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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

An episode of a regular series which, for some reason, is not included when the series is shown in syndication. This can take one of two flavors: * An episode which was produced but never shown. * An episode which was shown during the initial run, but never rebroadcast. In this case, the episode is not rebroadcast because no one has it anymore. Such episodes are lost to history until (as becomes increasingly unlikely) they unexpectedly turn up in the hands of a collector or a relative of one of the original producers.

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  • Missing Episode
  • Missing episode
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  • An episode of a regular series which, for some reason, is not included when the series is shown in syndication. This can take one of two flavors: * An episode which was produced but never shown. * An episode which was shown during the initial run, but never rebroadcast. In this case, the episode is not rebroadcast because no one has it anymore. Such episodes are lost to history until (as becomes increasingly unlikely) they unexpectedly turn up in the hands of a collector or a relative of one of the original producers.
  • In a practical sense, then, a "missing episode" is one without either an extant videotape master or a filmed or digital duplicate. As of 2013, there are 97 episodes missing from the archives. Though these missing episodes no longer exist in their entirety, several remnants exist for fans to sample. Clips — sometimes bits excised to comply with a network's editorial policies, sometimes bits included as teasers on other programmes — exist from many of the missing episodes. In a few rare instances, these clips are drawn from the original masters. Telesnaps, photographs taken of the performance as it was being videotaped or filmed, also exist of almost every missing episode. There are also instances, perhaps most notably with The Smugglers, where home video recordings of the actors in rehearsa
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abstract
  • In a practical sense, then, a "missing episode" is one without either an extant videotape master or a filmed or digital duplicate. As of 2013, there are 97 episodes missing from the archives. Though these missing episodes no longer exist in their entirety, several remnants exist for fans to sample. Clips — sometimes bits excised to comply with a network's editorial policies, sometimes bits included as teasers on other programmes — exist from many of the missing episodes. In a few rare instances, these clips are drawn from the original masters. Telesnaps, photographs taken of the performance as it was being videotaped or filmed, also exist of almost every missing episode. There are also instances, perhaps most notably with The Smugglers, where home video recordings of the actors in rehearsal on location at least give a flavour of what the characters might have looked like in costume. By far the most common way for fans to enjoy missing episodes, however, is through audio. Complete audio tracks of all episodes exist, thanks to off-air recordings by fans in the 1960s. The soundtracks for the missing episodes have all been released with linking narration by the BBC Radio Collection. Scripts and of these episodes also help to keep them accessible.
  • An episode of a regular series which, for some reason, is not included when the series is shown in syndication. This can take one of two flavors: * An episode which was produced but never shown. * An episode which was shown during the initial run, but never rebroadcast. The reasons for this can vary: with respect to relatively recent shows, there might be legal issues with respect to the rights on some of the content; the networks may have issues with the nature of the episode, due either to controversial content or because it's Too Soon after a tragic event; or it may simply have been lost in the shuffle when the program was repeatedly preempted. Missing episodes are somewhat more common for older shows, where syndication packages were not all-inclusive and might omit episodes based on nothing more than popularity. Episodes may also be deleted when a show is exported to another country with different standards of decency. In these cases, the missing episodes may be trotted out years later with much fanfare. There may be a nascent trend of intentionally withholding certain episodes for a time in order to create a "Missing Episode" mystique around them. A promotional video for Power Rangers SPD created for the DVD release was broadcast as a purportedly "Missing Episode" of Power Rangers Dino Thunder entirely to rook people into watching a ten-minute infomercial. A related phenomenon is the "Lost Episode". Older TV shows and movie series may not have a full library of old episodes to work from. The originals may have been destroyed, either accidentally or deliberately, or in the case of live programs there might never have been a recording. Most of the first ten years of the Johnny Carson Tonight Show is missing because videotape at the time was expensive and the network reused the originals. Hundreds of silent films are no longer extant because the original negatives were destroyed in order to recover the silver content from the film stock, lost in studio and vault fires, or simply decayed over time. This sort of thing plagues the early years of television. Of course, at the time few had any notion that people would want to watch "classic television" fifty or sixty years in the future, so they saw no reason to keep copies. In this case, the episode is not rebroadcast because no one has it anymore. Such episodes are lost to history until (as becomes increasingly unlikely) they unexpectedly turn up in the hands of a collector or a relative of one of the original producers. Sometimes, a network may hold the rights to an entire series, but may not like some episodes for various reasons (personal preference, orders of the programming team, cheaper to run a selected block of episodes etc.) so an episode isn't really "missing" per se, but the term still applies. The terms "Missing Episode" and "Lost Episode" are not synonymous, but which term refers to which phenomenon varies. It can also be an abused term, such as the case of Entertainment Tonight finding "lost footage" for their shows which is already properly cataloged and digitized, but uses the "lost" term instead of "old footage" as the latter doesn't work to pull in viewers. Can sometimes result from Old Shame. Frequently confused with Lost Forever, which is a Video Game Items and Inventory Trope despite having a name that sounds like this Trope. For an episode that never actually existed in the first place, see Un Installment. Examples of Missing Episode include: * Advertising * Anime and Manga * Comic Books * Film * Game Shows * Literature * Live Action Tv * Music * New Media * Newspaper Comics * Radio * Theatre * Video Games * Web Animation * Web Comics * Web Original * Western Animation * Real Life
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