JAG: Crossing the Line


11:00 am - 12:00 pm, Today on KOBR Heroes & Icons (8.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Crossing the Line

Season 2, Episode 5

A charge of sexual harassment sends the JAG team to an aircraft carrier, where they're joined by a congresswoman with an apparent bias favouring the plaintiff, a female pilot.

repeat 1997 English Stereo
Drama Action/adventure Crime Military

Cast & Crew
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David James Elliott (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Harmon `Harm' Rabb Jr.
Catherine Bell (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Sarah `Mac' MacKenzie
Patrick Labyorteaux (Actor) .. Lt. Bud Roberts
Karri Turner (Actor) .. Lt. (j.g.) Harriet Sims
Nancy Everhard (Actor) .. Lt. Marilyn Isaacs
Terry O'Quinn (Actor) .. Capt. Thomas Boone
John M. Jackson (Actor) .. Adm. Albert Jethro 'A.J.' Chegwidden
Slade Barnett (Actor) .. Petty Officer Ned Paderofski
Bill Bolender (Actor) .. Captain 'Skipper' Ross
Steve Eastin (Actor) .. Master Chief Petty Officer Max Sullivan
Sibel Ergener (Actor) .. Lieutenant Elizabeth 'Skates' Hawkes
Steven M. Gagnon (Actor) .. Landing Signal Officer
Butch Hammett (Actor) .. Communications Officer
Lance Patrick (Actor) .. Officer Chance Ellis
Don LaFontaine (Actor) .. Narrator - Opening Titles

More Information
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Did You Know..
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David James Elliott (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Harmon `Harm' Rabb Jr.
Born: September 21, 1960
Birthplace: Milton, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Played in a band as a teenager and dropped out of high school in his senior year to pursue a career in music. Returned to finish high school at age 19. Was inspired to pursue acting by reading King Lear. Performed with the prestigious Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Ontario. His wife, Nanci Chambers, appeared with him on CBS's JAG as Lt. Loren Singer. The pair also costarred in the 2003 made-for-TV movie Code 11-14. An avid runner, he completed the Boston Marathon in 2004. In 2010, spent two weeks in Ecuador with his family to study the people and culture.
Catherine Bell (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Sarah `Mac' MacKenzie
Born: August 14, 1968
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Tall and athletic actress Catherine Bell was born in London, England, but moved to Los Angeles with her mother when she was still a kid. Intending to study pre-Med in college, she dropped out to pursue a modeling career in Japan. After doing some commercials, she returned to L.A. to made guest star appearances on TV shows and do minor film work. She was Isabella Rosellini's nude body double for Death Becomes Her in 1992, leading her to meet her future husband (Adam Deason) on the film's set. After making a short guest appearance on the NBC show JAG, she wrote a letter to the show's producers expressing her interest in it. In 1996, JAG moved to CBS and she joined the cast as Major Sarah "Mac" Mackenzie, sidekick to Lt. Commander Harmon "Harm" Rabb (David James Elliott). As a real-life kickboxer and snowboarder, her athletic skills lead the way for physically demanding parts in the action movies Men of War, Crash Dive, and Black Thunder. In 2000 she starred in the sci-fi thriller Thrill Seekers with Casper Van Dien, and in 2003 she briefly moved to comedies for Bruce Almighty. In 2007 she was cast in the TV series Army Wives and in 2011 she starred in the thriller Last Man Standing.
Patrick Labyorteaux (Actor) .. Lt. Bud Roberts
Born: July 22, 1965
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California
Trivia: Patrick Laborteaux is primarily known for his television work on the popular series Little House on the Prairie, on which he appeared with his brother, Matthew Laborteaux.
Karri Turner (Actor) .. Lt. (j.g.) Harriet Sims
Born: December 21, 1966
Birthplace: Fort Worth, Texas
Nancy Everhard (Actor) .. Lt. Marilyn Isaacs
Born: November 30, 1957
Trivia: Lead actress Nancy Everhard first appeared onscreen in the late '80s.
Terry O'Quinn (Actor) .. Capt. Thomas Boone
Born: July 15, 1952
Birthplace: Newberry, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Character actor Terry O'Quinn's film career began (and almost ended!) with a role as Captain Minardi in the notorious Michael Cimino failure Heaven's Gate (1980). O'Quinn rose to prominence in Joseph Ruben's 1987 sleeper The Stepfather, as the ostensibly mild-mannered title character (of multiple names), who has this irksome habit of going psychopathic and slaying families who don't meet his exacting standards. Though O'Quinn went on to play leads in other films, he quickly became a television circuit staple (and an instantly recognizable face), in regular series and made-for-TV movies. His weight was more effectively felt in showy supporting roles like Howard Hughes in Disney's The Rocketeer (1991). On TV, O'Quinn became a regular on the daytimer The Doctors and the prime-timer Jag (1995). O'Quinn struck gold in 2004 as a member of the ensemble cast in the hit prime-time adventure drama Lost, on ABC. As Locke, an enigmatic character with a hidden personal attachment to the Pacific Island on which his plane crashes, O'Quinn managed to convey an ambiguous and understated sense of menace. The actor would go on to appear on the remake of Hawaii Five-0.
John M. Jackson (Actor) .. Adm. Albert Jethro 'A.J.' Chegwidden
Born: June 01, 1950
Birthplace: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Slade Barnett (Actor) .. Petty Officer Ned Paderofski
Bill Bolender (Actor) .. Captain 'Skipper' Ross
Born: November 14, 1940
Steve Eastin (Actor) .. Master Chief Petty Officer Max Sullivan
Born: June 22, 1948
Sibel Ergener (Actor) .. Lieutenant Elizabeth 'Skates' Hawkes
Steven M. Gagnon (Actor) .. Landing Signal Officer
Butch Hammett (Actor) .. Communications Officer
Lance Patrick (Actor) .. Officer Chance Ellis
Don LaFontaine (Actor) .. Narrator - Opening Titles
Born: August 26, 1940
Died: September 01, 2008
Trivia: A performer aptly named "The King of Voiceovers" for his everpresent vocal work (especially on movie trailers), Don La Fontaine ultimately grew so prolific that the sound of his voice became a veritable staple of American pop culture. La Fontaine's distinguished sound emerged in early adolescence; he began his professional life as an audio engineer, producing radio spots for Floyd Peterson, but quickly segued into voiceovers for a myriad of projects, commencing with the trailer of the 1965 MGM movie Gunfighters of Casa Grande. (He allegedly got that job when the man assigned to do it called in sick). Thousands of additional assignments followed, often rolling in at a rate of 10 per day. Throughout, La Fontaine's voice waxed grave, somber, and a bit chilling -- qualities that made him perfect for suspense and action fare. (At one point he developed a permanent association with the phrase, "In a world where..."). La Fontaine also turned up at one point on a series of television spots for Geico insurance, parodying himself. He died of complications from the treatment of an unspecified illness in early September 2008, at the age of 68.

Before / After
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JAG
10:00 am
JAG
12:00 pm