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Entertainment Weekly 2/19/1999 Television/Remote Patrol:
Remote Patrol Keeping a watch on TV A new conspiracy? Exploring the eerie
similarities between JAG and The X-Files
I admit it: I missed the boat on JAG (CBS, Tuesdays, 8-9 p.m.). i was
unimpressed by the military drama's initial 1995-96 NBC incarnation, loaded
as it was with action footage recycled from movies like Clear and Present
Danger. And I paid little attention when CBS picked it up the following
season (sure, I'm a TV critic, but I can't watch everything) . After it
soared into the top 20 this season, I gave JAG another look, and I've
figured out the secret of its success: It's the anti-X-Files. The parallels
are, shall we say, spooky. Let's start with the leading men. The X-Files'
Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) is a hunky loner whose quest is motivated
by the abduction of a relative (his sis was kidnapped by aliens) . JAG's
Harmon "Harm" Rabb Jr. (David James Elliott) is a hunky loner whose quest
is motivated by the abduction of a relative (his father was held hostage
by the Russians after the Vietnam War). Both work for the government--Mulder
for the FBI, Harm for the Judge Advocate General corps of military lawyers--and
both reside in the D.C. area. Each series flashes locations and times
in the bottom left-hand corner of the screen. Both men are partnered with
attractive women with whom they have a charged yet ultimately platonic
relationship. On The X-Files, of course, it's Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson).
On JAG it's Maj. Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie (Catherine Bell), a Marine attorney.
X-Philes, see if the CBS website's description of Harm and Mac's bond
doesn't ring a few bells: "The unmistakable chemistry between them must
be held at bay as they travel the globe together with a single mission:
to search for and discover the truth." Each team seems to enjoy unlimited
travel budgets; I'd love to see their expense reports. Both duos report
to a bald, broad-shouldered supervisor: The 7-Files' assistant director
Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi) and JAG's Adm. A.J. Cheqwidden (John M.
Jackson) . I know, Skinner s not technically Mulder and Scully's boss
anymore. But he still provides cover for them with the higher-ups and
backs their sometimes far-flung investigations with a steely confidence--just
like Admiral Chegwidden does with Harm and Mac. The enemy, in each case,
is aliens. That's meant in the little-green-men sense on The X-Files.
On JAG it's read as non-Americans. It doesn't matter who they are--Serbian
extremists, Italian terrorists, Japanese civilians--you just can't trust
'em. And here's where the anti part of my anti-X-Files theory comes in.
Whereas The X-Files is one of the most antigovernment shows in TV history,
JAG is TV's most jingoistic series. The U.S. military is seen as a force
fighting for good around the world. Even the paralyzed, institutionalized
Vietnam vet played by Kevin Conway in a recent episode died with an American
flag clenched in his teeth. The shows' political differences seem appropriate
given their respective networks' target audiences. The X-Files' antiauthoritarian
cynicism makes for a perfect fit for Fox's young, hip, urban viewers,
while JAG's red-white-and-blue patriotism is aimed squarely at CBS' older,
middle-American crowd. Not for nothing is the Eye network's motto "Welcome
home."
Amazing Catherine Bell
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