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Welcome to the Veterans Breakfast Club! Our mission is to create communities of listening around veterans and their stories to connect, educate, heal, and inspire. Our two weekly pre-recorded programs are VBC Live and Greatest Generation Live. From the battlefields of World War II to the front lines of today’s active duty service, this podcast captures the voices, memories, and hard-earned wisdom of those who served. Each episode features powerful, firsthand stories from veterans across generations, revealing moments of courage, sacrifice, humor, and humanity. Listeners will hear untold experiences, lessons learned, and reflections that connect past and present military life. Whether honoring legacy or understanding modern service, this podcast bridges generations through authentic storytelling, preserving history while giving voice to those who continue to serve and protect around the world today and for generations to come forward.
Welcome to the Veterans Breakfast Club! Our mission is to create communities of listening around veterans and their stories to connect, educate, heal, and inspire. Our two weekly pre-recorded programs are VBC Live and Greatest Generation Live. From the battlefields of World War II to the front lines of today’s active duty service, this podcast captures the voices, memories, and hard-earned wisdom of those who served. Each episode features powerful, firsthand stories from veterans across generations, revealing moments of courage, sacrifice, humor, and humanity. Listeners will hear untold experiences, lessons learned, and reflections that connect past and present military life. Whether honoring legacy or understanding modern service, this podcast bridges generations through authentic storytelling, preserving history while giving voice to those who continue to serve and protect around the world today and for generations to come forward.
Episodes

Tuesday May 26, 2026
Memorial Day Open Conversation
Tuesday May 26, 2026
Tuesday May 26, 2026
Join the Veterans Breakfast Club for a special Memorial Day virtual event on Monday, May 25, 2026, at 7:00pm ET. This live, online conversation invites veterans, families, and friends to gather in an open, heartfelt space to honor and remember those who have fallen in service to our nation. The event will take place on Zoom and will also be streamed live to Facebook and YouTube. Join us on Zoom here: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6402618738
We especially welcome the family of Capt. William Boyd Graves, a Wyoming soldier killed in Vietnam whose voice has unexpectedly returned nearly 50 years later.
After decades of silence, Graves’ family recently discovered a series of audio tapes he recorded during the Vietnam War—an extraordinary time capsule of humor, fear, longing, and daily life from a young American officer serving far from home. The discovery became the subject of a widely read article, “Voice From Vietnam: Nearly 50 Years After Wyoming Man Died, Family Discovers Tapes.”
Joining us live will be Graves’ sister Linda Fabian and other members of the Graves family, who will share memories of William, reflect on hearing his voice again after all these years, and discuss what the tapes have meant to their family. During the program, we will also play selections from the recordings themselves, allowing audiences to hear Capt. Graves in his own words.
This special Memorial Day conversation is about remembrance, family, loss, and the enduring humanity behind military service. It’s also a rare opportunity to encounter the Vietnam War not through history books, but through the preserved voice of one man who lived it.
The Veterans Breakfast Club creates communities of listening where veterans, families, historians, and the public come together to share stories and preserve personal history. Our programs are informal, conversational, and open to all.
#MemorialDay #VietnamWar #Veterans #WilliamBoydGraves #VietnamVeteran #MilitaryHistory #POWMIA #VeteransStories #OralHistory #USArmy #Vietnam #MemorialDay2026 #VeteransBreakfastClub
Often remembered as the calm, steady “GI’s General” of World War II, General Omar Bradley commanded more American soldiers in combat than any other officer in U.S. history. Yet compared to Eisenhower, Patton, and MacArthur, Bradley remains a surprisingly enigmatic figure. Was he the humble soldiers’ general of popular memory? A cautious strategist? A political insider? Or something more complicated?
Join Greatest Generation LIVE for a fascinating conversation with military historian Dr. David W. Hogan, Jr., former Director of Histories at the U.S. Army Center of Military History and one of the nation’s leading experts on Bradley. Hogan has spent decades researching the U.S. Army in World War II and is currently completing a major biography of Bradley, Omar Nelson Bradley: The GI’s General.
Drawing on years of archival research, Hogan will explore Bradley’s rise from small-town Missouri to the highest ranks of the American military, his relationships with Eisenhower and Patton, his command during Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge, and his postwar role as the nation’s first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the early Cold War.
This program will examine not only Bradley the general, but Bradley the man — modest, disciplined, intensely loyal, and still debated by historians today.
#OmarBradley #WWII #GreatestGeneration #MilitaryHistory #WorldWarII #Dday #BattleOfTheBulge #USArmy #Veterans #History #Patton #Eisenhower #KoreanWar #VBC #VeteransBreakfastClub

