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Does Harm Ever Seen Josh Again on Jag

Fictional character

Harmon "Harm" Rabb Jr.
Harmon Rabb photo.jpg

David James Elliott as
Harmon "Damage" Rabb Jr.

First advent A New Life
(September 23, 1995)
Final appearance Permit Fate Make up one's mind
NCIS: Los Angeles
(September 29, 2019)[1]
Portrayed by David James Elliott
In-universe information
Nicknames
  • Harm
  • Pappy (USS Patrick Henry)
  • Hammer (USS Patrick Henry, USS Fidelity)
Occupation Naval Officeholder
Naval Aviator
Estimate Advocate
Family
  • Harmon Rabb, Sr. (father)
  • Patricia Reed (mother)
  • Frank Burnett (stepfather)
  • Sergei Zhukov (half-brother)
Significant other Caitlin Pike, Annie Pendry, Roberta Latham, Jordan Parker, Renée Peterson,
Catherine Gail (fake wife),
Sarah MacKenzie (quondam fiancée)[ii]
Rank US Navy O6 infobox.svg Captain
Alma mater United States Naval Academy
Georgetown University Police force Center

Harmon 'Harm' Rabb, Jr. is a fictional character and lead role in the American tv set serial JAG. The character was created by Donald P. Bellisario, as a work for hire for Paramount Television, in the script for the JAG pilot episode, which was filmed and then aired past NBC on September 23, 1995.

Harm is introduced as a lieutenant in the United States Navy serving as a judge advocate, only information technology is revealed that he has a background as a naval aviator. The viewer follows his naval career and personal life from that point as the series progresses. With the longevity of JAG, plenty of information on his past life and previous war machine service is given at various points in the serial. JAG concluded its ten-year run on Apr 29, 2005.

Part in JAG [edit]

Youth and family [edit]

Harmon Rabb, Jr. was born on October 25, 1963, in La Jolla, California to naval aviator Lieutenant Harmon Rabb, Sr. USN (played in flashbacks by David James Elliott, with a moustache) and Patricia Reed (Christina Pickles).[3] [4] [5] Impairment is a 3rd generation aviator every bit his paternal granddad was killed in action flying off the USS Hornet (CV-8) in 1942 during the Second Globe War.[6] During the Vietnam War, his begetter flew F-4 Phantoms off the USS Ticonderoga and USS Hornet (CV-12).[3] [four] [vii] On Christmas Eve 1969, while flight an Iron Hand mission, Harmon Rabb, Sr. was shot down over N Vietnam and was considered MIA.[four] [3] Damage's female parent went on to happily remarry Frank Burnett (Jon Zippo), a senior VP of Chrysler Corporation.[3] [5]

When he was 16, Damage went to Laos to look for his father together with Colonel Francis Stryker.[3] Many years subsequently, Harm was able to make up one's mind his father's fate: after he was shot down, Harmon Rabb, Sr. was taken to the Soviet Marriage, escaped from his captors, was involved with a Russian woman, and was killed protecting her from Soviet soldiers attempting to rape her in 1980.[8] Later on, Harm met his half-brother, Sergeant Sergei Zhukov (Jade Carter) a helicopter pilot in the Russian Army, who was accused of selling weapons to Chechen rebels. Sergei was later shot downwardly and captured by Chechen rebels.

Most every Christmas Eve, Harm is shown visiting the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. to pay tribute to his father. In one episode, he met Jenny Lake (played by Catherine Bell) who was present on the USS Ticonderoga when his father was shot downward (and had been the fiancée of a Marine aviator who was KIA).[6] On another Christmas Eve, he invited one of his father's quondam squadron buddies Rear Admiral Thomas Boone (Terry O'Quinn) to the Wall. Another year, Harm was surprised past Clayton Webb (Steven Culp) bringing his half-brother Sergei to see him at the Wall, after Webb exchanged two boxcars of wheat for Sergei's liberty in Chechnya.

Service (on JAG) [edit]

The most unlikely hero of last night'southward highly successful naval air strike was Lieutenant Harmon Rabb, Jr., who saved Helm Thomas Boone's life when he safely landed this damaged Tomcat onto the deck of the Seahawk. What is so unusual is that Lieutenant Rabb isn't fifty-fifty an active airplane pilot in the Navy. He's a member of the Estimate Advocate General's Corps. He's a lawyer.

