Jocko Podcast - 516: The Fat Electrician & Veteran With a Sign Talk Military Service, Life, and Putting Out Word.
Episode Date: November 26, 2025>Join Jocko Underground<The conversation moves from military service and trades to online warfare, explaining how misinformation spreads, why memes are weapons, and how an entire digital communi...ty defended two creators from institutional falsehoods.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Jocko podcast number 516 with Echo Charles and me Jocco Willink.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
You may notice that things have changed since you left.
Family may have grown older.
Friends may have moved and familiar places may look unfamiliar.
That's as it should be.
After all, you've changed too.
Civilian life with its own duties and pleasures now offers the chance for a new beginning
built on the foundation of your service and sacrifice.
And that right there is an excerpt from a military pamphlet that was issued by the War Department and the Navy Department in August of 1945.
And the pamphlet is called Going Back to Civilian Life.
And it's a very, when you look through the entire manual, it's actually a very positive spin on coming home from an absolutely brutal war.
And that paragraph right there is about all they have to say about what the transition is going to be.
like from like a mental perspective, a psychological perspective, because the rest of the pamphlet is just,
you know, talking about your military records and your taxes and your family allowances and
allotments and wearing your uniform and when you can and when you can and how to how to get good
insurance and the change of beneficiaries and getting a government job and other just kind of like
mundane administrative information that you probably didn't care much about when you were coming
home from Iwo Jima. But the rest of it was up to you. And again, if you think about
1945 for the soldiers sailors airmen and marines of the greatest generation they took advantage of
every opportunity and they did adjust well and they built america into what it is today and it's not to say
that veterans in struggle then as they sometimes struggle now but there are a great many examples of
service members who come home from war or come home from their standard military service doing
whatever their country asked them to do, who then carry on successfully with their next mission
in the civilian sector.
And we've got two of those men here tonight, Zach Bell, also known as veteran with a sign
who joined us before in the past, episode 426, where we talked about his time in the Marine
Corps serving in Afghanistan, his post-service life leading up to becoming a veteran advocate
through his social media and podcast, and also joining us as Nick, the Fat Electrician.
Another veteran who served as a medic in the National Guard, who then became an electrician at some point along the way, apparently was fat, or at least heading in that direction, before finding an outlet for his sense of humor and his interest in military history, making educational and entertaining videos on his YouTube channel, the fat electrician.
So, gentlemen, thanks for joining us.
Thank you.
Thanks for coming out.
Yeah, this is a...
How did that fat electrician thing come about?
Man, I was, let's get on that one.
I was electrician and just had my first kid.
He was about three months old.
And I was at the gym bench pressing and completely ruptured my peck and tore it off.
So like the whole muscle sucked into your chest.
And couldn't work as an electrician with one arm.
So I was sitting at home doing door dashing a sling, trying to make money.
Got a new kid I just had.
Wife isn't back to work yet.
And she kept sending me.
these links through text messages for this little kids dancing app called TikTok.
And I refused to download the app because I thought it was for little kids.
So I just kept clicking them and watching them through like Safari or the internet browser on my phone or whatever.
And after 500, I was like, fuck it, I'll download the app.
So I downloaded it and sitting at home, doom scrolling on these shorts when they first came out.
And then for some reason, I decided to, you know, make a video on my own.
And I named the, my username was the fat electrician as a joke to my wife.
Like I'm I can't work out. I'm not at work. I'm sitting at home doing nothing all day. I'm going to get fat
So that's what I went with for the name is a joke to her
And then I made a TikTok and I think the first one I ever made got 12 million views in about three days
And then it just kept going
You is like you struck oil like you were digging in your backyard and all of a sudden like black stuff started coming out
You're like wait a second I know
Yeah, you should keep digging timer starts I've got 45 seconds till the DOD's here
It's gonna be awful
Jack. Well, let's get into that. Zach, obviously last time you were on here, we talked about your past and what you went through and how you ended up what you're doing. And if people want to hear that, go back and listen to 426. But before we get into what you guys are doing right now, let's get a little bit more background on that, on you, Nick, where you came from. So where did you grow up? California and Iowa. So I was born in Chico, California. I grew up there until I was about 12 years old. So parents, parents didn't really have their shit together. They were young when I was born.
How young?
I think my mom was 18.
I think my dad was 21.
And they weren't really ready for it.
And whole childhood was, you know, moving from one town to the next.
I think I went to like 13 different elementary schools.
So like I was always, always the new kid.
They had, you know, drug problems, some other problems.
And then right around the time I was 12, two younger sisters, I think she would have been
seven and three at the time.
they decided to get their shit together
and the only way if they could do that
was to go somewhere where they didn't know how to get drugs.
So when I was 12 years old,
I got on a Greyhound bus with a backpack full of clothes
and a goosebumps backpack with my PlayStation 2 in it
and had a three-day bus ride to Charles City, Iowa,
and then lived in my grandma's basement for a year.
Oh, so your grandma was out there.
Yeah.
Did you ship out there before your parents rolled out there?
So me, my mom, and my two sisters all went together.
on a Greyhound bus.
So super fun to do that as a 12-year-old on a three-day bus ride.
Get to see a lot of the world inside of a bus.
Let me tell you.
So, yeah, and then my dad probably came three weeks, a month and a half later.
Did you ever talk to your dad and mom and figure out, like, what was the wake-up call?
At what point did they go, hold on a second.
We got to fix their shit.
I mean, it's just one of those things.
Like, they always knew they were doing a bad job.
And then, you know, I think seeing the kids start to grow up and, you know, it sucks for me being the new kid all the time.
And it's like, okay, well, not that I was already too broken to repair,
but like we've got two more chances.
We can make it better for those two also.
And then, you know, I think it got to the point where, you know,
extended family was going to try to get involved and, you know,
have us go live with them.
So just decided to get their shit together.
It's been great ever since.
What time of year was it when you got to Iowa?
I don't remember exactly.
I tell you it's a lot fucking colder than California.
I was going to say, especially if it was Chico in the summertime.
Yeah.
It was like you went from blistering hot.
or if it was the winter time you went to just buck-ass cold.
I think there was snow on the ground.
It had to have been winter because I mean, and I live in,
I live in northern Iowa.
I'm like 30 miles from the Minnesota border.
And like that upper tip of Iowa is, I mean,
you'll have wind chills and stuff,
negative 30 to negative 60 in the winter.
So it was crazy.
Didn't you not see snow echo Charles until like you moved to San Diego or something?
So one time and then like years and years and years after I moved.
to San Diego yeah once you got to San Diego when's the first time you went and like ran around
in the snow well on the big island in Hawaii if you go to monaquale sometimes there's snow
so I saw snow walked in it that was it and then the first time was I don't know maybe like eight
years ago maybe yeah because I was you know we were friends when you saw snow for the first time
you can't be pretty excited about that it is a very magical experience for sure probably more
excited that Nick was when he showed up that 12 year old. He shows up to my house for the first time.
My house is on a river and he's like blown away and infatuated that the river is frozen in
January. He doesn't get it. It's too cold. If moving water is like we're done for a little bit.
My people aren't made for that. Like I come from the Mississippi. Like I need to be near warmth.
Dude, the real cold. I was up in Montana. I think it was two years ago and it was negative like negative 45.
like my diesel engine jelled up you know it was freaking gnarly and you couldn't do anything
except for you if you're in montana that's just life if you're in like minnesota that's just life
that's just the way it is you got to plug your diesel truck in have the warmer so the fuel
doesn't gel up that's normal stuff man so what was it like growing so you know small town there
up in the middle of iowa yeah so charles city iowa i think at the time it was like seven to eight
thousand people. So I mean, I went from being a new kid and, you know, pretty big cities all over the
place, you know, like graduating classes were, you know, so big. You never even met everybody in
your class. And I think the graduating class that I had in high school was like 150 kids. So like you,
you know everybody. And then I don't know, I was probably not the new kid for the first time in my
life around 14 years old. So. And you, what sports did you do? I did football for like the first year.
And then I just got into Jiu-Jitsu with the local anime team and just was doing that the whole time.
Straight to Jiu-Jitsu, even in Iowa.
And wrestling, was wrestling at your school big?
Wrestling is big at every school in Iowa, except I was 14.
And that's, unless you're an athletic freak, which I am not, it is way too late.
You go in at 14 years old to wrestle this other kid that's also competing for the JV slots,
It's got 900 matches.
You're like, I'm good.
To wrestle before you can walk.
They're crazy.
It's epic out there, is that?
It's insane.
So you did, and football you just did for a year?
Yeah, I did football for a year.
Just, yeah, not my thing.
And how'd you find Jiu-Jitsu?
I was working at a pizza place called Pizza Ranch,
and one of the, like, shift managers who was, I don't know,
it's a couple years older than me, maybe.
Did M&A at like an abandoned school.
in the next town over.
They had MMA events every month or whatever,
and he would go fight there.
So started-
You need kind of neat.
In what time frame is this?
This would have been like 2008 to 2012.
Because there's a certain,
if you go back a little further than that,
you've got to put air quotes around MMA matches in Iowa.
Because it's just like,
and even out here,
remember some of those old matches we'd go to that?
You'd go, bro, this is not regulated it anyway.
And these people have very limited training.
Oh, no, it was very much.
that. It was very much that. Pro matches. Pro matches air quotes you're going dude I
sincerely hope no one dies yeah because this is not this is not okay they at least
had they at least had like the local volunteer ambulance people showing up yeah so
that you got that going yeah that's another thing that's really weird like I used to
get these young MMA fighters like I want to fight I want to fight and you go to an
amateur MMA fight and sort of like that kid that had 900 matches when he's 14 years
old trying to the same thing happens with
MMA where hey oh this guy's
oh and oh but he
you know is a junior college wrestler
that was a golden gloves boxer
and you got some kid that
you know has been doing jujitsu
for eight months he's like dude I want to fight
MMA it's like bro you don't know what that
first match is going to be like it could be that kid
that's just going to annihilate
you and I had some people that were on the annihilation
side of that too you know
like Taylor remember Taylor
yeah bro he you know he's like a junior college
just all-American and he just murdered people, you know, but he had his own-no record.
It's like, well, then he had a one-and-o record.
He's getting somebody else that has a one-in-one record.
It's like just pure annihilation.
And so you're training jiu-jitsu.
Did you kind of get the jihitsu bug right out of the gate?
Yeah, I loved it.
I mean, I was a like fat, chubby kid until then.
So then started working out and stuff with that too.
And then, you know, didn't have a high-quality training in the area.
So I was, you know, taking all the money I was making it my minimum wage job for gas money to drive down to Waterloo, the only town with a jujitsu gym that was, you know, 90 miles away.
Go train there, drive up to Mason City where they had a bigger MMA team.
So did that all through high school.
Did you start getting any kind of like goals of fighting MMA or using that for a career type thing?
I mean, it was always one of those things that I wanted to do, but it was also just like, man, I hate competing.
I did a bunch of jih Tutsu tournaments of stuff.
And I think MMA would be better, but I loathe doing jiu-jitsu tournaments.
What makes you loat that?
I just want to show up and do it.
And I hate the, all right, well, we got to be here at 8 in the morning to weigh in.
And then, you know, you're younger and you're in the middleweight to heavyweight weight category.
So you're not going to compete until 4 in the afternoon.
So it's like you're stuck at an airport on a layover for six hours before you got to try to like turn it on to compete.
And it's just not fun to me at all.
They're getting somewhat better at it now.
Like, Jiu-Jit-Turnaments are a little bit better now.
Part of it is because they have computer, whatever, apps that kind of set the whole thing up.
So the cool thing now is they'll tell you, oh, you know, men's adult 200 pounds is competing at this time.
And they're fairly accurate as opposed to, I remember showing up at 5 o'clock in the morning to weigh in
and literally not getting my first match until 8 o'clock at night.
Yeah.
It was just a complete disaster.
It's just like, this is, I'm still working.
I got a normal life.
This is turned into a whole weekend thing and I spent money to be here.
And what are you going to win like a $4 plastic metal?
Yeah, exactly.
It's pretty sick.
Yeah.
It's pretty sick.
With your name spelled wrong or something?
No, they're not an engraving at custom for you.
Right.
What else were you into when you were growing up?
I mean, that was it, man.
I was always, I liked business, liked history.
So, I mean, history class, business class.
So, I mean, I was always working.
I think all through high school I was working 34 hours a week because that was the most you were legally allowed to work before they had to offer you benefits.
So, I mean, I was working, doing jiu-jitsu, going to school.
That was about it.
What was your plan as you're looking to the future when you're 17 years old or whatever?
You junior year, did you have a plan?
No idea.
I had no idea at all.
So that's kind of why I just did the always originally wanted to go into the Navy and then
had a high school girlfriend that I loved and she didn't want me to go away and do the active duty
thing. So I did an Army National Guard instead because it was one weekend a month and two weeks
in the summer. Never had a single Saturday Sunday drill ever, but whatever. So did that stay and ended up
what did you want to do in the Navy? Did you have like a specific goal? I actually want to
Swick. Okay. So I thought that sounded cool. Yeah. You even, I'm surprised people even knew about that
back then. I was, uh, I was pretty big on, you know, Googling it and looking into it and stuff.
But you got to remember this is also 20, 2012. So I mean, it's not like the 1990s where it was like,
what's a seal? Never hurt, you know, so there's some information out there if you could find it.
And I was young, knew how to use the internet. So I thought SWIC sounded cool. Yeah. I mean,
it's a cool job if you like boats. Like, it's what you're going to be doing, driving freaking
boat. So it's if you like boats, and some people are really into boats. I mean, obviously,
like you go out to Lake Havasu or something, that's the whole thing out there. It's a whole
culture of driving boats. So if you want to get free gas money, SWIC's a pretty good, pretty
damn good job, you know? So you go to the National Guard. Did you, did you pick an MOS out of the
gate? Uh, so when you go there, you go, you go to MEPs and then they, you know, they get your
GT score and they're like, they pretty much told me it. I, I don't remember what the score was, but I could
do borderline anything I wanted.
