BAND OF BROTHERS EPISODE 4 | REACTION | FIRST TIME WATCHING

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • BAND OF BROTHERS EPISODE 4 | REACTION | FIRST TIME WATCHING
    BIBLE VERSE OF THE DAY
    Isaiah 40:31
    but those who hope in the Lord
    will renew their strength.
    They will soar on wings like eagles;
    they will run and not grow weary,
    they will walk and not be faint.
    Enjoy my reaction as I watch "BAND OF BROTHERS EPISODE 4 (REPLACEMENTS)" for the first time!
    THANK YOU GUYS FOR WATCHING! Please, share, like, comment and subscribe ❤️ Be blessed 🙏🏾 #hbomax #moviereaction #firsttimewatching
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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    / cuethecommentary
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    Original Movie: BAND OF BROTHERS EPISODE 3 (REPLACEMENTS)
    INRTO/OUTRO MUSIC: FIRST DREAM - BRIAN BOLGER
    *Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
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Комментарии • 83

  • @vaderdraco6892
    @vaderdraco6892 Год назад +4

    NCO is a non-commissioned officer that is a corporal or higher in the enlisted ranks. They would be a squad leader or Platoon Sargent. Leadership role.

  • @trentrouse5991
    @trentrouse5991 Год назад +8

    The phone he is talking into is a radio. That was a small mobile radio receiver in those days. They would also carry rolls of communication wire that was used as telephone lines on the battle field

  • @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames
    @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames Год назад +6

    It turns out that Lt. Robert Brewer, the Lieutenant who got shot in the middle of the road, survived his wounds, which looked much worse than they were. He was shot in the neck, but it was through the part of his neck directly under his jaw, in front of his wind pipe. Nothing important was hit. He was even able to talk to Sergeant Albert Mampre, the medic who tried to help him (and who got shot himself).

  • @TruthHurts2u
    @TruthHurts2u Год назад +6

    "Green" means fresh, new, inexperienced

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 Год назад +4

    NCO=Non Commissioned Officer.
    Next to Winters, Bull Randelman is my favorite character. Easy going cigar chomping country boy. Very competent.

    • @gallendugall8913
      @gallendugall8913 Год назад

      NCOs are experienced enlisted, and have been the backbone of the US military since the Revolutionary War. Not every military uses them - Russia doesn't and look how well that is working out for them right now. The idea is you take experienced enlisted and give them better pay along with the rank and authority to deal with day to day maintaining discipline, getting new guys up to speed, making sure everyone has what they need. Takes a huge load off the officers which, like every profession in the modern world, has gotten very complex and specialized.

  • @tduffy5
    @tduffy5 Год назад +2

    NCO=Non-Commisioned Officer= Sergeant. Lieutenants/Ensigns and above receive a commission, whereas ranks below them enlist for a specific term of enlistment.

  • @rodlepine233
    @rodlepine233 Год назад +2

    being called Green is being called New Untested NCO is "Non Commissioned Officer" such as sergeants

  • @navagate1900
    @navagate1900 Год назад +5

    The guy who asked to be tapped on the shoulder when the light turned green was color blind so he couldn't tell red from green. Retreating is withdrawing, escaping or leaving the fight with the enemy forces because the enemy is too strong.

    • @ChrisMathers3501
      @ChrisMathers3501 Год назад

      Now...see...I've heard so many people say it was colorblindness, but *I* have red/green colorblindness, but not where I would fail to notice that a light turned from red to green. It's more like I fail to distinguish red from green when it's very dark and they both look brown. So I always took that scene as that he's so keyed up he might fail to notice the change and doesn't want to hesitate.

    • @navagate1900
      @navagate1900 Год назад

      @@ChrisMathers3501 Could be, it's Hollywood. I try to research most Historical Fiction movies - The Real Story; Master and Commander (Smithsonian) makes the corrections for that movie.

  • @jackray333
    @jackray333 Год назад +3

    Another great reaction, keep it up.
    All of Western Europe was under Nazi control for over 5 years. The civilians in these countries, Holland, Belgium, Netherlands, Poland etc..were at the mercy of Germany. 5 years of fear from Nazi rule. Very hard way to live.

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад +1

      ❤️

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Год назад

      Well not all of western Europe. Britain wasn't under Nazi control. Britain fought the Nazis off in the Battle of Britain in 1940 and the Battle of the Atlantic in 1940/41.
      👍

  • @dsmdgold
    @dsmdgold Год назад +1

    The Royal Family of the Netherlands is known as the House of Orange-Nassau and, for obvious reasons, the color orange is closely associated with it. During WWII the Netherlands was occupied by the Germans and the Queen had escaped to the UK, where she set up a government in exile, which amongst other things co-ordinated resistance activities between the the Resistance in Holland and the allies. To fly or display the color orange was to declare your allegiance to the government in exile and could mark you for execution by the Germans.

