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* In the So You Want to Be A Producer episode, Dan encourage twice people who are watching from a developement studio to go and hug their producer. The second time, the artist for the episode, Lee Lee Scaldaferri, is seen hugging the producer. As it transitions into the end credits, she's hugging James.

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* In the So You Want to Be A Producer episode, Dan encourage twice people who are watching from a developement development studio to go and hug their producer. The second time, the artist for the episode, Lee Lee Scaldaferri, is seen hugging the producer. As it transitions into the end credits, she's hugging James.



* Otto von Bismarck is portrayed as an amoral chessmater, but he gets a humanizing moment during the episode on the Franco-Prussian War: after hearing his son has been shot dead, Bismarck [[PapaWolf immediately rides his horse to the front lines]]...only to happily discover his son still alive, albeit with a wounded leg.

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* Otto von Bismarck is portrayed as an amoral chessmater, chessmaster, but he gets a humanizing moment during the episode on the Franco-Prussian War: after hearing his son has been shot dead, Bismarck [[PapaWolf immediately rides his horse to the front lines]]...only to happily discover his son still alive, albeit with a wounded leg.



** Doctors and nurses stayed at their post, even as their coworkers died around them, to help those who could still be helped. Private practicioners made as many as 60 calls a day.
** The church stepped in several times, both to help the sick and the dead. When the number of dead got so high that the morgues and graveyards couldn't accomodate them, the church hired construction crews to dig out mass graves, and they catalogued the precise location of each buried body. Priests would stay out to late at night to recite prayers and give the dead their last rites.
* The short, two-part episode on Mary Secole, a Jamaican woman who nursed and comforted soldiers during the Crimean War. The final part of the story remarks that while her name wasn't as well known as Florence Nightingale or other nurses, she was the type of role model the world needed in order to make it a better place.

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** Doctors and nurses stayed at their post, even as their coworkers died around them, to help those who could still be helped. Private practicioners practitioners made as many as 60 calls a day.
** The church stepped in several times, both to help the sick and the dead. When the number of dead got so high that the morgues and graveyards couldn't accomodate accommodate them, the church hired construction crews to dig out mass graves, and they catalogued the precise location of each buried body. Priests would stay out to late at night to recite prayers and give the dead their last rites.
* The short, two-part episode on Mary Secole, Seacole, a Jamaican woman who nursed and comforted soldiers during the Crimean War. The final part of the story remarks that while her name wasn't as well known as Florence Nightingale or other nurses, she was the type of role model the world needed in order to make it a better place.
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The other American beach was Utah, not Idaho


** Churchill insisted on giving the landing beaches proper codenames (Idaho, Omaha, Gold, Sword and Juno), instead of something silly like "Bunnyhop Beach", because he didn't want some poor mother to hear about how her precious son gave his life on "Bunnyhop Beach".

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** Churchill insisted on giving the landing beaches proper codenames (Idaho, (Utah, Omaha, Gold, Sword and Juno), instead of something silly like "Bunnyhop Beach", because he didn't want some poor mother to hear about how her precious son gave his life on "Bunnyhop Beach".

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* The “Road to Pearl Harbor” has a few:
** While the Japanese government was insincere in its apology over the attack on the Panay, many Japanese officials and citizens were genuinely mortified over what the army had done and offered compensation.
** There were Japanese officials, like Admiral Nomura, who wanted peace but were sadly undermined by the militarists who brushed them aside.

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