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Anthony DiNozzo Jr.
NCIS character
A man with short hair wearing a police bulletproof vest over a button-down shirt.
Michael Weatherly as Anthony DiNozzo Jr in a screencap from the NCIS season 2 premiere episode, "See No Evil".
First appearance"Ice Queen" (JAG)
Portrayed by
Voiced byAdam Epstein (NCIS: The Video Game)[1]
In-universe information
AliasTony DiNardo (during an undercover mission with Jenny Shepard)
GenderMale
Occupation
  • NCIS Very Special Agent (former)
  • Police Detective (former)
Family
  • Anthony D. DiNozzo Sr. (father)
  • Unknown Paddington (mother; deceased)
Significant otherZiva David
ChildrenTali (daughter; with Ziva David)
Relatives
  • Clive Paddington (uncle; deceased)[2]
  • Crispian Paddington (cousin)[2]
  • Vincenzo DiNozzo (uncle)[3]
NationalityAmerican
Career at NCIS
PositionVery Special Agent
RankSenior field agent
Years of servicec. 2001/2002-2016
BornJuly 8, 1972

Anthony D. "Tony" DiNozzo, Jr.[4] /dɪˈnz/ is a fictional character from the CBS TV series NCIS portrayed by American actor Michael Weatherly.[5] Created by producer Donald P. Bellisario, he appears as a series regular in the first 13 seasons before departing in the season 13 finale "Family First". He has also made guest appearances in the spin-offs NCIS: Los Angeles and NCIS: New Orleans.

The character initially drew mixed reception, often criticized for his male chauvinism.[6] Audience reception had improved after Weatherly decided to tone down that aspect of his portrayal, and afterwards the character was better received,[6] but critics remained polarized on the character's "goofball personality".[7] By 2011, Weatherly was listed among the top-10 most-popular actors on primetime television due to his portrayal of DiNozzo, according to Q Score.[8][dead link]

In January 2016, Weatherly and CBS confirmed that season thirteen would be DiNozzo's last as a series regular.[9] In the show, DiNozzo leaves after learning that he has a daughter with his former partner Special Agent Ziva David, who apparently died in a mortar attack on her home in Israel.[10] DiNozzo leaves NCIS to care for his daughter.

Weatherly returned to made a cameo appearance as DiNozzo at the end of the season 21 episode "The Stories We Leave Behind", paying tribute to Ducky Mallard (David McCallum).

Character creation and casting

[edit]

Michael Weatherly was cast for the role of Anthony DiNozzo in 2003.[11] Series creator Don Bellisario related the events that led to Weatherly being selected:

I liked him from the first moment I met him. I first met him in Australia, where he was doing The Natalie Wood Story, and he was playing R.J. and the agents called me, or the casting director called me, and said, "I would like you to meet Michael Weatherly." And I was on my last day down there, and I said, "Yeah, I'm going home tomorrow. You know, I'll meet him when he comes back to the States. I'm going out to dinner with my family tonight. I just don't have the time." I received a phone call from Michael, and Michael knows how to flatter you. He started off by saying, "Oh, I love Magnum, P.I...." And then he started telling me all the things he knew about Magnum. And I said, "Look, if you want to go to dinner with me and my wife and two of my boys, you're welcome." Well, that ended up to be a three-hour dinner. It might have gone longer. I liked him so much that I cast him in the show after that meeting.[12]

On another occasion, Bellisario stated, "I can't say enough about Michael Weatherly...He started out on NCIS [playing] a character who was just very unlikable to some women because he was just such a chauvinist, and he has gradually over the [seasons] changed—taken his character and softened it."[6]

Weatherly said that he had initially been reluctant to join a JAG spin-off and explained, "But I went and had this dinner with Don Bellisario in Australia and his personality, his storytelling and his presence and everything kind of won me over."[13] He later commented, "I got very lucky with Don Bellisario. He directed two of the first three episodes, and he really pushed me to try things and experiment and some of the wacky comedy came out of that. And it was kind of unexpected and I didn't really know what I was going to find."[14]

