Пікірлер
@penniea9098
@penniea9098 50 секунд бұрын
try putting scrambled eggs wrapped in the pancake with a slice of bacon or sausage it is great.
@Shadows653
@Shadows653 4 минут бұрын
You got me 3:53 😂😂😂😂
@RedRoseSeptember22
@RedRoseSeptember22 6 минут бұрын
Thank you all for your service ♥
@Shadows653
@Shadows653 7 минут бұрын
Bro 😂😂😂 1:32 you almost got me laughing
@user-vi5vc5rg3s
@user-vi5vc5rg3s 9 минут бұрын
I was told, if it's not broken, don't change it
@jtfortune7968
@jtfortune7968 11 минут бұрын
Welcome to Florida Adam! Jon here, i live in Tampa. Florida ain't right.🤭
@RealMJSr
@RealMJSr 16 минут бұрын
I woke up in the middle of the night and saw a black widow crawling across my blanket.
@nevysadventuresllc9074
@nevysadventuresllc9074 19 минут бұрын
In Florida the majority of homes are built from concrete do to hurricanes.
@jtfortune7968
@jtfortune7968 23 минут бұрын
Hey Adam, check out the Marine Corps boot camp at parris Island.
@jtfortune7968
@jtfortune7968 26 минут бұрын
This is so soft compared to the 80's!
@tommydurkin4467
@tommydurkin4467 26 минут бұрын
I was 15 living in the southside of New Orleans when Katrina hit
@jtfortune7968
@jtfortune7968 31 минут бұрын
Hair would make you an individual. You are striped of yourself. I wqs there in '82.
@tophers3756
@tophers3756 33 минут бұрын
The CO should've said he's happy to find soldiers still willing to fight needless wars that aren't really defending our country.
@rileydickerson2334
@rileydickerson2334 34 минут бұрын
you should react to Navy boot camp video
@nevysadventuresllc9074
@nevysadventuresllc9074 35 минут бұрын
Ok we also the first duplex we call row homes
@user-cn6ex6zw4o
@user-cn6ex6zw4o 37 минут бұрын
I should wrote "HOW THE US ARE" and i know it.
@Rectified.1
@Rectified.1 38 минут бұрын
I live in nc and I just had a mile wide tornado hit and destroyed and killed 10 people I have a picture of it my mom was in the store for ten mins and we saw it we immediately ran home I’ve had real bad weather because the storm lines right on me rn
@user-cn6ex6zw4o
@user-cn6ex6zw4o 38 минут бұрын
Hey, Adam, have you nothing else to watch than US, and WHICH THE US ARE, and HOW DOES PEOPLE LIVE IN US? Are not there the other countries or the other things to react? IM F***ING BORED. Im thinking about removing my subscription🤔🤔🤔
@MichaelJohnson-vi6eh
@MichaelJohnson-vi6eh 40 минут бұрын
I figure that running around carrying a heavy pack with things blowing up all around you is far worse than having someone yell at you. Boot camp would tend to focus things a lot.
@mysteryelysian
@mysteryelysian 41 минут бұрын
I live 10 miles from Ft Benning now known as Ft Moore. Back when i was in High School (many yrs ago 😄) I worked almost every summer @ Ft Benning : once at the . My city is running over with ex-military from all branches but mainly Army , many of my co-workers are ex- military .
@aaronbustos6190
@aaronbustos6190 42 минут бұрын
Yeah…this looked super easy compared to what it used to be. I signed up 3 weeks after 9/11. Back then, you were actually cussed out, smoked (physical training punishments) and could call anyone out to the woods. If you and someone else had an issue…call em out and the 2 of you fought it out hand to hand in the woods. They also took all the sweets out of our MRE’s
@more120girl
@more120girl 42 минут бұрын
Crazy how some shit never changes since Fort Knox 98 we bought phone cards at the PX
@ArleneAdkinsZell
@ArleneAdkinsZell 45 минут бұрын
Great reaction, I would love to see what you think about Navy Seal training.
@A-Z_Information_show_
@A-Z_Information_show_ 47 минут бұрын
I watched a ef4 tornado while drinking some sprite and also a ef2 satlite tornado . Greenfield tornado by the way Then watched 2 ef1 tornados go by.
