But the review would probably just be "oh, ya. I should do THAT. That's way smarter than what I'm doing." Idea for a new series: Watch criminals get tips from movies live!
Fact. Life is always about nuances and perspective. Unfortunately in America citizens and government have loss the ability to acknowledge grey area in almost every situation.
@@justinchiles9393 Many people are stupid and have so much pride that they are hard pressed on one stance or another on a particular topic, but despite what you see in media a majority of people in the workforce and including Washington are rational people who are willing to tread the grey area on any issue
@@NetherStray Add in doing a little surveillance to make sure your target is actually there before you break a door down, and maybe to ensure that there are no small children around before you start throwing incendiary devices around.
Of course he will be on the pigs side of it being a pig himself. Those warrants are wrong where innocents get murdered by the cops and need to stop. Cops have way too much power and abuse it.
Just like anything else, if you want to succeed, you need to know just as much, if not more than your adversary. I was a fugitive for over 5 years, but eventually turned myself in so I could get married and move on after serving my time. I spent 18 months learning/studying everything I could find on how the marshals service operates, who they hire and why, what their SOPs are, how they think, what their training consists of, etc. I even went to a local range frequented by SWAT officers, veterans, etc. once a week for over a year. I scrubbed all social media, cut all communication with family/friends, grew a beard, dyed my hair, got colored contacts, lost 30+ lbs (185 down to 152), avoided jobs similar to ones I worked prior and so on. It got to the point where I was forgotten and could have likely lived the rest of my life without worry, but I would have to come to grips with never seeing my family again, never traveling abroad again, never acknowledging my actual identity again… One day I woke up and called the agency that was hunting me (I was on the nightly news in multiple states dozens of times) and discussed a deal that my attorney presented and was ultimately accepted. The point of my post is that it’s actually far easier to evade capture than law enforcement would like you to believe, but it requires a combination of discipline, mental acuity, creativity and determination that is unpalatable or untenable for most people. I won’t lie and say anything I did was fun or easy or even remotely enjoyable, but when faced with losing your freedom, even the harshest conditions are embraced with open arms. I apologize for the lengthy comment, I just thought I could add something to the topic from a different perspective.
That story about having fugitives show up at a convention center was both genius on the cops end & stupid as h*ll on the criminals part. Idk about you but if I'm wanted for any reason by any person I will NOT be randomly accepting invitations to things that I have absolutely no prior knowledge of.
I remember one story how my father (former Miami PD '67-'75) was assigned to Burglary and were fed up with the low conviction rates. So he and his buddies came up with a sting operation by using a pawn shop that was a known fence. They took everything from tires and auto parts to kilos of hash. Short of nuclear arms, they bought it. They even convinced one guy, who spotted the camera, that it was for their protection because with this much swag around there they could easily be ripped off. A year later, they threw a party for all these mooks, and "SURPRISE!" were arrested. Some still thought it was a joke until they saw the uniforms waiting for them in the next room.
I'm not Googling this so it's from memory but Sea of Love (circa 1989), Al Pacino pulled this scam and one of the angry chumps was none other than an early role for Sam Jackson. So it's not new, probably wasn't a new tactic 30 years ago
There was a story of a drug house that got raided. While the cops were still there, with marked cars outside, people kept coming up and asking if they were still selling. Lot of arrests made that day. Point is criminals, on average, are not the sharpest tools in the shed.
That 90%+ fugitive capture rate is due to anyone jumping bail is a fugitive. If i fail to show up to any court date i am then a fugitive. So its very easy for common people to be fugitives. The ones that dont get caught are the more important people.
I believe that "No-Knock" warrants are needed in some situations. However, what I think is missing is a mandatory specific review after each one. A No-Knock warrant demands more robust supervision and oversight, before and after. Similarly, police having military vehicles. Yes, sometimes they are needed. But like the No-Knock warrant above, such needs more supervision and oversight, before and after.
Very interesting. A comment on the "Salt" review, however. Where I was a police officer, the tazer was always carried in a "cross draw" position, on the opposite side of the body from your sidearm. This was to help prevent accidental shootings. As a result, if riding in the back with a prisoner, you would sit with the less lethal option closest to the prisoner. Otherwise, spot on.
Part of the commentary on Salt he mentioned the officer should have been sitting with his weapon side opposite the suspect. He technically was. Tasers are carried on the opposite side from the firearm.