  • @cottonysensation3723
    @cottonysensation3723 Год назад +1

    I love how he says “watch and learn kids, you wanna live jump ready to fight” then slightly shakes the m1 and it makes a chachik sound as if it were a pump shotgun.

  • @rodlepine233
    @rodlepine233 Год назад

    it is called falling back to a rear position to re gather and form a new defensive line

  • @rodlepine233
    @rodlepine233 Год назад +1

    it is a two way radio a bigger version of a walkie talkie

  • @robinreiley1828
    @robinreiley1828 Год назад

    An NCO is a Non-Commissioned Officer. Officers go to College, enter the forces as a 2nd Lieutenant Commissioned for 6 years An NCO is a Sergeant that comes through the ranks stating as a Private. They have the most experience in actual combat. Often young Officers, though they out rank NCO's, will seek advice from NCO's if they are smart

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor Год назад +1

    NCO = Non-Commissioned Officer. In the Army, that means Sergeants.

  • @george217
    @george217 4 месяца назад

    To get a better overall view of Operation Market Garden, try the movie "A Bridge to Far". They civilians didn't know the Americans, they were just happy because they were being liberated fron German occupation after 4+ years.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Год назад +3

    Operation Market Garden, the battle this episode deals with, was very high risk but still almost succeeded. There is a movie about it that was made in the 70s that is highly regarded called A Bridge Too Far...as other folks have mentioned. Unfortunately, the operation failed due to poor decisions made both before and during the battle, but also due to more mundane factors. One sad thing is that, although it probably would not have made any real difference by itself, the Dutch civilians crowding the streets to celebrate being liberated from the Germans did slow down the tanks that needed to get to the final destination as quick as possible. Of course, the operation was based on speed but was taking place over a route with essentially just one main road to use...so there was clearly some faulty thinking in the plan itself. ✌

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Год назад

      Bottom line with Market Garden was the wrong decisions made by the air commanders. In particular Brereton of the First Allied Airborne Army and Williams of the USAAF who refused to fly double missions on day one and insisted on dispersed drops over a number of days. Even the Germans concluded that was the biggest mistake made by the allies. Even Montgomery could not persuade them to fly double missions on day one, despite the RAF telling Brereton they could do so.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Год назад +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751 The decision to use the 8th Air Force's heavy bombers to "soften up" the various German strongholds and other targets was also quite a bad choice, especially after the horrible performance of those bombers in their pre-invasion bombardment of the Normandy beaches. But you make a really good point about the double sorties for the transports on day 1...when you got the good weather, dammit... you gotta USE it! 💯✌

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Год назад +2

      iKvetch,
      Yes, the whole idea of paratroops is to take the enemy by surprise, and seize the target quickly with as much force as necessary. Unfortunately in Market Garden the paratroops had to keep a lot of force back to guard and keep the drop and landing zones safe for subsequent drops for the following days. This diluted their power for capturing the bridges.
      No coup de mains on the Arnhem and Nijmegen bridges either.
      Personally, I also think the First Allied Airborne Army should have already been moved to the continent before Market Garden, so the operation could have taken off from forward bases in Belgium or Eastern France. Brereton, however, seems to have been lax in doing this. Double missions on day one could have been done then.
      Double towed gliders could have been used too.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Год назад +1

      Wow...this is kind of a standard comment for me, but I have never gotten such terrific responses to it before...thanks to all who replied with great information. 💯

