If we need to keep it American-focused in order to keep US viewers from changing TV channels, then show the following dogfights:
- June 1, 1944, Erich Hartmann shoots down four US Mustangs in a single mission over the Ploieşti oil fields
- October 25, 1944, Hiroyoshi Nishizawa shoots down two USN Hellcats (his 86th and 87th victories)
- October 6, 1951, Yevgeny Pepelyayev, shoots down two USAF F-86, plus a pair on both Nov 8 and Nov 28, and another on Nov 29.
- April 24 1967, Nguyen Van Bay shoots down a USN F-8C and a USN F-4B in a harrowing dog fight
These are top aces from their respective forces facing and actually winning against US and allied fighters. Let's have "Dogfights" include some of these pilots' stories and re-enactments. Surely even American viewers must be looking at this program and asking themselves can it be possible that the enemy pilots always sucked so badly compared to our boys?

Admiral Beez wrote:
. Early war
JNAF fighter units were very good, they didn't have in fact some simple achilles heal by which they could easily be defeated, that concept is IMO a
fossilized holdover of Allied propaganda/morale booster accounts during the war, also based on exaggerated Allied claims (though unlike some people today, the
Allies knew a lot of those claims were exaggerated via codebreaking). The unit encountered over Darwin in 1943, the 202nd Air Group, had compiled an excellent
record in 1942 (as the 3rd AG) and hadn't been committed to the Solomons in meantime, had at least a fair nucleus of the same pilots. It just wasn't
easy to beat; It had had months to consider the hit and run tactics 49th FG P-40's used against it over Darwin in 1942 with occasional success (though much
less than was claimed). And of course the IJN's own preferred fighter doctrine based on China pre Dec '41 was to emphasize hit and run tactics with
close cooperation among pilots of the 3 plane 'shotai' (though both hit and run and aerobatic type tactics were observed in 1942). It's not
surprising IMO that the change in tactics by Spits, which they claimed to have made in the later combats of that series over several months in 1943, didn't
reverse the situation. They were up against a very good fighter unit. The relatively moderate, in the big scheme of things, differences in Spit V and P-40
performance were probably not that important (as noted above the RAAF considered those two types about equal at low-med altitude, and the Spit was notoriously
more sensitive to primitive field conditions).