But with National Guard, it's like, yeah, you can do that job.
You qualify and we'll do it for you.
But the nearest drilling location, a unit that has, you know, military intelligence or
whatever I thought I wanted, knowing nothing is eight hours away.
And you got to drive there every month.
And I was like, all right.
Well, what's close?
And they're like, well, there's infantry and combat arms and artillery 45 minutes from
your house.
And I was like, okay, cool.
What do they want?
They're like, you'd be infantry, mortars or a medic.
And I was like, all right, I'll be a medic.
Yeah, right on.
So that's what I picked.
Did you have any interest in being a medic or is it just like it seemed like a transferable skill?
It's one of those things where you're just like, yeah, it sounds cool to do.
I'll go do that.
And then that kind of changed the plan to, you know, I'm going to go off, be a combat medic and then I'll come back and do like nursing.
How old were you when you signed up for the National Guard?
17.
I was in my senior year still.
So you could sign up for combat medic.
How long did it take before you could leave for boot camp?
So I signed up, had to finish my senior year.
The National Guard has a program.
It's not ROTC.
It's there's some acronym for it,
but it's basically like you start drilling right away.
And they have a whole drill weekend for recruits that haven't been to Basic yet.
And it's like go there.
So I mean, you show up to Basic,
knowing how to March,
you know all the rank,
you know all the stuff they make you yell and recite and do everything.
So you're ahead of the power curving boot camp.
Yeah.
So National Guard, at least in the Army,
I don't know about everywhere else,
but they have like the highest percentage of honor graduates
it's because you show up already having done, you know, 100 hours of instruction and all this other stuff.
For free?
Yeah.
It's for free, right?
Hey, they paid me to go.
Oh, did they pay you?
Yeah, they paid you to go.
They paid you the same rate for whatever your rank was for the, I think National Guard splits it up into two eight-hour periods in a day for a MUA.
And that's what they paid you.
Okay.
That was cool.
So how's boot camp?
You pretty much crush it?
Yeah, I walked in.
I got Honor graduate.
And, I mean, it was just, you know, I was.
walked in knowing how to march i actually cared tried to whatever and other people can't understand
left face right face for six weeks i'm doing push-ups because of it but it was fine did you get any of that
sort of uh like hey maybe i want to do this for a living like for real uh like i want to stay in i want to go
active duty anything like that yeah i definitely thought about it but again you know the whole reason i
didn't was girlfriend didn't want to didn't want to live that life so
Made that decision chose her and worked out so far.
She's a mother of my kids and happily married.
So you made a good call.
Yeah, I don't regret it.
So you get done with boot camp.
And then do you go directly to your advanced training?
You would be in a medic?
How long is the medic school?
The medic school is like, it's one of the longest MOSs in the Army.
I want to say it's close to six months.
And they split it up into two categories.
You have like a civilian side and then the whiskey side because it's 68 whiskey is the MOW.
So the civilian side is you have to get your EMTB civilian certification in I think six, six or eight weeks.
And I mean, the EMTB book is this thick.
And you go through it.
And it's like 12 hours a day.
And it's like this chapter next day, we're testing on it.
If you fail, you're retaking it.
If you fail the retake, you're recycling.
So it had like, I don't know, 30 to 40 percent people getting kicked out rage, just failing the written tests.
Like it wasn't physically hard.
but it was just you have to do this.
So get through the civilian side,
then you get over the whiskey side
where you can do the actual like combat medicine
that the army allows you to do that civilians won't.
So you leave with an EMTB certification
and go work at the fire department or whatever.
And what year is this?
This would have been 2012, 2013.
Okay.
So you're looking at the wars.
Are you thinking like,
I'm definitely going to get called up?
Did you think that way?
Because, hey, in 2006, I was in,
Ramadi, when I got there, it was a National Guard on the ground.
They'd been there for 14 months and, like, taking massive casualties, and they were awesome.
Yes.
It was not probably what most National Guard dudes thought they were going to be doing when they joined the National Guard.
No, my recruiter and my unit were very upfront with us.
So we were 133rd at Waterloo out of the 34th Infantry, which is, I think it's the most
deployed National Guard unit in American history.
And, I mean, those guys have deployed everywhere.
And while I was at AIT, my unit was.
was in Afghanistan on deployment.
So like I was told right out of the gate like, hey, we deploy every four years
because they deployed every four years through all of GWAT.
So I mean, I was under the impression I was going to Afghanistan for the first three
years I was in.
So you have like the train up period and we were training up like we were going to Afghanistan
and then a year out, they're like, well, everything's winding down now.
You guys are going to go to Egypt.
And then six months later they're like, ah, we're not going to Egypt.
You're just going to go train in Alaska.
It's like, okay.
whatever so you had at least you had this medical background and then what you said you were going
to become a do something in the medical field yeah so then i figured i'd do something in medical field
so i came back home got through all the training was drilling doing national guard stuff and then
started going to college uh got the associates and science you need to get into nursing school
and then i went into nursing school and how that work out not great not my thing let me tell you
What did you like about it?
I can tell you the moment I knew it wasn't going to work out.
It was about 15 minutes into the first day.
Damn.
Okay, you went deep.
Yeah, super, super deep.
Got the threshold.
And I'm not ragging on nurses.
It's a very hard job.
They're incredible people.
They're super compassionate.
It just wasn't my thing.
What you should say is they're super compassionate and you're not.
Also true.
The nursing teacher who is, you know, nursing's the hardest job on the,
planet yada yada yada fine she plays this youtube video it's like an animated thing still on
youtube talking about how incredible nurses are it's like okay that's a good point that's a good
point and then they're like most people don't realize this but more nurses get hurt on the job
than active duty military cops firefighters and construction workers combined and i was like
okay not that we need to make this a competition but there's a difference between straining your
back helping an old lady out of bed and getting blown up or falling off a skyscraper landing on some
Rebar. So it was just very much, I don't know, I couldn't handle the gossip, didn't have the
compassionate side, I guess. My sister, my younger sister is graduating from nursing school in December.
She's going to be a nurse. But, you know, she's, and you probably like, well, thinking, wait,
how old is your younger sister? Because Jocko, you're 54. So, yeah, she's like 50 something.
But she's made up her mind that that's going to be her career.
But she's a perfect person for it because she is like ultra compassionate and hardworking.
And like she is going to be a great nurse.
And I would be probably in the running for being the worst nurse, you know, ever.
Probably right behind you, I guess.
That's where I was.
Like apparently you can't talk to the patients the way you talk to the army guys.
Like, okay, fine.
Well, I guess.
So were you, you were enrolled in nursing school?
Yep.
In 15 minutes you figure out that this is not your jam.
What do you do then?
You know, well, there's still kind, that's like the hindsight.
I should have known them.
So I mean, it's still like, okay, maybe this is just, you know, it's like the army.
It's like anything else.
There's the BS you got to walk through where it's like, this is what's supposed to happen
versus what actually happens.
So I'm still pushed through it for, I think, two semesters trying to like, and then eventually
I get to the point where I'm doing clinicals and stuff.
And I'm like, oh, I, clinicals at first for me were really good.
So what are you doing during your clinical?
You literally just show up and like you get, here's the nurse that works here.
She's, she's got five patients.
There's five students.
You're each going to take a patient over for her.
And she's just going to supervise you handling her patients.
So you're basically like practicing while being supervised.
100% looking at patients.
With one patient instead of five.
Got it.
overwhelmed, you know. And clinicals at first went great for me because when you first start out,
the clinicals are usually just in like old folk homes. And so they would always give me the old war
veteran that, you know, he's in there. He's 80 years old. And I would just sit down and be like,
okay, you need your diaper change, your food, nothing, cool. And all the other students would just
like go sit down and work on homework and then check on him every 45 minutes. But like I was in there
for eight hours just talking with some dude that was, you know, a Cavs Scout in Vietnam.
Talking about freaking ANZIO.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So like, and that's like part of why I love doing the military history stuff.
So it has got to go and talk with so many of these old war veterans and these retirement homes.
And then, you know, you get to the next, you know, nursing two or whatever the next class was.
And then you start going into like hospitals.
And it's like, I didn't care for those clinicals at all.
And it was like, I'm going to go do something else.
And what was the something else?
Is this where you picked up the election?
Yeah, I had no idea what I was going to do. Like, I joined the Army to pay for college, didn't need college, apparently, don't like it. And I was like, oh, shit, what a... And I was on social media and Mike Rowe, dirty jobs posted a meme that it was, I forget the exact stat, but it was like 85% of all licensed electricians are set to retire in the next 10 years and their average pay is this. And I was like, okay, cool, I'll do that. And then I called every electrical contractor in my town that day, asked for a job, had a job by,
the next day and was starting my apprenticeship to be a journeyman electrician.
And how long does that take?
It depends on where you're at.
It's either a four or five year program.
Where I was at at the time is it was a five year program.
How deep did you go on that?
I finished.
I'm a journeyman electrician.
I still have the license and everything.
Got it done.
And then so you become an electrician, you're working, are you getting like a lot of overtime?
You're working your ass off once you become an electrician or when you're working to become a
Journeyman.
Yeah, I mean, so you can always tell them note over time, but like when you're the young guy,
don't have kids yet.
And so, you know, you're working 60, 80 hours a week, depending on the time of year and how busy it is.
And the company that I worked for, we did a mostly industrial.
So, like, we had, you know, there's 15 factories in the town I live in, and this company
has the contract to like nine of them.
So it was very much a sit.
And they're running around the clock.
So it was always a situation like, hey, this electrical panel blew up or melted
down or they've got some emergencies. So like you're on call, you're showing up at whatever time,
whenever something breaks to fix it. And then you've got, you know, your new projects, you're
installing during normal hours. Did you like it? I loved it. Yeah. I mean, it's just the,
the construction industry is so much like the military. It's insane. Yeah, it does. I mean,
you show up to a construction site. They've got the whiteboard with all the rules and all the stuff.
The same thing like a military range does. You can, here's the timeline that we're trying to make.
Here's the mission that we're trying to get accomplished.
Here's the restraints that we've got to maintain.
Here's the overall regulations we got to follow.
Go.
Exactly.
I've always thought that being, so I took electricity in high school,
so I like knew how to wire houses and stuff.
And I also worked construction,
so I knew, I know how to like do plumbing and whatnot too.
But I've always found that the thing that sucks about electrical
is when you get done with a job and something doesn't work,
it's really hard to figure out where it is.
that sucks. The thing that sucks about plumbing is when you get done with a job and something
doesn't work, you see exactly where the problem is and it's spraying all over the place and
it's, and that sucks too. So it's like, which one do you want to do? Do you want to do the one that's
like unknown to try and figure out or the one that's really easy to figure out where it is, but it's
like you're, it's a shit sandwich. Yeah. Dude, I love the, you know, because I was, so I was a service
truck guy. So I was one of the, I was like one of the top electricians at my company, they would call
with like issues so I was always getting pulled off the job to go solve the mysteries that
nobody can figure out some of the shit I've seen that people have done like I've shown up to
somebody's house my switches electrocute me what I'm not shitting you I show I show up to this house
and I'm like flipping the switch I was like it's plastic I'm not getting shocked like what are you
guys talking about they're like I don't know sometimes it just shocks me and I get up and I'm like
looking at light fixtures I'm plugging stuff in and out and then I touch
the light fixture, the light fixture shocks the dog shit
out of me.
What is happening?
They had tied the hot wire
in with the ground
for this new room they built
and then the ground feeding that whole room
wasn't grounded at the panel.
So they were electrifying all the metal boxes
and anything touching metal
in that entire room.
So if you walked by and brushed the light switch,
the two screws on the cover plate
would shock the shit out of you.
like all kinds of stuff like that
but I love the problem solving of it
I had a I bought a house
and it was built in 1948
and bro I went into the attic
like once I bought it and started trying to figure out
what I had to fix on it
it was knob and tube wire
and totally insane that this place was still standing
it was just open wire
like electrical taped
in 1952
peeled off everywhere
insulation sitting right by it
it is it was a I couldn't believe
that this house was still standing.
And then I had another house that had
aluminum wire
from the 70s, I guess, that of the 70s.
And so it shrinks
and like everything is
open and missing and just
a disaster.
Some of the houses and stuff
you run into. It's like
I'm shocked there's not more house fires
but the other thing is like,
I'm shocked at how complex the electrical
systems and stuff are and how much thought
goes into keeping the average person safe
that has no idea what electricity is.
Like, it's just a magical plug-in that powers shit to you.
But it's like there's so much that could go wrong.
And there's so many safety measures that you don't even see protecting you.
And I hate to say this, but it's also gone very much the route of cars.
Like back when I was a kid and you'd open up the hood of a car, you're like, okay, there's the carburetor.
There's the spark plugs.
You know, there's the distributor.
Like you could see and identify what was happening.
And you could listen to it and be like, oh, this could be the problem over here.
Nowadays, you open up a car hood and it's like, yeah, I'm going into the Ford dealer.
Like, I have no idea what this shit does.
So I was in that generation that had to make that switch.
So all the electricians that taught me how to be electricians, they got started in the 60s and 70s.
And they were wild in hindsight to work with.
I mean, I had a journeyman that would walk up.
I have a little pen that tells me if something's got electricity in it,
if it's on or off.
I got a meter where I can see how many volts it is.
This dude would walk up to hot panels and shit and just be,
he'd lick his pinky and his thumb,
and he'd touch his pinky to hot bus bar,
electrified bus bar,
and then touch it to the case to shock his hand.
