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- WW2TV brings top military historians and best-selling authors on to share their knowledge and stories via our live battlefield shows. WW2TV is operated by Paul Woodadge who hosts and produces the shows.
- We examine this famous photo taken on D+1 on Omaha Beach. We talk, weapons and flags and about the likelihood that the photo was staged.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOperation Nordwind began on December 31st 1944. Elements of two German army groups attacked the U.S. Seventh and French First Armies in the icy, hilly and snowy Vosges Mountains. Overshadowed by events in the Ardennes, those who fought in and around Reipertswiller recall it vividly as a desperate engagement that resulted in terrible losses to both sides. Alex Kershaw talks about Major Felix Sparks, the father and son who fought side-by side and the unrelenting danger from German snipers and tanks as the men of the 157th find themselves surrounded and running out of supplies.
- A livestream starting on the Jig sector of Gold Beach at Asnelles. We will talk about the landings with a focus on 231 Brigade and their actions on the beach and inland. We will look at the area where the distinctive sanatorium depicted in the show graphic was situated and also look at the nearby memorials. From there we head inland a mile or so to Point 54 (WN 40a), where C and D Companies of the 1 Dorsets assaulted a hill top position defended by elements of the German 352nd Infantry Division. World renowned military historian and author Peter Caddick-Adams, PhD, FRHistS, FRGS is the expert.
- 2019–TV EpisodeWe are absolutely delighted to speak Sarah Megan Thomas, the writer and star of the brilliant WWII film A Call to Spy. In July 1940 Churchill ordered the creation of a new agency -- the Special Operations Executive (SOE). One of their key tasks was to recruit and train women as spies to work in Occupied Europe. Their daunting mission: conduct sabotage and build a resistance network. SOE's "spymistress," Vera Atkins (Stana Katic), recruited two unusual candidates: Virginia Hall (Sarah Megan Thomas), an ambitious American with a wooden leg, and Noor Inayat Khan (Radhika Atpe), a Muslim pacifist. Together, these women help to undermine the Nazi regime in France, leaving an unmistakable legacy in their wake.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThe Canadian offensive on Verrières Ridge, led by the Canadian Black Watch part of the II Canadian Corps, was a savage battle that helped ensure General Omar Bradley's US Army breakout from Normandy in Operation Cobra. I am delighted to have David O'Keefe join me for this show - historian, author, teacher, filmmaker and former soldier. We will focus on the role of the Canadian Black Watch and their attack towards Fontenay-le-Marmion held by German units including the 9th SS. We will have 3 camera teams on the ground showing both Canadian and German points of view.
- 2019–TV EpisodeSpike Milligan was a comedian, poet, novelist, satirist and actor, possibly best known for being one of the Goons along with Peter Sellers, Harry Secombe and Michael Bentine. He was also a WWII veteran and served in the Royal Artillery in North Africa and Italy. He wrote about his experiences in a series of 7 books, beginning with his conscription in 1940 to being demobbed and adjusting to a very different Great Britain, one of hardship and struggles postwar. His wartime memoirs combine side-splitting humour and pathos to reveal a deeply honest understanding of warfare. Spike witnessed death and suffering on a large scale and wrote about it with honesty and depth. Interspersed with barrack room japes and tales of the mundanity of army life he writes of battles. Actual battles with tanks and artillery and his private battles with fear, anxiety and also what would now be labelled PTSD.
- 2019–TV EpisodeIn the first of two shows this week we look at the history and creative teams behind WWII Comics. For so many WW2TV viewers it was comics like Commando, Battle Weekly, Warlord and Sgt Rock that fuelled our interest in combat and history. Join Paul Woodadge and three incredible guests for this live discussion: Garth Ennis is a Northern Irish writer now living in New York. Although probably best known for Preacher, The Boys and Judge Dread he is also a prolific writer of WWII comics. Series and books like Tankies, D-Day Dodgers, The Last German Winter and Night Witches (about a female Soviet bomber unit) are highly regarded. He has also written the introductions to reprinted volumes of Battle comics from the 60s and 70s.
