The Daily Signal - INTERVIEW | Football Coach Builds 'An Army of Normal Folks'
Episode Date: June 8, 2023Bill Courtney made his mark in Memphis as the volunteer football coach of the Manassas Tigers and successful businessman. Now, he’s taking his message to a much larger audience with the launch of a ...new podcast called “An Army of Normal Folks.” Courtney’s inspirational message to an underrated high school football team in North Memphis became the subject of Oscar-winner documentary called “Undefeated.” He followed that with a book called “Against the Grain: A Coach’s Wisdom on Character, Faith, Family, and Love.” On today’s edition of “The Daily Signal Podcast,” Courtney explains why he decided to take action in his local community—and why he’s encouraging you to do the same. His new podcast features stories of normal people who are doing their part to change lives and our country. Listen to the full interview or read a lightly edited transcript at DailySignal.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
We have dysfunction in culture, society, and our political discourse.
And meanwhile, there's need everywhere, and it surrounds us daily.
And I just think it's going to take an army of normal folks.
I just think it's going to take average folks seeing a place of need in their communities and filling it.
This is the Daily Signal podcast for Thursday, June 8th.
I'm Rob Blewey.
That was the voice of Bill Courtney.
his mark in Memphis as a volunteer football coach of the Manassas Tigers and a successful businessman.
Now he's taking his message to a much larger audience with the launch of a new podcast called
An Army of Normal Folks. Courtney's inspirational message to an underrated football team in North
Memphis became the subject of an Oscar-winning documentary called Undefeated. He followed that with
a book called Against the Grain, a coach's wisdom on character, faith, family, and love. On today's
show Courtney explains why he decided to take action in his local community and why he's
encouraging you to do the same. His new podcast features stories of normal people who are doing
their part to change lives and our country. Stay tuned for my interview with Bill Courtney
after this. Conservative women are problematic women. Why? Because we don't adhere to the agenda
of the radical left. Every Thursday morning on the Problematic Women podcast, Chris and I
camera Lauren Evans and me, Virginia Allen, are joined by other conservative women to break down
the big issues and news you care about. Whether you're interested in hot takes and conversations
on pop culture or what Congress is up to, problematic women has you covered. We sort through the
news to keep you up to date on the issues that are of particular interest to conservative
leaning, that is problematic women. Find problematic women wherever you like to listen to podcasts,
and follow the show on Instagram.
Today we're joined on the Daily Signal podcast by Bill Courtney,
a celebrated football coach and businessman
whose documentary and book have inspired a new podcast called
An Army of Normal Folks.
Bill, thanks for joining us on this busy week as you launched the new show.
It's great to have you with us to talk about your story
and those that you're going to be featuring on your new podcast.
I really appreciate you having me.
Really do.
Well, those who have watched the documentary Undefeated,
know a little about your own personal story, but for those who haven't, let's begin with this
question. How did you end up in one of Memphis's most troubled neighborhoods coaching a football
team that was considered one of the worst in the state? I mean, we don't have a four hours
to go into the whole story, but basically I grew up in Memphis, dad left home when I was young,
mom was married and divorced five times and had a couple of grandfathers that were good guys that,
you know, had an impact of my life. But candidly, the most impactful people in my life
were my football coaches coming up. And had I not had good men in my life as football coaches,
I'm not sure exactly the track my life would have taken. And so I graduated from Ole Miss and all
I wanted to do is coach football. The problem is I married my wife and we had four kids in four
years and $17,000 a year coaching football, no insurance, wasn't getting it done. And so I had to
leave football coaching as a profession, ended up starting a lumber business. But in the state of
Tennessee, you can be what's called a non-faculty certified football coach if you go through a bunch
classes and all and get all the certification and there's there's a few of those guys in state of
Tennessee.
I'm one.
And so while I was starting my business and transitioning away from football as a profession, I
continue to stay in it as a passion and and continue to coach and started a business with almost
no money and bought some property in the most dilapidated, crappy part of Memphis.
and Manassas High School was less than a mile from where I started my business.