But it just went through his hand.
And he could tell you how much voltage it was by how much it shocked it.
And that was just a normal fucking thing for him to do.
normal day, bro.
And then like I'm, I'm learning from this guy, but I'm also having to deal with all these new light fixtures and light switches where it's like to install it.
I got to download an app on my phone and then figure it out.
And then I got to teach the customer how to run this app so they can dim their fucking lights.
That's what I was just about to complain about.
Yeah.
Because I'm that guy now and I have like an app on my phone where it's like, oh, you want to dim the lights.
There's no dimmer switch.
You know, like, oh, get into the app, which is your app needs to be updated.
And then you're downloading this thing.
It's just, it's a different world.
And the electrical panel is also now through what looks like some kind of a computer server of some kind of Echo Charles.
Like you look at it, you're like, all right, cool.
You know, the electrician job has got to have stepped up in the last five years as far as what you need to know.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, it's gotten a lot more complicated.
And the other thing with like the electrical field is saying you're an electrician is like saying you're in the military.
It's not and a lot of people don't realize that like it doesn't give you a good grip on what this guy knows or does on a day to day basis because you can be a journeyman electrician and all you've done for 30 years is dig ditches and lay pipes in it and pull wire to traffic lights which nothing wrong with that but that's all you know how to wire a house.
You don't know how to install a giant animatronic robot armed to palletize shit or you can be dealing with a guy that quite literally has to frequently correct the electrical engineers on how to build a factory.
You just have no idea.
It's a broad spectrum.
It's humongous.
It's everything with electricity.
Yeah.
Shockingly enough.
Shocking.
So then I guess did your life start to turn a little bit when you hurt your pack?
Oh, yeah.
I mean.
So you told that quick story about you blew out your pack.
Total pack tear?
Yep.
Total pack rupture.
I had a I had just become a journeyman electrician.
So like I was pumped because every year you finished.
a year of the program, you get a big raise.
And that jump from being an apprentice to a journeyman,
it was like a, it was like a $10 an hour raise.
Like it was what I've been working for for five years,
didn't get a single full paycheck in before I got hurt.
My son's three months old.
God.
It fucking sucked.
You were benching?
Yeah, just bench pressing.
Were you maxing?
Or was it like a weird moment?
It was like the third rep and I was doing 375,
like nothing I hadn't done before all the time.
And it just went.
No warning?
Nothing.
Was it a hard rep?
No.
God, this is scary.
I found this scary.
Echo Charles.
Is this scary?
At 375, you kind of.
You're in the game.
Yeah, you got to know about that.
Things can happen.
Things will be happening.
Things will be happening.
So it's gone.
Yep.
So, I mean, that tour and like, you know, lucky.
Do you drop the weight?
Like, what happens?
Yeah.
Weight drops.
That side just freaking gives out.
Oh, that goes.
And then I had, you know, I had a spotter with me standing there.
but he knows that he knows that this wasn't heavy weight for me.
He was just there for more of like a check the box.
And then so out of nowhere.
Yeah.
He gets it off me and like just drive home from the gym, pissed.
And like I could tell immediately like this muscle isn't here.
You know, I walk into the doctor and, you know, my mom worked at the hospital.
So she got me into seeing an orthopedic surgeon.
And he's like, yeah, it's torn.
He's like, do you want to like mess with the MRI and stuff?
I was like, no, just fix it.
So I go in, get it fixed and like that.
Do they fix it immediately or you got surgery like two, three days later?
Two, three days later.
I mean, it's not like an emergency thing.
It was, I got really lucky.
It's hard to find a place, a doctor that will do that surgery, actually, at least in rural Iowa where I live.
Because I've torn both.
At the second time I tore one, like that guy had retired and I had to call around all over the state to find somebody.
Usually they're like, oh, we treat it conservatively.
And I go, that sounds like, that sounds like you're not going to fucking.
can fix it. They're like, yeah, well, we can give you rehab. That's not going to reattach the tendon
to the bone. Like I'm 30. I think kind of like the way car mechanics and electricians, I think like
doctors are going to have to adjust to the new attitude of humans, which is like in the old days,
you're still able to lift your arm to you're good, you know, you don't need, we don't care
about your peck. We don't care about your bicep. We don't care about, oh, you lost some strength
in your hands because your freaking spine is jacked up, but you're still, you can still,
do the dishes, you're good to go.
We're not like that anymore.
Get in there and do the dishes.
Yeah.
We're like,
no,
you get me back to like as close to full capacity as you can get me.
Well,
you know there's risk.
Yeah,
I know there's risk.
Let's fine.
Let's fucking do this.
Yeah.
So it was hard to find a doctor that second time.
But, uh,
so I mean,
luckily haven't,
you know,
gone through a whole lot in my life.
I guess that was probably the shittiest chapter of my life.
It just felt like a complete shit bag.
You know,
I'm out here lifting weights at the gym.
We got a three-month-old son.
Wife's not back to work yet.
What number kid was that?
My first.
Oh,
damn.
So, like, you know, I got a three-year-old baby that I can't even pick up because I'm in a
sling.
Like, it just felt like an absolute bag of ass.
It's my fault going out here trying to be Mr. Tough guy.
I lived on a lot of weight.
And then I was doing DoorDash and a sling trying to make whatever money I could.
I got like, I don't know, like 200 bucks from workman's comp or something.
And, uh.
And you got, do you, did you own a house?
Do you have like a mortgage and shit at this point?
Yeah, I had a house.
had a mortgage. So I mean, it was, it was not good. It was not a good time. And at some point,
your wife sending you TikTok videos. Yeah. What was the first freaking TikTok one that you made that
got 12 million views? Man, I just, I was scrolling through these TikToks. I was like, man,
I think I could be funny. And then I made a, I made a three minute video about why Aldi is the
best grocery store. And it was just like a comedy bit and 12 million views, 100,000 followers.
on TikTok overnight.
And then what was next?
You're like, okay, like I said earlier, like, okay, I got oil.
I'm going to keep digging.
I was like, okay, well, the whole vibe of the video was this business model is crazy and it's
awesome.
And I explained that from like my perspective.
And then next video I did was why the Marine Corps is the craziest branch of the military
and people loved it.
And then the comments were like, now do Army infantry.
Then now do mortarmen, now do C-Bs.
And then I started doing these three, three-minute short videos on why every
military job is crazy and then it progressed into 15 minute videos and now I'm doing you know 45
minute to hour and a half stories on war heroes yeah yeah no they're great I've I've watched a
bunch of your videos they're great they're like they're kind of the perfect YouTube video
they're long enough they're short enough to watch like in a you know a rapid period of time
you don't have to like get in the proper chair to watch them you know you don't have to like get
your neck warmer out or anything like that you can just
just watch them.
They're fast moving.
Like I was like watching you talk and I'm like, oh, he's, it almost seemed like you're editing
even little moments out.
So it's just like, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.
So they come at you really quick.
You got your, you know, you're funny.
So it's, so, you know, you get like a smile out of it.
But they're also, you're just telling epic, badass stories of dudes that are doing epic,
badass shit.
So most grown ass men want to hear that stuff.
Right.
And you do it in between,
20 and 30 or maybe 40 minutes, boom, you got your little dose of badassery with some laughs
and smiles and you're a little smarter.
That's a freaking awesome model.
Yeah.
I like it a lot.
People seem to like it.
I think the reason it works so well for me is because I didn't, like, I never deployed,
never got to go do that.
So like I still have the, I don't know what it's like.
So I just, in my head, I just assume it's incredible and really hard.
So it's like I'm still looking up to those guys with like,
the, like a kid looking up to his dad. So everybody's awesome to me. Yeah. So then we can, you know,
I'm doing a video on a CB telling you how awesome the CBs are. I have somebody,
hundreds of emails and comments of like, hey, I'm 45 years old. My dad was a CB in World War II.
And I had no idea how awesome my dad was. And now we watch your videos together and it brought us
closer together. And I understand my dad a lot more. And it's really cool. I was like, that's fucking
awesome. Yeah. That is awesome. And yeah.
I had a lot of that too
where I've had people say
oh my dad was in Vietnam and we sat down
he never talked to me about before
and we watched this video
when you had this Vietnam guy
or you covered this book
and we know he's now
we go out for dinner every Wednesday
and he tells me like another story
of what month you know we're in
he tells me about what they did that month
so yeah that's it's pretty cool
to have the help people make that connection
and you know for me
I mean I didn't do anything crazy in combat
but
I still look at
at like, you know, all the guys that I get to read books about.
It's like, I still look at them.
How did you say you look at them?
Like a kid looking up to death.
Exactly.
I mean, I just did a podcast with a couple like seals from Vietnam.
And it's literally, these guys are actually why I joined the SEAL teams.
It was like, seals in Vietnam is why I joined the SEAL teams.
And here I am sitting here talking to SEALs from Vietnam that were in kind of one of the
most iconic SEAL platoons from the West Coast, Charlie Patoon, CLEONs.
Team 1, 1968.
And I'm sitting here talking to him.
And it's like, it's hard for me to act like a grown man.
You know what I mean?
When my inner 12-year-old just wants to, like, ask him a bunch of questions about
their stoner 63, you know what I mean?
It's awesome.
So, because, like, one thing that was interesting to me, and it makes complete sense
in hindsight, but one thing that was interesting to me is, like, I've read so much of the
history of, like, the broader scope of what was going on.
I'll talk to a veteran that was there.
and I know more about the big picture of what happened
than he does.
He just has his first person perspective.
He like,
I got drafted.
I went there.
I did a job.
I came home.
So like,
we'll talk about stuff.
I was like,
holy shit,
you were at that battle when this,
this is like,
how do you know all this?
I was like,
it's kind of a big deal.
Like,
and we were talking with,
um,
Mr.
Graves,
the World War II veteran.
There's a flamethrower on Eogima.
And just like hearing him being like,
oh yeah,
I was there when they raised the flag.
And just,
yeah,
we found an old drainage pipe.
And,
slapped it up there and raised it.
It was like, this is insane.
And he's just talking about it nonchalant,
like the most iconic picture of all time.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's weird for me.
Like when it,
because when I started this podcast,
it was mostly just books because I didn't know anybody
and no one knew what a podcast was or anything like that.
So it was me just taking these old.
And for me,
the big focus was the,
the front line like first person accounts.
You know,
who was there?
And let me read your book and wrote what you wrote about
being there. And sometimes, you know, I would usually add some of the bigger picture context to it.
But a lot of times, like, we, we learned the bigger picture context in school. You know, you learn about
these major battles and whatnot. But to hear a dude or read about a dude that was on the ground,
you know, picking lice out of his friend's jacket so he would return the favor. And by the way,
you don't, you can't get all the lice. They're always going to be there and just going to gnaw on your
skin for the next four months. And that's what we're doing.
It's like, that's, that's, it gives you a different perspective than just, oh, you know, it was cold.
And so everyone wore coats for the entire time they were deployed on whatever front.
And it's like, oh, yeah, there's something called lice.
You remember those things?
Yeah, they were everywhere and everyone's infested with them and they would chew through their freaking skin.
Like, it just gives you a different perspective when you hear that from the people that were there.
Well, I think it, I think that's why like content like mine in yours works were a little different, but the same type just.
I think history's, there's a lot of people that just like, I don't like history.
It's boring to me.
And it's because school always starts big picture and slowly zooms in.
And you've lost everybody's attention.
Just being like in 1945, the Germans, blah, blah, blah.
And they were here.
And this division of 23,000 dudes moved here.
You lose everybody.
But if you start with like, here's this guy that had really shitty childhood.
It winds up being the guy that, you know, Jake McNasty, paints his face.
He has this iconic picture.
he jumps out of a plane with his 13 renegades that they call the filthy 13 and he jumps into
this battle this battle's a big deal because boom boom boom boom boom okay now like you've taught
somebody history that they otherwise never would have understood because they didn't have the attention
span but because now it's part of an actual hero story they learn it and retain it yeah you you get
to understand and relate to and this is something I said like one of the earliest podcast that we did
you know I don't even remember what book it was but I'm like reminding people
that these guys are not characters in a book.
They're a person.
Like this is a person.
I think it was like Paton Death March, you know,
these guys, just everyone's dying.
Everyone's dying.
And it was like broken down.
The way this guy broke it down was basically
anyone that just did not have
a deep, intrinsic desire to live would just die.
Like if you just said, I can't take an,
I can't walk right now.
I just need to rest.
You're dead.
You're going to die.
You're just going to get left on the side and dead.
and to convey to people like McNasty, right?
Like, this is a dude.
And how does a dude end up like that?
Well, let me tell you a little bit where he came from it.
And how's he end up with 13 other dudes that are also kind of like that?
Well, they took a bunch of freaking knuckle draggers that really aren't fit for much else in the world.
But we're going to put them all in a group and we're going to let him go get after it.
What about it?
What about when he gets thrown in jail a couple times?
Don't worry about that.
That's the guy we're looking for.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a human frag grenade.
We're going to throw out the enemy.
It'll be their problem soon enough is pretty much the strategy at that point in time.
Hey, we could either have this guy back on our base causing problems or throw him over behind enemy lines and let him cause some freaking chaos over there.
The chain of command is sitting in their office.
Like, what do we do with this guy?
Well, option A, we kick him out of the military and he's running around free with all our wives back home.
Or we put up with this shit for another 45 days and throw his ass out of a plane at the Germans.
So freaking good to go.
Send it.
So as you're looking at a you're on tech, you start with TikTok.
Yep.
And then what comes after TikTok?
TikTok, I immediately knew that TikTok was a fad.
There wasn't any money in it.
And, you know, I've been, you know, history and business.
What year is this?
This was 20, this is 2020.
