Jay doesn’t want to talk about what happened in Afghanistan, but I think it would be a great episode with just Jay about his time in Afghanistan and what happened after that. Only Mouse knows what happened to him They talk about he was tortured after his time? And I think it would be a great turn for series if they make a episode about this. Also I like to see Mouse again, I loved him in the show
The general public isn't ready for that heavy of a conversation yet. He wasn't physically tortured. And as someone who has done the job and has friends in the 75th Ranger Regiment, his attitude doesn't reflect reality. Reference my main comment above.
I really miss him ,he has such an intuitive sense of what is really going on in a scene. I call that an amazing actor. Him and Hailey are so fun to watch,their chemistry is right on.😍
@@elliehurm3928 the problem is they never dicuss it. Like jay has never ever talked abut anything related ro rangers except for that last time with hayley. And i mean like real talked, he used to pissed whenever Mouse mentions it or have nightmares abut it when smth real happens Hell even will told lisndey smth like "he had no one when it happened" yet we literally never hear him talk. Like come one 9seasons and all u can do is one scene?
I would really have an episode where there is a flashback and Jay is in the army and fighting. Maybe tie it together with a funeral or a murder of a friend or something.
Hailey Upton certainly would've liked to see Jay Halstead in his US Army uniform and would've hugged him so hard after seeing that uniform. It would've been good if Chicago PD had an episode in which Hank Voight meets someone who was a friend a of his only son, Justin, who was in the US Army, and comes to help Hank as he returns a debt to Justin, who helped him out in the service.
"Nobody ever came back the whole way" so true though. one of my buddy is an Army Officer. Station in a conflict area. We can see he changed when he came back. like there's something inside him missing.
Anyone who wants to sign up should be made to watch stuff like this, and everything else that shows how damaged some people can become because of their service and the things they've seen and done. It's absolutely right that we should respect those who have served, but it's wrong that these people had no idea of how traumatized they can become before they signed up. Whilst serving your country is honorable, there is nothing wrong in asking yourself "is it worth it?"
I wanna enlist ( be a military doctor) and I know the risks but I still wanna serve and help. My family is trying to convince me out of it but I wanna do it .
IDK how many times I've watched this but am I the only one who when he's telling the story of the little girl thinks he is telling him about the little girl he shot accidentally on duty at the beginning of season 5 in episode 1.
No that’s what actually happened when he was in the service because he said it ripped through her neck and the girl that he shot when he was a cop she got shot in the chest because I remember that episode that was season five episode one when he shot the little girl
I wish he was more open with Lindsay, it would have made their characters a little more dynamic. I think it would have made their relationship stronger as well because of her past traumas; we never really got to see Erin’s true experience. Wish they would have written more in depth for both of their characters when Sophia was still with the series. P.S. I haven’t watched an episode since she left the series...so I guess I’m biased.
Same I wish they opened up more about while Lindsay was there so she would feel confident in opening up to him but I wished they really talked about while mouse was there bc at least he had someone there who knew what happened and related to it all.
The way he takes the TTPs from being a Ranger and apply them to Law Enforcement is pretty real. The way he talks about it isn't. Nobody who did the job ever laments about it like that. Rangers are triple volunteers. The volunteer to serve by enlisting in the Army, the volunteer again to go to Airborne School, and the Volunteer AGAIN to go to RASP. They WANT to be there, and unfortunately when you do the job of a Ranger, it's understood that you'll loose some guys. This whole defeatist "Woe is me" attitude is the most antithetical thing to what a Ranger believes. This dialogue is dreamt up by leftist civilians who have no desire to fight, and don't have first-hand knowledge of how people who do fight think. Find ANY Special Operations dude out there and ask them their opinion of what they did. They swell with pride and they ALWAYS say they want to go back out with the boys and do the job again. People with this attitude NEVER pass selection.