At another point, Weatherly said, "It's kind of fun to play a total dinosaur in terms of sexual politics... The shallow end of the philosophical pool is obviously where Tony paddles around." In the same interview, actress Cote de Pablo (who portrays character Ziva David) added, "There's something deeper about that character. We always talk about the superficial element and the things that make us laugh. But he wouldn't be doing what he does if he wasn't really good at it. He's a complex character, and that's why people love him."[15]

Weatherly directed his own performance of the character in the 2011 episode "One Last Score"[16] and the 2013 episode "Seek".[17] In 2016, the character was written out of the series due to Weatherly having tired of the grind of production, stating that he felt "like a circle that had gone all the way around and I really felt happy with the resolution of character and my time on the show".[18]

Fictional character background

[edit]

Anthony DiNozzo is the senior field agent of the fictional Major Case Response Team (MCRT) led by Leroy Jethro Gibbs (Mark Harmon) a former Marine Gunnery sergeant. The team investigates major crimes involving military personnel, often dealing with local law enforcement officers (LEOs). A former police detective, he is characterized as an outgoing, joking, charismatic former jock and frequent lothario. His charisma helps him do undercover work and to deal with intra-agency conflicts. He often leads the team's crime scene investigations, where medical examiner Donald "Ducky" Mallard would put him through physical exertion for evidence retrieval. Over the course of the series, he carries a few storylines, including an undercover assignment that goes through seasons four and five to catch an international arms dealer. DiNozzo provided some comic relief for an otherwise serious drama, regularly spouting movie trivia, especially in the early seasons, and as a Casanova, his dating provided many roguish experiences. The death of agent Caitlin Todd and DiNozzo's relationship with agent Ziva David become fundamental to his subtle shift in attitude and character development

Tony was born in 1972, to a wealthy Italian-American family from Long Island, New York.[19] His great-grandfather worked as a truck-driver before eventually starting his own transportation company.[20] Though an only child,[21] he has been cut off from his maternal family's fortune.[22] According to Tony, his mother died in the hospital while they were watching a movie when he was eight years old.[7][23] His mother had taken him to the movies frequently before her death, resulting in his love of film.[24] After his mother's death, Tony spent much of his childhood in a number of boarding schools and summer camps.

Tony's father, Anthony DiNozzo Sr., played by Robert Wagner, skirts very close to the line between a businessman and a con man, and at one point Tony was left in a hotel room for two days when his father left for a supposed business meeting. It is stated in this episode that his father is pretending to be rich when he is actually bankrupt.[25] Consequently, his father and him had a frosty relationship. It has also been suggested that his father was emotionally neglectful.[26] In "Sins of the Father", he admits to Gibbs that, although his dad still "makes [him] crazy", he still loves him but has been unable to tell his dad so. In "Broken Arrow", DiNozzo Sr. helps Gibbs with a case by using his contacts and going undercover with Ziva at a party in the home of a well-known arms dealer. Tony and his father also reconcile their differences.

Other family members mentioned in NCIS episodes include a button-collecting grandfather who bequeathed Tony one thousand shares in a dot-com,[27] and a number of uncles. His uncle Vincenzo is a butcher on Long Island.[28] A second uncle was a successful businessman, but was found at a golf course looking for mole people.[29] A third uncle named Clive Paddington, wealthy and deceased, left his entire estate to his paternal nephew Crispian Paddington.[2]

Fictional education and work history

[edit]

After being expelled from six boarding schools in four years, Tony graduated from the Remington Military Academy in Tiverton, Rhode Island. He later completed a Bachelor of Arts in physical education at Ohio State University, [30] where he was on the varsity basketball team and competed in the Final Four.[31] DiNozzo discusses a football game in the episode "SWAK", in which his doctor broke his leg. In the same discussion, Tony claims he and the doctor "kissed each other's sisters," a football term meaning the game ended in a tie. In the episodes "Bikini Wax" and "Trojan Horse", he mentions he is in the Ohio State Alpha Chi Delta fraternity, class of 1989. At the end of the episode "Red Cell", he begins to tell a story about his fraternity days before Gibbs interrupts him.[relevant?] In the episode "Child's Play", he mentions receiving a combined score of 950 on his SATs.