And through some introductions, I was asked if I would be interested in coaching at Manassas.
And candidly, how I ended up there is I started a business near it.
And it was convenient.
But I didn't understand what I was getting into when I showed up.
And there were 17 kids on the team and they'd won four games in 10 years.
So it was a turnaround project.
And then the movie that you talk about is our last year there, which was seven years later.
It's truly remarkable.
Highly recommend the film to our listeners.
And we'll make sure that we include a link both in the transcript and the show notes.
Bill, paint a picture for us what it's like to be a student at Manassas High School at North Memphis.
To be a student at Manassas?
Yeah.
Yeah, like who, what's the profile of the types of students who are on your football team?
Okay.
There are three communities that largely support the student body at Manassas.
One is called Smoky City, the other is New Chicago, and the other is Green Law.
It is, I think the demographics are, I think it's a third or fourth poor zip code in the United States.
There's, in seven years, there was one white student at Manassas.
And the rest were all African American.
Some of the demographics are only 0.3% of the people from those neighborhoods have a college degree.
Only 51% have an operating vehicle.
Unemployment rate is around 43%.
An 18-year-old male is three times more likely to be incarcerated or dead by his 21st birthday than is to have a job.
So it is, you know, I don't want to sensationalize it.
Everything I'm saying to you right now are facts.
But it is the type of community that movies and media and the press do sensationalize.
It is the poorest of the poor, most disenfranchised, most underserved, food desert, dilapidated, horrific circumstance that
I mean, honestly, I travel all over the world with my business.
We do business in 42 different countries, and I travel to many third world countries doing business in Asia and across Central South American Europe.
And I will tell you, even in South Africa, there aren't many neighborhoods worse than those that surround Manassas.
Again, you can see the visual images from the documentary and to see.
the conditions that the students that live in and grow up around is truly eye-opening.
So how did the players react to your arrival and the discipline and the character building that you brought and required of them?
With curiosity at first, because some of it, most of it was foreign.
But I had a hook, and the hook was football.
And, you know, if you want to play football and you wanted to be part of a program that I was
pulled it into a winner by bringing in coaches, new equipment, uniforms, you know, giving the kids
kind of a level playing field to just have an opportunity to compete and to be part of something
that was first class, which very little in their and their orbit was first class.
If you want to be part of that, I'll have to adhere to these tenants,
care, for commitment, integrity, teamwork, you know, all of the core values that you hope
you learn when playing football that last you long after the day, playing days are over.
And candidly, it was tough.
You know, I had kids that were being asked to subscribe to notions and behave in a way that,
was not necessarily, you know, part of their world.
But I do want to, I don't want to sensationalize it.
I'm going to tell you something from the day I showed up, first day, it was yes or no, sir.
The principal at that school worked hard to keep the hallways clean and the kids where they
were supposed to be.
I don't want you to picture some sensationalized movie that looks like, you know,
kids hanging around and smoking weed in the hallway or in the parking lot or, you know, a bunch of
disrespectful teenage. It wasn't that at all. They were actually really respectful kids.
They just wanted to be part of something that was good. And a lot of the tenants and a lot of the rules
that I held them accountable to, they just never was foreign to them. They'd never been held accountable to
those rules. And so it was painful to create a culture that won in football, but not only in
football in life. And it didn't happen in, you know, one month or even one season. It took a couple
of years to really, actually three years to really make that transition happen. But we went from a
team of 17 kids that won four games in 10 years to a team of 75 kids who were,
18 wins and two losses their last two years.
And that turn around is a direct result of those kids deciding they were going to buy in
and conduct themselves in a little bit of a different way to try to find success not only on the football field, but in their lives.
And Bill, what kept you going back year after year?
So if I'm walking down the street, you're going to see a 54-year-old white dude who owns a.
$90 million lumber company and drives a nice car, lives in a nice house, has been married to the
same woman who I will stay married to for the rest of my life that I am in love with today,
as much as I was the day I met her. I have four grown children, all gainfully employed,
doing well. So when you see me, you're going to sum me up as a probably upper, maybe even
upper, upper middle, maybe even upper class, white dude.
living in a nice house and you're going to think you know me. You don't. That's not my reality.