Everything in that BB scene was Hanks fault. He chose to do everything in silence without notifying his fellow officers and he brought Jessie to the desert because it was shown in an earlier scene that season that Hank doesn't care about Pinkmans life and would even sacrifice him just to get to Walt.
The reason its only Hank and Gomey out there, is because they have no feasible evidence on Walt to put forward to their department, so thats why they need to bait him out into the desert where the money is.
Big props. You can tell how intelligent the captive is from the very opening “tracking down what THEY consider to be the worlds most violet criminals”. The implications here are striking
@@maotisjan he’s a good speaker in front of audiences. He’s not like some of the other people here on insider who broke down things and had no charisma or draw to their analysis. He seems like a dude you'd want to get a drink with but still a professional.
Re: the breaking bad scene, I think the theme of the show is that ego is these men’s downfall. Even at the end, Hank went off the books because he felt embarrassed that he didn’t see Walt under his nose for so long and he didn’t think Walt would use force.
yeah, i cant remenber well but he only told to his partner, that's why they went alone, I think he was not working with the FBI when they did that operation or something like that
@@janetmontalvo6944The blackmail video is merely a chess piece in the game Walt and Hank are playing. Hank knows his career at the DEA is done the very moment he's figured out that Walt is "the other W.W." However the rest plays out, he'll have to step down no matter what. Just like his former boss had to retire due to his friendship with Gus Fring.
This guy was great, only thing about these, when we know the show they are discussing and not all the details are provided. In breaking bad, the reason they were in the remote location was because they didn't know where Walter was, that was the trick, Jessie was telling Walter he was burning his money, and they tracked him there using his phone. Also Hank was working rogue at that time which is why it was only 2 guys. Not saying that makes anything more or less realistic, its just the explanation to why those events happened the way they did in the show. I see it with other "How real is it" episodes also, but they are still great to watch
Would have loved an assessment of the "3 days" Russell Crowe film but I guess Fugitive trackers only like the 93% where they catch the guy & not the 7% gottaways! To me, 7% are great odds.
I’ve been on the run twice, once for 3 years and then for 5. The first time, I ended up flying back and turning myself in to straighten things up. The second time, it had been so long that I forgot they were looking for me. I got picked up because I went and talked to the cop to straighten up things for a family member.
@@noahzeigler455 GTA for 3 years but it should have just been a joyriding charge. The 5 years was for driving without a license. I got probation, with 20 days of com serv but the PO was a dock when I first saw him. I said, “Hi.” and he said, “your gonna do this and your gonna do that and I won’t put up your s and if you’re so much as 5 minutes late to see me Or don’t immediately call me back I’ll lock you up in a minute, don’t play with me.” so on and so on. I’d never meet the guy before and had a good record for completing probation/com serv, so he had no reason to be such a prick. I left his office and never saw him again, never did any com serv or spoke to him on the phone. 5 years later I’d forgotten all about it and gave my name and birthdate to an officer who was investigating some stupid stuff that happened to my sister. I saw he was still sitting in his car in front of my place long after everything was settled and went up to see if there was something up. He said there was a warrant for me. He didn’t give me a hard time or anything. He stayed in his car while I put my dog up and emptied my pockets in the house. Then he drove me to the nearest jail. The intake person asked if I wanted to just serve out the 20 days in jail if I wanted to talk to my PO about letting out to do my com serve. I told her that I hadn’t talked to the guy in 5 years and there was no point in trying to talk to him now, I’ll just serve the 20 days. She said she had to call him anyway and I st there while she called. She was on the phone with him for a minute or so and then she starts laughing. After she hung up, still laughing, she says, “He told me the same thing you did, “I haven’t talked to the guy in 5 years, there’s no point in talking to him now.”” I just took my 20 day vacation.
I dont know why but this man... I would love him to be part of my family (no im not looking for a father figure, i come from a loving family and is very close to my dad and im a dad too) The way he talk, the way he behave, I would love to sit next to a fireplace with a Bourbon in hand and just say to him: 'Tell me what you know". I bet we would be sitting there for hours and hours. He just feel so full of wisdom. Fist time i write something like that on a How real it is and I've seen them all. God's speed.
