No, but I'm sure I've seen similar on THC, Discovery and other yadda-yaddas.
Here's the thing: If a person believes in the God of Christianity (I do), and can reach a point where there is comprehension that a God is so all-powerful as to be outside of the constraints of time, and create everything…
Then such a God is certainly powerful enough to bestow us with His words and make sure that, however it must occur, His un-diluted message is the same today as it was a thousand years ago.
People rant on about "can't prove who wrote the Bible," or "it was written 300 years later," etc. My reply is, "So, nu?" Who cares? Paul's letters, for instance, may just as easily been transcribed by a later penman from the originals that have been lost to history, rather than originally authored decades later. Or, just as easily, it may be that the original author is recording the oral traditions of what was passed down. Christianity was, at its inception, a very persecuted religion and keeping records would likely have been, for many, a severe penalty (possibly death sentence). That kind of pressure doesn't condone good written record-keeping, but it does foster close attention to keeping the spoken word accurate.
We'll never know in this lifetime. That's part of the reason why it's called faith. To believe, without seeing.
Kinda like physicists and their big bang theory.