
BRCC Events Team Finds That Nashville Looks Good on Them
Though donning cowboy boots wasn’t part of the assignment, the BRCC events team saddled up for a long, hot week of adventures on Broadway, coffee drops around the county, and NASCAR.
Though donning cowboy boots wasn’t part of the assignment, the BRCC events team saddled up for a long, hot week of adventures on Broadway, coffee drops around the county, and NASCAR.
With Nashville in the middle of a heat wave, this NASCAR Nashville Superspeedway weekend was heating up before the races even began. The BRCC drivers battled a heat index of 100, setting the stage for a variety of heat-related issues. But from the truck series on Friday, June 24, to Saturday’s Xfinity Series, to the Cup on Sunday, Matt Crafton, Noah Gragson, and Ty Dillon all held their own.
Out of all the ways to tour Nashville and deliver Black Rifle Coffee to the good citizens, law enforcement, and fire departments of the city, Hell on Wheels certainly is a choice, and the most obvious one at that.
Arguably the most skilled co-driver in the world, Rhianon Gelsomino has rally in her blood and is a welcome addition to the Black Rifle Coffee Company-sponsored motor sports team.
Located in the state with the third largest homeless population, the Cherokee County Homeless Vets Program (CCHV) is on a mission to support veterans through a variety of programs including housing, clothing, and VA claims.
The BRCC Rally team gathered for 114 competition miles, 219 total miles, of adventure through the southern Ohio forests. For the first time, the Southern Ohio Forest Rally (SOFR) was extended into a three-day event. The 2022 SOFR featured 78 competitors, with 34 of them battling for overall and class wins in the national event. Though Brandon Semenuk was unable to finish the weekend due to a broken wishbone, Travis Pastrana’s other competition, Ken Block, won 13 out of 19 stages. But Pastrana came through with a power stage win, earning him American Rally Association championship points.
There might not be a more interesting shift into the world of comedy than that of a psychology graduate becoming depressed with crisis counseling work and stumbling upon an open mic night.
Veterans, first responders, and Black Rifle Coffee Company gathered at Pastranaland over Memorial Day Weekend, offering a unique experience and a one-of-a-kind way to honor and commemorate what can so often be a difficult time for many in the community.
This Memorial Day Weekend, the BRCC Fund teamed up with The Honor Movement (formerly Ruck to Remember, though that is still the name of the full event) for their annual 60-mile team hike. The Honor Movement hike, which started on Saturday, May 28, is a mission of endurance formerly known as the 60-to-60 — two days of rucking that incorporates a number of stops along the Washington and Old Dominion Trail in Virginia that ends Sunday evening at the Marine Corps Memorial. Then, on Monday the second event for the weekend begins: The Final Miles, a mission of remembrance. The Final Miles kicks off at the Marine Corps Memorial and is designed to be at a slower pace than the events of the previous two days, allowing participants time to talk and think about what Memorial Day means as they carry out this movement. This 7.5-mile walk takes participants through the National War Memorials. Then the Warriors Walk (also known as the Final Movement) begins, incorporating bagpipes as participants walk into Arlington National Cemetery.