I am laughing at comments like yours here, just so many childish, stupid people here, who think that they are 'the real experts'. News flash : experts from the police as well as the army, work on this show, I know, because I know one of them, personally. Hardcore right - wingers see this show as "too leftist" and far-leftists as "too far right" and even that can be seen in a few comments here, which only proves that all of you are just morons with agenda, without actual understanding of reality. The show is great, because it presents reality as complex, full of nuances, as it should be. And these silly comments show that people today are terribly divided and that they only see their opinion and feelings, nothing more. A couple of things: what you wrote is bullshit. I have Rangers and Marines in my family, I also have people who never wanted the war in Afghanistan or Iraq, we all watch this show since episode 1 and this is one of the most real tv series about the police / army there is. If you had watched the show diligently, from the beginning, you would have known that Jay has always been and is proud of his service with the Rangers. He never said he wasn't, in this video he literally comforts the widow and son of his dead friend. Jay has PTSD, he has spent years in therapy, has been working for years as a police officer, and as in the case of any soldier, especially one who is now police officer, his wartime experiences and trauma have complicated his emotions and opinions about the war. Some of these emotions did evolve, as it happens in the real world. I don't know what kind of professional soldiers you know, but if you knew the real ones, you would know there is a difference between pride in serving in the army and analyzing what you saw or did during the war, because of what you experienced and because of the dirty politics of those above. Unless you are hillbilly, unable to reflect. And every tv show's function is to reflect and analyze people - their emotions and what they go through, you do understand this? This is exactly as it is. Jay and Mouse are both proud vets, but they also go through the trauma all the time (it never goes away for the guys who went through hell as Jay did; if you watched the show you would know; and if you had any professional contact with the army or war), and they constantly confront their feelings about what happened during the war. The changes that are taking place around them, are pushing them to do so. We are not living in the black-white reality, and you (some others here) write as if you do. These are very complicated, often brutal emotions and thoughts - that's exactly what all the guys who have returned from the war have. And all these episodes have shown just that. An episode where Jay protects the daughter of a police chief in which he is clearly angry at people who don't understand soldiers or don't appreciate his and his colleagues' service& sacrficie, but the same time, later, he also understands why other citizens are angry and protesting. On the other hand, there was the episode where a war hero Miller tries to get revenge and plants the bombs, and Jay is blind almost the entire episode and refuses to believe that his fellow soldier would do something like this. Very real, because being a great soldier like Jay, you don't want to believe it, but the reality is that anger and trauma can push anyone, including some bitter veterans to do attacks like these. Jay is simply able to think in a nuanced way, like any truly intelligent person. He doesn't just limit himself to his experiences. Something, you (and others) clearly don't get. And one more thing - Jesse Lee Soffer (the actor) has family experiences in this regard, from which he draws inspiration. His grandfather was a soldier, a World War II veteran and a Vietnam veteran. And as I said - real policemen and war veterans also work on this show. Knowing better what they're doing than an anonymous on the internet with the generic american-flag avatar xD.
Afghanistan wasn't Vietnam.... Usually, it's "over there", not trying to remember - to connect, it wasn't a war - it was an occupation, aggression.. Like PD, overtrying to please the military.. Note to Magnum PI - no POW in the Afghan war..
lmao your IQ level. This is a great show that shows reality in the police force as complicated - the bad, the good and the ugly, so exactly as it should be. They show some behaviors on purpose, but let me guess - you are the typical far leftist, unable to grasp that reality is not black&white, simple, one-sided, just as you would like it to be. That is why our political and social discussion is dead - because today it is dominated by people like you, on all sides of the political spectrum, people who are not able to see the nuances, but their 'agenda'. This show (if you watch it from the beginning, episode after episode) portrays the world as it is - complex, it shows everything. And don't even answer me because you're such an idiot that I feel my brain cells are depleting replying to you.
Jay doesn’t want to talk about what happened in Afghanistan, but I think it would be a great episode with just Jay about his time in Afghanistan and what happened after that. Only Mouse knows what happened to him
They talk about he was tortured after his time? And I think it would be a great turn for series if they make a episode about this.
Also I like to see Mouse again, I loved him in the show
It would be great if he came back even just to visit like after the tour and they reunite and catch up.
Mouse was the beeeeeest!