This is like the ass end of COVID for at least where I was at up in Iowa.
Uh-huh.
So like COVID was like pretty much over at this point.
Got it.
And, you know, I just studied business.
my whole life knew what business has worked and I knew there wasn't money in TikTok so I immediately
started doing everything I could to push that audience over to YouTube and originally I was just
uploading way before YouTube shorts even existed just my vertical TikTok videos I'd just scrub the
watermark and upload them and I got a decent size following there and then eventually switched over to
normal YouTube format and just started uploading and kept going and then what about being an
electrician? I still did it for like two years you know
I still, to this day, am fully ready to wake up and find out I got canceled and it's all gone and I'm going back to work.
And I won't be upset about it.
I'll just, it is a fun ride while I had it.
So I still worked, I want to say a year and a half to two years while I was making more money on YouTube.
And I was just doing that at night, grinding it out.
And finally my boss told me he needed me to work over a weekend, like 12 hour shifts over a weekend.
weekend is when I made all my videos.
I told him I can't.
And he said, you're going to have to decide if you want to be a YouTube guy or an
electrician guy.
And I said, all right, I'm going to go with whichever one pays me more.
And he said, I'm going to assume that's me.
And I go, you're wrong.
And he's like, all right, I'll see you on Monday.
And then a couple months after that, I was just like, I got to, you know, I started flying
down to Texas doing podcasts with these guys.
I was like, I'm getting too busy.
And so that's the unsubscribed podcast.
And how did you link up with those guys originally?
Were you part of the unsubscribe podcast out of the great, Zach?
No, I'm just friends with all.
I've known them for over five, almost six years.
And like, it's a big creator hub down in San Antonio.
So, like, what's something we always talk about is like, if you look at the span of time, we've known each other, it's really not that long.
But from sun up to sundown, we're with each other the entire time, doing something, eating something.
You know, like our rooms here, they're joining.
like we're always like interacting like it's it's just because you're we're maximizing that time we all
have together and when I had met Nick they had brought him I think it was like a few episodes
after they brought you down it was before you became a host um he was an electrician then and he was
like I'm still doing this and I was like for real and he's like yeah I got to be back Monday I remember
you saying that it like burned in my mind and I was like damn dude like while his videos are
getting a million, a million, a million views, a million views.
And by that time, people had started sending me stuff, like a lot of his Marine stuff,
because they'd be like, this guy really knows what he's doing.
I was like, matter of fact, we've been hanging out.
So that's how you guys met originally?
Yes.
Yes.
Was through unsubscribed podcast.
And who's the original unsubscribed podcast, dude?
So originally, it started with three buddies, Eli Kuevas, Eli Double Tap, Badi Streams, and Donut Operator.
We're the three original hosts.
I remember Donate operator because I remember seeing that name and going, that's pretty good.
You know what I mean?
And he was a cop.
And I was like, oh, that's, that's one, that one's going to stick.
You know, that's a pretty good name to throw it out there.
And then so you guys, so you're part of that now?
You're a part of unsubscribed.
I'm a host now.
And so where do you guys film that thing?
We got a studio down in San Antonio.
So do you have to travel down to San Antonio?
Yeah, I travel.
I travel down there about once a month and then we film, you know, three or four podcasts
over the span of two or three days and then those are our podcast for the month and I head back
home.
And what's, what is the nature of those podcasts for someone that's listening compared to just the
straight up fat electrician podcast?
Oh, it's completely different.
So, fat electrician is, you know, it's never me talking about myself.
It's never me telling any of my stories or anything I got going on.
Fat electrician is, this is a video on this dude.
It's today we're talking about this guy.
Here's his childhood.
Here's how he got in the military.
Here's the crazy things that happened.
Here's the crazy things happened after the military.
Here's how he passed away.
The end.
See you next week.
And unsubscribe podcast is literally me hanging out with two to three of my buddies
and potentially flying out somebody else that we think would be cool to hang out and drink beer with and just shooting the shit for three hours straight.
Do you go into those with any kind of list of topics you're going to cover?
Or you just roll in there.
It's a guess by.
guess basis. We have such a broad range. You know, if we're bringing out some other
YouTuber that we just think is a funny guy, like we're just going to drink beer and have
fun. Or, you know, it swings the other direction. Totally, we had, we had Jim Capers come on.
You know, I mean, that dude's a military legend. So, I mean, I went through, I read his book.
I watched all the documentaries on him. And my thing is I like, I like finding the funny, crazy
stuff that like humanizes these bigger than life figures. So like, you know, everybody else that
brings Jim on is wanting to talk about a knife kill or all the crazy war hero stuff, but it's
like also like Jim. I understand that you were on a mission in Vietnam and you captured a 23 foot
python mid mission and brought it back as a pet. Like I want to hear that story. Like they were coming
back from a recon mission and just happened upon this 200 pound snake. He's like, yeah, so we took our
poncho covers and wrapped its head up and then we were carrying it through the jungle headed back to
our fob.
And we got to a river and we couldn't get it across this river because it was so heavy.
So we left it.
And then we got back up there and the helicopter pilot didn't believe us.
So we took a chopper down and landed it on some shallow part of the river and took the snake
up to our base and dug a pit and kept it as a pet.
We called it Gomer.
Like,
freaking gnom, dude.
These guys had way,
these guys knew how to like get it on.
Yeah.
And have way better.
And plus Vietnam was just a better A.O.
than like either Afghanistan or Iraq
as far as just having some normal shit going down, you know?
And the seals, the East Coast SEAL SEAL Team 2 in Vietnam,
they brought home, they caught a monkey
and they brought it back to America
and they had it on the quarter deck
and it was really like an angry monkey that would like,
they had it on a leash or some shit.
But when I got to SEAL Team 2,
one of those old Vietnam guys like,
hey, we had a monkey, his name was Jocko.
So they had a freaking monkey
He on the quarter to the Sealed Team 2 that they brought back in Vietnam.
His name was Jacqueline was like, yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
For sure.
Do you know about Sergeant Reckless?
No.
The Marine Corps War Horse.
What about them?
Oh, God.
They did the same thing.
They had to smuggle her back.
So the Marines were up and they were fighting in Korea.
In this point, you know, it was, they were basically fighting on the 38th parallel.
And the Korean map is just, it's just hills.
It was just you're either running up a hill or you're running down a hill.
So the Marines were up on these hills just trying to hold.
just trying to hold the line for negotiations.
And these Marines, it was called the Iron Triangle,
and all the hills were named after Nevada cities,
Reno, Carson, Las Vegas.
And these Marines were holding this iron triangle.
And the North Koreans wanted to punch through their position
because that was the most direct route to Seoul.
So the North Koreans wanted to take over Seoul
because it would be highly beneficial for their negotiating power.
So they were throwing everything they had at these Marines.
These hills were so steep,
the only thing they could get up there for, you know, bigger than small arms was recoilless rifles.
But these big recoiless rifle rounds are like 30 pounds.
And so they're having to lug them up these hills.
And when, you know, the commies start rushing down, there's just meat wall after meat wall.
There's too many of them.
So they get permission to go into town and buy a horse or a donkey or whatever.
So they go into a racetrack.
They buy this Mongolian mare, short, stocky little horse.
And they bring her back and they put her through hoof camp instead of boot camp.
They, you know, they're blowing up grenades and shit so she doesn't get scared anymore and cover in her with flack jackets and North Koreans and Chinese end up attacking and they're attacking for like four days straight and all day and all night this horse is just lug and rounds up.
They said she spanned like, it was like something crazy, like a hundred miles and carried a couple tons of ammunition uphill under gunfire, completely saved the Marines during this battle multiple times.
And then they go to take her back and they're like, no, we're not taking her back.
We're not taking this horse back with her.
So the Marines link up with the Navy.
They smuggle her to Japan.
And then they link up with some independent shipping company that agrees to ship her back to California on boat.
And they link back up with her on the boat.
And the Marine, like chain of command is mad that they got her this far.
So they have the Department of Agriculture come in.
And they're like, we're going to destroy her because she could have diseases or whatever.
And the Marines are like, no, you're not.
Ain't happening.
Not happening.
So an altercation between the Department of Agriculture and these Marines goes down.
And they're like, well, we can take a blood sample.
And then we'll get the lab results back in a couple days.
And if she's cleaning, you can let her go.
But in the meantime, just leave her here.
Go to your Marine Corps.
Homecoming ball, whatever, whatever.
We'll take care of her.
And they're like, now they had a full security detail with her the entire time.
As soon as the Department of Agriculture leaves, they smuggle her off the ship out of the port.
And they smuggle her into a high-rise building.
in, I want to say it was like San Francisco or San Diego.
They get her up to like the 17th floor where the Marine Corps ball is.
And there's pictures of Sergeant Reckless at the Marine Corps ball, like eating the flowers and eating cake and shit.
She would walk up.
She was actually a sergeant.
And they made all of the lower enlisted treat her as though she was a sergeant.
So like if Sergeant Reckless walked up and like that was in order to share your food with her or to give her a drink.
So like they were literally mixed drinks directly into her mouth.
And then, yeah, she ended up retiring on Camp Pendleton.
And she had a always had a lower enlisted farm kid that was her handler.
And she was the one in charge and nobody was allowed to ride her.
So the running joke, the running joke was literally the kid in charge of taking care of Sergeant Reckless was the most in shape Marine in the Marine Corps.
Because the only way they could exercise her was to run beside her for 10 miles a day.
So, yeah, just smuggling animals back.
a good time.
Yeah.
We really screwed up the military with all these rules, man.
Because it was,
dude,
it was like we couldn't bring home anything,
you know?
Like the whole idea of bringing home war trophies,
which, you know,
when you think war trophies,
maybe you're thinking something,
you know,
crazy, but like to bring home,
uh,
enemy AK 47.
Right.
Why can you not do that?
That's freaking totally ridiculous.
I have,
I have a friend that got in like major trouble
because he took the blame for someone
that brought home on AK-47, it's like, bro, what do you think?
That's like going to, yeah, it's like going to McDonald's and saying you stole like one of those
plastic straws.
It's common loot.
Yeah, that's the issue.
We should be, we should have been shipping home for just freaking cruise boxes filled with AK-47s to hang up at your command or in your living room or whatever, you know, like, let's go.
It's not like World War II or shipping back trophy skulls or nothing like that I could kind of understand a little bit.
I don't know.
I'm so cool.
That's not a cool thing at all.
Yeah.
Gross.
Those pictures of all the wives back home with the skulls of her husband's enemies
didn't go hard as fuck.
I'm still upset about my nunchugs.
So that's something.
What's up with your num chucks?
My first deployment,
we came across this kid and he was like running around and it's in Afghanistan.
They don't have electricity in most places.
And he had a set of nunchucks.
Hell yeah.
And he wouldn't stop hitting people with this, so I snatched him.
And I was, to this day, I don't know how this young man in Afghanistan found out about nunchucks.
But we were leaving and we had to go through manis.
And a bunch of MPs were like going through my stuff and they like pulled out my nunchucks.
And he's like, what are these?
And I was like, they're nunchucks, dude.
They're mine.
I'm taking them home.
And he's like, no, you're not.
And I was like, I'm taking them home.
And he's like, this is a weapon.
And they had like a big burn pit.
We had to put all the stuff like over the side.
And the way he was looking at him, I was like, oh, he's about to take them home.
So I walked over and I tossed him into the thing.
He was just like, I was like, dude, you're not taking them from me like because it was just like a really cool thing.
And they wonder why brothers get PTSD, bro.
Your whole life would have been complete if you had a set of freaking Afghan nun chucks in your damn living room.
That's what I'm saying.
Like I watched Bloodsport as a child.
I watched all of those martial arts movies.
How did that culture find that kid in the middle of a poppy field in Afghanistan?
Dan. Like none of his friends, his friends, I thought he was insane. Like, what is he doing? He's
tying two sticks together. Like, I really wanted them. They took him. Stupid MPs. So how did you
guys end up? Because you guys have another podcast. Yes. Which is called the underwhelming
podcast. Yes. And how did you, what triggered that thing into existence? Well, I wanted to spend
more time with Nick. So I had to start a business with him. But no, it's just, it just kind of really
happen naturally. Like I got invited so I got invited on the show like literally a month after I did
this last year. And like I said, we're like always hanging out like almost every other month. We're doing
stuff together. And they the unsubscribe guys has started their subscription company called Pepperbox.
It's it's Patreon, but like it's literally made by them and they're the owners and stuff. And so
there's been like this expansion of like content in the unsubscribe universe, right? Wouldn't you say it's probably
the best way to describe it.
And so, like, you know, other shows being made on there, like, Donut has a cooking show.
Brandon has, like, a gun-specific show, you know, and Nick has another show is...
Wait, who has a cooking show?
A donut operator.
Really?
It's called Let him cook.
What is he teaching how to cook?
This is a general thing.
Cody's, like, really good at cooking, and, like, it was something that's been passed on from
his family.
He's, uh, from, uh, grew up in the South.
Like, he, like, literally North Alabama's where he grew up and stuff.
And so, like, it's just like the coolest version of guys hanging out.
Like, I would understand.
And then we made smash burgers and like he just makes stuff.
And so like we just started talking.
He's like, do you want to start a podcast?
And I was like, yeah, I think that would be fun.
Like let's do kind of like on an old dad, new dad.
That's different.
Like unsubscribe is very much like.
Smoke pit.
Unsubscribe.
Smoke pit hanging out with your buddies in the garage talk.
And then underwhelming is like he's a dad with more experience.
I'm a new dad.
We're talking about more like family oriented stuff.
And like, hey, how did you manage this?
what was the mistakes you made when this issue was going on when you're five-year-old, you know?