At the end of his run with the Baltimore Police Department's homicide division, [32][33] he was hired by NCIS in 2001 after discovering that his partner, Danny Price, was a dirty cop.[34] [35]

Letter sent containing Y. pestis that led to Tony's near-death experience in season two

During his tenure as a NCIS special agent, Tony operated as a supervisory special agent[36] and undertaken a long-term undercover operation throughout season four. In season two, he nearly dies from a bout with the pneumonic plague after a woman sends a letter filled with genetically altered Yersinia pestis to NCIS for revenge for what she believed to be neglect of a cold case. Tony ably leads the team in Gibbs's absence when the latter retires to Mexico after recovering from a coma. When Gibbs returns to lead the team, Tony declines an offer to lead his own team and resumes his former position to support Gibbs. At the end of season five, Tony is assigned as a Special Agent Afloat to the USS Ronald Reagan and later to the USS Seahawk. At the beginning of season six, he is reassigned to his original team at NCIS headquarters in Washington, D.C.

In the season 8 finale, Clayton Jarvis, the new Secretary of the Navy, tells Director Vance that he wants to include DiNozzo in NCIS's black operations program after the death of Lt. Jonas Cobb and the resignation of Jarvis's predecessor, Philip Davenport. Although Vance seems reluctant, Jarvis overrules him and gives DiNozzo his first assignment; stop an NCIS agent who is leaking information, who in the season nine premiere "Nature of the Beast" is purported to be the NCIS Special Agent Simon Cade. At the end of the episode, DiNozzo is shot by an impostor FBI agent who had killed Cade and attempted to frame DiNozzo for the murder.[37]

Characterization

[edit]

Tony is written as a streetwise promiscuous former homicide detective.[38][according to whom?] His behavior toward women is occasionally noted by other characters to be chauvinistic, and throughout the series Tony is shown flirting with most women he encounters. He does not respect personal boundaries, going so far as to rifle through his colleagues' possessions, both at work and in their homes, and to listen to private phone calls. In the episode "SWAK", Caitlin Todd described him as an "X-rated Peter Pan" who is "annoying" but whose absence is nevertheless keenly felt. The targets of this behavior are either victims of Tony's quests for new sources of amusement,[39] or those for whom he believes he has reason to be concerned.[40] Michael Weatherly commented on Tony's characterization: "Part of the dynamic of the show is that Tony irritates people, but when he's not around, they kind of miss him."[41]

headshot of a man with short hair
Michael Weatherly as Anthony DiNozzo filming in 2008

Although Tony is in his thirties when introduced,[42] he is typically written as possessing a juvenile sense of humor that manifests itself in name-calling, teasing, and pranks directed at his colleagues.[43] Tony delights in quoting movies in everyday life, often mimicking the original actor when quoting them;[40] Sean Connery's James Bond and Tommy Lee Jones come up frequently.

In a nod to NCIS creator Donald P. Bellisario, Tony has also been established as a fan of Bellisario television series Magnum, P.I. and Airwolf. In the episode "Dead Man Talking", Tony introduces himself to a suspect as Airwolf character "Stringfellow".[44]

Although his immature behavior often gets Tony into trouble, on more than one occasion he surprises his colleagues when an outwardly immature action on his part causes new evidence to be uncovered.[39][45][46] McGee has described Tony's interrogation style as "Dirty Harry meets Keystone Cop".[47] He is generally written as a highly capable agent, and in season four is offered a prized position as a supervisory/senior special agent in charge in Rota, Spain, which he turns down. By season ten, he is the only one out of Gibbs's field team who has been allowed to head an investigation. As Gibbs's senior field agent, he often pulls rank by ordering junior agents around[48] and playing pranks on them. He most notably calls McGee "Probie" until Ziva is made a full-fledged agent. With the addition Ellie Bishop, Tony and McGee begin calling her "Probie" and similarly order her around, claiming that "it's part of the job".[49]

