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  • How to Become a Firefighter | What It Really Takes to Get Hired
    2026/03/30

    In this episode, the guys circle back to one of their most popular topics: how to become a firefighter. Matt, Brian, and Unkie talk through what it really takes to get hired, survive the process, and build a successful career in the fire service.

    The conversation covers everything from attitude, humility, and work ethic to the value of mentors, accountability, and staying teachable. The crew shares personal stories about the grind of trying to get hired, the sacrifices it took, and the moments they knew this was the career they were meant to pursue.

    They also discuss the importance of being someone others want to invest in — because in this job, your attitude can open doors just as much as your résumé.

    The episode also includes Patreon updates, a new Wheel of Names winner for the Turnout Drill, sponsor shoutouts, a Moment of Silence for recent line-of-duty deaths, and some discussion on volunteer staffing, training, and the future of the fire service.


    In this episode:

    • What it really takes to become a firefighter

    • Why attitude matters as much as skill

    • The importance of mentors and accountability

    • Why humility and work ethic go a long way

    • Personal stories from the hiring grind

    • Recent LODDs honored in the Moment of Silence

    • Turnout Drill winner: Daniel Watson

    • FDIC excitement, merch, and sponsor updates

    Support the podcast:

    👕 Merch: https://the-cool-fireman.myshopify.com/collections
    🎧 Patreon: Join the crew for bonus content, giveaways, and more


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    1 時間 12 分
  • FDIC Experience: How Conferences Transform Firefighter Culture & Performance
    2026/03/23

    In this episode, Matt and Doug jump on the mic for a two-man show as they talk through the chaos of spring schedules, sick days, family life, and getting an episode recorded when everyone’s calendars refuse to line up. From a rough morning at the dentist with Matt’s daughter to Doug battling sinus misery, the guys ease into a real and relatable conversation before diving into the main topic: FDIC and why conferences matter in the fire service.

    They share their excitement for the upcoming FDIC conference in Indianapolis, where the podcast team will be partnering with The Burn Box and spending the week surrounded by firefighters, training, new technology, and networking opportunities. Doug gives a preview of what FDIC is like for first-timers, from the massive exhibitor floor to Firefighter Row and the sheer scale of the event. Matt and Doug also discuss why sending firefighters to conferences is such a valuable investment for departments of all sizes, especially when it comes to inspiration, training, networking, and bringing fresh ideas back home.

    The episode also includes updates on Patreon, merch, sponsors, and a heartfelt moment of silence requested by a listener for a teacher who recently passed away. They wrap things up with some listener engagement, including reactions to their recent episode on Social Security, unions, and associations, plus a reminder that the podcast is closing in on 1,000 Spotify followers.

    In This Episode:

    • Doug battles a brutal cold/sinus issue while Matt shares a wild dentist visit with his daughter

    • Why it can be so hard to coordinate podcast recordings with a busy crew

    • St. Patrick’s Day talk, corned beef tacos, and keeping things light

    • Patreon updates, giveaway winners, and plans for future prizes

    • Merch update and where to grab Cool Fireman gear

    • Sponsor shoutouts for Unkie’s Seasoning and The Burn Box

    • Preview of FDIC 2026 and what attendees can expect

    • Why conferences are worth the investment for fire departments

    • The importance of networking, hands-on training, and seeing new fire service technology

    • Thoughts on leadership, inspiration, and getting firefighters excited about the job again

    • Listener-requested moment of silence for Leanne Colley

    • Snail Mail and social media feedback from recent episodes

    • Discussion on Social Security, pensions, and the recent listener response to that topic

    • Closing encouragement to support the show through follows, engagement, merch, Patreon, and sponsors

    Key Takeaways

    This episode reinforces a message the guys keep coming back to: if you want better culture, better morale, and better performance in the fire service, you have to invest in your people. Conferences like FDIC are more than just a trip—they’re an opportunity to build passion, sharpen skills, create new connections, and bring real value back to the department.

    Mentioned in This Episode

    • FDIC International

    • The Burn Box

    • Unkie’s Seasoning

    • Patreon giveaways

    • Cool Fireman merch

    • Social Security Fairness discussion

    • Leanne Colley

    • Ricky Bird

    • Megan Louts / The Salty Paramedic

    Support the Podcast:

    Visit our Website: thecoolfireman.com

    Visit Patreon: https://patreon.com/TheCoolFiremanPodcast?utm_medium=unknown&utm_source=join_link&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=copyLink

    Follow and subscribe to The Cool Fireman Podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. Support the show through Patreon, grab some merch at thecoolfireman.com, and keep engaging with the crew on social media.


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    49 分
  • Why Firefighter Unions Matter | Pay, Staffing, Safety & Your Future
    2026/03/16

    In this episode of The Cool Fireman Podcast, the crew talks all things collective bargaining, firefighter unions, and what union representation really means for the fire service.

