I used to rent these Army Black & whites from the local mom &pop video stores back in the EARLY 80's... These were my favorite types of videos... because my dad was a Lt. Colonel... And my Grandpa fought in the Pacific... So naturally I got ALL my toys from the PX ... Tanks, Planes, Jeeps, Soldiers, and ALL those fun realistic plastic rifles... 😉 He served in Vietnam as well, I cant really mention some of THOSE Souvenirs that he brought home. He was the only Lt. of Alpha Company to survive. There were 7 Lt.'s that hit the Drop zone with them. I would not be here had he not survived... 😬
@@christopher7952 Thank you for those kind words and thoughts Christopher! It really means a lot to myself and them. More than you know... Sometimes a simple thank you from a complete stranger is the most powerful kind. You take care Christopher, and thanks again.
7:12 I think the longest supply in WW2, should be US aids for Chiang Kai-shek China, and 14th air corp in China. Railroad and trucks inside US for made bullets and weapons, then board the liberty ships, sail ed through South Atlantic or South Pacific plus India Ocean to reach Culcatta, India. Then truck or train hauled those stuff to Imphal, then aborded airplane flew through the infamous " Camel Hump Flight". Final load those weapons to trucks(In China, trucks was scarce in WW2) and sent to 14th aircorp or kmt army soldiers.
I saw this same cartoon about a week ago, posted by a different channel. It did not censor the word 'nuts' where it says "freeze the Jeep" and the nuts fall off.
Wow, thanks! If you love our channel and want exclusive inside information -- support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
It might have seemed boring and pedantic, but economists and logisticians calculated "ton miles" of various components of things like the Springfield .30-06 cartridge needed for the M1 Garand standard issue infantry rifle, i.e., copper, tin, lead, saltpeter, potash, sulfur, as well as service components of the machinery necessary to draw, stamp, fill, and seal the rifle cartridges. By establishing also the routes, the logisticians could also know where rail and road transport resources needed to be allocated. Both, along with things like rubber for TIRES were a critical item that could have severely hampered war production. The USA was fortunate that, in general, it's distance across the world's two great oceans, the Atlantic and the Pacific, made it all but invulnerable to enemy aircraft and/or missile attack, a security we NO LONGER enjoy and haven't since the Soviets tested their first ICBM in 1957. The enemy didn't have to lay waste to our cities like we did to Germany and Japan, indeed, such would have been a waste of effort, men, and critical resources. The greatest vulnerabilities were those BRIDGES, mainly crossing the Mississippi, which, if destroyed, would prove "choke points" that would halt critical cross-country traffic. Even then, the economics of mundane things like manufacture of ammo dictated a fairly national point, often in places like Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio where manufacturing long had the necessary infrastructure and MEN to work in the factories. It's not as if Springfield Arms could just post job listings on a web site in 1942! Therefore, all the raw materials had to make their way, across the country, totaling a necessary sum of routes exceeding 11,000 miles, as the narrator points out. So, taking out the bridge where US 30 crosses the Mississippi at Clinton, IA would have proved a severe impediment, as traffic would have to divert to other bridges still up. The enemy KNEW this, but they also knew that in the 1940s, bombers capable of even reaching the target with a useful payload, let alone fighting their way to the target and returning safely, were years, if not decades off. Same with missile tech; most missiles were short-ranged, used for artillery, the ICBM, and, of course, nuclear warheads to provide enough "bang" to justify the expense were still DECADES away, and definitely a setup ACCRUATE enough to destroy the target w/o necessary causing such horrific collateral damage as to provoke the "Mutually Assured Destruction", or "MAD", scenario. The method left to the Axis to do anything was, as Bugs Bunny would put it, "Die-Ah-Bol-lick-all...sab-boh..tageeee" (Diabolical Sabotage). This was shown in June 1942, when two teams of English-speaking Germans were landed in New York (Long Island) and Florida, to do their "deviltry". Fortunately, a