And so it's just, it's just something that happened naturally because, like, from the time that I came here a year ago to now, my life has significantly changed.
Right on.
In a good way.
In a good way.
No, like, like, I can't anticipate it.
Like, I was saying, it's just, it's, it blows my mind that I remember when you came on Joe Rogan.
I was like, this dude's fucking awesome.
So, like, now I can text you.
Like it's just like this weird timeline.
It's okay.
I read his book in high school.
Yeah.
I'm sitting across the table from it.
Yeah.
It is.
There's a lot of that.
Like a,
you know,
you're like looking up to heroes.
I'm like,
this is so cool.
But like the last year,
the beginning part was kind of weird.
So like I kind of in January,
I had this like mindset of like I want to lock in and like do this push to kind
of like continue to do what I'm doing with veteran with a sign to kind of like continue to
be a force for good, a change agent, stuff like that. And I found myself in like really
uncomfortable moments. And because I did a bunch of podcasts. I did here and did unsubscribe.
And then out of nowhere, the, um, the VFW started talking about me. And that was that about? That
was like you talked about one of the veteran assistants, like organizations and you promoted them as
doing a good job for you.
So I'll go as quickly as I can through, but the long and short of it is there are
organizations that veterans can pay to help them with their benefits, right?
And there are companies that take like back pay and stuff like that.
That's not what I'm talking about.
This organization that I work with is called Re-Medical, R-E-E-Medical.
And what you do is you go talk to them and then they give you like an outline of how they
can help you with getting supporting medical evidence for your claims.
That's why most claims are kicked back.
Now it is not free to use
It is free to talk to them
And then they tell you how much their services are
The same way
You know, TurboTax does
It is free to do your taxes online
Or you can pay Turbo Tax or a CPA
Right
And it is, I believe it's every
Everyone should have the right to choose
And I've told them this
And I've told everyone this
I don't like that they exist at all
But I do like that people have the option to choose
And I think
Well, just so I'm captioning this right
So just for people that aren't veterans
Like when you get
When you get out of the military
you can get some form of compensation for generally speaking,
it's service-related injuries.
Yes, sir.
So that is,
it seems like it should be pretty straightforward.
Hey,
I lost my left pinky,
you know,
uh,
in a,
in a range accident and,
okay,
yep,
yeah,
you lost your left pinky.
That sucks.
We're going to give you whatever percentage of your pay for the
rest of your life.
Yeah.
And you go,
okay,
that makes sense.
Cool.
That's,
it seems like it should be like that,
but it ain't like that.
It's not like that.
It's way complicated.
It's like, well, how exactly did you lose your pinky?
And how long, what length of pinky did you lose?
Yes.
And are you left-handed or right-handed?
And are you going to be in an occupative?
Like, there's all these things that you have to go through.
And so it ends up being a very complicated process, much like, you know, you brought up taxes.
Yeah.
Like, for me to do my taxes.
Yeah.
Is not possible.
I'm going to go ahead and say that.
Like, I believe, you know, you can make anything happen.
You know what I mean?
If you believe it, you can achieve it.
I'm going to tell you right now, I could not.
do my taxes.
That's smart.
It's impossible for me to do my taxes.
There are so many things,
or I could try, but I would get like arrested
because I would miss something.
And so, you know, I have a guy
that I've been working with for a long time
that does not just my taxes,
but he does the taxes for like 80 different people,
80 different families.
And so he's really good at it.
And he works with people that have multiple businesses
and have lots of weird tax stuff going on.
So he does that.
And he does it for me.
because he knows how the system works.
And by the way, he gets updated when there's a regulatory change or a new tax law comes in.
He understands it.
He dives into it.
He researches it.
He goes through it.
And he makes it work for me and figures out the best way to address the situation.
That's a really, that's a full-time job.
Yeah.
About a bunch of stuff.
Any more than I would go to a freaking, you know, a factory and start trying to wire a factory up.
Like, no, I wouldn't know how to do that.
So it's the same thing.
when you're trying to figure out what the government,
what the VA owes you,
it's a really complicated process.
I know it shouldn't be just like doing your taxes
shouldn't be, but it is.
And so a lot of veterans,
they have trouble getting what they're supposed to get,
and it's problematic.
And so what's happened over the past,
I don't know how long,
but these various companies have sprung up.
Some of them are charities,
some of them are companies,
and they sprung up to help veterans,
do a good job with their VA claim.
And so this one of these companies that did that does that,
and what are they called?
A remedical.
So Romeo Echo Echo Medical.
And so you're, how did you get involved with them and then how did the VFW?
Why is the VFW?
Okay.
I can say all right.
Yeah.
Okay.
I just, he's involved.
I just want to co-sod for my boy.
But we have the same man.
management agency. And what they do is they help to facilitate bringing on sponsors for his
YouTube channel or they'd be like, Zach, would you talk about this? You know, will I be involved
with, you know, ex-organization? They're doing these things. And they had one of the creators at the
agency was working with the VFW as a part of this bill that they're trying to push. I don't know
where it's at now. I've heard it gets knocked down everywhere. Thank God. But basically what they're
trying to do underneath the guise of protecting veterans from fraud and not being taken advantage
of they're trying to put forward a bill what is it called the is it the guard guard act yeah i think
it's the guard act the guard act and so basically what they want to do is to make all of these
for-profit companies illegal and and to restrict only a certain amount of nonprofits to help veterans
with their benefits moving forward or state or federal agencies like basically them the legion and the
d a v so they want to monopolize a market and i don't like that and they came forward and they were they
work with this one creator. He doesn't care if my name, but I'm not going to. They'd worked
with him. He had talked about it. And then they wanted to expand to other talent. So they came to
myself. They came to the fat electrician Nick. And they came to Angry Copts, Rich, our friend of
ours as well, very good friend. And we all talked about it behind the scenes. And I lean a lot on
Nick because, as you've seen from his videos, he's never, he's almost never wrong. I haven't come
across the time where he's wrong. There's one time where he's wrong and I won the argument, but that's
it and that will carry me through a decade. I can't talk about it. Fair enough. Classified information.
If you're going to be wrong, Nick, it might as well be something you can't talk about.
You're even right about what you were wrong about. I like that. He always wins. But no,
and we, I just, I know too much from like working with veterans since 2011 and everything else.
I don't need the government to protect me. I don't need them to remove choice. I need them
to do freedom. I need them to worry about things like what's in our food.
the never-ending wars, supporting veterans, stuff like that, let me have the right to choose.
I don't need the government to start regulating freedom and choice because it's a very slippery
slope that I don't want to be a part of.
And I don't know anyone that the VFW in particular has helped with their claims.
I've just never heard that from doing this for a long time.
And so I didn't support that.
There's another act that's called like the Choice Act.
And basically what they do is I'm not crazy about this either because it just feels like
something else to just have the government.
involved and I don't like that but the idea is that they would create some type of credentialing
process to where if you're a for-profit entity you go through this credentialing process and you
get a stamp that says hey you can use them right and I just I made like an ad and I was like hey
talk to this organization and it was like a month went by because I had done this and unsub
and then I opened up Twitter one day and there's this guy you know doing like the worst
version of me and he's an older veteran I'm going to try to be kind and I wasn't thrilled
He was dressed like you.
Yeah.
He had the same OD green shirt, holding up a sign over his head, doing the veteran with
a sign thing.
Yeah.
Basically shitting on you.
He was shitting on me lying about me.
And I can't remember the exact tweet, but it was something to the effect of veteran with
the signs lying.
So like on Twitter, I don't actually, it's not veteran with the sign.
It's just Zach because it's just me.
Because at the time I had started it, I was like doing op-eds and stuff for like different
publications to include, you know, Fox News, not Washington Post and the New York Times.
and so like I was like holy shit this is bad like and the first person I called was Nick and then
I was like what do we do and he's like don't do anything and I was like but I have tweets saved
I have things I want to say and he's like don't do anything we're going to figure this out and
then I call Rich and then the same thing so we start like trying to figure out what to happen and it was
really like the immediate response from like people that know me or people who heard about me was
like this isn't right stop lying about Zach whatever
Because their thing was saying that I was working with a claim shark company, which is it.
They were calling you a predator.
A predator.
You were accepting money to take advantage of veterans using a predatory company.
All because I did not accept their campaign is the long and short of which it was not an insignificant amount of money.
Also, worth mentioning the whole reason I turned it down immediately without even looking into it just because it was red flags for me.
I'm sorry, an organization wants to pay a YouTuber called the fat electrician to push,
legislation no I'm out I don't know what I don't know what you got going on this is either a stupid
plan or something bad that there's no other options you're trying to hire the fat electrician to
force legislation through it no get out of here something is strange yeah yeah and like I even
tried to like DM them and stuff and be like we should talk about this we should figure this out
and they were like no no no and they just kept doubling down and then we just kept moving with it and then
finally like we developed a plan and basically the idea was that rich rich is famous right doing
breakdowns of like military stuff that's like happening currently and then like he was going to like
take it all up and we were just going to gather the evidence and have like one conclusive video of like
exactly what happened and then next like i've got some stuff to say too so like and this is this is what
people would call a poor strategy was trying to get in a pissing match on the internet with a group of
guys that just have pissing matches on the internet.
Who have blind, dangerous, dangerously blind loyalty to each other.
Like, it's kind of like, shoot that guy.
Bang.
Why did we shoot that guy?
I mean, I don't care.
You know, it's a lot like that.
And because like my, my concern was, you know, most internet content creators,
they don't last longer than four, five.
Three, yeah, three to five.
So I'm already in like rarefied air to begin.
in with and then it continues to become like something different after that.
So I was like, what if my only concern was like, what if people believe them and then I can't
recover from this?
Like what if my reputation, you know, the work I've done and everything else wasn't enough
to really counteract the motherfucking VFW saying that I'm a predator?
And I was over one, it was like a rough 24, 48 hours and then they put together the video
and we just dog walks the VFW up and down the internet.
Like it felt great.
I'm not going to lie to you.
I mean, after the video came out,
there was,
they got a hold of you pretty quick
because there was people dropping their membership to the VFW.
And what did the VFW say to you when they got a hold of you?
I'll say this.
The president guy called me and he's like,
he's like, hey, hey, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I don't, I can't remember his name.
But like, he talked to me and he's like,
hey, you know, it's important that we all work together.
Like, he's in New York.
He's like, I'm a veteran, you're a veteran.
I go, I know you're the president of the VFW.
Like some of the stuff we could cut out of this conversation.
And I thought he was going to be much more of like, hey, this is a leadership thing.
I should have squashed this.
Negative.
His, like, first thing that he said to me was like, yeah, that angry cops and the fat
electrician guy are pretty mean.
And I was like, they just described what you did.
And he's like, fair.
Like, so like, he was, but his like initial response was like, we're the problem, not them.
because it became very apparent to me that the VFW does not like
that they are not taken as seriously
as they believe that they should be taken in the modern era.
They believe themselves to be leaders and elder statesmen
and all of this stuff that just isn't based in reality.
And so he was like on a tour visiting the boys in Korea or something
that have like two VFWs and I'm like,
listen, I'm not going to tell you how to spend your time, sir.
Kind of sound like a vacation.
I'm not going to say how to spend your time, but what about the VFWs in Philly, San Diego, Nashville, Iowa?
Do they not get this type of attention?
Oh, they're not in Asia in, like, really cool places.
Well, and the other part, like, I feel like we should point out is, like, it, we keep saying the VFW,
but, like, there was a lot of, like, chapter leaders and, like, ground-level VFW numbers that came out and were like,
hey, I don't like what, I don't know how to explain it.
The national corporate, yeah, the national corporate, end.
Yeah, I was going to say, I've been to VFWs that are freaking kick-ass, like,
Great people.
You know, there's some chapters down here in San Diego that I've hung out with and they're fantastic.
Like, they're great.
And, you know, I doubt they knew any of this stuff was going on.
I mean, I didn't know any of this stuff was going on.
They started pushing out, like, talking points to them and like.
So has this thing come to like any kind of a resolution?
Have you guys, like when they called you were like, hey man, like let's, if you want to be on the same team, let's talk about how we can do this.
Or is it just still negative?
Where we left it with the previous president was we talked on like a Monday and he was like, I'm traveling back Wednesday and then let's set up a time for me, Nick and Rich to all sit down and talk. And I was like, I'll do that. I'll do that. I honestly want them to succeed. Yeah, yeah, of course. He no longer was in that position by Friday of that week.
No kidding. His term ended. I don't know if it ended early or whatever. I will say it's highly unusual to make plans.
Because, you know, Rich is a cop in Buffalo.
Nick's got a family.
We were all like, okay, we're all going to D.C. Thursday to get their Friday.
Like, we had made plans.
I don't know why he would say that to me, and then none of it moved forward with.
Yeah.
That's very strange.
Yeah.
I don't know if he left early or if it's just the end of his term, but, like, it feels like,
oh, yeah, by the way, I won't have this job Friday would have come up if I felt like he was
intentionally trying to do it.
And, like, they continue to just kind of, not.
what's the right word?
They continue to resent.
I think just like newer veterans in general because they feel like we're not giving them their due.
But like honestly, they're the ones who did a lot of the work that put myself and everyone,
I believe in this room, in a position to succeed.
I wanted to work with them.
But like what I always say to people is like I have the ability to reach out and interact
with hundreds of thousands to millions of people in any given moment in my life.
That's what they did to me.
They straight up lied about me.
What do they do to other people?
How do they interact with the other people to have that?
I think they thought they could do to you and they realized they couldn't get away with it and then dropped it.
Yeah. Yeah. It's such a strange time that someone, you know, and this is not just this case, but it happens pretty regularly where you can just put something out there into the Ethernet.
You know, you watch the politicians.
The politicians are, it's insane to watch them.
