Baa Baa Black Sheep was a television show that came out in the 70's, detailing the exploits of the Black Sheep flying off a make believe island called Espritu Santo... All fiction, no realistic information or missions...
Loosely based on Pappy Boyington's autobiography, Baa Baa Black Sheep, which itself was loosely based on the facts...
The Corsairs were real, but everything else, especially all those cute nurses that they had running around the runway... My Grandpa said if that were true, and there were nurses there, there woulda been no reason for R R...
The opening credits of the show characterized the Black Sheep pilots as "a collection of misfits and screwballs," which Frank Walton, the squadron's Air Combat Intelligence Officer, and other veterans of the squadron resented... Walton wrote an article for TV Guide, in attempt to set the record straight." This article became the springboard for him to write his fine book Once They Were Eagles: The Men of the Black Sheep Squadron...
Pappy himself was a consultant to the show, and got on well with its star, Robert Conrad... The producers located some pretty good aircraft: about 5 Corsairs, a DC-3/C-47, some Zeros, and the ubiquitous SNJ (North American Texan) trainer.... The Corsairs in the TV show were finished in overall dark glossy blue, with no identifying numbers. Perhaps it would have been easy (and inexpensive) to paint them authentically... Pappy's Corsair is well documented... But one correspondent noted that un-identified planes were easier to re-use and make appear to be more numerous than they really were.
Baa Baa Black Sheep ran for one and a half seasons on NBC, 1976-77 and Spring 1978... There were 35 episodes: a two-part pilot entitled "The Misfits," 22 one-hour episodes in 1976-77, and 13 episodes first broadcast in 1978. The two-hour pilot was first telecast: on September 21, 1976... For the Spring 1978 season, the show was re-titled "Black Sheep Squadron;" the last episode aired on April 6, 1978.
The History Channel still airs "Baa Baa Black Sheep" from time to time.... The telecasts of the show feature brief interviews with surviving Black Sheep - usually John Bolt, Ed Olander, and Bob McClurg.