What happened to the USS Arizona? (Pearl Harbor)

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  • Опубліковано 26 кві 2024
  • This is the story of the USS Arizona - the famous battleship that was destroyed at Pearl Harbor.
    Watch more animations: • Jared's Animations
    👏Big thanks to my video reviewers:
    Ryan Szimanski - Curator for Battleship New Jersey Museum and Memorial
    Paul Stillwell - Author of book "Battleship Arizona: An Illustrated History"
    ⌚Timestamps:
    00:00-Intro
    00:37-Start of World War 2
    02:09-Airzona History
    03:28-Outside of USS Arizona
    05:40-Inside Turret
    07:58-Arizona Decks
    10:06-Destroyed
    11:16-Memorial
    14:23-Watch More
    💻Follow me on social media:
    Patreon: / jaredowenanimations
    Twitter: / jaredowen3d
    Instagram: / jaredowenanimations
    Facebook: / jaredowenanimations
    TikTok: / jaredowenanimations
    🌐Internet Sources:
    Visiting the USS Arizona Memorial: • Visiting the USS Arizo...
    USA Launching Aircraft by Catapult: • USA Launching Aircraft...
    Battleship Texas, Coal and Torpedoes: • Battleship Texas, Coal...
    Talkin' Ship - USS Texas Powder Room: • Talkin' Ship - USS Tex...
    Battleship Texas, Getting Loaded in a 14" Turret: • Battleship Texas, Gett...
    16 Inch Gun Training Film: • 16 Inch Gun Training Film
    USS Arizona Plans: www.researcheratlarge.com/Ship...
    Arizona Memorial: www.nps.gov/perl/learn/histor...
    Here comes the Navy (movie - 1934, filmed on the Arizona)
    📚Book Sources:
    Battleship Arizona: An Illustrated History by Paul Stillwell
    amzn.to/3L1HFQy
    USS Arizona: The Enduring Legacy of a Battleship by Ingo W. Bauernfeind
    amzn.to/3KZpU4r
    The USS Arizona by Joy Walkdron Jasper, James P Delgado, and Jim Adams
    amzn.to/3ORuEdr
    🟠This animation was made with Blender 3.6 (Cycles Render)
    www.blender.org
    🎵Music (soundstripe.com):
    A Seat At The Table by Salon Dijon
    Beyond All Time by Moments
    Depth of Loss by Cody Martin
    The Recovery by CJ-0
    Avoiding Mutiny by Cody Martin
    Beat The System by Cody Martin
    🎧Here is some of the gear that I use for animation:
    Graphics Card: GTX 4090 amzn.to/3EJvUe1
    Graphics Card: GTX 3090ti amzn.to/3nazTHE
    Microphone: Shure MV7 amzn.to/3rDKSfk
    Mouse: Razer Naga X amzn.to/3EupxKs
    Chair: Staples Gaming Chair amzn.to/31hNgKS
    📼Video Summary:
    The USS Arizona is the famous battleship was destroyed during the Attack on Pearl Harbor - Dec 7, 1941. It was commissioned in 1916 and traveled to many place throughout the world. The battleship has 4 triple turrets - making a total of twelve 14inch guns. Loading one of these turrets involves Powder Hoists, Shell Hoists, the Mechanical Rammer, Platform Trays, and Breech Block. The ship had 8 decks, the ships engines and boiler rooms were located on the bottom deck. The bomb that destroyed the Arizona landed by turret #2 and probably landed in one of the magazine rooms. The explosion killed most of the men on board. Today there is a memorial constructed overtop of the Arizona - you can see this in person if you visit Hawaii. The Shrine Room contains the names of all those that were killed on the Arizona.
    #b3d #USSArizona #PearlHarbor
  • Фільми й анімація

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,3 тис.

  • @JaredOwen
    @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +421

    Thanks for watching! Consider supporting my videos: patreon.com/jaredowenanimations

  • @ScottCooper136
    @ScottCooper136 7 місяців тому +731

    My grandfather was one of the men that survived the attack on the Arizona and fought the rest of the war. When he passed away, his wish was to rejoin his fellow sailors, so his ashes were taken down by divers. It was a great and sad ceremony but something that will stay with me for the rest of my life. Thank you for making this video.

    • @Aefleslshaeu-
      @Aefleslshaeu- 5 місяців тому +44

      May your grandfather rest in peace

    • @rammsteinmusicerotico9309
      @rammsteinmusicerotico9309 5 місяців тому +18

      Un Héroe de Guerra.

    • @krisdavis1470
      @krisdavis1470 5 місяців тому +8

      RIP Sir! I'm curious, did you ever tell you how he survived that ordeal? I'm curious. Did he just survive the bombs & made his way to the water & eventually the shore?

    • @ScottCooper136
      @ScottCooper136 5 місяців тому +32

      @@krisdavis1470 He said he was sitting with his mates on the front of the ship and a second later all hell broke loose. He said he saw a pilot very vividly and saw what he thought was a Japanese flag but had never seen a zero in person prior to that day. He told me that as quickly as the attack happened, it was over.

    • @footguy215
      @footguy215 4 місяці тому +15

      ​@@ScottCooper136I got the chills reading that. A lot of the stories I've read and the videos Ive watched of the men who survived all seem to start out the same way. How they were just doing their thing, hanging around and then chaos. And as quick as it happened, it's over.

  • @comsot
    @comsot 7 місяців тому +1451

    The fact that its still leaking Oil to this day is crazy

  • @FacloFormerFavorite
    @FacloFormerFavorite 25 днів тому +10

    Last survivor of the Arizona died today. RIP

  • @Nate-gz9tg
    @Nate-gz9tg 5 місяців тому +100

    There's another battleship sunk in pearl harbor, the much lesser known USS Utah. She capsized as a result of the attack on Dec 7th 1941, and was rolled over by salvage efforts in early 1944, but never fully recovered. 58 men went down with her. Still an interesting place to visit.

    • @mistershepherd6808
      @mistershepherd6808 4 місяці тому +1

      Hmmm Utah was not a battleship.

    • @Nate-gz9tg
      @Nate-gz9tg 4 місяці тому +8

      Hmmm I wonder what that BB-31 designation was supposed to mean 🤔

    • @tom22366
      @tom22366 4 місяці тому +8

      Do tell how the Utah is not a Battleship. Everything I have read suggest otherwise.

