safe, protecting our way of life.
We are grateful for all of you.
Also, the same for our police, law enforcement,
firefighters, paramedics, EMTs,
Dispatchers, Correctional Officers, Border Patrol Secret Service, as well as all other first responders.
Thank you for keeping us safe here on the home front.
And everyone else out there, doggy ain't got nothing for you.
No one does.
And listen, if you got a problem, you're going to have to fix it yourself.
You have to solve your own problems.
And in order to do that, what you got to do is go out there and get after it.
Until next time, this is Echo and Jocko.
