Podcast appearances and mentions of Hugh Morris

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Best podcasts about Hugh Morris

Latest podcast episodes about Hugh Morris

It Doesn’t Matter Podcast

In this episode of The It Doesn't Matter Podcast, the hosts delve into the final WCW pay-per-view, Greed. They discuss its significance in wrestling history, the decline of WCW, and the quality of commentary during the event. The conversation covers various matches, including the opening bout and the Cruiserweight Tag Team Championship, while also touching on the Magnificent Seven faction and its impact on the wrestling landscape. In this segment, the hosts delve into various wrestling matches and moments, analyzing performances and discussing the careers of notable wrestlers. They reflect on the lack of impact some wrestlers had in WWE, the significance of promos, and memorable moments from events like the Greatest Royal Rumble. The conversation highlights the evolution of wrestling and the challenges faced by certain talents in gaining recognition. In this segment of the conversation, the hosts delve into various aspects of wrestling, including the legacy of cruiserweights, the significance of merchandise and gimmicks, and the impact of name changes on branding. They analyze matches featuring Buff Bagwell, Lex Luger, Kanyon, and Dusty Rhodes, discussing the performances and the storytelling involved. The conversation highlights the evolution of wrestling characters and the cultural implications of their portrayals. In this episode, the hosts reflect on various aspects of wrestling, including the nostalgic themes in wrestling music, the career reflections of Ric Flair, and the legacy of wrestling icons like Dusty Rhodes and DDP. They analyze the main event match between DDP and Scott Steiner, discussing the overall quality of the WCW Greed pay-per-view and sharing their final thoughts on the event.Chapters00:00 Introduction to WCW Greed01:07 The Importance of WCW Greed02:06 WCW's Decline and Final Days03:53 Commentary and Production Quality06:06 Opening Match: KweeWee vs. Jason Jett11:38 Cruiserweight Tag Team Championship Match19:45 The Magnificent Seven and Their Impact21:47 The Mecca of Manhood23:00 Match Analysis: Stasiak vs. Bam Bam24:40 Team Canada vs. Hugh Morris and Konan27:03 Mike Awesome's Missed Opportunities29:00 WWE's Vision and the Invasion30:59 Titus O'Neil's Greatest Royal Rumble Moment32:01 Promo Highlights: Dusty Rhodes and Buff Bagwell34:02 Cruiserweight Championship: Chavo vs. Shane Helms38:54 The Legacy of Cruiserweights39:46 Merchandise and Gimmicks in Wrestling41:22 Name Changes and Branding in Wrestling42:12 Match Analysis: Buff Bagwell vs. Lex Luger48:51 Canyon vs. Ernest the Cat Miller53:33 Booker T's Rise to Championship Glory58:57 Nostalgic Themes in Wrestling Music01:01:52 Ric Flair's Career Reflections01:04:59 The Legacy of Wrestling Icons01:09:00 Main Event Analysis: DDP vs. Scott Steiner01:11:59 Final Thoughts on WCW Greed

It Doesn’t Matter Podcast
WCW vs. WWF: The Monday Night Wars 9/22/97!

It Doesn’t Matter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 120:25


Join us as we dive into the legendary Monday Night Wars, comparing the epic clash of WCW and WWF on September 22, 1997! Sit back and enjoy as we bring the action to life, dissecting the high-stakes battles between #Goldberg and Hugh Morris, the thrilling debut of Goldberg, and the unforgettable drama of WCW's Nitro. Who remembers the intense match between #ReyMysterio and Silver King? Or the comedic antics of the #NWO mocking Arn Anderson? But that's not all! We also relive the epic moments from WWF's side of the story, featuring #StoneColdSteveAustin's unforgettable stunner on Vince McMahon, setting the stage for one of the greatest rivalries in wrestling history! Witness the debut of #CactusJack against Triple H in a wild, no-holds-barred match! With appearances from legends like #Undertaker and #ShawnMichaels, this episode is a must-watch for any wrestling fan. So, grab your favorite wrestling snacks and take a nostalgic trip with us! For more iconic wrestling moments and deep dives, be sure to check out the archives. Let's relive the glory days of wrestling together! #RawVsNitro #WrestlingDocumentary #Nwo #MondayNightWarsDocumentary #WcwVsWwf#KevinNash #MondayNightWar #Wcw90S #TedTurner #MickFoley CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 01:34 - WCW Nitro Highlights 03:20 - Rey Mysterio Jr. vs Silver King Match 07:06 - Goldberg's Debut in WCW 10:06 - NWO Video Package Overview 11:05 - Nitro Party Experience 16:50 - Disco Inferno vs Alex Wright (WCW Television Championship) 20:07 - Disco Inferno vs Miss Jacqueline Match 20:54 - Scott Hall vs Hector Garza 24:24 - La Parka & Friends vs Ultimo Dragon & Team 29:58 - Roddy Piper Interview Segment 33:19 - Halloween Havoc 1997 Recap 37:30 - The Steiner Brothers vs The Faces of Fear 37:32 - Hogan & Bischoff Segment Analysis 40:19 - Macho Man Randy Savage vs Stevie Richards 45:42 - Conan & Scott Norton vs Harlem Heat 48:40 - Jeff Jarrett vs Curt Hennig Match 53:10 - Booking Buff Bagwell for Next Show 56:05 - Nitro Ratings Discussion 57:40 - Intro 58:40 - RAW Highlights 1:04:34 - Ahmed Johnson vs The Rock Match 1:06:03 - Captain Lou Albano Appearance 1:08:30 - Ahmed Johnson vs The Rock (Rematch) 1:10:54 - Shawn Michaels vs The Undertaker 1:11:55 - LOD vs The Nation of Domination Match 1:15:41 - Owen Hart vs Brian Pillman 1:24:48 - MSG War Zone Highlights 1:25:14 - Ronda Shear Appearance 1:26:31 - Triple H (w/Chyna) vs Dude Love 1:27:33 - Cactus Jack Returns to WWF 1:30:50 - Cactus Jack vs Triple H Match 1:33:10 - 1997 WWF Mount Rushmore Discussion 1:36:46 - Vince McMahon as WWF Owner 1:41:50 - Shawn Michaels Calls Out The Undertaker 1:44:43 - Bret Hart vs Goldust Match 1:54:05 - Next Week's Show Preview 2:00:00 - OUTRO

Boom Tequila
Dating in the 1930s: Rules and Kissing Techniques from the 30s

Boom Tequila

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 57:21


Send us a Text Message.We are continuing with our Dating Through The Decades Series and traveling all the way back to the 1930s. We are going to immerse ourselves into all the dating and relationship advice that was prominent in this time period. The thirties was pretty peak times for some fantastically interesting dating advice. We found some books from the 30s, articles and magazine clippings and have pulled together the most fascinating pieces of history to help us immerse ourselves in the world of 1930s dating.This episode includes:Dating advice in the 1930sRules for women in the 1930sGuidance for men on dating in the 1930sHighlight tips from the book "How to Make Love, Secrets of Wooing" from the 1930sA step-by-step (ohh baby) guide to kissing techniques from the 1930s (as outlined in Hugh Morris' book "The Art of Kissing" from 1936Magazine column advice from the 1930s1930s quiz trivia 1930s slang trivia An uncut video version of this episode is available on YouTube. Links/Resources:https://www.rd.com/list/ridiculous-dating-tips-from-the-1930s/  https://caronallanfiction.com/tag/womens-magazines-of-the-1930s/ https://richmond.com/do-s-and-don-ts-for-lovers---from-the-1930s/article_607fb0d4-b12c-11e3-b2fa-0017a43b2370.html https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0978664906/braipick-20 https://www.themarginalian.org/2014/01/15/how-to-make-love-1936-pietro-ramirez/ https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B002RGPUP0/braipick-20 https://www.smokyhillmuseum.org/file_download/inline/9e42437b-e940-4eb9-962b-dd66163d451cGet Comfortable Podcast Links Follow on Instagram: @GetComfortablePod Join our Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/boomtequilapodcast Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqro-8gXjDP_gVfwOhowJVw

Jock Doc Podcast
259. Focal Segmental Glomerulonephritis/Doctor Hugh Morris (feat. Bryan Spellman)

Jock Doc Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2024 35:00


Listen as Dr. London Smith (.com) and his producer Cameron discuss Focal Segmental Glomerulonephritis with special guest Doctor Hugh Morris (Bryan Spellman). Not so boring! https://www.patreon.com/join/jockdocpodcast Hosts: London Smith, Cameron Clark. Guest: Bryan Spellman. Produced by: Dylan Walker Created by: London Smith

The Watchalong Express
S2 EP 41: WCW Nitro, December 9, 1996

The Watchalong Express

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 120:49


Passengers, hello! How are we? We are back for another stop on the WatchAlong Express and we are full steam ahead to Starrcade. This week we discuss Andrew's newest and greatest purchase, a Macho Man Slim Jim holder. John makes a tremendous suggestion for Jimmy Hart's attire, and of course, we check in with Mike. A bit of sad news to report as Ole Anderson's passing was announced during the show. Yes, we record these episodes a few weeks in advance but we still felt it was important to acknowledge. Tonight's card: Michael Wallstreet vs Mike Enos, Hugh Morris vs The Renegade, Dean Malenko vs Jimmy Graffiti, The Faces of Fear vs The Nasty Boys, Chris Jericho vs Bobby Eaton, Arn Anderson vs Sgt Pittman, DDP vs Jeff Jarrett, Rick Steiner vs Scott Norton. The WatchAlong Express leaves the station in 3...2...1...play!

The Watchalong Express
S2 EP 37: WCW Nitro, November 18th, 1996

The Watchalong Express

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2024 117:20


Passengers, we are on the last stop before World War III. Please keep all keep your hands firmly on your umbrella drinks and join us. This week, the boys discuss Stings sensual return to Lex, Chris Jericho's hockey Dad, Larry and Tony's secret mob family past, and Andrew geeks out about Drew Bledsoe. Most importantly, we get a major plot twist in the NWO story line and Nick Patrick is still hurt. Tonight's card: La Parka vs Juventud Guerrera, Ultimate Dragon vs Dean Malenko, The Amazing French Canadians vs The American Males, Lex Luger vs Hugh Morris, Chris Jericho vs Johnny Grunge, Jeff Jarrett vs Bobby Eaton, Bubba Rogers vs Jim Powers, and Chris Benoit vs Eddie Guerrero. The WatchAlong Express leaves the station in 3...2...1...play!

The Church Times Podcast
Canon Victoria Johnson and Hugh Morris on the value of church music

The Church Times Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 18:22


For the podcast this week, Sarah Meyrick travelled to York to talk to the Canon Precenter of York Minster, the Revd Dr Victoria Johnson, and the director of the Royal School of Church Music (RSCM), Hugh Morris, about the importance of church music. The Church Times and the RSCM have together launched a new event, the Festival of Faith and Music, which takes place in York Minster from 26 to 28 April (News, 8 December). Full programme and ticketing information can be found at https://faithandmusic.hymnsam.co.uk. Through a programme of music and worship, talks and workshops, the festival is designed for clergy and church musicians, and seeks to celebrate church music in all its glory and to send delegates home encouraged, inspired, and equipped with new ideas for using music in worship. Canon Johnson will be speaking at the event about her book, On Voice: Speech, song, silence: human and divine, which will be published in March by Darton, Longman & Todd (Features, 5 January). On the podcast, she talks about some of the themes in the book, including why she is inspired by the singing of football crowds and how silence also figures in her thinking about sung worship. The keynote speaker at the Festival of Faith and Preaching will be the Archbishop of York, in a session called “Tuning forks and orchestras: Music and the mission of God”. Other speakers include Roxana Panufnik, composer of one of the works sung at the Coronation; and Andy Thomas, the author of Resounding Body: Building Christlike church communities through music. Two internationally renowned singers, James Gilchrist and Andrea Haines, both of whom started singing in parish church choirs, will talk about how it all began, and will perform some reflective music in the quire of York Minster. Find out more about the RSCM at www.rscm.org.uk. Try 10 issues of the Church Times for £10 or get two months access to our website and apps, also for £10. Go to churchtimes.co.uk/new-reader

The FS Club Podcast
CityForum: Resources, Security and Prosperity

The FS Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 59:20


In this discussion Hugh Morris, who has had a very long career in the City of London, will invite panellists to identify the three threat areas which each of them sees as most critical to the future security and prosperity of the UK and allied Western countries. The conversation will then turn to the principal worries of participants in the webclave, and at the end Hugh will invite comments on emergent threats that will then be covered in the spring 2024 Cityforum Resilience Assessment under preparation with help from the Cabinet Office and the National Preparedness Commission.

