
Show featured sponsor: Tip Top K9 Training In this round two conversation, Rich Brown sits down with Gavin Glasenapp, former 160th SOAR (Night Stalker) pilot and current leader on the Delta Defense training team for a deep dive into what it really takes to transition from military and law enforcement into the firearms training world. This episode goes beyond war stories. It's about teaching, influence, and carrying the mission forward in a way that actually impacts armed citizens. In this episode, we cover: The reality of transitioning from military/LE into the firearms industry, and where many get it wrong Why high-level operational experience doesn't automatically translate into effective instruction The fundamentals of teaching firearms to everyday citizens vs. trained professionals The responsibility of instructors in shaping safe, capable, and confident protectors A candid look at Second Amendment advocacy- what matters, what doesn't, and where we need to improve Lessons from the 160th SOAR mindset: preparation, accountability, and performance under pressure What makes a firearms instructor truly "high level" in today's environment This is a conversation about evolution of identity, of mission, and of responsibility. If you're an instructor, a protector, or someone serious about getting better, this one delivers.
Apr 4
1 hr 24 min

Today's Featured Sponsor: Werkz holsters In this episode, Rich Brown sits down with John Hearn of Two Pillars Training to break down what the data actually tells us about defensive gunfights—and how most training completely misses the mark. John has built a reputation for digging into real-world incidents, analyzing patterns, and applying that information to how we should actually train. From distances and timing to decision-making under pressure, this conversation challenges assumptions and replaces them with reality. They dive into what the numbers reveal about how fights really unfold, where traditional training falls short, and how armed citizens can better prepare for the moments that matter most. If you're serious about training with purpose—not just going through the motions—this episode will change how you think about practice. In 2021, John founded Two Pillars Training and began to offer unique curriculum focusing on decision making while shooting in addition to classic skills with pistol and carbine. Besides hands-on shooting classes, John has presentations focusing on the data side of the self-defense world. His interests include human performance under life and death stress, historic gunfights, crime data, and criminal typologies. John has a Master's degree in criminal justice with a concentration in Research Methods. He has instructor credentials from the FBI, FLETC, NRA-LEAD, Rangemaster, CSAT, Centrifuge Training, Tactical Anatomy Systems, Kentucky National Guard, and many others. Finally, John is a Life Member of the National Rifle Association and the Second Amendment Foundation. John Hearne's Webstie: https://twopillarstraining.com/
Mar 25
1 hr 25 min

*]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id= "request-WEB:057785d4-265d-4214-a186-24b22607cf36-0" data-testid= "conversation-turn-2" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> Show featured Sponsor: Tip Top K9 Training In this episode, Rich Brown sits down with returning guest Simon Golob for a raw and timely discussion on recent events shaping the security landscape—centered on the terrorist attack at Old Dominion. This isn't a distant, overseas incident. It's a reminder that violence can surface anywhere, at any time—and often where people feel safest. Rich and Simon break down what happened, what we know so far, and—more importantly—what it means for the everyday armed citizen. What you'll hear in this episode: A breakdown of the Old Dominion attack and key takeaways How modern threats are evolving—and why they're getting harder to predict The mindset gap: why most people are still unprepared for sudden violence Awareness failures and environmental blind spots in public spaces Where armed citizens fit—and where they don't—in events like this Practical considerations for movement, positioning, and decision-making under stress This episode isn't about fear—it's about clarity. Because the question isn't if violence exists. The question is whether you're prepared when it finds you.
Mar 21
1 hr 35 min

Episode #427: DevGru Operator Bill Rapier: Shooting Mastery, Training Discipline, and Elite Teamwork
Show Featured Sponsor Product: Seeklander Edition Holster *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "request-WEB:e9af6a20-080c-43f4-9450-fce48de0bf18-2" data-testid= "conversation-turn-6" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> In this episode of the American Warrior Show, Rich Brown and Bill Rapier dive into hard-earned lessons drawn from the world of Naval Special Warfare Development Group - where performance is measured in life-and-death outcomes, and teamwork isn't optional. This conversation isn't about hype or hero worship. It's about standards. It's about how elite units train, communicate, and execute and what armed citizens, competitors, and instructors can take from those principles. Because here's the truth: individual skill matters… but team performance wins. In this episode, they discuss: The difference between being a good shooter and being an asset to a team Why elite units obsess over repetition and measurable standards Communication under stress and how small breakdowns create big failures Accountability inside high-performance cultures How ego quietly destroys team effectiveness What civilian defenders misunderstand about "tactical" training Applying special operations training principles to your own range time Rich and Bill break down how discipline, humility, and clear standards build competence - and how those same principles can transform the way you train, lead, and protect. Whether you're an instructor, competitor, protector, or leader in your own home, this episode challenges you to raise your standards. Train with purpose. Perform with discipline. Contribute to the team.
Feb 22
1 hr 39 min

