Drunk History (2013) s05e08 Episode Script
World War II
1 You will be in charge of a ghost army.
Get those tanks blown up.
So they blow up tanks.
This glass hits my teeth too much.
Well, it's time for you to go to your internment camp.
This is completely in unconstitutional.
Take it from a drunk guy this is [bleep.]
ridiculous.
Because of World War II, Hitler's nephew was like, "Yo, I want to fight for the U.
S.
" Pow, pow, pow, pow, pow.
Buckle your seat belt.
(Patriotic music) (Dramatic music) We're gonna have a dirty gin martini.
- Were you a bartender? - I was for a little bit.
It's the only job I've ever been fired from.
Well, that might be a little too much gin.
This martini glass is a Cheesecake Factory martini glass.
Is that where you were the bartender of No, I wasn't.
I was a waiter at The Cheesecake Factory for two years.
Hello, I'm John Lutz.
Today we'll be talking about the history of The Cheesecake Factory.
No, no, no, no, we got to talk about the Ghost Army.
- The Ghost Army.
- Sorry, cheesecakes.
Sorry, Cheesecake Factory.
We'll see you next time.
Cheers.
Hello, my name is John Lutz, and today we will be discussing the Ghost Army.
In the autumn of 1943, it was World War II.
There was a general a general by the name of General Marshall.
And he came up with this crazy new tactic to help defeat the Nazis.
General Marshall came to President Roosevelt.
"Okay, here's the thing it is a fake army.
"It's a fake war, and it will distract the German army, and then we'll do the actual battles over here.
" Then FDR said, "What? Already on board.
" (Glass thuds) This glass hits my teeth too much.
- (Laughs) - (Snorts) So General Marshall came to Lieutenant Colonel Harry Reeder.
He said, "You will be in charge of a ghost army.
" Reeder was like, "That sounds like a good idea, "but I'm a soldier.
I should be on the front lines fighting for real.
" And then he was like, "I know you're a 'soldjler'" - (Chuckles) - "And soldier.
" (Laughter) "And "You get to cherry-pick everybody.
If you think they're right for your team, take 'em.
" And so that's what he did.
Harry Reeder brought together artists, like sound artists, design artists, actors.
One guy was like, "This is insane.
"I thought I was gonna be a soldier, but I'm happy that I'm not because I would be dead soon.
" So this is where the story gets good.
Once he assembled his team, they go to Europe, where the war was.
Harry Reeder's like, "Here's what you're gonna "here's what you're gonna do.
"Let's get inflatable tanks.
You, get those tanks blown up, asap.
" So he blew up tanks.
"Here's the other thing you're gonna use fake guns, but we're gonna use fireworks.
" They're like, "I love fireworks.
" And then he's like, "You, make this a headquarters.
Build it up, build it up.
Get those signs going.
" And, if you will, imagine a montage.
- I will.
- They blow up tanks.
You move them easily two people, three people can move them, and they make fake guns, fake planes - Mm.
- And then they blast out these radio transmissions that sound like tanks.
(Mimics tank grinding) - (Mumbles) - (Chuckles) And then they create fireworks that look like explosions - and shooting guns.
- It's [bleep.]
brilliant.
It's really smart.
It's near the end of the war, by the by, and it is very a significant victory they need.
Eisenhower orders up Operation Plunder.
Eisenhower came to Lieutenant Colonel Merrick Truly, who was a member of the Ghost Army, and he said, "Our division is gonna cross here "at the Rhine River.
"Your Ghost Army is gonna be 10 miles south, okay? "The big thing is you have to make sure that the German army thinks it's 30,000 people.
" And Truly said, "Aye, aye.
We'll do it.
" So the Ghost Army soldiers go 10 miles down.
Truly gets everybody together and says, "You, you, you what do you got?" He says, "We're gonna be the only ones broadcasting radio-ly.
" (Speaks in lower voice): "Um" Sorry.
(Speaks in lower voice): "Um, can all the Allied forces "please meet at this latitude and longitude "at the location of where we're going to cross the Rhine River and defeat the Germans?" What else? Overly sized pants.
That's just a Lutz idea.
Lutz, Lutz, Lutz.
Actors, what are you gonna do? Well, we're gonna walk around and look like real troops.