The Watchalong Express
S2 EP28: WCW Nitro, October 7, 1996

The Watchalong Express

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 118:44


Alrighty passengers, another stop on the Halloween Havoc train. This week, we make a stop in Savannah, Georgia. Justin and John go in to this weeks beer theme completely blind and try to guess what they have. Justin tells the story of his valet's trip to Orlando, Andrew tells the story of his trip to New York many moons ago, and Neil Patrick is still hurt.This weeks card includes Harlem Heat vs Public Enemy, DDP vs Jim Powers, The Faces of Fear vs High Voltage, Glacier vs Mike Winter, Jeff Jarrett vs Hugh Morris, Arn Anderson vs The Renegade, Lex Luger vs Squire David Taylor, and Rick Steiner vs Chris Benoit. The WatchAlong Express leaves the station in 3...2...1...play!

The Watchalong Express
S2 EP27: WCW Nitro, September 30, 1996

The Watchalong Express

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2023 121:16


Alrighty passengers, we are back with another stop along the Halloween Havoc journey. Time to crack those drinks of Madness and hop on the train. We discuss the woes of the Cleveland Browns, the NWO gives us the strangest backstage segment to date, and John has technical issues to the max.Tonight's card includes: The Public Enemy vs El Technico and Juventud, Alex Wright vs Dean Malenko, Eddie Guerrero vs Jim Powers, Hugh Morris vs Brad "Mega Mullet" Armstrong, Arn Anderson vs Chris Jericho, Lex Luger vs M. Wallstreet, The Faces of Fear vs The Rock 'n' Roll Express, Chris Benoit vs Rick Steiner.The Express leaves the station in 3...2...1...play!Follow us on Instagram @watchalongexpress

The Watchalong Express
S2 EP25: WCW Nitro, September 16, 1996

The Watchalong Express

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2023 112:31


Alright passengers, we are back! After an exciting War Games, WCW is coming at us from Asheville, North Carolina for another episode of Nitro. We get the best debut ever and Justin gives us his most important "To The Internet..." to date. John and Justin make good on their promise from 3 episodes ago. And we dive into who actually invented one of the most devastating finishing maneuvers in wrestling history. Crack your Oktober fest brew and join us!Our card tonight is as follows: Rey Mysterio vs Juventud Guerrera, DDP vs Ice Train, Konnan vs Super Calo, Brad Armstrong vs Hugh Morris, Scott Norton vs Randy Savage, IT HAPPENED, The Four Horsemen vs Chris Jericho and Marcus Bagwell, Lex Luger vs The Four Horsemen.The express is leaving the station in 3...2...1...play!Follow us on IG @watchalongexpress

The FS Club Podcast
Mauritius Offers An Attractive & Stable Environment For Captive Insurance Companies

The FS Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 74:48


Background: Mauritius offers an attractive and stable environment for captive insurance companies. Captive insurance entities have become a preferred vehicle for companies to manage their annual premium payments with sustained and continued growth over the past decade. The Captive Insurance Act was passed in 2015 with the aim of making Mauritius a captive domicile of choice and to introduce a new framework in line with international best practices which is equally competitive and will attract pure captive insurance corporations from around the world. Permissible classes of captive insurance business under the Captive Insurance Act are insurance or reinsurance pertaining to general insurance business, Alternative Risk Transfer policy contracts or any other class or type of insurance business as may be prescribed. At present, the Captive Insurance Act only caters for pure captive insurance business, i.e. the business of undertaking liability restricted exclusively to the risks of the parent and affiliated corporations. This webinar focuses on maintaining a regulatory system that attracts quality insurance business to Mauritius, safeguards the solvency of captive insurers and aims to shed light on the practical implications of the ongoing initiatives on the Captive Insurance Business. In this webinar, we will hear from expert speakers who will elaborate on: The Captive Insurance Framework Authorization and Supervision processes of Captive Insurance Experience from licensees Find out more about this event on our website: https://www.zyen.com/events/all-events/mauritius-offers-an-attractive-and-stable-environment-for-captive-insurance-companies/ Interested in watching our webinars live, or taking part in the production of our research? Join our community at: https://bit.ly/3sXPpb5 Speakers: Agenda: 10:00 - 10:05 BST - Welcome and Introduction, Hugh Morris, Senior Research Partner, Z/Yen Group 10:05 - 10:15 BST - Keynote Address, Mr Dhanesswurnath Thakoor, Chief Executive, Financial Services Commission Mauritius (FSC) 10:15 - 10:30 BST - Overview of the Captive Insurance Framework, Mr Aakash Mishra, Assistant Director, FSC 10:30 - 10:45 BST - Authorisation Process, Mr Kamalsing Burun, Assistant Director, FSC 10:45 - 10:55 BST - Share Experience on Captive Insurance Market, Mr Kabir Ruhee, CEO, Rogers Capital Captive Insurance Management Services Ltd (RCCIMS) 10:55 - 11:05 BST - Share Experience on Captive Insurance Market, Dr Chakanyuka Goodman, Executive Credit Risk Management, TDB Captive Insurance Company (TCI) 11:05 - 11:15 BST - Share Experience as Pure Captive Insurer, Mr David Too Sai Voon, Director, ProtectSure Captive Insurance Company Ltd 11:15 - 11:30 BST - Q&A and Concluding Remarks, Hugh Morris, Senior Research Partner, Z/Yen Group

SJP WORLD MEDIA
NN EP74 - 14.10.96 Nitro

SJP WORLD MEDIA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 64:07


The nWo is here! Savage gets upset, Liz cannot act, and Si & Danny ask a very important question.... Hugh Morris, why?FOLLOW US!@SJPWORLDMEDIA@NITRO_NIGHTS@ScottishJuggalo

savage nwo nitro hugh morris
NITRO NIGHTS
NN EP74 - 14.10.96 Nitro

NITRO NIGHTS

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 64:07


The nWo is here! Savage gets upset, Liz cannot act, and Si & Danny ask a very important question.... Hugh Morris, why?FOLLOW US!@SJPWORLDMEDIA@NITRO_NIGHTS@ScottishJuggalo

savage nwo nitro hugh morris
Monday Warfare: The Battles Within
Monday Warfare: RAW vs. NITRO – Episode 26 (7/8/96) Sid Returns, Warrior Exits, Misterio Wins WCW Gold!

Monday Warfare: The Battles Within

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 107:35


Coming off the 1996 Bash at the Beach, WCW Nitro focuses on the HEEL TURN OF HULK HOGAN! Plus, Rey Misterio defeats Dean Malenko for the Cruiserweight Title, Sting vs. Arn Anderson, Psicosis makes his Nitro debut vs. Eddy Guerrero, The Outsiders show up, and a whole lot more! Meanwhile, over on Raw... We say goodbye to the Ultimate Warrior (who battles Owen Hart), while we welcome back SYCHO SID! Plus, a slobber knocker featuring Savio Vega vs. Justin "Hawk" Bradshaw, and the Godwinns face Vader & The British Bulldog!Available everywhere your Podcast Streaming needs are met.Visit our Podcast Network https://wrestlecopia.comFollow us on Twitter @RasslinGrenadeFollow and LIKE our FACEBOOK PAGE - https://www.facebook.com/RasslinGrenadeSubscribe to our Youtube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/RasslinGrenadePlease Subscribe to our Patreon to help keep us going, multiple Tiers to choose from!!! https://www.patreon.com/wrestlecopiaIncludes a $5 “All Access” Tier featuring our Patreon Exclusive Watch-Along Series, our insanely detailed SHOW NOTES (for the Grenade, Monday Warfare & Regional Rasslin), Early Show Releases, REMASTERED editions of the early Grenade episodes including NEW content that was originally edited out! PLUS, monthly DIGITAL DOWLOANDS for your viewing and reading pleasure!Listen at your leisure and pick back up later if need be!Coming off the 1996 Bash at the Beach, WCW Nitro focuses on the HEEL TURN OF HULK HOGAN! Plus, Rey Misterio defeats Dean Malenko for the Cruiserweight Title, Sting vs. Arn Anderson, Psicosis makes his Nitro debut vs. Eddy Guerrero, The Outsiders show up, the Steiners tangle with the Nasties, and a whole lot more! Meanwhile, over on Raw... We say goodbye to the Ultimate Warrior as he takes on Owen Hart, while we welcome back the returning SYCHO SID! Plus, a slobber knocker featuring Savio Vega vs. Justin "Hawk" Bradshaw, and the Godwinns face Vader & The British Bulldog!WWF NEWS  SummerSlam setting sales records Barry Windham headed in Bret Hart's contract expires The 1-2-3 Kid's future up in the air Basil DeVito back A potential return for Jesse "The Body" Ventura"? Who is this Mark Henry fellow? Dale Torborg has his eyes on the WWF The Ultimate Warrior suspended pending an appearance bond.   WWF MONDAY NIGHT RAW 7/8/96 (00:11:45) Gorilla Monsoon has an ultimatum for the Warrior Man The Ultimate Warrior battles Owen Hart in what will mark the Warrior's final televised WWF match Camp Cornette take out the Warrior Savio Vega vs. Justin "Hawk" Bradshaw in an old school slobberknocker Vader & The British Bulldog battle the Godwinns Henry Godwinn holds his own with Vader! With the Warrior now suspended, Shawn Michaels & Ahmed Johnson find themselves a new partner for the upcoming In Your House PPV in the likes of a returning SYCHO SID! (and Jim Cornette loses his mind) We look at the masterful booking/editing that went into last minute production to fix the issues involving the Warrior being "out" and Sid being "in". WCW NEWS (00:38:16) Blood Runs Cold is no single character Bobsledder, Chip Minton Keiji Mutoh sighting! WCW offers The British Bulldog a contract, the WWF counteroffers Ted Dibiase headed in Rumblings of a potential Chris Jericho hiring WCW BASH AT THE BEACH 1996 RESULTS, featuring the HEEL TURN OF HULK HOGAN! WCW MONDAY NITRO 7/8/96 (00:47:00) While the Olympics take over Turner's production team, Nitro comes to us from Disney/MGM's outdoor venue  Schiavone & Zbyszko talk the traitor Hulk Hogan (as does the rest of the WCW roster throughout the entire broadcast) Rey Misterio Jr. defeats Dean Malenko to capture the Cruiserweight Championship The Blue Bloods of Steve Regal & Dave Taylor face Big Bubba & Hugh Morris of the Dungeon John Tenta isn't done with Big Bubba Psicsosis makes his Nitro debut vs. Eddy Guerrero Mean Gene talks to Kevin Sullivan & WCW Champion the Giant about the Horsemen, the Outsiders, and Hogan's turn The Steiner Brothers face the Nasty Boys in a #1 contender match for a shot at WCW Tag Champs Harlem Heat The Nasties tease jumping to the nWo Col. Rob Parker & Sherri wreak havoc on the tag division Eric Bischoff reemerges after no-showing Bash at the Beach and has a good explanation... Well, he has an explanation A jacked up Jimmy Powers takes on the NEW U.S. Champion Ric Flair in perhaps the biggest match of Powers' career Craig "Pitbull" Pittman proves to be impressive in a short match vs. Chris Benoit Teddy Long gets TOO involved on Pittman's behalf. Sting faces Arn Anderson in the Nitro main event as the Outsiders arrive! Sting & Randy Savage have final words for Hulk Hogan... Brother! Mean Gene speaks to Hall & Nash to close the show, promising that HULK HOGAN WILL BE HERE NEXT WEEK!!! All of that, and I'll share the "REAL WINNER" here this week. Who had the better shoiw? I'll share my thoughts. AND OF COURSE, we take a look at the July 8, 1996 TV Ratings as Nitro blows Raw out of the water following the heel turn of Hulk Hogan!