Show featured Sponsor: Werkz Holsters, the company that cracked the code on light bearing holsters! *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "56c82001-8d4e-4a18-90e4-fb1cf93c6383" data-testid= "conversation-turn-6" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> In this episode of the American Warrior Show, Rich Brown is joined by cybersecurity expert Andrew Frisbie for a timely and eye-opening conversation on modern cyber threats, digital preparedness, and the role of artificial intelligence in today's threat landscape. As recent cyber incidents continue to impact infrastructure, financial systems, personal data, and national security, Rich and Andrew break down what's actually happening—and what most people are completely unprepared for. This episode covers: Real-world cyber threats affecting everyday Americans right now How cyber attacks target individuals, businesses, and critical systems Where AI is helping defenders—and where it's empowering attackers Why cybersecurity is no longer a "tech problem," but a personal security issue Practical steps armed citizens, families, and leaders can take to reduce risk The battlefield has expanded. Threats no longer require physical proximity—and attackers don't need guns. This conversation reframes cybersecurity as part of modern personal defense, challenging warriors and protectors to think beyond traditional threats and recognize that preparedness now includes digital awareness, resilience, and adaptability. If you believe in protecting yourself, your family, and your community, this episode will change how you view security in an AI-driven world.
Feb 3
1 hr 11 min

Show featured sponsor: Precision Holsters. Check out the new Vanquish! In this episode of the American Warrior Show, Rich Brown sits down with TC Fuller for a deep, uncomfortable, and necessary conversation about obedience, authority, and moral responsibility. Using Stanley Milgram's famous obedience experiments and Christopher Browning's book Ordinary Men, Rich and TC break down how average, everyday people—not monsters—can be led to commit acts they never believed themselves capable of. This episode explores: Why people obey authority even when it violates their moral compass How peer pressure and normalization override conscience The concept of the "agentic state" and why responsibility gets outsourced Why "just following orders" is one of the most dangerous phrases in history What warriors, leaders, instructors, and armed citizens must do to resist blind compliance This isn't a history lesson—it's a warning. For warriors, protectors, and leaders, the takeaway is clear: Character, moral courage, and independent thinking must be trained—deliberately—or they will fail under pressure. If you carry responsibility—for a weapon, a badge, a team, or a family—this episode will challenge how you think about obedience, leadership, and your own decision-making under authority.
Feb 3
1 hr 33 min

Show featured sponsor: Tip Top K9 Training In this episode, Rich Brown sits down with Walt Settlemyre, host of The Distinguished Savage Podcast, for a wide-ranging conversation on readiness, capability, and what it actually means to live prepared in the modern world. They discuss: Why competence is disappearing as comfort increases The difference between talking about violence and preparing for it responsibly How physical fitness, mindset, and skill intersect in real-world self-defense The danger of outsourcing personal responsibility to systems, gear, or credentials Why training must be continuous, uncomfortable, and intentional What "civilized savage" really means - and why it matters now more than ever The role of community, discipline, and standards in developing capable humans This is not a tactics episode. It's a truth-based conversation about readiness, accountability, and becoming harder to break - physically, mentally, and morally. If you care about: Self-defense Leadership Personal responsibility And building real-world capability This episode will resonate.
Jan 11
1 hr 30 min