The character is initially portrayed as a "technophobe" who, like his superior, has limited patience with the scientific method and technical terms. However, he developes an aptitude for technology in later episodes, and has been depicted hacking into computer systems.[50]

Relationships

[edit]

Women

[edit]

During the run of NCIS, Tony consistently speaks at great length about women. He pursues women on a regular basis, typically indiscriminately.[40] Most of these relationships fail to progress past a certain point and have occasionally ended with humorously disastrous results. He has admitted to having commitment issues.[40]

The show's writers make reference to one of Weatherly's real-life relationships in the episode "Hiatus (Part 1)" when he states, "I've got a better chance of hooking up with Jessica Alba...". Weatherly's real-life relationship with Alba occurred while both were performing on the television series Dark Angel.[51][relevant?] In a flashback in the episode "Baltimore" Tony mentions proposing to his high-school music teacher and long-term girlfriend Wendy. Wendy is introduced in the season nine episode "Secrets".[52][relevant?]

Abby Sciuto

[edit]

Tony has a friendly platonic relationship with Abby Sciuto. Abby describes this as progressive: "You're like a piercing, Tony. Takes a while for the throbbing to stop and the skin to grow back". The strength of their friendship was demonstrated when she helped clear his name after her assistant framed him for murder, or when he is seemingly killed in an explosion, or when he returns from his time as an agent afloat. Abby once states, "I love you, and would hate to see you hurt". She sometimes becomes upset with him, but these feelings are often resolved quickly. Abby shares Tony's love of movies which solidifies their friendship. When Gibbs is injured in the season three finale and retired during the first few episodes of season four, Tony is usually the one to bring her Caf-Pow (a highly caffeined energy drink).[relevant?] He is also protective of her, especially after Ari Haswari made an attempt on her life in "Kill Ari". While Abby was in a coma, Tony was very worried about her, to the point he did not make a joke about McGee's last name.[relevant?]

Dr. Jeanne Benoit

[edit]

In season four, Tony's new girlfriend, Dr. Jeanne Benoit, is introduced and appears as a recurring figure and subplot throughout the season. Tony initially wants to "take it slow" out of fear of their relationship becoming like his earlier ones.[21] They subsequently consummate their relationship in the episode "Smoked"[relevant?] and Tony takes inspiration from movies to make their relationship special.[citation needed] Despite good intentions, Tony is unable to tell Jeanne that he loves her,[53] until the death of a fellow agent convinces him to do so.[54]

In the episode "Angel of Death", it is revealed that Jeanne's father is a wanted arms dealer. In the episode "Bury Your Dead", it is revealed that Tony is using Jeanne to infiltrate an arms smuggling network. Jeanne leaves Tony a greeting card in her apartment, as she leaves the Washington, D.C. area. In the episode "Family", Tony is shown struggling with how his relationship with Jeanne ended, with flashbacks of their relationship. Ziva tries to console Tony, but he rejects her attempts, insisting that he is fine. Contemplating whether he should leave NCIS to be with Jeanne, he rejoins the team.

Jeanne reappears in the episode "Internal Affairs", when she accuses Tony of murdering her father. At the end of the episode, Tony apologizes for letting her get involved in something that was not her fault. Asked if their relationship was real, Tony answers "No". Jeanne then tells him she wishes she had never met him. In a conversation with Tara Kole,[55] Tony admits that, since his relationship with Jeanne ended, he has not been enjoying his normal level of success with women, despite his continued bravado to his co-workers.

In the episode "Saviors", Jeanne and Tony are shown to be on amicable terms. Later, in "Loose Cannons" Tony encounters Jeanne and her husband while investigating a case, where she worries about it being connected with her father. This proves to be correct, and they both struggle emotionally with the conflict that ended their relationship.[56]

Female Agents

[edit]

Special Agent Caitlin Todd

[edit]

Tony's relationship with Kate is depicted as a sibling rivalry. Kate is often critical of Tony's attitude towards women and his disrespect for personal boundaries.[57] In one episode, Tony sneaks into the bathroom while Kate was having a shower, to brush his teeth, which infuriates her.[58][relevant?] In "Bikini Wax", he threatens to expose a picture of Kate during a wet t-shirt contest. In the episode "Pop Life" they seek counseling for their bickering.

