Courage Wears Two Uniforms
Baseball's Greatest Heroes
In Partnership with the National Baseball Hall of Fame
The Series Opening
It's a fighter plane, from the pilot's eye and it's flying over Korea... slow and sunny and then bang! Wham! Boom! The biggest g--damn explosion you ever saw... and then it goes dark. Dark! For maybe 10 seconds... And then when it comes back, there's the ballpark. And the crowd. Roaring. And that's how it's supposed to begin. Ted Williams to Richard Ben Cramer
This is how HOME & AWAY begins.
The Opportunity
A four-part premium limited series for America's 250th anniversary.
The never-before-told stories of 70 Baseball Hall of Famers who served in wartime — from the Civil War through Korea. In partnership with the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The America 250 window doesn't come again for 250 years.
What we need: The voice.
The Constant
The one constant through all the years has been baseball. America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It has been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt and erased again. But baseball has marked the time. James Earl Jones, Field of Dreams
The Series
Ten stories drawn from the 70 Hall of Famers who served—with every name honored through roll-call interstitials and plaque medallion reveals. From a Civil War Christmas to a burning cockpit over Korea. Branch Rickey’s decisions echo across every generation between. Restored archival footage. Living archive photography. The voices of those who were there.
Episode One — League Championship Series Premiere
Yogi Berra • Jack Buck • Joe Garagiola
The pattern begins in 1862: baseball spreading through Civil War camps, binding a broken nation. Morgan G. Bulkeley, 13th New York Militia, survives to become first president of the National League. The only Civil War veteran in Cooperstown. France, 1918: Branch Rickey commanding Ty Cobb and Christy Mathewson in the Chemical Warfare Service. Mathewson inhales mustard gas. Dead at 45. War changed them all. Elizabeth Avenue, St. Louis. Italian immigrant neighborhood. Yogi at 5447, Joey at 5446, playing catch across the street. A thousand miles away in Cleveland, a kid named Jack Buck dreams of a life in baseball—not knowing a German bridge will connect him to this street forever. Rickey lowballs Yogi at the Cardinals tryout. The Yankees match. His mistake sends Berra toward pinstripe immortality. But history wasn't done with Rickey.
Episode One — Continued
June 6, 1944 — Utah Beach
Then Pearl Harbor. Jackie Robinson is on the SS Lurline when the crew starts painting the windows black. Draft notices. Enlistment lines. Ballplayers signing up. And on D-Day, a 19-year-old catcher named Lawrence Peter Berra mans a machine gun on a 36-foot LCSS rocket boat at Utah Beach. The crews called them Landing Craft Suicide Squad. "Being a young guy, I thought it was like the Fourth of July." Fifty years of silence followed. The philosopher of baseball earned his wisdom in horror. The man who saw humanity at its worst chose joy anyway.
Episode Two — World Series Games 1-2
Jackie Robinson • Larry Doby • Hank Greenberg
Three men who faced prejudice in their own uniforms before facing the enemy abroad. Jackie Robinson refused to move to the back of an Army bus at Fort Hood. Court-martialed. Acquitted. The courage forged in that courtroom changed America. Larry Doby integrated the American League eleven weeks after Jackie, with none of the fanfare. Hank Greenberg hit home runs against Hitler. And the man who signed Jackie: Branch Rickey. The same WWI veteran who commanded Cobb and Mathewson. War taught him what sacrifice looked like.
Episode Three — World Series Games 5-6
Warren Spahn • Monte Irvin • Engineers at War
Two future Hall of Famers. Same theater. Different wars within the war. Warren Spahn, combat engineer, Battle of the Bulge, wounded at Remagen Bridge—the only intact crossing over the Rhine. The only MLB player to receive a battlefield commission. Monte Irvin, 1313th Engineer General Service Regiment—a Negro Leagues legend assigned to a segregated unit, denied the combat role his talent demanded. Same hell, different cages. Jack Buck returns. The voice we met in Episode 1 was wounded at the same bridge. The threads of this tapestry weave tighter.
Episode Four — Veterans Day 2026
Ted Williams • Jerry Coleman • Marine Pilots
We return to where we began. Ted Williams. Called to serve twice. Thirty-nine combat missions in Korea, more than half as wingman to John Glenn. February 16, 1953: his F9F Panther takes heavy fire. Plane on fire. He belly-lands at 200 mph. Watching from the runway: Jerry Coleman. Yankees second baseman. The only MLB player to see combat in both World War II and Korea. As Williams emerged, Coleman called out: “Hey Ted, that’s a lot faster than you ever ran around the bases!” The explosion that began our story finds its answer in one defiant crack of his bat.
Talent Target
Every element is in place. The Hall of Fame partnership. The Emmy-winning team. The once-in-a-lifetime premiere windows. What we need is the voice that brings these stories to life.
Talent Target — UTA
The Action Hero Who Means It
Chris Pratt doesn't play soldiers. He honors them. The Terminal List wasn't a paycheck—it was a mission. He trained with Navy SEALs, insisted on tactical authenticity, and publicly credited the military community that embraced the show. That's not acting. That's conviction.
HOME & AWAY needs a narrator who can carry both the humor of Yogi Berra at 19 and the silence of Ted Williams walking away from a burning cockpit. Pratt has the range—from the warmth that made Star-Lord a global icon to the gravity that made James Reece feel real. He brings something no other name on this list does: a massive audience that trusts him, and a personal connection to service that goes beyond a role.
He's also the biggest box office draw on this deck. For distribution conversations, that matters.
| Military | The Terminal List — trained with SEALs, championed by the military community. Zero Dark Thirty proved he belongs in the conversation about serious military storytelling. |
| Reach | Guardians of the Galaxy, Jurassic World — one of the most bankable stars on Earth. Brings a distribution audience that accelerates platform conversations. |
| Faith | Publicly faith-driven. The stories in HOME & AWAY are about men who believed in something bigger than themselves. Pratt's audience identifies with that. |
| Versatility | Comedy to drama, blockbuster to indie. Can narrate Berra's humor and Williams's fury in the same breath. |
The Format
We are actively packaging talent in parallel with sponsor and distribution conversations. Talent attachment is part of closing the financing and platform path.
The Team
The Close
When you sit down in the theater and the lights go off... what's the first g--damn thing you see? Ted Williams to Richard Ben Cramer
70 Baseball Hall of Famers served in wartime. Their stories have never been told at this scale. The Hall of Fame is in. The America 250 window is open. The Navy named a warship for them — USS Cooperstown, “America’s Away Team.” Four episodes. LCS through Veterans Day.
All we need is your voice.