The Twilight Zone was a popular American anthology series. The series was a collection of various tales that range from the tragic to the comedic. They may be scary or just thought-provoking. Most episodes have unexpected endings and a moral lesson. But, no matter what, it's "a journey into a wondrous land, whose boundaries are that of the imagination."
Season | From | To | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
All Seasons | |||
Specials | January 1955 | January 2000 | 39 |
Season 1 | October 1959 | July 1960 | 36 |
Season 2 | September 1960 | June 1961 | 29 |
Season 3 | September 1961 | June 1962 | 37 |
Season 4 | January 1963 | May 1963 | 18 |
Season 5 | September 1963 | June 1964 | 36 |
Unassigned Episodes | 2 |
Season | From | To | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
Specials | 0 | ||
Unassigned Episodes | 197 |
Season | From | To | Episodes |
---|---|---|---|
Season 1 | October 1959 | June 1964 | 156 |
Unassigned Episodes | 41 |
Name | Number of Episodes | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Rod Serling | 96 | 11/24/1958 - 05/19/1994 | |
Charles Beaumont | 21 | 11/27/1959 - 03/06/1964 | |
Richard Matheson | 17 | 12/11/1959 - 05/19/1994 | |
Earl Hamner Jr. | 8 | 01/26/1962 - 06/19/1964 | |
George Clayton Johnson | 7 | 01/01/1960 - 12/20/1963 | |
Jerry Sohl | 3 | 04/04/1963 - 03/06/1964 | |
Bill Idelson | 2 | 03/31/1961 | |
Frederick Louis Fox | 2 | 02/02/1962 - 04/13/1962 | |
Henry Slesar | 2 | 11/08/1963 - 01/17/1964 | |
Oceo Ritch | 2 | 03/10/1961 - 01/19/1962 | |
Martin M. Goldsmith | 2 | 03/13/1964 - 05/01/1964 | |
Price Day | 1 | 04/06/1962 | |
C.L. Moore | 1 | 12/25/1959 | |
Lou Holtz | 1 | 12/13/1963 | |
Madelon Champion | 1 | 01/15/1960 | |
Michael D. Rosenthal | 1 | 10/18/1963 | |
Anthony Wilson | 1 | 05/22/1964 | |
Bernard C. Schoenfeld | 1 | 02/14/1964 | |
Damon Knight | 1 | 03/02/1962 | |
John Collier | 1 | 05/13/1960 | |
Sam Rolfe | 1 | 12/29/1961 | |
Mike Korologos | 1 | 05/08/1964 | |
Ambrose Bierce | 1 | 02/28/1964 | |
Lynn Venable | 1 | 11/20/1959 | |
Reginald Rose | 1 | 04/18/1963 | |
Malcolm Jameson | 1 | 04/11/1963 | |
Lucille Fletcher | 1 | 01/22/1960 | |
Robert Presnell Jr. | 1 | 05/13/1960 | |
Jerome Bixby | 1 | 11/03/1961 | |
John Furia Jr. | 1 | 03/21/1963 | |
Marvin Petal | 1 | 12/22/1961 | |
A.T. Strassfield | 1 | 04/10/1964 | |
John Tomerlin | 1 | 01/24/1964 | |
Henry Kuttner | 1 | 12/25/1959 | |
Lee Polk | 1 | 05/04/1962 | |
Ray Bradbury | 1 | 05/18/1962 | |
Paul W. Fairman | 1 | 03/25/1960 | |
Manly Wade Wellman | 1 | 11/24/1961 | |