- 2019–TV EpisodeMarty Morgan, the eminent American historian joins us to talk about his two decades of research into the history of Graignes, a small village in Normandy. You probably know the story, it has been featured in documentaries, films and books. Around 150 US paratroopers, miss-dropped 15 miles from their DZs on D-Day end up in the village of Graignes, deep in the marais (marshes) south of Carentan. There, against overwhelming odds and a fanatical SS Division they defend the hilltop. When finally overrun, the vengeful SS set fire to the church and massacre many of the survivors and civilians. Though some of this is undoubtedly true, and memorials there to this day remember and honour those who fell, many of the facts are now disputed. This show will be a conversation between two frequent visitors to Graignes with a single question - what really happened?
- 2019–TV EpisodeIt is a widely held belief that chemical weapons and chemical warfare were significant in the First World War, but not the Second World War. The actual history is much more complex. Chemical weapons were used between the Second World War in a number of ways that most people don't really consider. Joining us to discuss this is Dan Kaszeta. Dan has decades of experience in protecting against chemical and biological weapons, and has held positions in the US Army, the White House Military Office, the US Secret Service and private industry. Dan will address the Japanese use of chemical weapons on the Chinese front - a campaign that resulted in more deaths than to mustard gas in the First World War. He will also explain the development of nerve agents by the Nazis and what happened to the stock piles of such dangerous toxins at the end of the conflict.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThe war film Go for Broke (2018) follows a group of University of Hawaii ROTC students during the tumultuous year after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as they navigate wartime Hawaii and fight discrimination. In the dark days following December 7th, these Americans of Japanese ancestry form the Varsity Victory Volunteers (VVV), fighting to defend their beloved Hawaii and get back their right to bear arms. The brave actions of these young men, their families, and the people who helped them, along with the perseverance of the original 100th Infantry Battalion draftees from Hawaii, directly led to the formation of the segregated all-Japanese fighting unit, the 442nd RCT - the most decorated combat unit in U.S. military history.
- 2019–TV EpisodeNearly three decades after her passing, Audrey Hepburn remains one of the most beloved of all Hollywood stars, known for films like Sabrina, Roman Holiday and Breakfast at Tiffany's. Our special guest is author Robert Matzen who wrote Dutch Girl about Audrey's early life and will talk about Audrey's war. He has also written books on Carole Lombard and Jimmy Stewart and frequently appears on TV and in other media. "The war made my mother who she was." said Audrey's son Luca Dotti. Audrey Hepburn's war included participation in the Dutch Resistance, working as a doctor's assistant during the battle of Arnhem, the brutal execution of her uncle, and the ordeal of the Hunger Winter of 1944. She also had to contend with the fact that her father was a Nazi agent and her mother was pro-Nazi for the first two years of the occupation. But the war years also brought triumphs as Audrey became Arnhem's most famous young ballerina. We will talk about all this and more during the show.
