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The Twilight Zone

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0 Views · 2 years ago

A young (24/25-year-old) Robert Redford in his second year of acting for Film/Television guest-starred in an episode of The Twilight Zone. First appearing to a little aged recluse of a lady, who is afraid of contact with the outside of her abandoned/condemned building as a wounded police officer in order to gain her trust to show her that there really is nothing to be afraid of, nothing that wasn't there before in the dark that wouldn't have been there with the lights on. Turns out to actually be the thing she was initially afraid of. The Prince of Darkness himself, at the end with a little coaxing she who in the end appears to potentially be the mother of a young man who passed before she had comes to realize exactly what he wanted her too, that he isn't anything to be afraid of and will do what he can do to help ease the fear of the unknown. And come on, we can't lie, can we? Who wouldn't trust him or want to trust him even if he is a little aloof with that wink and the gentleness he possesses?
#TwilightZone #FearOfTheUnknown #LittleHelp #Death
First Aired: January 5, 1962
Recorded: June 23, 2020
No copyright infringement intended, Uploaded for entertainment purposes only.

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0 Views · 2 years ago

Janet Tyler (Donna Douglas) learns that she's not like the other girls. Check back each Thursday for more Twilight Zone Classic videos. Stream The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

There is a fifth dimension, beyond that which is known to man. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition, and it lies between the pit of man's fears and the summit of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area which we call The Twilight Zone.

— Rod Serling


The Twilight Zone premiered the night of October 2, 1959, to rave reviews. "Twilight Zone is about the only show on the air that I actually look forward to seeing. It's the one series that I will let interfere with other plans", said Terry Turner for the Chicago Daily News. Others agreed. Daily Variety ranked it with "the best that has ever been accomplished in half-hour filmed television" and the New York Herald Tribune found the show to be "certainly the best and most original anthology series of the year".

Even as the show proved popular to television's critics, it struggled to find a receptive audience of television viewers. CBS was banking on a rating of at least 21 or 22, but its initial numbers were much worse. The series' future was jeopardized when its third episode, "Mr. Denton on Doomsday" earned a 16.3 rating. Still, the show attracted a large enough audience to survive a brief hiatus in November, after which it finally surpassed its competition on ABC and NBC and convinced its sponsors (General Foods and Kimberly-Clark) to stay on until the end of the season.

With one exception ("The Chaser"), the first season featured scripts written only by Rod Serling, Charles Beaumont or Richard Matheson. These three were responsible for 127 of the 156 episodes in the series. Additionally, with one exception ("A World of His Own"), Serling never appeared on camera during any first-season episode (as he would in future seasons), and was present only as a voice-over narrator. Serling did appear on screen in Twilight Zone promotional spots plugging the following week's episode – just not in the episodes themselves. These promo spots were unseen for several decades after their initial airings; while many have been released in the DVD and Blu-ray releases of The Twilight Zone, a few are lost completely and some survive only as audio tracks. Most are available through CBS All Access when watching the full episodes.

Many of the season's episodes proved to be among the series' most celebrated, including "Time Enough at Last," "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street," "Walking Distance," and "The After Hours." The first season won Serling an unprecedented fourth Emmy Award for dramatic writing, a Producers Guild Award for Serling's creative partner Buck Houghton, a Directors Guild Award for John Brahm and the Hugo Award for best dramatic presentation.

Bernard Herrmann's original opening theme music lasted throughout the first season. For the final four episodes of the season, the show's original surrealist "pit and summit" opening montage and narration was replaced by a piece featuring a blinking eye and shorter narration, and a truncated version of Herrmann's theme.

Some first-season episodes were available for decades only in a version with a pasted-on second-season opening. These "re-themed" episodes were prepared for airing in the summer of 1961 as summer repeats; the producers wanted to have a consistent opening for the show every week. During the original 1959/60 run, Herrmann's theme was used in every first-season episode. The first season openings for these episodes have since been restored to recent DVD and Blu-ray reissues.

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0 Views · 2 years ago

season 03 | episode 30 |.
"Stopover in a Quiet Town" is episode 150 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone starring Barry Nelson and Nancy Malone. It originally aired on April 24, 1964.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/....Stopover_in_a_Quiet_
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tWIcARDs - best words from The Twilight Zone:
https://youtube.com/playlist?l....ist=PLWh2Ndq_nOI5zrO
tWILIGHT cUTs:
https://youtube.com/playlist?l....ist=PLWh2Ndq_nOI60Oh
FULL EPISODEs:
https://youtube.com/playlist?l....ist=PLWh2Ndq_nOI6Qmt
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GIVE PEACE A CHANCE. - Plastic Ono Band - John Lennon
https://youtu.be/C3_0GqPvr4U
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S05e30 - The Twilight Zone - Stopover In A Quiet Town -
#fantasy #twilightzone #supernatural

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This site is for educational purposes only!!

Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
All rights belong and go to their respective owners
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Media
1 Views · 2 years ago

Retirement home resident Roger Simpson Leads has nightmares of an unknown woman being stalked. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

The Twilight Zone debuted the night of September 27, 1985 to a generally warm reception: it won its Friday-night time slot in four of its first five weeks. Episodes featured adaptations of stories by Harlan Ellison (whose "Shatterday", adapted by Alan Brennert, launched the new series), Greg Bear, Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert McCammon, and Stephen King. A new batch of scripts was supplemented with remakes of classic Twilight Zone episodes like "Dead Man's Shoes", "Shadow Play", and "Night of the Meek". Ratings began to slide. "You have not known humiliation until you have been beaten by Webster and Mr. Belvedere", said executive story consultant Alan Brennert.

Wes Craven directed several episodes including "Shatterday", "A Little Peace and Quiet", "Wordplay", and "Chameleon".

Other first-season episodes included "Healer", "Dreams for Sale" "Examination Day" "Children's Zoo", "Kentucky Rye" "Nightcrawlers" and "Paladin of the Lost Hour" , an episode written By Harlan Ellison which won the 1987 Writers Guild of America Award for Anthology Episode/Single Program. Ellison also adapted a Stephen King short story, "Gramma", which was favourably reviewed.

The DVD release includes several episode commentaries by Executive Producer Philip Deguere. On these DVD extras, he states that CBS initially told him the show would air at 10 PM and therefore the earliest episodes were written with that time slot in mind. The late and unexpected rescheduling of the show to the 8 PM family viewing time slot resulted in the broadcast of the first six episodes in a time slot Mr. Deguere states were inappropriate for their content. He attributes the intensity of the earliest aired episodes, considered by him as not the best fare to be broadcast during family viewing time slot, as the reason why the series ratings dropped and never recovered.

That the show's producers had even managed to hire Harlan Ellison was considered by many[who?] to be nothing short of miraculous; Ellison was an extremely vocal critic of television who had already published two collections of essays on the subject, "concluding that to work in television is akin to putting in time in the Egyptian House of the Dead." These feelings surfaced once again when the script he submitted for Twilight Zone's Christmas special—an adaptation of Donald E. Westlake's 1964 story "Nackles", in which an obnoxious and mean-spirited drunk frightens his children with stories of a malicious anti-Santa Claus—was rejected by CBS' West Coast Program Practices. The segment, which was to be Ellison's directorial debut, was halted in mid-production. This cost the program between $150,000 and $300,000 and Ellison's services as a creative consultant.[citation needed] "[Their] suggestions were vile, infamous!" Ellison recalled of his aborted attempts to change the network's mind. On the DVD release, Mr. Ellison further expounds on his experiences during four audio commentaries to four of his stories that were adapted for the show.

The "Nackles" incident generated a flurry of press which ultimately proved inadequate to revive public interest in the series. "I can see why people who were expecting The Twilight Zone were disappointed with it," said staff writer Michael Cassutt of the show's low ratings. "...our show always seemed uneven to me. There were episodes perfectly in keeping with The Twilight Zone spirit, and then others that could have been from The Outer Limits or from anything."[citation needed] Despite poor ratings, The Twilight Zone was renewed for a second season in early 1986.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

"Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" - episode 123 of The Twilight Zone (aired 1963)
Based on short story by Richard Matheson
Directed by Richard Donner
Narrated by Rod Serling
William Shatner as the passenger.
"Nightmare at 20,0000 Feet" - segment 4 of TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE (1983)
Directed by George Miller
Narrated by Burgess Meredith
John Lithgow as the passenger
#twilightzone #theTwilightZone #jordanpeele
SUBSCRIBE for more: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCRYdf6gRJvxI_5NnH Thank you!
"Mashup at 20,000 Feet" - edited by Mike Frenden

A remake of this has been announced! Adam Scott will this time play the passenger.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

"Dealer's Choice" is the third segment of the eighth episode of the first season of the television series The Twilight Zone. Featuring an ensemble cast composed largely of veteran character actors, it follows the events of a poker night in which one of the players is secretly the Devil.