couple of them either got "cold feet" or used the mission as an opportunity to defect, it was they that betrayed their comrades and frustrated the mission, and it was only they that were spared being summarily executed as spies and saboteurs. Of course, the Germans were hampered in all sorts of ways, from losses of natural resources, to sabotage, bombing, and active and passive resistance, in producing war material and ensuring that what did make it to combat units actually worked. Until late 1944, the Japanese enjoyed almost as much immunity from bombing or shore bombardment as did the Americans, but their big issue was in merchant transport, even from Manchuria, a huge manufacturing base for them, to the Home Islands, across the Sea of Japan and/or the East China Sea, which, since they'd effectively gone to war with China in 1931, were Japanese "lakes", but as the US Navy got closer and closer, no more. Once the B-29s got close enough, worked out the "kinks" of the large bomber which production cost even more than the atomic bombs they eventually carried and dropped, and perfected the low-altitude firebombing so Curtis LeMay's 20th Air Force could literally "bomb 'em back to the Stone Age", Japanese war production effectively halted, due to (1) cutting off of raw materials from outside the Home Islands (2) destruction of the factories, railways, and key bridges and ports and (3) DE-HOUSING of the work force and supporting small shops of the big factories with the firebombing. Even had the atomic bomb not been available to shock the Japanese into accepting surrender, given them a "face-saving" excuse, the Japanese economy was ready to utterly collapse, which would have imposed suffering on the Japanese people far worse than what the victims at Hiroshima and Nagasaki endured.
...yeah, opening line is censored for civvy audience -- "Freeze the Nuts off a jeep" ( jeep was a nickname, part from "GPW" Ford copy of MB Willys, and part from 1930s cartoon character, "The Jeep")
12:05 Strangely in 1940s US recognized China effort in fighting the AXIS ....... and the Chinese did fight better than the French with only 1/124 of French industrial strength French produced 6221000 ton of steel annualy(1938) while ROC(China) ONLY HAD 50000 ton of steel annualy (1935)😑😑😑😑 and NOW PRC(China) produce 1053,000,000 ton of steel annualy (2020)
Thanks very, very much. Donations like this make it possible for us to save more rare and endangered films! Love our channel? Get the inside scoop on Periscope Film! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm
I used to rent these Army Black & whites from the local mom &pop video stores back in the EARLY 80's... These were my favorite types of videos... because my dad was a Lt. Colonel... And my Grandpa fought in the Pacific... So naturally I got ALL my toys from the PX ... Tanks, Planes, Jeeps, Soldiers, and ALL those fun realistic plastic rifles... 😉 He served in Vietnam as well, I cant really mention some of THOSE Souvenirs that he brought home. He was the only Lt. of Alpha Company to survive. There were 7 Lt.'s that hit the Drop zone with them. I would not be here had he not survived... 😬
So thankful for your family protecting america
@@christopher7952 Thank you for those kind words and thoughts Christopher! It really means a lot to myself and them. More than you know... Sometimes a simple thank you from a complete stranger is the most powerful kind. You take care Christopher, and thanks again.
So interesting to see these relics from the past. Gives some insight into how soldiers thought in that era.
What?
whats era? iran?
@@StainderFin Are you braindead?
So cold it would freeze the nuts off a Jeep.
SNAFU: Situation Normal, All F___ed Up.
When the family cat is working, you know it's serious. 😆🤣😂😹
Great stuff. Still applicable today. It's also great to hear the voices of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck.
Can we take a minute to appreciate the full orchestra?
Agreed 👏👏👏
7:12 I think the longest supply in WW2, should be US aids for Chiang Kai-shek China, and 14th air corp in China.
Railroad and trucks inside US for made bullets and weapons, then board the liberty ships, sail ed through South Atlantic or South Pacific plus India Ocean to reach Culcatta, India. Then truck or train hauled those stuff to Imphal, then aborded airplane flew through the infamous " Camel Hump Flight". Final load those weapons to trucks(In China, trucks was scarce in WW2) and sent to 14th aircorp or kmt army soldiers.