    They break down the basics of unions, executive boards, local representation, and why being involved matters. The conversation covers retirement, safety, wages, staffing, equipment, cancer presumption, 24-hour shifts, and contract negotiations — along with a reminder that many of the things firefighters enjoy today were fought for through union work.

    The guys also talk about voting for your job, staying active in your local, attending meetings, and understanding what your dues are actually supporting behind the scenes.

    The episode also includes Patreon updates, the next Wheel of Names turnout drill winner, sponsor shoutouts, a Moment of Silence, and listener comments from the burnout episode.


    In this episode:

    • What collective bargaining means in the fire service

    • Why firefighter unions matter

    • Retirement, safety, wages, and representation

    • How union boards and local leadership work

    • Contract negotiations and staying competitive

    • Why firefighters should vote for their job

    • Patreon updates and Ricky Bird wins the turnout drill

    Support the podcast:

    👕 Merch: CLICK HERE FOR MERCH
    🎧 Patreon: Join the crew and get in on monthly Patreon Perks

    CLICK HERE FOR PATREON


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    1 時間 9 分
  • Firefighter Burnout: The Stress Nobody Talks About
    2026/03/09

    In this episode of The Cool Fireman Podcast, the crew kicks things off with some big Patreon news: the Engineer Tier officially hit 10 subscribers, which means Phase 1 is live and the first Wheel of Names giveaway is underway. Congrats to Simon Gray, who takes home the first box of firefighter goodies.


    The guys also share a heartfelt Moment of Silence honoring firefighters recently lost, including Lt. Robert “Dean” Clary, who passed away from occupational cancer, along with other recent line-of-duty losses. It’s a powerful reminder of the risks firefighters face both on and off the fireground.

    The main topic centers around burnout — what it looks like, how it builds, and how firefighters can recognize it before it takes a bigger toll. The conversation touches on stress at work, life at home, mental exhaustion, faith, family, and the importance of having healthy outlets and strong people in your corner.

    The episode wraps with snail mail, listener feedback, and more discussion around training, priorities, and the reality of balancing fire service life.


    In this episode:

    • Patreon giveaway officially begins

    • Simon Gray wins the first Wheel of Names box

    • Moment of Silence for recent firefighter losses

    • Burnout in the fire service

    • Stress, mental fatigue, and healthy coping outlets

    • Listener comments and training discussion

    Support the podcast:

    🎧 Patreon: Engineer Tier starts at just $2/month



    • 👕 Merch: https://the-cool-fireman.myshopify.com/collections
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    1 時間 10 分
  • Fire Department Training: Balancing EMS and Fire Response
    2026/03/02

    The crew debates a firehouse classic: If most of our calls are EMS, should most of our training be EMS? With departments running 80%+ medical calls in many areas, is it time to shift focus—or double down on fire because it’s high-risk and low-frequency?

    • EMS isn’t going anywhere.
      Call volume continues trending heavily medical. Fires are decreasing due to prevention, codes, and education.

    • Train for high-acuity on both sides.
      Even if you run EMS daily, you still need reps on cardiac arrests, strokes, trauma, airway management, and rare presentations. Same logic as training for low-frequency, high-risk fire incidents.

    • Service is service.
      Whether it’s a working structure fire or grandma on the floor, we’re there to solve problems. The public expects professionalism no matter the call type.

    • Jack of all trades? Good.
      The fire service is an all-hazards profession. Being competent across fire, EMS, rescue, and prevention is the job.

    • For new firefighters:
      You’re signing up for both. You’ll pull hose and you’ll run 12-leads. Train hard at both.

    • New Engineer Tier Patreon members: Simon Gray & Ty Rowan

    • Turnout Drill Wheel Winner: Simon Gray

    • Merch shoutout + FDIC Burn Box teaser

    • Road to 1,000 Spotify followers

    Bottom line:
    EMS vs. fire isn’t either/or. It’s both. Train accordingly.


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    52 分
  • How Volunteer Fire Departments Can Win on Social Media: Trust → Support → Recruitment (K-Bill)
    2026/02/23

    In this episode, the crew sits down with K-Bill from Social FD to talk about the reality of social media in today’s fire service—especially how it impacts volunteer recruitment, retention, and community trust. From “Facebook warriors” and negativity in comment sections, to meeting the next generation where they are (yes… even Twitch), this one hits culture, standards, and how we can do better without tearing each other down publicly.