Rasslecast Power Hour
Not On Black History Month!

Rasslecast Power Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 71:12


We rejoin Marc Rob, Noveliss, Handsome Bane and B Hyphen as they continue to decide the winner of the first annual Jake The Snake Invitational! Wrestlers expected to appear: Mia Yim! Alex Wright! Alex Riley! Hugh Morris! Rocky Johnson! And More!Merch

The Big Vito Brand
Getting Color 8/29/20

The Big Vito Brand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 41:21


What does it take to make stars in your roster?Is AEW and WWE failing at that? Story time -Hugh Morris learns the Moonsault and DLo Loses his teeth! All this weeks wrestling news! We podcast Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday on Twitch 6:30 pm Eastern Twitch.tv/thebigvitobrand Listen HERE Anchor : Anchor.FM/thebigvitobrand IHeart : https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-the-big-vito-brand-31159185/ iTunes : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-big-vito-brand Stitcher : https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-big-vito-brand Podbean : https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/j26b3-76d3a/The-Big-Vito-Brand-Podcast On your Alexa Devices under Flash Briefings https://www.amazon.com/The-Big-Vito-Brand/dp/B07N62Z7J4 Get Social HERE Instagram and Twitter: @thebigvitobrand Instagram and Twitter @MagicTSpiller Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thebigvitobrand TikTok @thebigvitobrand Official websites : BigVito.com TheBigVitoBrand.com Virtue on twitter @NoDQ_Virtue @NotJargo PWR team on twitter @pwhustleprof @TheeTommyWonder @TheP1JB @BigRayHernandez --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thebigvitobrand/message

Chaos Is Everywhere
Hugh Morris Get It?

Chaos Is Everywhere

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 176:24


R D Vice and Jonathan Gilchrist watch WCW Slamboree 1996 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

wcw slamboree hugh morris
Red Pill Revolution
Memorial Day: Badass Medal of Honor Recipients