Televised report of Chuck DePalma (Cliff DeYoung) in the pilot motion picture [3]

Harmon Rabb, Jr. graduated from the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland;[9] and although never stated in canon, judging by his birth year and other dates made explicit, information technology must have been in the latter half of the 1980s.[note one] His service number is #989548301.[4] During his early naval career, Harm was a naval aviator flying F-14 Tomcats. On April 16, 1989, while flying an F-14 Tomcat to enforce a no-fly zone in the Gulf of Sidra, subsequently he and his wingman were attacked, Harm shot down a Libyan Air Force MiG-23, disabled another, and forced the third ane to return to its base.[xvi] [annotation 2] He served aboard the aircraft carrier USS Midway at some betoken.[17] Subsequently an accident during a night landing on an shipping carrier, in which his RIO (Radar Intercept Officer) dies, it is revealed Harm suffers from dark incomprehension, he recovered on his grandmother'southward farm in Pennsylvania, earlier returning to naval service. Afterwards graduating from law schoolhouse at Georgetown University Law Heart and passing his bar examination, he transferred to the Approximate Advocate General's Corps (JAG). During his time at JAG, he trained with Navy SEALs and Marine Force Recon at shut-quarters combat, Halo jumps, and other special forces tactics.

I of his most memorable moments was, in his zealous prosecution of a Navy SEAL Main Piddling Officer, he fired an automatic weapon into the court ceiling.[xviii] Other notable cases Rabb was involved in include going undercover as a Force Recon Gunnery Sergeant,[nineteen] and investigating whether the actions of Navy SEAL Lieutenant Curtis Rivers (Montel Williams) warrants the Medal of Honour.[20]

After a few years every bit a Guess Advocate, he had laser surgery to correct what was misdiagnosed every bit night blindness (really blurred vision as a result of retinal scarring acquired past service action[21]) and resumed his career as a naval aviator, flying F-14s off the USS Patrick Henry (CVN-74) every bit a member of VF-218 "Raptors".[22] [23] However, considering of the slim chance of career advancement equally an aviator, Impairment returned to JAG afterwards 6 months of service aboard Patrick Henry. While in the aviation squadron, his call sign was "Pappy" because he was older than the other aviators. Later, the other pilots renamed him "Hammer", his male parent'due south former phone call sign, believing Rabb's father would have been impressed by his son'southward bravery.[24]

In 2002, Damage and Mac prosecutes a high-ranking Al-Qaeda member captured by US Forces in Afghanistan in a armed forces tribunal.[25]

In the season 8 episodes "Ice Queen" and "Meltdown"—the backdoor pilot for NCIS—Rabb is accused of killing Lieutenant Loren Singer (Nanci Chambers). He was defended by Lieutenant Commander Faith Coleman (Alicia Coppola). Though NCIS Special Amanuensis Leroy Jethro Gibbs (Marking Harmon) initially thinks he is the culprit, Gibbs later becomes convinced of his innocence, but it is Special Amanuensis DiNozzo (Michael Weatherly) who finds the proof exonerating him.[26]

While serving at JAG, Rabb withal kept his flying status electric current. At one point, after being denied leave by his commanding officer, Rear Admiral Chegwidden, to rescue Mac, Rabb resigned his commission from the Navy. He had a brusk stint working as an employee for the CIA. While flying for the CIA, Damage landed a C-130 Hercules aboard the aircraft carrier USS Seahawk.[27] While working for the CIA, Rabb was certified in several different types of aircraft including the F/A-18 Hornet and the classified Aurora;[28] however he was fired from CIA because his landing of a C-130 on an aircraft carrier was filmed past a ZNN crew.[29] Rabb was afterwards reinstated into the Navy by SECNAV and once once more served at JAG Headquarters.[29]

After being fired from the CIA and before being reinstated into the Navy, Harm worked as a crop-squeegee for Grace Aviation in Blacksburg, Virginia.[29] He became friends with and eventually took in Grace Avionics' owner, 14-year-old Mattie Grace Johnson (Hallee Hirsh). She lived with him for about a twelvemonth while her begetter, Tom Johnson, sobered up. In 2005, Damage was devastated when Mattie was critically injured in a plane crash.[30]