Great review. I was hoping he would address the scene in so many movies like this were the commander orders his crew to find out "His name, where he grew up, every job he ever had, what he ate for breakfast, who his second grade teacher was, his girlfriend's mother's best friend..." Sometimes that just all seems way over the top.
The only thing I didn’t like about this one was that he kept calling shotguns rifles. And not even ar-12s or saiga-12s which are mag fed shotgun’s derived from rifle designs, but he kept calling like mossberg 500s rifles.
This is the best "How Real Is It?" interview i've watched very informative, Mr. Peppers is very knowledgeable and so easy to listen to. I'd want him back for more.
You should have paid more attention; he said that the only reason Federal authorities would give the ok to close down a major city would be because of a terrorist attack! I.E. the Boston Marathon bomb....
I really appreciate him coming over and explaining all the protocol, BUT realism does entail a lot of protocol breaking, even more so when we're talking about the police, so I think he should've taken that into account and rated some of the scenes higher when protocol was indeed broken
Expert calls a pump shotgun an assault rifle. Uh, what? FYI assault rifles aren't sold in the US, only semi-automatic, which except for appearance are exactly the same as great grandfathers hunting rifle except great grand paw would consider the .223/ 5.56 round most commonly used in modern semi-automatics a varmint cartridge.
I was a fugitive for a few months in my 20s lol.. didn't last long. It's not fun and exciting like on TV at all. I didn't know you needed *MONEY* and lots of it to stay on the lamb💯
21 Bridges: "This crime" let's not forget the "crime" was the murder/execution of several police officers. I think the response was very realistic. The mayor and chief of police would shut down their city to catch them. I would have ranked it at least a 6/10.
"they would never sit a prisoner to their right if their weapon is on the right" - I, a police officer doing this every time: oh well😅 Also, we unfortunately don't have anything between the front seats and the back😅 At least, back in Berlin, we had special cars to transport the 'bad' ones where the have like little cells
One fugitive scene I would have like to see his take on was in 'First Blood'. Rambo is up in those mountains and Sheriff Teague had everyone looking for him. Colonel Trautman shows up and tells Teague to leave a hole in their lines where Rambo can escape. Defuse the situation. Tells him, that he'll turn up in a couple of weeks, working at some car wash or something where he could be taken into custody in a safer, more controlled situation (I'm paraphrasing, here). Of course, Teague, while following the script, refuses. That's when Colonel Trautman utters the 'classic' line: "If you're gonna send that many men after Rambo you're gonna need something." Teague: "Oh yeah? What's that?" Trautman: "A good supply of body bags." How accurate and correct would you find the advice of Colonel Trautman? Having served for 32 years in the USAF as an attack aircraft pilot, I, of course, went through SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape) training many times. It's not hard to evade that many people in that kind of terrain if you paid attention in your schools. We were all 'captured' during training because, well, if we're too good at evasion, then you're missing out on a significant portion of what your training is about, but it's nice to know that they had to cheat to find us. I say all that to emphasize that in several scenarios, we were allowed to pass through concentrated search grids on several occasions. The reasoning was that it would give the unexperienced a false sense of confidence and we would lower our guard. An enemy wants a pilot to be sure for all kinds of reasons, but they want us ALIVE if possible and if they can avoid a firefight to get us, they will.
One of the best " How Real Is It? " I've seen so far. You can see and feel that M. Rasheen Peppers really knows his stuff (and that's not always the case 😁).
I was with him and in belief of what he had to say until 16:32 when he called a shotgun an assault rifle and at 18:11 when he called a shotgun a rifle again 🤦. He's a seasoned vet an makes that mistake
Gotta love this guy, a lot of the experts on these series dismiss the movies or incompetence in the movie by the officers/police, but in the Bourne and The Fugitive scene he even admits that its happened before that Fugitives slip by, or that they turn out to be very agile, perimeter’s not shut off, or that blocking a viaduct, while dangerous could work. A lot of nuance that he’s seeing even in very action-y scenes, very much appreciated.
Wow, so in The Fugitive, the "I don't care line" wasn't just cool, it was realistic and in line with their jobs. Wow. No wonder The Fugitive remains so realistic till today.
Dude I know people that have missed court over a drug possession charge that the Marshal's came and got. So saying they get the most violent criminals is a little much.
I knew a guy who was a former D1 track athlete He got away with so many crimes because the cops couldnt catch him on foot and in the city they couldnt chase him by car. He got caught breaking into a vape shop and then ran 3 miles to get away from the cops.