Real people.
Art design, go.
Art design said, "200 inflatable tanks we'll throw in two real tanks just to make it look good.
" And then there's one guy who's like, "If anybody comes by, "I'm gonna create a dump that looks like 30,000 soldiers worth of trash.
" Audio department, go.
We'll have these speakers blaring out sounds that are like 'tr-tranks.
' "Tranks"? - Tanks.
- Oh, like tanks.
Like tanks.
Then the night of the actual crossing happens.
The Ghost Army gets in position, Ten miles up, Churchill actually shows up and is with Eisenhower to see this battle, and Churchill's like, "hey, I hope this idea works that you had that we're crossing here.
" And Eisenhower's like, "Trust me we have our Ghost Army ten miles down the road or River Rhine.
(Laughs) Sorry.
Ghost Army! (Laughs) 10 miles from here, and that's where all the Germans are.
Can you believe it? (Laughs) It's almost like they put on a show, and the Germans fell for it.
The German army was sitting there, and they were like (German accent): "We are ready for them to cross the Rhine!" Eisenhower says, "Now, look.
" And Eisenhower puts up these binoculars to Churchill's eyes, and he looks out, and he's like, "Holy moly.
" (Laughs) "There's no Germans who are attacking us.
" (Laughs) I'm making him like a penguin for some reason.
It's just Operation Plunder was one of the final nails in the coffin, in Hitler's horrible regime.
This ragtag group of artists saved the world all through nonviolent means.
(Chuckles, gulps) Cheers, Lutz, so good.
Good night.
(Chuckles) Did you ever think about joining the Army? - I did.
- What made you say, - "No, no, no"? - My mom said, "No.
" And I was like, "Okay.
" (Laughs) That's how strong I am.
If my mom says "no," I say "no.
" - Did you do anything like that? - Mm-mm.
- You can drink.
- I can.
I can drink.
Tell some stories.
That's our contribution.
That yeah.
You're welcome, America.
(Laughs) There we go.
- Cheers to you.
- There you go, cheers.
Hello, my name is Randall Park, and you are about to hear a story about Frank Emi.
Uh yeah.
(Bright music) So Frank Emi was born in Los Angeles, and he worked for his parents' produce market.
And when Frank became of age, the parents were like, "Okay, it's time for you to take over this fruit market.
" And Frank was like, "Sweet, because I got plans.
I'm gonna live the American Dream.
" Then on December 7, 1941, Frank Emi was listening to the radio, and he hears (Mimics static) "Hey, everybody, this is the radio, "and I have news for you.
"It's breaking news the Japs have bombed Pearl Harbor.
"Don't be offended this is what how "this is how what we call them right now.
"We call them 'Japs.
' It's all good.
And they just bombed Pearl Harbor.
" (Mimics static) (Chuckling) So so he was like, "Oh, shit.
This is crazy, "but probably won't affect me.
I'm an American citizen, "and I've been here all my life.
It'll be fine.
" And then a couple months later from the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt basically said, "The Japanese are officially "a national threat to the national security.
And, yes, I used 'national' twice in the same sentence" (Belches) Excuse me.
"Therefore, we must put them round them up and put them in internment camps because they're too dangerous.
" And then and then, uh and then Sorry.
I lost my train of thought.
I was onto something.
Oh, man, I'm, like, gone.
So, like, basically Frank was like, "Is this for real? This is mind-blowing.
" And the next thing you know, it's, like, a knock at the door.
(Knocking) "It's the it's the United States of America.
" "Uh, yeah, what do you want?" "Well, it's time for you to go to your to your internment camp.
" They were a bunch of Jeff Foxworthys? Yeah, yeah, and they were like, "You know you're "a redneck if you're walking people into trains to get sent off into internment camps and you don't give a [bleep.]
.
" (Laughter) And then they got rounded up into these trains, and they head off to Wyoming, and then they get to this internment camp called Heart Mountain.
What a name, right, for an internment camp.
How much heart was there? - No heart, no heart, no love.
- Just a mountain.
Just a mountain.
They should've just called it Mountain.
So here's this Japanese phrase, "Shikata ga nai.
" It basically means "It can't be helped.
" - Shikata - Ga nai.
- Ga nai.
- Ga nai, yeah.
