Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The game heard and referenced in this episode is fictional, depicting a final score of Navy 42, Army 36. As of the 2022 contest, no actual Army–Navy Game has finished with this score. Though not acknowledged in the credits, game show host Tom Kennedy is the voice of the football commentator heard throughout this episode.
Navy had its tenth consecutive win in the series in the 112th Army–Navy game in 2011 Then Vice President Joe Biden at the coin toss prior to the 113th Army-Navy Game in 2012. Navy Midshipman (and later Admiral) Joseph Mason Reeves wore what is widely regarded as the first football helmet in the 1893 Army–Navy Game. He had been advised by a ...
Besides their debut album, Army Navy has also contributed music to the films Beastly and Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist. Their second and third full-length albums, The Last Place and The Wilderness Inside, were released on July 12, 2011 and July 15, 2014 respectively.
Army Navy is the self-titled debut studio album by American indie rock band Army Navy, released on August 27, 2008 on the band's label, The Fever Zone. [1] Two singles were spawned from the album, "My Thin Sides" and "Saints", as well as the music videos for them.
These episodes originally did not have titles. Titles here are taken from the series box sets and the 60th Anniversary collection. Alternate titles from repeat listings are included when applicable. As of 2023, one episode is missing from the BBC archives: The TV Lark episode 9, "The Top Secret Rocket Trials".
But their activities draw the attention of both the U.S. Navy and the Japanese. McHale dodges a court martial and Binghamton gets a commendation. Note: This is the last episode to bear "SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC 1943" billing in the opening scene. Note: Bob Hastings (Carpenter) does not appear in this episode.
A Tale of Two Cities was an Army–Navy Screen Magazine film that tells about the destruction and death caused by atomic bombs dropped on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, on August 6 and 9, 1945. An eyewitness account by Jesuit priest Father John Seimes, who had been on the outskirts of Hiroshima, was included.
E-Ring is an American military drama television series created by Ken Robinson and David McKenna and executive produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, [1] that premiered on NBC on September 21, 2005, and aired through February 1, 2006.