    • Why Social FD exists and the problem it’s trying to solve for volunteer departments

    • How social media can build trust → support → recruitment

    • The uncomfortable truth: everyone’s an “overnight expert” online (and it’s hurting the fire service)

    • Why departments shouldn’t ban everyday station content—the next generation lives online

    • A real talk discussion on standards vs. public shaming (beards/NFPA/social media pile-ons)

    • How to correct mistakes the right way: educate internally, don’t embarrass externally

    • The crew rips Legacy Fire Cards live and talks using them to engage rookies and kids

    • Snail Mail highlights + community shoutouts, including powerful mental health feedback

    • The Burn Box (housekeeping segment shoutout)

    • Unkie Seasonings (plus a fun giveaway tease tied to brisket tags)


    • “Trust builds support, and support builds recruitment.” — K-Bill

    • “A simple post can save a life.” — K-Bill

    • “We’re tearing the fire service down with these arguments publicly.” — K-Bill

    • “Educate first, then advocate.” — Brian

    • “We’re the custodians of the fire service.” — Freddy

    • “It’s not what you say—it’s how you say it.” — Brian

    Social FD is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit helping volunteer fire departments with:

    • Online engagement support

    • Free website hosting tools

    • Social media scheduling/posting help

    • Guidance on using content to build community trust and recruitment

    Find K-Bill / Social FD:

    • socialfd.org/links (all platforms + resources)

    Also mentioned:

    • Thinline Rock Station (online radio for first responders)

    • Saturday nights (5–7pm CST) you can catch K-Bill featured on-air

    • Honor Guard uniform opinions (ascot + blouse belt hate = strong consensus 😂)

    • Listener shares first Honor Guard detail experience and learning etiquette fast

    • Powerful mental health responses: encouragement to normalize getting help early

    • Patreon and merch mentions sprinkled throughout (plus “Sorry, Rhett” moments)

    If this episode hits home, share it with:

    • A volunteer department that needs community support

    • A chief/admin team debating social media policies

    • A new firefighter who needs encouragement and culture done right

    And as always: be kind, build people up, and keep the tradition strong—without becoming the comment-section NFPA police.

    What You’ll Hear in This EpisodeSponsors / Housekeeping MentionsKey Moments (Approx. Timestamps)Quotes Worth PullingGuest Info: K-Bill (Social FD)Community / Snail Mail HighlightsCall to Action

