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@blackpanther3912
@blackpanther3912 Күн бұрын
This is so adorable, thanks for sharing! 38:42 reactionception
@amylorraine3776
@amylorraine3776 Күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@onetrickpony6862
@onetrickpony6862 2 күн бұрын
This has nothing to do with the movie but you looks INSANELY like young Shelley Duvall
@rasyay
@rasyay 2 күн бұрын
💚it ✌n blessings your channel is now favorited 🇷🇸🇬🇳🇸🇽🇲🇽🇷🇴🇨🇴🇯🇲😎🚬😤react to apacalypto.. shottas.. city of god.. candyman.. the exorcist.. a Bronx tale
@piotrsupski5182
@piotrsupski5182 3 күн бұрын
I can't concentrate on the video because I'm staring at your beautiful face Amy. You have a wonderful smile and that's why I will watch every next vlog of yours...
@jacktilghman9797
@jacktilghman9797 3 күн бұрын
Amazing movie, my second favorite that Anton was in that I’ve seen, may his soul rest in piece, would’ve been a world wide known actor by now I’m sure. Missed greatly.
@SirGregg
@SirGregg 6 күн бұрын
Procedural. Procedure is how they control the difference between each states policies. The Olympics is a good example of the separation of company policy from the law. Governments are businesses that comply with company policy, not law. Policy can be purchased in the form of a Bill before Congress. Police policy is not law. Legal is not law. Courts are not law. Citizenship is not law. A US business is a US citizen. The business is a ship on the sea. A citizen is a crew member onboard the ship. Your legal name is a vessel called 'You'.
@flatcat6676
@flatcat6676 6 күн бұрын
"Band of Brothers" is an amazing series, and is a showcase of the comradery that can develop between men and the importance of good, steady leadership in a time of war. "The Pacific" is an amazing series that showcases the mechanical horror of war as it chews men up, leaving them broken, dead, or walking shells of who who they used to be. The war in the Pacific theatre between the Americans and the Japanese was just as brutal and unrelenting as that waged between the Germans and the Russians on the Eastern front, with no quarter expected and mercy rarely extended by either side.
@Stuart267
@Stuart267 6 күн бұрын
*As a kid I went to see the first movie with my friend and his parents. Back in those days you could see even an R-rated film if you had a "guardian" with you. I avoided this movie in the cinema as I didn't have high hopes for it. After finally watching it I wish I had gotten to see it in the theatre*
@johnmagill7714
@johnmagill7714 8 күн бұрын
Retired Navy here. Thank you for those kind words and heart felt feelings you shared. Believe me we appreciate far more than you may know.
@darielharris131
@darielharris131 9 күн бұрын
Rest In Peace “Aileen wournos” ❤️🐐☮️wish she wasn’t sentenced to death fr!
@vicegamer6944
@vicegamer6944 11 күн бұрын
I’ve had the honor to meet Atryu and he was super kind. ❤
@vicegamer6944
@vicegamer6944 11 күн бұрын
This kind of inspiring me to watch this as I’m on the airplane to feel like I’m nighthob on his bat.
@Bobbymaccys
@Bobbymaccys 13 күн бұрын
In reality, Winters took the pistol. It had never been fired, and he never fired it himself.
@bertieb7811
@bertieb7811 14 күн бұрын
Dr Sledge treated WW1 veterans who suffered from PTSD so that makes it even more heartbreaking
@DogmaBeoulve
@DogmaBeoulve 14 күн бұрын
Eugene lied - he found his humanity, again.
@Seadog7981
@Seadog7981 15 күн бұрын
Once you marry a man like John nothing will compare.
@williamivey5296
@williamivey5296 15 күн бұрын
I liked Leckie's mom. She's subtle, but when she notices his interest in the girl next door, she casually mentions his dress blues and how good he looks in them. Just nudging him in the right direction to outflank that officer and his car. 😊 My dad fought in the Pacific and Korea, though he had a battery of 155mm artillery and didn't get as close to the front lines.
@donhutchison4295
@donhutchison4295 15 күн бұрын
REACT TO THE SONG THE MOODY BLUES NIGHTS IN WHITE SATIN LIVE. YOU WILL LOVE IT !!
@Carln0130
@Carln0130 15 күн бұрын
Well done Amy on finishing the series. It is pronounced E-whoa, Iwo that is. Your summation closely mirrors my feelings. Sure it's not feel good T.V., but it is extremely important T.V.. History is ignored at our own peril. Thanks for reacting to this series. My suggestions are Letters From Iwo Jima, which is the fighting on Iwo from the Japanese perspective. A great movie directed and produced by Clint Eastwood and Full Metal Jacket, which is Vietnam, not WW2, but does give some additional insights into the Marine Corps and why members of the Marines are held in such respect in the United States.