- Shikata ga nai.
- Yeah, that was right.
So Frank is like, "No, this is we got to do something "about this.
We're Americans.
This is completely in unconstitutional.
" And that's when a soldier comes up to him and is like, "Fill out this loyalty oath.
" And on it, it has a bunch of just questions.
"Do you like hamburgers?" - Do you like hamburgers? - Dumb questions, right? Well, do I know, I'm asking you, do you like hamburgers? Are you questioning my loyalty right now? No, I'm just asking if you like hamburgers.
- Cheeseburgers.
- Of course.
- Yes, okay.
- You're a [bleep.]
asshole - if you want a hamburger.
- Yes, if you had the choice.
- Yeah.
- Right.
And then he comes to this question "Are you loyal to the United States?" And he's like, "Whoa, wait a minute.
"You just, like, stripped us of our rights and privileges "as citizens of this of the United States, and now you're asking us if we're loyal?" So Frank stood up, and he's like, "Under the present circumstances, I cannot and will not answer these questions.
" - That's so cool.
- Boss move.
So he starts posting flyers all around the camps.
"Hey, everybody, like, don't check these boxes.
Come with me and defy this order.
" And as he was hammering this thing on a post, this dude comes up to him and is like, "Hey, man, I'm coming with you.
" Frank Emi was like, "What's your name?" He was like, "I'm Frank Inouye.
" and they were like, "Oh, shit, Frank.
"We're both that's kind of cool.
But this sucks.
" So why don't we meet and figure out what to do about this? And then the government was like, "We need more troops.
We're gonna start drafting Japanese Americans to fight in the war.
Take it from a drunk guy on, you know, on a comedy show on Comedy Central, this is [bleep.]
ridiculous.
So at that point, Frank Emi was like, "Oh, hell no.
No, no.
" This is when The Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee was born.
And their mantra was "No shikata ga nai.
" And they would say this.
No shikata ga nai.
BOTH: No shikata ga nai.
No shikata ga nai.
No shikata ga nai.
They were now this unified group that and their main tactic was to resist the draft.
During these mandatory recruitment sessions, the first thing they'd do is send this pre-draft physical don't even touch it.
- Just return it empty.
- Yeah.
And then they, well, they won't be able to do anything.
And then these U.
S.
Marshals with guns, and they're like, "You guys are under arrest.
Come with me.
" So they came.
- "Comed"? - They "comed" to the court.
They "comed" to the court.
They were 63 of them in this trial, and at this point, these guys were, like, masters of the Constitution.
So they were like, "We're gonna be okay.
" And then this judge comes up.
The first thing he refers to them as is "You Jap boys.
" Then they all realize, like, "We're done.
" And they ended up going to prison.
So when all was said and done, almost 500 men throughout all the internment camps resisted the draft in some way.
So eventually the war, like, ends.
So Frank Emi ended up spending 18 months of his four-year sentence in prison, and then in 1947, President Truman officially apologized to Frank Emi.
Sorry we kind of screwed up.
And he basically said, "Thank you.
" - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
- Let's help each other.
(Mumbles) We're all the same.
Come.
- I mean, not - We come the same color.
Let's come together.
(Laughs) I came twice.
(Laughter) (Glasses clink) Okay, so, yeah, so, cheers to You know what? It's okay if you don't like - everyone you're related to.
- Yeah.
I don't like some of my family.
Do you like everybody in your family? - Mm-mm.
- So cheers to that.
- Cheers to - You can pick your friends.
But you can't pick your family.
Mm.
Hello, my name is Hello, my name is Lyric Lewis, and tonight we're gonna talk about Willy Hitler, the nephew of Adolf Hitler.
Hmm.
(Belches) Oh, excuse me.
So our story begins in Liverpool, England.
William Hitler is living his young life, and in 1930, his father was like, "Yo, come and meet your uncle.
" So they go to the chancellery in Berlin, and Willy is like, "What, what, what? This is my uncle?" His uncle is the head of the Nazi party, which, side note, this is before World War II.
Hitler was like, "Yo, let's take a picture together, then I'm gonna autograph it.
" So they took a picture, and he had a big position, and he looked up to him, and he was just like, "Wow, my uncle's dope as [bleep.]
.
