Drill instructor: Louder, louder!
You're not screaming at me!
I can't hear you, [unintelligible].
Recruit: Aye, aye, sir!
Aye, aye, sir!
Aye, aye, sir!
Aye, aye, sir!
Narrator: This is Marine Corps boot camp
in Parris Island, South Carolina.
Before they become United States Marines,
all recruits have to graduate
from the Marine Corps' 13-week
basic training program,
which tests them physically
and psychologically.
Drill instructor: No
one feels sorry for you!
Ty Kopke: It's a pressure
cooker for 12 weeks
under the pressure of an
intimidating drill instructor,
someone that's putting
you under the scrutiny
of attention to detail every single day.
And, to a certain degree,
everything you do is never
gonna be good enough.
Recruit: Everything at boot camp sucks.
It's gonna hurt.
It's gonna be painful,
but it's only gonna hurt more
if you look at it that way.
Drill instructor: Around, around, around!
Kopke: It's boot camp, and
it's supposed to prepare you
for the challenges that lie beyond.
[cadence]
Narrator: We spent five
days at Parris Island,
where we saw different companies
at various stages of training.
Drill instructor: You will
not run. You will walk.
Get on the yellow footprints right now.
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Drill instructor: You will
do what you're told to do,
when you're told to do
it, and without question.
Do you understand?
Recruits: Yes, sir.
Narrator: On day one of boot camp,
new recruits arrive at
the receiving barracks,
where they take their first
steps toward becoming Marines
by walking through these silver hatches,
symbolizing the threshold
between the outside
world and Parris Island.
Drill instructor: You will walk
through these silver hatches
once and never again.
Do you understand?
Recruits: Aye, sir!
Narrator: Once inside,
recruits are processed
and assigned to their platoons.
Drill instructor: Put it up!
Recruit: Yes, ma'am.
Drill instructor: I know you were told
not to come with your hair down.
Put it up in a bun.
In a bun, bun, bun,
bun, move faster.
Recruit: Aye, ma'am.
Aye, ma'am.
Narrator: After graduation,
Marines commit to a minimum
of four years of service.
Upon entering the Corps,
an entry-level private
will earn around $20,000 a year.
Drill instructor: Sit down.
Recruit: Yes, sir.
Narrator: Recruits are
required to make a phone call
to a family member or their recruiter
to let them know they've arrived.
Recruit: This is recruit Hatcher.
I have arrived safely at Parris Island.
Please do not send any food
or bulky items to me in the mail.
Narrator: They're only allowed to read
the script printed for
them inside the phone bank.
Recruit: I will contact
you in seven to nine days
by letter with my new address.
Thank you for your support.
Goodbye for now.
Drill instructor: Get in the classroom.
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Narrator: Recruits are given three chances
to get someone on the line.
Recruit: Sir, my recruiter's
not answering, sir.
Drill instructor: Call him again.
Narrator: Not every recruit
is able to make a connection.
Drill instructor: If there is no answer,
hang it up and close it.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Narrator: But they won't
have long to dwell on it.
The Marine Corps Recruit
Depot in Parris Island
sits on 8,000 acres of the
South Carolina Lowcountry.
It's one of two enlisted recruit depots
in the United States.
The other is in San Diego,
where only male recruits are trained.
Around 20,000 recruits
graduate from Parris Island every year
before joining the more than 180,000
Marines actively serving today.
Kopke: We take young men and
women from all walks of life,
all cultures, maybe they were
rich, maybe they were poor,
they've got different
religious backgrounds,
they are the melting pot of America.
And they come here with one common goal,
and that's to be a United States Marine.
Clip: Parris Island, South Carolina.
Here, everyday Americans become Marines,
the toughest fighting men in the world.
Narrator: Male recruits have been trained
at Parris Island since 1915.
Female recruits began
to train there in 1949.
[whistling]
Recruits: [yelling]
Narrator: Today, females
comprise under 25%
of recruits at Parris Island
and approximately 8% of the
United States Marine Corps,
the lowest percentage of any
United States military branch.
[cadence]
A recruit's day begins
before the sun comes up.
Their typical wake-up
call is 0400, or 4 a.m.
[yelling]
Recruits endure an intense
series of physical challenges.
Drill instructor: Four, three,
am I hearing that right?