tyranny, pope false prophet, ronald reagan, george bush, bill clinton, hillary clinton, Barack Obama, donald trump, joe biden, kamala harris, passport, lockdown, yes we can = thank you satan, Holy Spirit, Matrix, Madela effect, moon cube matrix soul trap, apocalypse, truman show, they live, evil lies, bill gates, jeffrey epstein, dark winter, delta variant, dr.fauci, kary mullis, david icke, alex jones, booster, manchurian candidate, society is brainwashed, 5g, pyramids, sphinx, black sun, andrenochrome, chosen, enoch, righteous, justice, truth, interdimensional, old soul, book of life, mark of the beast, Anunnaki, Nibiru, Planet X, Saturn, Babylon, YHWH, FDA, CDC, 6 minutes 6 days 6 weeks, zombie, twilight zone, 9/11, skull and bones, mk ultra, Australian pilot program, vax that thang up, beast system, multiverse, protected need to be protected from the unprotected, track citizens, gang stalking, star seeds, light warriors, twin flames, James Frewen, Putin, Gog, Magog, Bohemian Grove, Molech, Moloch, Baphomet, follow the science, ufo, uso, orb, osama bin laden, saddam hussein, atlantis, gobekli tepe, martial law, no rights, 1984, dystopian, left behind, rapture, npc, decepticons, disney, fema, manifest, lucifer, satan, devil, darkness, mib, john kerry, al gore, predictive programming, horus, all seeing eye, dionysus, ishtar, adam eve, lilith, paradise lost, queen semiramis, royal bloodline, lost tribes, maga, 8 kings, trumpets, trumppence, mabus, nostradamus, vision, prophecy, dream, son of perdition, lawless one, do not comply, sumerians, antarctica, disclosure, 11:11, 144, lebron james, freedom, great reset, agenda 21, snake in the grass, Jesus Christ, Yeshua, Y'shua, Joshua, yehōshu'a, Yahshuah, NWO, New World Order, 666, 144,000, The Chosen, antichrist, anti christ, star wars, illuminati, devil

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

Would-be inventor Barney Schlessinger ("NORM!!!!") is bored with his life until he meets another inventor in a parallel world. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

The Misfortune Cookie lands on the plate of arrogant food critic Harry Folger when he writes a negative review of Mr. Lee's Chinese restaurant without tasting the food first. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

The Twilight Zone debuted the night of September 27, 1985 to a generally warm reception: it won its Friday-night time slot in four of its first five weeks. Episodes featured adaptations of stories by Harlan Ellison (whose "Shatterday", adapted by Alan Brennert, launched the new series), Greg Bear, Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert McCammon, and Stephen King. A new batch of scripts was supplemented with remakes of classic Twilight Zone episodes like "Dead Man's Shoes", "Shadow Play", and "Night of the Meek". Ratings began to slide. "You have not known humiliation until you have been beaten by Webster and Mr. Belvedere", said executive story consultant Alan Brennert.

Wes Craven directed several episodes including "Shatterday", "A Little Peace and Quiet", "Wordplay", and "Chameleon".

Other first-season episodes included "Healer", "Dreams for Sale" "Examination Day" "Children's Zoo", "Kentucky Rye" "Nightcrawlers" and "Paladin of the Lost Hour" , an episode written By Harlan Ellison which won the 1987 Writers Guild of America Award for Anthology Episode/Single Program. Ellison also adapted a Stephen King short story, "Gramma", which was favourably reviewed.

The DVD release includes several episode commentaries by Executive Producer Philip Deguere. On these DVD extras, he states that CBS initially told him the show would air at 10 PM and therefore the earliest episodes were written with that time slot in mind. The late and unexpected rescheduling of the show to the 8 PM family viewing time slot resulted in the broadcast of the first six episodes in a time slot Mr. Deguere states were inappropriate for their content. He attributes the intensity of the earliest aired episodes, considered by him as not the best fare to be broadcast during family viewing time slot, as the reason why the series ratings dropped and never recovered.

That the show's producers had even managed to hire Harlan Ellison was considered by many[who?] to be nothing short of miraculous; Ellison was an extremely vocal critic of television who had already published two collections of essays on the subject, "concluding that to work in television is akin to putting in time in the Egyptian House of the Dead." These feelings surfaced once again when the script he submitted for Twilight Zone's Christmas special—an adaptation of Donald E. Westlake's 1964 story "Nackles", in which an obnoxious and mean-spirited drunk frightens his children with stories of a malicious anti-Santa Claus—was rejected by CBS' West Coast Program Practices. The segment, which was to be Ellison's directorial debut, was halted in mid-production. This cost the program between $150,000 and $300,000 and Ellison's services as a creative consultant.[citation needed] "[Their] suggestions were vile, infamous!" Ellison recalled of his aborted attempts to change the network's mind. On the DVD release, Mr. Ellison further expounds on his experiences during four audio commentaries to four of his stories that were adapted for the show.

