@@AngryMarine-il6ej its ironic, he did a shitload of combat jumps throughout the war being special forces/intelligence. He said glider landings were one of the scariest things he ever experienced... Which says something coming from a Commando.
In the Royal Navy it was a joke that submariners were paid more than aircrew...because "what goes up must come down, but what goes down won't necessarily come back up." No idea if that's true :)
Coincidentally I’m reading Frank Murphy’s book “Luck of the draw” at the moment. There’s a section where a Lt Colonel Lay who was in B17 Piccadilly recalls Escape Kit’s demise. He saw the Copilot Richard Snyder bail out from a window but he was whisked back and killed after striking the planes horizontal stabiliser, his chute never opened. Curtis Biddick was trapped inside Escape Kit which rolled over and spun into the ground. His body was located three months later hanging in his cute harness from a tree branch.
As a Brit born into a relatively peaceful Europe I can only say that all of us nations allied in Europe against the axis owe a debt to the rest of the world that we recognise can never be repaid, in particular to the men and women of both the US and Canada who could have turned their backs on us in our time of desperate need but steadfastly came to our aid at such a high cost. My never ending gratitude means nothing against such a cost borne by an entire generation, especially so soon after the war to end all wars. My life lived in peace is thanks to that generation of heroes and I include those on the home front as well as this was total war, the likes of which I pray is never seen again.
Ben, as a 4th generation American soldier, I appreciate your sentiments. I am also not only a history buf, but also just a plain ole historian. Here is the TRUTH unadulterated... NONE of the Allies could've succeeded without the other. What are considered "little skirmishes" by some, like the war fought in Greece and Crete by the OSS ( Later CIA ) and the SOE ( British Special Operations Executive later MI 6) tied down SEVERAL German divisions that MIGHT HAVE turned the tide against the Soviets on the Eastern fron. In turn, if the Soviets had not absorbed the number of German divisions they had, the Allies probably would not have been able to invade Europe as quickly as they did with Anvil ( Sicily ), Avalanche ( Itlay ), then Overlord ( France ) . WE here in the US came VERY close to losing in the Pacific if we had not lucked out at Midway. That battle was much closer than a lot of people realized. Skill and luck though are GREAT combat multipliers. With that victory in the Summer of 42 it gave us time to crank up our war production and deliver relief in later 42 with Operation Torch in Morocco. It is all so interconnected that NO ONE nation can claim to have been more important than another. While the Russians in paricular paid the highest human cost in total numbers, the saying "All gave some, some gave ALL", applies. If your STUBBORN and TENACIOUS island had not've held out, we might ALL be speaking German right now. So you take a bow too Ben, we owe YOU and your countryman a debt we cannot repay either.
Subscribed Thank you for telling these brave mens story. I knew many of them having joined the 8th AAF Historical society back in 1991. I am proud to see my friends will not be forgotten. All the men I personally knew are all gone now but because of people like you their not going to be forgotten.
I’ve seen the series twice now, and it’s been obvious to me both times that he died in that plane crash depicted in the show. I didn’t realize others hadn’t thought that.
Recently finished the book Guns at Last Light, by Rick Atkinson, he mentions hardly any other country had the wherewithal to ship remains of servicemen like the United States did.
You are right. Here in Belgium we have 2 WWII cemeteries (Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery and Ardennes American Cemetery), almost 13 thousand fallen are resting in the hallowed grounds. The effort that was made to find, identify and bury these heroes is impressive. What is also impressive is that the cemeteries are kept in immaculate condition. We Belgians consider it a true honor to have the fallen in our country. Our thankfulness and respect hasn't changed since 1944. We consider it our duty to keep their memory alive and to tell young people what the price of freedom is. Time will not dim the glory of their deeds. May God bless the men and women of the United States Armed Forces. A humble and grateful Belgian, who's grandfather was liberated from a German labor camp by the US 1st Division.