    • @chrismaverick9828
      @chrismaverick9828 3 місяці тому +5

      @@tom22366 I suspect it is because the Utah was being used as a training ship at the time, although it was STILL a battleship and on the registry, even if it was in back-line service.

    • @Thegeneralms1
      @Thegeneralms1 2 місяці тому +2

      Utah is on the other side of the island

  • @aidanlouw4274
    @aidanlouw4274 7 місяців тому +588

    1. The reason the Missouri faces Arizona is because she watches over the wreck and the victims may rest in peace.
    2. Five brothers died that day on USS Arizona.
    3. She was full of fuel to set sail the following day back to the states.
    4. USS Nevada bombarded Japanese and German defenses using the guns salvaged from Arizona
    5. Last Arizona survivor died in 2019.

    • @justinfowler2857
      @justinfowler2857 7 місяців тому +108

      Not exactly true. Lou Conter is still alive as of August 2023 at 101 years old.

    • @ironnads7975
      @ironnads7975 7 місяців тому +37

      Lou Conter still around.

    • @jacobchurchwardtruered116
      @jacobchurchwardtruered116 7 місяців тому +63

      The five brothers died on the USS Juneau. They were the Sullivan brothers. There were 23 sets of brothers and a father and son who died on the USS Arizona.

    • @chrisgardner6677
      @chrisgardner6677 7 місяців тому +47

      Aloha, Actually 23 sets of brothers & a father & son passed on that fateful day. One survivor is still alive & Lou Conter is 101 years old. Not to be disrespectful as I am stoked you know so much. Sincerely Chris

    • @aidanlouw4274
      @aidanlouw4274 7 місяців тому +9

      @justinfowler2857 thanks for the information

  • @Acelum
    @Acelum 7 місяців тому +448

    Don’t forget those guys who desperately attempted to rescue the sailors who drowned inside the Arizona later that day. Just try to think how hardly they tried to cut through the armored steel while Arizona was sinking, it must have been so terrible to see them drowning and their bodies where never been recovered.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +70

      Very true - reading some of those stories is very sobering

    • @NK-qn6pq
      @NK-qn6pq 7 місяців тому +26

      That was the Oklahoma.

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile 7 місяців тому

      @@NK-qn6pq I’m sure this sort of rescue efforts happened all over the place. Oklahoma is probably better known for the sailors getting trapped because it capsized instead, and didn’t blow up like Arizona did. Now that’s the kind of slow death I’d have nightmares about.

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 7 місяців тому +27

      @@NK-qn6pq Not only Oklahoma but nearly every battleship sunk that day had men trapped in air pockets down inside the hulls, few of those survived. Those few who did were able to find ways out and were not "cut out" as those few rescued from Oklahoma were.
      Both Arizona and the Utah, sunk on the far side of Ford Island still have men entombed in them. Most or all of the bodies of the dead were retrieved from all the other ships including the Oklahoma as part of the salvage effort.

    • @cristsan4171
      @cristsan4171 7 місяців тому +1

      And that one casino land abandoned them all by swimming into the middle of the sea like a coward.
      -Germsmany bombing USAmerica with zero fighter troops

  • @swinginjoe8477
    @swinginjoe8477 3 місяці тому +13

    My great grandfather served on the Arizona, but was in the hospital with with flu or fever during the attack at Pearl. I saw his boarding ticket once, before it disappeared when my aunt took it after my grandmother died.

  • @jamesmcneely5124
    @jamesmcneely5124 4 місяці тому +19

    Thanks for an awesome video, Jared! My uncle was a US Navy hard-hat diver and he helped remove some of the bodies from other ships and he told me about the Arizona. Very sobering.

  • @iamsionemafi
    @iamsionemafi 7 місяців тому +172

    I spent some years growing up on Kauai. One trip I remember vividly was an 8th grade band trio to play on Oahu. While there we visited the Pearl Harbor Museum and the USS Arizona Memorial. As the boat pulled up to the memorial and we disembarked, I remember the feeling in the air; it’s hard to put into words exactly what it was, maybe a feeling of sacrifice or death, but also one of triumph. I was surprised how this silence fell over all my classmates (had to be about 50 or more of us that made it over on that boat). Everyone went from being immature and silly to respectful of where we were when we stepped aboard the memorial. It was crazy. Brought tears to my eyes to see the oil slicks rising in the water, with all the names of those who gave all on a wall. Really starts to pull you towards the gravity of what occurred on that day. I was proud to see that what brought us into the war (Pearl Harbor/ USS Arizona) and the battleship where we triumphantly ended it (USS Missouri/Mighty Mo) are parked bow to bow. It’s as if bringing back the head of the snake who killed a family member to say, “don’t worry, we got ‘em Joey”, in their remembrance. May all those who tragically lost their lives on that day rest in eternal peace. All gave some, while some gave all.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +24

      Thanks for sharing your experience Sione!

    • @scotabot7826
      @scotabot7826 7 місяців тому +6

      Bravo, Bravo!!!!!

    • @BIG-DIPPER-56
      @BIG-DIPPER-56 7 місяців тому +3

      👍

    • @iamsionemafi
      @iamsionemafi 7 місяців тому +10

      @@JaredOwen Thanks Jared! What an honor to have you reply to my comment! Love all of your content! It’s an awesome day when I open UA-cam and see one of your videos at the top, whilst only a short 30-40 minutes of time up! Keep up the hard work, thouroughly enjoy everything you put out and I know it’s a ton of work, that’s what makes them so enjoyable. Everything is clean and looks like there’s been a ton of time put into it.