That's not where I come from. I came from dysfunction. My mom's fourth husband shot at me down
a hallway one night. I had to dive out of window to save myself. I don't come from what you think
you would see when you see me. And the truth is, as a child, as a kid and as an adolescent,
identified with the kids of Anastas a lot more readily than identified with even my own children.
And so what kept me going back was that I knew that with some love and some dedication
and some commitment and some accountability that, you know, these kids had an opportunity to do something with their lives.
and I didn't see it as a nice thing to do.
I saw it more of as a calling and more as an opportunity to give back
in a way that men gave to me when I was their age
and struggling with my own identity and my own insecurities
and my own fears and my own dreams.
And so what kept me going back was every once in a while,
one of these kids would do something just amazing and, you know, cross over a new step that I
didn't know that that maybe they could cross over. And frankly, the kids inspired me to keep
coming back. And to this day, it's one of the most rewarding experiences of my life because
I learned so much as a result of, as a result of, as a result of,
to my time with the players of Manassas.
Well, Coach, thank you for sharing that.
That is an incredible story and an inspiration, I hope, to listeners of this show and others,
to follow a similar path.
And it leads me to my next question, because I want to talk about the podcast now.
This obviously is a big week for you launching this.
As we just heard from you, you're really one of the normal folks.
How did the experience of being the football coach and writing the book against the grain
lead you to this idea for the podcast?
Well, honestly, it's like everything else in my life.
I'm not really sure how it happens, but it does.
You know, listen, after the Academy Awards, you know, I thought I had my 10 minutes in fame.
And Lisa, my wife and I enjoyed it.
The kids enjoyed it.
We had a big time.
And I went back to Memphis and planned on running my lumber company coaching football and, you know, whatever.
And then people started calling me and wanted to do speeches.
And so I started doing keynote speeches and still do them for a variety venues, stuff like the Olympics, for goodness sakes, and Nike and Frito L.A.
and all these cool places.
And it was awesome.
And it gave me a platform to talk about stuff that I think we need to talk about, like politics, like race, like political belief and creed and faith.
I think it's high time that we put aside the fear of how somebody's going to categorize you because of your opinion and start having real open, candid conversations about the stuff that matters, but just do it in a civil, non-threatening way.
And this movie showed me as this guy who came from interesting circumstances, coached football, and ran a lumber company.
and it gave me this platform to say some things that I think need to be said and give people an opportunity to think about things a little differently.
And then from that came, you need to write a book about all this stuff.
So then I wrote a book, which led to more speeches and more interviews.
And this thing's just kind of, you know, we didn't produce a movie.
Some goofy guys that were 29 years old showed up from Hollywood and followed us around for nine months and made a movie that,
we thought nobody would see and it ended up winning an Academy Award.
I mean, it's just, it just happened.
And so in one of my interviews, I was interviewed by Alex Cortez, who is now the producer of an army of
normal folks.
And he was asking me a bunch of questions like you're asking me now.
And I was as candid and real as I could be like I am with you now.
And one of the things I said was that we all have.
streets or areas or even viaducts that when you're driving around our communities, that you just
don't want your car to break down. You don't want to have a flat tire, especially in every major
city. You know, D.C. has them. Memphis has them. Everybody has them. And when you pass by those
areas and you look over and you see the disenfranchisement and the loss and the despair, you do think to
yourself, gosh, that is terrible. Somebody had to do something about that one day, as if that
sentiment matters. Sentiment doesn't mean anything. It doesn't move the yardstick, and it helps
nobody. In fact, it's basically hypocritical to even look down into a space like that and say that
from your $50,000 car. And so my suggestion is maybe you tilt that ruby mirror about 30 degrees,
and look yourself in the face and say, hey, maybe I ought to do something about that.
I think government has proven woefully inadequate.
I think a lot of well-intentioned programs that maybe decades old have gotten to be almost paternalistic
and keep some of the most disadvantaged among us in that disadvantaged state.
and I'm sick of fancy people on CNN and Fox using big words that nobody really ever uses in conversations and nobody really understands and as if they're going to change anything.