@@fletsepopje I appreciate the sentiment but no thanks are necessary, it was a privilege and an honor to wear the uniform of my country and those who came before me, just enjoy your freedoms and don't tread on others, that's thanks enough for me.
Love your channel brother. You give sobering and grounded information on the heroic deeds without glorifying the horror that these people faced. We will NEVER be able to say thank you enough to this generation of warriors. Warriors not only from the US, but Canada, Australia, UK, Russia, Poland, France and yes even Germany, Italy, and Japan and countless other nations. It was a true age of heroes whether they were men, women, or children. You really do them all justice. Thank you VERY MUCH for your channel.
I'm 72, and the people we lost from the US, both mikitary and Merchant Marines (due to failing physicals), are remembered through family oral history in Europe, mostly. A friend's family lost several in the Pacific.
My grandfather, who I’m named after but never met, was an air gunner on a B17 during the war. Funnily enough, I was an air gunner, too, but in a ch-53 in the 80’s. I found his discharge & info years after I got out, and I discovered that before the war he lived in the exact same apartment in South Boston that I lived in after I got out of the Marines, and we had the same jobs as Steelworkers. Crazy, huh ?
So many daring tales of brave men and women of that time. When being 25 was considered being an 'old man', it was certainly a different time. I always enjoyed reading the old British 'Commando' comics, which I still think they issue to this day. I have kept all mine from. the early 80's, and even as recent as the late 90's, as I do with all books, comics...and almost everything to be honest. I have not read any for some years, perhaps time to open the box again. Read my old Phantom comics as well. Who is old enough to remember going to see Memphis Belle at the cinema's? I also recall as 'amazing tales' kind of program, which had Kevin Kostner as the pilot of B52, which had its belly gunner stuck, but they also had no landing gear, so to save the crew, they also had to sacrifice the belly gunner! I won't spoil the ending in case anyone looks it up.
Reader's Digest had a story of a Hispanic LAUSD school admininstrator who had been a bomber survivor in the Pacific. He went back to where the plane and other crew members had vanished. Eventually he tracked remains that had been recovered after the war to an "unknown" grave in Hawaii. Getting permission from still living relatives and descendants government DNA work was performed on the "unknown" recovered remains. Jumbled together were three of his former crew mates. He went to the individual reburial of all three at their hometowns. The other missing crew mates the Reader's Digest did not yet know what had happened to them. I actually met a man who had worked with this Hispanic administrator. He knew nothing of this story. So I handed the Reader's Digest book over to him. I wish I had written the issue down so I could try to replace it. A loyal man who's honor was loyalty.
The one they missed that’s in the book, I believe they should have shown as more than anything else it demonstrates the horror. A B-17 returned with damage the landing gear would not extend and the belly turret was jammed in a position that the gunner could not extract. Everyone knew what was going to happen the base watched, the crew knew including the victim. The landing was horrific I think they should have shown that in the series. Another tragedy in war the only way to honour is to show the truth.
@@saucejohnson9862 I agree, I had hoped they would combine the books as they did with The Pacific. I feel the fighter story would have been much better weaved in. I’d have preferred to see more of that over the prison camp story
To all those that served and especially those that paid the ultimate price we all owe a debt that we can never repay. God Bless Them each and every one.
At 1:29 the video states that Biddick flew over Schweinfurt/Regensburg in 1934. This is clearly incorrect since the tombstone of the 3 crewmen definitely shows August 17th, 1943. The 4 and the 3 must have been transposed in the script.
I did notice that the narrator said the raid was on August 17th 1934 not 1945 😳maybe that’s why Hitler was pissed. The 100th bomb group was doing raids 5 years before the war started
In the RAF they had Sergeant Pilots...mostly in fighters, but in some larger planes too. And you could have a bomber with a Sergeant in the pilot's seat, and a commissioned officer as a Navigator or similar. In the aircraft, the pilot was still the commander. In the German bombers, the aircraft commander was usually the navigator...which kind of made sense in theory because the navigator tells the pilot where to fly. But in combat situations, it's probably better for the pilot to decide what to do rather than wait for an order.