In the concluding episode, Harm and Mac decided to get married; also, each was offered a career promotion, simply to unlike locations; Harm was offered the position of Force Judge Abet at Naval Forces Europe and to be stationed in London, while Mac was to atomic number 82 the Joint Legal Services Center Southwest out of Naval Base San Diego. They decided to leave to fate which 1 of them would retire from the service and had Bud flip a money. The upshot was never shown,[31] and the career status of either remained unknown until 2019.[2]

Post JAG activities [edit]

During the Season 14 premiere episode of NCIS, Special Amanuensis Timothy McGee (Sean Murray) asks Helm Bud Roberts (Patrick Labyorteaux) almost Harm and Mac, but Bud is interrupted earlier he can answer the question.[32] [33]

Harm appears in the final 2 episodes of the 10th season of NCIS: Los Angeles as the executive officer (XO) of the aircraft carrier, USS Allegiance (CVN-84).[34] Mac too made a guest appearance in the season 10 finale of NCIS: Los Angeles.[35] [36] While Harm left the Navy and followed Mac to San Diego later on losing the coin flip, he ended up existence fatigued back into service old later, and they mutually ended their relationship. They had not seen each other for nine years until video conferencing with each other in their new roles.[2] Harm and Mac then met in person in the season 11 premiere, where they shared an embrace and later renewed discussion of their relationship, in one case once again without reaching any conclusions.

Dates of promotion [edit]

Rank Date
Lieutenant O3.png Lieutenant former before 1995[3]
Lieutenant Commander O4.png Lieutenant Commander March 13, 1996[37]
Commander O5.png Commander Nov 23, 1999[38]
Captain O6.png Captain April 22, 2005[note iii]
US Navy O6 insignia.svg Captain [annotation 4]

Assignments [edit]

  1. July fourteen, 1995 – May 21, 1999, JAG officeholder, JAG Headquarters, Washington, D.C./Falls Church, Virginia
  2. May 21, 1999 – Oct 5, 1999, F-xiv pilot, VF-218 "Raptors", USS Patrick Henry (CVN-74)
  3. Oct 12, 1999 – May twenty, 2003, JAG officer, JAG Headquarters, Falls Church, Virginia
  4. May 2003 – October 24, 2003, pilot, Air Wing, Directorate of Operations, CIA, Langley, Virginia
  5. Oct 31, 2003, ingather duster pilot, Grace Aviation, Blacksburg, Virginia
  6. November 7, 2003 – April 22, 2005, JAG officeholder, JAG Headquarters, Falls Church building, Virginia
  7. ???? –(2019) –????, Executive officer (XO), USS Allegiance (CVN-84)[34] [36]

Temporary assignments [edit]

  1. March 1997  visitor Gunnery Sergeant, 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, MCB Military camp Pendleton, California (cloak-and-dagger assignment)[xix]
  2. November 1998  special adviser to the House National Security Subcommittee, Washington, D.C.[41]
  3. December 15, 1998  Interim Judge Advocate General of the United States Navy, Falls Church, Virginia
  4. January 13, 1999  Acting Guess Advocate General of the United States Navy, Falls Church, Virginia
  5. May xi, 1999  Interim Judge Advocate General of the United States Navy, Falls Church, Virginia
  6. Feb 27, 2001  Acting Judge Advocate Full general of the United States Navy, Falls Church, Virginia
  7. February 2003  Armed forces Judge, JAG Headquarters, Falls Church, Virginia[42]
  8. March 11, 2005  Acting Judge Advocate General of the United states of america Navy, Falls Church building, Virginia[30]

Partners [edit]

  • Lieutenant (Junior Grade) / Commander Caitlin "Kate" State highway, USN (Andrea Parker) - partner with Rabb in the pilot movie,[3] recurring character during the first season,[43] [44] returned as guest star in the 6th season.[45]
  • Lieutenant (Junior Class) Meg Austin, USN (Tracey Needham) - Partnered with Harm for the residue of the showtime season,[46] left afterward 1st flavor when JAG was first canceled past NBC.
  • Lieutenant Commander Tracy Manetti, USN (Tamlyn Tomita) - Harm'due south partner for seven episodes in flavor 8.
  • Major / Lieutenant Colonel Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie, USMC (Catherine Bong) - Harm's long-time partner (from the showtime of Flavor Two in January 1997), all-time friend, and former fiancée.