" And Willy's like, "You know what? I want a high-ranking position in my uncle's socialist party.
" And so he moves to Germany.
It's very romantic in Germany and actually a good time.
Everybody was German, eating schnitzel.
Willy was like, "Hey, everybody, "my name is Willy Hitler, Adolf Hitler's my uncle.
He's gonna hook me up.
" So he bust in the chancellery, he burst in, and his secretary's like, "Oh, pump all of your brakes.
You know Hitler don't [bleep.]
with you like that.
" So he waits.
He doesn't wait a day, not a week, he doesn't even wait three weeks.
He waits two mother[bleep.]
months.
So Willy Hitler was like "I'm mat.
" Mat, what does that word mean? Mat means, like, you're not even, you're not mad.
You're not M-A-D.
When you're "mat," you're beyond the point of mad, and you're like mad and insulted.
You're disrespected.
- Got ya.
- (Chuckles) But anyways, he goes into his office.
Hitler was just looking at his goddamn maps.
Hitler was like, "Mm, mm, my maps of everywhere I want to go.
" And Adolf Hitler in his hand has a horsing whipping whip.
He's doing it at his toes.
(Mimics whip cracking) Adolf was like, "I'm so sorry that you have to work for your goddamn money.
" (Mimics whip cracking) "I didn't get this chancellor job for the family, so, no.
" (Mimics whip cracking) So Willy left that meeting, and Willy was like, "Hell to the no.
" Willy was pissed.
Milly was piss - Mat, then pissed.
- (Laughs) And he decided that he wanted to do something about it, - so buckle your seat belt.
- (Chuckles) But, no, really, buckle your seat belt.
(Percussive music) - We're doing tequila.
- We're doing te-quill-as.
(Clink) - Mm-hmm.
- (Grunts) Anyways, so William goes to the United States in 1939 and decided to do, like, a lecture tour.
And he spilled all the beans.
He's saying, like, "Yo, my uncle's, like, super racist.
" He's saying, "My uncles want "to invade your countries and take over and do horrible things when he invades.
" But people were like, "Yeah, well, okay, okay, we'll believe it when we see it, Willy.
" And then because of World War II, he was like, "Yo, I want to fight for the U.
S.
" So he goes to meet with Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
And he was very impassioned.
And he was like, "I know that I'm, like, one person," but he was like, "I can fight for the greater cause of many.
" And he's like, "I know I'm, like, one little baby Hitler, "like, I'm, like, technically a Hitler," but he's like, "I don't [bleep.]
with the Hitlers like that.
" And FDR was like, "All right, if he says he don't "[bleep.]
with Hitler, like, we can't chastise the man for his name.
" And so Willy, he gets accepted to the Navy, and then he goes into basic training.
He he trains night and day.
By day, he's running through tires, climbing over ropes, underneath mud, and he's like "Yeah, I can't wait to [bleep.]
see my uncle's face and then shoot his mustache off.
" - (Chuckles) - (Mimics gunfire) He said hold up.
(Belches) Excuse me, he did not burp.
(Belches) (Grunts) Ooh, it's wavy.
So Willy's on the ship.
They're at war.
Big explosions all around.
He's a paramedic.
He's throwing aspirin in people's mouth.
They're catching it.
Holding their wounds, giving them little shots.
So he's in the Navy for three years.
So, all of a sudden, people are shooting.
It's like (Mimics gunfire) And then he wait and then Now, all of a sudden, there's a big explosion, and he's hit with a piece of shrapnel.
He was like, "I'm out of the Navy.
" - So Hitler - (Chuckles) - Baby Hitler, he - Baby Hitler? Now we're going "baby"? - Okay, so moving on.
- (Chuckles) So they honorably discharged him, and America was like, "You know what? "You're not just a baby Hitler.
You a G.
You like an OG," and they were like, "We're gonna give you a Purple Heart because you earned this shit.
" What? Okay, and then and then, he was like, "I'm gonna change my name "to Patrick Stuart-Houston to get away from the Hitler surname once and for all.
" Boom.
Boom, in your face, Hitler.
And his sons, rumor have it, they vowed to never pass on the Hitler name.
They deny it, but they've never had kids, so I think at the end of the day, Willy Hitler got the last laugh.
