I don't think it is misplaced emotion. People get emotional about this group because of what they symbolize. They represent all of those soldiers who don't have epic movies made about them. They represent the little old guy down the street who sacrificed part of his youth for the greater good and even more importantly they kid who will be forever young because he paid the ultimate sacrifice. Everyone needs a hero and I'd rather Wild Bill Guarnere be some kid's hero than Kanye West.
There is always going to be more adulation over those groups who have the benifit of having well documented and more well know history. When my grandpa came home, just like most people's grandpas there were no ticker tape parades and no people buying rounds of drinks for everyone in uniform at the local tavern.
I think anger over the adulation is misplaced. Personally, I'm just happy that some people recognise that sacrificing yourself for the greater good is worthy of praise, worthy of documenting, and worthy of making films about it. I prefer it much more than an endless line of Michael Jackson tributes.
Ryan
Randy Haskin wrote:
No disrespect to Winters or his troops, but that is the one thing that just burns me about all of the 'Band of Brothers' adulation over the last near-decade...there are literally thousands of other GIs who are worthy of the same praise, yet are never the object of it.
Personally, it seems like very misplaced emotion when people get all gaga over the soldiers featured in Band of Brothers, when their effort is better placed in the guy living quietly in the nursing home in their own town who participated in just as much and performed just as gallantly (but wasn't the subject of an Ambrose book or HBO miniseries).