@tomw324
@tomw324 17 күн бұрын
Another great reaction to an excellent series. Yes some of it was pretty tough but you did a great job with some very thoughtful comments at the end. If you want to watch a really great movie about the experience of WWII soldiers coming back into civilian life, I recommend reacting to the 1946 black and white film "Best Years of their Lives". Wonderful, bittersweet film about three soldiers returning to the same home town and the issues each has getting used to civilian life again.
@prodbycinder
@prodbycinder 17 күн бұрын
not to sound gay but i think im in love
@JimFinley11
@JimFinley11 17 күн бұрын
Retired Marine here. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts and feelings about this series! I loved this, along with Band of Brothers and Masters of the Air, and, for that matter, Tom Hanks's film Greyhound, depicting the experience of the convoy escorts in the Atlantic up against the German U-boats. I can heartily recommend the Ken Burns historical mini-series The War, about America's experience in World War II. It follows service members, civilians, men, women, adults and children, from four parts of the U.S., and interviews the ones who were still alive when it was filmed. Eugene Sledge had already died, but Burns covered his story, and interviewed Syd Phillips and his sister extensively. It's a seven-part history, beautifully done, and it not only explains the war itself, it covers the experiences of the people at home, and it looks at the experiences of Black Americans in a segregated military, those who became prisoners of both the Germans and the Japanese, and the interactions of American service members with those of Allied countries. Thanks again for your reactions to The Pacific! As a Marine, I sometimes wish the Pacific war was as well remembered as the war in Europe, North Africa, and other theaters. Take care! Semper Fi, Jim Finley Captain, USMC, retired
@tomw324
@tomw324 17 күн бұрын
As I remember "The War" has several interview clips with the real Sledge.
@yjb854
@yjb854 17 күн бұрын
My youth baseball coach in the 90s was a retired career marine. He fought in Okinawa at 17 years old, then in Korea and then Vietnam. He was a gunny and actually reminds me a lot of Gunny Haney. I don’t think he struggled with PTSD too bad, because he would tell us every gory detail about the combat he’d seen, almost with amusement. To him the Marine Corps was a religion and a lifestyle, everything thing he did was the Marine Corps way, from the way he dressed and the way he wore his hat, his pickup truck was always spotless. But he was an open book and would let us ask him any questions about those wars. He would let us have some of his chewing tobacco, because he said it would put hair on our ass! He swore like crazy and was one of the funniest people I’ve ever met.
@OkieJay
@OkieJay 17 күн бұрын
I enjoyed your reaction to this. Please consider also reacting to "Masters of the Air". It's the most recent WWII miniseries by Hanks and Spielberg.
@rickchollett
@rickchollett 18 күн бұрын
My late uncle fought on Okinawa. His wife said he had nightmares for years after. He said, "Bad things happen in war and you just have to get over them and move on." He rarely spoke of it other than to say that he despised the Japs and that they had no souls.
@olejensen3125
@olejensen3125 18 күн бұрын
🥰 Like you annd your reaction🥰
@olejensen3125
@olejensen3125 18 күн бұрын
🥰
@hokiedoo
@hokiedoo 18 күн бұрын
I used to hunt with a great man he was injured by a Japanese grenade at Guadalcanal,he had metal splinters come through his skin from the grenade for the rest of his life....he loved being a Marine!
@mileschang796
@mileschang796 18 күн бұрын
The train ride never happened unfortunately, Sledge ended up in China as a part of the stablization effort along with processing surrendering Japanese troops for another year. He wrote in his memoir, China Marines.
@tomw324
@tomw324 17 күн бұрын
I thought they made that clear when they were talking at the beginning of that scene. That they were coming back well after all the others. Chronologically their return would have been well after the events in most of the episode and I suppose should have come at the very end, but it works how it is done.
@mileschang796
@mileschang796 17 күн бұрын
@tomw324 Yes, they did. But to my understanding, Sledge was reassigned separately.
@tomw324
@tomw324 17 күн бұрын
Yes that may be true, been a while since I read China Marine. Still the train journey is a nice series of scenes, even if it didn't happen that way.
@mileschang796
@mileschang796 17 күн бұрын
@tomw324 yeah, it's meant to be a fitting send off for them.
@Uncle_Neil
@Uncle_Neil 18 күн бұрын
"The Pacific" lost HBO money, but it makes people cry out of sorrow, for the living and the dead. Priceless.
@BigDicnigga-eh4kj
@BigDicnigga-eh4kj 18 күн бұрын
They families saw the pdst and heard the nightmares.. they never talked about it.
@justinm4497
@justinm4497 18 күн бұрын
good series wasn't it? nice kid.
@dedcowbowee
@dedcowbowee 18 күн бұрын
Thank you, you really put in the effort and made great reactions for every episode. thank you for your reading text, some reactors don't bother, lol.🥰
@zombiespongebob6903
@zombiespongebob6903 18 күн бұрын
still the greatest generation of heroes... there were no drones... there were no satellites... they just had each other and a mission... and just plain bravery and grit. Sad to know that generation of heroes are almost all gone.
