Instagram - / aria.chanson Second Channel - / @ariachanson02 00:00 - Intro 01:45 - Reaction 17:30 - Review episode 1 the pacific reaction 1x1 part one first time watching
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@dan_hitchman00715 күн бұрын
Two of my uncles were in the U.S. Pacific Fleet during World War 2. They would not talk about what happened. It was far too traumatic.
@warriorpitbull117015 күн бұрын
So happy to see you're watching my favorite war series and I'm here for the long haul. As a Marine, I see the Pacific as an ode to the Old Breed and an important set of knowledge for every American to see what these amazing men went through. Love your reactions, Aria.
@FXGreggan.15 күн бұрын
Ohh, most 'reactors' miss The Pacific series, this is going to be good - thank you!
@suprchickn7745Күн бұрын
Your beautiful name seems to go along with your beautiful heart. You are one of the most thoughtful reactors out there and it is a pleasure to hear your well-reasoned ideas, your humility and your desire to be informed. It is so refreshing to see people of your age who are approaching these difficult subjects with such a willingness to learn and sympathize with others. God bless you, Aria!
@michaeldmcgee449914 күн бұрын
With each episode the story becomes darker and the fighting more savage and brutal, but it's worth the effort.
@4nthr4x15 күн бұрын
Glad to see you're reacting to this series Aria. An important point of attention, as any veteran watcher will tell you, please try to find a version of The Pacific where each episode has a short intro narrated by Tom Hanks, which outlines the current situation, with maps and crucial context. It enhances the experience a great deal. There are many versions out there where these intros are omitted, for some inexplicable reason.
@ariachanson0115 күн бұрын
Ohhh, this one didn’t have any intro☹️
@dan_hitchman00715 күн бұрын
@@ariachanson01Aria, I believe you have to watch the Blu-ray disc set for those Tom Hanks introductions because most streaming services do not include them. A bonus is that those specific discs have much better picture and sound quality. FYI
@BogeyDopeYT15 күн бұрын
Yeah. You’re missing the real footage intro’s and interviews.
@rollomaughfling38014 күн бұрын
@@ariachanson01 Yep. You're running a business here! Invest in yourself! ❤
@crispy_33815 күн бұрын
Fighting in the Pacific Theater was hell on earth compared to Europe. And Europe was bad enough
@TheSocratesian15 күн бұрын
Guadallcanal was just an enormous struggle to the death that took six months and was fought on the land, sea and air. It was one Hell of a campaign.
@rollomaughfling38014 күн бұрын
Well, I'm sure glad you explained that to her, after she'd already watched the video depiction of all that. Wouldn't want her to confuse this, with, say, "a tiny discomfort" . . .
@dioghaltasfoirneartach725811 күн бұрын
Japan lost the war on Guadalcanal. Midway, 1st Guadalcanal 2nd The Japanese never recovered from Midway and Guadalcanal.
@TheSocratesian11 күн бұрын
They certainly never recovered from Midway.
@cavemancell356213 күн бұрын
Japan went from a feudal society to a modern country in a very short time. There are basically two types of feudal societies - one is hierarchical, and other cooperative. Englian had a cooperative feudalism - mutual respect amongst the different parts - clergy, farmers, knights/warriors, merchants, nobility. Each sector had respective rights and responsibilities. In Japan's hierarchical feudal society, rank was everything. Samurai worked for the nobility, peasants and merchants were below Samuri ..If you were a farmer, and a Samurai walked past you and you didn't bow low enough, he could slice you in half, with no consequences. If a Samurai's Lord told a warrior to jump off a cliff to his death, or kill himself, he obeyed. When Japan conquered other countries, they regarded the conquered population as dishonored, and treated them with contempt. Japan invaded Korea and treated the nation a virtual slaves for 40 years. 6 million Indonesians died by overwork, malnutrition, starvation. 20 million Chinese died as the result of Japan's invation. For the Japanese, no quarter was given to opponents, and no quarter was asked of them. And young Americans fought this mentality for 4 years. The Japanese were brutal. American forces had no choice but to work to match the brutality. At great cost.