Four, three?
Recruit: Yes, sir.
Drill instructor: Fail!
Narrator: Some recruits arrive
in better shape than others.
Kopke: Some never did anything
more than sit on a couch,
you know, as a couch potato.
And some may have been
collegiate athletes.
So there's a vast spread
of what their athletic
fitness and ability is.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Narrator: Much of their
training happens here,
in Leatherneck Square, where a series of
intimidating obstacles
comprise the confidence course.
Drill instructor: No,
I'm tired of watching you
freaking fail. You failed this event.
Nope, just grab your canteens
and go, you failed this event.
Recruit: May this recruit
have one more try, sir?
Drill instructor: What did I just say?
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Drill instructor: What'd I just say?
Recruit: Aye, sir!
Drill instructor: Go!
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Kopke: The training program
is progressive in nature.
It starts out in a crawl,
walk, run approach,
throughout training.
99.9% of those that get here
can complete all those requirements
at the end of training,
regardless of how they started.
Recruit: I'm slipping,
please, please help.
I don't want to do this.
Drill instructor: You're fine.
Recruit: No, I'm not, please.
Drill instructor: Good lord, son.
Narrator: Any recruit
with a fear of heights
gets the chance to conquer that fear,
courtesy of this 47-foot-tall tower.
Recruits must rappel down
using two different methods.
Recruit: For me, the rappel tower was hard
'cause I sort of had a fear of heights.
Drill instructor: Grab
hold of my right hand
with your right hand.
Recruit: You have to trust a rope,
so there's nothing to be worried about.
You'll be safe all the time.
Recruit: Can you please help me?
Drill instructor: I'm
trying to help you, son.
Recruit: I don't wanna go down.
Narrator: Recruits with
a phobia of heights
have little choice but to face their fear.
One of the most dreaded parts of training
is the gas chamber.
Drill instructor: Crush,
crush, crush, crush.
Narrator: Where recruits
are exposed to CS gas,
more commonly known as tear gas.
Once the recruits enter the chamber,
they break the seals of their gas masks.
Recruit: You go in. You feel
it instantly hit your skin.
You just feel burning.
Drill instructor: Say
something to me, now.
Recruit: Feels like those few
minutes felt like an hour.
Narrator: After around five minutes,
the recruits are free.
But the pain endures.
Recruit: Definitely, you
thank God for fresh air.
It's really nice to be able to breathe in
and not feel an instant burning sensation.
[coughing]
Antonio Garay: Gas chamber's
important because it
builds confidence.
Confidence in the gear, confidence
in the drill instructors,
and then confidence in themselves.
Narrator: Recruits are trained
in different styles of
hand-to-hand combat.
Drill instructor: First thing
we wanna see is that straight
thrust, you understand?
Recruits: Yes, sir.
Drill instructor: Or that
butt stroke. Scream aye, sir.
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Narrator: A key aspect of
their martial arts training
is fighting with pugil sticks.
Drill instructor: You kill
that opponent, you understand?
Recruits: Aye, aye, sir!
Narrator: The pugil stick
techniques are intended
to mirror those used in
combat while using a bayonet.
Darrin Hill: Here in
the Marine Corps we have
kind of a little ditty
that means red is dead.
[whistling]
[cheering]
So, that red side, it's
supposed to emulate
the actual knife portion
of the actual bayonet
mounted on the weapon.
So anything that you
strike with that red tip,
nine times out of 10, are either gonna be
incapacitated or laid to rest.
[whistling]
Honestly, it gives them an opportunity
to blow off a little steam.
They have a lot of pent-up aggression,
especially towards, maybe,
their drill instructors.
They're out there, they're
actually doing what they feel
like they signed up to do,
which is learn how to combat the enemy.
Narrator: Recruits also
practice with actual bayonets.
Recruit: Marine Corps, Marine Corps,
Marine Corps, Marine Corps.
Drill instructor: Fight back, you!
Narrator: And engage in other types
of hand-to-hand combat.
Drill instructor: Grab the muzzle.
Recruits: Freeze, get back, get back.
Narrator: Although male
and female recruits
do intersect during training,
platoons are separated by gender.
And although the Recruit
Depot has experimented
with integration before,
the Marine Corps is the
only military branch
that separates male and female recruits
during basic training.