1:27: "On August 7th, 1934 the 100th Bomb Group set out on the Schweinfurt Regensburg raid." Wow, they're lucky they weren't court-martialed and hung for attacking a country during peace time. Seriously, why can't TH-cam content providers create quality, major error free content?!?!?! Still gave this video a thumbs up, but you need to pay better attention when you are editing your videos.
"You might have been left wondering...?" There is no doubt in the series he was KIA. You noted the Schweinfurt-Regensburg date was off. But yes, your research (as did mine) showed he died a terrible death, consumed by fire. Probably holding his plane steady to give at least some of his crew a chance of bailing out. Thank you for showing the tombstone noting he & two other men buried together by the banks of the Mississippi.
We cannot comprehend the sacrifices all the allied aircrew made to free the world from Nazi tyranny - I sometimes think we do not deserve what you all did for us
If the date of August 17th, 1934 had not used at the 1:27 minute, I might have subscribed to this site, but obviously you don't know your history or don't do post edit of the videos. There was no 100th Bomb Group in England in 1934! The B-17 wasn't even in US Army Air Force service until 1941! Either you made a major mistake by not doing post editing or the entire narration is AI generated, either of which is Adult Male Bovine droppings! I am in no way disparaging the heroes of my father's generation or the courage the crews, just the narration of the video.
Thanks for the feedback Wayne. My content is certainly not AI generated but I am deaf so I use text to speech. This is an earlier video (I have only been making videos for 6 months as it is) so my editing skills were not as sharp as they are now (hopefully). I got the date wrong here yes, a simple typo as I am aware the US did not bomb Germany in 1934. I corrected the error in the description and pinned comment. Mistakes are easy to make, I am sure you have made a few in your time.
The creators choosing not to depict his death isn't censoring. Someone can censor someone else's work, you can't censor your own work, unless you filmed what happened and played it, then bleeped out the dialogue and blacked out the scene.
I couldn't watch Masters of the Air. No characters development, no story development, you feel no attachment to the characters portrayed since you're just slapped with them and is all rushed to combat scenes. Also the over use of CGI dulled it and ruined the experience. Band of Brothers remains the one, only and greatest WWII series of them all.
Thanks for sharing this. Regarding the three aircrew buried together with mixed bones, I wonder if today's DNA testing could separate the remains so they could each be buried close to their hometowns.
Neither did they before the US entered WW2. They expected to live ordinary lives. There was nothing superhuman or near godly about the servicemen of WW2 - I'm probably a lot older than you and I knew a lot of them in the 1950s and 1960s. They didn't think they did anything other than what they had to do, and many would have avoided it if they could, they didn't want to get involved with kill-or-be-killed, but they had to. Why are so determined to downgrade people living in the 21stC? Ask a few Ukrainians about sacrifice for their country.
If its youtube then its a copy of my video. There are channels popping up almost daily cloning other videos from numerous channels. I dont have to give sources btw, does Mark Felton provide them? Yarnhub?
Do humans do any better? Im Australian, I don't know how to write the text to pronounce a lot of European cities correctly. Do you know how to pronounce Wulkuraka?
@ in that case, carry on. However, that can’t possibly be the factor in the other, multitudinous postings by others in which the narrations are computer generated. And, yes. Except for the speaking of the name, “Curterbiddick”, the rest is well done.
He was cukked by the dreadful woke interject that was put into this show. It was to diminish the utter bravery and sacrifice these young men made. Something we are being stripped of acknowledging.
@@JoshuaTootell The real story of Curt Riddick in brief. He stayed piloting the plane so the crew including his co pilot could get out. The co pilots name was changed in this dire tv show. But he managed to get out and onto the wing where he jumped only to be cut in half by the tail. Riddick's plane was heading towards a village and the reports from other bomber crews were that he purposefully steered his plane into a field to avoid any civilian casualties. There are many other examples of how down graded this show was so as not to over play the courage of these young men but interject utter fiction in order to appease DEI directives current in entertainment.
