[[Image:VIP-M1911aaa.jpg|thumb|none|500px|An assassin at a Hollywood red carpet event aims his M1911A1 - 45 acp]]
[[Image:VIP-M1911aaa.jpg|thumb|none|500px|An assassin at a Hollywood red carpet event aims his M1911A1 - 45 acp]]
[[Image:VIP-NickelM1911DumpMagA.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Nikki Franco ([[Natalie Raitano]]) dumps her empty magazine after firing seven shots during a building siege - 45 acp]]
[[Image:VIP-NickelM1911DumpMagA.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Nikki Franco ([[Natalie Raitano]]) dumps her empty magazine after firing seven shots during a building siege - 45 acp]]
Revision as of 16:55, 6 December 2009
V.I.P. was a comedy action show by Sony Pictures Television that ran for four seasons on the UPN Network and was syndicated all over the United States. The show was intentionally campy and broad farce and captured the spirit of the 1990s with splashy colors and 'lightweight' villains (one of the last shows to elicit that "pre-9/11" feel). One thing the show had tons of was .... (no not girls in skimpy attire, which was the case) ... guns. And only on V.I.P. could Vallery's team have a full auto shoot out with bandits in the street and no vehicles or buildings are damaged. It was a low budgeted series and it showed, but the filmmakers kept up the light feel by not taking the show seriously at all.
The following guns were seen on the television show V.I.P.:
Seen in Season 1 - Episode 1 "Beats Working at a Hot Dog Stand", A Ruger MK II with integral Suppressor is the primary sidearm of Tasha Dexter (Molly Culver) - .22 LR.
Valmet M82A
Season 1 - Episode 2 "What to Do with Vallery When You're Dead" in the hands of one of Viktor Baleks' henchmen.
Ruger Mini 14
Season 1 - Episode 2 "What to Do with Vallery When You're Dead" in the hands of one of Viktor Baleks' henchmen in a factory folding stock.
Ruger AC556
Glock 17
The standard sidearm of Quick Williams (Shaun Baker) - 9mm.
Grendel P-12
Seen in Season 1 - Episode 1 "Beats Working at a Hot Dog Stand", Kay Simmons (Leah Lail) carries a grey colored Grendel P-12 pistol - .380 acp.
M60E3
Heckler & Koch MP5A3
Seen throughout the run of the show, this is a very commonly used firearm.
Heckler & Koch MP5K
AK-47
In Season 1 - Episode 1, A member of a gang of Diamond thieves uses a milled receiver AK-47 - 7.62x39mm
MGC-16 Replica rifle
M16A1
M16A1 with A2 Handguards
Seen in Season 1 - Episode 3 "One Wedding and Val's Funeral" used by Tasha Dexter and Quick Williams.
Remington 742
Season 1 - Episode 2 "What to Do with Vallery When You're Dead", Cyberjournalist Arnie Feign (Wayne Pére) takes a Remington 742 Semiautomatic deer rifle with a scope out a locker and uses it to attempt to scare off Vallery Irons.
Remington 870
Ingram MAC-11
Used by two female assassins in Season 1 - Episode 11 "Good Val Hunting".
C96 Broomhandle Mauser
Seen in Season 1 - Episode 11 "Good Val Hunting", used by Eric Collier (John D'Aquino). Collier's C96 is nickel plated.
Seeing as this pistol looks very shiny and almost brand-new, I'd assume it's a Chinese-made imitation. Real "Broomhandles" are relatively rare.
Beretta 92SB
Beretta 92FS
Mossberg 500 shotgun
Franchi SPAS-12 Shotgun
Winchester Model 1200 Shotgun
Commercial CAR-15 Variant
In Season 1 - Episode 1, diamond thieves use an unusual CAR-15 variant with a bayonet lug attached to the elongated flash hider. This is also used to mount a CM203 37mm launcher during some scenes.
Steyr AUG
SA Vz.61 Skorpion
Uzi Submachine Gun
Type 56-1
SWD Streetsweeper
M72A3 LAW Rocket
AT4
In Season 1 - Episode 1 "Beats Working at a Hot Dog Stand", "Militia Leader" Jackson Lasarr (Dean Norris) uses an M136 AT4 Launcher with a Night Vision scope mounted against the VIP team. Militia leader Lasarr is the head of the fictional "Texas Mad Dog Militia". In the 1990s the favorite and only politically correct 'bogeyman' of Hollywood was the "White Christian Male Militia Member". But to be fair to V.I.P., wide shots of Lasarr's "anti Government" fringe group seem to have Hispanic, Asian and African American members as well, so they are an Equal opportunity fringe group.
Browning Baby 25
To be sorted
It actually looks a bit like a CZ-82 with a suppressor. I see now the hammer isn't a ring like I thought, so this gun matches it more now. - Gunmaster45