You know private snafu was the first adult animated series I've ever seen
I saw this same cartoon about a week ago, posted by a different channel. It did not censor the word 'nuts' where it says "freeze the Jeep" and the nuts fall off.
Woke showing up all over.
4:54 "This is a picture of you..."
i'm pretty sure i have eyes, actually
The sound of that bellows around 9:30 going ¨Theyre gonna bomb us, theyre gonna bomb usss¨ sounds just like that singer Tom Waits speaking voice
Is that the bugs bunny voice I hear in multiple characters as well as Yosimite Sam's?
Yes.
It is the voice of actor Mel Blanc, who also voiced the aforementioned characters.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mel_Blanc
Why? What does Mel Blanc have to do with this video?
@@staspastukh2005 cuse he voiced snafu
I swear I heard John Wayne
They used to say that “‘F___’ was the word that won the war.”
How long has that word existed?
Super video! I applauded for $2.00 👏
Wow, thanks! If you love our channel and want exclusive inside information -- support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
Wow ! GRAMPA was pretty lecherous..and it's apparent that that other guy isn't focused on Sally Lou's eyes. 🤣
"its so cold it would freeze the jeep." Something has changed.
Nuts off the Jeep ..lol
It's been censored .lol
That's not funny!
Actually it’s very funny. It just doesn’t translate in your mysterious Slavic language.
JK.
@@shotcall1 That's the least of your worries. Wait til you see the Cyrillic handwriting.
(profile pic is my Dad's 1943 Willys MB -- was in North Africa -- big, non-standard 2nd gas tank)
Do you have it? Does it still run?
it was censored because, according to the title card, this film was presented to a civilian audience.
Even so, some of it's still pretty raunchy! LOL!
@@paigetomkinson1137 yeah the mermaids weren't censored at all!
@@DJsuryong LOL! IKR? I wonder how many families saw this and were scandalized! 😅
I had no idea! I always assumed these were just shown privately to armies or something :0
In a different cartoon, it was, "its so cold it was freeze the nuts off a Jeep".
It might have seemed boring and pedantic, but economists and logisticians calculated "ton miles" of various components of things like the Springfield .30-06 cartridge needed for the M1 Garand standard issue infantry rifle, i.e., copper, tin, lead, saltpeter, potash, sulfur, as well as service components of the machinery necessary to draw, stamp, fill, and seal the rifle cartridges. By establishing also the routes, the logisticians could also know where rail and road transport resources needed to be allocated. Both, along with things like rubber for TIRES were a critical item that could have severely hampered war production.
The USA was fortunate that, in general, it's distance across the world's two great oceans, the Atlantic and the Pacific, made it all but invulnerable to enemy aircraft and/or missile attack, a security we NO LONGER enjoy and haven't since the Soviets tested their first ICBM in 1957. The enemy didn't have to lay waste to our cities like we did to Germany and Japan, indeed, such would have been a waste of effort, men, and critical resources. The greatest vulnerabilities were those BRIDGES, mainly crossing the Mississippi, which, if destroyed, would prove "choke points" that would halt critical cross-country traffic. Even then, the economics of mundane things like manufacture of ammo dictated a fairly national point, often in places like Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio where manufacturing long had the necessary infrastructure and MEN to work in the factories. It's not as if Springfield Arms could just post job listings on a web site in 1942! Therefore, all the raw materials had to make their way, across the country, totaling a necessary sum of routes exceeding 11,000 miles, as the narrator points out. So, taking out the bridge where US 30 crosses the Mississippi at Clinton, IA would have proved a severe impediment, as traffic would have to divert to other bridges still up. The enemy KNEW this, but they also knew that in the 1940s, bombers capable of even reaching the target with a useful payload, let alone fighting their way to the target and returning safely, were years, if not decades off. Same with missile tech; most missiles were short-ranged, used for artillery, the ICBM, and, of course, nuclear warheads to provide enough "bang" to justify the expense were still DECADES away, and definitely a setup ACCRUATE enough to destroy the target w/o necessary causing such horrific collateral damage as to provoke the "Mutually Assured Destruction", or "MAD", scenario. The method left to the Axis to do anything was, as Bugs Bunny would put it, "Die-Ah-Bol-lick-all...sab-boh..tageeee" (Diabolical Sabotage). This was shown in June 1942, when two teams of English-speaking Germans were landed in New York (Long Island) and Florida, to do their "deviltry". Fortunately, a couple of them either got "cold feet" or used the mission as an opportunity to defect, it was they that betrayed their comrades and frustrated the mission, and it was only they that were spared being summarily executed as spies and saboteurs.
