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- Ermey returns to Afghanistan; goes on foot patrol around Kabul; tests a CH-53 Super Stallion and an MTVR; gets trigger time with a Cobra attack helicopter and spends time with Medical Corpsmen.
- The Pentagon: #69. In Washington, DC, R. Lee Ermey takes viewers inside the nerve center of American defense--the Pentagon. The Commandant of the Marine Corps gives Lee a rare interview, and Lee reviews the Pentagon's past to show how the world's largest office building came into being, what keeps it running, and what kind of work goes on inside to fight wars and keep the peace. Next, Lee hangs out with the PFPA--Pentagon Force Protection Agency. We see a RAM--a Random Anti-Terrorism Maneuver, meet officers and dogs that patrol the Pentagon, and the Gunny gets a little trigger time at the Pentagon firing range with the PFPA's newest automatic weapon, the UMP40 submachine gun. And Lee infiltrates the Navy Operations Center, where ships and sailors are tracked 24/7, and the Army Operating Center, where troop movements are tracked. Finally, he looks back at September 11th and shows how the Pentagon has changed since that dreadful day.
- R. Lee Ermey, the sergeant in Full Metal Jacket, answers mail about what the armed forces were, and really are, like. He steers a WWII M5A1 tank and explores the Gatling Gun and samurai swords.
- 2002– 22mTV-PG9.7 (9)TV Episode
- 2002– 22mTV-PGTV Episode
- Former U.S. Marine Corps Sergeant R. Lee Ermey answers viewers' questions about military technology.
- The Living Century: The Extraordinary Lives of Ordinary People is a new biography television series that profile individuals who are 100 years of age and older. Each 30-minute episode profiles the life of a single centenarian. Their memories, their unique perceptions of the world and the radical changes they witnessed during their lifetime come alive through interviews, family photographs, home movies, archival footage and an original musical score. There are 70,000 Americans who are at least 100 years old. By the year 2050, there will be 834,000. The producers research and select active and lucid centenarians to honor their lives, their experiences and the contributions they have made and continue to make to society.
- 2002– 30mTV-PG9.4 (7)TV Episode
- 1998–201142m9.2 (11)TV EpisodeThe tragic story of the World War II-era B-24 Liberator bomber "Lady Be Good", which mysteriously disappeared after its first bombing mission over Naples, Italy in April 1943. The plane was discovered 15 years later, without its crew, in the Libyan desert 400 miles south of its air base.
- On May 10, 1972 the United States escalates the air war in Vietnam bombing strategic targets in the north. On this day American pilots shot down a one day record of eleven MiGs trying to intercept the bombers.
- History's Mysteries looks at the Roswell UFO crash and presents the definitive government explanation for the incident.
- In SOLVED career defining cases are presented by investigators. Forensic analysts, trace evidence experts, crime scene technicians, forensic document examiners, forensic linguistics, handwriting experts and computer forensic specialists add their incredible investigation techniques to help solve compelling murder cases.
- 1998–201143mTV-148.3 (20)TV EpisodeOn Friday, November 13, 1942, all five Sullivan brothers from Iowa were serving aboard the U.S.S. Juneau when a Japanese torpedo hit. 400 died instantly; 150 or so bobbed helplessly in shark-infested water. When rescue forces finally arrived, only 10 survived--none named Sullivan. Could their deaths have been avoided?
- Bodies preserved in time by the environment... by the cold of a glacier, acid of a peat bog, dryness of desert sand. Join us as we travel the globe to unravel the secrets.
- The story of Tonica Jenkins,who faked her way into Yale and then attempted to fake her own death using the body of another woman.
- The great flood that destroyed the world, except for Noah, his family, and herd, would probably be dismissed as legend.
- A generational leap in technology and strategy is put to the ultimate test over enemy airspace in Iraq. The air combat of the future begins with America's first large scale air offensive since the Vietnam War.
- Jennifer Myers is shot dead in an art gallery in Pennsylvania. Police attempt to reconstruct the crime to find out who is responsible. Ultimately they need the help of an astronomy professor to undermine the perpetrator's alibi.
- Human remains found in a sewer are identified as a 14-year-old boy reported missing seven weeks prior. Could another teenager be the prime suspect in one of the most gruesome murders investigators have ever seen?
- 25-year-old waitress Corey Parker is found dead in her apartment bedroom with over 100 stab wounds to her body. After two long years of intense investigation, detectives finally zero in on a suspect.
