He plays a decorated war vet and a little known battle that might have been the bloodiest enough you know to stand its hitting theaters and v o d on july 3rd scott our ema you get as you can see i live in an airport so. Its like that where he ended up living in the perfect work for year for scott a bus to does that we get on it we appreciate it thank you but yeah closure you spin for a long time. Always fly in like brother you about to get on the flight or did you just get off the flight was it was a paranoid city or what was it like on the plane. I mean its quiet its you know its its live but theres people i havent stopped flying. Back and forth to mexico a few times during this nonsense but. Its great i mean its you know i wish there was more flights more options tell me about your new film. Yeah well you know you said it very pointedly there. Really was you know incredible circumstances these details but under. You know i mean i can only imagine the stress level. That doesnt stop until you get home and ive always been fascinated by these stories true stories that it really examines that examines these these really tough times. This one in particular happened in 2009 in afghanistan in a valley of kamdesh an area kamdesh in afghanistan. And it really just its all of a group of guys of 50 or so guys to run into there at this hour is this remote outpost but that was by all accounts street running a terrible terrible attack to live. And trust sort of knew it. And many people spoke up and said this is a good position for times and war machine sort of just overlooked it in and then like you know what happened was if there is one of the bloodiest battles in afghanistan for almost 24 hours and what they were that years in extreme heroism. And incredibly true sure. You know when you when you come to work with change guard and such an app descriptor because thats what it is its a big and eggs are open force through the folly of man the gets pushed on a hill and then the people on the point are young bad asses who you know every time ive talked to a soul. Ive met a couple who. I hadnt quite read right but the camaraderie they felt superseded all the madness of it all the you know the danger of it they have the ability of one of those 50 to be with the other 50 it seem like the very life blood of the whole yeah you know if thats whats interesting about the stories you know sure do i play. One of the men who received the medal of honor yes when i miss a but the stories about everyone who was d there and everyone whos and we sacrifice because certain guys you know received medals at that certain people didnt but they were all there just the same and that camaraderie that you speak about is what kept them together what kept them alive what kept them there pushed them to to it in the face of almost certain death. To really say. That were going to win. Tell me who you are tell me the rudiments of the story itself the battle itself were talking about 50 men i assume and a world class hall way up there and tell me by clint and tommy i am usually what you say congressional medal of honor winner we have met the code of meyer hes still alive but usually its its to cease tell us the story of clanton the other men. Sure. But never met actually but ive spoken to on the phone. He is a very humble man he is. And you know ive read his book extensively. See is that hes a man who. Did it at the very core doesnt believe hes better than anyone he believes hes you know is job in his. Heart in this whole thing was to serve his country he was his his family was a family both people in the service. Everything his brothers to his father grandfather. And he you know when youd speak to him you really hear in his voice that he doesnt you know he does even you know he doesnt want that burden of caring that many. You know really is the current they nobody wants to theyre there and theyre unequipped completely to receive the praise almost. You have to make it brief and to the point and let them know that youre not doing it in a cursory sense because they cannot sit in that sort of phonics thats not why theyre the guys they are thats not why theyre the guys who save the world for us. Yeah they all said. What what were the exact. Layout of the battle that theyre tell me why why would something its its sort of like the end tatum of afghanistan i believe its the bloodiest battle there its one that i had not even heard about i feel remiss tell us about the details of the battle and and how it played out. Yeah it was. You know it was in a fishbowl really at the bottom of. These mountains that completely surrounded the outpost which you know from the from a tactical perspective should have never happened it just was a royal fuck up on all accounts it should have never happened. And. You know it happened. It happened that it had happened many times before this actual battle so there was many skirmishes many contact points where the afghans were testing them and testing our response to this so when it finally did happen it took a 3rd of the 2009 it was very well perhaps they had come in with almost 400. 