Tuesday May 26, 2026
Who Was Omar Bradley?
Tuesday May 26, 2026
Tuesday May 26, 2026
Who was Omar Bradley? The answer is more elusive than generally understood.
Often remembered as the calm, steady “GI’s General” of World War II, General Omar Bradley commanded more American soldiers in combat than any other officer in U.S. history. Yet compared to Eisenhower, Patton, and MacArthur, Bradley remains a surprisingly enigmatic figure. Was he the humble soldiers’ general of popular memory? A cautious strategist? A political insider? Or something more complicated?
Join Greatest Generation LIVE for a fascinating conversation with military historian Dr. David W. Hogan, Jr., former Director of Histories at the U.S. Army Center of Military History and one of the nation’s leading experts on Bradley. Hogan has spent decades researching the U.S. Army in World War II and is currently completing a major biography of Bradley, Omar Nelson Bradley: The GI’s General.
Drawing on years of archival research, Hogan will explore Bradley’s rise from small-town Missouri to the highest ranks of the American military, his relationships with Eisenhower and Patton, his command during Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge, and his postwar role as the nation’s first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the early Cold War.
This program will examine not only Bradley the general, but Bradley the man — modest, disciplined, intensely loyal, and still debated by historians today.
#OmarBradley #WWII #GreatestGeneration #MilitaryHistory #WorldWarII #Dday #BattleOfTheBulge #USArmy #Veterans #History #Patton #Eisenhower #KoreanWar #VBC #VeteransBreakfastClub

Tuesday May 26, 2026
Recon Marines in I Corps, 1969-70
Tuesday May 26, 2026
Tuesday May 26, 2026
In 1969–1970–at the start of “Vietnamization”– a small, exposed rise south of Da Nang became one of the most contested observation posts in I Corps. Known simply as Hill 119, it overlooked the Thu Bon River Basin and Go Noi Island — terrain Marines called “Indian Country.” From this barren patch of ground, rotating platoons of Recon Marines watched, reported, called artillery, and launched patrols into enemy-held territory.
Our guest, Col. Michael O. “Deli” Fallon, USMC (Ret.), served there as a young officer and later set out to reconstruct the full story. In writing Hill 119, Defending a Reconnaissance Marine’ OP, Vietnam, 1969-1970, Fallon interviewed more than one hundred Marines and artillerymen who rotated through the position and analyzed hundreds of debriefing reports and command chronologies to piece together what daily life — and nightly danger — truly looked like.
Hill 119 was an observation post and a patrol base, a radio relay site monitoring Recon frequencies, and even a testing ground for new battlefield technology, including early laser range-finding systems that sharpened artillery accuracy. Yet as President Nixon’s policy of Vietnamization accelerated, fire support diminished and missions continued with fewer resources. Fallon writes candidly about what that shift meant to Marines holding an exposed hill while political decisions were made far away.
We’ll also explore the harder questions: operating among civilians whose loyalties were uncertain, the strain of constant rotation as platoons “flipped” in and out, the reliance on helicopter crews who flew into enemy fire to extract teams — and the court-martial that followed the shooting of a Vietnamese woman outside the perimeter, a case that unfolded in the shadow of My Lai.
Hill 119 could feel like the moon — one Marine joked on the night of the Apollo landing, “You’re already on the Moon.” But it was no abstraction. It was close combat, long watches, and young men navigating the line between aggression and restraint.
Join us for a conversation about small-unit war, memory and documentation, leadership under scrutiny, and what Vietnamization looked like on the ground.