- 2019–TV EpisodeSterling Hayden was a true Renaissance man - master sailor, war hero, actor, and author who struggled with self-hatred, alcoholism and substance abuse. Joining me is the author of Sterling Hayden's Wars - Lee Mandel a retired USN Physician. Hayden's wartime career is incredible. After a couple of minor film roles, he left Hollywood to fight. His first attempt to serve ended up badly after he broke his ankle jumping from a Stirling bomber in the UK on assignment with the British. Later, he joined the USMC where he served under the name John Hamilton. While at Parris Island, he was recommended for Officer Candidate School. After graduation, he was commissioned and was transferred to service as an undercover agent with William J. "Wild Bill" Donovan's Office of the Coordinator of Information. He remained there after it became the Office of Strategic Services. As OSS agent John Hamilton, his exploits included sailing with supplies from Italy to Yugoslav partisans and parachuting into fascist Croatia. Hayden, who also participated in the Naples-Foggia campaign and established air crew rescue teams in enemy-occupied territory received the Silver Star for gallantry and a commendation from Yugoslavia's Josip Tito. After the War he acted in some classic films including: The Killers, The Asphalt Jungle, Johnny Guitar, The Last Command and was (famously) the corrupt Police Chief killed by Michael Corleone in The Godfather. He also appeared in the War Films: Fighter Attack, Battle Taxi, The Eternal Sea and the cold-war satire Dr Strangelove.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOn December 15th 1944 a single-engine UC-64 Norseman, departed from RAF Twinwood Farm in Clapham near Bedford, and disappeared while flying over the English Channel. On board and heading for Paris were band leader Major Glenn Miller and two US Army Airforce officers: Lieutenant Colonel Norman Baessell and the pilot, John Morgan. Miller's disappearance was not made public until December 24th, when the Associated Press announced Miller would not be conducting the scheduled BBC-broadcast "AEF Christmas Show" the following day. My guest for this exciting show is Dennis M. Spragg. During a comprehensive six-year investigation, Dennis discovered and assembled detailed evidence with the cooperation of the United States Air Force Historic Research Agency, the National Archives of the United States, the National Archives of Great Britain, the Imperial War Museum, the Royal Air Force and other sources to unravel the mysterious disappearance and examine all the various theories and rumours..
- 2019–TV EpisodeDavid O'Keefe joins us again. In Part 1 he talked about the real reason for the raid on Dieppe in August 1942.7 - In Part 2 we will talk about the plan for Operation Jubilee and David will share his presentation about the intentions of the raid and how it was supposed to unfold. A final show sometime in the summer will come live from Dieppe to explain how the plan unravelled and how the nearly 1,000 British, Canadian and American commandos died.
- 2019–TV EpisodeFollowing his hugely popular debut in December, Marty Morgan joins us once again to talk about the events immortalised in The Longest Day Film. Marty and I will look at the accounts of everyone who was in the square that fateful June 5th/6th night, in an attempt to make sense of the chaos. We will address the layout of the square, the bell tower, who could see what? who was where? and where the different stories started? The most frequently told story of the DDay landings will be rigorously analysed and you're all welcome to join us.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThe US Airborne landing in Normandy is still one of the most written about military operations of the war. Joining us today to discuss the roles of the two June 6th 1944 Divisional Commanders is Mitch Yockelson PhD - military historian, archivist, professor and author. Matthew Ridgway of the 82nd "All-American" Airborne Division and Maxwell Taylor of the 101st "Screaming Eagle" Airborne Division refused to remain behind the lines and stood shoulder-to-shoulder with their paratroopers in the thick of combat. Jumping into Normandy during the early hours of D-Day, Ridgway and Taylor fought on the ground for six weeks of combat that cost the airborne divisions more than 40 percent casualties.
- 2019–TV EpisodeIn 1980 the British band OMD released Enola Gay from their second album "Organisation". The synth-pop classic, which sold over 5 million copies worldwide, addressed the atomic bombing of Hiroshima by the B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay on 6th August 1945. It was written by OMD's vocalist and bass guitarist Andy McCluskey who joins us to talk about the song. Frequently labelled as "anti-war" we will find out what inspired Andy to write the song and what it means to him and to the fans 40 years later. What's fascinating is that the song is now referenced in class-rooms as an indicator of the public's perception of the use of the Atomic bomb to bring an end to WWII. Yet to others it is simply a highly catchy pop song.