@TheCrazyDamon
@TheCrazyDamon 49 минут бұрын
I did Basic Training back in 2002 and this is really accurate. First week is known as "Hell week".
@sandymackay9713
@sandymackay9713 49 минут бұрын
My Daddy spent time as a drill sergeant for a short time between the Korean War and the Vietnam Conflict. He was Special Forces (Green Beret) serving in the 82nd Airborne during the Korean War and the 101st Airborne during the Vietnam Conflict. My Daddy was a badass. Yes, I am very proud of my Daddy. Much love from Athens, GA, USA
@boxerjeep
@boxerjeep 50 минут бұрын
I can’t tell you how many times I have been in the woods and saw a (black) bear. If they don’t have cubs or don’t startle them they don’t care about humans.
@haroldwalma255
@haroldwalma255 52 минут бұрын
People live in areas they shouldn't. The first time I drove through NO I said to myself, hell no, I would not live there, it is a disaster waiting to happen.
@markacamacho
@markacamacho 54 минут бұрын
I joined the Army back in 2003. I come from a military family that has been in every major war. It's a shame that they got rid of the shark attack. I think it helped weed out people.
@wuxtry
@wuxtry 57 минут бұрын
20 Years in the Army, started off at Fort Knox as a Cavalry Scout. This reaction makes me smile
@DM-jt8yy
@DM-jt8yy 57 минут бұрын
Everytime I see a bus of new recruits coming through Columbus, GA. heading towards Ft. Benning ( which is now called Ft. Moore) I feel proud of them and sympathetic for the shock they are about to encounter. Bless our military!
@inthedarkanonymous5625
@inthedarkanonymous5625 57 минут бұрын
My brother, who is now deceased, made us swear not to tell this story, but I think it’s okay. He and our older brother enlisted in the early 70s, the older to the Army, the younger to the Marines. During basic, the recruits were warned to use ONLY the side aisles because the main aisle was strictly for the sergeant. My brother was sitting on his bunk when the Sergeant shouted his name. Reflexively, he leaped from the bunk to the main aisle, focused on immediate obedience. The Sergeant bellowed “You’re in my aisle,” and threw a small knife at him that stuck in his thigh above his knee. This was illegal, of course, and the Sergeant bribed them with candy not to tell.
@greeneyedlady5580
@greeneyedlady5580 39 минут бұрын
That's horrible!
@NoGoodGamer30
@NoGoodGamer30 58 минут бұрын
As an american I dont know what club room is...
@joshuadenoyer3738
@joshuadenoyer3738 Сағат бұрын
I went to Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri which we called Fort Lost in the Woods. My experience was pretty similar to what was shown in the video. Even though things kinda calm down, the stress is still pretty high. One time we were punished by having to move out of our barracks (bed sheets and all) and it started raining before we were allowed to move back in 😂
@oahts5906
@oahts5906 Сағат бұрын
6:52 “it doesn’t take rocket appliances-“ 😂😅
@melodygrim471
@melodygrim471 Сағат бұрын
Yeah, my son went through Ft. Benning. A medical assistant I worked with had also gone thru Ft. Benning, and she got jealous hearing my son's stories. She re-upped - that was In 2000 - and she's still in! So, yeah, it's rough, but for the right people, it's their entire life!
@OldGoat-cw8he
@OldGoat-cw8he Сағат бұрын
I am retired Navy. Best job i ever had. Aviation Ordnance was my MOS or job.
@jamesmessina436
@jamesmessina436 Сағат бұрын
Granite countertops are awesome… wth
@gloria9983
@gloria9983 Сағат бұрын
Look up Tornado Alley in the US and it will show you where the most tornados occur in the US on the regular. Of course, they can form in other places, but are most common in Tornado Alley. So, avoid those places if you ever visit the US?