    • @Tanker-ok9uz
      @Tanker-ok9uz 2 місяці тому +3

      You may not know this, but Arizona did have her revenge, her salvaged guns were fitted to Nevada after wearing out her own, Nevada's next mission after fitting Arizona's guns was to bombard the Japanese homeland. It's a shame what happened to Nevada after retirement though

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam 7 місяців тому +437

    Jared casually returning after 2 months with dope commentary is a blessing, the quality over quantity is on point

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +53

      "casually returning" 😂😂 Thanks Heisenburg

    • @b1laxson
      @b1laxson 7 місяців тому +6

      Jared 2 months ago: Ill do a BB and the town around it, how long could that possibly take ^_^

    • @jasonsecretkhorsecret8515
      @jasonsecretkhorsecret8515 7 місяців тому +1

      MM

    • @AaronArroyo-sn4uy
      @AaronArroyo-sn4uy 7 місяців тому +1

      i never thought I'd see him here

    • @thecoolbird13
      @thecoolbird13 7 місяців тому

      go away

  • @American_Jeeper
    @American_Jeeper 4 місяці тому +10

    Jared, well done. I was stationed in Hawaii and visited the Arizona memorial, before USS Missouri arrived at Pearl in '98. While my family and I were there, a recently deceased crewman from the USS Arizona was being taken down into the wreck, to be with his shipmates. It was a somber reminder of the madness of war and the eternal bonds of camaraderie that servicemen have with each other.

  • @usm1le
    @usm1le 4 місяці тому +5

    no animation can truly make you understand how huge these ships are. one of my favorite memories in the past 5 years was exploring the inside of a battleship

  • @BranchEducation
    @BranchEducation 7 місяців тому +1110

    Great work on modeling and animating such a complex ship. I appreciate how you integrate the history and present into the story of Pearl Harbor.

    • @richbenmediatech
      @richbenmediatech 7 місяців тому +5

      Yea
      Am loving his tutorials

    • @ThatBenKraft
      @ThatBenKraft 7 місяців тому +5

      It’s so cool to see two amazing education modelers admiring each other!

    • @panjian1794
      @panjian1794 7 місяців тому

      I always kind of have the feeling that you two are the same person...

    • @user-hi9ok2ym5r
      @user-hi9ok2ym5r 6 місяців тому

      One of the bombs hit near turret number 2. Killing a lot of men

    • @user-hi9ok2ym5r
      @user-hi9ok2ym5r 6 місяців тому

      Hahahhahahahahaha the battleship mo I near the arazona mormril
      13:42

  • @mkey570
    @mkey570 7 місяців тому +75

    My dad took me to see this in 1977 when he was stationed in Hawaii. Incredibly moving place, even for my 7 year old self. I remember my dad telling me about the attack and of course I had to know why and thus started my lifelong adventure as a student of history. Massive thanks to my dad, you were and still are my greatest hero.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +3

      Thanks for sharing

  • @wpariah
    @wpariah 2 місяці тому +3

    This video was unexpectedly emotional. I needed a moment to collect myself. The part about the black tears got to me. Great job.

  • @peterganse
    @peterganse Місяць тому +1

    I’ve been lucky enough to visit Pearl Harbor twice. Once when I was 13, and again at 26 years old. Watching this at 33 years old it still keeps me in awe and deep emotion. My grandfather and grandmother used to talk about it like it was yesterday. Hard to imagine such chaos and tragedy in such a beautiful place. Thank you for your great video.

  • @Sheepy19801
    @Sheepy19801 7 місяців тому +136

    This is probably the best 3D Battleship operation explanation I have ever seen. Great Job!

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +17

      Thanks! I wanted to go into even more detail but it was hard to find information

    • @c-57d55
      @c-57d55 7 місяців тому

      You're absolutely right! Have never seen such clearly presented warship detail! A joy to watch!!

    • @Fred69Rio
      @Fred69Rio 7 місяців тому +1

      No doubt about that.

  • @Historybuffm8
    @Historybuffm8 7 місяців тому +153

    I got to go to Pearl Harbor last year, which included going to the Arizona Memorial. I can’t describe how it felt being there and seeing everything. It was incredibly quiet, only broken by very quiet whispering. The people who work there are adamant about all visitors showing the highest level of respect.
    You do a really good job explaining how you can go visit the Arizona Memorial, where you start, how to get there, etc.

    • @johnzeszut3170
      @johnzeszut3170 6 місяців тому +6

      I am long in the tooth and it is not going to happen but I wish I had seen the Memorial.

  • @kirkengnath5501
    @kirkengnath5501 4 місяці тому +7

    It is really nice that time was taken to explain this in more detail and with animation. Seeing as there are those of us more visual able to learn.

  • @jamesepperson5940
    @jamesepperson5940 4 місяці тому +2

    That somber music and the detailed description of the Arizona memorial made me cry

  • @danielrobinson9451
    @danielrobinson9451 7 місяців тому +208

    This man is the definition of quality over quantity.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +21

      Thanks Daniel😀

    • @Indo-Fury6521
      @Indo-Fury6521 7 місяців тому +5

      ​@@JaredOwen So how does a Aircraft Carrier work?

    • @CrusaderSmjolk
      @CrusaderSmjolk 7 місяців тому +3

      ​@@Indo-Fury6521I guess you turn it on an drive it

  • @themightiestofbooshes9443
    @themightiestofbooshes9443 7 місяців тому +204

    I think it's very poetic that USS Missouri and USS Arizona, both symbolizing the beginning and the end of the pacific war are right next to each other; and how USS Missouri is facing the USS Arizona as if it's keeping silent vigil over its fallen comrade. Yes, there are tears running down my face.
    Thank you for this video, Jared.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +8

      Thanks for watching

    • @magisterrleth3129
      @magisterrleth3129 7 місяців тому +16

      I think WWII memorials are the most powerful. It was the most deadly conflict in human history, and just reading the numbers isn't enough. Seeing how much space is required just to list the _names_ of people that died in a relatively small battle by casualty count is sobering. There are battles where nearly a million people died. How big would _that_ wall have to be? And how much was lost with so many names? We can never know, that cost is incalculable.

    • @brians9508
      @brians9508 7 місяців тому +4

      @@magisterrleth3129 i think there were 2 battles in ww2 in which there were close to (actually exceeding) a million deaths - battle of Stalingrad and siege of Leningrad.

    • @richardautry9594
      @richardautry9594 7 місяців тому +4

      Yes, the AZ and MO were both highly symbolic of the birth and end of the war between the US and Japan. I'm not sure if it was either MacArthur or Truman, that this symbolism was centered, but I'm glad General MacArthur was rather courteous with them as opposed to dictatorial or overbearing with them, as the Soviets would have been had he permitted them to form a Soviet sphere as did Eisenhower.