- When Gary Larson is murdered and his girlfriend raped, the police suspect that the perpetrator may be a Peeping Tom but the case soon grows cold. Fourteen years later, the police use a bloody footprint found at the crime scene to find the man responsible.
- The story of Greg "Pappy" Boyington and his famous World War II Marine Corps fighter squadron - VMF 214 - the Black Sheep.
- Follows class 10-00 through the three rigorous phases of U.S. Army Ranger School.
- In 1958 Jean Ellroy, a divorced nurse and closet alcoholic, was strangled and her body dumped on a roadway in a seedy LA suburb. Her killer was never found and the police dismissed her as a casualty of a cheap Saturday night.
- Colonel Robin Olds leads a flight of four F-4 Phantoms mimicking American bombers in the first ware of Operation Bolo, to lure North Vietnamese MiG-21s into a trap. An expert P-38 dog-fighter, Olds reintroduced dogfighting to the 8th fighter wing, This one operation obliterates half the North Korean MiG 21 force and discourages attacks on American bombers for quite some time.
- Robinson Risner flew an F-86 Saber in Korea at the dawn of the jet age. There, with a hunter's persistence, he pursued his prey whether Korean, Chinese or Russian leading to some dramatic air combat adventures. In 1953 Ralph Parr leads a flight of four Sabres hunting sixteen MiG 15s leading to an extended dogfight. The improvements from the 1951 F-86A to the 1953 F-86F gave Parr a decisive advantage.
- Mission turns to ambition as top Saber pilots vie for the title of jet ace during the Korean war.
- Noted World War II dogfights of the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, an American fighter class famous for its durability under fire.
- An pair of American-piloted, propeller-driven Skyraider dive bombers manage to elude a Mig 17 jet fighter thanks to its tight turning radius then miraculously, scores the first gun kill of Vietnam by shooting down the Mig. Originally fielded without a gun the first gun equipped F-4 Phantoms quickly score gun kills.
- This program provide detailed reenactments of three of the epic dogfights of world war one.
- Notable low altitude dogfights.
- The missions of Nazi Germany's Sonderkommando aerial ramming unit, the Luftwaffe's last ditch defense tactic against Allied bombers.
- Famous nighttime dogfights.
- World War II battles of the noted American land based fighter class.
- At the end of the Vietnam war the USS Midway's pilots and airmen engaged in some of the most thrilling and intense air combat.
- This program explains the operation of the messerschmitt-me-163-komet, Kaiten suicide torpedo and Project Anvil's radio controlled bomber. All were military failures but effective terror weapons and research projects.
- The first supersonic gun kill and two other high speed dogfights of earlier eras are described.
- The story and battles of a group of African American pilots who overcame racist opposition on their own side to become some of the finest fighter pilots of World War II.
- The case of 47-year-old eye doctor Brian Stidham, who was stabbed to death in the parking lot of his medical practice in Catalina Foothills, Arizona in 2004.
- The story of the murder of Alan and Diane Johnson.
- A man confesses to killing his polygamous wife but refuses to give details. Where's the body? What's the method or motive? Forensics is the key to bring this self-appointed "minister" to justice.
- Two suspicious suicides in Georgia are linked to a prominent dentist. The blood spatter analysis experts are the key to determining the true cause of the identical deaths - deliberate deception by a calculating killer.
- The Los Angeles FBI office receives a call from a man who claims his son has been kidnapped with just one week to live unless his family pays a $230,000 ransom. Agents follow the money trail overseas and uncover a ruthless international kidnapping ring.
- Three homemade bombs claimed two lives in Salt Lake City and injured a third. Document examiners were the forensic experts who uncovered the motive and exposed Mark Hofmann as the guilty party.
- The story of the murder of Christina Moore.
- Unusual forensic experts helped solve the 2004 murder of Charlene Hummert: forensic linguists, soil analysts, photometrics, and computer recovery. Even without being allowed to know the man had confessed to the murder, the jury convicted him on the evidence.
- Who would murder such a nice lady? And why? Cooperation of the public and family with the Pinellas PD was just as important in solving this case as forensics. A photo of the victim wearing a watch was a clincher for the jury.
- Three pieces of luggage filled with the dismembered body of William McGuire are retrieved from Chesapeake Bay. Can New Jersey police convince a jury that his beautiful wife (a nurse) was capable of such a gruesome crime?