The general public isn't ready for that heavy of a conversation yet. He wasn't physically tortured. And as someone who has done the job and has friends in the 75th Ranger Regiment, his attitude doesn't reflect reality. Reference my main comment above.
Agree
I really miss him ,he has such an intuitive sense of what is really going on in a scene. I call that an amazing actor. Him and Hailey are so fun to watch,their chemistry is right on.😍
I think they an episode where mouse comes back and surprises Jay and the rest of the 21st.
Or something happends to mouse in and jay get back in his old unit and goes to help him
We need an episode where jay breaks down or has a panic/anxiety attack
We kind of do when Ruzek finds Jay sleeping in the break room in season 5 ep 7 “Care Under Fire”
It’s a kickoff for ptsd and one of the bad ways Jay chose to handle it.
hailey is going to have one next week in 9x4
@@elliehurm3928 the problem is they never dicuss it. Like jay has never ever talked abut anything related ro rangers except for that last time with hayley. And i mean like real talked, he used to pissed whenever Mouse mentions it or have nightmares abut it when smth real happens Hell even will told lisndey smth like "he had no one when it happened" yet we literally never hear him talk. Like come one 9seasons and all u can do is one scene?
I hate how he left I wanted to see
I’ve seen dead bodies and I’ve seen people shot in front of me, but I’ve never seen somebody take a bullet that was meant for me
Wish they explored this a little more.
I would really have an episode where there is a flashback and Jay is in the army and fighting. Maybe tie it together with a funeral or a murder of a friend or something.
My dad is a marine I dott see him much but when he comes home we watch this.
Hailey Upton certainly would've liked to see Jay Halstead in his US Army uniform and would've hugged him so hard after seeing that uniform. It would've been good if Chicago PD had an episode in which Hank Voight meets someone who was a friend a of his only son, Justin, who was in the US Army, and comes to help Hank as he returns a debt to Justin, who helped him out in the service.
thank you it's a great edit :)
I'm glad you like it!
I love this show!
5:20-5:26 cracks me up 'buddy, they gotta shoot me first'
Ya it's hilarious and it's part of another video called Jay Halstead being a smartass for 4 minutes straight
Which ep is that
@@parijatbanerjee8748 Season 2 Episode 2
This is great! You can even update it after 9x03.
Could you maybe do a second part? There are a few scenes missing, that I would have loved to see, for example his talks with Mouse.
What episode does he have the nighrmare in the break room?
@@susannadipasquale9028 i think ist's 5x07
@@HEY-gn5lx unfortunately I've watched that episode a few times and couldn't find that scene :( Thanks anyways
@@susannadipasquale9028 ist's definitely an opening scene or at least within the first few minutes.
@@HEY-gn5lx I'll double check earlier episodes in the season
"Nobody ever came back the whole way" so true though. one of my buddy is an Army Officer. Station in a conflict area. We can see he changed when he came back. like there's something inside him missing.
Anyone who wants to sign up should be made to watch stuff like this, and everything else that shows how damaged some people can become because of their service and the things they've seen and done. It's absolutely right that we should respect those who have served, but it's wrong that these people had no idea of how traumatized they can become before they signed up.
Whilst serving your country is honorable, there is nothing wrong in asking yourself "is it worth it?"
I wanna enlist ( be a military doctor) and I know the risks but I still wanna serve and help. My family is trying to convince me out of it but I wanna do it .
this was great 😍
My baby Jay
IDK how many times I've watched this but am I the only one who when he's telling the story of the little girl thinks he is telling him about the little girl he shot accidentally on duty at the beginning of season 5 in episode 1.
that is who he's talking about. but he's telling it as if it was a story from when he served bc the guy he was talking to didn't know he was a cop
No that’s what actually happened when he was in the service because he said it ripped through her neck and the girl that he shot when he was a cop she got shot in the chest because I remember that episode that was season five episode one when he shot the little girl
@@lousteve8538 it has to be the girl he killed in 5x01 there’s no way it could happen twice. I mean how can someone’s luck be THAT bad lol.