Tony buys flowers as a peace offering after annoying her in the episode "Vanished" and shows concern for her in "Left For Dead" and "Bête Noire", when she is held hostage by Ari. In the episode "The Bone Yard", Tony pretends to be Kate's lover. He appears close to jealousy when Kate accepts a date with the victim's brother in "Black Water". In "My Other Left Foot", Tony is obsessed by the idea of Kate having a tattoo and tries to ascertain its location. The producers state that it was intended for there to be a relationship between these two characters,[59] and the series creator Don Bellisario said that if Kate hadn't died, she and Tony would have embarked on a relationship at one point during the series. In the episode "SWAK", after Kate is found uninfected, she continues to stay with Tony, lying about her condition to him even though she knows that the risk of infection is still imminent. She is devastated as he seemed about to die, and relieved as he survives.[60][better source needed]

Kate's death would have a serious impact on Tony, which along with other events make Tony "grow up" during the following seasons. As shown in the episodes "Kill Ari 1 & 2", the team struggles to deal with the shooting, culminating in a scene in which Tony and McGee mourn over the dead body of their deceased colleague in Ducky's autopsy room. After Kate's death, like the other characters, DiNozzo also has a vision of her postmortem. Typical to Tony's chauvinistic personality, Kate appears in the Catholic schoolgirl uniform that he had been asking about in the episode "Bikini Wax". After telling him that she always knew what he was thinking, she realizes that she is wearing the uniform and quickly berates him. This "sexual fantasy" is portrayed after Tony offers to go back out in the pouring rain to find the bullet that killed Kate.[61]

In the season ten episode, "You Better Watch Out", Tony is shown to have a goldfish named Kate, whom he teases like his former partner (telling the fish she's "getting fat"), despite clearly doting on it.[citation needed]

Special Agent Ziva David

[edit]

Throughout seasons four to ten, Ziva and Tony exhibit a high level of chemistry. Although their relationship was not explicit until the beginning of season 11 when David left the show, the close bond between the two ultimately resulted in their daughter, Tali.

Special Agent E.J. Barrett

[edit]

E.J. is introduced in the season eight episode "One Last Score". She took the lead investigator position in Rota, Spain, which Tony declined.[62] Tony and E.J. begin a sexual relationship shortly after her arrival, much to the disapproval of Gibbs.[63]

In a flashback in the season nine premiere Nature of the Beast, Tony confronted E.J. about her removal of a microchip from the body of a victim of the Port-to-Port killer. Subsequently, Tony suffers memory loss and E.J. disappears while another agent is killed.[37] E.J. emerges from hiding in the episode "Housekeeping" and discusses events with Tony at a safe house while he is furious with her for her abrupt disappearance, but they go their separate ways after the killer is apprehended, with E.J. urging Tony to try to pursue a relationship with Ziva.[64]

NCIS Director Jenny Shepard

[edit]

In the fourth season, Tony's relationship with Jenny Shepard is shown to have warmed considerably in comparison to the end of the third season, with Tony occasionally being caught referring to her by her first name with even Gibbs joking about how close they were. This was due to Tony's involvement in an ongoing operation of personal importance to Shepard, in which they develop a strong level of trust. Their interactions become more frequent when Tony assumes Gibbs's responsibilities, and they become increasingly familiar as seen in the episode "Shalom". Tony was particularly upset at Shepard's death in "Judgment Day (Part 1)", and blames himself for following Shepard's instruction to abandon her protection detail.[39] In the episode "Agent Afloat", Ziva reveals that, in the aftermath of Shepard's death, Tony has been drinking out of guilt.

Male Agents

[edit]

Special Agent Leroy Jethro Gibbs

[edit]

Through flashbacks in the episode "Baltimore", it is shown that Tony first met Gibbs in 2001 when, as a Baltimore PD officer, Tony arrested an undercover Gibbs while they were investigating the same suspect in different cases. When Tony realized that his partner was corrupt, Gibbs took the opportunity to recruit Tony to NCIS and became a mentor to him.

