Yes, my point was that a quantum leap in metamaterial application, if achieved, may well not be publicly acknowledged in detail.
As for assertions of a world first, maybe I'm a jaded cynic, but that invariably arouses my suspicions. If you do some research, it so often turns out that somebody else has been doing it for ages (even when the claim originates in the specialised press rather than mass media) that it's not even funny. I mean, Kinzhal is the world's first air-launched ballistic missile, Gutenberg invented movable type and GE pioneered swept fan blades & 3D compressor aerodynamics*, right?
* A favourite example of mine - poorly known, but extremely impressive. I'd rather not digress, but can certainly elaborate if there is interest.
Tbh whether the CCTV documentary statement of the application of the material being a "world first" is true or false isn't that important in the scheme of things, so much as whether it is actually a product that is being implemented on the aircraft or not.
As for whether it may be acknowledged in detail or not -- I think the documentary was definitely not acknowledging it "in detail". It's definitely not something produced that is intended to convince anyone that may be skeptical of such a claim.