00 insurgents and they had they had been testing them for over a year and so they really knew their countermeasures well our countermeasures and it just didnt quit and then to add to this battle we had we had difficulty with with weather and in air support during the time of the battle so that really created a just. You know a confluence of events at the same time that normally maybe we couldve suppressed this but it it just it ultimately you know that it was a perfect storm. How many men walk away from that group of 50. There was. 8 passed away. During that day and what is that thats 42 it was written by jake tapper which amazed me ive always said i talk to jake many times over the years and i did not know he had even written a book but the talk to take it all that and give me any insight. I did jake you know chicken i had spent time there he wasnt there during that day but he you know after he had been out there and spent that time there i think it compelled him to you know after seeing him been there after seeing what happens to compelled him to write the story and it is it is interesting i you know i wouldnt pay jake tapper when i see him on c. N. N. To write this book but i think the great job and you know hes just a really nice fellow and we had a great. Great talks we continue our relationship came out to austin texas to visit me after filming and weve got some barbecue down there so. Once a man breaks barbecue with your best days for a life i like the fact too that a lot of guys who are veterans of the battle in 2009 they also turned up in a film right. Yeah thats true we had a genuine rodrigues who was there and he played in self which was which is pretty interesting we had. We had a bunch of other veterans and people there who may not been there on the day that this facet place but they are either you know 6 months prior or d you know were there is a year before that so in order was there as one of our military consultants d through the filmy. Get a lot of help. You know guys like rodriguez and carter must look at the oxide your old man and a few other people film sets can sometimes get a little sucky and a little whiny some people run a tight ship or they keep moving along but i think can you imagine when the rodriguez and carter hears stuff like weve got to flip it were for going to night shooting tonight were going to flip it im not going to be in there just look at your brother im sitting there all 400 cashews have a good one thing about the crap service. True story you know i will say and i will give a lot of the guys that worked on this film a lot of credit everybody showed up and they showed up with humility they showed up ready to tell the story and and there wasnt really there wasnt any bichon you know which was incredible ive worked on film sets there have been and this was it was about doing this story justice and ordering these men. There you go if youre going to be the inner alaka tour folks on timeless heroes you knew your karma would just be so bad if you came in with the wrong intention im glad to hear that the film were talking about is the outpost. Scott east which is the actor in play Staff SergeantClint Romesha it is hitting theaters and v o d on july 3rd once again the outpost not just for the outpost and when we come back well talk to god about hes got a Clothing Brand. So maybe hes wearing one of the shards there and also just talk about acting in general how things gone seems like a good catch scottish wit this is Dennis Miller plus one. It lead to even the e. U. The e. U. You. You you. You you. You. You. The primary purpose of history is joining just in the past as a guide to understanding the present and future history should not be is feeling that missed out because a lot of history is facing. So how should we find the right balance the statue size the life. Thousands of american men and women choose to serve in the countrys military and the decision lotos sheltered lives every song came to a complete. The day that i was raped to be instructed here you know told to shut up what they kill me and i see how it destroyed my life any screamed at me and he made me come in and he grabbed my arm and he write me with his birthing area if you take into account that women dont report because of the extreme retaliation and its probably somewhere near about half a 1000000 women have now been sexually assaulted in the us military rape is a very very traumatizing thing to have happen but ive never seen trauma like ive seen it from women who are veterans who have suffered military sexual trauma reporting rape is more likely to get the victim punished them the offender i had an almost 10 year career or chose very invested in and i gave that up to report a sex offender who was not even going to justice or put on the registry this is some plan is sheer power and violence male sexual predators for the large part of target whoever is there to prey upon whether thats man or woman. Og no 2 no crow. No shots no. Action. Well its true no 1st. Point ch your thirst for action. Welcome back redundant smaller plus one were joined by Scott Eastwood nice enough to jump into a coffee shop in our port and pick up their wife im not very mad committed to to the interview. A lot of people get that im driving through mall and i can hear you got a huge crowd out. Tell me about a Clothing Brand where they were or what i like this idea of a very micro idea i always admired how micro honors the working man in america and this has a little temper that