I think we have dysfunction in culture, society, and our political discourse.
And meanwhile, there's need everywhere and it surrounds us daily.
and I just think it's going to take an army of normal folks.
I just think it's going to take average folks seeing a place of need in their communities and filling it.
And I do believe that.
And I said that to Alex.
And so Alex came back to me about six, seven months later and said, I can't quit thinking about that conversation.
I want to launch a podcast called an army of normal folks with two objectives.
One, to tell the stories of normal folks doing extraordinary things across our country that change lives.
And two, to have people join the, quote, army of normal folks, to join in a movement that says,
this is our country, this is our culture, this is our society, the power brokers,
the few power brokers that are out there that are dividing us with media and politics,
cannot, cannot combat an army of normal folks just saying, you know what, I can help in my world
and my society. And so we started doing interviews. We've canned 20 so far in the podcast
released today. And we're telling the stories of extraordinary people who have done extraordinary
things. And they are black and white and Christian and non-Christian and left and right and right
and moderate and center and male and female and from all walks of life.
And from it, I've learned nobody has a monopoly on philanthropy or kindness.
And it is phenomenal, the amazing things that go on in our world and our country every single
day that we never hear about and we never focus on.
And I want to grow an army of normal folks, a movement of people who,
celebrate each other despite their differences and who come together around kindness and decency
and civility and celebrate one another's differences instead of villainize each other over them.
Bill, you launched this week with the story of Officer Tommy Norman.
His episodes are available now for any listeners who would like to check those out.
Who is he?
And why did you decide to lead with him?
I got a crush on him, kind of.
I got a deep crush on this guy.
I don't know him, really.
I mean, this guy is from North Little Rock, Arkansas.
One of nine children grew up in a house with one bathroom.
He said his six sisters would choke him out every morning with Aquanette.
I mean, he just, his mom was a stay-at-old mom, and his dad was a, was a, was a,
a contractor. I mean, we're talking blue collar, probably lower end financially, trying to feed
all those people. And he became a cop. And the reason it became a cop is because his uncle
was the chief of police at Hot Springs Village south of Little Rock about an hour and a half. And
he respected his uncle and the way his uncle looked in his crisp uniform and the way his
patent leather gun belt sounded and squeaked when he got.
up and he just, he revered the guy and he became a cop. And he said that, you know, he knew two things
about cops. They pulled people over and wrote tickets and they arrested folks. And he knew as a cop
he would have to do that, but he also thought a cop could do something else, which is serve,
literally serve. And in North Little Rock, it's an interesting place. It's only 70 to 90,000 people,
but there's upper class, middle class, and then there are the projects in North.
Little Rock and he works where the poverty is. And this cat parks his car and walks his beat,
old school, and his goal is threefold to get invited into somebody's front yard, to then get
invited to that person's front porch, and then from the porch get invited to their dinner table
to have breakfast, lunch, or dinner with him. That is his goal. And everywhere he goes, he gets the
phone numbers of the people that are on his beat and on his off day, he calls them and checks on
them. Make sure they're doing okay. He's been invited to birthday parties. He's been invited to
weddings. He's been invited to dinners. He's invited to kids games. He's routinely seen out on
the basketball court in these areas playing basketball with his gun belt on. He's routinely
seen break dancing in the streets. He's spoken at funerals. He's also, he's also,
also a cop and he's arrested people that broke the law, including murders, but he does it with dignity.
And his favorite basketball player was Michael Jordan. He even shaves his head today because Michael
Jordan shaves his head. And here's this guy, Tommy Norman from Little Rock, who decided,
I'm going to police differently and serve. Just one guy. He's not the captain of the police force
or anything. And he's now considered the Michael Jordan of community policing. And he's showing a
different way to police and to break down the bounds of racial fear about cops. And at the same time,
he had his own personal struggles. And he lost his daughter to a drug overdose during the
middle of all this. And he had heart problems. And he struggled. And despite
his own personal struggles, he continues to be the shining light in North Little Rock as an officer.