@mattwood648514 күн бұрын
When they say 7th Marines, 5th Marines etc they mean 7th Regiment, 5th Regiment and so on. They're just units.
@ExUSSailor12 күн бұрын
Marine Corps fighting units are broken down into battalions, and, regiments. So, when you hear a Marine refer to, say, the "three-five", what they mean is, "3rd Battalion, Fifth Marine Regiment". When they say, "the 7th", they mean the 7th Marine Regiment.
@stevenlurati369114 күн бұрын
There are intros like Band of brothers had, fr some reason they were removed this past summer they are in a composit video so you can still watch the intro prior ti each episode. It helps explain whats going on a little better.
@ariachanson0113 күн бұрын
Saw the intros for the first 2 episodes today and I can’t understand why they removed them☹️
@patmancrowley850910 күн бұрын
I wept when I watched this movie because my friends father fought on Guadalcanal. He was a tough but fair man may GOD rest his soul.
@mikecaetano14 күн бұрын
The beach landing scene does quote the opening minutes of Saving Private Ryan until they hit the beach and find it empty. When you're finished with this series, if you're interested in great films set in the Pacific Theater of WWII, check out The Bridge on the River Kwai, Sands of Iwo Jima, They Were Expendable, or the more recent Letters from Iwo Jima or The Thin Red Line -- Terrence Malick made a war film and set it in The Battle of Guadalcanal. The cast is full of famous cameos. Hacksaw Ridge is another popular film set in the Pacific Theater. It is set in The Battle of Okinawa. And if you want to go way old school, check out Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo from 1944 about the Doolittle Raid - "an air raid on 18 April 1942 by the United States on the Japanese capital Tokyo"
@ariachanson0113 күн бұрын
I’ve heard about Hacksaw Ridge but could never bring myself to watch it🙈 I didn’t know it was set in the Pacific, that’s gonna make it even harder to watch
@mikecaetano11 күн бұрын
@@ariachanson01 "The Bridge on the River Kwai" is a David Lean epic masterpiece. Start there. You'll never look at Star Wars the same way again afterward. Also, don't discount the Japanese movies made about the war after the war. Some of them rank among the greatest films ever made -- "The Human Condition", "The Burmese Harp", "Fire on the Plains".
@twohorsesinamancostume760615 күн бұрын
Band of Brothers was very much about the brotherhood that develops between men at war. The Pacific focuses more on the dehumanization that war subjects people to, especially when you're fighting a brutal enemy like Imperial Japan. I don't condone the way the Marines were toying with that guy in the river, but don't cry too hard for him. A lot of the units that the Marines fought against were responsible for war crimes all over the Pacific and tens of millions died at their hands. The Imperial Japanese military wasn't like the Nazis, where you had specific units carrying out most of the war crimes. The Japanese military was cruel and barbaric from it's leadership all the way down to the lowliest private.
@michaelb176112 күн бұрын
That the the Nazi representatives in Japan and China were writing back to the high command about how inhuman and barbaric the Japanese were, gives you an idea of how inhuman they were. Even literal Nazis were sickened by the behavior of the Japanese military. From what I've read and heard the Japanese still think they were on the right side of the war and teach that superiority in their schools. The Rape of Nanking, the horrible experiments they carried out on captured Chinese, how they turned Korea into one huge brothel; none of that happened according to their history books.
@pricemoore202215 күн бұрын
Awesome reaction of my favorite episode of The Pacific!!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊😊
@TheMistrG15 күн бұрын
Pumped for this one, Aria. Anyway, yes, you're dead on with flanking. Just basically trying to overpower one side/flank of the enemy to gain an advantage. "If flanking doesn't work - flank some more!" Can't remember who said it, but it always pops in my mind. Also can't wait for another episode, especially if you manage to find the ones with the veterans talking and Tom Hanks narrating at the beginning.