- 2019–TV Episode
- 2019–TV EpisodeOn the 76th anniversary of the liberation of Saint-Lô we bring you two shows. Part 1 will cover the assault towards the town in early-mid July. For Part 1 we are joined by Joe Balkoski, the prolific author and historian who will share his unrivalled knowledge of the US 29th Infantry Division in WWII.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOn the 76th anniversary of Operation Lüttich - the German advance on Avranches in Normandy, we will livestream two shows from the battlefields. The shows will cover the epic defence by men of the US 30th "Old Hickory" Infantry Division. Part 1 will cover the 117th Infantry Regiment's stand in Saint-Barthélemy and their "last stand" position astride the road to Avranches. We will also cover the battle for Le Neufbourg where two famous photos were taken. We will look at the action of the American anti-tank gunners and examine how the German plan began to unravel. Joining me will be author and historian Kevin Hymel who wrote about the battle for WWII History magazine and Frank Gubbels from the Netherlands, a 30th Division historian.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOn the 76th anniversary of Operation Lüttich - the German advance on Avranches in Normandy, we will livestream two shows from the battlefields. The shows will cover the epic defence by men of the US 30th "Old Hickory" Infantry Division. Part 2 will cover the fighting in the town of Mortain and also the battle for Hill 314. We will visit the Little Chapel and look at the foxholes and positions around the hillside, including where the Forward Observers were directing Allied artillery fire and indeed the attacks from the air by British Typhoons. Joining me will be author and historian Kevin Hymel who wrote about the battle for WWII History magazine and Frank Gubbels from the Netherlands, a 30th Division historian.
- 2019–TV EpisodeAn interview by Paul Woodadge with Michael Sellers (director and producer) and Michael Cudlitz (narrator) of the new documentary film Return to Hardwick, about the 93rd Bomb Group which was the most decorated, most traveled and most effective bomber group of WWII. Crippling Hitler's Europe from the air, they executed some of the most daring bombing raids of the war. Along with the group's rich history, sons, daughters and grandchildren travel to England and explore the 93rd's long forgotten airbase - Hardwick Aerodrome 104. Return to Hardwick is released on June 9th 2020 in North America.
- 2019–TV EpisodeMy friend Adam Makos has graciously agreed to take a break from writing his new book to join me for an interview. Adam has taken the military history world by storm with his trilogy of deeply personal stories about men at war. The themes of redemption, forgiveness and compassion are paramount in Adam's writing and readers who don't necessarily enjoy war books love them for that very reason. I've known Adam and his family for well over a decade and I am thrilled to have him on a WW2TV show.
- 2019–TV EpisodeWe at WW2TV are delighted to have the authors of this forthcoming book join us to talk about the Dick Winters collection. Erik Dorr is the curator of the Gettsyburg Museum of History where the collection is displayed. Jared Frederick appeared on our DDay livesteam and is an instructor of history in Pennsylvania.
- 2019–TV EpisodeIn the second of two shows this week we look at the history and influence of WWII Comics. Calum Laird is a long-serving editor of Commando Comics and has overseen the republishing of several volumes of classic titles and has also written his own stories. He earned a PHD in "Representations of conflict and character in British War Comics." Garth Ennis is a Northern Irish writer now living in New York. his books like Tankies, D-Day Dodgers, The Last German Winter and Night Witches (about a female Soviet bomber unit) are highly regarded. He has also written the introductions to reprinted volumes of Battle comics from the 60s and 70s. Paul Trimble is a hugely respected comic collector and event organiser. He contributes to various online resources and is one of the admins of the Battle Fans Facebook page. Damien Lewis is a best-selling military author and one of many current historians who was influenced by war comics. His latest book SAS Band of Brothers came out in October. Dr Stephen Connor teaches at Nipissing University and serves as the Regimental Historian for The Algonquin Regiment. He has written extensively about comics, including a chapter for the book "Drawing the Past: Comics and the Historical Imagination. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2020.