Ha ha ha.
(Patriotic music)
Get those tanks blown up.
So they blow up tanks.
This glass hits my teeth too much.
Well, it's time for you to go to your internment camp.
This is completely in unconstitutional.
Take it from a drunk guy this is [bleep.]
ridiculous.
Because of World War II, Hitler's nephew was like, "Yo, I want to fight for the U.
S.
" Pow, pow, pow, pow, pow.
Buckle your seat belt.
(Patriotic music) (Dramatic music) We're gonna have a dirty gin martini.
- Were you a bartender? - I was for a little bit.
It's the only job I've ever been fired from.
Well, that might be a little too much gin.
This martini glass is a Cheesecake Factory martini glass.
Is that where you were the bartender of No, I wasn't.
I was a waiter at The Cheesecake Factory for two years.
Hello, I'm John Lutz.
Today we'll be talking about the history of The Cheesecake Factory.
No, no, no, no, we got to talk about the Ghost Army.
- The Ghost Army.
- Sorry, cheesecakes.
Sorry, Cheesecake Factory.
We'll see you next time.
Cheers.
Hello, my name is John Lutz, and today we will be discussing the Ghost Army.
In the autumn of 1943, it was World War II.
There was a general a general by the name of General Marshall.
And he came up with this crazy new tactic to help defeat the Nazis.
General Marshall came to President Roosevelt.
"Okay, here's the thing it is a fake army.
"It's a fake war, and it will distract the German army, and then we'll do the actual battles over here.
" Then FDR said, "What? Already on board.
" (Glass thuds) This glass hits my teeth too much.
- (Laughs) - (Snorts) So General Marshall came to Lieutenant Colonel Harry Reeder.
He said, "You will be in charge of a ghost army.
" Reeder was like, "That sounds like a good idea, "but I'm a soldier.
I should be on the front lines fighting for real.
" And then he was like, "I know you're a 'soldjler'" - (Chuckles) - "And soldier.
" (Laughter) "And "You get to cherry-pick everybody.
If you think they're right for your team, take 'em.
" And so that's what he did.
Harry Reeder brought together artists, like sound artists, design artists, actors.
One guy was like, "This is insane.
"I thought I was gonna be a soldier, but I'm happy that I'm not because I would be dead soon.
" So this is where the story gets good.
Once he assembled his team, they go to Europe, where the war was.
Harry Reeder's like, "Here's what you're gonna "here's what you're gonna do.
"Let's get inflatable tanks.
You, get those tanks blown up, asap.
" So he blew up tanks.
"Here's the other thing you're gonna use fake guns, but we're gonna use fireworks.
" They're like, "I love fireworks.
" And then he's like, "You, make this a headquarters.
Build it up, build it up.
Get those signs going.
" And, if you will, imagine a montage.
- I will.
- They blow up tanks.
You move them easily two people, three people can move them, and they make fake guns, fake planes - Mm.
- And then they blast out these radio transmissions that sound like tanks.
(Mimics tank grinding) - (Mumbles) - (Chuckles) And then they create fireworks that look like explosions - and shooting guns.
- It's [bleep.]
brilliant.
It's really smart.
It's near the end of the war, by the by, and it is very a significant victory they need.
Eisenhower orders up Operation Plunder.
Eisenhower came to Lieutenant Colonel Merrick Truly, who was a member of the Ghost Army, and he said, "Our division is gonna cross here "at the Rhine River.
"Your Ghost Army is gonna be 10 miles south, okay? "The big thing is you have to make sure that the German army thinks it's 30,000 people.
" And Truly said, "Aye, aye.
We'll do it.
" So the Ghost Army soldiers go 10 miles down.
Truly gets everybody together and says, "You, you, you what do you got?" He says, "We're gonna be the only ones broadcasting radio-ly.
" (Speaks in lower voice): "Um" Sorry.
(Speaks in lower voice): "Um, can all the Allied forces "please meet at this latitude and longitude "at the location of where we're going to cross the Rhine River and defeat the Germans?" What else? Overly sized pants.
That's just a Lutz idea.
Lutz, Lutz, Lutz.
Actors, what are you gonna do? Well, we're gonna walk around and look like real troops.
Real people.
Art design, go.