According to the Corps, every Marine
is first and foremost a rifleman.
Recruits spend the bulk of two weeks
devoted to marksmanship...
the first of which sees
few shots actually fired.
Jonathan Gilbert: First
off is the fundamentals.
They have to understand how to aim.
They have to understand
exactly how to breathe
when they're taking that shot.
They have to understand exactly
how to squeeze the trigger
and how to have follow-through
and recovery with the rifle.
Kopke: Combat operations
is the foundation for
every single Marine, regardless
of what your occupation is.
What it is to sit behind a rifle,
look down that barrel, and be
able to put lead on target.
[gunshots]
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Drill instructor: You are going to swim
until you pass that ladder.
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Narrator: The Marine Corps is defined
as an amphibious warfare force.
Therefore, swimming plays
a key role in training.
Narrator: During swim week,
recruits go through numerous
exercises in the pool
while wearing their camouflage uniforms.
But training at Parris
Island isn't all physical.
Recruits also spend long
hours in the classroom.
But what may seem like downtime...
Drill instructor: Push, push, push.
Can end at any moment
when a drill instructor
decides to order an
impromptu cardio session.
At Parris Island, it's what
known as getting slayed.
Recruit: It's an experience.
You realize the thing you
done to get in the sandpit,
and then you realize, OK, that hurt,
so let's not do that again.
Recruit: Physically, it
hurts, but me, personally,
I never worried about the
pain I was feeling in my body;
it was more thinking
about the mistake I made
and how I need to
correct it the next time.
[screaming]
Kopke: So, there's gonna be some chaos.
Because, when they come here,
we wanna tear them down a little bit.
And then we wanna bring them back up
into the mold of what it is
to be a United States Marine.
Narrator: Recruit training
culminates in an event known
as the Crucible.
Over the course of 54 hours,
with minimal sleep and food,
recruits must endure
realistic combat scenarios.
The sounds of gunfire and shelling
are played over loudspeakers
mounted in the training area.
Recruits are forced to work together
to overcome obstacles
and achieve objectives
that require problem-solving and strategy.
Drill instructor: You
gotta start all over.
Recruits: Aye, sir.
Narrator: This is what
we saw on the second day.
The recruits had become
exhausted and irritable.
Recruit: Catchers ready?
Recruits: Ready!
Recruit: Jumping.
Recruits: Jump away.
Recruit: Just jump. Jump.
Drill instructor: You're not even jumping.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Drill instructor: You're
just falling down.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Recruit: You know, you go
through a really rough time.
You just start thinking, man,
like, it's hot, I'm thirsty,
my arms haven't felt this
bad in my whole life.
Recruit: We're halfway there, come on.
Recruit: You just keep looking
at the person to the left
and right of you, like,
well, he's doing it.
I gotta keep going.
Like, I'm not gonna let
him do it on his own.
[grunting]
So there's no reason not to push.
Narrator: Once the Crucible is complete,
these recruits officially become Marines.
The day before graduation,
friends and family see their
new Marines for the first time
in more than three months.
[cheering]
Kopke: Families that come
down for graduation day
that haven't seen their son or daughter
in about three months
immediately  notice not only a physical
but an intangible difference.
When they walk across that parade deck
on training day 70 and they graduate,
they're no longer
recruits; they're Marines.
Narrator: Meanwhile, in the
barracks of Lima Company:
Drill instructor: I'm talking to you.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Drill instructor: All
those wrinkles right here,
get all that trash out.
Recruit: Aye, sir.
Narrator: Brand new recruits
diligently square away their racks
before being warmly welcomed
by their senior drill instructor.
James Espinoza: Sit up
straight and look at me.
Our mission is to train each one of you
to become a United States Marine.
Discipline and spirit are
the hallmarks of a Marine.
We will give every effort to train you,
even after some of you
have given up on yourself.
Starting now, you will treat
me and all other Marines
with the highest respect.
Physical or verbal abuse
by any Marine or recruit
will not be tolerated.
My drill instructors and I
will be with you every day.
Everywhere you go,
you must give 100% of
yourself at all times.
Above all else, never quit or give up.
We offer you the challenge
of recruit training
and the opportunity to earn the title
United States Marine.
Recruits: Yes, sir.