Awards and decorations [edit]

Rabb was awarded a Silver Star for leading a nuclear missile, launched from an Iranian diesel fuel submarine used past Al-Qaeda and with a mercenary Russian submarine crew, away from the USS Seahawk in an F-14 Tomcat at the terminate of the seventh season.[47] He was given the decoration in a anniversary taking place at JAG HQ in the middle of the eighth season.[48]

Rabb received his first Distinguished Flight Cross at the start of the 2d season in a ceremony at the White House Rose Garden by President Bill Clinton for saving the injured CAG, Captain Thomas Boone (Terry O'Quinn), of the USS Seahawk afterward the modified F-14 Tomcat they were flying was damaged by flak during an ATARS run prior to an alpha strike in the pilot episode.[49] This incident also earned Rabb the respect of a sometime shipmate and prompted him to commencement wearing his wings again.[3]

He received his 2d Distinguished Flying Cross in the fifth flavor for pushing his wingman to safe by using his wingman'southward tailhook and his F-fourteen's windscreen while flying over Kosovo.[24] [note 5]

Rabb was awarded the Order of the Crown by King Josif of Romania (Michael Des Barres) in the 2nd season for saving the King and his girl Princess Alexandra (Kiersten Warren) from an assassin (Nanci Chambers) while the King was in Washington, D.C. to denote Romania'south application for NATO membership.[51]

[notation 6]
Naval Aviator Badge.png

Gold star


Bronze star


Bronze star

Bronze star


Militaryduty.jpg
Surface Warfare Officer Insignia.png
Naval Aviator insignia
Argent Star Distinguished Flying Cross
with one star
Combat Action Ribbon Navy Meritorious Unit of measurement Commendation National Defense Service Medal
with one star
Southwest asia Service Medal
with one star
Kosovo Campaign Medal
with one star
Global State of war on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal
Global War on Terrorism Service Medal Gild of the Crown, Knight
(Romania)
Kuwait Liberation Medal
(Kuwait)
Surface Warfare Officeholder Pivot[note vii]

Personal life [edit]

Harmon Rabb, Jr. lives in a pocket-size Washington, D.C. loft flat north of Spousal relationship Station that he renovated himself.[49] During the showtime few seasons of JAG, he smokes Cuban cigars occasionally only and then later quit as he did non like being addicted to them. He endemic a classic red 1969 Corvette, but it was stolen; he would later on recover the car frame. He later "rebuilt" information technology (the steering wheel was all he had left from his original machine) with help from his friend Commander Sturgis Turner, whom he met during their academy days, Damage once thought the auto had been stolen, but Sturgis had taken it from his garage to go a new top placed onto it. Later, it suffered damage from a collision with an erstwhile woman attempting insurance fraud.[48]

Harm owns a vintage Boeing-Stearman Model 75 aeroplane that he named "Sarah" later on his paternal grandmother.[54] He likes to accept friends up flight when he'south not working.

Rabb likes olives, organic noodles (he eats at Ho's Organic Noodles) and Thai food. Rabb does not ain a tv set and plays guitar to relax at home.[55] Rabb has several girlfriends throughout the series, but past the terminate of the concluding season, he and Mac finally confront their feelings for one another.[31] It is subsequently revealed in 2019 that they mutually concluded their relationship, just that neither had moved on.

Conceptual history [edit]

Creator Donald P. Bellisario wanted an actor for the part of Harmon Rabb similar in the vein to that of Tom Selleck and Scott Bakula (which he had a hand in casting for Magnum, P.I. and Quantum Leap, respectively).[56] For the character's nickname, and shortened class of the first name, Bellisario got it from a famous quote written by 18th century United states of america naval hero John Paul Jones, "Give me a fast transport for I intend to become into harm'due south manner", which Bellisario believed befitted the human of activity his male lead would get. For the surname he got the inspiration from Princeton University history professor Theodore Rabb, whom he had met on a cruise in the Mediterranean Sea while he wrote the airplane pilot. Paramount Television Grouping chairman Kerry McCluggage, who knew of David James Elliott from his earlier starring role on Paramount's The Untouchables (and a recent recurring role on Melrose Place and a guest role on Seinfeld), suggested him to Bellisario as a possible pb for JAG, and Bellisario (who was under contract to Paramount) fabricated sure he was ane of the actors he wanted to meet and ultimately became Elliott's champion for the part.[58]

