And while you're watching, take notice of the soundtrack. Yo-Yo Ma, Edgar Meyer and Sam Bush. Very good! 








Ken Burns re-invented historical documentaries.
Like baseball, jazz, Mark Twain, the Brooklyn Bridge, Huey Long, Lewis and Clark, or more?
http://www.pbs.org/kenburns/
I respect your opinion.
Our, America's, wars have defined us as a nation.
Just watched the first episode tonight. Wow.
One of the veterans interviewed in the first episode said that WWII was a "necessary" war. We HAD to participate in it.
Otherwise, we Americans would be speaking German today. When I saw Ken Burns in Atlanta, he related a story told to him by a vet who was watching over some German POWs. One of the POWs asked the vet where he was from. The vet said a certain town in Connecticut (I don't remember the town); the POW said what street did he live on back in his town. The German told him the street crossed over such and such creek. The vet was amazed that this German knew so much about his hometown. Turns out that this POW's future job was to be administrator of the vet's hometown when the Germans took over America.
Watching this series, I am amazed at how much the people back home sacrificed and did without during the war. It was a time when most everyone was involved in this singular effort.
Wow! Gotta admire German efficiency & organization!
The project to record veteran's stories is very cool! Both my grandfathers served, but they didn't talk about their experiences w/ their children & grandchildren, so all I know is that one grandfather was the only midwestern tanker to survive and the other was supposed to be docked at Pearl Harbor, but had a scheduling/duty change and that grandma and her friends moved to New York and threw parties for all of the hometown boys who were shipping out..........and broke every single glass in their rental by the time it was all said and done!