Red Pill Revolution

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 89:51


In this episode of Red Pill Revolution, we discuss the unbelievable stories of 5 Medal of Honor recipients. Dakota Meyer, Kyle Carpenter, Salvatore Giunta, John Chapman; All Heros with their own incredible stories that we dive into and discuss. Listen in and pay homage to these remarkable men.   Subscribe and leave a 5-star review today!   Protect your family and support the Red Pill Revolution Podcast with Affordable Life Insurance. This is attached to my license and not a third-party ad!   Go to https://agents.ethoslife.com/invite/3504a now!   Currently available in AZ, MI, MO, LA, NC, OH, IN, TN, WV Email redpillrevolt@protonmail.com if you would like to sign up in a different state   Leave a donation, sign up for our weekly podcast companion newsletter, and follow along with all things Red Pill Revolution by going to our new website: https://redpillrevolution.co   Full Transcription:   Hello, and welcome to red pill revolution. My name is Austin Adams. Thank you so much for listening today. This is episode number 30 of the red pill revolution podcast. And again, thank you so much for listening. Uh, pretty excited about this conversation we're going to have today. It is all surrounding, you know, a little bit in the Memorial day theme here, we are going to be discussing all of, uh, some really incredible stories surrounding some of the medal of honor recipients from our great nation here in the United States of America.   Um, I know we have some people listening abroad, but there's some really incredible stories. Some really incredible people that we're going to highlight to. Uh, so I'm really excited to get into this. A few of the names that we're going to be going over is Kyle Carpenter, Dakota Meyer Salvatore. Gianatta John Chapman, Thomas Paine.   And then we got a sprinkle of some Jocko Willink in here to bowl the, get us into the episode and an outro to the episode. So I think that's the, I don't think you can get any more American than jockowillink. So let's go ahead and jump into this clip here. A little bit of a, some Memorial day United States pride here, here is Jocko Willink   in a country that most people would struggle to find on a map in a compound that few possess the courage to enter men from my previous life. Took the fight to our enemy in that compound, they found men that pray five times a day for your destruction. Those praying men don't know me. They don't know you.   And they don't know America. They don't understand our compassion, our freedoms and our tolerance. I know it may seem as if some of those things are currently missing, but they remain at our core and always will. Those men don't care about your religious beliefs. They don't care about your political opinions.   They don't care if you sit on the left or the right liberal or conservative pacifist or war. They don't care. How much you believe in diversity, equality or freedom of speech. They don't care. Sorry. You've never felt the alarm bells ringing in your body. The combination of fear and adrenaline as you move towards the fight instead of running from it.   Sorry, you've never heard someone cry out for help or cried out for help yourself. Relying on the courage of others to bring you home.   I'm sorry. You've never tasted the salt from your own tears. As you stand at flag draped, coffins bearing men, you were humbled to call your friends.   I don't wish those experiences on you.   But I do wish them had them.   if you had them, it would change the way you act, who would change the way you value. It would change the way you appreciate. You would become quick to open your eyes and slow to open your mouth.   Most will never understand the sacrifice required to keep evil men like those from that distant compound away from our doorstep. But it would not hurt you to try and understand would not hurt you to take a moment to think of the relentless drain on family, friends, and loved ones that are left behind sometimes for weeks, sometimes for months, sometimes for years.   Sometimes forever   ideas are not protected by words, paper and ink may outline the foundation and principles of this nation, but it is blood only blood that protects it   in that dusty compound. A man you have never met, gave everything he had so that you have the freedom to think, speak and act. However you choose.   He went there for all of us, whether you loved or hated what he stood for. He went there to preserve the opportunity and privilege, to believe, to be, and to become what we want.   this country, every single person living inside of its borders and under the banner of its flag. Oh, that man, we owe that man, everything. We owe him the respect that his sacrifice deserves saying, thank you is not enough. We send our best and lose them in the fight against the worst evil this world has to offer.   If you want to respect and honor their sacrifice, it needs to be more than words. You have to live. Take a minute and look around, soak it in the good, the bad and the ugly. You have the choice every day as to which category you want to be in, in which direction you want to move, you have that choice because the best among us, the best we ever had to offer, fought, and bled and died for it.   Don't ever forget that.   Wow. Well, what a way to start the show today? Uh, definitely hit me in my fields, Jocko Willink. They're just kind of outlining what this day is about, right? Th th the Memorial day is, is, you know, shrouded with barbecue grills and, and beach parties with the family and, you know, and all that's amazing and all of that's great.   And I'm sure every soldier who has ever sacrificed his, his life would have wanted it that way. Right? We're, we're, we're celebrating life, not just, you know, being, uh, having sorrow for those that we have lost, but it doesn't take away from the fact that we have to remember what the day's about. You know, we have to remember the reason that we are able to even have this type of weekend and the true reason behind that, which is soldiers who have lost their lives for us to have the freedoms that we have here in the United States.   Now over the last few episodes that, you know, I'm sure it seems like we've had, we've had a tough go here in the United States, you know, the last, the last several months, the last couple of years, even. Um, but I don't think that takes away from, from something that I found pretty powerful in that statement that Jocko Willink just said was that the, the piece of paper is what defines who our country is.   But the blood of the individuals who are willing to defend it is truly what matters in that really rings true. And I think we're going to see that today with a lot of the individuals that we're going to hear their stories and know that they're just everyday people, everyday people just like you and me who decided to go into the military for one reason or another.   Um, but generally, because they're a Patriot because they believe in what our country stands for. And this is something that I've had to wrestle with recently. Right? I am a veteran myself. I am not a combat veteran, so I did not have the experience that these individuals have had. Um, but you know, something that we, we have to remind ourselves during this time is that there is truly a unique individual who's willing to run to the fight.   And every single story that we hear of here is not only the individuals who signed that line, not only the individuals who picked up a weapon and went overseas and left their families, left their children, left their, their, their significant others left everything behind, just so they could S could go and fight for what they believe in.   Right. And that's kind of what I was getting at before, which is that, you know, it's, it's difficult. It's, it's easy to look at all of the flaws that we have in the United States here today. It's easy to look at, you know, the, the political divide in the partisan divides that we have in, in kind of just, uh, you know, diminish what these great men have done for us.   But, but that's, that's such a shallow viewpoint. Right? And, and the reason that these men signed that, that line is not because they believe in the politicians. It's not because they believe. You know, they, they believe in who we are as a nation. They believe in the individuals that are around them. They believe in the, that piece of paper that Jocko Willink just talked about, right.   The constitution, which was written as a, a literal divide between totalitarianism, that we're seeing all across the world right now in almost every so many. So many countries are dealing with, with this totalitarian states, you look at China, you, you look at the way that they're just ripping people off of their streets and like these like home alone, white jumpsuits and, and you know, for how long we've looked at these different countries and thought that just, it could never be like that here.   Well, why is that? Well, that's because of two reasons, two reasons why that is. And the first reason. We have our constitution. Our constitution is, is the founding document of our nation that allows us to have a, a literal defense against individuals who are in the political system, who are trying to take as much power as possible.   The constitution stops us from having people who can go in and become the system. There was already a set system that is out there. There was already a outline of the way that we have to act in the separation of powers and all of these individual things that make it, that, that were pre thought out, knowing that politicians are.   Dirty knowing that politicians are generally corruptible, knowing that people are flawed, right. And that's truly what it is, is people are flawed. And to know that people are flooding and to implement an institution in a piece of paper, a founding document with our constitution, which will allow us to have a literal divide, a literal wall, a defense against those corruptible individuals who seek power in the easiest way to go find it, which is through the political system.   So that is number one. We have our constitution, which is a actual defensive wall against those corruptible individuals on the inside. And that is the number one thing that we have to protect ourselves from. If we're going to remain a free country. Now, number two, which is equally as important is to have, is that what we have the fortune of having here in the United States is the greatest military power in the world.   The greatest military power in the history of. Right. And that doesn't protect us from the inside more than it protects us from the outside. So to allow us to maintain this organization, to maintain this, this ongoing freedom away from other totalitarian individuals who are wanting to come in and push their political agendas, whether they're from, you know, foreign or domestic, right.   Is, is that what you raise your hand? I promise to defend in the country from foreign and domestic enemies, the foreign aspect of that is where the military comes into play. Right. And, and the military is just a broken. A list of individual names who are willing to put themselves, put their lives on the line to make these things happen.   So let's go ahead and let's jump into the very first clip here that we have, which is actually the, so let's do a little bit of background on the, the medal of honor. So all of these individuals that we're highlighting today, our medal of honor recipients. Now it is Memorial day. Some of these individuals, I believe even most of them are not deceased, which is definitely a positive thing.   Um, but just so you know, that. And this is Memorial day, but I am highlighting medal of honor. Right? So the medal of honor is the very first, uh, it was, it was the very first, um, distinguishing factor for the American military  so, uh, Abraham Lincoln implemented the medal of honor, and it's kind of just, it been the most distinguished honor that you can have, uh, being a part of the military.   All right. Now the structure of this with the medal of honor is that you actually have to either get a congressional, um, a Congressman has to put your name down for the medal of honor or your chain of command. So those are two different ways that you can get a medal of honor. So far there's been around 3,500 medal of honor recipients.   Most of those medal of honor recipients were at the very beginning. Like I think it's like 80% of the medal of honor recipients were towards the very, very beginning of when the medal of honor was, uh, was made. And so since then the requirements to receive the medal of honor has gone up and, and become much more, uh, Distinguished in, in there's a lot more, um, I guess, uh, I dunno, there's a lot, there's a lot more, um, specific things that you have to boxes.   You have to check to get the medal of honor, as opposed to what it was like before. So a vast, vast majority came at the very beginning of when the medal of honor was made in the early 18 hundreds. Okay. So there's the background for it now, since then the most recent, uh, requirements change was in 1963, I believe where they began to make these requirements more stringent and you see less and less of these medal of honors today.   So the very first one that we're going to watch here is of Kyle Carpenter. Kyle Carpenter is an incredible story. He's actually the youngest medal of honor recipient ever. Um, it's truly, truly an incredible story. I don't want to take anything away from it for you guys here, so let's go ahead and listen to it.   And then we will discuss.   I joined the Marine Corps because I wanted to devote my life. My body, if need be to something greater than myself or any one individual   in 2010, I deployed with second battalion ninth Marines to Marsha Afghanistan. We were constantly attacked, just like we were every single day for the entire deployment. The fighting was very intense and it wasn't a matter of okay. Is it going to happen, but just a matter of when   myself and amazing friend and fellow Marine, when it scroll up on NICU Fazio, we were on top of that roof together. We were near the end of our four hour post position on top of the roof. When the enemy initiated a daylight attack with hand grenades   I felt like I got hit really hard in the face. My vision was as if I was looking at a TV with no connection, it was just white and gray static. I thought about my family and how devastated they were going to be. Especially my mother that didn't make it home from Afghanistan. And I closed my eyes and I faded out of consciousness for what I thought was going to be my last time on this earth.   my injuries were so severe that still nine years later,   it's hard to comprehend that I survived.   all right. So what it's saying here, I'm going to pause it real quick because it's, it's, it's saying some stuff that's pretty important. Basically. What ended up happening is, uh, Kyle actually jumped on a Brittany. Um, and it says that he has very little recollection of what actually happened during this event.   Um, but according to the information that they had here, he, uh, I'll just read it to, you says, says to this day Kyle's memory of what happened on November 21st, 2010, it remains blurry, but a military review of the incident determined that he had covered the grenade with his body to save the life of corporal Nick, you phrase you on June 19th, 2014, Kyle was awarded the medal of honor.   The nation's highest and most prestigious personal military decoration. All right. I just wanted to read that to you guys. I mean, that's pretty, I mean, literally the, the, um, captain America story right there for you and in a real individual, and, and we feel the need to create false idols, to be able to idolize somebody and think that somebody would have the capabilities or the, the mindfulness or, or the courage to do something during this, in, in that type of situation.   And that's why it's outlined in a movie in captain America, uh, an individual, you know, captain America goes on to jump on the grenade, right? This guy, Kyle Carpenter actually did that in the state of war to save his friends. How truly incredible. And like, you know, it gives me goosebumps just thinking about it.   That's it's amazing. Um, so let's, let's finish this, if there's anything else that comes up, I'll go ahead and read it to you guys. So.   All right. So while one second, while that loads up for us. Um, but yeah, really incredible story. The fact that, you know, that he, this individual actually did, so it says that several grenades were tossed onto the roof where he was at, and one of them, um, would take an enormous toll. It says Kyle was certain that he was going to die when that happened.   Um, it says Kyle is often asked, uh, what the medal of honor means to him. Um, and let's see if we can get this clip going here to discuss what he actually says there for that. Here we go.   We're just here because we're here. No, we got here because of incredible amounts of courage and sacrifice.   the metal represents all whoever raised their right hand and sworn to give their life if called upon for their country, represents those who have never made it home to receive the things and recognition. They deserve. Those who charged the beaches and world war II froze while fighting in Korea. Bled out across the lush fields of Vietnam and those who never made it home because of another deadly blast in the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, those who were tortured for years in prisoner of war camps and those who still rest and just didn't lands forever remaining missing an action.   The metal represents the parents, husbands wives, and loved ones who have heard the dreaded knock on their front doors to find a telegram or service member delivering the unbearable news. This is where the true weight of the metals caring being a medal of honor. Recipient is a beautiful burden, but one, I am honored to carry   all right. And at the end of the video there, what they show is Kyle going ahead and putting on his medal of honor. So, um, really an incredible story, unbelievable story. And one that will, we'll go on in history as the, you know, the, the real captain America courage here with Kyle Carpenter. Um, you know, I almost feel like there should have been his name in the credits of the captain America movie, that they, you know, stole, stole that scene from something that actually happened with a true hero, um, with Kyle Carpenter there.   So what an incredible story. Um, now the next one that we're going to discuss here is going to be a Dakota Meyer. Now Dakota Meyers is a somewhat of a large figure when it comes to combat veterans who have spoken out, he's been on Joe Rogan, I believe once or twice, I think twice where the first time he went on and discussed his story directly in his story is.   A hard one to listen to and in a pretty gruesome one at that. And then, you know, that's kind of the thing that you hear about the differences between war. I don't know, you know, the way that our modern wars are fought is, is a lot of times, you know, you think of a gunfight and you're pressing a button from afar land, or like from, from hundreds of yards away and shooting it, you know, enemy fire zones and, and, you know, you're seeing small areas where you're shooting at and that didn't use to be the case.   Right. You think back to like the way that they fought in, I dunno, think of like, you know, 17 hundreds was like swords and stuff. That's not that far removed from where we are. So there's some really gruesome stories that come out of like older wars and we, we don't have as many hand-to-hand combat stories.   And Dakota Meyer is one of those stories where it really just reminds you of. The real gritty, terrible aspects of even modern war. And, um, we'll hear a little bit more about it when he discusses it here, but he talks about, um, in, in this clip, he not only discusses what he actually went through, what he did.   Um, but Dakota Meyer is an incredible story where I believe he was the only one of his team that made it out of a situation where, um, they basically left them stranded. So I don't want to take away too much of his stories surrounding it. Um, but it's a, it's a really incredible story. That's a little, you know, he, I believe he ends up, um, he gets in the hand-to-hand combat situation with somebody and ends up killing them with a rock man.   Like that's a tear. I can't even imagine what these guys carry around with them. Right. In, in that Kyle Carpenter story, not only the fact that he jumped on a grenade, but the fact that he lived to tell about it, he has very little recollection of what happened. Must be a really difficult thing. To try and wrestle with right.   To try. And you know, how often does that come up in his mind and into not even remember what actually happened? One of the curd must be really, I don't know, I guess a blessing in some ways, but also frustrating because it's such a pivotal moment in your life, right? Like you have how many days of your life that, that, you know, thousands and thousands of days in your life.   And, and to have this one most impactful day, like whether it's with what happened with Kyle Carpenter, where he jumps on that grenade and lives to tell the tale, or whether it's about Dakota Meyer, where he ends up having to take this other man's life. And he talks about not only having to take this man's life, but like the humanity behind it.   