This episode blew my mind for several reasons. As I have already said several times in previous episodes, as the grandson of two POWs I was moved when Bucky saw the other brothers in arms in the stalag, and I can't imagine what HUGE they felt in that moment. Then I start to become more and more certain that Rosie is my favorite character of the series: the moment in which her plane companion talks about how he no longer felt alone when Rosie sang Artie Shaw in the middle of an air combat is truly truly touching . And the director was excellent in inserting Artie Shaw when Rosie comes back on the plane. Which I hated: why insert a historical fake with Egan involved, when the lynching, the real one, of the American bombers really happened in Russelsheim, but a year later?