the kind of injuries here in our country we don t see gunshots. reporter: you re not used to treating gunshots? not so much. a few a year. not people coming all month one place. there was many people we tried to treat. there were injuries to the face, the thorax, the belly, some war scenes. reporter: it was a war screen? yeah. to see the fear in the eyes of the people coming which was most young people, was everything reporter: all different religions? all different religions. just everybody. reporter: what was the message you were trying to send with the photograph? there was a big organization for everybody to save people. we came here it help people.
place. there was many people and there was injury to the face, belly, some war scenes. reporter: it was a war scene? it was exactly that. to see the fear in the eyes of p people who were coming and most of them young people but it was everything. everybody was there. just everybody. reporter: what was the message you were trying to send with the photograph? it was a big organization for eve everybody to save people. we came together to help people, it s our job. everything was awful. the only thing that was incredible this night and quite nice. reporter: you found the good.
accounts. a book was written, which was written by the actual sergeant in the film. the movie itself is actually really scary at times. but the script feels very scripted. the dialogue feels dialogue heavy. i gave it 2 1/2 how out of five. all right. from scary to patriotic, you had your twitter universe rate the most patriotic films out there. the list is? right. so the fourth of july this weekend, i had to put together a quick list. number five is yankee doodle dandy. number 4 is forrest gump requesting. lieutenant dan from gary sinise. the patriot at number three. number two is saving private ryan. the opening 20 minutes of that movie are the greatest war scenes i ve ever seen. number one, got to go with independence day only because of the epic president s speech.
wanted very much to be accepted as one of the boys. and so he went off to vietnam. he worked there as all of the other reporters did. you would go in for a month or two. he would cover war scenes and politics. he choked at one point joked at one point that the pieces that got on the air were the war pieces, not the political or the economic pieses. everyone laughed, but that said something very important about television. i think myself, as i look back upon mike as a colleague, he was somebody who stood out because he was so good on television. he simply knew how to project himself, his voice, his style. i don t want to say he was unique, but he was very special. i seps that you could see that i understand from what you said, where the probing style of question came from,