tell me about the Clothing Brand made here. Sure to tell you the impetus for the whole thing was. You know just looking around in our in our country and look at a round of what i buy personally and and everything you know it seems that. It is outsourced and that bugs me not that there are great products elsewhere and there are but i think this idea of localizing. Localizing to your neighbor to somebody who might live next you might. Need that job if its it just seems like we had one of the 2 greatest Manufacturing Capabilities in the world at one point and we still do in i think we should celebrate American Workers and celebrate American Goods i think if anything this this pandemic has showed us just now that its time that we received. Making goods for cheaper just because we can. And really keeping the bloodline of our economy going by driving jobs back and celebrating the people that we can. Talk of wartime footing quite frankly when you get the american economy. When you get the american we talked earlier about the war machine when you get the American Economic machine going when theyve got their eye on the prize nobody when we start pulling together the oars but it cuts through the water like america so im glad to hear that that was the pitch b. R. The the idea behind it is a just you to just jump in alone you had a right here dummy on the financing set up and all that. No no i have a partner have a great hair theres a color. Danger happen to use a serial entrepreneur and you know we just we were very much aligned on our own are thinking about this by the way the brand is called made here. The public should give it a plug and you know right now we are primarily selling socks boxers and some apparel goods but we have plans to. Move into other sectors and create you know goods and and then partner with the brands that are already here Manufacturing Companies that are already here doing great products and and continue to grow things. Like they are they were there. To accompany the bread and once again scott said the Clothing Brand is made here at tell me a botcher in a day series yeah no you know just we know were always talking about how to market things and how to. Value add to a custom right not just ask somebody to buy something you know i think thats cheap and i think if you can value add or give somebody content provide something with information thats intertainment. Thats great and so whos said you know what do we do in america lets start showing people what we actually do and so we decided to really could create a series of around that all things in a day so we would you know dissects. On a macro level. You know do what we do in different sectors of our economy. And show how we do things for 1st episode that we were. Able to get it going that us nimitz which is an incredible experience. We got to really show you know how an Aircraft Carrier. In a day. Thats a. Absolutely great idea and it gives you so many options to associate the brand with the true American Star i absolutely love that that is a great value at the end of day series once again the Clothing Brand is made here and were talking to scotty spaceward who is the head of the made here promise. They tell me about Everybody Knows about that and you must do a 1000 interviews in your life but i got to give up your dad youre probably in debt tell me about your mom i think you raised with your mom in hawaii right. Thanks for asking me to not a lot of people ask that so its i always say that sometimes people ask that you say you know what dont you could last so they dont ask about my mom and thats you know. I think of the dad things the low hanging fruit for people but my mom etc and. It yeah you know my dad and my mom is shes an incredible woman and she shes. Completely selfless probably probably too upset to reform. She i mean im she she raised me mark in hawaii like you said which was an incredible Life Experience. Getting to grow up there was you know. You know a brick lesson getting to be. 2 to really be in nature and. Form of love for the ocean for love for you know just just the country really. I grew up there and age 8 to 16 and i say what grew up in hawaii. As a white boy. It was it it was interesting it was yet how we play you know but it was just it was a great experience. That will give you our no command not record because you know. Better toughen you up for it oh well what brings him to the mainland at 16 what do you want to pursue acting or what grabbed you. I think. You know growing up in hawaii hes an incredible Life Experience but like any any small town you have. To see something bigger and to experience new things. Highland fever rather so you get the you get to hollywood are i dont know maybe you want to carmel i know. I know your old man was mayor up there fwiw boy talk about beautiful places scotty youve gone from hawaii to a school choir to the most beautiful places on the other side of the i love you guys my struggle but its led you reckon a. Brother when i think of you out there every day which i got 18 mile drive its its like what he got 3 its absolutely the toms go black existence. First its a cult listen its. You over at Cypress Point having to carry 2 bags wed move. Ringback back to the to do a nice course something. You know i was always fascinated with. I cant