A few points, overall. I found the clips entertaining. They brought back some memories.. that damn green door. A lot of the Staff on that course put my platoon through too. 11Pl. Some of the other staff, I work with now. The P.O.2, the one leaning on the wall, he sure has his moments, but I'm sure a lot of us learned a lot from him, most of us were smart enough to filter the bravado cheesy image from the actual useful knowledge. I can say that of all the staff on our course, he was the only one to sit the platoon down for an hour in our field phase to break the news to us that a soldier had been killed in Afghanistan, and helped us reflect on what we were doing there (at basic), and motivated us to believe that what we were doing was as important as it felt. The P.O. doing the inspection in the showers, well, he definitely put on a better show for the camera, but really, he was kind of a cluster. Same for the Mcpl from the R22er, they never really tried to pass on any knowledge or experience, just wanted to jack us up all the time.. sure their jackings weren't as loud or colourful, but they were just as meaningless. The PO2, he took the time to tell us what he could about being deployed, getting to know the guys around you, how family might cope, and what we can do to help them. Some of it seemed far out hearing it from a Sailor, being an Infantry Recruit, but now as I am working up for deployment, I am remembering more and more the guidance he gave us.
BTW< Poor ol' Dumont made it through that course, failed her P.T. and had to stay on PAT for remedial P.T. and eventually made it out of the mega.