Just openly lie. Just blatantly openly lie as if it's.
it's nothing about whatever.
And that's now just part of the Ethernet.
And depending on which algorithm you're living in, that lie becomes the truth.
And that's what's happening right now.
Yeah, it's a certain governor's doing a lot of that on podcasts right now, apparently.
Yeah, it's crazy to watch.
Like, these things are...
Is it bad?
I don't know which one you're talking about specifically.
That's actually a worse.
That's even worse, right?
There's so many of them.
Just openly lying.
And it's the, I forget which you'll probably remember this.
like who is it gerbils that said if you lie enough it becomes the truth it's like that that is a
real thing and it's just lie lie lie lie and it is interesting too like this the approach that you guys
took with this dude um because sometimes it's like if you when you rebut something or someone
rebuts something it just adds more fuel to the fire as opposed to like oh yeah that happened
three years ago like this is yeah it was just a bunch of bullshit oh okay cool because
The news cycle is so fast and filled with so much stuff that if you wait, like you said, 24, 48 hours, you were really, you know, really hate in life.
And then like, well, 72 hours.
You're like, oh, yeah, what are we doing this afternoon?
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Somebody said something to be about, you know, three days ago.
And it doesn't matter anymore because it just fades into the past.
And the other thing that I think you pointed out, which I think is really important, is like, that's not part of your character.
And eventually as a person, you build up enough like repetitions of who you are where when someone just jumps out of nowhere and, you know, calls out some random thing about you when you've been doing repetitions and repetitions of helping people of, of helping charities, of helping veterans for year upon year upon year upon year.
But now all of a sudden all that was just like that was just a front because I was really over here just trying to get this paycheck
Yeah and it's like mm it just doesn't add up and so I think the
The long-term consistency of a person
Generally speaking will win when when someone comes out with some you know trash
Bullshit about them yeah it was it was crazy
Because like I knew we were gonna get through it I was just I would
know what type of damage I was going to take.
Well, that's the only reason that we even bothered to acknowledge it was because, I mean,
the default setting for all of our friend group is, you know, somebody comes out saying
crazy stuff, ignore them, it'll go away.
Like, people know it's not true.
The issue with this one was like, this isn't, you know, nobody coming out of the woodwork
with an allegation.
That's true.
This is the VFW.
This is one of the oldest veteran organizations on the planet that exclusively deals with
a big overlap in our audience.
And like, that's actual, okay, we do have to correct this because.
Well, yeah, that's crazy.
Like I said, hopefully the VFW, you know, I know a lot of great people in the VFW.
Hopefully they kind of come to their senses and realize that, you know, we're, we should,
we're supposed to be their people, right?
Again, I don't even, we keep saying VFW and like, it's not even, it wasn't, like,
we had so many, like, chapter leaders and VFW members that were reaching out being like,
hey, this is bullshit.
They're doing to you.
We don't like what the international is doing.
And so, I mean, I think it was very much like a couple of dudes at a very, very high level,
just mad that they didn't have enough political power at the top of the hill that were more worried about their own, you know, leverage points than the actual mission.
And like all the people at the ground level and like mid-level were very much like, this is stupid.
We don't support this.
So the VFW, we keep saying is the issue, but it wasn't.
I think it was a couple of high leaders that maybe shouldn't have been there.
Just the headshed.
It's the headshed.
They had no idea what's going on in the ground.
ground. Yeah. And like it's I can still think of like when I opened up my phone and I saw it and I was just like my wife's going to be so pissed in me.
Like like because I was just like I can't believe I'm in this place. Like I've like I said like you said it like I have worked with veterans. I have worked with nonprofits. Mark Green who was my congressman was my state representative. I worked with him in Tennessee to help pass you know a few hundred thousand dollars a year to support veterans organizations at the state level. Like I've done all of these things and like there's a
moment where I'm like, is this, is this what's going to wipe all that away? And so it just really
like changed everything in the sense of like, it gave me a new sense of feeling of support
because the unsubscribe community in general, they came forth. They're, when they lock in,
these, when these boys lock in, they're aggressive. They're aggressive. His, his wife made a meme
that's probably the most perfect meme ever. You've seen two towers, right, Lord of the Rings?
No.
You haven't seen Lord of the Rings?
Are you being serious?
I'm sorry, but no.
Echo.
Echo.
Can you explain?
You've seen two towers, right?
No.
You haven't seen any of them?
Oh, I'm over two.
That's a hell of a Venn diagram.
Seen snow, seen Lord of the Rings?
Nope.
No, it's fine.
So this old freaking metaphor is gone out the window.
Well, there's this point where Aragon and a few people are down at the bottom and they're
waiting on Gandalf to reinforce them with the Rohirom.
They're in a fort.
and they're completely surrounded by a million dudes.
Yes, I understand.
And the end is coming.
And the reinforcements show up at the top of the hill with the sunlight to their back,
right as the sunlight peaks over and they cavalry charge in.
Nice.
And save the day.
And that was the unsubscribed crew.
Yeah.
Hannah made a meme.
And it was just an ocean of people with memes and tweets and comments,
just really just putting the VFW back in their place.
So it was like overwhelming.
And to this day, I still get messages about it and stuff.
And it just like, it's, I don't know, it gave me hope in a way I didn't anticipate
in the very best way.
Because like you said, like, if you say something enough times, it can become true.
And like, no one really researches stuff anymore.
You know, they're like an inch deep and a mile wide type stuff.
And so it just changed everything.
And it's been an exciting year and like me and Nick hung out enough.
I was like, yeah, I can do a podcast.
I'll go here, you go there and we'll figure it out.
And it's, you know, it's under, he's like,
what do you want to call it?
And I was like, I don't know,
underwhelming.
He's like, why?
And I was like, just said the bar low and we'll just achieve it.
It's funny to the meme things.
I remember a few years ago, I saw like a meme of a hat.
And it was like a VFW type hat.
And it said like, meme, you know,
veteran of the meme wars.
Yeah.
And the first time I saw it, I was like,
uh, that's like pretty funny,
pretty awesome, pretty cool.
But there is.
reality behind the idea of meme wars and information, you know, to take Alex Jones's, you know,
the name of his organization of Info Wars, like that is a real thing. And that is what is happening.
And these are like, what you guys just described, this sort of micro meme war of, you know,
sort of a social media war between, you know, you and the VFW.
It's like a really small scale thing where, you know, you had the backup, the reinforcements,
the whatever tower of whatever you said.
The Roherom.
Right.
You had that, right?
I had the real life riders of Rohan.
Yeah.
And you're able to overcome what, you know, the enemy in this case.
And what people got to remember is that that's happening on a real scale in a real way,
with with just straight up call it what it is meme wars like memes that do well people that and and i
mentioned this earlier what algorithm are you living in because and you know we were talking about this
a little bit last night but the if you're living in an algorithm and what you're being whatever
you're being fed you begin to believe that and never mind begin you end up believing that this
algorithm that you see all day every day is real and that that is the way the world is and it's
just what you've been fed through information warfare it's very disturbing it well it's i always explain
it like you know back in world war two in korea and stuff you could the government could censor
like we're not putting this out we can hide this that those days are gone everybody has a smartphone
and a camera phone so now the only way to have control of the narrative is to over saturate the market
with so much bullshit that nobody knows what's true.
And then that's where memes,
you think it's a stupid picture on the internet,
but a picture is worth a thousand words.
Yep.
And if I can create a meme that conveys a thousand word message
and makes you go, ha, or, yeah, it's immediate.
Then you share it.
This is how I feel.
This is a reflection of me in my opinion.
Boom, you share it.
And then that person shares.
Look at the current presidential races.
Like memes played a humongous role in the last presidential election.
You've still got the official White House
and Department of Homeland Security and all kinds of,
they're posting memes.
Posting memes straight up.
Yeah.
It's a hundred percent of the United States is dropping memes.
It's like, it's kind of crazy.
It's like human communication went up and up and up and up and up and language got
and more and more articulate, more and it peaked.
And now it's like, okay, everybody understands the articulate part.
Now we're going to dumb it back down to hieroglyphs because they can articulate a thousand
words in one image.
And that being said, it's like, you know, I think we talked about this a little bit last night
as well when we were having dinner.
But you know, you've heard the whole thing
that Jordan Peterson would talk about of the podcast
being like a bigger revolution than the Gutenheim,
you know,
printing press because now not only does it just completely like,
goes anywhere in this press of one button.
I mean, at least when you had a printing press,
you had to like buy paper and ink.
And even if you were writing books.
Sit there, put the dyes in the right way.
Yeah.
You got a 15, 20 years ago, if you were going to,
if you wrote a book, it was like,
You had to get a publisher.
There's all kinds of cost a bunch of money.
Now you can, then, you know, you could vlog for whatever blog for a while.
And that was like, you could write and it was kind of cheap to get that out there.
And that worked for a while.
And the barrier to entry was lower and lower.
And then with podcasts, well, bro, there's like, you don't even know how.
You don't need to know how to write or read to do a podcast.
But you have to put in at least a little bit of time to talk the words or listen to the words.
But you get into the meme zone.
now it's like, I'm going to give you a message that you are going to absorb in one second, one look.
And so if you nail, and we know it, like, how often do you look at a meme?
Because I got kids that are 25, 16 through 25.
So look, we're freaking knee deep in memes.
Oh, you're all over it.
And meme deep.
Yeah, we're meme deep.
And yet it's like, you know that there's a meme when it's good.
it might as well be a freaking incredible piece of poetry
because it just lands and the whole family
gets the meme like the whole family knows what it means
understands what the what the indication is
understand what's about understand the like the humor in it
or the sorrow in it or the frustration that they all understand
all these things from a picture and seven words
that is next level and there's a certain level of art
to oh yeah I mean a high level
of art to making really good memes.
And the other interesting thing is we have this,
this system now that percolates the winning memes
to the top.
But at no point is it required for that meme
or for that seven second video to be true.
It just has to bring out emotions.
What was it?
Da Vinci said that simplicity is the ultimate complication.
Yeah.
That's exactly what it is.
Or Mark Twain said, hey, I wanted to write you a long letter,
or I wanted to write you a short letter,
but I didn't have time because it takes more time
to make your words more concise and more direct.
But the scariest part of this is it doesn't need to be true.
And so you can get a meme that has just complete misinformation in it.
And that's probably, what's the word?
They use disinformation, they use misinformation.
Fucking lying.
Yeah.
Shit that ain't true, right?
It's like, shit, this shit ain't true.
And yet it perpetuates whatever, you know, algorithm that I'm living in, it perpetuates that.
It makes, deepens my strength.
And I talked about this after Charlie Kirk got killed.
It's like, bro, at least from the outside.
And look, I'm not, I'm not deep in day-to-day researching on what happened there.
But it certainly appears from the outside that you had a dude that was kind of normal.
Like, you know, normal family, normal job, like going to normal college.
And in a relatively short period of time, he went from that person who could have had a totally normal, great, positive, productive life to a person that murdered another human being in front of millions of people and, you know, changed, hit the course of his life, his family's life, Charlie Kirk's life.
Charlie Kirk's families destroyed.
Like, it's crazy that that took place, at least again,
and I don't know if you guys have more information about this,
but it certainly seems like that guy went from a relatively normal human
to this twisted person.
Yeah.
Right?
Is that kind of what happened in a short period of time?
I mean, that's probably the best way to describe without knowing details that they'll probably
never share.
But like, regardless of your political opinions, he was put in a place by the things that
he was ingesting.
They made him convinced that this was the only solution to this problem.
So he had been radicalized by the misinformation or disinformation.
I think misinformation is supposed to be a straight-up lie.
Disinformation is like obscuring.
Obscuring with like kind of like 75% true.
Like they kind of, what does it call where they give you, what copps the thing with the tree?
Oh, fruit of the poisonous tree.
Yeah.
I think that's kind of the whole thing of like.
What's to deal with that?
it's a thing cops always say
but basically like you follow a thing
but it's like a bad lead
and so then you have fruit of the poison tree
like all your stuff that comes after it
is that the best way to describe it
and um
you know this person
and again I don't know everything
but just from when I gathered
and all the stuff it just seems like
there's so much stuff that's thrown at you now
you have to have deliberate
and intentional
mechanisms within you to be like
I need to stop
like because that's that the internet
is built off a reaction. It's built off of what? Like that's the whole thing. So you have to be like
I love freedom. I don't know if I actually support this, but if the government came out
with legislation tomorrow and they were like, you know what? Every Tuesday, we're just going to
shut off all social medias for 24 hours. It probably wouldn't be a bad thing for society.
Touchgrass Tuesday. Sounds good. Touchgrass Tuesday. Because I used internet now just for goofs
with my friends. Like we just, I'm trying to bring it back old school. Like back when it was
just silly, silly good time stuff, you know, not a lot to it.
You know, I think that's one cure, but I like touchgrass Tuesday.
Yeah.
We're going to make a shirt now.
I tell people like, you know, when when someone creates a meme or a comment or a post,
their goal is to make the readers of that or the viewers of that emotional.
Because if I see something and it freaking pisses me off so bad, I freaking retweet it to you guys.
Like, I want everyone to say, well, check this bullshit on.
or if it's something that I strongly support,
hell yeah,
I repost it,
hell yeah,
everybody.
But either way,
it's like,
that is absolutely traveling.
And the weird thing is, too,
is,
you know,
sometimes I'll see these super passionate
freaking posts,
you know,
about something.
And I'm like,
it's weird.
Imagine your world
where when something,
you see something that,
like,
you don't agree with strongly
or whatever,
and your reaction is like, you know what?
I can't believe this is happening.
I'm going to go write a tweet and post it.
Like that's what we're doing?
No.
Yeah.
No.
What is that?
Because there's actually like, I don't know.