    • @richardautry9594
      @richardautry9594 7 місяців тому

      ​@@magisterrleth3129it would only have been so had we not used the bomb. Stalin, as only typical of him, would have declared.

  • @jculpmm7
    @jculpmm7 4 місяці тому +4

    This was an awesome presentation!! Back in the late 70’s there a nice man that work at the bowling I went to as a kid, his father was killed on the Arizona. He would tell the story based on what his mom told him. He was right around 1 yrs old, maybe younger when his father died. Not remembering his father hurt him the most. When telling the story his eyes would tear up because he said he was robbed the chance of being with his dad, learning from him and doing father- son stuff. After all those years he still angry at the Japan for taking his dad. I wish kids today take time to actually learn our past, maybe they could learn something . . . History always seems to repeat itself. Thanks again for this, I love history and this was a nice way to honor those who have fallen. GOD Bless the USA, all those who have served, passed and are still serving our Nation!!!!! Thanks

  • @brandonoliver9125
    @brandonoliver9125 Місяць тому +1

    I have been wanting to visit the USS Arizona and her memorial since I was a child. I'm 37 now and might not ever be able to. This was an excellent video and very well done. Many thanks. Many of my families older generations have served in wartime. Grandpa's served in WWII but not with the Navy. God Bless EVERYONE who served and sacrificed.

  • @retiredmarine3225
    @retiredmarine3225 7 місяців тому +63

    Thank you so much, Jared. I'm a retired Marine whose mother is Hawaiian and was a little girl living in Pearl Harbor when it was attacked Dec 7th. I had my retirement flag flown over the Arizona out of respect for her and those lives lost. She went on to serve in the Army along with my Dad.

  • @jamesalvarez6266
    @jamesalvarez6266 7 місяців тому +19

    Thanks for posting. Fun fact: there's a scale outline of the USS Arizona at the University of Arizona just east of the Old Main building.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +4

      Oh neat! That would be fun to see

  • @mikekannely2286
    @mikekannely2286 4 місяці тому +3

    My dad and uncles fought in the NAVY in the Pacific Theater. Finally went Oahu a few years ago. Found my uncle's graves in the punchbowl and visited the Arizona. I never got to meet them, but I cried for them. Thank God for them!

  • @michaellissow543
    @michaellissow543 23 дні тому +1

    Visited the USS Arizona while in the Navy. Returning from a 6 month Westpac cruise, our final port of call was Oahu before heading back state side San Diego. I love history so I had to visit the memorial to take it all in up close and pay my respects. I didn't expect how emotional it would be. I was fighting back tears seeing the ship knowing fellow sailors are still down there and reading their names on the wall.

  • @RedDeadRogue
    @RedDeadRogue 6 місяців тому +278

    My grandfather served aboard the USS Tennessee at Pearl Harbor, the ship anchored just in front of the Arizona. He said that he arrived at his battle station just as the Arizona was hit and that when she exploded, for just a brief moment, her keel came so far out of the water that he could see the bottom of her hull before she slammed back down. God bless and God rest all the brave men who died in the sinking, and to all those who fought for our country in World War 2.
    Edit: Grammar correction.

    • @rongendron8705
      @rongendron8705 3 місяці тому +8

      My great uncle, 37 yr. old Chief Ed Gaudet, was also on the USS Tennessee & was at 7 a.m. Mass on
      Ford Island, when the attack happened! (Read my statement above) (R) Maybe they knew each other?
      p.s. My 20 year old uncle, Army Pvt. Kenneth Cooke, was also at Hickam Field, that day!

    • @markushuber214
      @markushuber214 2 місяці тому +1

      God bless all people fighting in the great wars - it is not the people who wanted the war.

    • @knowingyourmind
      @knowingyourmind 2 місяці тому +5

      There is that famous film of the Arizona's explosion. It has been enhanced, and the ship raising out of the water can, indeed, be seen. It is a horrible sight to see. In just that moment, over 1,000 men perished.

    • @degsbabe
      @degsbabe 2 місяці тому

      Apparently the Japanese message of intent was not recieved at the proper time by the American war office. Otherwise alot of lives may have been saved. The 'sleeping giant' was truly awoken....

    • @Tylerz_theman
      @Tylerz_theman Місяць тому

      E

  • @willmchale3001
    @willmchale3001 7 місяців тому +19

    We were at the memorial a few years back when one of the survivor's ashes were being brought down to be laid to rest with his brothers. What a crazy coincidence that we were there that day and got to witness the ceremony before he was brought down. Not a dry eye in the house - holy cow was it moving.

  • @1134Dproductions
    @1134Dproductions 5 місяців тому +1

    I was at the Arizona a month ago. A quarter sized blob of oil would come to the surface about every 45 seconds. The emotions on the memorila were powerful.
    Great video on this.

  • @DonHeres-fp5zy
    @DonHeres-fp5zy 22 дні тому +1

    Fantastic video! My Dad was a Marine at Pearl during the attack. He watched the hi-altitude bomb bomb fall and the Arizona explode. Have been to Memorial twice. Everybody should see it.

  • @tictackpainting9983
    @tictackpainting9983 6 місяців тому +129

    My wife and I visited Pearl Harbor and the Arizona several years ago. There’s no words that can explain how sacred a place it truly is.

    • @garyjensen1602
      @garyjensen1602 3 місяці тому +1

      We were there 4 years ago as well, very solemn and powerful place. Everyone should experience this, and like you mentioned, there are no words.

    • @amekoriginal
      @amekoriginal 2 дні тому

      Рекомендую вам побывать в России на Мамаевом кургане

  • @Toukirahmedmunna
    @Toukirahmedmunna 7 місяців тому +84

    Quality content. I've not found another animator like you on youtube, Jared. I never miss your videos.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +9

      Thank you Toukirah! I appreciate the compliments

    • @SaiTaX_the_Chile_boi
      @SaiTaX_the_Chile_boi 7 місяців тому +1

      I can only think of a handful, none are better in my opinion, at most equal.