When I asked my grandfather why he became a Marine, rather than RAF. "Because if we got hit, I know I can swim, but I can't fly".
Goes without saying. A sinking ship you can escape, a burning aircraft is a whole other story.
@@AngryMarine-il6ej its ironic, he did a shitload of combat jumps throughout the war being special forces/intelligence. He said glider landings were one of the scariest things he ever experienced... Which says something coming from a Commando.
In the Royal Navy it was a joke that submariners were paid more than aircrew...because "what goes up must come down, but what goes down won't necessarily come back up."
No idea if that's true :)
@@richardsimpson3792 Lots of subs are now on what submariners call, "The Eternal patrol."
As a Missourian, thank you for your service and Ultimate sacrifice for America, we will never forget you! God Bless you all.
Coincidentally I’m reading Frank Murphy’s book “Luck of the draw” at the moment. There’s a section where a Lt Colonel Lay who was in B17 Piccadilly recalls Escape Kit’s demise. He saw the Copilot Richard Snyder bail out from a window but he was whisked back and killed after striking the planes horizontal stabiliser, his chute never opened. Curtis Biddick was trapped inside Escape Kit which rolled over and spun into the ground. His body was located three months later hanging in his cute harness from a tree branch.
Brutal...
As a Brit born into a relatively peaceful Europe I can only say that all of us nations allied in Europe against the axis owe a debt to the rest of the world that we recognise can never be repaid, in particular to the men and women of both the US and Canada who could have turned their backs on us in our time of desperate need but steadfastly came to our aid at such a high cost.
My never ending gratitude means nothing against such a cost borne by an entire generation, especially so soon after the war to end all wars.
My life lived in peace is thanks to that generation of heroes and I include those on the home front as well as this was total war, the likes of which I pray is never seen again.
Ben, as a 4th generation American soldier, I appreciate your sentiments. I am also not only a history buf, but also just a plain ole historian. Here is the TRUTH unadulterated... NONE of the Allies could've succeeded without the other. What are considered "little skirmishes" by some, like the war fought in Greece and Crete by the OSS ( Later CIA ) and the SOE ( British Special Operations Executive later MI 6) tied down SEVERAL German divisions that MIGHT HAVE turned the tide against the Soviets on the Eastern fron. In turn, if the Soviets had not absorbed the number of German divisions they had, the Allies probably would not have been able to invade Europe as quickly as they did with Anvil ( Sicily ), Avalanche ( Itlay ), then Overlord ( France ) . WE here in the US came VERY close to losing in the Pacific if we had not lucked out at Midway. That battle was much closer than a lot of people realized. Skill and luck though are GREAT combat multipliers. With that victory in the Summer of 42 it gave us time to crank up our war production and deliver relief in later 42 with Operation Torch in Morocco. It is all so interconnected that NO ONE nation can claim to have been more important than another. While the Russians in paricular paid the highest human cost in total numbers, the saying "All gave some, some gave ALL", applies. If your STUBBORN and TENACIOUS island had not've held out, we might ALL be speaking German right now. So you take a bow too Ben, we owe YOU and your countryman a debt we cannot repay either.
@@lawrencefields7874 Absolutely spot on brother. (22 years Royal Navy 1988-2010)
Subscribed Thank you for telling these brave mens story. I knew many of them having joined the 8th AAF Historical society back in 1991. I am proud to see my friends will not be forgotten. All the men I personally knew are all gone now but because of people like you their not going to be forgotten.
Welcome aboard.
I’ve seen the series twice now, and it’s been obvious to me both times that he died in that plane crash depicted in the show. I didn’t realize others hadn’t thought that.
I have to be honest and say that I wasn't sure. I did only watch it once however.
There's an error in your narration on minutes 1:28, you said "1934" obviously it should have been "1943 or 44".
Its in the description
Thanks again. Well done.
Thank you too!