In February 2005, during the tenth season series co-star David James Elliott announced his departure from the series,[59] with Bellisario noting that "his contract was upwards, and we never expected it to keep. We had to cut costs. [So] we started doing episodes with less of David, and it became obvious to him that nosotros were not going to renegotiate."[60] Both Catherine Bong and Chris Beetem had signed on for a potential eleventh season.[lx] "'It was always intended that Catherine would be [on] the show next flavour just [Elliott] would non,' says Bellisario."[threescore] In April 2005, despite CBS informing Donald P. Bellisario that the serial "may get picked up," JAG was cancelled.[59] Bellisario stated that "the reason 'JAG' is non coming back is purely demographic. Nil more,"[61] adding "it'southward wrong to say the bear witness was canceled because [serial co-star David James Elliott] said he was leaving."[61]

Reception [edit]

Variety noted in its review of the pilot episode in 1995 that "Elliott looks great in dress whites, but should display more personality if he's to be a sympathetic continuing lead" and that JAG "borrows from recent features Crimson Tide and Apollo 13 in being jargon-heavy to aid generate temper just equally Rabb'due south character is allowed to develop, JAG could go 1 of the season's highlights".[62] In its review at the start of the first flavor of JAG, Entertainment Weekly noted in its review that the male lead "radiates the sort of piece of cake, low-key confidence that makes an player watchable calendar week after week" and "[westward]ith his square jaw, flinty eyes, and fluffy hair, David James Elliott is so gosh-darn good-looking, it'due south a wonder he's not just some other banal pretty-male child".[63]

The similarities in the human relationship between Rabb and Mac and that of Mulder and Scully on The X-Files has been noted by many.[64] [65] [66] Entertainment Weekly elaborated further on it: in each example it is a "hunky loner", partnered with "bonny women with whom they have a charged even so ultimately platonic human relationship", each working for the U.S. Government and based in the DC metropolitan area, with seemingly "unlimited travel budgets": with the primal thematic difference being that in JAG with its "cerise-white-and-blueish patriotism" the "U.Southward. war machine is seen as a strength fighting for good around the world" while the other series displays "antiauthoritarian cynicism" towards ditto.[67]

