 Did you hear we had a tsunami this morning? How big was it? Bigger than your mom. How big were the waves? We were under a tsunami advisory. Because it was an earthquake in Japan or something? There was a volcano that erupted at Tonga in the South Pacific. So it went from, like, the tsunami warnings were New Zealand to Washington state. It wasn't warnings here. We were advisories. So it was a two to four foot wave. By the time I did here, it was a four foot wave down in those regions. But it didn't really materialize here. But it was crazy how waves can travel that far. It's crazy. Unbelievable. And the speed at which it can travel, because that had happened at, I think, 9 o'clock the prior night, our time, and then it was supposed to by 7 o'clock be here. So that's like, that's fascinating. Crazy. Josh! Hey, welcome back to our stupid right here. It's a Corbin. How are you? Think there's a girl out there named Sue who has a last name, Nami? Paging Miss Nami, Miss Sue Nami? I'm right. My name's Hugh Janus. Wow. Did you see that CNN thing? It was the New Year's Eve thing. Yeah, they called out the fake names. Who the heck? Who's putting these on here? They're fake names. They were probably young people wanting to troll. And it's hilarious. Anyways, today we got a video, Indian Army. Commando training. Dry hand. Say this. And Goraka training. What is that? I don't know. I'm hoping they'll explain the video. But I think it's more of like an intense training that this regimen could. By the way, we've probably asked this question once before, got the answer, and I've forgotten. But we know the branches of the military here in the United States. What are the branches of the military in India? I'd imagine they're similar. I know we have Indian Army. I know we have Indian Air Force. I know we have Indian Navy. I'm assuming. Do they have a Coast Guard? And do they have like a Marine Corps? I don't know Marine Corps. That might be a branch. A branch specialty of Army? You guys know it's not. But I'm pretty sure they have a Coast Guard as well. But my dad, he's coasty. 30 years. Here we go. The weapons class. One of the commandos who breaks one of the most important rules of business, so that you never leave your weapon behind. And all the commandos are going to pay for one man's error. Yep. That works. And the guys are being struck as if you're trying to disappear. The strength of any team is decided by its weakest link. The weakest link is the one just saying it's having mistakes. And for this, there's going to be one of the most important commandos called the fretted koni nala. Yeah, this is one dragon nala. If you even go across the way, you can smell the unwanted odor, which you would not like to even smell. It smells gross. It doesn't smell at all. This is very smelly. If you wash your clothes, it doesn't smell for a week. It's a bad diarrhea. It's now every once in a while. And there's a presence behind this. Rations and error by one can lead to death for a very significant structure. The sole purpose of this punishment is to ensure that no commando ever forgets his weapon. None of his men are better than the gut-wrenching pile. It's so gross. And by the smells and tastes of the koni nala, making sure no new piece is such a mistake. 3.30 PM, the sun finally starts to set. It's so gross. But the next 31 days are going to be far more excruciating. The tests get tougher. The stakes get higher. Teamwork and military precision will define who makes it in the end. So how do they vary themselves for the storm that lies ahead? Every night, for the first two weeks at commandos school, the commandos live in an extreme state of uncertainty. The only thing that they're certain of is that they're going to get no sleep by the form of physical pain coming their way. It's a mystery. Initially, we start the course at 4 PM. And as the course goes on, it keeps increasing. It's 2.30 PM, then 2.30 PM. Push them to the point of exhaustion. So if the commandos are quitting at 1.30 PM to 6 PM, it's just me making that circuit. They might inherit that on the field. There won't be two weeks left until their physical fitness is built up. And the physical fitness graph is very steep. In those two weeks, we bring them to the extreme. Touch your nose to your knees. And you hold it there for at least 30 seconds. Don't try it, don't try it, don't get up. Think right to touch. The whole biological cycle, we don't break it. When it needs to sleep, it runs somewhere. And when there's a storm in the day where it needs to be fought, it's classed there. Breakfast timing, at 4 PM or 3 PM, actually, we don't break it. But here, we force it to be okay. At 3 PM, it's your breakfast. It's your day and your night. Over the first two weeks of commando school, the instructors make nights melt into each other. The main focus is an extreme sleep deprivation so that these young soldiers can advance to the next stage of becoming late commandos. The dizzy first two weeks of commando school come to an end. Breaking down their body clocks has left the commandos with a fuzzy brain, blurry vision, and a complete sense of disorientation. But according to the instructors, this is the best time to test their skills in the field. No. I studied somewhere that you will not know how strong you are, continue unless being strong is the only option left for you. We created a similar kind of situation. I could have kept watching that for another half hour. I'm sure it's like a whole series that they had just broken up. From what I can tell, obviously it's very similar to, I'd say every branch that we have here that has some version of it, it's very common. Obviously in the military, you're going to break somebody down to the point of exhaustion and then keep breaking them because obviously they have to be prepared for that. And sleep deprivation is one of the reasons food deprivation, all this stuff to push you to the breaking point to see how you're going to act when this actually might happen on the field. There was a guy I worked with at a restaurant. He was one of the cooks in his 20s. This was a long time ago, but he was freaking ripped, maniac, just incredible shape who went in for Navy SEAL training and came out, had a break for like a couple of days before he went back and he went in, you know, pumped up, going to be a SEAL, you know, proud, going to kick your ass. When he came back in the middle of what he was going through, he had a couple of days and we asked him how he was doing. He was very humble and did not know if he was going to make it through and said, it's nothing I didn't expect to be what it is. It's not fun. No, it's not. Sleep deprivation is one of the primary things which is why I know I, as much as I'd love to be in the military, sleep deprivation, I know how well I don't function when I'm sleep deprived. So, yeah. Yeah, that's off. It was a really interesting documentary. I could watch the entire thing. I kept going to see their whole, I'm guessing it goes through their whole progression during the training. Yeah, it's really interesting though. And the other thing that they, I'm sure they do, they didn't talk about it, but one of the things I know that SEALs do and I'm sure that they do it, I say SEALs because that's the one I'm the most familiar with because I just love SEALs and I've listened to podcasts and books. I've read books. I've watched documentaries. I've throughout my life I've had times where I've embraced some of the physical aspects of their training and I do know that the other thing that they do in SEALs is the people, sometimes somebody who does something exactly right will get punished and they'll quit because they'll say it wasn't fair and that's exactly the point. They'll take them through it and say if you think going to war if you're going to have this thing in your mind of I get discouraged because that wasn't fair. You're dead. You will not survive and war because you're going to face situations where you should have had air support. Your weapon should have worked. They should have followed on the right-hand side and done what you commanded them to do. They shouldn't have been over there. Your gun shouldn't have jammed. You did everything right and everything went wrong. Are you still going to be able to keep moving forward? We've talked about different breed of human being. That swamp thing was absolutely disgusting. That would be my breaking point. I love mud, but the fact that they were in something that was like a sewage-y nasty and they had to put it in their mouth. I would be out at that point. I could probably deal with a lot of the other stuff. I could function on very low sleep but when you start getting to stuff that's just going to make me like... I can't do anything. Like if training was fear factor? Well, it depends on the fear. All of that I can do. Really grosses me out. Anyway, great video. Let us know more videos similar to this. Military style videos of any branch or stuff like that we can react to down below.