@jamesmessina436
@jamesmessina436 Сағат бұрын
Idk anyone who reheats coffee or tea in the microwave… they again seem to speak from their own experience
@pigs18
@pigs18 Сағат бұрын
Thumbs down for spreading this video. It's a complete fabrication. From the start: Conscripted sailors (on both sides) was one of the leading causes of the war. Key was not sent by the government to negotiate the release of American prisoners. He was hired by a family to negotiate the release of _one_ captive. There was no mass negotiation or deal. At this point, (this is the War of 1812), the British government already recognized the American Independence. The fort lowering its flag would not signify America's surrender. Fort McHenry. Fort Henry is in Tennessee and won't see action until the Civil War The entire British Fleet was not there. Even if they leveled the fort the war would not have been over. The river was blocked anyway. The fort was a military fort. It was not full of women and children. No one would have been under British rule if the flag came down. Key was left off down shore prior to the start of the battle. He wasn't relaying the battle to anyone on the ships. The next few minutes of the video are just make believe. Due to the range of the fort's guns only a handful of British ships could get within firing range of the fort. The flag was not directly hit. There were four deaths at the fort, not a "pile of bodies." (Seriously this whole part doesn't even make sense. Break a popsicle stick multiple times and then prop it up with sugar packets in place of bodies and it becomes instantly obvious how ridiculous that even is.)
@Willyj161
@Willyj161 Сағат бұрын
I went through Army boot camp back in 2010.
@QuietFury9
@QuietFury9 Сағат бұрын
Hello from the USA!.If you read this comment you should definetly look at my home state of maine! A really slept on state i feel. Our state is about 80% tree! Keep going bud love the content!
@adamdalton2965
@adamdalton2965 Сағат бұрын
i went to basic training for the army in 2009 at Fort Knox Kentucky
@angelado3
@angelado3 Сағат бұрын
I remember my aunt wanted me to join the military when I got out of high school, her husband was a high ranking something in the army, heard that you get good benefits if you stay in the military forever, I was told but I looked at her and said, hell no I would never ever get through boot camp 😵‍💫
@greeneyedlady5580
@greeneyedlady5580 30 секунд бұрын
After taking the ASVAB on a lark (to get out of class), I was recruited by the Army, Navy, and Air Force, The Navy even offered me a free 2 week summer camp at Annapolis between my Junior and Senior years in high school. My mother said NO to going to Annapolis, and told all of the recruiters in no uncertain terms to bug off. My life would have been much different if my mother hasn't done that. I might not have made it through boot camp, but they were recruiting me for my brains and leadership skills, not for my negligible been. I would have been a candidate for officer training.
@user-ej3tp3pv8m
@user-ej3tp3pv8m Сағат бұрын
Golf ball to soft ball sized hail is not unusual where I live (Texas). It does not “fall” from the sky…it “shoots” from the sky at high speed. Will go through and leave a round hole in your car windscreen.
@NormaBurnson
@NormaBurnson Сағат бұрын
I went to boot camp during the early 1970’s . 50 years ago few women served, nonetheless our training was brutal. When one takes the oath, you give Uncle Sam total control of your life 24/7. Many people are not aware that after recruitment a person in the military gives a blank check to Uncle Sam, that during one’s service we will take a bullet between our eyes for our country until the end of our service.
@dwhite849
@dwhite849 Сағат бұрын
He cut my hair years ago!!!!! holy crap I wouldn't forget him
@pharmacymg
@pharmacymg Сағат бұрын
NatGeo also did a decent one on the Joplin, MO storm 13 years ago. Our home was 4 blocks from the high school. We lost 17 of our neighbors and had lived in our home for 25 years. We walked out of it because we had a basement (it did take nearly an hour to get out of the basement). Our home now and for the last 13 years also has a basement. I can say I've seen many a tornado in my life (trust me I'm old) but that one...looked like it was straight from a war zone. A few days later when some roads were cleared we were at an intersection I had known (and lived near) for over 50 years, and I did not know where I was. Just grateful not more lives were lost than was. Pays to have a healthy respect for these storms. Oh, and even if you don't have/hear a warning-you'll know. The creepy feeling before they hit is very real. Nice job on the video!
@justinworthington8127
@justinworthington8127 Сағат бұрын
That’s so cool I actually live right next to Ft. Benning (now called Ft. Moore). Infantry!!