Art design said, "200 inflatable tanks we'll throw in two real tanks just to make it look good.
" And then there's one guy who's like, "If anybody comes by, "I'm gonna create a dump that looks like 30,000 soldiers worth of trash.
" Audio department, go.
We'll have these speakers blaring out sounds that are like 'tr-tranks.
' "Tranks"? - Tanks.
- Oh, like tanks.
Like tanks.
Then the night of the actual crossing happens.
The Ghost Army gets in position, Ten miles up, Churchill actually shows up and is with Eisenhower to see this battle, and Churchill's like, "hey, I hope this idea works that you had that we're crossing here.
" And Eisenhower's like, "Trust me we have our Ghost Army ten miles down the road or River Rhine.
(Laughs) Sorry.
Ghost Army! (Laughs) 10 miles from here, and that's where all the Germans are.
Can you believe it? (Laughs) It's almost like they put on a show, and the Germans fell for it.
The German army was sitting there, and they were like (German accent): "We are ready for them to cross the Rhine!" Eisenhower says, "Now, look.
" And Eisenhower puts up these binoculars to Churchill's eyes, and he looks out, and he's like, "Holy moly.
" (Laughs) "There's no Germans who are attacking us.
" (Laughs) I'm making him like a penguin for some reason.
It's just Operation Plunder was one of the final nails in the coffin, in Hitler's horrible regime.
This ragtag group of artists saved the world all through nonviolent means.
(Chuckles, gulps) Cheers, Lutz, so good.
Good night.
(Chuckles) Did you ever think about joining the Army? - I did.
- What made you say, - "No, no, no"? - My mom said, "No.
" And I was like, "Okay.
" (Laughs) That's how strong I am.
If my mom says "no," I say "no.
" - Did you do anything like that? - Mm-mm.
- You can drink.
- I can.
I can drink.
Tell some stories.
That's our contribution.
That yeah.
You're welcome, America.
(Laughs) There we go.
- Cheers to you.
- There you go, cheers.
Hello, my name is Randall Park, and you are about to hear a story about Frank Emi.
Uh yeah.
(Bright music) So Frank Emi was born in Los Angeles, and he worked for his parents' produce market.
And when Frank became of age, the parents were like, "Okay, it's time for you to take over this fruit market.
" And Frank was like, "Sweet, because I got plans.
I'm gonna live the American Dream.
" Then on December 7, 1941, Frank Emi was listening to the radio, and he hears (Mimics static) "Hey, everybody, this is the radio, "and I have news for you.
"It's breaking news the Japs have bombed Pearl Harbor.
"Don't be offended this is what how "this is how what we call them right now.
"We call them 'Japs.
' It's all good.
And they just bombed Pearl Harbor.
" (Mimics static) (Chuckling) So so he was like, "Oh, shit.
This is crazy, "but probably won't affect me.
I'm an American citizen, "and I've been here all my life.
It'll be fine.
" And then a couple months later from the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt basically said, "The Japanese are officially "a national threat to the national security.
And, yes, I used 'national' twice in the same sentence" (Belches) Excuse me.
"Therefore, we must put them round them up and put them in internment camps because they're too dangerous.
" And then and then, uh and then Sorry.
I lost my train of thought.
I was onto something.
Oh, man, I'm, like, gone.
So, like, basically Frank was like, "Is this for real? This is mind-blowing.
" And the next thing you know, it's, like, a knock at the door.
(Knocking) "It's the it's the United States of America.
" "Uh, yeah, what do you want?" "Well, it's time for you to go to your to your internment camp.
" They were a bunch of Jeff Foxworthys? Yeah, yeah, and they were like, "You know you're "a redneck if you're walking people into trains to get sent off into internment camps and you don't give a [bleep.]
.
" (Laughter) And then they got rounded up into these trains, and they head off to Wyoming, and then they get to this internment camp called Heart Mountain.
What a name, right, for an internment camp.
How much heart was there? - No heart, no heart, no love.
- Just a mountain.
Just a mountain.
They should've just called it Mountain.
So here's this Japanese phrase, "Shikata ga nai.
" It basically means "It can't be helped.
" - Shikata - Ga nai.
- Ga nai.
- Ga nai, yeah.
- Shikata ga nai.
- Yeah, that was right.
So Frank is like, "No, this is we got to do something "about this.
We're Americans.
This is completely in unconstitutional.
" And that's when a soldier comes up to him and is like, "Fill out this loyalty oath.
" And on it, it has a bunch of just questions.
"Do you like hamburgers?" - Do you like hamburgers? - Dumb questions, right? Well, do I know, I'm asking you, do you like hamburgers? Are you questioning my loyalty right now? No, I'm just asking if you like hamburgers.
- Cheeseburgers.
- Of course.
- Yes, okay.
- You're a [bleep.]
asshole - if you want a hamburger.
- Yes, if you had the choice.
- Yeah.
- Right.
And then he comes to this question "Are you loyal to the United States?" And he's like, "Whoa, wait a minute.
"You just, like, stripped us of our rights and privileges "as citizens of this of the United States, and now you're asking us if we're loyal?" So Frank stood up, and he's like, "Under the present circumstances, I cannot and will not answer these questions.
" - That's so cool.
- Boss move.
So he starts posting flyers all around the camps.
"Hey, everybody, like, don't check these boxes.
Come with me and defy this order.
" And as he was hammering this thing on a post, this dude comes up to him and is like, "Hey, man, I'm coming with you.
" Frank Emi was like, "What's your name?" He was like, "I'm Frank Inouye.
" and they were like, "Oh, shit, Frank.
"We're both that's kind of cool.
But this sucks.
" So why don't we meet and figure out what to do about this? And then the government was like, "We need more troops.
We're gonna start drafting Japanese Americans to fight in the war.
Take it from a drunk guy on, you know, on a comedy show on Comedy Central, this is [bleep.]
ridiculous.
So at that point, Frank Emi was like, "Oh, hell no.
No, no.
" This is when The Heart Mountain Fair Play Committee was born.
And their mantra was "No shikata ga nai.
" And they would say this.
No shikata ga nai.
BOTH: No shikata ga nai.
No shikata ga nai.
No shikata ga nai.
They were now this unified group that and their main tactic was to resist the draft.
During these mandatory recruitment sessions, the first thing they'd do is send this pre-draft physical don't even touch it.
- Just return it empty.
- Yeah.
And then they, well, they won't be able to do anything.
And then these U.
S.
Marshals with guns, and they're like, "You guys are under arrest.
Come with me.
" So they came.
- "Comed"? - They "comed" to the court.
They "comed" to the court.
They were 63 of them in this trial, and at this point, these guys were, like, masters of the Constitution.
So they were like, "We're gonna be okay.
" And then this judge comes up.
The first thing he refers to them as is "You Jap boys.
" Then they all realize, like, "We're done.
" And they ended up going to prison.
So when all was said and done, almost 500 men throughout all the internment camps resisted the draft in some way.
So eventually the war, like, ends.
So Frank Emi ended up spending 18 months of his four-year sentence in prison, and then in 1947, President Truman officially apologized to Frank Emi.
Sorry we kind of screwed up.
And he basically said, "Thank you.
" - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
- Let's help each other.
(Mumbles) We're all the same.
Come.
- I mean, not - We come the same color.
Let's come together.
(Laughs) I came twice.
(Laughter) (Glasses clink) Okay, so, yeah, so, cheers to You know what? It's okay if you don't like - everyone you're related to.
- Yeah.
I don't like some of my family.
Do you like everybody in your family? - Mm-mm.
- So cheers to that.
- Cheers to - You can pick your friends.
But you can't pick your family.
Mm.
Hello, my name is Hello, my name is Lyric Lewis, and tonight we're gonna talk about Willy Hitler, the nephew of Adolf Hitler.
Hmm.
(Belches) Oh, excuse me.
So our story begins in Liverpool, England.
William Hitler is living his young life, and in 1930, his father was like, "Yo, come and meet your uncle.
" So they go to the chancellery in Berlin, and Willy is like, "What, what, what? This is my uncle?" His uncle is the head of the Nazi party, which, side note, this is before World War II.
Hitler was like, "Yo, let's take a picture together, then I'm gonna autograph it.
" So they took a picture, and he had a big position, and he looked up to him, and he was just like, "Wow, my uncle's dope as [bleep.]
.
