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The Army Bloke

Podcast by Dan Russell

English

Technology & science

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About The Army Bloke

Lessons in Leadership: advice to the next generation of military leaders.Real life experience & challenges that every leader will face in their early career.

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10 episodes

episode The Accidental Army Reservist & Best Selling Author | Owain Mulligan artwork

The Accidental Army Reservist & Best Selling Author | Owain Mulligan

The moment you realise it is not “a big adventure” anymore can arrive fast: a new job title, a live threat, and soldiers looking at you for decisions you did not expect to be making. I sit down with Owain Mulligan, a reservist officer whose winding path through a gap year commission, the OTC, and the Army Reserve turns into operational tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and a career shaped by responsibility. We unpack what it is actually like to mobilise as a reservist, including the strange incentives around volunteering, the intensity of pre-deployment training, and the brutal jump from training theory to troop command. Owain talks candidly about Basra on Operation Telic, the shock of a Lynx shootdown, IDF, and the hard-to-explain anger that can surface when you face mortality for the first time. We also dig into leadership where it really counts: NCO trust, competence under pressure, and how good seniors respond when a young officer makes an error on a strike op. From there, the story moves into specialist capability and the Defence School of Languages, including 15 months of Dari and Pashto and how language skills can shape an Afghanistan deployment. We finish with Owain's book The Accidental Soldier, why the ending turns reflective, and why he sends his royalties to War Child to support children affected by conflict. If you get value from this conversation, subscribe on YouTube or follow on Spotify, share it with someone considering the Army Reserve, and leave a review so more people can find it.

3 May 2026 - 1 h 21 min
episode What a Squadron Commander REALLY wants from New Officers?! | Ollie Braithwaite artwork

What a Squadron Commander REALLY wants from New Officers?! | Ollie Braithwaite

The fastest way to spot shaky leadership is to watch what happens when people are cold, tired, and under pressure. That’s where the real habits show up, for better or worse. We sit down with Ollie, a former British Army major with 20 years’ service, to unpack what actually builds strong junior leaders from Sandhurst onwards. He shares blunt lessons from RoCo, why “negative motivation” collapses fast, and how fitness isn’t just about passing tests, it’s about buying yourself time to think. We also get practical on planning: why plans fail, why planning still matters, and how better courses of action make you more adaptable on the ground and in civilian life. From there we go into career reality: choosing roles, understanding promotion systems, dealing with setbacks, and learning to ask smarter questions rather than pretending you know everything. Ollie explains what bosses really want from new platoon commanders: be thoughtful, bring character and care, and work hard while enjoying the journey. Finally, we connect leadership development with intelligent self-protection through Ollie’s business, Absolute Defence, including conflict debt, productivity, and small security habits that make you safer and more effective when travelling for work. If you found this useful, subscribe, share it with someone who’s stepping into leadership, and leave a review on Spotify or your podcast app.

19 Apr 2026 - 1 h 32 min
episode Sandhurst Commandant: The Brutal Truth About Command | Maj Gen Paul Nanson artwork

Sandhurst Commandant: The Brutal Truth About Command | Maj Gen Paul Nanson

Plans fail. People freeze. Information is incomplete. That’s when leadership stops being a theory and becomes a decision.  I sit down with Paul Nanson, former Infantry Officer, Major General, and a previous commandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, to talk about what actually holds a team together when the night does not go to plan. We start at the beginning: why he joined, what Sandhurst felt like in the moment, and what he learned the hard way after failing early selection and coming back stronger.  If you’re preparing for AOSB, thinking about Sandhurst, or weighing the graduate versus non-graduate route, you’ll hear a grounded view of what matters most: purposeful preparation, fitness without self-inflicted injury, and trusting a system designed to identify potential rather than perfection. From there we get into operational leadership and mission command. Paul shares how rehearsals and wargaming are not box-ticking, but a way to create shared understanding so that junior leaders can act decisively when chaos hits. We also unpack how leadership changes as you rise through the ranks, why senior leaders must work harder to stay connected to reality, and how Army leadership doctrine and the Centre for Army Leadership help make development consistent across all ranks. We close on life after service: the shock of losing daily military community, what surprises him about civilian leadership development, and why veteran mental health support must make it easier to reach out early. If you take one thing away, let it be this: do the job in front of you well, build habits of excellence, and the next step tends to follow. Subscribe for more conversations on military leadership, Sandhurst preparation, and the transition to civilian life, and if you found this useful, share it and leave a review.

12 Apr 2026 - 1 h 13 min
episode Army Doctor Reveals: The PQO Route No One Talks About | David Hindmarsh artwork

Army Doctor Reveals: The PQO Route No One Talks About | David Hindmarsh

We talk with David Hymarsh about what the Army Professionally Qualified Officer route really looks like for doctors, from AOSB and Sandhurst to phase two training and life in unit. We pull out the leadership lessons that matter most: humility, speaking to your audience, leaning on experienced NCOs and taking mental health seriously.  • How AOSB feels for medical students • What the short Sandhurst PQO course covers and why it exists  • What phase two Medical Officer training adds beyond university and the NHS  • the reality of arriving at unit as a captain while still feeling new  • Day-to-day work as a Medical Officer: sick parade, occupational medicine, deployability and advising commanders  • Learning from corporals and sergeants with deep operational experience  • How military mental health support works best when the clinician understands life in green  • Deploying as a medical officer: malaria, vaccines, heat, allies and making decisions with limited information  • Leaving the Army, becoming a GP partner and using military skills to build online education and mentoring  Let me know what you think of this episode and don't forget to subscribe

29 Mar 2026 - 1 h 23 min
episode Inside AOSB with the Vice President: What Gets You Selected (Or Rejected) - Jim Pritchett artwork

Inside AOSB with the Vice President: What Gets You Selected (Or Rejected) - Jim Pritchett

We explore how the Army Officer Selection Board truly works, why potential beats pedigree, and how authenticity, fitness, and feedback shape success. Jim shares lessons from Sandhurst, early command, operations in Northern Ireland and Iraq, and his vantage point as an AOSB Vice President. • selection focused on potential not polish • myths about “classic officer” backgrounds challenged • sandhurst shocks and adapting fast • technical depth for young gunners at phase two • the officer–sergeant partnership as a command pair • operations shaping judgment, trust and decentralised command • inside Westbury: roles of VPs and group leaders • using feedback between briefing and main board • common pitfalls: weak fitness, acting, overthinking • planex basics: DST, risk and simple, reasoned plans • how teams gel and why evidence of contribution matters • serving soldiers and non‑traditional candidates encouraged If this content is useful, please do click like, click subscribe. You can click the bell so you can be notified every time I upload a video. If you’ve got questions, put them in the comments. I’ll do my very, very best to get back to you. And if I don’t know, I’ll try and find out and get back to you anyway.

4 Mar 2026 - 1 h 28 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
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