Nightline "The Fallen" 721 stories in one

Written by Al Barger
Published May 01, 2004

This controversial Nightline broadcast turned out to be mesmerizing television.

I rarely watch Nightline these days, but I tuned in to see what the hubbub was all about. I had considered in advance the basic controversy, and decided on principle that it was perfectly appropriate. Indeed, it seems like a valuable public service to document all these names for general public acknowledgment together. But I also expected it to be extremely boring to just hear a recitation of names. I was very wrong.

In theory, it was extremely simple. Ted Koppel read just a couple of sentences explaining that these were the names of all 721 US soldiers killed in combat in Iraq. He then spent the next half hour simply reading the names of the dead.

They also, critically, showed pictures of the fallen soldiers, going mostly for the simplest mug shot photos- along with their ages and military rank. It was those pictures, two at a time rotating across the screen that grabbed my attention.

Here were 721 lives flashing before my eyes in an instant, but you could get some clue about many of the individuals just from spending those couple of seconds looking carefully. A lot of these were common portrait shots, some fair number were high school graduation pictures, with tassels and gowns.

Some of the people were pretty poker faced, but a lot of them had a great deal of personality implied in just a captured moment. Some of them cast fairly stern poses in their military uniforms- all business. Others had sly smiles, or just a little twist in how they held their heads that said volumes.

There were a few for whom they apparently had no pictures. In their spot, we got the image of the flag draped coffins that were so controversial last week.

I noticed quite a lot of teenagers, at least a hundred. There was of course a wide ethnic mix, black soldiers and white and Latino. There were what seemed to me a surprising number of obviously Asian names. I personally found it a little rougher to digest the images of the women amongst our fallen.

In the midst of this, I felt pained to keep up. A couple of times in these recitations my attention lagged, and my mind started to drift for just a few seconds- and I snapped back to attention. Each soldier's picture was only up for a few scant seconds. That's probably the only time I'll see the name and image of this specific soldier who gave their life for our country.

Blink and you'd miss someone entirely. My eyes were pretty dry by the end of the reading, from trying not to blink.

Professional right wing crapweasel Brent Bozell expressed the general Republican spin on the issue arguing that the show was biased propaganda to simply read the names of the dead without explaining what they died for. Shut up. This show covers arguments for the war and against the war every night. Tonight they highlighted one specific issue- the names of the fallen US soldiers.

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Unreformed hawkish Hoosier hillbilly and sometimes candidate Al Barger runs the still squeezin' down the psychodelic Kentucky moonshine at MoreThings.com, what with the paranoid religious visions and the Pentacostal music and visions of God and Sarah Palin and anarchy running amok and such. Somebody oughta call the cops to report his out of control freedom of conscience. Till they come to take him away somewhere where he can't hurt anyone else, you can check out his weekly column of NEW ALBUM RELEASES.
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Nightline "The Fallen" 721 stories in one
Published: May 01, 2004
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Section: Video
Filed Under: Culture: Media, Video: Documentary, Video: News, Video: Television
Writer: Al Barger
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