And then looking into this man's eyes and knowing that he's just another. Uh, another person just like him, who has a family and kids. And, um, it's, it's, it's tough, but I think it's necessary. We have to know what these people go through to properly be able to memorialize, you know, the other soldiers who actually did fall in these types of situations.   But, um, let's go ahead and listen to the Dakota Meyer story now. Well, I think sometimes people need to hear it from somebody like you, you know, or someone like Jocko or, you know, the, the, the beautiful thing about these podcasts is that you get to hear people's perspective. And a lot of them are eye-opening, you know, they, they they're, they literally can change the world because they changed the way you behave and you interact with people when you listen to it.   Yeah. And that podcast that you did with Jocko, when I was listening to me, it changed my whole day. It changed like how I was going to look at my day. I was, you know, instead of like looking at my day, like up it's a normal day, I was thinking, God damn, I'm lucky. God damn, I'm lucky and goddamn. Imagine.   Experiencing what you, and how old were you at the time? I was 21, 21 years old. And experiencing what you experienced in that insane firefight being locked down. And I mean, how many guys did you wind up engaging with? I don't know. I, you know, I don't know. I mean, everyone that I got an opportunity with.   Right. And it just, you know, it was just, uh, you know, it was so chaotic. I mean, I, you know, I still, I look, I think about all the time, obviously. Um, it's something I could have never experienced. I mean, I trained for war every single day when I was in the Marine Corps. I mean, it was what it was, what my job was and I still could have never imagined that day, the way it was or anything to turn out.   I could've never pictured it. I could've never, and, and I think every day it goes by, I think there's a reckoning of it, right. The way that I seen it that day is not the way I see it today. And, uh, I think that comes with, you know, just, just sharpening and just your body, you know, you change and you, you see different things in perspective, but yeah, I mean, you know, I, I, I, you know, that day, I mean, it's still, I mean, it still is just, you know, just, it's just there and, and, and literally I walked out of there and I, I just think about all the time today.   I just think about all the time of how many generations, just that day were changed. How many generations of, of people's lives were changed? You know, all my teammates died, so don't ever have kids that generations stopped their families forever. So many lives were changed that day by that, that, that piece.   And guess what? And everybody in America had no clue it was going on. Like right now, there are us. Somebody wondering if they're going to be able to come home and see their family again, that's reality, whether you want to ignore it or not like that's reality. And that was me September 8th, 2009. And it was just, um, gosh, it was a chaotic day.   I think that's an important thing to highlight too, is like, you know, what percentage of people that are going into these actual firefight, what is their average age like the, the, the military at that level is primarily made up of, you know,  may be some staff Sergeant like the primary, primary bulk of the individuals who are going in and fighting.   These wars are 18 to 22 year old kids. Right? Like you listen to, uh, you know, all of these conversations around, you know, gun control and, and, you know, should he be able to purchase a gun or not at 18 years old and all this stuff of like the recent events. So the tragic events that have happened. And you don't even remember the fact that worse, our government literally arms 18 olds and sends them to fight on their behalf.   And the 18 year olds that are signing up to go into the military. Don't don't have the big picture in mind. They barely paid attention in government class if like me. Um, and, and they, they really don't even know how our political system works, let alone geopolitics, and what's happening around the world.   And like what's actually going on, um, they're 18 to 22 year old kids who are going to fight the wars of these 85, 70 year old politicians who they don't have a clue what they're actually fighting for other than, you know, what you'll hear a lot in, in these kinds of videos is you'll, they'll hear them talking about who they're with, right.   Their team, um, saving their buddy next to them. That's what they fight for. And the fundamental ideal that they have surrounding what the United States is and what it means to be a Patriot and what the constitution stands for and being the, you know, um, th th the freest country in the world, right? And that's what these 18 year olds, the ideals that they're fighting for in their head at this age, besides the actual, like geopolitical situation of why we're actually going in there, what we're actually doing and why we're doing it, they're kids going into these situations.   And what you'll find is like, this is kind of an interesting conversation. This, you know, he talks about, you know, they were married and they had didn't, weren't old enough yet to have kids, right. They weren't old enough to be able to see what life is actually about when you, when you look at your child's eyes, when they're born, and they didn't get any of that.   And, and not only that, but their, their family lineage has gone. They did, they, they will not reproduce. There will be no duplication of that DNA because of these wars that they were sent to fight at. It's such a young age, And so, you know, to me, it's like these conversations running like is an 18 year old able to carry a gun.   Well, if you're going to allow people to sign up for the military and to go fight on behalf of our government and wars that these 18 year olds don't even understand, yet you gotta, you can't, you can't like have your cake and eat it too. As people say, right? Like you can't not allow an 18 year old to protect his own home because he can't purchase a weapon, but then send him to Afghanistan to go fight the Taliban in the same breath, because you think that it's okay for them to do that under their scenario.   Right. And under your, your reasoning. Right. Because, you know, and that's kind of how you have to look at that gun situation. I guess we'll, we'll take a little skirt side sidetrack here, you know, to me the gun, situation's an interesting one. And especially with the most recent events and things. That, you know, the, if you look at the government from a large standpoint is the government is its own entity, right?   It's its own, uh, household, right? It's a household of 300 million people, and then you break it down to the state level, right? And the state is just a smaller organization of that same family, right? That it breaks down to a smaller number. And inside that you have counties and inside that you have cities and inside that you have subdivisions and inside that you have households, but what the country is, is just its own family entity that has decided that we're on the same team.   Right. And we all live around each other, so we should be kind to each other and we should have some rules and that type of deal. Right. So when you break it down to like the, the household level, the, the, the government in the sense stands when it comes to gun control is basically. The government wants to be able to control weapons for its own personal reasons to defend itself.   Right? As a country, as a country family, it wants to defend its property, right? It wants to be able to do that. And it does that through military action right now, when you break that to the state level, you have sheriffs in the national guard and you have state entities that want to be able to defend itself against its enemies.   And then you have the households, right? You have, you have actual physical subdivisions, you're home in that subdivision, and you need to be able to do what the government does. You need to be able to do what the federal government does, what the state, they all know that they have to do it. It's the same reason.   Joe Biden has a security guard, armed security, all around him at all times. Same thing with celebrities, same thing. You know, all of these people that are preaching gun control are constantly surrounded by their own security who are all. Right, but, but you're, you're the peasant. You don't need that stuff.   You, what do you have to worry about? You're not famous. And like, I am, you're not a political elite. Like me, what do you have to worry about? Right. So they want to strip your right away. But if there's no guns that are allowed, right. If they strip your right to own a handgun or the purchase without, you know, extreme background checks where they get to say whether, you know, you get it or not.   If, if that's allowed, you know, that, that allows them to be, you know, when, when the constitution was written and we're getting on a little bit of a rant here, when the constitution was written, the idea for, for the second amendment was not was, was generally not yet for hunting. Right? Sure. You should be able to have a gun.   Right. But it's also protection of person and protection of property. And it's also protection from a totalitarian government. Right? So, so in the same way that they want to defend themselves against other countries, they want to defend themselves against their enemies. There are people, there are bad individuals, bad countries out there who want to harm.   There are also bad people out there who want to harm the president. There are bad people who want to harm celebrities and there's bad people who want to harm me and you. And so why should it be any different if the government is okay, I can much rather get on the page of the government. If they want to say that nobody gets guns, we don't get guns.   We're going to, we're going to sign a treaty with the UN where everybody just throws all of their weapons in a circle, and we're going to go back to the stone age. And we're just going to beat the shit out of each other with sticks, because that's, you know, we don't like guns anymore. If everybody agrees that we're on the same page and there's no longer going to be gun manufacturers that every single gun that's ever distributed, it has been rightfully returned and checked next to a box so that we know there are zero guns that are out there.   We can have a conversation about that, but if, but if the government wants to be armed, if our president wants armed security, if our celebrities get armed security, if everybody, but the peasants gets to have guns and then they want to take away your rights. No, I'm on, I'm not, I can't buy into that. Right.   Because it, for in the same way as it's, it's, um, it's a microcosm, the family household is a microcosm of what the government is. And so to strip the family of, of their ability to defend themselves, this doesn't work, right. It's the same reason our government will never lay down their arms and just give it to the UN and say, all right, right.   If we're all going to throw in our weapons on an individual level, why don't we do it on the government level? Well, because we all know that there's sneaky ass people out there who want to do you harm there's countries who want to kill American soldiers. Right. We know that we also know that there's individuals out there who are going to break into somebody's house tonight and murder somebody.   It's just, it's just, unfortunately, the side-effect of humanity is there is bad people that are. And that in that you see that in that macro level of our government, our government is not going to just throw their guns into the middle with every other government say, oh, all right, we're all safe. We're going to go back to using sticks, to beat the shit out of each other.   No, they're not going to do that. They know that the power is in the weaponry. The power is in the individual who holds the, the, the most deadly weapon. Right. And so why would we as individuals give that up? All right. Anyways, side note, everybody who goes into the military, if you're going to say 18 is too young to own a weapon to go into a, um, a gun store and purchase an AR to protect yourself, to protect your family, to go hunting, whatever the hell.   Then you have to change the military age. You can't just, you, you can't just allow them to shed blood on your behalf, but not allow them to protect their own home. It makes no sense. So anyway, so let's, let's continue this Dakota Meyer clip. It's amazing how you could have, uh, thousands of days in your life in one day changes the way you look at everything.   One day, it changes the way you look at everything and, you know, and like the further I go on, I look at it different. You know, I always talk about the story of, um, you know, whenever this guy came up behind me and I ended up, I ended up killing him with a rock and I always remember just like, I remember it.   Like I see it every night. Like I remember like I just see his face and I got just, cause there was a point, there was a point that I, I feel like that anybody that when they, whether they're injured or anything, like they realized that. Like they like it. Like, I don't know. I just think there's a point when you look at somebody and they know they're going to die and on there, forget that.   And I, you know, now I look at it and I see it and how we sank that, like   this guy is a son to somebody, his mother and father are gonna miss him. This guy, he believes in his cause as much as I do, he doesn't believe he's wrong. This guy, this guy, he, he could have had a wife or kids that are never going to see their father. Again, just like, you know, my dad, might've never seen me again if it was switched and really, I don't even know.   I don't hate him. I don't even know this guy. We're just here at this place right now, because we were born in two different. When you add a weapons, were you out of, out of him? So my, no, he had came up and he started choking me. Uh, I had shot him once before and he, I was trying to pick my buddy, Donna Lee, my, my, my, one of my closest Afghans daughter.   Lee had been shot. He, he got killed. He had been killed and I came around this terrorist to get him and I was on my knee and this guy came up behind me. And, um, so he didn't have a weapon either. He was, he did, he, he had a weapon and I ended up shooting him from the ground. And I thought he was dead when he fell on the ground.   And I kind of moved down and got down with Donna Lee because I was still getting shot at, from this machine gun up on this hill. And I was trying to make myself small as I could. And, um, this guy ends up coming up with choking me. Like I thought he was, I thought he was dead and he ends up choking me out.   He starts trying to choke me out and eventually led up a little bit and I ended up getting around. And I just got, we were fighting back and forth and I can remember all of us thinking about it was like, don't let his legs to get on me. Like, you know, these guys, their legs are, I mean, they've been crawling up mountains our whole life.   And he was a, he was a pretty big dude. And, um, I just remember getting on top of him, finally got on top of him and I ended up, I was rolling on top of him. He didn't have all the gear on I did. And, um, I ended up, I remember getting on top of him, like, like I was straddling him and I'm just reaching up, trying to grab for anything I can and I'm holding him and I'm holding him down with my throat, with my forearm and I'm just grabbing anything I can.   And finally, I ended up grabbing a rock and I just started beating this dude space in and I started beating and beaten and beaten. And I remember, I remember just like finally, like after hitting him, you know, I don't know, three or four times four or five times, whatever. I remember him, like finally just kind of looking at me and like, just it's it's like, he's like just, I'm just looking at him in the eyes, like obviously closer than me to you right now.   You just see all the, you can tell, like he knows where this is going. And I always think about that, you know, um, obviously I would kill him a million times over again. Right. He, he was the enemy. Like, I don't feel bad about that part of it, but I just think about like, in that moment, if I can find a way to relate to him in that moment, uh, man, I'm taking his life.   We all in America can find a way to connect with each other. If we don't connect with each other because we choose not to, I don't care what your differences are. Like. Don't like find a reason to why we can get along, not why we should not get along. Right. Wow. So that's pretty, um, like I was saying a little, a little intense, right?   That's it's a truly a horrific situation that this man found himself in and how unfortunate to have to be. In a situation where you have to take somebody's life or it's your own. Right. And you said that he said that I would do it a thousand times over if I had to, because he was the enemy. Right. He was going to do that to me.   He came up to me to choke me. There's nothing that I could've done to put, put, put myself out of the situation, besides not go in the military. You know, however many years ago he had been in three years. Um, but, but he was positioned in, in somewhere where he had to defend himself and had to defend the people around him.   And you know, what, what he didn't talk about there was the, what led up to that, but I'm believe none, nobody on his team made it out. It was just him in that situation. And, uh, you know, that's, that's something that's easy to forget too. It's easy to like glorify them. It's easy to like put them on a pedestal because they went off and fought.   But like, man, it's such a mixed emotion. That should be such a powerful thing on Memorial day to like look back at what they actually went through. Right. What, what they actually had to endure both in the, in the moment and then for the rest of their life, after these actions, after defending themselves, after, you know, um, positioning, being positioned in a way where they had to go through this and, and do these things to other people.   And it's probably not very often, well, maybe it is maybe, you know, but, but it's, it's, it's refreshing to hear someone, you know, I guess refreshing and then an interesting to hear somebody go from speaking about. Beating someone's face in with a rock four or five times in, in, in seeing them really just like, decide that they're okay.   Not okay with it, but just decide that like, oh, this might be it right to like, actually have to look at the humanity of an individual in that moment and realize, you know, that maybe this is the end of your life, that you're not going to see your children and, and on both sides of it. Right. It's like the, I don't know.   I think the more developed we get as a world, right? As a consciousness, as an individual, the more we realize that, like these wars, at least from, you know, uh, uh, human aspect, or like just makes no sense to be fought in these manners. Like literally neither of those men knew the geopolitics down to the core of what they were there fighting for.   They were positioned by people in power who had agendas in mind that they wanted to accomplish on the backs of this man losing his life. In this situation where he went to, you know, go choke Dakota Meyer, um, either which way it's like it's a horrific event because he just as easily see whoever picked up that rock first, right?   Whoever was put in a position where they could have walked away alive would have seized that chance. But they were only in that position because of the individuals who put them there. But anyways, let's not take away from that. There were always CISM, heroism, heroism is a word heroic CISM. Let's not take away from their heroism of that individual in that moment who faced their fears and had the courage to fight in this situation.   And, and, and now it, like I said, it's a, it's a mixed emotion. You can't just like throw them up on a pedestal. And you know, you have to have empathy is still right. It's not just like, look at the heroes. It's like, man, what these people had to endure to allow us to. Enjoy our lives, the way that we do allow us to maintain our freedom in our S our sovereignty from other nations and, and how easily it is to forget the horrific actions when just putting them on that pedestal.   When just looking at them as a hero, it's easy to forget everything that they had to go through. And like I said, everything they're going to have to endure from here on out, but it's, it's important to understand how deeply complex these things are, even for an 18 and 19 and 20 year old to have to handle, and to not even be in your head like your adult life, right?   Like you're a 17, 18, 19 years old. You signed that dotted line and then you go off and you have to experience such trauma, and then take that into what you believe to be normal everyday adult life, when you're 24. And you, you have your DD two 14 in your hand, and you're ready to like take on the world.   If you're one of these individuals who went through this, like you don't, you don't have the same lens as everybody. You have such a heavier burden to take into everyday life, to take into your first marriage, to take into your, you know, to, to, to parenting your children. And you have such a different vantage point of what, you know, what it means to, to go into the military and what it means to protect your country and what it means to have a constitution, the way that we do and be willing and able to protect and defend it.   