Well done? Pfff. Listen to 1:27 and then tell me you think this was well done.
@@johnmohanmusic never make any mistakes in your life?
Recently finished the book Guns at Last Light, by Rick Atkinson, he mentions hardly any other country had the wherewithal to ship remains of servicemen like the United States did.
It’s a trilogy.Read the other 2.
You are right. Here in Belgium we have 2 WWII cemeteries (Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery and Ardennes American Cemetery), almost 13 thousand fallen are resting in the hallowed grounds. The effort that was made to find, identify and bury these heroes is impressive. What is also impressive is that the cemeteries are kept in immaculate condition. We Belgians consider it a true honor to have the fallen in our country. Our thankfulness and respect hasn't changed since 1944. We consider it our duty to keep their memory alive and to tell young people what the price of freedom is. Time will not dim the glory of their deeds. May God bless the men and women of the United States Armed Forces. A humble and grateful Belgian, who's grandfather was liberated from a German labor camp by the US 1st Division.
@@fletsepopje
1st Infantry Division 84 to 86.
"No mission too difficult, no sacrifice too great, duty first!!!"
@@dukecraig2402 Thank you for your service
@@fletsepopje
I appreciate the sentiment but no thanks are necessary, it was a privilege and an honor to wear the uniform of my country and those who came before me, just enjoy your freedoms and don't tread on others, that's thanks enough for me.
Love your videos,because you use FACTS,and not heresay.
I appreciate that!
@1:29min the narrator mistakenly say '1934'. He clearly means '1944".
No, on August 17,w 1943--that's when Schweinfurt/Regensberg. was flown.
@@nickmitsialis Either way, the narrative is wrong.
@@kennethkonjura4418 Si. Senor
Love your channel brother. You give sobering and grounded information on the heroic deeds without glorifying the horror that these people faced. We will NEVER be able to say thank you enough to this generation of warriors. Warriors not only from the US, but Canada, Australia, UK, Russia, Poland, France and yes even Germany, Italy, and Japan and countless other nations. It was a true age of heroes whether they were men, women, or children. You really do them all justice. Thank you VERY MUCH for your channel.
Thanks again, Take care, keep safe.
Thanks, will do!
There was a ton left out of this series. It had such promise but instead it drove off the plot cliff.
We're can I find the stuff you refer too please
Check out Masters of the air book
Crosby wrote one as well.
I'm 72, and the people we lost from the US, both mikitary and Merchant Marines (due to failing physicals), are remembered through family oral history in Europe, mostly. A friend's family lost several in the Pacific.
My grandfather, who I’m named after but never met, was an air gunner on a B17 during the war. Funnily enough, I was an air gunner, too, but in a ch-53 in the 80’s. I found his discharge & info years after I got out, and I discovered that before the war he lived in the exact same apartment in South Boston that I lived in after I got out of the Marines, and we had the same jobs as Steelworkers. Crazy, huh ?
That is absolutely amazing!!!!! Thank you both for your service.
Great Job! Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!
thank you for sharing such a real story
Thanks for listening
So many daring tales of brave men and women of that time. When being 25 was considered being an 'old man', it was certainly a different time. I always enjoyed reading the old British 'Commando' comics, which I still think they issue to this day. I have kept all mine from. the early 80's, and even as recent as the late 90's, as I do with all books, comics...and almost everything to be honest. I have not read any for some years, perhaps time to open the box again. Read my old Phantom comics as well.
Who is old enough to remember going to see Memphis Belle at the cinema's? I also recall as 'amazing tales' kind of program, which had Kevin Kostner as the pilot of B52, which had its belly gunner stuck, but they also had no landing gear, so to save the crew, they also had to sacrifice the belly gunner! I won't spoil the ending in case anyone looks it up.