The "Nackles" incident generated a flurry of press which ultimately proved inadequate to revive public interest in the series. "I can see why people who were expecting The Twilight Zone were disappointed with it," said staff writer Michael Cassutt of the show's low ratings. "...our show always seemed uneven to me. There were episodes perfectly in keeping with The Twilight Zone spirit, and then others that could have been from The Outer Limits or from anything."[citation needed] Despite poor ratings, The Twilight Zone was renewed for a second season in early 1986.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

"Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" - episode 123 of The Twilight Zone (aired 1963)
Based on short story by Richard Matheson
Directed by Richard Donner
Narrated by Rod Serling
William Shatner as the passenger.
"Nightmare at 20,0000 Feet" - segment 4 of TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE (1983)
Directed by George Miller
Narrated by Burgess Meredith
John Lithgow as the passenger
#twilightzone #theTwilightZone #jordanpeele
SUBSCRIBE for more: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCRYdf6gRJvxI_5NnH Thank you!
"Mashup at 20,000 Feet" - edited by Mike Frenden

A remake of this has been announced! Adam Scott will this time play the passenger.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

"Dealer's Choice" is the third segment of the eighth episode of the first season of the television series The Twilight Zone. Featuring an ensemble cast composed largely of veteran character actors, it follows the events of a poker night in which one of the players is secretly the Devil.


tyranny, pope false prophet, ronald reagan, george bush, bill clinton, hillary clinton, Barack Obama, donald trump, joe biden, kamala harris, passport, lockdown, yes we can = thank you satan, Holy Spirit, Matrix, Madela effect, moon cube matrix soul trap, apocalypse, truman show, they live, evil lies, bill gates, jeffrey epstein, dark winter, delta variant, dr.fauci, kary mullis, david icke, alex jones, booster, manchurian candidate, society is brainwashed, 5g, pyramids, sphinx, black sun, andrenochrome, chosen, enoch, righteous, justice, truth, interdimensional, old soul, book of life, mark of the beast, Anunnaki, Nibiru, Planet X, Saturn, Babylon, YHWH, FDA, CDC, 6 minutes 6 days 6 weeks, zombie, twilight zone, 9/11, skull and bones, mk ultra, Australian pilot program, vax that thang up, beast system, multiverse, protected need to be protected from the unprotected, track citizens, gang stalking, star seeds, light warriors, twin flames, James Frewen, Putin, Gog, Magog, Bohemian Grove, Molech, Moloch, Baphomet, follow the science, ufo, uso, orb, osama bin laden, saddam hussein, atlantis, gobekli tepe, martial law, no rights, 1984, dystopian, left behind, rapture, npc, decepticons, disney, fema, manifest, lucifer, satan, devil, darkness, mib, john kerry, al gore, predictive programming, horus, all seeing eye, dionysus, ishtar, adam eve, lilith, paradise lost, queen semiramis, royal bloodline, lost tribes, maga, 8 kings, trumpets, trumppence, mabus, nostradamus, vision, prophecy, dream, son of perdition, lawless one, do not comply, sumerians, antarctica, disclosure, 11:11, 144, lebron james, freedom, great reset, agenda 21, snake in the grass, Jesus Christ, Yeshua, Y'shua, Joshua, yehōshu'a, Yahshuah, NWO, New World Order, 666, 144,000, The Chosen, antichrist, anti christ, star wars, illuminati, devil

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

A church handyman discovers a magic scale model that gives him the power to help his small town, but the mayor takes all the credit for his good intentions.

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Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

The Misfortune Cookie lands on the plate of arrogant food critic Harry Folger when he writes a negative review of Mr. Lee's Chinese restaurant without tasting the food first. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

Registered nurse Claire Hendricks believes that there is a deeper reason why blindness is spreading quickly through her community. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use"
for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

In the sequel to the 1961 episode, "It's a Good Life", Anthony Fremont—the young boy (Bill Mumy) who once terrorized his town with his amazing mental powers—is now a man and the proud father of a little girl (Liliana Mumy) whose mental powers are stronger than his.

Media
0 Views · 2 years ago

A compulsive gambler (Eddie Kaye Thomas) who mysteriously learns how to travel back in time, believes he has found a sure bet to win big at the casinos. He soon discovers, however, that everything is a gamble




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