Of course, the Germans were hampered in all sorts of ways, from losses of natural resources, to sabotage, bombing, and active and passive resistance, in producing war material and ensuring that what did make it to combat units actually worked. Until late 1944, the Japanese enjoyed almost as much immunity from bombing or shore bombardment as did the Americans, but their big issue was in merchant transport, even from Manchuria, a huge manufacturing base for them, to the Home Islands, across the Sea of Japan and/or the East China Sea, which, since they'd effectively gone to war with China in 1931, were Japanese "lakes", but as the US Navy got closer and closer, no more. Once the B-29s got close enough, worked out the "kinks" of the large bomber which production cost even more than the atomic bombs they eventually carried and dropped, and perfected the low-altitude firebombing so Curtis LeMay's 20th Air Force could literally "bomb 'em back to the Stone Age", Japanese war production effectively halted, due to (1) cutting off of raw materials from outside the Home Islands (2) destruction of the factories, railways, and key bridges and ports and (3) DE-HOUSING of the work force and supporting small shops of the big factories with the firebombing. Even had the atomic bomb not been available to shock the Japanese into accepting surrender, given them a "face-saving" excuse, the Japanese economy was ready to utterly collapse, which would have imposed suffering on the Japanese people far worse than what the victims at Hiroshima and Nagasaki endured.
It would be Really fun, and entertaining, to see the Private Fubar series. I can see it now...
I hope my grandpa watched theese while fighting the nazis
Ever notice that the Technical Fairy has the front of his shorts hanging open?
This bullet is more well traveled than I
15:16 had me dead laughing, these were hilarious too back then
...yeah, opening line is censored for civvy audience -- "Freeze the Nuts off a jeep"
( jeep was a nickname, part from "GPW" Ford copy of MB Willys, and part from 1930s cartoon character, "The Jeep")
any chance California can get those bullet shipments back?
Nah the lead mines are all closed in the tri state mining area.
Why?
Haha of course they censored it for the civilian audience. “It’s so cold it would freeze the nuts off a jeep.”
Hola saludos desde Bucaramanga Colombia mano.
Never did I ever concieve that bugs and popeye would do a compilation. Get educated!
Oh ho ho ho ho you can make a friggen bed boy 😂😂
Try Rumors @ 8:40
Gosh I didn't know you cared uwu
Gomer Pyle would be so very proud.👀
10:16 the flying baloneys look like Hand Banana from aquateen hungerforce
That was actually funny. Turns out Sargent snafu was a hater whole time .... Who knew
Women were not the worst gossipers during WW2
That's Bugs Bunny's voice.
whia
12:05 Strangely in 1940s US recognized China effort in fighting the AXIS .......
and the Chinese did fight better than the French with only 1/124 of French industrial strength
French produced 6221000 ton of steel annualy(1938)
while ROC(China) ONLY HAD 50000 ton of steel annualy (1935)😑😑😑😑
and NOW PRC(China) produce 1053,000,000 ton of steel annualy (2020)
Muh steel figures
It's censored
SNFU
Merci !
operation kansas terminer steve garcia 12536cia merci 10-4 .
Thanks very, very much. Donations like this make it possible for us to save more rare and endangered films!
Love our channel? Get the inside scoop on Periscope Film! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm