This looks to be a great documentary -- commercial free tonight on ABC. ________ "If you look at the brain injuries we have at Bethesda," he says, "his was on the high end of being severe." Bob Woodruff: Turning Personal Injury Into Public Inquiry From chilling accounts of the roadside attack in Iraq that nearly took his life to a shocking investigation into the plight of military families dealing with injuries to their loved ones, Bob Woodruff returns to ABC News Tuesday night with a hard-hitting look at the human cost of war. Thirteen months after suffering a traumatic brain injury when a roadside bomb struck his Iraqi army transport vehicle in Taji, Iraq, the ABC News anchor is back reporting, with the hourlong documentary "To Iraq and Back," airing Tuesday at 10 p.m. ET. Amid highly personal stories of tragedy and triumph, Woodruff delves into the crisis of care faced by so many injured soldiers and their families, uncovering important new information about veterans suffering from brain injuries and the care the U.S. government provides. Woodruff meets soldiers who, after fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, must fight bureaucratic red tape before receiving the treatment they need, and others who may not even know they're injured, as traumatic brain injury can go unrecognized. The Moment of Impact Relived The start of the documentary shows Woodruff reporting from Iraq before President Bush's January 2006 State of the Union address. He had just started in his new role as anchor of "World News Tonight" earlier that month, and was embedded with the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division, reporting on American efforts to hand over military responsibilities to the Iraqis. Today, Woodruff told reporters at a press screening for the documentary that he has just a few memories of that day, beginning with his talk with soldiers before they set out in the convoy on the morning of Jan. 29. "And then I remember driving along in the tank, up that road, and standing up outside through the open hatch at the top," he said. "When the IED actually exploded, I don't remember that," Woodruff continued. "But I do remember at that moment I saw my body floating below me and … a whiteness … I just saw something." Moments later, he woke up in the tank and saw his cameraman Doug Vogt. "When I fell into the tank, I looked up and I saw Doug Vogt sitting right here across from me, and I know that I was spitting a lot of blood out of my mouth," he said. "And I looked up at Doug, and I saw his eyes big and afraid, and I saw the blood dripping down his face, just asking if we were still alive. And then that's really the last that I remember." In the documentary, Woodruff's producer, Vinnie Malhotra, describes those terrifying moments after the attack: "Bob turned around and he looked right at me. And he said to me, 'Am I alive?' And I said, 'You're alive!' I said, 'You're alive. You're going to be OK.'" full article
Not sure why you consider a major tenet of your Buddhist religion to have the tendencies of fruitcakism. OBE
Starting now -- looks really interesting. I can't believe how messed up this guy was and now he's reporting on what happened. Amazing.
Commercial free? They just showed one. So far so good. It just makes me wish the networks would give this kind of time to the soldiers too.
Yeah there are actually a lot of commercials. Now they are going to focus on soldiers with brain injuries...
Yep. I'm glad they did. Is it just me or is the documentary moving too fast? I know they just have one hour, but it doesn't seem like they totally focused on his early struggles...kind of like they are glossing over everything to get it all fit in.