Okay so he can catch a person, but no one is worried about the cop that says that he doesn't care that he's arresting the wrong person? More over we're not worried that many cops are like this? What?
Now you have to get a fugitive (still on the run) to review movies with fugitives
🤯
And the cops storming in the end of the video🤯
instant click! o and they could just blur out his face!
But the review would probably just be "oh, ya. I should do THAT. That's way smarter than what I'm doing."
Idea for a new series: Watch criminals get tips from movies live!
Lmfao
I really respect how mature this guy was on the hole no-nock thing. Really acknowledging the nuances
Fact. Life is always about nuances and perspective. Unfortunately in America citizens and government have loss the ability to acknowledge grey area in almost every situation.
A good starting point, I think, would be to AT LEAST GET THE RIGHT ADDRESS.
@@justinchiles9393 Many people are stupid and have so much pride that they are hard pressed on one stance or another on a particular topic, but despite what you see in media a majority of people in the workforce and including Washington are rational people who are willing to tread the grey area on any issue
@@NetherStray Add in doing a little surveillance to make sure your target is actually there before you break a door down, and maybe to ensure that there are no small children around before you start throwing incendiary devices around.
Of course he will be on the pigs side of it being a pig himself.
Those warrants are wrong where innocents get murdered by the cops and need to stop.
Cops have way too much power and abuse it.
Just like anything else, if you want to succeed, you need to know just as much, if not more than your adversary. I was a fugitive for over 5 years, but eventually turned myself in so I could get married and move on after serving my time. I spent 18 months learning/studying everything I could find on how the marshals service operates, who they hire and why, what their SOPs are, how they think, what their training consists of, etc. I even went to a local range frequented by SWAT officers, veterans, etc. once a week for over a year. I scrubbed all social media, cut all communication with family/friends, grew a beard, dyed my hair, got colored contacts, lost 30+ lbs (185 down to 152), avoided jobs similar to ones I worked prior and so on. It got to the point where I was forgotten and could have likely lived the rest of my life without worry, but I would have to come to grips with never seeing my family again, never traveling abroad again, never acknowledging my actual identity again… One day I woke up and called the agency that was hunting me (I was on the nightly news in multiple states dozens of times) and discussed a deal that my attorney presented and was ultimately accepted. The point of my post is that it’s actually far easier to evade capture than law enforcement would like you to believe, but it requires a combination of discipline, mental acuity, creativity and determination that is unpalatable or untenable for most people. I won’t lie and say anything I did was fun or easy or even remotely enjoyable, but when faced with losing your freedom, even the harshest conditions are embraced with open arms. I apologize for the lengthy comment, I just thought I could add something to the topic from a different perspective.
Wow man, you made a conscious decision to be focused and disciplined.
Well got damn! What an interesting story. Glad you got through that whole situation and, hopefully, are doing good now. Well done friend.
Badass!
Jackson Bauer… Jack Bauer… uh huh
Thank you so much, OP. Your words are greatly valuable and can save peoples lives from corrupt law enforcement.
You know back in house prime this dude totally chased down fugitives and said some cool and relevant line as he was cuffing them
He was like a young Captain Holt in his day
Dude seems like a cool-assed cucumber
lol
He probably said "You just got Peppered".
"You're going for Oolong time."
I must say, not only is Mr. Peppers extremely interesting to listen to, he has an awesome name.
That's *Marshall Peppers* to you.
At least it's not Brian Peppers.
Rasheen Peppers is the greatest name I've ever heard. Definitely not going to borrow it for D&D purposes...
As a tracker for the Royal Guard myself, I'm impressed by how accurate his commentary is.
It would appear that he is the real deal
it's almost like you had the same job with the same manual with the same common sense way of doing things.
It’s almost like you’re all little kids. Go take your medicine
Simply love how this prior officer and Marshall public safety is the first thought everytime!
That story about having fugitives show up at a convention center was both genius on the cops end & stupid as h*ll on the criminals part. Idk about you but if I'm wanted for any reason by any person I will NOT be randomly accepting invitations to things that I have absolutely no prior knowledge of.
Most criminals are not particularly smart...
There's video of it. Check out donutoperator's channel.