Friday May 15, 2026
WWII Okinawa Veteran James Wheeler
Friday May 15, 2026
Friday May 15, 2026
At 104 years old, WWII Army veteran James Wheeler is one of the last surviving American tankers to witness firsthand the brutal Battle of Okinawa. A member of Company C, 193rd Tank Battalion, Wheeler fought in one of the most punishing armored campaigns of the Pacific War, where American Sherman tanks were sent headlong into the deadly defenses of the Japanese Shuri Line.
In April 1945, the 193rd Tank Battalion took part in the disastrous assault on Kakazu Ridge and Kakazu Village—what historians later called the “Death Ride of the Shermans.” Trapped without infantry support, Wheeler’s battalion drove into a maze of mines, hidden anti-tank guns, artillery fire, and suicide attacks. In a single day, the battalion lost 22 tanks, the greatest single combat loss of American tanks in the Pacific Theater.
Join us for a rare and extraordinary conversation with James Wheeler as he reflects on survival, combat inside a Sherman tank, and the savage realities of Okinawa, one of the bloodiest battles of World War II. Wheeler’s memories offer not just a window into armored warfare in the Pacific, but a living connection to a rapidly vanishing generation.
#WWII #WorldWarII #Okinawa #BattleOfOkinawa #TankBattalion #ShermanTank #USArmy #PacificWar #GreatestGeneration #MilitaryHistory #WW2Veteran #TankCrew #Okinawa1945 #Veterans #VeteransBreakfastClub

Tuesday May 12, 2026
Linebacker I: The Air Battle of 1972
Tuesday May 12, 2026
Tuesday May 12, 2026
In the spring of 1972, North Vietnam launched the massive Easter Offensive, a conventional invasion that nearly broke South Vietnam. The response: Operation Linebacker I—a sustained U.S. air campaign that reshaped the battlefield and helped halt the advance.
Join the Veterans Breakfast Club (VBC) for a powerful live conversation on this pivotal moment in the Vietnam War.
Our guest, Brian Harrison, served in Vietnam in 1972–1973 with the legendary 1st Cavalry Division’s “Centaurs” (air cavalry)—flying in the thick of the fighting as U.S. airpower supported South Vietnamese forces on the ground. His firsthand perspective brings us closer to the reality of the Easter Offensive and the air war that followed.
We’ll explore what triggered the 1972 Easter Offensive and how Operation Linebacker I differed from earlier bombing campaigns like Rolling Thunder. We’ll look at the role of air cavalry and helicopter operations in the fight, and what it felt like on the ground and in the air during one of the war’s most intense phases. Finally, we’ll consider why 1972 marked a turning point in U.S. strategy in Vietnam.
#VietnamWar #LinebackerI #EasterOffensive #MilitaryHistory #AirWar #USAirForce #ArmyAviation #VietnamVeterans #VeteransStories #ColdWarHistory

Friday May 08, 2026
WWII Marine Neal McCallum and the Battle of Okinawa
Friday May 08, 2026
Friday May 08, 2026
Join VBC LIVE on Thursday, May 7 at 7PM (ET) for a conversation with World War II Marine veteran Neal McCallum, who fought in the Battle of Okinawa 81 years ago.
At just 18 years old, McCallum landed on Okinawa with Fox Company, 29th Marine Regiment, 6th Marine Division, part of the massive U.S. invasion force that stormed the island on Easter Sunday April 1, 1945y.
He served as an infantryman in a mortar section and fought through some of the fiercest combat of the war, including the deadly struggle for Sugar Loaf Hill, where Marines suffered staggering losses. On May 19, 1945, McCallum was seriously wounded by enemy fire, just one day after his close friend was killed in action.
The Battle of Okinawa was the largest amphibious assault in the Pacific Theater and one of the bloodiest. The battle raged over 82 days. Whenit was over, more 12,000 Americans were dead and another 37,000 wounded. Japanese casualties were many times that number. And, perhaps most tragic, 100,000–200,000 Okinawan civilians were dead.
Fought across ridges, caves, and fortified positions, Okinawa became a war of attrition with kamikaze attacks. The scale of the destruction gave a U.S. forces a yardstick for estimating the cost of invading mainland Japan.
Battle of Okinawa, World War II Pacific, US Marines WWII, Okinawa 1945, Neal McCallum, WWII veteran interview, Sugar Loaf Hill, Pacific War history, VBC Live, Veterans Breakfast Club, WWII stories, military history livestream
#WWII #BattleOfOkinawa #USMarines #VeteransStories #MilitaryHistory #VBC #PacificWar #Okinawa #WW2Veteran #HistoryLive