Um, it's heavy, right? Like that, that, that that's a kid 19 years old as a kid. And then they carry that burden into every other year, every other decade, every engagement, every family reunion that whatever it is like to you, you carry that with you. Um, so, you know, it's, it's something that's refreshing too, is looking at all these people and looking at how normal they are, right?   Like every single one of these guys could just be right next to you on a plane. They're, you know, talk to you at the, at the bar or. So, you know, it, it speaks to human resiliency too, right. To be able to experience something that horrific and then to come out and still be able to just leave your house, let alone form a sentence or get on a Joe Rogan interview.   Right. Like man. So the next one we're going to listen to is Salvador. Jiante I hope I'm pronouncing that correctly, but Salvador Gionta um, we will go ahead and listen to this clip and then we will discuss it too. This is a pretty incredible story. I haven't read too deep into it. Um, but I'm, I'm interested to hear it.   So here we go. I grew up in Cedar rapids, Iowa. I'm the oldest of three children. It was the Midwest middle-class sunshine, rainbows green grass. You don't have to lock the door kind of neighborhood. That was where I grew up in Iowa. I was about to graduate high school and I heard a radio commercial come on.   And I said, you know, come on down, see the recruiter. Who doesn't want a free t-shirt I'm working, but I want a free t-shirt of course I want a t-shirt. So I went down and I, uh, I talked to the recruiter and kind of the things that he said started making sense, you know, we're we're country at war. This was 2003.   We just jumped into Iraq. We we've been in Afghanistan since 2001. This is my chance. I can make a difference if this is what I want to do, and I can do it everywhere, but not in Cedar rapids, Iowa. My great grandparents came over from Italy in 1904. No one that I know of in my immediate family served in any sort of military.   This is my chance to say, you know, the juniors are going to go serve. I'm going to do it. Salvatore, Giunta enlisted in the U S army in November of 2003, after excelling in basic training and infantry school, he was deployed to Afghanistan in 2005. And again, in 2000. The second tour would station him at a remote fire base and the deadly Corrine gal valley.   I remember being so excited to go. I wasn't just excited. I was ready. I'm going to go there and kick in doors and solve this, wrap it up. We'll go home. We'll drink some beers and say, you know what? I served in the United States army. I'm proud of that every day. And within three months of being in country, an IED took out a truck and killed four and gunner lost both of his legs.   These are people in their prime of their life. There will never be stronger than they were that day to no longer have it tomorrow. That was when I truly felt that it was in the army. My second deployment was the corn gold valley. It was like nothing that I had never seen in Afghanistan before we were at the bottom of the valley with mountains, just cheer straight, straight up and down on every single side.   And every single place you're going to fight. You are at the bottom and there's no spot you can choose because you don't get to choose a spot. They get to choose the spot. So operation, rock avalanche when he go to, and I guess that's something that's fair to mention too, is they don't even get to pick where they go or like some of the tactical disadvantages that they've been pulled into.   Like, there's a, there's a movie that came out surrounding. Uh, there was a group of Marines who basically did a bunch of home videos, like early in the, you know, like literal, uh, cam corridor mode. Like I think it was like early mid nineties. Uh, there was a group of Marines. I need to think of the name of the movie because it's a true, unbelievably, incredible depiction.   Um, and it really seems like the whole movie that the depiction of it that they ended up doing seemed like a, um, like they took a lot of the scenes of this home movies that they made. And I think there was like four or five medal of honor recipients. I should have clipped that together for you guys too, but really unbelievable.   A movie that, that came out about this specific, it might, it might be this specific area that he's mentioning here where basically there was a big, um, mountain area surrounding the entire, like a full circle mountain. And then down, down in the valley here, um, there was a, uh, a military base that they were put in a forward operating base, right in the middle of these mountains at the very, very bottom where they were at a complete disadvantage from every single point that you could look at, they were at a disadvantage from, and, uh, there was, uh, many, many, uh, soldiers from the U S who died.   Um, and, and every single day in this area that they were, they were fighting. And in this forward operating base, they would receive gunfire just from the mountains and they could barely even see where it was coming. But the vantage point that they were, they were fighting from was just like, imagine, like, I dunno if you've ever seen, like, I guess that's a bad example, but if there's a, there's just a complete circle of mountains around this area, there's a base at the very, very, very circle middle bottom.   So there's nowhere to hide. There's nowhere to run. Um, there's nowhere to, to even cover, to, to, to reload your weapon besides the, you know, the buildings. And so, um, this movie is truly incredible depiction. So I wonder if this is the same base that they were talking about. There is like the, it might've been, um, like he might've said it, but I think it was like they coined it like death valley, um, but a horrific, horrific, uh, tactical disadvantage vantage that these men were in from the beginning.   Like it's not even like they, they, none of them choose to this either like higher up chain of command guy writes a fucking sticky note and hands it to a corporal and says, all right, start a base at the bottom of this mountain without ever actually visiting. And how many people died on the decisions, like on the backs of that decision, how many these young soldiers lives were lost because of this like terrible tactical disadvantage that they were given from the very beginning.   Like they, they didn't even have a chance from the beginning. And, and so whatever this movie is, you gotta find it. It's a, it's a great, it probably one of my favorite military movies of all time. Um, and, and it truly like captures the humanity. Like the essence of what being in the military is, and all the shit-talking and comradery and all the, you know, difficult situations that you find yourself in.   Um, it's a really incredible story. So, um, but if that's not the place that he's talking about, the fact that they're putting our soldiers in these areas over and over again, now I know that there's been like since then, like statements that they came out and said, yeah, there's no, absolutely no reason that we should have actually put a base in this area.   Uh, I dunno, it's crazy, but I'll, I'll find the name of that hopefully before the end of this podcast. And, and, uh, we'll, we'll see if I can give the shout out and let you have a, a good movie to go watch. Cause it's a really, really incredible movie. Um, but let's, let's continue on this clip again. This is Salvador gianatta, um, discussing his, uh, the time that he received the medal of honor for, we had no idea.   Well, we had Intel and there's Intel. It was lots of bad guys. That's what we came here to do.   the first day we got some contact a couple of times, each day, usually small mines, RPGs. There's some bad guys in the shot at us. And we dropped some orders and other things. Apparently there was a lot of people that they deemed innocent that died. Then they're not. We came to help, but now he pissed off everyone.   I'm here still, other than our little areas that we've been watching for the last, you know, day and half, we don't know what's outside of this. We left where we were headed, headed to another village. It's probably only enough, maybe another street kilometers. And we set up for doing listening posts for going in and engaging the villages saying, Hey, you know, what do you need?   What would, what would make your lives better? And how let's let's talk to offer to all of this is to Bravo radio check over. That was a team leader. So I have a radio so I can click over and I can hear what's going on with the other guys. And we started hearing on the radio chaos shooting. Doesn't make chaos to hear chaos from people who'd been doing this restraint.   And we started hearing they're missing people. They're missing things. There's there's Kia's we have, we have Americans killed there. It was bad. We just stayed waiting, listening to a million bad things, happen to our brothers kilometer away. You've never been more ready than you were right there. And we couldn't do anything right over here.   They over overran a scout team position and they overran a gun team. And second tune was going to go into the village. And then we were going to be on one of the side peaks over watching the village. So if anything, anyone started coming from the outside to come and attack them in the village. We already have the high ground above them and we sat there 12 hours, 14 hours just watching and waiting.   And nothing happened. Commander said, we're going to pull out. We'll go back as it was probably two and a half hours. And the sun was down to the moon was big and that moon really does make a, just a huge amount of difference in what you can. And can't see, there was Sergeant Brennan specialist, sack road, the squad leader, staff, Sergeant Gallardo, myself.   Uh, Casey was my solid gunner. And then clarity was my two or three gunner. We went about 200 meters from where we sat. And that was when I I've never seen before or since anything like what, what happened?   The tracers coming, usually one tracer, four balls. So every time you see one that glows, there was four somewhere in between there and absolutely everything. Every single inch of the air in front of us behind you. Was filled with tracers thousands of bullets in the air going both ways at this point, I think within the first five seconds, I think pretty much everyone had been shot somewhere.   Casey and Clary were behind me and Casey had the 2 49 squad. Automatic weapons saw and searched can shoot about a thousand bullets per minute. Clary was shooting is 2 0 3, which shoots a 40 millimeter grenade. But the guys were so close. She couldn't the grenade. He was just making a lot of booms, but it wasn't on them, but he was doing exactly that.   That was a good thing for him to be doing. And so I looked towards my leader, Sergeant Gallardo, I saw Gallardo coming back and I just saw his head Twitch. And it wasn't like a, what was that Twitch? He was like, something just hit his head Twitch and he dropped, sorry. I just ran out and I grabbed, he was kind of flipped over on his back, but he was okay.   So I kind of grabbed him, was pulling him and he was jumping up and we got back and I went to a little bit of desolate. I probably gave us maybe six to eight inches of relief in the ground. And I, we were both there. And when that happened, I got hit Largo's here and I'm here and they're shooting at us from here.   And I just got hit over here, which the people over here can't shoot over here. That is a very serious thing to figure out incredibly quick, why that bullet came from over here, they set up in an L shape, which if we were to do it, we would do it exactly like that. We were trained from from day one in basic training.   It was a battle drill that a near ambush. What do you do if your ambush happens? Well, you charged the line. You're going to win or lose on that, but you're going to win or lose stain where you're at. And if you stay where you're at, you're probably gonna lose. We threw your name. And we ran forward, that road was on the ground and he said, he'd been shot.   Brennan said he was shot as well. He's somewhere up ahead. I can hear this. As I'm running and Garda went for acro Gallardo is the man. I trust the lardo. There's no more grenades. And I was already running forward. So pointless to stop and Gallardo had that growed and chasing and Claire were doing everything they could and they were, they were keeping their heads down.   And when I ran up and I couldn't, I couldn't find Brinton where it should've been   this part haunts my dreams.   Now it's interesting to think in this situation like that, like everything that's going on. You know, all of the intensity of the moment, like gunfire from here, gunfire, from there, you, you like, it's easy to, it's easy to let it escape from, from your mind if you've never been in a situation like that, not I've never been in a situation like that.   So it just, just interesting. The the real time chess match that is happening in a firefight. And so, you know, in, in the stakes are so high. And for him to say that like, you know, in this next moment was one that will stick with me forever, you know, in the intensity of that moment to have a moment that even like within that however many minutes that this firefights happening and you're seeing people drop to your left into your right and to have something significant enough in that moment to, to, to stand out to you and to have to also not only like comprehend everything that's going on around you.   Um, but to, to, to react, analyze strategize, and then take action is like, it, it truly is a special type of individual who can find themselves in a position to gain this medal of honor, because every single one of those decisions has to be correct. Right? The, the, the analyzing the situation, the reaction to the situation, the, you know, calm, cool, and collected, and then the actual action itself, everything had to Evelyn.   You know, perfectly for these men to do what they did. Um, so, you know, just speaks to the intensity of the moment and the intensity of what he's must be talking about coming up here. The fact that there's an individual moment within all of this, that, that sticks with him specifically. So here's that I came out and there was two guys carrying one   crazy. I don't know how anyone else got up here before me. I mean, this all happens like this. I was like a little bit closer. I realized what was going on. I deployed with Berlin before we, the year before we were in Afghanistan for a year. So I'd been with Brendan for maybe four years. He's smarter than me, stronger than me.   He's smaller than me too, but he's faster than me. He's a better shot.   And that's, who's getting carried away June to immediately charged through the persistent enemy fire toward the two insurgents carrying Joshua Brennan. He killed one and wounded. The other Ben carried Brennan to a position of relative safety until medevac helicopters could arrive   25, 2007 30 supportive operation during freedom is unwavering courage. You don't find out if you did the right thing or wrong thing until later. Sometimes maybe if you did the wrong thing, maybe you don't ever find out lardo. My squad came up, I was talking to captain Kearney. He said, you're going to get put in for a middle of,   I said a lot of things, none of which were very happy or, or should be told that. Mendoza had died and Brandon had died. The other guys were going to be okay, they're all in surgery or getting some bullets out. You're going to congratulate me. You're going to pat me on the back and say, thanks stupid the day at the white house.   When the president put around my neck and the front row, I had my family had my wife and my mom and dad and brother and sister. And the second row, I had some aunts and uncles, but the road behind my family was Britain's family. Next to them was windows is family. When, as I felt this light silk ribbon go around my neck, I felt the weight of the sacrifices of those two and the sacrifices of several of the people in that audience.   No one did anything special. I, every single one of us were fighting for our absolute life. If I didn't do that was my. Congratulate and pat it on the back and everyone thinks I'm such a great guy when there's people that will never get a congratulations. Thank you. Or you're the man ever again, or see their family, the mother, the father, the children.   And yet you're gonna congratulate me on the keeper of it stays at my house at night, put it around my neck when I need to, but this is not mine. This is not for me. This represents so much more. This represents not just my boys, not just bringing, not just Mendoza, not, not rugal who died the day before. Not all the guys who, who have been wounded, not all the people who have suffered, not the families that will pay the price for this country.   It's not for any one of those people. It's for all of those people. And if I got to do it, I'm going to do it for them. And there's nothing they wouldn't do for me. So how could I not do this for them?   Yeah, that's heavy. Is he, you know, can't imagine being in that situation, like he said, like getting your metal of honor, while you sit out and watch the families of your friends that didn't have the opportunity to come home, let alone sit there from, in front of the president of the United States being congratulated, right?   Like that, you know, it's like, I'm such a weird, you know, status to obtain because all of the things that came with that, right? Like I wonder how many of those men who have the medal of honor even, you know, look at it in, in a way other than how he looks at it, which is just like, you know, it's not this, like, it's not the Stanley cup, right.   It's not like, it means horrible tragedy happened and you witnessed horrific things in likely your friends or dad and, or seriously wounded. And then too, like. This like celebrity type event where the president is putting a, a necklace around your neck about it. And he can't comprehend the fraction of the agony that you went to, to be standing on that stage, or to look in, to look out and see your friend's parents.   There is cash that's heavy, you know? And, and, and so the Mo the movie I was mentioning earlier was called the outpost. I believe it's, it's, uh, it came out in like 2019. I don't know if this specifically talking about this one place, it might be. Um, I'll have to look deeper into that for you guys, but the corn golf valley is what is where, um, Gionta served, where he got his metal event of a medal of honor.   And so here, here's what it talked about. I was talking about that earlier, like the base at the very like, um, the very bottom of this like mountainous area. And so here's six reasons why the Korengal valley was one of the most dangerous places in Afghanistan. So it says nestled between the high mountains of the Afghan side of the border with Pakistan, the Korengal valley has the most has one of the hardest fought over patches of ground in the war on terror, 54 Americans have been killed in four medal of honors were earned in the valley or its vis immediate vicinity while the case for a fifth is under review.   One of that, um, one was that of the first living recipient of the reward of awards since Vietnam staff, Sergeant Salvatore. That's who we're discussing here today, the American military rarely moves into the valley, but handpicked, Afghan commandos, some trained by the CIA fight constantly with militants there, the Afghan government maintains offices at the Peck river valley, the entryway to Korengal, their police execute raids and patrols, and the continuing attempt to shut down or limit the shadow government operating there.   When the American military was there, they face the same challenges the Afghan forces do today. Some of these dangerous of some of these dangers are common across Afghanistan while others, um, only existed in Korengal valley and the other branches of the pack river valley. So it says the terrain is a nightmare.   Steep mountains, loose shale thick forest is an open patches of land, made the area in nightmare for an occupying force. Command outposts were built in relatively open areas so that defenders could see approaching militias. However, this meant patrol is returning to the base, had to cross the open.   Sometimes under heavy military arms fire from nearby wooded areas and houses, the thick trees in the area allowed fighters to attack us forces from covering concealment. The attack would then hide there. The attackers would then hide their weapons in the forest and return to the civilian population.   The steep hillside allowed snipers to climb above outposts and fire into the bases. As soldiers slept loose rocks on the steep land led to injuries from falls and trips. It says building new bases and keeping them supplied, presented constant challenges, probably just, they show that in the outpost again, I don't know if that's the exact movie.   I'll have to I'll look at that before we're done here, but in the outpost, they showed that like when they would actually go to get supplies, they would drive their Humvees up these mountains. Like right on the cliffs, like horrifying to try, like, you know, you ever drive through like Colorado going up to, uh, like Vail or Breckenridge or something.   And so it's like how I felt, but it's like, not even close to that. It was like this small, small patch of area that yo