Fourth dimension described the character of Rabb in 2001 as a "buff-bodied flying ace who packed a gun, a direct-arrow defense lawyer without the moral ambiguity of his counterparts on The Exercise".[65] Slate characterized David James Elliott's functioning during the 7th flavour (2001–02) as being "erratic, evasive, and wooden."[66] Elliott won the TV Guide Honor in 2000 for "Favorite Male Actor in a Drama" for playing Rabb on JAG.[68]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Classmates from the Academy include Bruce Carmichael (James Denton),[10] Jack Keeter (Michael McGrady),[xi] Luke Pendry (Timothy Dale Agee),[12] Jack Raglan (John Diehl),[13] Diane Schonke (Catherine Bell),[xiv] and Sturgis Turner (Scott Lawrence).[15]
  2. ^ In real life, a similar incident did occur on January 4, 1989, known as the 1989 air battle well-nigh Tobruk; only it is never made articulate if, in the fictional universe of JAG, information technology replaces or is in addition to the real issue.
  3. ^ Harm's promotion to captain was authorized under 10 U.S.C. § 777 to assume the rank before official "pay class" promotion, a Navy custom known equally "beingness frocked," by Major General Gordon Cresswell.[39] [31]
  4. ^ Harmon Rabb serves, every bit of 2019,[34] as the Executive Officer (XO) of the aircraft carrier USS Allegiance,[40] which makes him an unrestricted line officer over again, rather than a staff corps officer (e.thousand. a member of the Navy'due south Judge Advocate General's Corps), which he was for most of the elapsing on JAG.
  5. ^ This plot device was based on an actual incident during the Vietnam War in which Captain Bob Pardo, USAF pushed his wingman'southward crippled F-4 Phantom 60 miles so the two aircrews could eject over friendly territory.[50]
  6. ^ The list beneath contains all of Rabb's known awards and decorations from his appearances in JAG and NCIS: Los Angeles. The names are given in guild of precedence, according to SECNAVINST 1650.1F and the U.S. Navy Uniform Regulations (NAVPERS 1566.5G).
  7. ^ Captain Rabb qualified as a surface warfare officer sometime between the end of the original JAG series and his guest appearance on NCIS: Los Angeles, every bit seen on his belt buckle.[52]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "NCIS: LOS ANGELES Episode Title: (#LA1024) "False Flag"". The Futon Critic . Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c "False Flag". NCIS: Los Angeles. Flavor 10. Episode 24. May 19, 2019. CBS.
  3. ^ a b c d east f g h i "A New Life". JAG. Season 1. Episode 1. September 23, 1995. NBC.
  4. ^ a b c d "The Prisoner". JAG. Flavour i. Episode 20. May 8, 1996. NBC.
  5. ^ a b "To Russia with Love". JAG. Flavor 3. Episode 24. May nineteen, 1998. CBS.
  6. ^ a b "Ghosts of Christmas Past". JAG. Flavor 5. Episode 11. Dec 14, 1999. CBS.
  7. ^ "Ghost Transport". JAG. Flavor 3. Episode 1. September 23, 1997. CBS.
  8. ^ "Gypsy Optics". JAG. Season 2. Episode v. September 22, 1998. CBS.
  9. ^ "Ghosts". JAG. Flavor 2. Episode 6. February 14, 1997. CBS.
  10. ^ "Hemlock". JAG. Season one. Episode 15. March 27, 1996. NBC.
  11. ^ "Smoked". JAG. Flavor 1. Episode 14. March 20, 1996. NBC.
  12. ^ "Airplane pilot Error". JAG. Flavour ane. Episode half dozen. November four, 1995. NBC.
  13. ^ "Rogue". JAG. Flavour 5. Episode seven. November 9, 1999. CBS.
  14. ^ "Skeleton Coiffure". JAG. Season 1. Episode 22. NBC.
  15. ^ "New Gun in Town". JAG. Season 7. Episode 2. Oct 2, 2001. CBS.
  16. ^ "Cowboys & Cossacks". JAG. Season 2. Episode fifteen. April 11, 1997. CBS.
  17. ^ "Mixed Messages". JAG. Season vii. Episode 5. Oct 23, 2001. CBS.
  18. ^ "Heroes". JAG. Flavour ii. Episode four. January 24, 1997. CBS.
  19. ^ a b "Force Recon". JAG. Season 2. Episode 11. March vii, 1997. CBS.
  20. ^ "Above and Across". JAG. Season three. Episode 8. November 11, 1997. CBS.
  21. ^ "Second Sight". JAG. Season 4. Episode twenty. April 27, 1997. CBS.
  22. ^ "Goodbyes". JAG. Season 4. Episode 24. May 25, 1999. CBS.
  23. ^ "King of the Greenie Board". JAG. Season five. Episode one. September 21, 1999. CBS.
  24. ^ a b "True Callings". JAG. Flavour 5. Episode 3. October 5, 1999. CBS.
  25. ^ "Tribunal". JAG. Season 7. Episode 21. April 30, 2002.
  26. ^ "Meltdown". JAG. Season eight. Episode 21. April 29, 2003. CBS.
  27. ^ The C-130 is carrier capable in the hands of a skilled airplane pilot; come across: C-130 Carrier Landing, Defense Media Network.