Tuesday May 05, 2026
Veterans Open Conversation
Tuesday May 05, 2026
Tuesday May 05, 2026
[00:00 - 01:10] Introduction and Welcome
Hosts Shaun, Todd, and Glenn welcome viewers.
Overview of the Veterans Breakfast Club mission: creating communities of listening around veterans and their stories.
Invitation to join live Zoom sessions and watch on Facebook or YouTube.
[01:10 - 06:40] Upcoming Events and Programs
Announcement of Thursday night’s "Greatest Generation Live" focusing on World War II and the 81st anniversary of the Battle of Okinawa.
Introduction of two Okinawa veterans guests: Neil Mallalum (99 years old) and James Wheeler (104 years old).
Discussion of their service, experiences, and upcoming program details.
Mention of in-person breakfasts and the BBC magazine distribution.
[06:40 - 34:00] Why Veterans Wear Black Caps - Open Discussion
Jim Roberts poses the question: Why do veterans wear black caps? (Jim shares his personal experience and reflections on wearing his Vietnam unit hat.)
Discussion about the symbolism of hats for veterans as identifiers and conversation starters.
Mixed feelings about public reactions to hats and "Thank you for your service" comments.
Ben Dawson (Air Force veteran) talks about pride and connection through hats.
Baltimore Ben shares his evolving attitude toward wearing veteran hats and public recognition.
Chris Perolo discusses the military tradition of headgear and its role in identity.
John Per shares his pride in his Army Security Agency hat and its role in connecting with fellow veterans.
Patrick Hughes talks about his separate brigade service and pride in his hat.
Ron comments on the professional look and versatility of black hats.
Al Smith shares mixed feelings about wearing hats and recognition.
Rick Weber tells the story of the "Lobcocks" nickname and its significance.
Mark Spearigio discusses his late adoption of wearing hats due to Vietnam War reception and the healing aspect of acknowledgment.
Sue Watson shares her father's Marine Corps hats and the significance of the Eoima survivor hat.
Discussion about family members wearing veteran hats or apparel.
Civilians working with veterans share their experiences with public recognition.
John Terry and others discuss the importance of hats as conversation starters and symbols of pride.
[34:00 - 55:50] Special Guest: Bill Peters and Army Security Agency Story
Bill Peters joins to share a story about a photo of Army Security Agency veterans in Vietnam.
Description of the photo location (Dong Ba Thin near Cameron Bay) and unit activities.
Discussion about the casual dress in the photo and life in Vietnam.
Bill shares his homecoming experience and current involvement with military honor guards.
Plans for an upcoming Army Security Agency anniversary program.
[55:50 - 01:17:40] Anniversary of the Kent State Shooting - Historical Context and Veteran Memories
Greg Yoast provides a detailed history of the Kent State shooting on May 4, 1970.
Explanation of the political and social climate leading to the incident, including Nixon’s Cambodia incursion.
Todd and veterans share personal memories and reflections on the event.
Don Nemch recalls the impact and significance of Kent State and related protests.
Ben Dawson and others discuss the National Guard’s role and the atmosphere on campuses.
John Terry shares his experience as a ROC instructor during ongoing protests.
Bill Rios shares his story as a two-war veteran and Vietnam War protester, including his draft experience and later service in the National Guard during the Gulf War.
Discussion about the complexity and divisiveness of the Kent State incident and its lasting impact on veterans and the nation.
[01:17:40 - End] Closing Remarks and Upcoming Programs
Thanks to participants and viewers.
Reminder to join the upcoming Battle of Okinawa program.
Encouragement to support the Veterans Breakfast Club through membership and participation.
This breakdown captures the main topics and flow of the conversation, providing viewers with a clear guide to the video content.

