
Mark Foran
3.8K posts

Mark Foran
@MarkForan
Husband,Dad, business owner ,Engineer,history nerd. Pink Floyd nut, 60-64 AG slow triathlete IronmanBarcelona finisher ... @t3triclub



Thesis: Saving Private Ryan and Band of Brothers accidentally kneecapped the WWII movie as a genre. Everyone said "well, we can't top that," and now every entry is "come marvel at the DARING nerds who solved logistical problem" x.com/metoffice/stat…

The first trailer for ‘Pressure’ is here, the film which tells the story of the most important weather forecast; the D-Day forecast. Andrew Scott stars as Group Captain James Stagg – the Met Office meteorologist tasked with delivering the weather forecast and helping shape D-Day's plans. In cinemas 9 September. #pressuremovie @StudiocanalUK

The first trailer for ‘Pressure’ is here, the film which tells the story of the most important weather forecast; the D-Day forecast. Andrew Scott stars as Group Captain James Stagg – the Met Office meteorologist tasked with delivering the weather forecast and helping shape D-Day's plans. In cinemas 9 September. #pressuremovie @StudiocanalUK

#OnThisDay 1907 General James Gavin was born in New York to unwed-Irish parents who put him up for adoption. Gavin became the youngest Major General in the @USArmy. He commanded the 82nd Airborne Division in WW2 & later aimed to end segregation in the Army. #Ireland #History



Last week, we hosted a few VIPs from Ardoyne Youth Club - which has been working to improve the lives of young people in North Belfast for 50 years - it’s also the very place where Jack grew up, which made the visit all the more special.







10 movies on money you should watch this weekend: 1. Margin Call



In the hours before D-Day, one decision changed the world. Based on the untold true story. PRESSURE is only in theaters May 29, starring Andrew Scott, Brendan Fraser, Kerry Condon, Chris Messina and Damian Lewis. Watch the trailer now.



Dwight D. Eisenhower walked back onto the beaches where he once sent thousands of young men into history’s deadliest storm. In April 1964, nearly 20 years after D Day, Eisenhower returned to Normandy for a special episode of CBS Reports titled D-Day Plus 20 Years. Cameras followed him as he revisited Omaha Beach and the invasion sites. But this was not a victory tour. It was a reckoning. In 1944, Eisenhower had made the hardest decision of his life. Launch the invasion. Or delay and risk disaster. If it failed, the war could be lost. If it succeeded, thousands would still fall. He signed the order anyway. And accepted full blame if it went wrong. On June 6, 1944, boys barely out of high school stormed these beaches. Many never left them. Waves turned red. Sand became graves. Freedom was bought with lives. Twenty years later, Eisenhower stood where they had fallen. Older. Quieter. Heavier with memory. No speeches. No celebration. Just reflection. He remembered the letters he wrote to families. The nights he lay awake. The faces he never forgot. He had commanded millions. But he never forgot the individuals. This visit was not about power. It was about responsibility. A commander returning to the place where he asked everything from others. And knew the cost. He did not see beaches. He saw sons. He saw sacrifice. He saw history written in blood and courage. And he never stopped honoring it. May this act as a reminder for all who complain about our great country