I remember one story how my father (former Miami PD '67-'75) was assigned to Burglary and were fed up with the low conviction rates. So he and his buddies came up with a sting operation by using a pawn shop that was a known fence. They took everything from tires and auto parts to kilos of hash. Short of nuclear arms, they bought it. They even convinced one guy, who spotted the camera, that it was for their protection because with this much swag around there they could easily be ripped off. A year later, they threw a party for all these mooks, and "SURPRISE!" were arrested. Some still thought it was a joke until they saw the uniforms waiting for them in the next room.
I'm not Googling this so it's from memory but Sea of Love (circa 1989), Al Pacino pulled this scam and one of the angry chumps was none other than an early role for Sam Jackson. So it's not new, probably wasn't a new tactic 30 years ago
There was a story of a drug house that got raided. While the cops were still there, with marked cars outside, people kept coming up and asking if they were still selling. Lot of arrests made that day.
Point is criminals, on average, are not the sharpest tools in the shed.
This guy is who Sam L Jackson plays in the movies 😂😂
imagine being on the run and you find out they got samuel L jacksons irl counterpart after you
Das racist
@@user61920 Yeah white people see any black guy with glasses as Samuel L Jackson because they aren't smart, not because of racism.
Wait I thought this was Samuel L Jackson???
😂😂Fr
It's detective Peppers from "Manhunt: Fugitive Task Force" show that aired back in the day! Man I miss that show. Good to see him again.
This guy was incredible. He actually rated them accurately, and often the experts rate the clips too highly for being inaccurate.
Even with the first clip so informative loved this video. More “how real is it” with Rasheen please!
"I didn't kill my wife!"
"I don't care!"
Peppers: "So, that reaction is true."
WOW!
That's for the courts to decide
@@stevencollins8348 Ikr👮♂
That 90%+ fugitive capture rate is due to anyone jumping bail is a fugitive. If i fail to show up to any court date i am then a fugitive. So its very easy for common people to be fugitives. The ones that dont get caught are the more important people.
Nice, an episode where I've seen almost all the movies and shows. Wonderful expert! Knowledgeable and succinct.
I believe that "No-Knock" warrants are needed in some situations. However, what I think is missing is a mandatory specific review after each one. A No-Knock warrant demands more robust supervision and oversight, before and after. Similarly, police having military vehicles. Yes, sometimes they are needed. But like the No-Knock warrant above, such needs more supervision and oversight, before and after.
I used to love watching this guy on Manhunters: Fugitive Task Force.
I thought that was him! Yeah, that was a good show.
Very interesting. A comment on the "Salt" review, however. Where I was a police officer, the tazer was always carried in a "cross draw" position, on the opposite side of the body from your sidearm. This was to help prevent accidental shootings. As a result, if riding in the back with a prisoner, you would sit with the less lethal option closest to the prisoner. Otherwise, spot on.
Yeah okay little kid, go take your medicine
Two times he called a shotgun a "rifle", lol. Cool video tough. Big props to all those hunting fugitives.
Part of the commentary on Salt he mentioned the officer should have been sitting with his weapon side opposite the suspect. He technically was. Tasers are carried on the opposite side from the firearm.
@Adam V That's what I said. And everyone else seemed to figure it out. But you do you UA-cam guy, continue with your service, whatever that is.
Everything in that BB scene was Hanks fault. He chose to do everything in silence without notifying his fellow officers and he brought Jessie to the desert because it was shown in an earlier scene that season that Hank doesn't care about Pinkmans life and would even sacrifice him just to get to Walt.
"8/10. They completely messed up the entry, and the portrayal of the mess it caused is very realistic."
This gentleman is a treasure.
The reason its only Hank and Gomey out there, is because they have no feasible evidence on Walt to put forward to their department, so thats why they need to bait him out into the desert where the money is.
Big props. You can tell how intelligent the captive is from the very opening “tracking down what THEY consider to be the worlds most violet criminals”. The implications here are striking
?
@@edun4513Fuck you mean "?"
RIP Chadwick Boseman
I love this video. He was so cool and informative and gave this video a good entertaining experience
Videos that are both entertaining and informative are always the best
@@maotisjan he’s a good speaker in front of audiences. He’s not like some of the other people here on insider who broke down things and had no charisma or draw to their analysis. He seems like a dude you'd want to get a drink with but still a professional.
The Fugitive is the best movie here. I love it.