    • @floofypoofybread
      @floofypoofybread 7 місяців тому

      ​@@SaiTaX_the_Chile_boiCould you share some of those channels? Thanks

    • @Watchman_Jay
      @Watchman_Jay 7 місяців тому +1

      I wish I could do what he does with animations
      Thumbs up for you @JaredOwen

    • @grissee
      @grissee 7 місяців тому +2

      Lesics is another good animator, he focus more on engineering (his Pantograph videos are my favorite!)

  • @collinleblanc2562
    @collinleblanc2562 2 місяці тому +4

    Simply amazing work Jared. Words cannot express how wonderful the job you have done.

  • @kqr573v2
    @kqr573v2 20 днів тому +1

    Great video with plenty of information to give a basic understanding of the memorial without getting too far off into the weeds. The animations are very clear, helpful, and on point. I'd read a lot about Dec 7th over time including some very technical info about the Arizona and the post-attack investigation before I got to visit the memorial several years ago, but even with some background knowledge of the attack and the ship itself it it can be difficult to understand exactly what you're looking at once you get out to the memorial. Unfortunately, the memorial itself does not (or did not when I was there) have much info to help visitors interpret what you're seeing and to orient yourself as you're standing there. I wish this video had been available and I had seen it before my visit.

  • @neskire
    @neskire 7 місяців тому +32

    I visited the Arizona Memorial in 1975. The names on the wall of those killed struck home to me when I saw one with a name similar to mine. One thing people should know is that the ferry to the memorial is operated without cost to the public. It is the only vessel allowed to dock at the memorial. You might see promotions for harbor tours that claim to visit the memorial but they are not allowed to dock there. Also, it has been estimated that the Arizona will continue to leak a gallon (4 litres) of oil a day for the next 500 years.

    • @catlady8324
      @catlady8324 7 місяців тому +4

      Thank you for that info.

  • @MiniMC546
    @MiniMC546 7 місяців тому +50

    Oh my god I've been waiting for this when you announced it. Awesome animation as always. You really learn a lot when an animation is included.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +8

      Thanks - I'm glad you learned a lot!

  • @rpbajb
    @rpbajb Місяць тому +1

    When my family visited the memorial many years ago, a survivor of the attack was present to answer questions. A great guy. My Dad, a WW2 US Navy veteran, was very quiet that day.

  • @knightwinggl1800
    @knightwinggl1800 5 місяців тому +1

    I've always had some some questions about the lower decks..... not anymore. Well done Sir. Well done.

  • @ASHISHYADAV-ny5nv
    @ASHISHYADAV-ny5nv 7 місяців тому +35

    His animations are both educational and mesmerizing, making learning a joy.

    • @jcd_2000
      @jcd_2000 7 місяців тому +2

      The absolute best

  • @michaelmccotter4293
    @michaelmccotter4293 7 місяців тому +39

    Thanks Jared!
    You did a fantastic job on this animation!
    I first visited the memorial on my 12th wedding anniversary.
    1992. My wife had purchased a Lei of flowers for me for our anniversary dinner.
    I could not leave the island with the Lei because of agriculture regs.
    I decided to drop it into the water while visiting the memorial.
    A tribute to the sacrifice of these Navy men who gave their all. Rest in peace!

  • @benr2862
    @benr2862 4 місяці тому +1

    This is the most comprehensive overview of this disaster i have ever heard. Even in school this was glossed over. Thankfully you covered it all

  • @rongendron8705
    @rongendron8705 4 місяці тому +1

    Thanks for such a great descriptive, of the USS Arizona! My great uncle, Edward Gaudet, was a Navy Chief, on the
    USS Tennessee (the ship in front of the Arizona, on Dec. 7th,1941. He & eight Chiefs from the Arizona, were finishing
    7 a.m. Mass on Ford Island, when the attack started at 7:55 a.m. (possibly saving their lives!) When they got back to
    their ships, the Tennessee was on fire & the Arizona in ruins! Gaudet was later commissioned & retired after 30 years!

  • @Pats0c
    @Pats0c 7 місяців тому +55

    I work at the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum on Ford Island and I gotta say this impressed me. You got pretty much every detail about the ship, the attack, and Pearl Harbor today correct. Bravo

    • @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181
      @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181 7 місяців тому

      Fun Fact. ADM Boorda and MA3 Osvald on December 7, 1995 at the Air Tower created USSF, United States of America Space Force. For if aliens do come the first place they will attack is Pearl Harbor, HI. Fords Island is better known as BOORDA USSF ISLAND! Thanks to Trump MA3 Osvald is now a 5 Star Grand Admiral and The Admiral of the Universe. Emergency Rapid Response Team is BOORDA’S TEAM parent of USSF!

    • @bollockjohnson6156
      @bollockjohnson6156 7 місяців тому

      Liar. Unlike you, I ACTUALLY work at that place. Stop lying to the children. He got pretty much EVERYTHING WRONG. Read more, fool.

    • @rjjames9336
      @rjjames9336 5 місяців тому

      except the attack didn't happen at the start of ww2

    • @robinblackmoor8732
      @robinblackmoor8732 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@rjjames9336The attack started World War 2.

    • @rjjames9336
      @rjjames9336 5 місяців тому +3

      @@robinblackmoor8732 no it didn't WW2 started when Germany invaded Poland and the allies declared war on Germany in September 1939. It was a world war long before the US got involved. There was already a war going on in the Pacific and Europe.

  • @Marc-js8rx
    @Marc-js8rx 7 місяців тому +23

    I made a point to visit the USS Arizona Memorial while in Hawaii in 2000. It was indeed a very solemn experience. I could not help but shed tears at the gravity of such loss of these young men's lives. And yes, the "black tears" were indeed visible almost 60 years later. (One can only imagine the amount of oil still trapped within its keel.)
    Excellent job, Jared! Thorough, informative...and educational for younger generations that may have difficulty relating to what they deem as "ancient history" and "irrelevant".
    "December 7th, 1941...a date that will live in infamy." ---- Franklin D. Roosevelt

    • @trevorn9381
      @trevorn9381 7 місяців тому +1

      There is a large quantity of oil still onboard the wreck of the Arizona. The tanks had been topped off for a trip back to the West Coast for Christmas. A number of years ago I worked for an environmental consulting company that did a lot of work for the Navy and I know that they were exploring the possibility of removing the remaining oil from the ship to prevent a massive oil spill when the rusting century old hull inevitably collapses. To my knowledge the oil has never been removed.