Wow... that was... Just wow.!!!
what episode is the cut from 5-5:25 where halsted says they will have to go through him first.
My pops dad was in the Army. He died and He didn’t like talking about the Army.
Military guys always have an understanding.
My poor Jay
What episode was the last scene? With Hailey and Jay?
6x7 trigger!
idky but their brothershio reminds me of supernatural brothers
Does anyone know what season and episode 5:03 is
Nirman Noorpuri season 2 episode 2 “get my cigarettes”
Which episode is the scene in 2:57 from?
Don't know
I think it’s 3x17??
Wait or 2x03 ?
It’s 3x17 called forty caliber breadcrumb
What episode is 2:53 ?💓
joyce season 3 episode 17
Which season and episode is when he talks to Brett, 1:37 ???
2x03 I think
What episode is 0:30
Voyager 1 spacecraft arrives at planets Saturn’s rings before in 1977 until in November 8 through 12, 1980
What episode is 4:43 from?
@@elinmadadian4080 Thanks so much!!!
@@elinmadadian4080 I was rewatching that episode and couldn't find it :( it is close to the beginning? end?
@@elinmadadian4080 thanks 👍 I'll check again tonight on the CTV website.
This was an edit and a half.
What episode is 1:35?
Series 2 episode 3
@@r_sharma11 Thanks a lot
Witch episode 0:01
2x18
What episode is where kid pointing the gun at him I can never find it pls help
2x2 get my cigarettes
What episode is 1:21 from
6x07
Which episode is 0:54?
3x17
When’s it back?
November 11th I think
January 6th
I wish he was more open with Lindsay, it would have made their characters a little more dynamic. I think it would have made their relationship stronger as well because of her past traumas; we never really got to see Erin’s true experience. Wish they would have written more in depth for both of their characters when Sophia was still with the series.
P.S. I haven’t watched an episode since she left the series...so I guess I’m biased.
Same I wish they opened up more about while Lindsay was there so she would feel confident in opening up to him but I wished they really talked about while mouse was there bc at least he had someone there who knew what happened and related to it all.
Anyone know what episode and season 0:56 is
Season 3 Episode 17 "Forty-Caliber Bread Crumb"
Which episode is the funeral from?
3x17
what eps are this
what are these episodes?
Hey :) I used quite a few across many seasons but mainly s3 and s5 I believe. The next compilation video I do, I'll keep track and give you a list!
@@spaceandtime1364 which episode is minute 1:01 ?
@@spaceandtime1364 what episode is on 1:50?
@@anneblume3937 I think its 3x17
@@marithavreeken4962 6x07
The way he takes the TTPs from being a Ranger and apply them to Law Enforcement is pretty real. The way he talks about it isn't. Nobody who did the job ever laments about it like that. Rangers are triple volunteers. The volunteer to serve by enlisting in the Army, the volunteer again to go to Airborne School, and the Volunteer AGAIN to go to RASP. They WANT to be there, and unfortunately when you do the job of a Ranger, it's understood that you'll loose some guys. This whole defeatist "Woe is me" attitude is the most antithetical thing to what a Ranger believes. This dialogue is dreamt up by leftist civilians who have no desire to fight, and don't have first-hand knowledge of how people who do fight think. Find ANY Special Operations dude out there and ask them their opinion of what they did. They swell with pride and they ALWAYS say they want to go back out with the boys and do the job again. People with this attitude NEVER pass selection.
I am laughing at comments like yours here, just so many childish, stupid people here, who think that they are 'the real experts'. News flash : experts from the police as well as the army, work on this show, I know, because I know one of them, personally. Hardcore right - wingers see this show as "too leftist" and far-leftists as "too far right" and even that can be seen in a few comments here, which only proves that all of you are just morons with agenda, without actual understanding of reality. The show is great, because it presents reality as complex, full of nuances, as it should be. And these silly comments show that people today are terribly divided and that they only see their opinion and feelings, nothing more. A couple of things: what you wrote is bullshit. I have Rangers and Marines in my family, I also have people who never wanted the war in Afghanistan or Iraq, we all watch this show since episode 1 and this is one of the most real tv series about the police / army there is. If you had watched the show diligently, from the beginning, you would have known that Jay has always been and is proud of his service with the Rangers. He never said he wasn't, in this video he literally comforts the widow and son of his dead friend.