Show Featured Sponsor: Werks Holsters "WE MAKE HOLSTERS FOR PISTOLS WITH LIGHTS" On this episode of the American Warrior Show, Rich Brown sits down with retired Navy SEAL Bill Rapier, founder of AMTAC Shooting, for a no-nonsense discussion on real-world self-defense. He is the lead instructor of over 200 Amtac Shooting courses and has trained over 2500 students since 2020. Bill is retired after twenty years in the Navy, where his duty assignments included several years at SEAL Team 3 and over 14 years at Naval Special Warfare Development Group. Positions held include assaulter, breacher, sniper, team leader, troop chief, and military working dog department senior enlisted adviser. He has always been an avid shooter and is heavily involved in combatives. Bill brings decades of experience from Naval Special Warfare, including time at SEAL Team 3 and DEVGRU, where performance under pressure wasn't optional—it was survival. Why most self-defense conversations focus too heavily on the gun—and what happens when the fight starts inside arm's reach. The importance of a layered defensive approach: awareness, decision-making, combatives, and firearms—used in the correct order. How to train shooting skills that actually transfer to real life, not just the square range. Integrating fighting and shooting so skills don't collapse when stress, chaos, and violence show up fast. Common training blind spots among armed citizens—and how to fix them with smarter practice and higher standards. Why efficiency, simplicity, and pressure-tested fundamentals matter more than flashy techniques. Practical takeaways for warriors who want skills that work when it counts, not just look good on Instagram.
Dec 12, 2025
2 hr 6 min

Featured Podcast Sponsor: Precision Holsters holiday specials! Episode #422: Gavin Glasenapp: From Special Operations Aviation to Defender Development On today's American Warrior Show, we will be joined by former 160th Pilot and the current Training Operations Manager at Delta Defense, Gavin Glasenapp. Gavin Glasenapp is the Training Operations Manager at Delta Defense, supporting the U.S. Concealed Carry Association's nationwide instructor network. He brings a deep operational background built over two decades in the U.S. Army, where he retired as a Chief Warrant Officer Four. Gavin spent the first half of his career in the AH-64A and AH-64D Apache community, serving as both an Instructor Pilot and Standardization Instructor Pilot. He later assessed into the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne), flying the MH-47G on heavy-assault missions in direct support of special mission units. Across twelve combat deployments flying both the Apache and Chinook, he gained extensive experience in complex, high-risk environments. After the Army, Gavin served as a police officer in Southeastern Wisconsin, completing advanced LE training, including ALERRT and SWAT school. He now leverages his combined military, law-enforcement, and instructional expertise to strengthen USCCA training programs and enhance the readiness and capability of responsibly armed Americans. Gavin enjoys multiple hobbies and spending time, especially traveling, with his soon to be wife, Jessica. This episode gives listeners a rare look at the training, standards, and mission profiles of the legendary 160th SOAR. Gavin Glasenapp explains what sets these pilots apart and how their approach to risk, planning, and contingencies offers powerful lessons for everyday carry practitioners. Rich and Gavin connect SOF aviation principles to personal defense, instructor development, and decision-making under pressure. A fascinating mix of story and strategy.
Dec 9, 2025
1 hr 36 min

Featured Product Sponsor: Werkz Light Bearing Holsters - "WE MAKE HOLSTERS FOR PISTOLS WITH LIGHTS" Episode 421: Justin Carroll & Rich Brown — Competent and Dangerous In this powerful conversation, Rich Brown sits down with author, Marine veteran, former intel professional, and long-time friend of AWS Justin Carroll to dive deep into his new book, Competent and Dangerous. This episode breaks down what it truly means to be a capable, prepared, and resilient protector in a world that is shifting faster than most realize. In this episode you'll hear: Why Justin wrote Competent and Dangerous and who the book is designed to serve. The gap between "owning a gun" and "being dangerous enough to win." Justin's model for developing well-rounded capability across shooting, fitness, medical, communication, and decision-making. The realities of modern threat environments and why most citizens dramatically underestimate them. Why competence must precede confidence — and how to build both through structured training. The role of mindset, deliberate practice, and environment design in building daily habits that stick. Justin's take on preparedness culture — what we're doing right, and where most people are failing. Rich and Justin's shared experiences training, carrying, and working with real-world protectors. How to turn information into action and begin closing capability gaps immediately. Who is Justin Carroll? U.S. Marine Corps veteran Former intelligence professional Security, preparedness, and communications expert Author of multiple well-regarded works on readiness Instructor and long-time AWS contributor Host of the "Across the Peak" podcast One of the clearest voices in the modern preparedness and training community Why this episode matters: Because being armed is not the same as being dangerous. Justin's book and this conversation outline the roadmap for the modern citizen-protector: capable, adaptable, trained, and mentally resilient. Get the Book here!
Nov 14, 2025
1 hr 25 min
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