Cultaholic
Classic WCW Nitro Review #13 | Hogan Battles The Giant, Hogan Squares Up To Macho Man, Hogan Saves Sting, Hogan Hogans Hogan

Cultaholic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 70:30


Nov. 27th, 1995: Sting teams with Lex Luger to take on Brian Pillman & Arn Anderson in the main event. Hulk Hogan goes up against Hugh Morris. Johnny B. Badd takes on Diamond Dallas Page in a rematch from World War 3. "Mean" Gene Okerlund interviews the new World Heavyweight Champion, "Macho Man" Randy Savage, and much more.Sam Driver and Tom Campbell travel back in their Pastamania-Powered DeLoreon, accompanied by Patreon backer Lewis Markham to watch every single episode of WCW Monday Nitro from the very beginning to the bitter end. Want to join us on a future episode? Patreon.com/cultaholic See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

CC4 Museum of Welsh Cricket Podcast
Mark Frost BEM: A Cricketing Legacy

CC4 Museum of Welsh Cricket Podcast

Play Episode Play 39 sec Highlight Listen Later Feb 23, 2022 55:40


We talk to Glamorgan and Criced Cymru / Cricket Wales' Mark Frost.  Recipient of a BEM in the 2022 New Years Honours List, Mark tells us about growing up in the West Midlands where his first taste of club cricket came at Dudley Cricket Club who were, at that time, captained by the recently retired Worcestershire and West Indies opener Ron Headley.After University and some excellent performances in the Minor County's Championship for Staffordshire he first signed professional terms with Surrery in 1988 and played in a team that included Alec Stewart, Ian Greig and Graham Thorpe.Mark moved to Wales to play for Glamorgan in 1990 and spent 4 seasons with the county.  He remembers playing alongside Alan Butcher, Hugh Morris, Mathew Maynard and the great Sir Vivian Richards as well as a tumultuous over facing the great Curtley Ambrose.After leaving cricket he took up an administrative role with Sport Wales and thus began a career in managing community and professional sport that has lasted almost 30 years.  Mark has had three spells working with the body representing recreational cricket in Wales.  He has been in his current role since 2014 which combines development work in the recreational sector with a role for Glamorgan CCC bringing together the professional and recreational games.He talks enthusiastically about his own professuional career and the development of cricket in Wales emphasising the inclusivity and diversity of cricket at a time when these qualities are being looked at sceptically by some outside the game.  He talks about his optimism for the future of the sport and the joy he gets from regularly volunteering as a coach at his local club, Penarth.Mark has written and published 5 books for children, details of which you can find here:https://httpthefour.weebly.com/You may wish to contact Mark directly if it is not possible to order these books from this site (contact details below)He has been a longstanding member of Christians in Sport and he explains how important his faith is to him in his work and life generally.Anyone wishing to contact Mark can do so here :mark.frost@glamorgancricket.co.ukFollow him on Twitter @MarkFrostsport

CC4 Museum of Welsh Cricket Podcast

This week's episode explores the latest addition to the cricketing calendar in England and Wales, The Hundred. There is an interview with Chief Executive Officer of Welsh Fire, Hugh Morris where we not only discuss the new format for cricket but also Glamorgan's recent success in the Royal London One Day Cup.  Hugh outlines the background to the Hundred and how important it is to the future promotion of the game in Wales.Next, we have a brief interview with sports journalist from Pakistan, Roha Nadeem.  From her perspective as a production assistant with The Hundred she sketches out her enthusiasm for the competition and, in particular, the role it will play in the promotion of women's cricket.Finally, we have excerpts from a series of interviews conducted at the final Welsh Fire home fixture of the season at Sophia Gardens.

History While Intoxicated
Week 88 | WWF IYH 15 Main PLUS 5/12/97 | 4-Way Elimination Tag Match (WWF) Hugh Morris/Konnan vs. Alex Wright/Ice Train (WCW)

History While Intoxicated

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 116:31


We got week 88 up next a long night of wrestling. We start off first with the 5/11/97 In Your House 15 PPV and the main event of Stone Cold vs. Undertaker for the title. Then we move to the next night's RAW and we got a couple segments featuring the Hart Founddation, The Undertaker, as well as Mankind before our main event of Owen/Bulldog vs. Headbangers vs. New Blackjacks vs. Furnas/Lafon in an elimination 4-way tag. Finally, we end it with Nitro and we have some NWO segments, Sting, and the main event of Hugh Morrus/Konnan vs. Alex Wright/Ice Train. Watch it with us!

CC4 Museum of Welsh Cricket Podcast

This week's episode is Part Two of our chat about Glamorgan's Championship Winning Season of 1997.We talk about openers Steve James and Hugh Morris, captain Mathew Maynard as well as the other Glamorgan players who contributed to the club's success including Robert Croft, Waqar Younis, Tony Cottey, Adrian Dale, Dean Cosker, Steve Watkin, Adrian Shaw and Darren Thomas.Our four participants, journalist Grahame Lloyd, ex- Glamorgan Secretary Mike Fatkin, Joan Pockett (one of the front reception/admin staff in 1997) and Alun Rhys Chivers, then a 12 year old supporter talk about their abiding memories of the season as well as the memories of the day Glamorgan clinched the title against Somerset in Taunton.

Wright on the Nail
Deep Dive: International travel in the Covid Era

Wright on the Nail

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 39:41


In this week's ‘Deep Dive' episode, host Chris Wright and guests discuss a sharp rise in cases of the so-called ‘Indian variant' of coronavirus, as well as mounting confusion around the government's travel guidance.In this episode, Chris is joined by Natalie Grover, The Guardian science correspondent and freelance reporter; Helen Coffey, deputy travel editor at The Independent; and Hugh Morris, travel news editor at The Telegraph.The conversation begins by delving into the latest information on the covid variant which was first detected in India, to help us understand how it differs, and whether the vaccine can broadly protect us from this strain of the virus. The discussion then moves to mixed messages surrounding  the travel traffic light system, to explore whether the lack of countries currently available to visit on the ‘green list' will spur Brits to book more ‘staycations' this year, despite travel firms slashing their prices.Guests also question the impact of Portugal reopening its doors will have on  tourists, and speculate whether all legal limits on social contact will be lifted by June 21st, as previously set out by Boris Johnson. Created & produced by Podcast Partners: www.podcastpartners.comSign up to receive updates by email when a new episode drops at: www.wrightonthenail.fm

The Church Times Podcast
RSCM Music Sunday competition winning anthem, and creating worship that connects

The Church Times Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 20:14


On this week's podcast, Christopher Totney, director of music at St John's, Devizes, is interviewed about his new anthem, “God Of All Creation”, which was the winner of the Royal School of Church Music's Music Sunday competition. He is interviewed by Stefan Putigny, the Royal School of Church Music's Magazines Editor. A recording of the anthem, sung by St Martin's Voices, is played after the interview. The world première of the anthem will be on the annual RSCM Music Sunday on 6 June, which celebrates the part played by music and musicians in church life. The podcast also features a talk by Prebendary Chris Thorpe, “Creating worship that connects: Liturgy as a tool of mission in reaching out”, which was given at the “Creativity out of Crisis” webinar last October, hosted by the Church Times and the RSCM. Prebendary Thorpe is the author of books which include Ploughshares and First Fruits: A year of festivals for the rural church (Canterbury Press) (Books, 1 January 2021) and Apprentices and Eyewitnesses: Creative liturgies for incarnational worship: Lent, Holy Week and Easter (Canterbury Press) (Books, 8 March 2019). The Church Times and the RSCM are hosting a webinar on Tuesday 18 May, “Lift Up Your Voices, Lift Up Your Hearts”, which will explore questions of music and worship. Subjects include how congregational singing could come back stronger after the pandemic, what next for choirs, and a training taster session for clergy who are not musicians. Speakers include the director of the RSCM, Hugh Morris; John Bell; Brenna Conin; and Gill Fourie. For more information and to buy tickets, visit www.churchtimes.co.uk/events Find out about other forthcoming Church Times online events at www.churchtimes.co.uk/events. Sign up to receive our email newsletter at churchtimes.co.uk/newsletter-signup Try 10 issues of the Church Times for £10 or get two months access to our website and apps, also for £10. Go to churchtimes.co.uk/new-reader.

#BeardSpeaks
Super Famous Fun Time Guys | Hugh Morris | McNastee | LLE | Reaction

#BeardSpeaks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2021 7:53


Super Famous Fun Time Guys | Hugh Morris | McNastee | LLE | Reaction https://www.BeastHostBeard.com Congratulations to the guys for recently signing to Alla Xul Elu's LLE label, Long Live Evil . #LongLiveEvil Check out Hugh Morris HERE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rD4eeXEOt0Y&t=16s Super Famous Fun Time Guys | Hugh Morris | McNastee | LLE | Reaction,super famous fun time,super famous fun time guys,super famous fun time guys positive,super famous fun time guys brainless,super famous fun time guys wiki,hugh morris,mcnastee,lle,reaction,sfftg,long live evil lle,alla xul elu lle,lle alla xul elu,alla xul elu reaction,super famous fun time guys out album,super famous fun time guys l.i.f.e,super famous fun time guys purge party,hip hop reaction --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

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The Apron Bump Podcast
WWF Invasion 2001

The Apron Bump Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 73:36


What a wacky one this episode is! A few road bumps in this one but it all fits into the theme of the Invasion and what a fumbling that was for WWF. Although, was it really bad? Or just bad timing? Did WWF actually carry this storyline out how they should have? We get into that in this episode, as well as enjoy us some Hugh Morris, Meat, and Billy Kidman's horrendous Shooting Star Press. Oh, and that Steve Austin guy and all his shenanigans.   Was glad to have Joey from "The Angle Podcast" on this episode to have some fun talking about the latter portion of the Attitude Era! Joey puts out a ton of great content; a really knowledgeable guy and an entertaining listen. Go check him out!   "The Angle Podcast" theangleradio.com @theangleradio on Twitter and Instagram   Follow me! Subscribe!   ApronBump.com @Apron_Bump on Instagram @ApronBump on Twitter “Apron Bump” on Facebook and Youtube

meat invasion wwf steve austin attitude era billy kidman hugh morris apron bump shooting star press
Classical Music Now
E4 A Writer and a Reviewer Walk into a Music Podcast...