The Winter Soldier Sir.
I'd love to get this guy reviewing scenes from Justified.
Re: the breaking bad scene, I think the theme of the show is that ego is these men’s downfall.
Even at the end, Hank went off the books because he felt embarrassed that he didn’t see Walt under his nose for so long and he didn’t think Walt would use force.
yeah, i cant remenber well but he only told to his partner, that's why they went alone, I think he was not working with the FBI when they did that operation or something like that
I agree, that context is really important. Hank already knows that his career is done.
No wasn’t it because Walt blackmailed him so if he went to the police force for help Walt had that video to blame his brother.
@@janetmontalvo6944 either way, Hank didn’t follow protocol intentionally.
@@janetmontalvo6944The blackmail video is merely a chess piece in the game Walt and Hank are playing. Hank knows his career at the DEA is done the very moment he's figured out that Walt is "the other W.W." However the rest plays out, he'll have to step down no matter what. Just like his former boss had to retire due to his friendship with Gus Fring.
This guy was great, only thing about these, when we know the show they are discussing and not all the details are provided. In breaking bad, the reason they were in the remote location was because they didn't know where Walter was, that was the trick, Jessie was telling Walter he was burning his money, and they tracked him there using his phone. Also Hank was working rogue at that time which is why it was only 2 guys. Not saying that makes anything more or less realistic, its just the explanation to why those events happened the way they did in the show. I see it with other "How real is it" episodes also, but they are still great to watch
Captain America: The Winter Soldier" (2014) and "Catch Me If You Can" (2002)-most real
My man, you were awesome. Gotta come back for more
You should get this guy back to do episodes of justified, given that that’s about a US Marshall
Would have loved an assessment of the "3 days" Russell Crowe film but I guess Fugitive trackers only like the 93% where they catch the guy & not the 7% gottaways! To me, 7% are great odds.
Should have done one on Justified.
There is one thing that makes me believe he really is who he claims to be: dude's huge
I’ve been on the run twice, once for 3 years and then for 5. The first time, I ended up flying back and turning myself in to straighten things up. The second time, it had been so long that I forgot they were looking for me. I got picked up because I went and talked to the cop to straighten up things for a family member.
Sorry but BS
What were you on the run for ?
@@noahzeigler455
GTA for 3 years but it should have just been a joyriding charge.
The 5 years was for driving without a license. I got probation, with 20 days of com serv but the PO was a dock when I first saw him. I said, “Hi.” and he said, “your gonna do this and your gonna do that and I won’t put up your s and if you’re so much as 5 minutes late to see me Or don’t immediately call me back I’ll lock you up in a minute, don’t play with me.” so on and so on. I’d never meet the guy before and had a good record for completing probation/com serv, so he had no reason to be such a prick.
I left his office and never saw him again, never did any com serv or spoke to him on the phone. 5 years later I’d forgotten all about it and gave my name and birthdate to an officer who was investigating some stupid stuff that happened to my sister. I saw he was still sitting in his car in front of my place long after everything was settled and went up to see if there was something up. He said there was a warrant for me.
He didn’t give me a hard time or anything. He stayed in his car while I put my dog up and emptied my pockets in the house. Then he drove me to the nearest jail. The intake person asked if I wanted to just serve out the 20 days in jail if I wanted to talk to my PO about letting out to do my com serve. I told her that I hadn’t talked to the guy in 5 years and there was no point in trying to talk to him now, I’ll just serve the 20 days.
She said she had to call him anyway and I st there while she called. She was on the phone with him for a minute or so and then she starts laughing. After she hung up, still laughing, she says, “He told me the same thing you did, “I haven’t talked to the guy in 5 years, there’s no point in talking to him now.””
I just took my 20 day vacation.
@@charlie15627 sounds like you are white!
get ur life together man
Wow! That was awesome. And thank you, sir, for your service!
i thought he was Samuel L Jackson 🤣🤣🤣
I dont know why but this man... I would love him to be part of my family (no im not looking for a father figure, i come from a loving family and is very close to my dad and im a dad too)
The way he talk, the way he behave, I would love to sit next to a fireplace with a Bourbon in hand and just say to him: 'Tell me what you know". I bet we would be sitting there for hours and hours. He just feel so full of wisdom.
Fist time i write something like that on a How real it is and I've seen them all.