" And Willy's like, "You know what? I want a high-ranking position in my uncle's socialist party.
" And so he moves to Germany.
It's very romantic in Germany and actually a good time.
Everybody was German, eating schnitzel.
Willy was like, "Hey, everybody, "my name is Willy Hitler, Adolf Hitler's my uncle.
He's gonna hook me up.
" So he bust in the chancellery, he burst in, and his secretary's like, "Oh, pump all of your brakes.
You know Hitler don't [bleep.]
with you like that.
" So he waits.
He doesn't wait a day, not a week, he doesn't even wait three weeks.
He waits two mother[bleep.]
months.
So Willy Hitler was like "I'm mat.
" Mat, what does that word mean? Mat means, like, you're not even, you're not mad.
You're not M-A-D.
When you're "mat," you're beyond the point of mad, and you're like mad and insulted.
You're disrespected.
- Got ya.
- (Chuckles) But anyways, he goes into his office.
Hitler was just looking at his goddamn maps.
Hitler was like, "Mm, mm, my maps of everywhere I want to go.
" And Adolf Hitler in his hand has a horsing whipping whip.
He's doing it at his toes.
(Mimics whip cracking) Adolf was like, "I'm so sorry that you have to work for your goddamn money.
" (Mimics whip cracking) "I didn't get this chancellor job for the family, so, no.
" (Mimics whip cracking) So Willy left that meeting, and Willy was like, "Hell to the no.
" Willy was pissed.
Milly was piss - Mat, then pissed.
- (Laughs) And he decided that he wanted to do something about it, - so buckle your seat belt.
- (Chuckles) But, no, really, buckle your seat belt.
(Percussive music) - We're doing tequila.
- We're doing te-quill-as.
(Clink) - Mm-hmm.
- (Grunts) Anyways, so William goes to the United States in 1939 and decided to do, like, a lecture tour.
And he spilled all the beans.
He's saying, like, "Yo, my uncle's, like, super racist.
" He's saying, "My uncles want "to invade your countries and take over and do horrible things when he invades.
" But people were like, "Yeah, well, okay, okay, we'll believe it when we see it, Willy.
" And then because of World War II, he was like, "Yo, I want to fight for the U.
S.
" So he goes to meet with Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
And he was very impassioned.
And he was like, "I know that I'm, like, one person," but he was like, "I can fight for the greater cause of many.
" And he's like, "I know I'm, like, one little baby Hitler, "like, I'm, like, technically a Hitler," but he's like, "I don't [bleep.]
with the Hitlers like that.
" And FDR was like, "All right, if he says he don't "[bleep.]
with Hitler, like, we can't chastise the man for his name.
" And so Willy, he gets accepted to the Navy, and then he goes into basic training.
He he trains night and day.
By day, he's running through tires, climbing over ropes, underneath mud, and he's like "Yeah, I can't wait to [bleep.]
see my uncle's face and then shoot his mustache off.
" - (Chuckles) - (Mimics gunfire) He said hold up.
(Belches) Excuse me, he did not burp.
(Belches) (Grunts) Ooh, it's wavy.
So Willy's on the ship.
They're at war.
Big explosions all around.
He's a paramedic.
He's throwing aspirin in people's mouth.
They're catching it.
Holding their wounds, giving them little shots.
So he's in the Navy for three years.
So, all of a sudden, people are shooting.
It's like (Mimics gunfire) And then he wait and then Now, all of a sudden, there's a big explosion, and he's hit with a piece of shrapnel.
He was like, "I'm out of the Navy.
" - So Hitler - (Chuckles) - Baby Hitler, he - Baby Hitler? Now we're going "baby"? - Okay, so moving on.
- (Chuckles) So they honorably discharged him, and America was like, "You know what? "You're not just a baby Hitler.
You a G.
You like an OG," and they were like, "We're gonna give you a Purple Heart because you earned this shit.
" What? Okay, and then and then, he was like, "I'm gonna change my name "to Patrick Stuart-Houston to get away from the Hitler surname once and for all.
" Boom.
Boom, in your face, Hitler.
And his sons, rumor have it, they vowed to never pass on the Hitler name.
They deny it, but they've never had kids, so I think at the end of the day, Willy Hitler got the last laugh.
Ha ha ha.
(Patriotic music)