Reader's Digest had a story of a Hispanic LAUSD school admininstrator who had been a bomber survivor in the Pacific. He went back to where the plane and other crew members had vanished. Eventually he tracked remains that had been recovered after the war to an "unknown" grave in Hawaii. Getting permission from still living relatives and descendants government DNA work was performed on the "unknown" recovered remains. Jumbled together were three of his former crew mates. He went to the individual reburial of all three at their hometowns. The other missing crew mates the Reader's Digest did not yet know what had happened to them. I actually met a man who had worked with this Hispanic administrator. He knew nothing of this story. So I handed the Reader's Digest book over to him. I wish I had written the issue down so I could try to replace it. A loyal man who's honor was loyalty.
All gave some...some gave all. May they rest in eternal peace and their sacrifices never be forgotten.
No good deed goes unpunished
You couldn't tell from that crash that he was dead? Duh.
lol
@@War_And_Truth
Great response😂
1934?
If that was my only mistake I'm doing ok.
Hey man, I understand. I’m a bit dyslexic also…
1:10. It wasn’t Dyce Aberdeen, it was at Cairnbulg beside Fraserburgh NE Scotland. You can still see that old WW2 aerodrome on google maps.
The one they missed that’s in the book, I believe they should have shown as more than anything else it demonstrates the horror.
A B-17 returned with damage the landing gear would not extend and the belly turret was jammed in a position that the gunner could not extract.
Everyone knew what was going to happen the base watched, the crew knew including the victim.
The landing was horrific I think they should have shown that in the series.
Another tragedy in war the only way to honour is to show the truth.
It is shown in a couple other movies
@@StacyThornhill Notably the 1990 film "Memphis Belle"
That was covered in WWII In HD, it was actually Andy Rooney reports, there's so much this series missed it feels like a crime.
@@mihajlo961x no not that movie as the ending is much more pleasant
@@saucejohnson9862 I agree, I had hoped they would combine the books as they did with The Pacific. I feel the fighter story would have been much better weaved in. I’d have preferred to see more of that over the prison camp story
He shouldn't have even been flying that plane. That's how random war is.
To all those that served and especially those that paid the ultimate price we all owe a debt that we can never repay. God Bless Them each and every one.
At 1:29 the video states that Biddick flew over Schweinfurt/Regensburg in 1934. This is clearly incorrect since the tombstone of the 3 crewmen definitely shows August 17th, 1943. The 4 and the 3 must have been transposed in the script.
Of course they didnt bomb Germany 5 years before the war started. Its a typo.
@@War_And_Truth I think that's what I said.
I did notice that the narrator said the raid was on August 17th 1934 not 1945 😳maybe that’s why Hitler was pissed. The 100th bomb group was doing raids 5 years before the war started
August 17th, 1943. By August 1945 the war was over.
I meant ‘43 was a typo but if you listen to the narrator he clearly says 1934, 5 years before the war started and 9 years before the actual raid.
@@brettprince1528I agree, small detail, but proofreading is essential.
@@brettprince1528You should study your history a little more
A decade is not two years nor is the opposite the same.
Does nobody read the books? We knew this series was coming for years. Nothing should have been a surprise
OUTSTANDING!!!
August 17, 1934 huh? Did it sound weird to say that, or was that a typo that the AI narrator read?
Typo. Its in the description.
Where can i watch please?
Apple TV has this series I believe.
@War_And_Truth thank you.
.
It seemed pretty obvious they were gone. That B-17 was sinking very fast. Huge fireball. The "Oh God" tells the story.
With Hanks anything is possible.
AT 1:30 August 17 1934? Perhaps 1943
Typo
SGT James Bair was a pilot? As a Sergeant? Or did I misunderstand?
He was a radio operator, I have just worded it badly
In the RAF they had Sergeant Pilots...mostly in fighters, but in some larger planes too.
And you could have a bomber with a Sergeant in the pilot's seat, and a commissioned officer as a Navigator or similar. In the aircraft, the pilot was still the commander.
In the German bombers, the aircraft commander was usually the navigator...which kind of made sense in theory because the navigator tells the pilot where to fly. But in combat situations, it's probably better for the pilot to decide what to do rather than wait for an order.
