Feral Jundi

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Film: Cade Courtley, Contractor and Host of ‘Surviving Disaster’

   First off, this show definitely gets a FJ thumbs up.  Each episode is all about how to survive some really tough and realistic scenarios.  The two shows I recommend especially are the mall shooting and the hijacked airplane episodes.  Both of them are filled with excellent information on how to realistically survive and lead the efforts.  This stuff falls in line with the ‘hero in waiting concept’ I keep talking about.  That there is no one else that is going to save you and your fellow victims, so it is up to you all to stop the terrorists or criminal, and get out alive.

   The second part of this, is that Cade Courtley is one of us.  He is a security contractor (or was, now that he has this Hollywood gig), and this is something we can all be proud of.  Cade is representing his SEAL community, and this industry well.

     I also think that these shows will no doubt lead to the survival of folks. It reaches out to the kid, the mom, the grandmother, the wife, etc., and gets everyone involved in an entertaining and intriguing show.  It is all about arming people with the knowledge necessary to defeat the Jokers, the Mumbai terrorists, the fires and floods, the 9/11 hijackers, and the Hasans.  We cannot and should not depend on someone else to save us, and this show is just one more way of arming yourself with life saving and enemy defeating information.  Be the ‘hero in waiting’ and win that fight. –Matt

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Cade Courtley, Host of Spike TV’s Surviving Disaster

What will you do when disaster strikes? Spike TV’s new original series Surviving Disaster, led by Navy SEAL Cade Courtley, vividly takes viewers through catastrophic scenarios and arms them with the knowledge needed to survive the unthinkable. Courtley tackles worst-case scenarios and equips viewers with the practical information needed to save their own lives and the lives of their loved ones. Whether the threat is natural or man-made or on a national or personal level, Courtley speaks directly to the viewers and guides them through a comprehensive, step-by-step process to not only survive the big picture disaster, but endure the many dangerous obstacles that may occur within each catastrophic event. While leading viewers out of danger, Courtley not only provides helpful tips and hands-on instruction, but swiftly points out common misconceptions and fatal mistakes. Unlike any other series, Surviving Disaster may actually save lives by providing actions that anyone can perform.

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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Executive Protection: R.L. Oatman On Film In Mexico, Protecting Author Brad Thor

Filed under: Executive Protection,Film,Mexico — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 9:56 AM

   This is a show I would like to see.  Oatman is famous in the executive protection (EP) world, and the courses he teaches are fantastic from what I have heard.  It is definitely on my list for future training. R.L. Oatman is also the author of several excellent books on the subject of EP and security.

   What really makes this interesting, is the author that he is protecting while filming in the slums of Mexico. The author’s name is Brad Thor and he is writing a thriller about battling the gangs and crime in Mexico.  Brad Thor has made quite a name for himself in the military/police/contractor world, and this show should be packed with all sorts of industry best practices for EP.  Check it out. –Matt

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Towson security firm seen at work in Mexico

Team protects author researching drug trade, kidnappings

Gus G. Sentementes

December 1, 2009

Robert L. Oatman does executive protection – and no, he isn’t a beefy, brainless bodyguard.

He is a fit, trim and congenial figure who likes to wear crisp suits and who works with his team to draw up complex plans for shielding people they’re paid to protect. It’s a point of professional pride that none of his clients have ever been attacked on his watch over the past 20 years.”If you’ve got to touch your gun, it means you’ve made a mistake,” said Oatman, 62, whose R.L. Oatman & Associates Inc. is based in Towson. “It’s not about the gun. It’s all about planning.”Much of the work that Oatman and his associates do is low profile and behind the scenes, since most clients don’t want attention drawn to them and they want to avoid dangerous situations. Because of the confidential nature of his work, Oatman avoids publicity and ordinarily would’ve scoffed at the idea of allowing a film crew to shoot him and his team in action – until the right opportunity called.A New York-based television production company called him up a few months ago, wanting to send a crew to shadow him and his team on one of their missions for a new show called “Dangerous Drives,” on Fox’s Speed Channel cable network.It turned out to be a new kind of adventure for Oatman, who has been on many in his 40 years of law enforcement and executive protection experience. In September, Oatman and his team protected thriller writer Brad Thor on a trip to some of the grittiest parts of Mexico City while the author did research for a book on drug trafficking and kidnapping – and a film crew taped their efforts.