Jerry McNeely | 1 | 01/17/1964 | |
Richard De Roy | 1 | 12/20/1963 | |
E. Jack Neuman | 1 | 12/09/1960 |
Name | Number of Episodes | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
John Brahm | 12 | 11/20/1959 - 03/06/1964 | |
Douglas Heyes | 10 | 12/11/1959 - 01/27/1961 | |
Buzz Kulik | 9 | 09/30/1960 - 05/02/1963 | |
Lamont Johnson | 8 | 09/29/1961 - 05/09/1963 | |
Montgomery Pittman | 8 | 05/26/1961 - 02/23/1962 | |
Richard L. Bare | 7 | 01/08/1960 - 03/13/1964 | |
Richard Donner | 6 | 10/11/1963 - 05/22/1964 | |
James Sheldon | 6 | 01/20/1961 - 05/18/1962 | |
Don Medford | 5 | 05/20/1960 - 02/07/1963 | |
Joseph M. Newman | 4 | 09/27/1963 - 06/19/1964 | |
Alan Crosland Jr. | 4 | 03/14/1963 - 12/27/1963 | |
Alvin Ganzer | 4 | 12/25/1959 - 06/17/1960 | |
Ted Post | 4 | 03/11/1960 - 05/29/1964 | |
Jack Smight | 4 | 11/13/1959 - 02/10/1961 | |
Elliot Silverstein | 4 | 06/02/1961 - 02/21/1964 | |
William F. Claxton | 4 | 02/05/1960 - 05/18/1962 | |
Abner Biberman | 4 | 05/04/1962 - 03/27/1964 | |
Robert Parrish | 3 | 10/09/1959 - 06/17/1960 | |
Justus Addiss | 3 | 02/24/1961 - 03/07/1963 | |
Mitchell Leisen | 3 | 10/23/1959 - 03/25/1960 | |
Robert Florey | 3 | 11/27/1959 - 01/10/1964 | |
David Orrick McDearmon | 3 | 04/01/1960 - 01/13/1961 | |
Ron Winston | 3 | 03/04/1960 - 04/24/1964 | |
Stuart Rosenberg | 3 | 01/15/1960 - 01/31/1963 | |
Perry Lafferty | 3 | 01/03/1963 - 01/17/1963 | |
Christian Nyby | 2 | 02/02/1962 - 05/25/1962 | |
Ida Lupino | 2 | 03/20/1964 | |
Robert Stevens | 2 | 10/02/1959 - 10/30/1959 | |
Robert Butler | 2 | 04/10/1964 - 05/01/1964 | |
Don Siegel | 2 | 11/15/1963 - 01/17/1964 | |
John Rich | 2 | 12/16/1960 - 10/18/1963 | |
Allen Reisner | 2 | 11/24/1958 - 10/16/1959 | |
Robert Enrico | 2 | 02/28/1964 | |
Boris Sagal | 2 | 04/28/1961 - 09/22/1961 | |
Anton Leader | 2 | 03/18/1960 - 11/17/1961 | |
Richard C. Sarafian | 1 | 11/01/1963 | |
Jacques Tourneur | 1 | 02/07/1964 | |
Norman Z. McLeod | 1 | 12/15/1961 | |
Ralph Senensky | 1 | 02/28/1963 | |
Harold D. Schuster | 1 | 01/26/1962 | |
Paul Stewart | 1 | 03/16/1962 | |
Allen H. Miner | 1 | 04/27/1962 | |
Robert Ellis Miller | 1 | 06/01/1962 | |
David Greene | 1 | 02/16/1962 | |
William Asher | 1 | 06/03/1960 | |
David Lowell Rich | 1 | 04/11/1963 | |
Roger Kay | 1 | 12/20/1963 | |
Robert Gist | 1 | 03/21/1963 | |
Ralph Nelson | 1 | 07/01/1960 | |
Robert Markowitz | 1 | 05/19/1994 | |
Don Weis | 1 | 10/04/1963 | |
Joe Dante | 1 | 06/24/1983 | |
David Butler | 1 | 05/23/1963 | |
Walter Grauman | 1 | 02/21/1963 | |
Bernard Girard | 1 | 12/13/1963 |
No lists.