And our current political, our current social discourse says that people in poverty, largely in African-American neighborhoods,
are supposed to fear the police, especially white ones.
And he has destroyed that narrative by simply getting out of his car and having conversations with people and showing me cares.
and that is just our first story.
We have stories of all kinds of other stuff,
but because he was so inspiring to me
and because he's, I mean,
he's got this crazy following.
He's got like two million followers on Facebook
from just being a good cop, a good person.
I mean, what a novel idea.
Be a good human being and serve those around you.
and there could not be a better opening to what we're talking about.
We're talking about an army of normal folks, seeing need in their communities and filling it
and changing our culture.
And I just think he's the poster child for it.
And so he's first.
And then next week, we will talk about a, I'm not going to spill the beans completely,
but we'll talk about a young woman who struggled with addiction and her.
family and she had some issues she was dealing with and in the middle of all of it did something
that has turned around the fortunes of thousands of homeless people by teaching them to run.
An incredible story.
But that's for next week.
Well, we look forward to listening.
It's truly fantastic that you're giving these people a voice.
And you've hinted that this could be bigger than just a podcast.
What do you mean by maybe seeing it develop into a movement of normal folks?
If you go to normalfolks. Us, you can sign up to just be a part of the Army.
Now, that's a little hokey and a little goofy, and I get it, but I mean it.
And when you sign up, you know, you'll get information from an Army of Normal Folks about when the podcast come out and what's going on.
you'll you'll be able to see the pictures of the people that we interview and um little by
little i hope to grow those numbers so that as we grow those numbers we can use that community
of people to uh to start making some statements i just you know i know it's a pipe dream maybe
it's not a pipe dream but can you can you fathom a group of
of tens and hundreds of thousands of people who say, yeah, I'm a normal person and I like
good things to happen in my communities. And some are Democrats and some are Republicans and
some are moderates and some are black and some are white and some are Asian and some are
Hispanic and some are Jews and some are agnostic, some are Muslims and some are Hindus.
And some don't care about any of that stuff, but they've all found something that they
can agree about and that they can get behind and that they can subscribe to, which is,
let's find places of need in our communities and fill it.
Can you imagine, you know, we're always talking about how do we fix what divides us?
In my mind, we celebrate our differences and we work together and create a better society.
And you know, it's a podcast and hopefully it will be redemptive and interesting and
you will laugh and you will think and you will be entertained and I want you to listen.
But hopefully, after listening and being entertained and laughed and hearing the stories,
you're also motivated to become part of something bigger than yourself that maybe can change some
of what we have been taught these last decade and a half to think about one another
because of the particular group we happen to be from, which is completely distrable.
to our society.
And congratulations for getting picked up on IHeart.
Now, perhaps the most important question I'll save this for last bill is, how can people
listen?
What's the best way for them to subscribe and to make sure that they are every week hearing
these powerful stories that you're featuring?
Go to IHeart and download it.
You can go to Spotify.
You can go to Google.
You can go to Apple.
You can go to normalfokes.
us and download it just basically wherever you listen to podcast you can you can find us and and
again you know my hope is that people listen people like it and i have learned in pretty short order
that podcast they do well as people share them and suggest them and so my goal is to get people
to listen and join up and enjoy it and then share it and share it and share
on social, share it with your friends, get people to listen. And much like our conversation today,
which I really appreciate, just trying to get as many people's ears to understand this thing's
out there, give it a shot. I bet if you listen, you'll come back. A good rating and a good review
as well, Bill, that's always helpful. Pay it, review it, share it. You know, gosh, I'm starting to get
sick of myself now. I'm starting to feel like a commercial. But honestly, that's what you got to do.
Read it, review it, share it, listen, join, and, you know, let's have some fun.
Let's hear some redemptive stories.
Let's be inspired.
And maybe as a group we can do something special.
Coach Bill Courtney, again, the podcast is called an army of normal folks.
Thanks so much for being a guest on the Daily Signal podcast.
Thanks for having me.
Really appreciate it.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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