@thetr00per3014 күн бұрын
You were right to be nervous about beach landings in the pacific. Just wait, you will see them. I warned you that this will not be the same journey as Band of Brothers, but I commend you for taking this on.
@Thelordofloneliness13 күн бұрын
Yay, I've been looking forward to seeing you watch this!❤
@mikejacobson1415 күн бұрын
This is a dark series, quite different from Band of Brothers, but so important to watch and get some feel for what our men had to go through or us. We owe them biggly. BTW, flanking is getting by the end of the enemy's line to attack where they're weaker or from behind.
@frankieH9115 күн бұрын
Yeah, that's what "flanking" means. You got it right. The start of this battle August 1942 would be about 4 months before Easy company even starts training to be paratroopers. Kind of interesting to think where those guys were at this point in the war. The guy with the heart condition Eugene is played by the boy from the first Jurassic Park movie. Joseph Mazzello is the actor's name. The scene with the US navy ships exploding in the distance was "the Battle of Savo Island." There's some really well done youtube videos explaining it. If you just search that name of the battle on youtube the first 2-3 videos are really informative and interesting.
@MrKawika6411 күн бұрын
My Tio fought on Guam & Okinawa
@dudermcdudeface367415 күн бұрын
If you decide to read the source material after finishing the show, one of the main sources is a lot better than the other. Won't say which because their names could be a spoiler. But there's definite consensus about it.
@williambranch428315 күн бұрын
My young Italian-American father-in-law was heading to the War Dept. Took 6 months to take this one island. The 1st Marines were there for the first 3 months. The Japanese Navy badly beat the American Navy in that first battle.
@johannesvalterdivizzini152315 күн бұрын
I don't understand what anecdote you are telling us about your father in law.
@williambranch428315 күн бұрын
@@johannesvalterdivizzini1523 Analogy, that Italian-American family in drama and fact ... are good people. Same as my father-in-law. Not everyone thought so at that time when we were fighting Italy.
@Carln01304 күн бұрын
There are pictures of the aftermath of the Battle of the Tenryu. It is something you can Google. They didn't exaggerate the carnage.
@TD-mg6cd10 күн бұрын
Some classical music can make your soul soar.
@mikejacobson1415 күн бұрын
"1st Marines" refers to 1st Marine Division. This kind of term could be used for battalions or regiments as well.
@suhey3410 күн бұрын
Happy is the wrong word to use but I'll just say I'm intrigued to see your reaction and thoughts to this series and happy to see you start it. Buckle up, it's going to be a helluva ride. Band of Brothers was a kids show compared to The Pacific.
@TD-mg6cd10 күн бұрын
I believe that the picture was of the soldier and his wife. The doll probably was their daughter"s.
@dogawful15 күн бұрын
I was always interested in Guadalcanal since one of my uncle's fought there. He wasn't in the Marines though, instead in the army through the North Dakota National Guard. I never really knew my uncles since I am the youngest of seven and my dad was the youngest of eight. My uncle did end up with malaria and problems with night terrors. My dad told me that my uncle always had to sleep alone throughout his life because of this. I think he was able to adjust pretty well to life afterward though for the most part. The Operations Room channel has a good 21 minute video on the battle featured in this episode: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fpm5knxpbcmpmdE The also have one on the naval engagement, The Battle of Savo Island, about 17 minutes: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnjWonmui9N2bqc I guess one of the things that I didn't realize about the war in the Pacific growing up was the scale of the fighting in China. As horrible as the fighting was for the US and Australians on the islands in the Pacific, most of the killing and dying was going on in China, and for years before Pearl Harbor. Dan Carlin's podcast Supernova in the East is fantastic, though it is really long. Kind of an overview of the war and the Japanese mindset.
@goldenageofdinosaurs719215 күн бұрын
Wow, I was just re-watching your Christmas Story reaction when this came up in my feed. This is quite an intense series. It’s really good, but it’s harrowing. I actually prefer it to Band of Brothers, though I’d guess I’m in the minority there.