- 2019–TV EpisodeToday we are delighted that Alain de Levita, the producer of forthcoming war film - The Forgotten Battle (De Slag om de Schelde) is joining us to talk about the project. Alain is an experienced Producer and Forgotten Battle is not his first historical film. We will talk about bringing a war epic to the big screen and historical authenticity.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOn December 7th 1941 USN sailor Mickey Ganitch was getting ready to play for the USS Pennsylvania football team against the USS Arizona team. it was not to be. Mickey Ganitch, still wearing his pads and football gear spent the morning watching in horror as Japanese dive-bombers launched torpedos and dropped bombs on the ships in the harbor. USS Pennsylvania had been in Dry Dock No. 1 in Pearl Harbor undergoing a refit. When it became clear that the area was under attack the crew, including Mickey, rushed to their battle stations, and just after 8.00am her anti-aircraft gunners began engaging the hostile aircraft. Mickey's job was to serve as a lookout and report "anything that was suspicious." He saw a plane coming over the top of a nearby building. Sailors trained the ship's guns on the aircraft and shot it down. "I was up there where I could see it," Ganitch said. This is an amazing opportunity to talk to an eyewitness to history.
- 2019–TV EpisodeHanna Reitsch and Melitta von Stauffenberg were talented, courageous and strikingly attractive women who fought convention to make their names in the male dominated world of flight - both were pioneering test pilots and both were awarded the Iron Cross for service to the Third Reich. But they could not have been more different. Hanna was middle-class, vivacious and distinctly Aryan, while the darker, more self-effacing Melitta, came from an aristocratic Prussian family, was part-Jewish, and while Hanna tried to save Hitler's life, begging him to let her fly him to safety in April 1945, Melitta covertly supported the most famous assassination attempt on the Fuhrer. Their overlapping lives provide a vivid insight into Nazi Germany and its attitudes to women, to class and to race.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOur distinguished guest today is Professor Frank McDonough talking about his new book, the second volume of his highly regarded study of the Third Reich. At the beginning of 1940 Germany was at the pinnacle of its power. By May 1945 Hitler was dead and Germany had suffered a disastrous defeat. Hitler had failed to achieve his aim of making Germany a super power and had left her people to cope with the endless shame of the Holocaust. Both volumes of The Hitler Years are immensely readable and challenge previously held ideas about the Reich. We will ask Professor McDonough about his argument that Germany was only ever a middle-ranking power and never truly stood a chance against the combined forces of the Allies.
- 2019–TV EpisodeI am delighted that Donnie Edwards is joining us to talk about his passion for WWII history and his many trips to the battlefields with veterans. Donnie played for 13 seasons in the NFL for the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Diego Chargers. He retired as one of only eight players in the history of the NFL to record more than 20 interceptions and 20 sacks during his career. He now spends his time with his wife Kathryn and a team of volunteers working with veterans under the banner "Taking care of the ones who took care of us."
- 2019–TV EpisodeIt's December 1944, the Germans are retreating. It appears the war in Europe may be over soon, but not soon enough for members of the battle-worn 28th Infantry Division. Knowing they won't be home again for the Holidays, soldiers from a 112th Regiment Signal Company Message Center in the storybook town of Wiltz, realize that although the town has been liberated after nearly five years of Nazi occupation, the ravages of war have left the townspeople with nothing to celebrate the season. For the children, it will be especially bleak without the hope of candies, treats or gifts on the normally town-wide celebration of St. Nicolas Day.
- 2019–TV EpisodeBeing a historian isn't as simple as writing books or giving lectures, it's a role that has so much depth and definition. This exciting panel of historians will discuss what it really means to be a Second World War historian. To every positive experience unfortunately there is a negative, and we want to use this platform to highlight the reality of the gendered issues faced within the career of a historian.
- 2019–TV EpisodeOur guest for this show is Dr Philip Weir, a historian specialising in the Royal Navy in the first half of the twentieth century. He has written for the Navy Records Society, History Today and Time. During 1940 the German army swept with devastating speed across the Low Countries and into northern France and drove Allied forces back into a small pocket around Dunkirk. Without a swift withdrawal across the English Channel, the latter faced certain death or capture. The evacuation plan - Operation Dynamo - initially calculated that 45,000 men might be rescued, but between 26 May and 4 June 338,226 men were in fact brought back to England. In his newly published book "Dunkirk and the Little Ships" Philip shows how this was made possible by a vast armada of disparate vessels including destroyers, minesweepers, fishing vessels and, most famously of all, the privately owned 'Little Ships'.