  28. ^ "The 1 That Got Abroad". JAG. Flavour 9. Episode 4. October 17, 2003. CBS.
  29. ^ a b c "Back in the Saddle". JAG. Season 9. Episode 6. October 31, 2003. CBS.
  30. ^ a b "JAG: San Diego". JAG. Flavour 10. Episode 17. March 11, 2005. CBS.
  31. ^ a b c "Fair Winds and Post-obit Seas". JAG. Season x. Episode 22. April 29, 2005. CBS.
  32. ^ "Rogue". NCIS. Season 14. Episode 1. September 20, 2016. CBS.
  33. ^ Wiedel, Kathleen (September 21, 2016). "NCIS Season 14 Episode 1 Review: Rogue". Goggle box Fanatic . Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  34. ^ a b c Wigler, Josh (March 29, 2019). "David James Elliott to Reprise 'JAG' Role For 'NCIS: Los Angeles'". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved April nine, 2019.
  35. ^ Porter, Rick (Apr 2, 2019). "Catherine Bell Joins 'JAG' Reunion on 'NCIS: Los Angeles'". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved Apr 9, 2019.
  36. ^ a b "David James Elliott and Catherine Bell on NCIS: LOS ANGELES". CBS Studios International. April 4, 2019. Retrieved May v, 2019.
  37. ^ "Defensive Action". JAG. Season 1. Episode 13. March 13, 1996. NBC.
  38. ^ "Contemptuous Words". JAG. Flavor v. Episode 9. November 23, 1999. CBS.
  39. ^ "Dream Team". JAG. Season ten. Episode 21. April 22, 2005. CBS.
  40. ^ "The Guardian". NCIS: Los Angeles. Season x. Episode 23. May 12, 2019. CBS.
  41. ^ "Mr. Rabb Goes to Washington". JAG. Season 4. Episode 8. November 10, 1998. CBS.
  42. ^ "Friendly Fire". JAG. Season 8. Episode fifteen. February xi, 2003. CBS.
  43. ^ "Brig Break". JAG. Season one. Episode 8. December 2, 1995. NBC.
  44. ^ "Ares". JAG. Season 1. Episode 21. May 22, 1996. NBC.
  45. ^ "Touch and Go". JAG. Season half-dozen. Episode 10. January 9, 2001. CBS.
  46. ^ "Shadow". JAG. Season one. Episode three. September 30, 1995. NBC.
  47. ^ "Enemy Below". JAG. Season 7. Episode 24. May 21, 2001. CBS.
  48. ^ a b "Standards of Conduct". JAG. Season 8. Episode 13. January 21, 2003. CBS.
  49. ^ a b "We the People". JAG. Season 2. Episode one. January three, 1997. CBS.
  50. ^ "Pardo's Push: An Incredible Feat of Airmanship". HistoryNet. June 12, 2006.
  51. ^ "Washington Vacation". JAG. Season 2. Episode nine. February 28, 1997. CBS.
  52. ^ Rice, Lynette (Apr eleven, 2019). "'NCIS: LA': Hither'due south a beginning await at David James Elliott's appearance". Amusement Weekly . Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  53. ^ "Jinx". JAG. Flavour two. Episode 3. January 17, 1997. CBS.
  54. ^ "Total Date". JAG. Flavour 2. Episode 8. February 21, 1997. CBS.
  55. ^ "Someone to Watch over Annie". JAG. Season 3. Episode 12. January viii, 1998. CBS.
  56. ^ Karlen, Neal. "Encompass STORY;From the Human Backside 'Magnum, P.I.,' 'Height Gun' Meets 'A Few Good Men' Archived August iv, 2017, at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times (November five, 1995)
  57. ^ David James Elliott - Eastward! Glory Contour (Tv set). E! Entertainment. December 29, 1999.
  58. ^ a b Why JAG Came to
  59. ^ a b c JAG's Star: Why He's Out, Television Guide (February 25, 2005)
  60. ^ a b "Amusement & the Arts | Silent-running "JAG" cashiered out past CBS | Seattle Times Newspaper". community.seattletimes.nwsource.com.
  61. ^ Everett, Todd (September 22, 1995). "Jag". Variety . Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  62. ^ Tucker, Ken (Oct 27, 1995). "JAG;Degree OF GUILT". Amusement Weekly . Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  63. ^ Fretts, Bruce (April nine, 1999). "JAG gets a new recruit: Catherine Bell joins the striking CBS show as a series regular". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved May three, 2019.
  64. ^ a b Poniewozik, James (December 2, 2001). "Battlefield Promotion". Fourth dimension . Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  65. ^ a b Heffernan, Virginia (August fifteen, 2002). "A Few Sanctimonious Men: CBS's JAG preaches all that it can preach". Slate . Retrieved May iii, 2019.
  66. ^ Fretts, Bruce (February 4, 1999). "Remote Patrol: 'JAG' and 'The Ten-Files': Nosotros explore the strange similarities between the armed services drama and the creepy sci-fi show". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved May iii, 2019.
  67. ^ Tv Guide Book of Lists . Running Press. 2007. p. 41. ISBN0-7624-3007-nine.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmon_Rabb