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Год назад

      A lot of compromises were made in the planning, and Sebastian Ritchie's book Arnhem: Myth And Reality: Airborne Warfare, Air Power and the Failure of Operation Market Garden (2011, updated 2019), makes a study of all airborne operations by both sides before Market Garden and argues that the decisions made were based on previous experience, but it's fair to say that airborne warfare was still in development. Many of the so-called 'lessons learned' from Market Garden were incorporated into the Rhine crossing by British 6th and US 17th Airborne in 1945, but the airborne element was actually less successful. Like the D-Day operation, it was only really saved by the fact the areas of operation were so close to the amphibious landings that the Airborne were reinforced within 24 hours. The German operations in the Netherlands were more difficult for them than anticipated, and the German invasion of Crete was such a bloodbath for the Fallschirmjäger that Hitler forbade any further large scale airborne operations for the rest of the war.
      Market Garden was working, and it was working very well, despite all the usual well-known problems, until the tanks got to Nijmegen on schedule and found one Parachute Infantry Regiment had not done its job - against zero opposition - on the first day, and progress was delayed 36 hours while the Waal bridges were secured against a very strongly reinforced German position. 82nd Airborne historian, Phil Nordyke, details the story of this failure in his combat history of the 508th PIR - Put Us Down In Hell (2012).
      One of the most remarkable references I have is Bob Gerritsen and Scott Revell's book on Kampfgruppe Knaust - Retake Arnhem Bridge (2010) - it contains a note from SS-Ustf Gernot Traupel (II./SS-Panzer-Regiment 10, Kampfgruppe Reinhold) that when they reinforced the Nijmegen bridges on the night of 17 September, the bridges were guarded only by 30-40 men of the BdO Musikkorps-Zug (the military police band platoon of the German 'Order Police' HQ for the Netherlands, equivalent to a division HQ). The BdO under General-der-Polizei Hellmuth Mascus was the only significant German unit quartered in the city at the time of the airborne landings and evacuated the city that afternoon, leaving behind their Musikkorps-Zug at the bridges. There were simply no combat troops available. It was during this window of opportunity, before the SS-Panzer troops arrived, that the 508th had orders to seize the bridges, but failed to "move with speed" as instructed by Gavin in his divisional briefing in England. Nordyke also details in his Normandy chapters that the Regiment had command problems on their first operation during the D-Day landings, so there's some more context in their backstory. The Colonel's career background in the Airborne is also relevent.
      What the 508th did do was send a recon patrol into the city. It was led by the S-2 (Intel) Section under Lt. Lee Frigo from 1st Battalion, and reinforced or followed (there are two different accounts by 1st Battalion CO and XO in Nordyke) by Lt. Robert Weaver's 3rd Platoon of 'C' Company, reinforced with an LMG Section from HQ Company and given an SCR-300 radio set on the battalion net. The patrol(s) got split up in the crowds of celebrating 'liberated' Dutch civilians in the city (it must have looked a lot like the Eindhoven scene in BoB) and only three leading Scouts led by Trooper Joe Atkins pushed through to the highway bridge, surprised 6/7 German guards at the south end of it, and waited for about an hour for reinforcements that never came. They decided to withdraw when it got dark, and as they did so they could hear "heavy equipment" arriving at the other end of the bridge. This was almost certainly Viktor Gräbner's SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 9 coming from Arnhem - the timing is correct (they were observed by Frost crossing the Arnhem bridge just before he got to it). This account from Trooper Joe Atkins is in the 508th Connection (2013) by Zig Boroughs, a veteran member of the 508th's Demolition Platoon and the book is a collection of letters and stories from 508th veterans.
      All the other reasons for the failure of the operation are misdirection and, frankly, just excuses. They were not fatal to the success of the operation as was the one unforced error of not carrying out the part of the plan at Nijmegen.

  • @an.american
    @an.american Год назад

    Loved your reaction
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
    Loved the episode
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @tduffy5
    @tduffy5 Год назад

    The Dutch national flag is the tri-color. The orange is the color of their Royal Family.

  • @MetalDetroit
    @MetalDetroit Год назад +1

    Moving out again means they’re headed back into combat. Someone is going to die, maybe even themselves.

  • @michaelstach5744
    @michaelstach5744 Год назад

    You will get to learn more about the job of a medic and your appreciation will increase 500%.
    Ike’s plan was to advance on a broad front. If you put your fist on a map of Normandy and gradually open it up that might give you an idea of what he intended. Unfortunately we did not capture a port facility right away. This meant very limited supplies of gas so the armies could not advance as fast or as far as the commanders would like. Two of the commanders under Ike were prima donnas, Montgomery and Patton. Each of them thought they should be given the gas to lead a thrust into Germany. Montgomery got the gas for Market-Garden. There are a lot of books written about this. There were multiple reasons why the plan failed. The section of the road the 101st was in charge of got the nickname “Hell’s Highway.”

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Год назад

      IKEs broad front was a complete failure. It didn't fail due to lack of supplies. It failed due to poor strategy, and knocking on the door all over the front line instead on kicking the door down in one concentrated sector. That was down to IKE's inexperience as a field general. He was more of a desk man and politician, not a military strategist.
      The Hurtgen Forest calamity was not about lack of supplies.
      Antwerp was fully open in November and yet Operation Queen continued to fail, then the US Army was pushed back into a retreat in the Ardennes. Again, Antwerp had been opened a month by then.
      The allies had plenty of supplies before Antwerp was open. They just didn't use them properly.
      By the way, Market Garden only had priority of supplies for two weeks in September. The American armies had priority of supplies all through October, November and December....and still got next to nowhere.

  • @2104dogface
    @2104dogface Год назад

    I remember back during 1 of the Battle of the Bulge reenacments in PA w/ E/506th living history unit my squad was getting ready to go "Walking out" in our M43 uniforms and SGT XXX comes up and say's were our your captured German belts pistols or knives??? he added "We wore them around base to scare the FNG's " so were scrambled around to find some and put them on then he looked at as with a big shitty grin "Now you look like we did" 3:02 mark in ep #2 it dose show Cobb getting hit in the plane and they pulled him out of the stick and he didn't make the jump so he when back with the plane. 4:28 mark It was Sobel who took back the motorcycle that Maralkey & More had stolen in Normandy. 5:25 mark Every Vet who made that jump said it was the softest landing, BUT there was so much gear falling you had to got off the DZ (drop zone) fast or you could get killed. 7:13 mark That old man drinking a real beer sitting at the table left side was XXX E co Vet him and XXX & XXXX were visiting the set 8:15 mark that kid would never be able to bite off that candy as it was a D Bar (emergency ration) just a 4 oz. chocolate bar by Hersey hard as a rock & bitter tasting.