Friday May 01, 2026
WWII Navy SeaBee Richard Inlow
Friday May 01, 2026
Friday May 01, 2026
Join us for a remarkable evening with World War II veteran Richard “Dick” Inlow, a 101-year-old Navy Seabee who served in the Pacific.
Drafted out of high school and sent to a Seabee battalion, Dick didn’t even know what a Seabee was—just that the Navy put him on a train and sent him where he was needed. Before long, he found himself landing in the first wave at Peleliu, supporting the Marines under fire, carrying ammunition through waist-deep water as bullets struck around him.
“I survived by hiding behind the Marines,” he says with characteristic understatement.
Dick served with the 33rd Naval Construction Battalion, helping repair airstrips under combat conditions and supporting frontline operations in some of the Pacific’s most brutal fighting.
After the war, Dick built a full and accomplished life, becoming a teacher, a mathematician, and a man who never lost his passion for learning.
About VBC LIVE:
Veterans Breakfast Club brings veterans, families, and the public together in “communities of listening”—where stories connect us across generations, experiences, and perspectives.
#WWII #Veterans #Seabees #Peleliu #PacificWar #OralHistory #VeteransStories #MilitaryHistory #GreatestGeneration #VBC

Tuesday Apr 28, 2026
Aeromedical Evacuation: Film + Live Talkback
Tuesday Apr 28, 2026
Tuesday Apr 28, 2026
What happens between the battlefield and home? Aeromedical, an Emmy Award–winning documentary by Rebecca Abbott and Tim Malloy, takes you inside U.S. Air Force aeromedical evacuation missions that move wounded service members from combat zones to advanced care—often within hours, and sometimes back to the United States within days.
Filmed in Afghanistan, Germany, and the U.S., the documentary captures a life-saving system nearly a century in the making, from its beginnings in 1918 to today’s flying intensive care units aboard C-17, C-130, and KC-135 aircraft. The result is a survival rate approaching 98%. More than a story of combat, Aeromedical reveals the skill, urgency, and quiet dedication of the doctors, nurses, technicians, and aircrews—many from the National Guard and Reserve—who keep the wounded alive in the air.
Following the 28-minute film, join the Veterans Breakfast Club for a live conversation and Q&A with the filmmakers and aeromedical crew members. This VBC LIVE program offers a different view of war—not the fight itself, but the effort to bring people home.
#Aeromedical #USAirForce #Medevac #MilitaryMedicine #Veterans #DocumentaryFilm #VBC #VeteransBreakfastClub #Landstuhl #Ramstein #C17 #C130 #KC135 #WarStories #MilitaryHistory #NationalGuard #Reserves #AfghanistanWar

Tuesday Apr 21, 2026
Learning to Live from Those Willing to Die
Tuesday Apr 21, 2026
Tuesday Apr 21, 2026
Retired Navy Captain and author David E. Grogan joins us to discuss his book Learning to Live from Those Willing to Die, a collection of life lessons drawn from the lived experiences of American veterans. Grogan, a former international and operational attorney for the U.S. Navy, has spent years listening closely to those who served. The result is a book that not only describes twenty-six veterans’ personal battlefields, but also digs deeper to discover the enduring life lessons their service teaches.
All royalties from the book are donated to America’s VetDogs, which provides guide and service dogs to veterans and first responders. The project has already raised more than $4,100 for the charity—a reminder that these veterans continue to serve others through their stories.
For this special program, David will be joined by four of the veterans whose lives anchor key chapters in the book. Each represents a different era of service and a different lesson learned.
Specialist Tom Garvey’s service in Vietnam underscores one of the most enduring truths of military life: survival and sanity often hinge on friendship. His chapter reflects on the bonds formed under stress and how loyalty to one another carried young soldiers through war and long afterward.
Specialist Billy Terrell’s story emphasizes his efforts to provide a sanctuary for the most vulnerable victims of the Vietnam War. His service shaped in him a deep commitment to fairness and advocacy, particularly for those without a voice. His chapter explores how efforts military members take to help others often change lives, including their own.
Specialist Eric Ferguson’s experience during the Gulf War era highlights a quieter but powerful trait: attentiveness. Listening—to mentors, to circumstances, to possibilities, even to art—opened doors that might otherwise have remained closed. His story is about recognizing opportunity in unlikely moments and having the discipline to act.
Commander Tom Jones unconventional career as a Navy attorney took him from military courtrooms to capture missions with the SEALs in Iraq. He had an equally unconventional family life growing up, yet his family always remained in the forefront of his military career. His chapter reflects on the sustaining force of family—before, during, and after war—and how service impacts not only the individual but also all those they love.
This evening will not be a book talk but rather a conversation about what military service teaches and how those lessons echo long after the service is over.
