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| - Talk to Rod Serling, he will tell you that the Twilight Zone has gone mad!
- What was once an abandoned warehouse, now has become the premier club of Midan City. Rumor has it that there is far more to this seedy industrial club than what meets they eye. Something dark, something sinister ... something perhaps lying just beneath the perceptive surface of its driving rhythms, thick fogs and flashing lights. Somewhere in the dangerous back alleys of Midian City, just beyond dank steel doors lies ... The Twilight-Zone.
- The Twilight Zone is the place in the ocean approximately 660-3,300 feet deep (convert that into meters yourself). It has sperm whales, octopi, and un, hatchet fish, sponges, and sea pens (whatever those are). There are probably other creatures, but I'm too lazy to look them up.
- The Twilight Zone is published by Dynamite Entertainment. Price per issue is $3.99.
- The Twilight Zone was an Earth science fiction and fantasy television program. Trip Tucker said T'Pol's story about her second foremother, T'Mir, sounded like something from The Twilight Zone. (ENT: "Carbon Creek")
- The Twilight Zone (released in 1998) is a complete 32 level megawad designed and developed by Paul Corfiatis during his teen years. Difficulty is easy throughout and the theme varies from level to level. Work started in October 1996 and by mid 1997 15 levels were complete. The Wad was finished in January 1998 and released later in 1998. In 2003 a revamped version of The Twilight Zone was released improving the level design in most levels. There are also plans for a highly modified and revamped Zdoom version, named "Z Twilight Zone".
- The Twilight Zone is an American television anthology series created by Rod Serling. It originally appeared on CBS from 2 October 1959 to 19 June 1964. Each episode of the series is a mixture of self-contained fantasy, science fiction, suspense, or horror, often concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist. A popular and critical success, it introduced many Americans to serious science fiction and abstract ideas. Adapted from the Wikipedia article on The Twilight Zone.
- Marty McFly made a reference to the show when he stated to Emmett Brown in 1955 that he "must be in the Twilight Zone". Doc found Marty's usage of the phrase as peculiar, and added "in a zone of twilight, neither here nor there, a middle ground, between light and shadow, between things and ideas...". Marty replied "Yeah I know, there's a signpost up ahead, you've just crossed over--" Marty later used the Twilight Zone as a reference to scare George while as "Darth Vader".
- The Twilight Zone was an American science fiction television series broadcast from 1959 to 1964, from 1985 to 1989 and from 2002 to 2003. It was created by Rod Serling. In 2152, when Subcommander T'Pol told Captain Jonathan Archer and Commander Charles Tucker III that Human-Vulcan first contact had taken place in 1957 rather than 2063, the latter likened it to a story from the series. (ENT episode: "Carbon Creek") Vic Fontaine was a fan of the series during its initial run. In 2375, Constable Odo claimed that Rod Serling (Rodserl) sounded like a Romulan name. (DS9 - Millennium novel: Inferno)
- One of television's most revered series, The Twilight Zone (CBS, 1959-64) stands as the role model for TV anthologies. Its trenchant sci-fi/fantasy parables explore humanity's hopes, despairs, prides, and prejudices in metaphoric ways conventional drama cannot. An often worthy revival series ran on CBS from 1985-87, and in first-run syndication in 1988. Another recently ran on UPN, which reunited Bill Mumy and Cloris Leachman in a sequel to the classic TZ chiller "It's a Good Life." But it's the daring original series that shows every sign of lasting the ages as the literature that it is.
- Welcome to the The Twilight Zone category in Novelas, the fiction wiki. To add a new story in this category, just [ edit this page], add a link to your story in [[double square brackets]], save the page, and follow the link. You can then start writing immediately!
- The Twilight Zone was an acclaimed, science-fiction and fantasy-themed anthology series, created and hosted by Rod Serling, whose deadpan delivery and phrases such as "Submitted for your approval" entered the popular vernacular. The series ran on CBS from 1959 to 1964, and was typified by weaving social commentary and themes within the sci-fi and fantasy context, and often featured ironic endings.
- "The Twilight Zone" is the third track on Rush's album 2112. It was released in 1976. As with most Rush songs, the lyrics are written by Neil Peart. It is based on two episodes of The Twilight Zone, the first stanza of the song being based on the episode "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?", and the third stanza being based on the episode "Stopover in a Quiet Town". It was the first single to be released from 2112.
- In "Love Thy Trophy", Serling, host, creator, and narrator of the original series, appears in the episode to give a typical exposition seen on the show. The neighborhood strife is similar to the episode “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”. Brian Griffin beats him with a shovel so his secret of burying the trophy underground, remains unrevealed. The last scene in "Wasted Talent", with the last brain cell in Peter Griffin’s brain, parodies The Twilight Zone episode “Time Enough at Last”.
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