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    1 時間 16 分
  • Honor Guard in the Fire Service: Professionalism, Tradition, and Doing It Right
    2026/02/16
    The crew kicks things off in classic “kitchen table” fashion (yes… with an unfortunate shart confession) before shifting into a respectful, meaningful conversation about Honor Guard in the fire service—why it matters, what professionalism looks like, and how departments can build/strengthen their own teams. Along the way: sponsor shoutouts, a moment of silence for two fallen firefighters, and a trick-question flag trivia that gets Matt good.In This EpisodeCold Open: The “Literal Sh*t ShowUnkie admits to a wet fart situation (aka: shart), sparking a round of “we’ve all been there” stories.Brian loses his appetite mid-conversation.Doug officially welcomes everyone to the literal “shit show” that is the podcast.”Housekeeping & UpdatesPatreon ShoutoutsNew Patreon members welcomed:Ricky BirdBig Bob Penrod (Doug’s new nickname for him)B. Stapleton (the crew debates what the “B” stands for—Brandon? Bradley? Bryce? Broseph? Bart?)Merch UpdateMerch is moving: shirts, hoodies, hats, and now embroidered hats are rolling out.Big thanks to everyone who’s ordered.Sponsor ShoutoutsUnkie’s SeasoningsUnkie will be at Virginia Fire & Expo in Virginia Beach (Feb 19–21)Hanging around heavy hitters like Taylor’s Tins, National Fire Radio, and more.Burn BoxThe crew highlights recent box items (hoodie, stickers, mask bag).“If you’re on the fence, jump off and get one.”Potential New Sponsor IdeaThe crew makes a strong case for Dude Wipes becoming a sponsor… for obvious reasons.Moment of SilenceThe team honors two recent losses in the fire service:Firefighter Michael Mejia (National City FD) — passed from complications of a severe illness.Firefighter Howard Bennett (60) — fell into the icy Delaware River while inspecting a fireboat at Wiggins Park Marina.Main Topic: Honor Guard in the Fire ServiceThe crew emphasizes Honor Guard as a prestigious, humbling, high-respect role.Doug shares that Honor Guard may be the most important work he does in his career.Doug lays down a core philosophy:Honor Guard should be professional, tactful, and executed quietly.Cadence screaming or making it “about you” defeats the point.Unkie shares frustration with “Marine Corps cadence” style pageantry in civilian settings.Doug’s pet peeve: ascots (“Victorian era nonsense” 😂)Matt shares a probationary-day moment:At a Memorial Day ceremony, he placed a wreath… and saluted his Captain instead of the flag.Crew compares Matt to “Officer Doofy.”Unkie hits the crew with trivia:Trick question: What degree does the American flag angle during Present Arms?Answer: It doesn’t. The U.S. flag does not bow—only other flags do.Brian nails it. Matt gets smoked.Bonus trivia:Texas is the only state flag that can be displayed at the same height as the U.S. flag (as explained in the episode).Ricky Bird praises the importance of recent mental health episodes.Kenny Mitchell encourages using the episode for roundtable training and discussion.Doug shouts out Chelsea from “Hold the Line at Home” for sharing mental health content.A listener shares they were admitted to a psych facility after letting things build up—crew praises the honesty and reinforces:“It’s okay to not be okay. It’s not okay to stay not okay.”“Welcome to the literal shit show…” — Doug“You shouldn’t be heard.” — Doug on Honor Guard professionalism“Ditch your bricks.” — Doug (throwback phrase that may become merch)How does YOUR department run Honor Guard?Drop it in the comments—structure, training, uniforms, pay/OT, recruiting, etc.What’s the worst (or weirdest) Honor Guard/Class A uniform detail you’ve seen?Keep it respectful… but let’s hear it.
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    58 分
  • Firefighter Mental Health Awareness — The Power of the Pause w/ Greg Rudiger
    2026/02/09
    SummaryIn this episode, the guys welcome back Greg Rudiger (Resilient Another Day / The Radcast) for a real, needed conversation about mental health in the fire service—and why we must start talking to recruits and new members early, not just after 15–20 years of calls, stress, and life piling up. The crew covers how peer support, resiliency tools, spirituality, and the “power of the pause” can help firefighters stay in the fight—at work, at home, and into retirement.Greg returns (first appeared on Episode 75) for Episode 145.Matt sets the tone: firefighters are killing themselves—and we need to stop acting like it’s not real.The crew agrees this topic should be in fire academies nationwide, not treated as an afterthought.Patreon updatePatreon is growing fast: 12 members (with a recent surge of new sign-ups).The team discusses possible perks like watching the podcast live during recording via Riverside.New subscribers shout-outsTyler Carson (free member)Tyler AdamsJesus & SophiaSocial FD (paid supporter)MerchNew flagship merch drop: shirts/hoodies/hats/long sleeves + specialty designs.Discount code mentioned: “Episode144” for 15% off (limited time).SponsorsUnkie’s SeasoningsBurn Box / FD Collectors ClubPlus love for Blue Collar FiremenGreg breaks down the shift toward a proactive approach:If firefighter survival training is 75% prevention, why isn’t mental health training the same?They’re teaching recruits common language + tools before they ever hit the street:Stress continuum (blue/green/yellow/orange/red)Breath work / mindfulnessWork-life balance, sleep, nutrition, exercisePeer support resources and appsThe goal: normalize “Cap, I’m not okay” and make it safe to say.Brian brings up the tension:Some firefighters reject the mental health conversation as “victim mindset.”Greg responds: it’s not about weakness—it’s about leading with love, listening, and meeting the human.Also discussed: the “weaponization” concern—people claiming mental health issues to avoid accountability—without dismissing anyone who truly needs help.Greg’s point hits hard:You don’t carry one tool on the rig—you carry a toolbox.Same for wellness: breath work might work today, but tomorrow it might be running, faith, calling a buddy, stretching, ocean time, etc.The theme: sometimes you have to sit in the uncomfortable long enough to move through it.The crew emphasizes not being afraid of silence—on the mic and in real life.The pause helps you:respond instead of reactrecognize what you’re feelingBrian shares scripture and the Footprints poem to underline the spiritual dimension:Faith isn’t “religion as performance”—it’s spiritual grounding and support.Greg ties it into wellness: the spiritual pillar is often the missing piece.Shared theme: we’re not meant to carry it alone.Freddy raises a huge point:Retirement can be dangerous for mental health—loss of structure, identity shift, isolation.Greg explains what they’re doing:retiree peer support groupsintentional check-ins (personal phone/email, not “department HR”)spouse inclusionmonthly breakfasts and continued connectionMatt addresses a correction from a listener regarding PAH exposure discussion from Episode 144:Clarifies the study measured urinary metabolites, not dermal skin measurements.Reinforces the key takeaway: SCBA use (even for engineers in the hot/warm zone) reduces exposure.Comment: How are you “par checking” your people?What tools are you using—peer support, faith, exercise, breath work, counseling, retirement groups?If you’re struggling: reach out to someone (your crew, peer support, or the podcast team).Merch: https://the-cool-fireman.myshopify.com/collectionsGreg / RAD: resilientanotherday.comSocial: @stay.rad10 (IG/TikTok)Greg RudigerFounder: Resilient Another Day (RAD)Co-host: The RadcastOffers: resiliency training + help building peer support frameworks (“can’t be a prophet in your own town” support)
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    1 時間 13 分