 

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

Film: Terror in Mumbai

Filed under: Film,India — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 7:21 AM

   Outstanding.  This is the kind of film I like, just because it breaks down what happened and allows the viewing public to see first hand how to combat something like this.  Knowing is half the battle, and we have to expect that attacks like this will happen again, and in all corners of the world.  Get prepared, and study how these things work I say.  Be a ‘hero in waiting’, and foil these attacks by being able to recognize the signs and actions of it, and inserting a monkey wrench into the terror machine. That smart phone in your hand, is your weapon, along with anything else you can think of to cause harm to or stop this kind of attack.  Or you can coward away, and expect someone else to save you. –Matt

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Terror in Mumbai

Synopsis

TERROR IN MUMBAI features exclusive audio tapes of the intercepted phone calls between the young gunmen and their controllers in Pakistan, and testimony from the sole surviving gunman.

The Mumbai attackers’ targets included the city’s main railway station, a popular cafe, two major hotels and a Jewish center. Leaving the city’s iconic Taj Mahal Hotel in flames, and Mumbai’s woefully unprepared police and security forces paralyzed with fear, the attacks sent an ominous message to governments around the world.

“Much as the 9/11 attacks in the U.S. did in 2001, the events that unfolded last November in Mumbai served as a terrifying wake-up call, not just to India but to the rest of the world,” says narrator Fareed Zakaria, who appears on camera in the opening and closing of the film. “It broadened the spectrum of our enemies and brought attention to the number of different terrorist groups that exist, who may be bigger and better organized than we ever imagined. The fact that a small group of gunmen was able to inflict so much pain, and the government of the second most populous nation on earth was unable to stop them for three days, should change our sense of the dangers out there.”

In the words of one of the operation’s masterminds, who remotely controlled the terrorists’ every deadly move by cell phone from neighboring Pakistan, “This was just the trailer. Just wait till you see the rest of the film.” The assailants belonged to the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, or “Army of the Righteous,” which aims to “liberate” Muslims living under Indian rule in Kashmir. Their mission: global jihad against the “infidels.”

TERROR IN MUMBAI presents a moment-by-moment account of the horrific attacks through interviews with survivors and Indian police officials, archival news coverage, extensive video surveillance footage of the terrorists in action, and chilling audio excerpts of cell-phone conversations intercepted by security forces. The phone intercepts provide a grotesque running commentary as the controllers, watching events unfold on live TV, direct the gunmen, telling them where the security forces are, which of their hostages should be killed and how to do it. With the killers wounded and asking what to do next, the tapes reveal the controllers calmly urging them to fight to the death and not allow themselves to be taken alive.

Guests from the Taj Mahal and Oberoi hotels tell how the terrorists first staged mass executions, then worked their way through the corridors, killing whenever they managed to enter a room. An elderly couple recounts how they were spared by the terrorists when it was realized they were fellow Muslims, while all around them were mowed down in a hail of bullets. Perhaps the most unsettling testimony comes from Ajmal Amir Kasab, the sole surviving terrorist, who answers his captors’ questions with startling frankness from a gurney soon after being captured.

While the Mumbai attacks differed in many ways from the Al Qaeda assault on the U.S. on September 11, 2001, the personal motives of the Laskar-e-Taiba terrorists bear some of the same hallmarks, notably the belief that there would be material wealth for their families and heavenly glory for themselves if they died for the cause of jihad.

What remains unclear is how this quest for holiness meshed with the indiscriminate nature of the killings, which mowed down Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

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Film: The Surge, The Untold Story

Filed under: Film,Iraq — Tags: , , — Matt @ 4:20 AM

Understanding the Surge from ISW on Vimeo.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Film: Ken Loach Taking ‘Route Irish’

Filed under: Film,Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 6:24 PM

   I have no idea how this will turn out.  Anyone got odds?  lol. –Matt

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Ken Loach taking ‘Route Irish’

Film centers on love triangle between two men and a woman

By Stuart Kemp

Nov 5, 2009

Ken Loach is reuniting with cinematographer Chris Menges on his latest film titled “Route Irish,” penned by the filmmaker’s longtime writing partner Paul Laverty and produced by Rebecca O’Brien.

Menges, whose resume boasts previous Loach movies including “Poor Cow” and “Kes,” returns to work with Loach on the movie billed as a tense love triangle between two men and a woman.

The film stars big-screen debutants Mark Womack (“Sorted”) and Andrea Lowe (“Where the Heart is”) and also boasts comedian John Bishop. They join the supporting cast of Trevor Williams and Talib Hamafraj.

It details the story of two men who work as private security contractors in Iraq who risk their lives in a city awash with violence and greed. When Frankie is killed on “Route Irish” — the road linking Baghdad airport with the Green Zone — Fergus, wracked with grief and guilt, rejects the official explanation and determines to investigate the truth of his friend’s death.

Route Irish is a Sixteen Films Why Not Prods. and Wild Bunch production made with the support of Les Films de Fleuve, BIM, Diaphana, Tornasol and Alta. Other financiers are France 2 and North West Vision Media. Wild Bunch is handling international sales at AFM.

Find story here.

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