    • @tcg1_qc
      @tcg1_qc 7 місяців тому

      @@trevorn9381 I don't see how they would remove it, maybe they can stick a pipe through where the oil is leaking but even if they can, there would still be oil in the other tanks. It's gonna be a massive headache to remove the oil, maybe the best thing to do is to surround the ship with barriers and then drain the water inside, which is one of the techniques used to build things in a body of water.

  • @jimw1615
    @jimw1615 23 дні тому +1

    It still chokes me up watching and listening to the part of this video describing the Arizona Memorial. My one and only visit in 1974 had me dazed, just being there and staring down into the water at the ship. It is a hallowed place.

  • @bruceholroyd7063
    @bruceholroyd7063 22 дні тому +1

    Jared, this is one of the most clearly informative, educational videos on the Arizona and Missouri that I have ever seen! Your animations are excellent and very explanatory in detailing the ships and their internal workings! You even explained a few things about the Memorial that I had little, if any, previous knowledge of! To sum it all up, yours is one of the BEST tributes to U.S.S. Arizona on UA-cam! I am one of your subscribers because of the quality of your animations and accompanying textbook information! Keep up your incredible work! My wife's distant cousin, Paul E. Shiley was one of Arizona's casualties during the Pearl Harbor attack. His name is on the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial Wall.

  • @comusrules1244
    @comusrules1244 7 місяців тому +25

    My ex was on the Missouri during the 80’s. I had access to the ship and walked all around it. The inside of those gun turrets is unbelievable. Pearl Harbor is the most appropriate place for it to retire. RIP Arizona. ❤. Great Vid Jared!!!

    • @apearofglasses5801
      @apearofglasses5801 7 місяців тому +2

      I recently visited the Missouri and although it was not at the center of focus of the Pearl Harbor attack it was a survivor none the less.
      Edit: it wasn't the Missouri I was on it was different ship sorry.

    • @bobjohnson205
      @bobjohnson205 7 місяців тому

      Plus, the Missouri sure kicked those aliens' butts in the movie 'Battleship'!

  • @angelovalavanis2314
    @angelovalavanis2314 7 місяців тому +14

    I've visited the memorial and it's breathtaking. Rest in peace to all who lost their lives that morning.
    I wonder when the leaking oil will run out.

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 7 місяців тому +1

      The ship had been fully refueled just a couple of days before after returning to port following an exercise at sea. While much of that fuel had escaped when the forward 14" powder magazine exploded about 30 or so percent remained once the fires were allowed to burn themselves out. The Navy in the 1970s estimated that there was still sufficient fuel oil remaining in the tanks in the double bottom to feed those leaks for more than another century.

    • @justinfowler2857
      @justinfowler2857 7 місяців тому

      ​@@robertf3479There has been debate on if they should remove the remaining oil due to the amount of damage it's causing to the harbor.

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 7 місяців тому

      @@justinfowler2857 That debate has been going on about 40 years, since the time I was stationed at Pearl. The desire is there but the technology to remove the oil without disturbing the wreck, causing undue damage still isn't up to where the Navy and National Park Service want it to be.

    • @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
      @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid 6 місяців тому

      @@robertf3479 Practicality took a back seat to symbolism? And in the USA, no less?! 😳
      Well I don't believe it for a second.

  • @danielreynolds5438
    @danielreynolds5438 4 місяці тому +3

    Thank you Jared!!! I was born on December 7, in 1959, but for as long as I can remember, I've always had a very special and revered place in my heart for what happened that day and with the accompanying history. I hope someday to be able to go there, but I know my heart will be touched so much, any words I try to speak will only come out as tears.

  • @briankorbelik2873
    @briankorbelik2873 4 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for making this great video. I had four uncles who served in the USN during the war. Two saw combat and one was badly wounded and his injuries greatly affected the rest of his life, and most likely led to his early death at age 65.

  • @Tundraviper41
    @Tundraviper41 7 місяців тому +10

    A fact that some don't know is that one of Airzonas' triple 354 mm gun turrets was taken off the wreck and used to replace one of USS Nevadas (her predecessor class) triple 354mm turrets which was then used to bombard Japanese held islands in the pacific, so a piece of her got to exact its revenge on the nation that destroyed her.

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 7 місяців тому +5

      Those guns also took part in the Normandy operation.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +5

      yeah I did read about that - very neat fact

  • @UCFDisneyMan
    @UCFDisneyMan 7 місяців тому +9

    I visited the memorial back in 1998 when I was in high school. Something I will always remember. And another fact about the three sets of 7 windows, the guide we had mentioned that these 21 windows serve as a continuous 21 gun salute to all those who died in combat both on the Arizona and at Pearl Harbor.

  • @garyschlagheck603
    @garyschlagheck603 5 місяців тому +1

    Wow, i really appreciate the structural layout. It makes it easier to understand.

  • @trade0714
    @trade0714 4 місяці тому +2

    This is some of the best animation I've ever seen. One of the sailors still onboard is Alan Brooner, a 19 yr. old from the small town in Indiana both my parents are from, and grew up at the same time with.

  • @kentslocum
    @kentslocum 7 місяців тому +17

    This is an incredibly high-quality video. The detail is perfectly balanced with respectfulness. Well done, and thank you for helping me better understand such a tragic moment in American History.

  • @douglasgriswold2533
    @douglasgriswold2533 7 місяців тому +4

    Thank you, Jared. I was in the Army and stationed on Oahu 1983-1987, and moved back to the mainland in 1990. I cannot say how many times I visited the USS Arizona Memorial during that time. At 2-3 times a month and more. I was present for several anniversaries (1984, - 1989), and had the opportunity to speak to several of the Arizona survivors as well as to several Japanese pilots who actually participated in the attack. It was quite sobering to see former enemies embracing as friends during those anniversaries. One of my friends at that time would visit the Memorial with me and we would stand and read the names of the dead, of which one was his grandfather. BLANKENSHIP, Theron Andrew. We would often stand in silence for minutes as we read those names. Thank you.