@jian5568
@jian5568 18 күн бұрын
Besides American views of the pacific war. The Chinese and the eastern Asian countries were liberated by the Japanese and cause massive destruction. And very least view of the war and China was at war with japan before ww2 offically began.
@catherinelw9365
@catherinelw9365 16 күн бұрын
The Japanese didn't "liberate" anyone.
@catherinelw9365
@catherinelw9365 14 күн бұрын
No east Asian country was "liberated" by Japan. They were ravaged.
@jian5568
@jian5568 11 күн бұрын
@@catherinelw9365 ok fine
@YN97WA
@YN97WA 18 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed all your reactions to this series, Amy, and I agree with you; everyone needs to see this series, along with B o B and Masters of the Air. This generation paid a hefty price to save the world from tyranny, and it should always be remembered and honored. I think you represented that beautifully, young lady.
@mikealvarez2322
@mikealvarez2322 18 күн бұрын
Amy, you have such a beautiful response to the hell these men went through and what we owe them. We need to do more than just honor them. We need to be sure that what they fought for, freedom and human decency, is not lost. Millions of men and women fought to stop evil from dominating so much of the world. That same evil that wants to rule the world is still with us it just has a different name.
@kevinotoole2285
@kevinotoole2285 18 күн бұрын
I think something we don’t mention with Sledge is his father must of been brought back to the First World War with the trauma he experienced treating those boys helping Eugene. The toll of now worrying about his 2 sons being home and idle with trauma.
@sandbagger57
@sandbagger57 18 күн бұрын
Sledge was stationed in China after the war until 1946. He wrote the book China Marine. Sledge's memoir is a classic and considered one of the great combat memoirs. You did an excellent job. The three parts of this trilogy are Band of Brothers, The Pacific and Masters of the Air. They are all made by the same people.
@mikealvarez2322
@mikealvarez2322 18 күн бұрын
The documentary about the Battle of Pelelieu has several clips featuring Eugene and some of his experiences on the Island.
@skyhawksailor8736
@skyhawksailor8736 18 күн бұрын
Now you need to watch the additional documentary "Profiles in the Pacific". Bob's wife and family along with other families and Marines who were still alive.
@mikealvarez2322
@mikealvarez2322 18 күн бұрын
It's important to note the difference in how WW2 soldiers went to war and how they came home compared to those who fought in Vietnam. WW2 vets went in units and returned in units while Vietnam veterans returned singularly with no time to readjust with their comrades. I believe we did a terrible disservice to our Vietnam vets. My best friend did 2 tours of duty as a combat Marine in Vietnam.
@JoshDeCoster
@JoshDeCoster 17 күн бұрын
It’s insane that we required servicemen in the infantry in Vietnam to serve 12 months there, and witness their friends dying and so much death, but yet we immediately put them on a commercial plane for a 24 hour flight. Could you imagine that? Everything must have hit those guys all at once on those planes back.
@mikealvarez2322
@mikealvarez2322 16 күн бұрын
​@@JoshDeCoster I read somewhere that soldiers in Vietnam experienced 240 days of combat while WW2 soldiers experienced an average of 40. Combat experience includes sitting in a fox hole in the Ardennes or humping the rice paddies looking for Charlie.
@bg7606
@bg7606 18 күн бұрын
I grew up in northern New Jersey in the 70s. My friends and I were very interested in history. And we knew who Robert leckie was from his book. Those teams that they mention...used to play our high school. One time Leckie was there. Our history teacher, who was a retired Marine Corps captain in Vietnam, knew him, and pointed him out to us. for history nerds, It was a BIG deal.
@RichardWelty
@RichardWelty 18 күн бұрын
in addition to his memoir, Leckie wrote a number of popular histories after the war. i've acquired copies of a couple of them. he's a good writer, although the books are a little dated as is common with the popular history category.
@cpj83
@cpj83 18 күн бұрын
Great job with a tough to watch series! My father and all but one of my uncles served in the Pacific. Those men were my heroes as a kid and still are. They’re all gone now, taking their stories and experiences to the grave. They were The Greatest Generation!
@michaelstach5744
@michaelstach5744 18 күн бұрын
You are now qualified to watch “He Has Seen War,” the documentary that follows this series. It show some of these men and men from BoB and their families and how they adjusted to civilian life. There was no understanding of PTSD back then. You might also watch “The Best Years of Our Lives,” a fantastic movie about vets returning home and adjusting or not not to civilian life.
@terryd757
@terryd757 17 күн бұрын
I second the suggestion to watch "The Best Year of Our Lives" I think the real impact of that movie is knowing it was made in 1946 and not everyone was even home yet. It was also made in an era when you didn't admit to having problems, so maybe seeing that it was happening to others was helpful.
@erivej
@erivej 18 күн бұрын
With all that Leckie went through, I believe who he ended up with was his biggest accomplishment 😁
@prodbycinder
@prodbycinder 18 күн бұрын
That's Snafu's Pecker!