God's speed.
My man Peppers!!! You've made it to retirement! Congratulations. The US Marshal show back in the day was cool.
The officer’s command of language is superb. Lucid and eloquent.
Bring him back. Very insightful 😊
I would have liked to see him comment on the fugitive chase in The French Connection.
Next y'all should get a mime to review mimes in television and movies. But, obviously, they'd have to mime the whole thing. Riveting stuff.
Because mimes are always on duty.
This guy is a great expert… good stuff
Great review. I was hoping he would address the scene in so many movies like this were the commander orders his crew to find out "His name, where he grew up, every job he ever had, what he ate for breakfast, who his second grade teacher was, his girlfriend's mother's best friend..." Sometimes that just all seems way over the top.
I like this guest and video. Thank you Insider for doing this.
This one was cool! Enjoyed the insight
The only thing I didn’t like about this one was that he kept calling shotguns rifles. And not even ar-12s or saiga-12s which are mag fed shotgun’s derived from rifle designs, but he kept calling like mossberg 500s rifles.
This is the best "How Real Is It?" interview i've watched very informative, Mr. Peppers is very knowledgeable and so easy to listen to. I'd want him back for more.
I'm from Boston and I remember we closed down all of MA to catch the marathon bomber...
You should have paid more attention; he said that the only reason Federal authorities would give the ok to close down a major city would be because of a terrorist attack! I.E. the Boston Marathon bomb....
@@frankiefavero1666 lol reading comprehension is hard I don't see where I said he didn't say that... lol
@@frankiefavero1666 I just stated a 100% fact thank you for adding absolutely nothing to this comment section.. hahahah
@@rileyhaley3848 nah, you contributed nothing new and added an example of the exception that this guy mentioned... keeping it real :)
@@frankiefavero1666 look at you making ASSumptions lol
I had no idea Samuel L. Jackson was also a US Marshal
Was about to say the same thing
Nah, he doesn't say 'muthafuckin' enough
The brother looks more like Morris Chestnut imo.
I really appreciate him coming over and explaining all the protocol, BUT realism does entail a lot of protocol breaking, even more so when we're talking about the police, so I think he should've taken that into account and rated some of the scenes higher when protocol was indeed broken
Breaking Bad was off the books because Hank messed up by having a Walt right under his nose.
Expert calls a pump shotgun an assault rifle. Uh, what?
FYI assault rifles aren't sold in the US, only semi-automatic, which except for appearance are exactly the same as great grandfathers hunting rifle except great grand paw would consider the .223/ 5.56 round most commonly used in modern semi-automatics a varmint cartridge.
That was a shotgun, not a rifle...
There are shotguns with rifled barrels.
He did it twice too, both times were obvious pump action shotguns. The one in US Marshalls he called an assault rifle.
@Adam V Thanks, man. I will look out for my badge in the mail.
I was a fugitive for a few months in my 20s lol.. didn't last long. It's not fun and exciting like on TV at all. I didn't know you needed *MONEY* and lots of it to stay on the lamb💯
It's actually 'on the lam'.
Dude should have a go at "Midnight Run"
Oh, my gosh! Why so many cuts in the video? It is like a puzzle put together!
21 Bridges: "This crime" let's not forget the "crime" was the murder/execution of several police officers. I think the response was very realistic. The mayor and chief of police would shut down their city to catch them. I would have ranked it at least a 6/10.
Wish they would have covered OG Point Break!
Would a fugitive try to surf a tsunami to get away?! You're God damn right he would! According to him they've jumped from buildings 😄
Saw this dude on the US Marshall Manhunt show on A&E years ago.
Can you make a "Real magician reacts to magic(tricks) in movies". That will be awesome
"they would never sit a prisoner to their right if their weapon is on the right" - I, a police officer doing this every time: oh well😅
Also, we unfortunately don't have anything between the front seats and the back😅
At least, back in Berlin, we had special cars to transport the 'bad' ones where the have like little cells
One fugitive scene I would have like to see his take on was in 'First Blood'. Rambo is up in those mountains and Sheriff Teague had everyone looking for him. Colonel Trautman shows up and tells Teague to leave a hole in their lines where Rambo can escape. Defuse the situation. Tells him, that he'll turn up in a couple of weeks, working at some car wash or something where he could be taken into custody in a safer, more controlled situation (I'm paraphrasing, here). Of course, Teague, while following the script, refuses. That's when Colonel Trautman utters the 'classic' line: "If you're gonna send that many men after Rambo you're gonna need something." Teague: "Oh yeah? What's that?" Trautman: "A good supply of body bags."