I think you get what you need in life.
And if you look for things with intention, they'll come to you.
Like one of the best stories out there right now, in my opinion, online.
Everyone should check him out is Ethan Bernard.
Yeah.
Ethan Bernard.
He came to the San Antonio show.
Yeah.
He's awesome.
There are a few people in my life that have a vigor, a vigor and, like, enthusiasm for working hard, and he is doing it.
That boy is about it, about it.
And I love him.
Like, that's the stuff where he's lost, what, 170 pounds?
Yeah, he lost a backstreet boy.
Yeah.
A full-blown pop star.
And he's still digging in.
He was telling, he's up training in Philly now, right?
He's out there.
It's so great.
Like, those are the things that we need more of, someone who's like,
I can change this.
It's not too late.
Watch me do it.
And he's doing it.
Yeah, there is so much positive out there.
And that's a good example.
Like Ethan has gone and grown very rapidly like in popularity because he's doing something super positive.
But negative shit spreads so much more.
So much faster.
Like I bet if he freaking blew out his knee and was in the hospital, it'd be like, you know, uh, I knew he was making it.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know, Jocko Fuel injures freaking Ethan Bernard by pushing him too hard in uncontrolled circumstances.
That would be a bigger story than, hey, he reaches his goal.
Like, it's going to be great when he reaches his goal and we get done with that training.
Like, he's, like, our goal is that he gets good habits.
That's the goal.
Yeah.
I don't care if he loses five pounds or 50 pounds or 150 pounds while he's up in Philly.
But, hey, can you recognize?
He's like, I want him to know what it feels like to not want to do something, do the something that he doesn't want to do, and realize how good that feels.
Because, like, if you can get that, to me, that's always, you know, to this day, I know that if I get out of bed, I'm going to feel better later.
I know if I get my work out and I'm going to feel better later.
I know if I do the work on the project I'm supposed to be working on.
I know that I don't want to do it right now, but I know that when I do it, I know that I'll feel better.
and that's like a great fuel to have,
but you kind of have to learn that.
And I don't think he learned it,
you know,
early in his life.
Yeah,
I think,
like,
I don't know,
as a,
doing content creation as a job for like three years now,
I think,
most political pundits
and like people whose whole job is to piss people off
is like the lowest tier,
easiest level of entry for being a content creator.
Like the whole vibe,
you get paid for making people feel something,
but making people feel anger is the easiest thing in the world.
in the world to make somebody feel you know what i mean it's much harder to inspire somebody
make them feel happy make them you know entertained them positively yeah right like that's so much more
impressive to me than somebody walking away pissed off like that's so i could i think i'm pretty good at
like inspiring people you know with the stories that i tell but it would be so much easier i could
piss off so many more people so much faster i don't need 45 minutes to piss somebody off
Like I could do that easy
Yeah well when I was a kid there was magazines
Like the National Enquirer
And it is just gossip like negative stories about celebrities
And who doesn't love seeing some celebrity
With all their money and their plane and all
How you like that now now you got rolled up for DUI
You miserable piece of shit I knew you know like people just there's
There's some sick little twisted part of our ego that just loves to see people that are doing
well get crushed or people that aren't doing well get crushed like we just freaking it's that's like
you said it's so easy because that's such a natural instinct that we have like oh burn it down and i
always tell people it's like so much harder to build something than it is to burn something down
and destroy something and then that's why it's like well if i have got to do something i'll just
burn just set fire to stuff and it's a good way to make things happen and i don't think things are
going to it's going to get real weird right now because the AI is upon us and you know I was
on Twitter the other day and people were posting like little little clips of me doing stuff
it's not me but it's me doing stuff and I sent one to Echo's like bro this shit's getting
pretty good and Echo immediately sent back that guy's teeth are straight he has no gap between
his front two teeth and I was like okay so AI Jocko does not have a gap between his front two teeth
hurtful, but hurtful but helpful.
You put that out.
It's going to be patched by tomorrow.
Yeah, that's a thing.
It will be.
Yeah, you're right.
It's fixed now.
Well, and it's just weird because, like, it used to be like AI was like really clunky.
Like I, there's the video of like Will Smith eating spaghetti in like 2024.
Will Smith eating spaghetti in 2025.
And it's just like, what is it?
Uncandy Valley?
It's pretty, it's pretty close.
It's pretty close some of it.
Oh, it's going to get.
Especially with someone like you.
Like you have so much stuff
You have so much stuff in the ether
Like your memes of Jocko working out
Throwing batteries in the ocean
Wow
Have you seen this echo Charles
It's just the most like
What type of workout would Jock do
He would carry two car batteries to the beach
Throw them in and then run back home in 435
434 excuse me
I've never heard anybody compare the AI thing
To the uncanny valley
That's an interesting
How ironic would that be
I thought the AI thing was the uncanny valley
As it enters humanism
Right?
The uncanny valley, or at least what I was under the impression of, is the uncanny valley
is like predates AI forever.
The uncanny valley is like when you can look at something that looks like a human,
but you can tell for some reason, you don't know why, but I can tell in its eyes or
something.
That's not a person.
So like the theory was always like the, the cryptology or whatever theory or the
Bigfoot people, whatever that's called, research and conspiracy.
Conspiracy?
No, it's like cryptozoology or something.
Shit like that where they study shit that's not real.
The theory was like, oh, there must have been some type of predator or something somewhere in human evolution that looked similar to humans and tried to trick them.
And that's why humans all have this ability to identify humanoid-looking creatures that aren't actually human and aren't friendly.
So, like, if that were true and then it comes back to be in handy again to help differentiate AI,
to where people can again just be able to be like that's not true I can just sense it yeah
never heard anybody compared to that this shit is getting good though yeah the well I don't want
to contend with the crypto zoo people but isn't like facial recognition is like one of the most
valuable assets that people have because it's like yeah I can tell your intentions by your
face so it's a collection of systems really what it is you don't mean facial recognition you
mean like reading someone's face not just like I know that that's Nick but like
I know that Nick's pissed or I know that Nick doesn't care or whatever.
Exactly right.
Exactly right.
Like what your face, your face don't even talk.
Your face is telling me a lot, you know.
So that ability is so fine-tuned with people.
So, and again, it's a collection of things.
So it's not just, oh, his eyes are squinting there for this.
No, no, it's the eyes squinting with this, you know, all this stuff.
So the uncanny valley just doesn't get all of those systems in correct order is essentially what it is.
like the eyes don't squint enough.
I can tell that's fake, you know, and that unease.
And even as people, we can't really say, like, oh, the wrinkle in his cheek there wasn't
enough for me to be, you know, we don't know that.
It's too, it's too fine-tuned, you know?
So the computers, they just send it.
The resolution's not high enough.
And the people we can tell, we can't tell what we can tell, but we can still tell.
So it feels weird.
It feels uncanny.
I'm just freaking pissed at that.
AI people because they freaking just what they did to my wife because my wife would like send me a meme or whatever like a video and it would be like oh my gosh this is amazing and it'd be like a baby cow that like walks over and like jumps in the security camera footage yeah yeah yeah and it's like a baby cow walks over and like you know licks the face of the little baby who then like jumps on it and rides away yeah
And maybe not that fantastic, but my wife probably sent me three or four of these videos where she was like, oh my God.
You know, like her, she's the sweetest person.
Just like her benevolent hope and humanity was like back, you know.
And then I'd be like, that's just AI.
And she would just be so freaking disappointed that like that little cow with a little bell around its neck with the little kid riding it.
Like, no, it's not real.
And I'm sorry.
It's terrible.
It's a terrible thing.
But that's what it's going to become after.
while where the internet if you see an internet video it's all like by default
not trustworthy that's all it's gonna be so it's like you gotta and then these
little companies are gonna pop up authenticator companies you know we tired of
not trust in your videos online go to authenticator.com oh yeah but that'll be the
standard you're right everything will be fit it's a circle right there's a thing
that happens there's a solution I posted a picture I was gonna post a
picture on Instagram with the sunset and in this I took a picture of sunset
and there was like refraction or reflection or something weird where the sun was here and then
up above it there was like a little like another sign artifact yeah like an artifact yeah and I was like
all that sucks and it kind of made the picture not look as cool and I did something either with
Instagram or with my Apple photos to like get rid of it and it offered it to me it was like you know
hey do you want to get rid of this thing and I was like cool and I posted it on Instagram and the
shit got labeled AI image and I took it down.
And I was like, dude, that's kind of crazy.
That's good.
You know, it was a little tiny adjustment.
And it was like, this image has been altered by AI.
Oh, man, the fitness model industry is going to be pissed.
This ass is fatter from AI.
Yeah.
God, those, those, that's going to be crazy, isn't it?
Because, you see some of those people do a picture of, like,
like what they really look like.
They'll admit like, hey, this is what I really look like
and this is what I look like in the picture.
But, you know, as disturbing as that shit got
for like girls in the 80s and 90s,
when the magazine covers were, you know,
unachievable physiques other than like just completely starve yourself
and be anorexic and bulimic
and the whole nine yards.
What a terrible.
Terrible.
And now they're just getting that all day
in these freaking apps all day.
Every day.
There's a few creators who like do stuff that like break down like fitness people,
which I think is actually good,
especially as someone who has daughters where the world's being thrown at them
to be like,
do this,
change this about you.
You look good,
but you could look great.
You know,
like I don't like that stuff.
And because like I'll see some of these people and like the telltale sign is like,
you look behind them and like,
that staircase probably shouldn't do like this all of a sudden.
It's like zipped,
pinched,
enhance.
And I'm just like,
come on, man.
Do better.
But you buy their fitness package and you can look like them too.
It's just the same thing over and over again.
AI is about to get more wild, huh?
Yeah, I think Touchgrass Tuesday is the best solution.
It's definitely moving faster than the government.
They are a bunch of dinosaurs that don't know what's going on.
Yeah, well, that's going to be, that could be very problematic, you know, like them trying to operate in the system of how long it takes for them to make changes and implement things.
and this system is moving so rapidly that you just can't behave like that.
The system itself doesn't move fast enough to keep up.
You're correct.
But the other problem is the people in charge of that system, on average, are what, 60 years old?
I mean, we all saw the video of Mark Zuckerberg getting called before Congress
and some 70-year-old congressmen being like, can the Facebook app access my Wi-Fi?
Yeah, that's how the Internet world.
Like you don't have the prerequisite knowledge to understand anything.
You know what I mean?
Like you don't know two plus two and we're trying to explain it physics to you.
Like it's impossible.
Mr. Zuckerberg, how do ads work?
God.
Yeah.
That's the worst.
Yeah.
Well, you're jocco.
You don't have this problem.
I don't know.
The worst problem.
You were, I just like, I don't know.
I've only been doing the YouTube thing for three years.
So it's always like, oh, what do you?
Like, I'll meet new people.
somewhere or something oh what do you do for work i'm a YouTuber and i just say i make videos on the
internet and you know i'll be there'll be some dinner with like doctors or whatever you know like
successful people and they'll say that and it's like 90% of the time their face is just like
gives me this look like a loser this guy's this guy's married to a doctor and sits at home in his
underwear making video games shit online all day and i don't know it's it's like my pet peeve and it was it was
impossible to get a mortgage for a house being a YouTuber.
Really?
Oh, dude, it was so bad.
Try going to the bank and be like, I make, I make fart jokes on the internet.
And that's how I make my money.
They're like, ah, we'd rather you had a dub YouTube from McDonald's, like 100%.
So like, but I was making enough money that they finally like, it was a local bank.
And they like brought me in to the loan committee of just old bank people.
And they're like, so what do you do?
I was like, I make videos on the internet.
and the one lady on the committee did my pet peeve.
And she's like, what does your wife do?
And I don't know why I let it fly this time,
but I just go, me.
Did you get the loan?
Oh, yeah.
The other two guys on the committee
were laughing their ass off.
Yeah, I guess it is a weird,
I guess it is a weird job to have.
And I've, because I've always done like a bunch of different things.
Like once I retired from the Navy,
I was doing a bunch of different things.
So I was my, my answer, like random person asked me, it's like, oh, I retired from the military.
That's my answer.
It's a good.
It usually kind of, usually diffuses the rest of the conversation.
And I don't really, you know, have to go into like, well, yeah.
Because even.
Do the business boys.
Yeah.
It's like, what do you do?
Because I don't really, because how, what do I do?
But like, I'm a writer.
Like, I'm not like, I'm not going to say that.
What, you know.
The worst is like, I'll be like, I make videos on the internet.
Oh, are you an.
Influencer, like as much as I hate that title, yeah, it fits, unfortunately.
Yes, I am.
Yes, I am.
I just tell people I'm jaco now.
That's what I do.
They go, oh, I'm jaco, and I just exit the conversation.
That's a job.
Yeah.
Oh, he said jaco.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Right on.
All right.
Well, does that get us up to speed?
We've got the underwhelming podcast.
Yes, sir.
The unsubscribed podcast.
We got the Fat Electrician YouTube channel.
That's what we got going.
on what did we miss anything I don't think so I don't think so no drag you on to the
underwhelming podcast next yeah we're gonna
awesome and people can find you so Zach veteran with a sign dot com
Instagram and face book you're at veteran with aside Twitter X you're at Zachary
Bell yeah and Nick the fat electrician dot com Instagram and YouTube is at the
underscore fat underscore electrician and then Twitter X your fat
underscore electrician and your Facebook is the fat electrician official yes sir and like I said
your podcasts are the fat electrician podcast underwhelming podcast and unsubscribe yeah that's
sir echo you got any questions yeah back to your peck there what about it your second one
how did you do that benching uh first one was bench pressing yeah and uh the second one was just a freak
accident doing jiu jutsu just like caught myself in a roll but I think like it shouldn't a tour so
what I think happened because it was about a year and a half after the first one.