  • @nemesis4852
    @nemesis4852 Год назад +1

    Good comments below no need to add any. Good reaction, thank you.

  • @Shutterbug5269
    @Shutterbug5269 Год назад +1

    He was asking his Sgt to tap him because he's color blind and managed to hide it.

  • @williamberry9013
    @williamberry9013 Год назад +1

    NCO= non-commissioned officer Sergeants and Corporals.

  • @drew2ist
    @drew2ist 11 месяцев назад

    The Allied tanks were outmatched by the Germans. Our tanks had to as close to 100 meters to kill a German tank because our shells would just bounce of of them. German tanks could kill ours at around 2,000 meters.
    Montgomery’s plan in this operation was flawed from the beginning. Too many things had to fall in place and be successful to get a win. There was also a narrow path that our tanks could take and once one was knocked out the tanks behind it couldn’t move until the destroyed tank was removed from the road.

  • @calneigbauer7542
    @calneigbauer7542 Год назад

    Nco stands for non commissioned officer they are the backbone of the army think of your lower level management officers are upper level. He wanted to be pushed at the green light so he knew it was green and so he jumped he might lick up in the plane

  • @melbeasley9762
    @melbeasley9762 Год назад +1

    A Bridge Too Far is a film about Market Garden from the British perspective. Additionally there is a documentary by Jeremy Clarkson, the story of the Victoria Cross focusing on a officer who won the VC during Operation Market Garden. ruclips.net/video/Bl6j7I8FWT4/видео.html

  • @jamesmoore4003
    @jamesmoore4003 Год назад +1

    “Green” means being new to something….lack of practical and applied experience

  • @aranerem5569
    @aranerem5569 Год назад

    Hello, how's it going?

  • @lyndoncmp5751
    @lyndoncmp5751 Год назад

    Such a shame this episode is so inaccurate in the way it portrays the battle for Nuenen. In reality, the British tank unit, the 44th Royal Tank Regiment, was a far more battle hardened and experienced unit than the 101st Airborne, with 2 years of combat. North Africa, Sicily, Italy and all through Normandy. It gave as good as it got at Nuenen. It lost two tanks, but knocked out two German tanks as well.
    This episode portrays the 44th RTR as a bunch of clueless headless chickens. It's neither respectful or accurate.
    Oh well.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Год назад

      The tanks in this episode are supposed to be from 15th/19th The King's Royal Hussars (the 11th Armoured Division's Reconnaissance Regiment from 17 August 1944), with the blue over green '45' tactical flash on the vehicles. This would be correct for the Cromwell tanks, but not the Shermans. I think this episode is a conflation of two actions, and the other action I think may have involved one of the other three armoured regiments from the 11th:
      23rd Hussars
      2nd Fife and Forfar Yeomanry
      3rd Royal Tank Regiment
      They should display a red flash with '51', '52', and '53' respectively.
      44th RTR was part of 4th (independent) Armoured Brigade and was detached to 101st Airborne during Market Garden when contact was made. Without checking my references I don't believe they were involved in the Nuenen action because that was an operation to get 11th Armoured Division onto the VIII Corps 'Spade Route' to Helmond, as VIII Corps did not have a bridge over the Meuse-Escaut canal in Belgium and needed to use XXX Corp's bridge at Neerpelt to get over the canal.
      I think you can blame Richard Attenborough and his insistence on British officers being portrayed as incompetent in A Bridge Too Far - it's all part of the Market Garden 'conventional narrative', which is as difficult as a supertanker to turn around with actual facts and evidence. Perhaps Elon Musk can make a updated movie?

  • @Smoshy16
    @Smoshy16 Год назад +1

    I just can't take it seriously with the video sped up. The voices are ridiculous and kind of make a mockery of the show!

  • @Brandon-sw5ob
    @Brandon-sw5ob Год назад +1

    N.C.O = non-commissioned officers sergeants of all ranks staff sergeant First Sergeant so on and so on all the way up to a sergeant major is still a non-commissioned officer but the sergeant major basically runs the base runs all the sergeants runs everything and reports for the commanding officer whoever that might be could be a lieutenant colonel colonel General who knows

  • @Brandon-sw5ob
    @Brandon-sw5ob Год назад

    Militarily politically correct version of a retreat is fighting in reverse LOL