Tony greatly respects Gibbs and claims to have a mentor/protégé or father/son relationship with him, a feeling supported by the "tough love" Gibbs often demonstrates. Gibbs has the tendency to smack Tony on the back of the head whenever he says or does something inappropriate, starting with the last flashback sequence of "Baltimore". Tony tolerates being smacked only by Gibbs, reacting angrily when this is done by Todd and Ziva.[65] When Gibbs starts "being nice" in the episode "Kill Ari (Part 1)", Tony irritates Gibbs until he elicits a slap to the back of the head.

Tony prides himself on knowing many of the military terms, acronyms, and slang that Gibbs regularly mimics.[66] Tony explains these to others (serving as exposition), as well as Gibbs's unorthodox interrogation techniques, often accurately predicting Gibbs's next moves. Throughout the first several seasons, Tony's coworkers remark that he is becoming more and more like Gibbs, much to Tony's annoyance.[67]

Emotionally scarred when his relationship with Jeanne Benoit ends, Tony begins confiding in Gibbs on personal issues, especially after DiNozzo Sr. is introduced in season seven and the frosty love-hate relationship between father and son is revealed.[68][69] Gibbs confronts DiNozzo Sr. about his lifelong neglect of his son and calls Tony the best young agent with whom he has ever worked.[70] Although he thinks very little of DiNozzo Sr., Gibbs does encourage the two to repair their relationship. As of season ten, Gibbs and DiNozzo Sr. are on friendlier terms.[26]

Special Agent Timothy McGee

[edit]

Tony's relationship with Timothy McGee was initially problematic. Tony largely ignored or degraded McGee's work and later began actively hazing McGee, as the least-experienced member of the team, from name-calling[71] to making McGee carry all the gear and equipment to a crime scene.[72] He would largely take advantage of McGee's naiveté and unfamiliarity with the team's "customs".[48][relevant?]

Contrary to appearances, Tony values his relationship with McGee, as seen in the episode "Probie", where Tony goes out of his way to support McGee and is the first to try to allay McGee's guilt after he accidentally shoots an undercover police officer. While Tony is the field leader, McGee becomes the senior field agent, and Tony shows him much more respect and confidence in his abilities.[71] In the seventh season, the relationship between the two agents is on a much more equal footing,[43] and Tony frequently calls McGee by his first name, Tim.[43]

By the eleventh season, Tony is a lot closer to McGee and they confide in one another. McGee is the one Tony tells that he has been attending a support group to get over the events of Ziva's departure and also goes to Tony for advice when he is considering asking his girlfriend to move in with him.

Reception

[edit]

DiNozzo was included[when?] in TV Guide's list of "TV's Sexiest Crime Fighters".[73] In November 2011, DiNozzo won TVLine's "Ultimate Male Law-Enforcement Crushes Bracket Tournament",[74] and Ziva David won the "Ultimate Female Law-Enforcement Crushes Bracket Tournament" a month later.[75]

His flirtation with Ziva received significant media coverage over the years, with the characters being referred to as a "power couple" by Entertainment Weekly.[76] In 2009, TV Guide dubbed their interactions "TV's hottest love-hate relationship"[77] and in 2012, they were listed in Entertainment Weekly's "30 Best 'Will They/Won't They?' TV Couples".[78] EW.com also included them in its list of 10 "TV pairs who have us hooked as they dance around their attraction".[79]

During the first season of NCIS in 2004, Ross Warneke of The Age described the character as "fearless but a bit wet behind the ears".[80] A year later, Bill Keveny from USA Today commented that DiNozzo was "competent but immature".[81] At the beginning of the third season, Noel Holston from Sun Sentinel described him as "a self-styled ladies' man, handsome yet hapless".[82]