If they did, the CGI world probably have been laughable.
at 1:30 you said "1934" instead of "1943".
Yes that can happen. Band of Brothers made mistakes with 120 million budget. Mine is $0
@War_And_Truth
BoB got the date of h!tL€R death wrong so... yeah.
1:27: "On August 7th, 1934 the 100th Bomb Group set out on the Schweinfurt Regensburg raid." Wow, they're lucky they weren't court-martialed and hung for attacking a country during peace time. Seriously, why can't TH-cam content providers create quality, major error free content?!?!?! Still gave this video a thumbs up, but you need to pay better attention when you are editing your videos.
I certainly don't make errors on purpose and I'm a one man band.
"You might have been left wondering...?" There is no doubt in the series he was KIA.
You noted the Schweinfurt-Regensburg date was off.
But yes, your research (as did mine) showed he died a terrible death, consumed by fire. Probably holding his plane steady to give at least some of his crew a chance of bailing out.
Thank you for showing the tombstone noting he & two other men buried together by the banks of the Mississippi.
I was probably just hoping he was still alive. I did like his character.
If we learned one thing from the 20th century, please tell me what that is.
Should have showed it, war is tragic that's why we should avoid war at all costs when and if we can
I can think of no better eternal resting place than with by band of brothers.
August 17, 1934?
Read the description
We cannot comprehend the sacrifices all the allied aircrew made to free the world from Nazi tyranny - I sometimes think we do not deserve what you all did for us
Europe was saved from Nazis, but
At 1:26, you surely meant "1944".
Yes
If the date of August 17th, 1934 had not used at the 1:27 minute, I might have subscribed to this site, but obviously you don't know your history or don't do post edit of the videos. There was no 100th Bomb Group in England in 1934! The B-17 wasn't even in US Army Air Force service until 1941! Either you made a major mistake by not doing post editing or the entire narration is AI generated, either of which is Adult Male Bovine droppings! I am in no way disparaging the heroes of my father's generation or the courage the crews, just the narration of the video.
Thanks for the feedback Wayne. My content is certainly not AI generated but I am deaf so I use text to speech. This is an earlier video (I have only been making videos for 6 months as it is) so my editing skills were not as sharp as they are now (hopefully). I got the date wrong here yes, a simple typo as I am aware the US did not bomb Germany in 1934. I corrected the error in the description and pinned comment. Mistakes are easy to make, I am sure you have made a few in your time.
I wasn't left wondering
I was hoping more than anything. He was the only decent character portrayal in the series.
1:35... 1934?
Its an error. I am aware the US weren't bombing Germany 5 years before WW2 started.
You mean 1944 not 34
Yes I realize the US wasn't bombing Germany 5 years before the war started
Actually, 1943.
August 17th, 1934???
It was a typo. Check out the description and top comment.
Moving.
1934? No wonder they were shot at!
Corrected in the description.
The creators choosing not to depict his death isn't censoring. Someone can censor someone else's work, you can't censor your own work, unless you filmed what happened and played it, then bleeped out the dialogue and blacked out the scene.
How would you title the video?
@@War_And_Truth left out, cut out, too tragic for audiences. I sympathize, I am a creator also, sorry.
@@skowog too tragic for audiences sounds good. Ill change it.
@@War_And_Truth Great job on the video by the way, subscribed!
@@skowog Cheers
1934?
Corrected in the description.
That mission year date should have been be 1944 not 1934.
Yes corrected in the description.
EDIT YOUR NARRITIVE AT 1:25-ish. 1944 NOT 1934.
You cant edit narration once its uploaded. I made a note of this in the description and top comment many weeks ago.
I couldn't watch Masters of the Air. No characters development, no story development, you feel no attachment to the characters portrayed since you're just slapped with them and is all rushed to combat scenes. Also the over use of CGI dulled it and ruined the experience.
Band of Brothers remains the one, only and greatest WWII series of them all.
Subscribed. I'm in. WTYFYS.