How accurate and correct would you find the advice of Colonel Trautman?
Having served for 32 years in the USAF as an attack aircraft pilot, I, of course, went through SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape) training many times. It's not hard to evade that many people in that kind of terrain if you paid attention in your schools. We were all 'captured' during training because, well, if we're too good at evasion, then you're missing out on a significant portion of what your training is about, but it's nice to know that they had to cheat to find us. I say all that to emphasize that in several scenarios, we were allowed to pass through concentrated search grids on several occasions. The reasoning was that it would give the unexperienced a false sense of confidence and we would lower our guard. An enemy wants a pilot to be sure for all kinds of reasons, but they want us ALIVE if possible and if they can avoid a firefight to get us, they will.
16:30 "Assault rifle" when it was clearly a shotgun...
One of the best " How Real Is It? " I've seen so far. You can see and feel that M. Rasheen Peppers really knows his stuff (and that's not always the case 😁).
More from Marshall Peppers, please! I really enjoyed this one. He’s great at explaining both the how and why of what he does.
No-Knock - As long as you go to the right house...
Ra, bringing the business! Excellent evaluation.
I looked at the thumbnail and thought "Samuel L Jackson is a real life US Marshall?"
No Knock Warrant is scary... when the officers have the wrong address.
14:49 12x quick cuts in 10 seconds?? Come on editors, please stop this ridiculousness, we have attention spans.
You know the rules. Everytime you hear "That's Unrealistic" it's a free-pour shot of Tequila.
bro looks like the villan from sunny with a chance of meatball 2
this guy looks like real life nick fury lmao
I was with him and in belief of what he had to say until 16:32 when he called a shotgun an assault rifle and at 18:11 when he called a shotgun a rifle again 🤦. He's a seasoned vet an makes that mistake
He isn't wrong. Federal and state law definitions place shotguns as assault rifles.
They are literally defined as rifles by law. Seems like you’re the one who needs to learn something.
Federal law calls them shotguns. Maybe your just a bum who thinks they know all that and he’s a vet working by law 😂
great work Thank you
Very insightful and interesting!
This man's pimp name would be Pepperjack
Gotta love this guy, a lot of the experts on these series dismiss the movies or incompetence in the movie by the officers/police, but in the Bourne and The Fugitive scene he even admits that its happened before that Fugitives slip by, or that they turn out to be very agile, perimeter’s not shut off, or that blocking a viaduct, while dangerous could work. A lot of nuance that he’s seeing even in very action-y scenes, very much appreciated.
I remember him from Manhunters: Fugitive Task Force!
Wow, so in The Fugitive, the "I don't care line" wasn't just cool, it was realistic and in line with their jobs. Wow. No wonder The Fugitive remains so realistic till today.
Dude I know people that have missed court over a drug possession charge that the Marshal's came and got. So saying they get the most violent criminals is a little much.
Soap trusted you!
I’ve been in detective vehicles with no partition, also seen cops do hit and runs while chasing someone
0:14 I'm pretty sure this is Tracy Morgan doing Bryan Fellows...
Hi I'm Bryan Fellows
don’t let this man lie to you, it’s just samuel l jackson studying a role
those glasses are exactly what he would wear
This guy is very knowledgeable in his field for sure
The cuts in the interview footage make this unwatachable.👎
The expert missed out that Gérard did order the vehicles checked as they went through the tunnel before going into the drain.
I knew a guy who was a former D1 track athlete He got away with so many crimes because the cops couldnt catch him on foot and in the city they couldnt chase him by car. He got caught breaking into a vape shop and then ran 3 miles to get away from the cops.
Soon as he said he Policed Newark, I knew I could trust his word cause we got hella fugitives out here lol
Then he joined the S. H. I. E. L. D.
Awesome video. Great expert. 👍
I couldn't listen to what he was saying. Those glasses are the bomb!
To be fair in salt the only reason they transported her like that was because she was one of them
Okay so he can catch a person, but no one is worried about the cop that says that he doesn't care that he's arresting the wrong person? More over we're not worried that many cops are like this? What?