Jay has PTSD, he has spent years in therapy, has been working for years as a police officer, and as in the case of any soldier, especially one who is now police officer, his wartime experiences and trauma have complicated his emotions and opinions about the war. Some of these emotions did evolve, as it happens in the real world. I don't know what kind of professional soldiers you know, but if you knew the real ones, you would know there is a difference between pride in serving in the army and analyzing what you saw or did during the war, because of what you experienced and because of the dirty politics of those above. Unless you are hillbilly, unable to reflect. And every tv show's function is to reflect and analyze people - their emotions and what they go through, you do understand this? This is exactly as it is. Jay and Mouse are both proud vets, but they also go through the trauma all the time (it never goes away for the guys who went through hell as Jay did; if you watched the show you would know; and if you had any professional contact with the army or war), and they constantly confront their feelings about what happened during the war. The changes that are taking place around them, are pushing them to do so.
We are not living in the black-white reality, and you (some others here) write as if you do. These are very complicated, often brutal emotions and thoughts - that's exactly what all the guys who have returned from the war have. And all these episodes have shown just that. An episode where Jay protects the daughter of a police chief in which he is clearly angry at people who don't understand soldiers or don't appreciate his and his colleagues' service& sacrficie, but the same time, later, he also understands why other citizens are angry and protesting. On the other hand, there was the episode where a war hero Miller tries to get revenge and plants the bombs, and Jay is blind almost the entire episode and refuses to believe that his fellow soldier would do something like this. Very real, because being a great soldier like Jay, you don't want to believe it, but the reality is that anger and trauma can push anyone, including some bitter veterans to do attacks like these. Jay is simply able to think in a nuanced way, like any truly intelligent person. He doesn't just limit himself to his experiences. Something, you (and others) clearly don't get.
And one more thing - Jesse Lee Soffer (the actor) has family experiences in this regard, from which he draws inspiration. His grandfather was a soldier, a World War II veteran and a Vietnam veteran. And as I said - real policemen and war veterans also work on this show. Knowing better what they're doing than an anonymous on the internet with the generic american-flag avatar xD.
Afghanistan wasn't Vietnam....
Usually, it's "over there", not trying to remember - to connect, it wasn't a war - it was an occupation, aggression..
Like PD, overtrying to please the military..
Note to Magnum PI - no POW in the Afghan war..
Hi
oh stop already................. seriously...
Lmao the level of propaganda that runs in this show is a joke. Shame to see Sophia Bush took part in this crap, but we all saw what that got her.
lmao your IQ level. This is a great show that shows reality in the police force as complicated - the bad, the good and the ugly, so exactly as it should be. They show some behaviors on purpose, but let me guess - you are the typical far leftist, unable to grasp that reality is not black&white, simple, one-sided, just as you would like it to be. That is why our political and social discussion is dead - because today it is dominated by people like you, on all sides of the political spectrum, people who are not able to see the nuances, but their 'agenda'. This show (if you watch it from the beginning, episode after episode) portrays the world as it is - complex, it shows everything. And don't even answer me because you're such an idiot that I feel my brain cells are depleting replying to you.
what episode was 0:53 from?
3.17 - "Forty-Caliber Bread Crumb"
What episode is 2:25?
5x14
From what episode was 2:15?
What episode is 1:40 ?
2x03
What episode is 1:30 from?
Cant remember but it is the episode where they put a bounty hunter for jay. So youtube smth like 10,000$ for Jay's head or smth😂😂
What episode is 2:35?
Season 6 Episode 7 "Trigger"
Wich episode and season is 1:50?
Season 6 and I think episode 7
@@HEY-gn5lx thanks
What episode is 1:04 ?
what episode is 1:31 ??
I think it's season 2 episode 3
@@HEY-gn5lx Thankss