Welcome aboard
Schweinfurt was NOT in 1934. Robot voices are offensive.
Did you notice he said Re- jensburg ?
Read the description buddy. Its probably because I am not a robot that I make mistakes.
Check your time frame. We weren’t at war in 1934.
Read the description
1:27 1934 ! ! !
Read the description
Thanks for sharing this. Regarding the three aircrew buried together with mixed bones, I wonder if today's DNA testing could separate the remains so they could each be buried close to their hometowns.
I wondered the same thing. I think the families had a an agreement to not mess with them again.
"August 1934, Schweinfurt, Regensburg" ?????? Mmmmmm
Check out the first comment and my description. Just a typo in my script. Obviously they didn't bomb Germany 10 years before the war started.
👍👍
Not 1934 !
Read the description
1944 not 1934
Look how many times this has been said in the comments.
Me thinks 1944 not 1934
Typo
Barry Keoghan - pronounced 'kee-own'
Or......Keegan
These men were just late teens and very early 20's.
This same age group today has no clue what sacrifice and love of country truly is.
Neither did they before the US entered WW2. They expected to live ordinary lives. There was nothing superhuman or near godly about the servicemen of WW2 - I'm probably a lot older than you and I knew a lot of them in the 1950s and 1960s. They didn't think they did anything other than what they had to do, and many would have avoided it if they could, they didn't want to get involved with kill-or-be-killed, but they had to. Why are so determined to downgrade people living in the 21stC? Ask a few Ukrainians about sacrifice for their country.
1934 Regensburg raid? I think not. Try 1944
Its obviously a mistake. Do you think I thought they were flying there 5 years before the war even started?
@@War_And_Truth I hope not
Try 1943
Yeh, kinda harsh. Just point out errors. Perfect people ought have mercy on we the imperfect.
Everyone focusing on a grammatical error like fake astute, grammar nazis. youtube vultures
Cite sources, this is read almost word for word from what I just read elsewhere.
If its youtube then its a copy of my video. There are channels popping up almost daily cloning other videos from numerous channels.
I dont have to give sources btw, does Mark Felton provide them? Yarnhub?
One of these we’ll have artificial intelligence (AI) that can correctly pronounce names and cities.
Do humans do any better? Im Australian, I don't know how to write the text to pronounce a lot of European cities correctly.
Do you know how to pronounce Wulkuraka?
@@War_And_Truth I'd rather hear a real, live human with an Aussie accent butcher city names than an AI Robovoice.
@@GrizzAxxemann Well buddy I'm deaf/mute so that's not going to happen.
@@War_And_Truth Do you think somebody would/should review before posting?
@@tomspencer1436 Not sure what you mean sorry
What is the point of these narrations being done by some computer program that is incapable of pronouncing names and places? It's very annoying.
I'm deaf and cant speak so it is this or subtitles. I think I have improved a lot since this video.
@ in that case, carry on. However, that can’t possibly be the factor in the other, multitudinous postings by others in which the narrations are computer generated.
And, yes. Except for the speaking of the name, “Curterbiddick”, the rest is well done.
@@RealDapperDude Some of the videos are probably completely AI generated (images and narration)
He was cukked by the dreadful woke interject that was put into this show. It was to diminish the utter bravery and sacrifice these young men made. Something we are being stripped of acknowledging.
Who asked?
WUT
@@JoshuaTootell The real story of Curt Riddick in brief. He stayed piloting the plane so the crew including his co pilot could get out. The co pilots name was changed in this dire tv show. But he managed to get out and onto the wing where he jumped only to be cut in half by the tail. Riddick's plane was heading towards a village and the reports from other bomber crews were that he purposefully steered his plane into a field to avoid any civilian casualties. There are many other examples of how down graded this show was so as not to over play the courage of these young men but interject utter fiction in order to appease DEI directives current in entertainment.
Horrible show.. sucked from episode one and continued until it finished.
key-ogan?
Savage mofoes..........