- 2019–TV EpisodeWe are delighted to have best selling author Damien Lewis join us once again to talk about his new book SAS Band of Brothers. June 1944: the SAS parachute deep into occupied France, to wreak havoc and bloody mayhem. In a country crawling with the enemy, their mission is to prevent Hitler from rushing his Panzer divisions to the D-Day beaches and driving the Allies back into the sea. Led by Captain Patrick Garstin MC, a man supposedly invalided out of the military due to his war injuries, rarely had a wilder bunch of raiders been assembled. Dispatched on the personal orders of Colonel Blair Mayne DSO, this elite band included gritty former miner Thomas 'Ginger' Jones, John 'Rex' Wiehe, 'banned' from front line combat due to his war wounds, plus Serge 'Frenchy' Vaculik, who's journey to escape the enemy and join the SAS beggared belief. Having blown to pieces scores of prize targets, Garstin's patrol executed one of the most daring escapes of the war, only to fall victim to shocking betrayal. Captured, imprisoned and tortured terribly by the Gestapo, they faced execution in a dark French woodland on the orders of Hitler himself. But miraculously, two would escape, triggering one of the most-extraordinary Nazi-hunting operations ever.
- 2019–TV EpisodeAuthor and historian Eric Lee joins us to talk about his stunning book "The Night of the Bayonets." In the last days of WWII in Europe, Georgian troops serving in the Wehrmacht on Texel island off the Dutch coast rose up and slaughtered their German masters. Hitler ordered the island to be retaken and fighting continued for weeks, well after VE Day. The uprising had it origins in the bloody history of Georgia in the twentieth century, a history that saw the country move from German occupation, to three short years of independence, to Soviet rule after it was conquered by the Red Army in 1921. A bloody rebellion against the Soviets took place in 1924, but it remained under Russian Soviet rule. Thousands of Georgians served in the Soviet forces during WWII and among those who were captured, given the choice of "starve or fight", some took up the German offer to don Wehrmacht uniforms. The loyalty of the Georgians was always in doubt, as Hitler himself suspected, and once deployed to the Netherlands, the Georgian soldiers made contact with the local Communist resistance. When the opportunity arose, the Georgians took the decision to rise up and slaughter the Germans, seizing control of the island. In just a few hours, they massacred some 400 German officers using knives and bayonets to avoid raising the alarm. An enraged Hitler learned about the mutiny and ordered the Germans to fight back, showing no mercy to either the Georgians or the Dutch civilians who hid them. It was not until 20 May, 12 days after the war had ended, that Canadian forces landed on the island and finally put an end to the slaughter.
- 2019–TV EpisodeWe are delighted to have best selling author Damien Lewis join us to talk about the early raiding forces that were created in the wake of Churchill's plea to his chiefs of staff: "Prepare hunter troops for a butcher-and-bolt reign of terror." Units such as the Commandos, the LRDG and SAS are now world famous but it was the earlier Small Scale Raiding Force that went to Normandy via MTB / Goatley boat in September 1942 to a stretch of sand that 2 years later became better known as Omaha Beach. Also joining us to elaborate on the raid will be Duncan Hollands. Amazingly Duncan's Great Uncle was on the MTB during the raid.
- 2019–TV EpisodeI am joined by my friend George Luz Jnr, son of the famous radioman in Easy Company 506th in WWII. The unit immortalised in the HBO series Band of Brothers. George has been giving a presentation for a number of years about his father in the war, how he grew up attending the reunions, getting to know the veterans and visiting the battlefields and will be sharing this presentation with us. It will include rare photos and audio clips of the men talking. George regularly guests on the Stephen Ambrose Band of Brothers Tours to Europe.
