JAG is a television program that ran from 1995 to 2005 on NBC then CBS. The letters stand for "Judge Advocate General." Basically, the Navy's lawyer group. The show had a reputation of being popular with older viewers.
As of this writing we've watched four episodes including the pilot. That episode had to do with naval aviators on an aircraft carrier. At the beginning of the episode there is a dog fight between U.S. F-14 Tomcats and "Bosnian MiGs." And the footage was lifted 100% from the movie Top Gun. The "MIGs" were actually F-5s just like in Top Gun. Other footage used in the episode was also lifted from Top Gun (F-14s launching off the catapult, or in aerial maneuvers for example). I annoyed my wife by pointing this out... every time it happened.
According the the Internet Movie Database, the show utilized "unused" footage from a lot of Paramount studios films. But since I recognized the footage, it wasn't all "unused."
I thought I caught them in a historical inaccuracy. They showed A-6 Intruders taking off from the carrier (perhaps using footage from the Flight of the Intruder movie). But JAG started in 1995 and the Navy was still flying both A-6 Intruders and EA-6B Prowlers electronic warfare planes at that time. They were both replaced by the F/A-18 Hornet/Super Hornet and the EA-18B Growler.
The second episode took place on a submarine. And guess which Paramount film they used footage from. The Hunt for Red October.
The third episode took place at Twenty-Nine Palms marine base in the Mojave Desert (I've been to Twenty-Nine Palms... in August). I didn't recognize any reused footage. The fourth episode was set in Washington D.C. and, again, no reused footage.
During the opening credits (used from the second episode on) they re-reuse the footage from Top Gun and The Hunt for Red October and maybe other movies.
I remember when JAG first came out, I watched the first season and then lost interest. But it went on for ten seasons, apparently.
The above photo is being used under Section 107 of the Copyright Act: fair usage.