I think the first one got damaged having all, like this one blew.
So I think this one took some damage with it also.
And then I think a year or two of just like I was overcompensating everything on my right side
because this one was still getting back to normal.
So I think this one just got overworked and then it blew eventually too.
So I think this one's a freak accident.
Who are you rolling with when it happened?
I don't know, Zach, who was it?
Go ahead.
I think it might have been me
the worst 10 minutes of my life
when he stood up in his arm moved with extra slack
my first thought was oh that sucks
my second thought was
hell yeah thank God
I was just
just pushing fire just like
I had a neck problem and my
arm like went
kind of like not fully limp but like
way crazy pain and
like way weak
and I was I was training jiu-jitsu at the time with a dude and I like had to just summon the whatever
ring of power from this movie you're talking I had to like I'd like summon that ring of power
to like submit this dude and like say like hey thanks man good roll and like walk off the mat
and like crawl into a corner hide and like die inside you just got to get through the cool
that explosion walk away and then I can cry I did it I freaking I did it
And I was like, bro, I'm so screwed right now because my arm is just all like shitty and crazy pain.
Yeah.
So you got to just suck it up sometimes.
Like for that last.
Did you finish the round?
Huh?
Did you finish the round?
It was like right at the end.
And how's it now back 100%?
I mean, I just, I don't know.
I just kind of like made a deal with myself.
I never bench more than 225.
So I mean, I was set there and wrap out 225.
But you said you were like 375.
I was doing 375.
The first time I tore it.
And even that, what's your best bench?
It was four plates on your side
That's your best one
Yeah
Well 375 you're kind of in the red zone
For injury
And how old were you at the time?
Yeah
Come on me
We're good there
Yeah
I think you're right
It was a third rep though
And like I've been able to do it five
I mean it wasn't even to the point
Where we were doing like shaky stuff
Right right
But I mean it was literally
And it just went
Yeah yeah you're right
You're not in the red zone
In that way
Yeah right
So we're not worried about
At 27 years old, third rap, like, yeah, you're not really worried about it.
Yeah.
Like, this was a routine thing.
Do you have like that explosive style?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
That was part of my problem because I, like, at the time, I was like, okay, well, you know, force times acceleration.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, so I was like if I can do it faster, I can do more because more power.
So, yeah.
Cake nuts did the exact same thing with less weight.
My friend, Kiko, yeah.
He was a seal back in the day.
So he, yeah, he just entered a contest, right, bench,
And he was like, hey, I didn't know that your muscles could just like tear off the bone from your own like strength.
So it's like your muscles are too strong for your body to hold it on.
He's like, I didn't know that was a thing.
I was like, bro, it actually is a thing.
And there's a thing.
There's a, it's called a Golgi Tendin organ.
There are these little things that like attach to your bones and muscle and stuff that basically it's like a little regulator that's like, hey, there's too much force being generated.
So we kind of shut down your muscle a little bit.
Sorry, but this is like the thing that gets overridden when you hear the stories about like the mom lifted the car off her name.
Exactly right.
Oh yeah.
And actually training, especially with the explosive style, but any kind of like strength, like, you know, power training starts to override those.
Sure, it improves the structure of your body as well.
But it over one of the results is overriding those those Golgy tendon organs.
So you just overrode those and overrode them and overrode them and then finally it's just like, yeah, we're done.
I don't need it.
I'll push through it.
Oh, shit, that was actually an important part.
Oh, boy.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, man.
So it works.
It's hard.
Well, right on.
Any closing thoughts?
Nick, any closing thoughts?
That's a good time.
Right on.
Zach, anything?
Stay you're worth fighting for.
Right on.
Yeah.
Good message.
Well, gentlemen, thanks for, thanks for coming out.
Thanks for joining us.
Thanks for sharing lessons learned.
Thanks for sharing some freaking good stories.
Thanks for your service to the country.
And thanks for
what you're continuing to do right now to make people a little smarter,
a little bit happier,
and a little bit better.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
And with that,
Zach and Nick have left the building,
getting after it,
bench pressing.
Yeah,
yes, sir.
Hell yeah.
I mean, what do you say?
375, 375, 27 years old.
27 years old.
In the zone.
Strong.
You know,
that's even at 27,
when you're throwing around
what do you think you
enter like just yellow zone
regardless of
regardless of age
I mean that's it
I mean depends on how many reps he was going for
but anywhere from one to three reps
is kind of yellow zone
so wait a second you're saying when you're working
with a weight that you can handle for one to three
reps you're in the yellow zone
you know what though at that age
I don't think so to be honest with you
I think that...
Remember what you felt like at 27?
Yeah.
Bro, like whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
Throw whatever at me.
Whatever, yeah.
I don't care.
Yeah, you're just gonna,
you're gonna fail with the weight
before you start tearing stuff off, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, he said that he was,
he thinks he injured it on that first one kind of a thing.
So it was like a maybe like a partial going on.
No, injured the other one.
Right.
So the first one sounded like it was just out of nowhere.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, you're right.
You're right.
Out of left field just,
you're right.
Yeah.
It can happen for sure.
Like, you know, like when you're running and you get a hamstring pull.
Yeah.
Have you ever heard about Achilles, people that tear their Achilles?
And that seems to happen out of nowhere.
Scotty Lewis.
Tori is a key.
Really?
Squatty?
The legend?
The legend of Squatty Lewis.
Yeah.
Tori.
Well, it wasn't while he was walking.
That was when he was doing something, but it was one of those ones.
It's not like he was like on the starting line of some intense sprint up a hill or something like this.
Or you know how you play basketball.
Sometimes you pivot wrong or I don't know.
I think he was like.
I think he was like something like kind of like you wouldn't think.
But yeah, it happens.
That's a long recovery right there.
But he's back.
Well, hey, try not to tear these things.
Maybe, maybe take some joint warfare, take some super grill, take some time more.
That's what we're doing.
Check out joccofuel.com.
We get protein.
So good.
I'm having one right now.
As a matter of fact.
A little bit of 30 grams of milk ready to drink chocolate flavor tasty.
That's what we're doing.
Joccofuel.
You get at joccofield.com, you can get it at a bunch of different stores, including a bunch of different stores.
So check it out.
We make the best.
We make the cleanest.
We make the tastiest.
And the most efficacious.
I was going to say effective, but I decided to step it up.
My goat kicked in.
And I was like, no, we're not just going to be effective.
We're going to be efficacious.
So that's what we're doing.
Check out that whatever you need.
We got you covered hydration.
I'm having that hydration too.
which is freaking, as we like to say, GTG.
That's what we're doing.
So check out joccofuel.com.
Also, check out origin, usa.com.
We got American-made clothing.
We're talking a lot about American history, right?
World War II, World War I.
We won those wars with our manufacturing capability.
We could out-manufacture these other countries.
And we gave that away.
70s, 80s, 90s, gave away that manufacturing capability.
blew it
We're bringing it back
OriginUSA.com, not communist
Not origin USA.comunist.
No, it's origin USA.com.
It's not communist as all.
It's communist free.
Jeans, boots, geese.
As a matter of fact, Nick was just asking me about
like, we had these work pants
that we made for a while and Gardner loved them too.
I might have to talk to Pete.
We might have to bring those things back to the mix.
Whoa, the specialness of that.
They got like extra pockets on them.
They're super heavy duty.
They're awesome.
They're awesome.
You know, so we'll see.
But we got jeans.
We got hoodies, t-shirts.
We got everything that you need.
We got that.
Did you get the bonded fleece hoodie?
No, I did.
I did not.
This thing is a technical piece of gear.
It's a technical piece of gear.
Wind, no factor.
Rain, no factor.
Warmth or cold, no factor.
We just got you covered.
Check out OriginUSA.com.
We got you covered.
Head to toe.
Head to toe.
Beanie?
Sox, everything.
Sox, boots.
Everywhere in between.
Everything in between.
Dang.
We got you covered.
All right.
All right.
Also, jaco store.
Jocco store.com.
This is more apparel.
Discipline equal freedom.
Shirts.
Got some hoodies on there.
It's almost hoodie season.
It kind of is hooty season for some of us.
Some people.
Yeah, definitely.
Especially by the time this comes out.
It's way deep in the hoodie season.
It's true.
Got some hoodies on there.
Worry kid stuff on there and kids stuff.
So, man, if you guys shopping still for Christmas at this time,
like,
kid a cool little shirt that he wants to represent my boy wore his discipline equals freedom he had a
baseball scrimmage yesterday um they wanted what position is he playing he plays outfield and yeah
i brought my kid to how old is he night i brought my son was a little bit younger but i brought
him to like he wanted to play baseball he's like oh you know baseball that's what we're doing
hell yeah of course i take him out there bro he's like picking dandelions and
center field.
Yeah,
that's how not giving a shit about this.
Once he realized how boring it was for him, you know, I can dig it.
They're like, hey, but the thing and that stuff.
And he's just out there just not caring about it.
He, he needs to say, he didn't have a long baseball career.
I can dig.
And part of that was on me.
And I've briefed you on this before, you know, kind of the way I manipulated the
scenario was, oh, you want to play baseball?
Cool.
Don't give him any training.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Have him go down there.
He's not good at it because he hasn't trained at all.
So it's like, this kind of sucks.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, oh, like, well, how was Jiu-Jitsu?
Well, I choked three people.
That's pretty fun.
Seems like fun.
Seems like I'm kind of good at that.
And you're into it too.
Yeah.
It happened to be in that.
I didn't into it too.
I see.
So that's what we're doing.
It's okay.
Yeah, I dig it.
And that would be the case.
But I take them up to the park and we hit balls.
So you're better.
You're better dad than I was.
So he did.
He did good in the scrimmage, though.
He did better than he did in all other games.
Let's just hope he likes Jitsu too.
Yeah.
Well, we got the mats at the house, so that's all we, that's all.
Hey, well, in the game.
Yeah, yeah, but nonetheless, yes.
So there's some kid stuff on there, too.
Also, the short locker, which is a subscription scenario,
new design every month.
People seem to like that.
So yeah, subscribe on now.
And if you want, check it out.
Go jococococor.com.
Click on the top button there says check out the shirt locker.
Just a heads up for the store.
Probably from here moving forward.
This is going to have something new in some capacity every month.
on top of the shirt locker shirt lockers every month that's for i'm saying from the story you know so
whether it be new design or maybe we might release like one design from the shirt locker a few years ago
got it you know something like this anyway there's an email sign up thing if you want i don't spam
so put your email on there in there and i'll give you the heads up on everything once a month
you'll be sending an email there's something new yeah more yeah once a month ish you know i'm not saying
every single month but that's that's the goal you know right something something good something
something relevant.
So you'm saying?
It won't be just some nonsense.
Like, hey, just checking it.
No, that can't.
Anyway, it's all on jocco store.com.
Predate on.
Also, we got some books.
We got the book,
things my brother used to say,
written by Ryan Mannion.
If you want to check that out,
great book for your kids,
for the neighbor's kids,
a whole nine yards.
Of course, I've written a bunch of
warrior kid books,
and don't forget about leadership books.
I've written a bunch of those,
and so is Dave Burke.
Good, too,
you go to something called
the need to lead.
So check that one out.
Eschlam Front,
we have a leadership,
consultancy.
We solve problems
Go to Eshlamfront.com if you want us to meet with you in your organization and get you squared away on leadership or if you want to come to one of our events.
Go to Aslamfront.com. We also have an online training academy. We're on there live. I'm on there live.
So if you want to join that, you can take courses that are pre-recorded courses that have interactive tests and quizzes and learning.
and you can go to extreme ownership.com to learn the skill of leadership.
So check that out.
Also, if you want to help service members active and retired, you want to help the families.
You want to help Gold Star families.
Check out Mark Lee's mom, Mama Lee.
She's 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 Micah Fink's organization at Heroes and Horses.org.
And finally, Jimmy Mays, Beyond the Brotherhood.org.
And if you were in Ramadi with us,
In 2006, 2007, with the 1-1-A-D, go to Ramadi Reunion 20.com, January 16th and 17th,
2026 down in Texas.
We will see you there if you want to connect with us.
Once again, for Zach and Nick.
We got Zach, veteran with a sign.com, Instagram and Facebook at Veteran with a Sign and Twitter
X at Zachary Bell.
And then Nick, you can just find him at the fat electrician.com.
He's also Instagram and YouTube at the fat electrician and then Twitter X fat electrician at Facebook Fat Electrician official and their podcast that they have collectively are
the unsubscribe podcast the fat electrician podcast and the underwhelming podcast. So check those out also
Check out for us jocco.com and then on social media I'm at jaco willink and echoes that echo Charles just as you know don't
spend too much time on there. It's a waste. Thanks once again to Nick and Zach for joining us
and for sharing their knowledge with America and for your service to America. And thanks to all
of our service members who right now, as we're sitting here in an air-conditioned room,
their stages around the world standing by to protect freedom and our way of life. And we thank
all of you for that. Also thanks to our police, law enforcement, firefighters, paramedics,
EMTs, dispatchers, correctional officers, Border Patrol.
Secret Service as well as all other first responders.
Thanks for your service here at home.
And everyone else out there, you know, keep an open mind.
Keep an open mind.
When I look at Nick and Zach, I see two guys who, you know, walked different paths in life.
Some places those paths kind of overlapped a little bit.
Some places they didn't.
But they both had an open mind as they looked around and looked to look at the world and see what they could add to it.
see what they could bring to the world.
What could they do to help make the world a little bit better?
Who could they help out?
And I think if you open your eyes and you keep an open mind,
you too can find a place where you can help someone else.
And if you're doing that, then you're winning.
And that's all I've got for tonight.
Until next time, this is Echo and Jocko.
Out.