- For Halloween night join us with a drink in hand to share ghost stories and tales of other mysterious goings-on from WWII. Our first guest is my old friend Neil R Storey, a prolific author of WWI, WWII, Criminology and Local History titles, and also some fantastic books about death, murder and Jack the Ripper. My second guest is Penny Griffiths Morgan. Penny is a podcaster, historian, writer and investigator. in 2017 her podcast "Haunted Histories" was born courtesy of Parasearch Radio, and has gone from strength to strength with guests including the who's who of the world of the paranormal.
- 2019–TV EpisodeBrothers Mark and Jared Frederick are making a film about their Grandfather - Thomas Nycum who served in the 4th Infantry Division in WWII, in the of the Hürtgen Forest, a brutal and bloody campaign that seems to get less attention than the Battle of the Bulge. Mark and Jared will join us live via Zoom from the USA.
- 2019–TV EpisodeA live panel discussion about Air Power in the Normandy campaign. Troop Carriers on DDay and beyond, the role of the 2nd Tactical Air Force, Hawker Typhoon ops and Aerial reconnaissance etc. We are joined by three guests with lots of experience with regards what went on in the skies above Normandy.
- 2019–TV EpisodeIn 1945 Yevgeny Khaldei took the now world-famous photo of the Russian flag being flown from the Reichstag, but 4 years earlier he created this striking image of a Reindeer standing in front of a flight of Hurricanes. Laurance Robinson of Finland at War, a student of the Eastern Front campaign shares the history of the image.
- 2019–TV EpisodePaul Woodadge speaks to Tracy Spaight and Andy Brockman live on the day their book "The Buried Spitfires of Burma" is released. A the biography of a modern legend, which was born of the chaos of the end of World War Two in the Far East and ended by captivating the world in January 2013. The legend of the buried Spitfires of Burma. With a colourful cast of characters including a Lincolnshire farmer, the British Prime Minister, diplomats, generals, business tycoons, monks and old soldiers, The Buried Spitfires of Burma is also the gripping story of a belief bordering on obsession, made for the era of fake history and fake news, much like the quests to recover the treasure of the fabled Oak Island Money Pit, Yamashita's Gold, or the lost Ark of the Covenant.
- 2019–TV EpisodeA WW2TV livestream with Paul Woodadge and authors/historians Joshua Levine and Rick Beyer to discuss the use of Deception in 1944, Operation Fortitude and the Battle of Normandy. With special guest Bill Moffat, the son of a Fortitude veteran.
- 2019–TV EpisodeWe are going back to June 6th for this live show. The tide when we stream will be just as it was as these events unfolded. Over around 90 minutes we will follow Jimmy Monteith's push up the draw and attack on WN60 in real time - albeit in the evening rather than the morning.
- 2019–TV Episode76 Years on to the day we will discuss the attack through the fields around Chateau de la Londe north of Caen on June 28th 1944 by 1 Suffolk against a German enemy that included elements of 21 Panzer. With filming on the ground by Duncan Hollands and Magali Desquesne.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThis was from my home in Normandy with guest historians joining me live via Zoom to talk about DDay and Operation Overlord. We tackled a wide range of subjects are visited lots of different sites around the DDay beaches and dropzones. Thank you to all the great guests who joined us.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThis is a live show from the actual battlefield, discussed 76 years on to the day. Three camera teams will be sending footage in and I will be joined by historian Daniel Taylor giving us his expertise. We look at various locations around the town of Villers-Bocage.
- 2019–TV EpisodeMy friend Joe Balkoski the chronicler of the 29th Infantry Division in World War II joins us again from the USA, and on the ground both filming for us and sharing his incredible research as a historian is Normandy guide and filmmaker Florent Plana.
- 2019–TV EpisodeThis is a live show from the actual battlefields discussed live 76 years on. Two camera teams will be sending footage in and I have two fabulous guest historians. From Canada via Zoom Mike Bechthold, who has written and lectured extensively on the Canadians in WWII. From Normandy and live with our camera team is local author Frederick Jeanne. Frederick is a fantastic historian and his book on the 7th Brigade's actions is packed with maps, photos and information.