  • @joshuakampamba9061
    @joshuakampamba9061 3 місяці тому +1

    I really enjoy your animation alot❤❤❤thank you very much for educating me👍🇿🇲

  • @joshuakampamba9061
    @joshuakampamba9061 3 місяці тому +1

    This is really very educating and helps us to reflect of the past... Thanks very much Owen

  • @tomhunter965
    @tomhunter965 7 місяців тому +5

    Well done. I have one thing to add.
    We toured the USS Arizona, the first time, in 1986. The architect of the memorial, Alfred Preis, was on our tour. We were told the twenty-one “windows” in the memorial itself signified a silent “twenty-one gun salute,” not the date of the attack.

  • @CommanderSlayers
    @CommanderSlayers 7 місяців тому +8

    For those of you who are wondering, you can actually find a video of the actual USS Arizona blowing up. I heard it was recorded from a nearby medic ship close to Battleship Row.

  • @acerjuglans383
    @acerjuglans383 19 днів тому +1

    Your work is exemplary. Thank you for sharing.

  • @markushuber214
    @markushuber214 2 місяці тому +1

    So much effort, well done! Very interesting even for people who dont know much about battleships

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 7 місяців тому +8

    My great uncle served on the Arizona in the 20's and 30's and was Captain of the USS Boreas which was the first relief ship to sail into the Harbor after the battle. He later was Captain of the USS Arkansas at the Battle of Iwo Jima and was made a admiral. His name was Admiral George McFadden O'Rear.

    • @user-xn6fq7gv7p
      @user-xn6fq7gv7p 6 місяців тому +1

      My great uncle was Captain Franklin VanVaulkenburg ... My Mother's uncle ... My Grandmother's Brother . lol . He went down w that blast while giving commands . ✌🌐

  • @MarvelousSeven
    @MarvelousSeven 7 місяців тому +4

    I was at the USS Arizona memorial a few weeks ago and it has been on my mind a lot since. Thank you for putting this video together. Very good work.

  • @laura737luververetenikoff5
    @laura737luververetenikoff5 5 місяців тому +3

    I visited the memorial last April. It was a very emotional experience. There are a lot to learn about the history of it. The video is very helpful in learning how it really happened on December 7th, 1941. Thanks for sharing this video

  • @L.L
    @L.L 4 місяці тому +1

    I dove that ship it was breath taking. So much emotions . Crazy to see all the stuff from the sailors that is still there and not aloud to be touch of moved.

  • @jameseaton905
    @jameseaton905 7 місяців тому +20

    One small note: the attack on Pearl Harbor was NOT the beginning of World War II. Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931; Germany invaded Poland in 1939, causing Britain and France to declare war on Germany. That's the event often given as the beginning of WWII. But by December 7, 1941, most of the world had been at war for more than two years. Excellent information on the ship and the modeling and animation.

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 7 місяців тому +3

      I personally consider sept. 1939 the start of WWII. But it can be up for argument, even with myself. 1937 maybe?
      1937 - The Sino-Japanese war begins, it ends in 1945 with Japan's surrender. China is later part of "the Allies".
      1939 - Germany invades Poland, UK & France joins the war as the Allies. This is the accepted start of WWII.
      1941 - Japan & Germany drags USA into the wars, which now become connected, only _now_ a real "world war".

    • @brettbrooks5511
      @brettbrooks5511 3 місяці тому +2

      He didn't say the war began from the attack on Pearl Harbor, he said it began the direct US involvement. We know that the German invasion of Poland is what began the war officially.

    • @refreshfr
      @refreshfr Місяць тому +1

      @@brettbrooks5511 The exact opening of the video is "The USS Arizona. This was the famous battleship that was sunk at Pearl Harbor at the beginning of World War II." This is just factually incorrect. Yes, he does say later that the USA did not enter WW2 at the beginning, but why leave an objectively false statement at the beginning of the video?

  • @markharris5107
    @markharris5107 7 місяців тому +44

    Jared - you are a treasure. I've watched all of your animations, and you have excelled at at least three aspects: 1. The technical animation, 2. The treatment and ordering of the presentation, and 3. The gentle storytelling. I hope you continue doing this work.

  • @fourpatts
    @fourpatts 4 місяці тому

    Well done. Your video clarified a number of points that puzzled me. Thanks for an excellent presentation.

  • @LanielPhoto
    @LanielPhoto Місяць тому

    Very well done. Thank you ! Great graphics and an important subject.

  • @johno9507
    @johno9507 7 місяців тому +5

    I visited the USS Arizona as a kid in 1989, quite a humbling experience even for a young fella.
    LEST WE FORGET. 🇦🇺🇺🇲

  • @ptes9761512
    @ptes9761512 7 місяців тому +5

    Very love this, thank you for this work.

  • @danshowlund
    @danshowlund 3 місяці тому +1

    I think that’s the best animation I’ve ever seen on a military history video. Just a phenomenal piece of work putting this together

  • @osulxa
    @osulxa 3 дні тому

    I have visited the Arizona memorial. The experience truly is haunting and surreal.

  • @gregwarner3753
    @gregwarner3753 7 місяців тому +6

    I could have visited the Arizona on my way to Riverine duty on the Mekong River so many years ago. I simply could not bring myself to do it. Little did I learn more about grief then I needed to know.
    Excellent presentation.

  • @itsjustpops
    @itsjustpops 7 місяців тому +8

    0:04 - This didn't happen at the beginning of WWII. It was 2 years after the start of the war. This was what caused the start of the US offensive operation in the war.

  • @rcstl8815
    @rcstl8815 Місяць тому

    Great presentation, Jared. I'll be watching for more from you.

  • @dougsnavely847
    @dougsnavely847 4 місяці тому +1

    Absolutely amazing - I can't imagine the work this took but thank you for your incredible efforts! Just awesome!

  • @djlashman
    @djlashman 7 місяців тому +5

    I was just at the USS Arizona last year, it was amazing and eye opening to finally be there, but your video pointed out some things that I definately didn't know about which makes this even more amazing....

  • @grxengine
    @grxengine 7 місяців тому +6

    Yes! That short ferry ride over is intensely humbling and to stand in one of those 7 open windows & see that serene wreck just underwater below you is an image you can never forget. Amazing work capturing this, @JaredOwen.