Classical Music Now

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 53:08


Today we are blessed with a great window into the world of arts reviewing and writing thanks to Hugh Morris, and the similarities and differences to creative writing thanks to Georgia Affonso. The pair collaborated on a piece for No Dice Collective in 2019 based on a photo of Anthony Burgess (the Clockwork Orange guy) walking his dog, and we share the stories behind the piece in this episode and play the piece in full. Hugh Morris - https://www.facebook.com/hughmorrismusic Georgia Affonso - https://twitter.com/georgia_writes Links and Show Notes Harrison Birtwistle Mask of Orpheus - ENO ENO Baylis scheme For those as fashion unconscious as me... Chorus of rage as ENO gives critics’ coveted extra tickets to young bloggers - The Guardian Georgia and Hugh’s object: Anthony Burgess walking his dog Georgia Affonso x Sophie Sully - Dilly the Slug Hugh makes it on Buzzfeed Good King Agatha | Hugh Morris & Edmund Phillips | Manchester Contemporary Youth Opera (check out more of Hugh’s work!) As ever, thank you for spreading the word about the podcast! Subscribe to the mailing list for podcast episode news and a piece recommendation every month

Futility Closet
284-The Red Barn

Futility Closet

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2020 33:48


When Maria Marten disappeared from the English village of Polstead in 1827, her lover said that they had married and were living on the Isle of Wight. But Maria's stepmother began having disturbing dreams that hinted at a much grimmer fate. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll tell the story of the Red Barn, which transfixed Britain in the early 19th century. We'll also encounter an unfortunate copycat and puzzle over some curious births. Intro: In 1859, a penurious Henry Thoreau donated $5 to a college library. Georges Perec rendered "Ozymandias" without the letter E. Sources for our feature on the Red Barn: James Curtis, The Murder of Maria Marten, 1828. Shane McCorristine, William Corder and the Red Barn Murder: Journeys of the Criminal Body, 2014. Lucy Worsley, The Art of the English Murder: From Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes to Agatha Christie and Alfred Hitchcock, 2014. James Moore, Murder at the Inn: A History of Crime in Britain's Pubs and Hotels, 2015. Colin Wilson, A Casebook of Murder, 2015. Maryrose Cuskelly, Original Skin: Exploring the Marvels of the Human Hide, 2011. Henry Vizetelly, The Romance of Crime, 1860. "Trial of William Corder for the Murder of Maria Marten," Annual Register, 1828, 337-349. James Redding Ware, Wonderful Dreams of Remarkable Men and Women, 1884. Jessie Dobson, "The College Criminals: 4. William Corder," Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 11:4 (1952), 249. Richard Grady, "Personal Identity Established by the Teeth; the Dentist a Scientific Expert," American Journal of Dental Science 17:9 (1884), 385. Harry Cocks, "The Pre-History of Print and Online Dating, c. 1690-1990," in I. Alev Degim, James Johnson, and Tao Fu, Online Courtship: Interpersonal Interactions Across Borders, 2015. Sarah Tarlow, "Curious Afterlives: The Enduring Appeal of the Criminal Corpse," Mortality 21:3 (2016), 210–228. Ruth Penfold-Mounce, "Consuming Criminal Corpses: Fascination With the Dead Criminal Body," Mortality 15:3 (August 2010), 250-265. "The Trial of William Corder, for the Wilful Murder of Maria Marten, Etc.," 1828. "The Trial, at Length, of William Corder, Convicted of the Murder of Maria Marten," 1828. "An Accurate Account of the Trial of William Corder for the Murder of Maria Marten," 1828. "The Trial of William Corder at the Assizes, Bury St. Edmunds," 1828. "Dream Testimony," Notes & Queries 52, Dec. 27, 1856. Paul Collins, "The Molecatcher's Daughter," Independent on Sunday, Nov. 26, 2006, 20. Peter Watson, "Alternatives: Natural Barn Killer," Guardian, Feb. 19, 1995, 23. Jonathan Kay, "Lessons From a Molecatcher's Daughter," National Post, Jan. 9, 2007, A17. Michael Horsnell, "Red Barn Murderer Finally Laid to Rest," Times, Aug. 18, 2004, 10. Max Haines, "The Red Barn Murder," Sudbury [Ontario] Star, Aug. 16, 2003, D.11. Maryrose Cuskelly, "Of Human Bondage," Australian, June 3, 2009, 18. "Gruesome Murder Still Has the Power to Fascinate," East Anglian Daily Times, Oct. 28, 2013. "True Crime From the 1820s: Shades of Capote," Weekend Edition Saturday, National Public Radio, Oct. 28, 2006. Colin Wilson, "A Murder Mystery: Why Do Some Killings Dominate the Headlines?", Times, Jan. 28, 2006, 25. Pamela Owen, "The Day Murder Became a National Obsession," The People, Sept. 22, 2013, 34. Stephanie Markinson, "Dark History," Yorkshire Post, Jan. 10, 2020, 7. "Collection Articles: The Trial, at Length, of William Corder, Convicted of the Murder of Maria Marten," British Library (accessed Feb. 2, 2020). Alsager Richard Vian, "Corder, William," Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Vol. 12. Alsager Vian, "Corder, William," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Sept. 23, 2004. Listener mail: Malcolm Gladwell, "Safety in the Skies," Gladwell.com, Oct. 1, 2001. Hugh Morris, "The Strangest Stories From the Golden Age of Plane Hijacking," Telegraph, July 5, 2019. Thom Patterson, "How the Era of 'Skyjackings' Changed the Way We Fly," CNN, Oct. 2, 2017. "Three Cheeseburgers and a Rental Car," Fear of Landing, July 26, 2019. Wikipedia, "D. B. Cooper" (accessed Feb. 4, 2020). Joni Balter, "Attorney: Hijacker Couldn't Hurt Anyone," UPI, Jan. 21, 1983. "Man Killed in Attempted Hijacking on Coast," UPI, Jan. 21, 1983. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by both Ronald Gainey and Chris Zinsli, based on an item they heard on the podcast 99% Invisible. Here are four additional corroborating links (warning -- these spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!

Pro Wrestling Post Podcast
Pro Wrestling Post Podcast Presents Episode 7 with former WCW and WWE superstar Bill DeMott

Pro Wrestling Post Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2018 51:50


As a student of Johnny Rodz himself, Bill DeMott shared his knowledge and experience with everyone he came into contact with. He wrestled under a number of different alias while in WCW and the WWE but none more notably than that of Hugh Morris. DeMott is currently on a quest to shares his knowledge and understanding along with his greatest triumphs from the tragedy. To listen to this edition please do so by clicking the link below.

E.W. Conundrum's Troubadours and Raconteurs Podcast
Troubadours and Raconteurs with E.W. Conundrum Demure - Episode 258

E.W. Conundrum's Troubadours and Raconteurs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2018 58:59


Troubadours & Raconteurs, Do You Enjoy Working with Your Hands? We have for your listening pleasure Episode 258 of "Troubadours and Raconteurs with E.W. Conundrum Demure" Small Batch Radio crafted In North Eastern Pennsylvania... Heard All Over The World. Episode 258 features a conversation with Painter, and Charge Artist for the Public Theater in NYC Hugh Morris. Hugh and I discuss Making Scenery for the Public Theater, Shakespeare in the (Central) Park, I Ask Him to Drop Some Names (and boy does he - Meryl Streep, Christopher Walken, Ann Hathaway, Philip Seymour Hoffman). We talk about His Green Room Series of Paintings, and Working With His Hands to Be Happy... Episode 258's sixty minutes includes an EW Essay titled "Luxurious." Our Associate Producer and Resident Essayist Dr. Michael Pavese shares another wonderfully written and beautifully read essay titled "The Plate."We have poem called "Perhaps." The Artwork for this episode has been graciously shared by Hugh Morris. It is called "Avatar." Our music this go round is provided by these wonderful artists: Django Reinhardt, Stephan Grapelli, Kevin Marby, Marilyn Manson, Smashing Pumpkins, Ezra Furman, Beth Orton, Branford Marsalis and Terrence Blanchard. Commercial Free, Community Radio at its Finest. Share this episode with whomever you choose. Tell your Friends and Neighbors... Become a friend via facebook - Freespeakandsome Withewconundrum. Follow us on Twitter @FreespeakWit. Email us ewconundrum@radiofreebrooklyn.org

Late to the Nitro Party
Episode 34 - 05/06/96

Late to the Nitro Party

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2016


This week on Late to the Nitro Party we check out WCW Nitro from 05/06/96. Randy Savage attempts to strangle-murder Hugh Morris. Ric Flair has dinner. Sting gets beat up by an Englishman. Lex Luger has a briefcase and Jim Duggan gets a title shot.

Late to the Nitro Party
Episode 13 - 11/27/95

Late to the Nitro Party

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2016


On this episode of the Late to the Nitro Party podcast we discuss the WCW Monday Nitro from 11/27/95 which took place in Salem, VA.  We have international action as some great female wrestlers from Japan show off their legit good wrestling skills.  DDP tries to win back the Diamond Doll from Mr. B. Badd.  We get to see the Nitro debut of Hugh Morris.  Luger and Sting battle with the Horseman.  Hogan tries to show his face as much as possible.  All this and more as we start our angles that will lead to Starrcade '95!

Late to the Nitro Party
Episode 23 - 02/05/96

Late to the Nitro Party

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2016


On this exciting episode of Late to the Nitro Party we discuss WCW Monday Nitro from 02/05/96.  We are greeted by Raggedy Ann Pepe on the announce team.  Our first match puts Macho Man against Chris Benoit.  Benoit precedes to slam his skull against several things including a nasty slam against the guardrail, and later, Savage's elbow.  This ends in Hogan getting involved of course.  We then get Arn and Pillman vs Sullivan and Hugh Morris.  This match involves a special guest with a broom!. Flair takes on Bagwell.  Then the main event puts Luger and Sting against the Road Warriors for the tag straps.  Watch..Listen..Enjoy!

Glamorgan Cricket
Glamorgan Cricket Podcast Ep 7 – QUARTER FINAL SPECIAL

Glamorgan Cricket

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2016 22:41


Peter Miller hosts a jam-packed podcast this week, featuring a chat with Glamorgan captain Jacques Rudolph about the upcoming quarter-final against Yorkshire, a chat with Chris Cooke about his injury and interviews with Glamorgan greats young and old: Don Shepherd, Hugh Morris and (double centurion)Aneurin Donald. Enjoy.

PN podcast
ABN Conference 2016: Nick Fletcher on movement disorders in young adults

PN podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2016 12:36


Hugh Morris is joined by Nick Fletcher to discuss his ABN Conference lecture "Movement disorders in young adults". The ABN conference 2016, which theme was "The Seven Ages of Man", was held in May, in Brighton, UK.

20 Years of Nitro
Episode 34 - 5.6.1996

20 Years of Nitro

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2016 69:00


Tonight on Nitro Lex Luger has a shot at The Giant's world title, but after missing a similar opportunity at Saturday Night will Lex show up this time? Macho Man locks up with Hugh Morris, Sting takes on Lord Steven Regal but Dean Malenko and Jushin "Thunder" Liger threaten to steal the show. All that plus Ric Flair, "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan, Blood Runs Cold, and a tribute to the late "Crippler" Ray Stevens right here where the big boys play!

American Planning Association
Tuesdays at APA: Community Preference and Transportation Survey

American Planning Association

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2016


The discussion with Hugh Morris, AICP, LEED, manager of the Smart Growth Program for the National Association of Realtors focused on the results of the recent poll of residents in the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S. The poll focused on biking, walking, and transit use as well as the degree to which respondents would be willing to live in a smaller home if it meant they could walk to more places. The large sample size, 3,000, provides an opportunity to examine the data though several demographic lenses.