@nataliestclair617615 күн бұрын
My heart went out to you when you said you hoped this episode would not make you cry today becuase you didn't feel like crying 😢
@goldenageofdinosaurs719215 күн бұрын
So, the 5th & 7th numbers you were asking about are the division of the marines they are in (5th division, 7th division etc). It doesn’t have anything to do about which ones go first or anything (though in modern times, the US 1st Marine Division is usually the first US military to be sent anywhere, as marines are a rapid deployment force).
@gregoryellias299415 күн бұрын
It is not Divisions it is the 5th. & 7th. Marine Regiments.
@nataliestclair617615 күн бұрын
during WW2 the Marine Corps had 6 Divisions, the 1st through the 6th Marine Divisions. The 4th Marine Division was ordered by McArthur to surrender when the Philippines fell, 1st time in history an entire Marine Divison surrendered. The Marines later reestablished the 4th Marine Division in WW2. The 1st Marine Division was sent to Guadalcanal. The 5th and 7th Marine Regiment was and still is an infantry regiments in the 1st Marine Division
@davemeyer142314 күн бұрын
It was the 5th & 7th Regiments of the 1st Marine Division
@williambranch428315 күн бұрын
Band of Brothers, The Pacific, Masters of the Air ... same war, very different experiences.
@dallesamllhals916111 күн бұрын
To bad, the third one was to late 'n' to CGI'ish 😕
@williambranch428311 күн бұрын
@@dallesamllhals9161 Did you enjoy Greyhound from 2022?
@dallesamllhals916111 күн бұрын
@@williambranch4283 Semi! Nice to see a real ship...ALAS: WAY to much Type-VII surface CGI BANG-BANG-bang 😕
@scenxad14 күн бұрын
Highly suggest 1998-The Thin Red Line. Great film about the Pacific Guadalcanal battle.
@johnpearce516814 күн бұрын
If you think you're emotional for this one you haven't seen nothing yet.. episode 9 is going to be the worst one
@ariachanson0113 күн бұрын
🙈🙈🙈
@williambranch428315 күн бұрын
My mother and grandmother were Rosies, making ammo for the war. My mother could never forgive Asians for this war or the next two wars.
@catherinelw936514 күн бұрын
Not fair to blame all Asians for this. IT WAS JAPAN. Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos and other Asians suffered at the hands of the Japanese. If your mother and grandmother blame all Asians, they are racist assholes.
@cavemancell356213 күн бұрын
I had a cousin who made ammo in Kansas. Huge plant out in farm country, thousands of workers bused in and out each day from nearby cities. Long days for all of them. They all served, in different ways. My grandfather had a "victory garden" in what shortly before was his beautiful front lawn, and he housed traveling military in the NYC area. He did it to help - he had a big house, and he had plenty of money. Every helped where they could. There are a lot of heart-warming stories, seldom herd over the roar of battles...
@catherinelw936511 күн бұрын
Not ALL Asians are responsible for the war. I guess your mother is a classic racist.
@dallesamllhals916111 күн бұрын
@@catherinelw9365 HOW far back are We going?
@dallesamllhals916111 күн бұрын
@@catherinelw9365 Ah-Hah! Thé Naked primate do not make war...?
@buddystewart202015 күн бұрын
As brutal as the war in the Pacific was for the US, more men died in Europe, fighting the Germans, than did in the Pacific. A lot more.
@catherinelw936514 күн бұрын
Well duh. That's because far more were sent to Europe to fight. But the percentage of PTSD and casualties was much higher in the Pacific. An Allied POW in the Pacific had about a 50-50 chance of surviving. A (western) Allied POW had over 90% chance of survival.
@buddystewart202014 күн бұрын
@@catherinelw9365 ... What do you mean well duh? She didn't act like she knew it, and that's who I was talking to.
@catherinelw936511 күн бұрын
@@buddystewart2020 Then provide a better answer. You omitted a material fact.