A ranking of the most game-changing, side-splitting, tear-jerking, mind-blowing, world-building, genre-busting programs in television history, from the medium’s inception in the early 20th century through the ever-metastasizing era of Peak TV BY ALAN SEPINWALL
We are what we watch-and over the last half century, we've watched some pretty fabulous TV. From Mary to Jerry, from Tonight to Today, from the sublime (Prime Suspect) to the ridiculous (Gilligan's Island), EW recalls everything you need to know about 100 shows that tell us who we are.
What makes a great television show? There may be as many types of excellence as there are excellent shows. Series can wow us with how broadly they changed society, from “Seinfeld” redefining American slang to “Mad Men” bearing all the hallmarks of an early-21st-century TV Golden Age to “The Oprah Winfrey Show” making daytime viewers feel part of a special club of millions. Or they can feel like closely held secrets, always ready to welcome curious viewers for the first time, like “The Leftovers” or “Enlightened.” They can bring together insights about a rapidly shifting society with humor that stands the test of time, like the shows created by Norman Lear, who died this month at age 101. And they can dazzle us with spectacle or entrance us with intimate character moments — or, if they’re “The Sopranos,” they can do both.
The best shows are the ones that take advantage of the length that movies don't have and use the imagery that novels can't conjure. They can captivate big audiences and change their lives forever.
The Twilight Zone is an American media franchise based on the anthology television series created by Rod Serling. The episodes are in various genres, including fantasy, science fiction, absurdism, dystopian fiction, suspense, horror, supernatural drama, black comedy, and psychological thriller, often concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist, and usually with a moral.
From time-capsule sitcoms to cutting-edge Peak-TV dramas — the definitive ranking of the game-changing small-screen classics
TV (The Book): Two Experts Pick the Greatest American Shows of All Time is a collection of essays written by television critics Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz. It was published in 2016. The main purpose of the book was to provide a canonical list of the top 100 greatest television programs in American history.
Mike Wallace and a vampire slayer? Letterman and Oprah? Andy Griffith and the Sopranos? On one list? What were we thinking? Simply put, the best of the best, from Day 1 to last night: quality, innovation and the ability to stay in our lives year after year after year. A touch of sentiment? Sure, but nostalgia alone couldn’t make the cut (sorry, Beav). And TV-movies, miniseries and specials will have to wait. These are the series we watched regularly — and will watch again. And again.
What's the best TV show of all time? Who knows? This poll is strictly about favorite shows, the programs people in Hollywood hold nearest to their hearts — that remind them of better times or speak to their inner child or inspire their creativity or just help them unwind after a crappy day at the studio — even if one or two of the programs listed here aren't exactly masterpieces of the medium.
From a pioneering variety show from the black-and-white days to two faves on now -- see our No. 1. To see EW's picks of the top 100 all-time greatest TV shows
IGN and some of our friends have decided the best in the world of TV.
From iconic British sitcoms to epic American sagas, inventive animations and daring anthologies, these are the shows worth getting lost in, that have proved instrumental in evolving a storytelling form that continues to offer deeper and more complex narratives
So many golden ages, so much brilliance from which to choose. In culling from the "60 Greatest" lists we've compiled during our 60th-anniversary year, we shook things up, blending drama, comedy and other genres to salute the shows with the biggest cultural impact and most enduring influence. What will the next 60 years bring? We can't wait to find out.
A comprehensive list of all TV series seen and experienced throughout my life from early childhood to the present day. Usually full completion including all seasons, but at least a mandatory minimum of one full season. Will include live action and Western animation/cartoons, but exclude anime, which is on a separate list.
The “TV 101” list honors classic, trailblazing series and miniseries, as well as current and critically acclaimed programs, from comedies and dramas to variety/talk and children’s programming. At their core, all of these wonderful series began with the words of the writers who created them and were sustained by the writers who joined their staffs or worked on individual episodes. “This list is not only a tribute to great TV, it is a dedication to all writers who devote their hearts and minds to advancing their craft.
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