In 2011, one critic from Slate called him a "womanizing doofus given to spouting movie trivia" but added that all the characters on the MCRT team (Tony, Gibbs, Ziva, and McGee) "are men and women of honor, heroes who have all made significant sacrifices for their country".[83] In 2012, Sandra Gonzalez from Entertainment Weekly wrote, "I have a deep appreciation for everything about Tony DiNozzo. I love his goofball ways, his pop culture references, and his endless supply of ways to get under McGee's skin. But like any perpetually lovable character on a TV drama, he also has a host of dark secrets, and when said secrets have a chance to come to the surface as part of a meaty and revealing storyline, it's a treat for us all."[84] He was referred to as a "charming goofball/special agent" by AOL TV's Michael Maloney in 2010.[7]

Catherine Lawson from The Huffington Post reported in August 2011 that Michael Weatherly was voted as number seven in the list of the top 10 most popular primetime TV stars. Pauley Perrette (Abby Sciuto) and Cote de Pablo (Ziva David) placed first and second, respectively. Additionally, Mark Harmon (Jethro Gibbs) and David McCallum (Ducky Mallard) were voted as numbers five and six.[8][dubiousdiscuss]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Voice Of Special Agent Anthony DiNozzo – NCIS: The Video Game | Behind The Voice Actors". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved September 25, 2017. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  2. ^ a b c "South by Southwest". NCIS. Season 6. Episode 17. February 24, 2009. CBS.
  3. ^ Season 3, Episode 15 "Head Case"
  4. ^ Season 3, Episode 9 "Frame Up"
  5. ^ "CBS Bio of Michael Weatherly". CBS. August 6, 2008. Archived from the original on March 6, 2009. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  6. ^ a b c NCIS Angel of Death 4x24 => Audio Commentary by Donald P. Bellisario (NCIS: The Fourth Season (DVD)). CBS Home Entertainment. 2007.
  7. ^ a b c "Michael Weatherly on His 'NCIS' TV Dad, Robert Wagner". AOL TV. January 12, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  8. ^ a b "'NCIS' Star Pauley Perrette Named Most Popular Primetime TV Star". HuffPost. Archived from the original on January 4, 2014. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  9. ^ Egner, Jeremy (January 6, 2016). "Michael Weatherly Leaving 'NCIS'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  10. ^ "Family First". NCIS. Season 13. Episode 24. May 17, 2016. Event occurs at 09:41. CBS. DiNozzo: "What do we know? What are the facts? 'Cause we don't assume, we verify. Do we know she's dead? 'Cause if we know she's dead, we're gonna get him." Gibbs: "Yeah, she's dead, and we will get Kort."
  11. ^ JAG (TV Series 1995–2005) – IMDb, retrieved November 29, 2022
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  17. ^ Williams, Scott (March 20, 2013). "INSIDER'S BLOG: "SEEK"". CBS. Archived from the original on April 1, 2013. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
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  20. ^ "Designated Target". NCIS. Season 5. Episode 8. November 13, 2007. CBS.
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  24. ^ "Keck's Exclusives: NCIS Reveals Tony's Movie Magic". TV Guide. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
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  28. ^ "Head Case". NCIS. Season 3. Episode 15. February 7, 2006. CBS.
  29. ^ "Conspiracy Theory". NCIS. Season 2. Episode 19. April 12, 2005. CBS.
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  31. ^ "Dead Man Talking". NCIS. Season 1. Episode 19. April 27, 2004. CBS.
  32. ^ Jacobs, Meredith (March 14, 2011). "'NCIS' character profile: Special Agent Anthony DiNozzo". Examiner.com.
  33. ^ "Frame Up". NCIS. Season 3. Episode 9. November 22, 2005. CBS. DiNozzo remarks that a particular incident occurred when he was at the Baltimore Police Department.
  34. ^ Season 1, Episode 2 "Hung Out to Dry"
  35. ^ Marsi, Steve (May 4, 2011). "NCIS Review: Baltimore's Finest". TV Fanatic. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  36. ^ Which 'NCIS' Character Would Make the Best Team Leader
  37. ^ a b Marsi, Steve (September 21, 2011). "NCIS Season Premiere Review: His Navy, My Team". TV Fanatic. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  38. ^ "Ice Queen". JAG. Season 8. Episode 20. April 22, 2003. CBS.
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