  • @Fremen2
    @Fremen2 5 місяців тому +3

    I had the privilege of visiting the memorial in the 90's. Emotional, contemplative a truly sublime experience. Also the tradition of "manning the rails" as modern day warships coming into Pearl assemble all crew on the decks to acknowledge the memorial as their respective ships pass by.

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 5 днів тому

    I took my 1 year old daughter and my husband and his daughter to see the monument the week after 9/11. Originally our flight was due to leave on 9/12, but since all flights were cancelled for 3-4 days after, we had to wait a week. You had to leave your backpacks or purses outside the monument. My dad was in Pearl Harbor on the seaplane tender the USS Tangier, which made it out before the attack threatened to block the ships from getting out to sea. He thought the whole thing was a drill, as he was locked in the engine room at the time and he couldn't hear much of anything, it being so loud in the engine room. I daresay my daughter was the only granddaughter of a Pearl Harbor Survicior there are the time. (my parents had me very late in life, btw).
    Fascinating place. I always cry when they play taps over the loudspeakers on the ferry over. (I don't know if they still do in this ridiculous political climate we live in now, what with a Navy filled with drag queens. When my dad was in the Navy, he thought it was a joke that men could be attracted to other men until he walked in the barracks one day and saw two men....I never ound out what they were doing, my mom wouldn't let him tell me.)

  • @fundude9938
    @fundude9938 6 місяців тому +4

    I went to Pearl Harbor about a year ago and I got to explore the USS Missouri, but I never got inside the Arizona memorial. However I did get to see some of the Arizona by looking down from the bow of the Missouri. It was a really cool experience.

  • @daburgerbandit1598
    @daburgerbandit1598 7 місяців тому +10

    An absolutely phenomenal video as always. Well detailed, interesting subject, good quality animation, consistent and engaging narration... Jared deserves far more appreciation than he gets.

  • @racketyjack7621
    @racketyjack7621 3 місяці тому +1

    A respectful and accurate description of the ship and what happened to her. Well done! BM2 USN 1977-84.

  • @mikegarcia7914
    @mikegarcia7914 4 місяці тому +1

    fantastic video. I grew up on Hickam for 11 years and we moved off base next to the stadium.. This is the best video Ive seen. Wow

  • @stephenfestus9268
    @stephenfestus9268 7 місяців тому +4

    Jared your presentation was excellent and should be shown as a requirement in all high school classes. It's our history and people need to know the sacrifices that were made for our freedom.

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +2

      Thank you Stephen! My hope is that a history teacher would find this useful

  • @hungryanimal5112
    @hungryanimal5112 7 місяців тому +10

    Can you do a nuclear submarine next? Thank you
    I love your animations!

    • @JaredOwen
      @JaredOwen  7 місяців тому +5

      Thanks for the suggestion!

    • @justinfowler2857
      @justinfowler2857 7 місяців тому +3

      That would be harder since many parts of nuclear submarines are classified, such as weapon locations and the engine rooms. A general video could be made though.

  • @garyjohnson7490
    @garyjohnson7490 4 місяці тому +1

    Very well done and so respectful. Hope our young people are watching. Thank you

  • @toddkurzbard
    @toddkurzbard 3 місяці тому +2

    An excellent and informative video, worthy of praise. I learned much that I did not know.
    I went to the memorial twice, in 191 and again in 1999. It was (as a TITANIC and ship historian), an important part of my desire to see when I was in Hawai'i.

  • @xxfilatusxx
    @xxfilatusxx 7 місяців тому +6

    I remember going to the Missouri and the Arizona memorial, Missouri served in most of not all conflicts after wwII and served in the later years of world war two, the Korean War, Vietnam, Gulf War, and Operation Desert Storm, although she was retired after Desert Storm. She had over a Fifty year career in the navy truly a remarkable ship if you ever get the chance to see her. USS Bowfin was the submarine in Pearl Harbor and as you said she is docked as a museum ship at the Pearl Harbor memorial area on O’ahu Hawaii

  • @PAVEL--JAKL
    @PAVEL--JAKL 7 місяців тому +5

    Can you make video how you do the design that would be interesting..👌

  • @fly-over1517
    @fly-over1517 4 місяці тому +3

    Great video and as mentioned in other comments appreciate you incorporating the Arizona's History from its beginning, a much different telling than other videos I've watched about the Arizona and its demise in Hawaii. I've been at the Arizona memorial at least 15 times over the years as my Uncle and Mother in-law both worked at Pearl Harbor. It was always a surreal visit when I went and stared over the edge of the memorial into the waters and imagined what happened that day.

  • @gojoe47
    @gojoe47 2 місяці тому +2

    super very well told, clear and easy to understand love your animated explanation.

  • @donalddodson7365
    @donalddodson7365 7 місяців тому +9

    Thank you, Jared, for your dedication to your videos! The images are so clear and your research is excellent.

    • @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
      @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid 6 місяців тому +1

      Hey, thanks for that donation!
      I have nothing to do with this channel, other than being a viewer, but I love when people support the things that they enjoy - especially when there's THIS much talent behind the product.
      Good job, man. 👍

  • @billymcg4808
    @billymcg4808 6 місяців тому +14

    Very informative!!!
    As a young Marine I was stationed in Kaneohe Bay MCAS in '77-79. Visited the memorial and heard about the design signifying initial defeat and rising to victory. You're the first one I've ever heard who described it as such. However, my memory also tells me the openings, which are 7 apiece on 3 sides are meant as a perpetual 21 gun salute to the fallen. So I heard.... in 1977.

    • @NikkiTheOtter
      @NikkiTheOtter 3 місяці тому +2

      I visited in 2016 with my family, and the tour guide mentioned that salute thing as well. They also said something about the 'Black Tears'. That the ship would cry until the last survivor passed. It's now been 82 years since that day. If there are any survivors left, they would be over 100 years old, but since this video states that it's still crying, perhaps there's more to the tale.

    • @lumineria1
      @lumineria1 3 місяці тому +2

      I think there’s one survivor left. The other had passed away in 2023. 🥺

  • @DaNards
    @DaNards 3 місяці тому +1

    I just found your channel you will never see this probably but I love your videos they are all soooo well done! Thank you for making learning fun and interactive