say that i always knew of one tour or. Even a time still do but i do love you know i think. Telling stories creating parts that effects people that moves people either to tears or laughter is. Something thats. It really is just you know its its a beautiful thing in life and life would be sort of both out art without music without film without you know without the arts and so i was always fascinated with this idea of storytelling and then you know growing up watching my father. Tell these incredibly stories i remember i remember them squares day it was 10 years old or so and it was. I was so. It was watching unforgiven you know its the moment when when hes telling young young scholfield kid then. You know we all got it coming kid and i just remember going to this hell of a movie and just thinking thats what i wanted to. Listen i thought the Mount Rushmore great westerns was close with john ford and the searchers and stuff like that but your father came along later and that is a thats one well talk about for the rest you know the westerns they might not be in vogue at any given moment but they are timeless it will stay around forever and thats one of the office yeah he said but i listen id like it like i said i want to talk about you ill talk about your career but boy that i didnt see those director chops come in i mean i didnt know him from adam but then i watched him in the surgical young things and you watch him early in the cow and things and then youre thinking boy what an artist he turned out to be amazing good for him you have been a director it showed you a map. You look at it see even cross that bridge yet but i mean yes yes i do only because it you know i have to you know theyre doing this for 1617 years now and its at a certain point you just. You see what you like and you see what you dont and you say well if i ever got a shot. I do it that way. Melissa man you should do a film about the kid over your right shoulder because i think its max headroom. You know you know it you know to sit here Dennis Miller is really here. And there were it was a movie you know that even right there. Hey listen when we started the road we got some social Media Questions and nancy right on facebook wants to know and i dont know if this is your creed election do do you want to do a comedy and it looks like action and obviously this one here is a true tale and. A sacred what about comedy you want to do comedy at some point under a 100 percent of the sudden i got to do it a very small comedy early in my career that no one should ever see but. It really gave me the bug and i said that is a hell of a time filming Something Like that its so solemn every day you show to work youre trying laughing that i ever got a chance you know i would i would jump at it so i you know ive been trying but were trying to put some together luke wilson and i actually got a script was put me together right now it was pretty pretty darn funny so well see how listen talk about films that will last forever tell luke idiocracy. I think one of my favorite. Were talking to Scott Eastwood and he has a film coming out called the outpost he plays a decorated war veteran and it is hitting theaters and g. O. D. On july 3rd also has a clothing line it sounds like theyre doing it the right way its called made here and also look for the accompanying as he called it the ad. In a day series its all of us want to be. In a day on an Aircraft Carrier the member nimitz and it sounds like you did great way to comingle the friend and the people who might wear the bret scott to use with folks in the film is the outpost july 3rd look for thank you scott bruce shared it its been dentist miller plus one. Rule. And one else so something seems wrong. Dont blow just dont on. Me. Get to see pal it just did become agitated and in detroit he closed the trail. When something find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. Secret prisons are not usually what comes to mind when thinking about europe however he even the most prosperous can be deceived weve been busy roads on the way to view the houses were allowed to leave prison was located and only people had access to the story investigators held the uncovered the darkest dealings of the secret services but i mean. The great of no. Justice. Is your media a reflection of reality. In a world transformed. What will make you feel safe. Isolation community. Are you going the right way or are you being. Direct. What is true what is faith. In the world corrupted you need to descend. To join us in the death. Or inmate in the shallow. Greetings and sell you take a shim all right while millions and millions of People Living in the United States will wake up on july the 1st with no idea how to pay their rent or earn an income in the wake of both the us congress and the trumpet ministrations abject failure to protect and support us through. The covert 19 pandemic that my friends will not be the biggest news story of the week or the day no it will not know that slot is reserved for yet another helping of russia gate or in this case what bounty gate oh actually no you cant use about a gate because that was the new Orleans Saints a few years back when they put bounties on play ok so by the gates you cant use that as the way some kind of gate will eventually find its way to the