![]() ![]() Many of the episodes throughout have end-of-episode pitches for other network shows and Rod Serling doing short promos for next week. Most of the significance of these items will be known to the devout fan who wants a complete series set, or you’ll need to check the internet, since they’re not introduced well. * Various interviews and conversations with Serling * A Saturday Night Live sketch with Dan Ackroyd doing a great Serling * 15 minutes of Tell It to Groucho in which Serling appeared * An episode of Liars Club hosted by Serling * An audio interview with William Tuttle, a makeup artist. * “Nightmare at Ground Zero”, a 1953 (kinescope) episode of Suspense (complete with car battery ads) written by Serling about a man making mannequins for a nuclear bomb test and his unpleasant wife. * Three minutes of Serling winning writing Emmys (the first features Fred Astaire oddly hand-cranking the nominees through a box screen display). ![]() This continues throughout the other discs in the set. ![]() * An audio interview with cinematographer George Clemens, who won an Emmy for his work on the show. It’s available with or without commentary by Marc Scott Zicree (author of The Twilight Zone Companion) and with syndication open and close. * “The Time Element”, a 1958 Rod Serling script aired on Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse considered something of an “unofficial pilot” for The Twilight Zone. Otherwise, the extras are on the last disc of every season. If you look under individual episode listings, you can find the commentaries, isolated scores, and radio drama versions. Every disc says it has them, which isn’t true they’re only on the last disc of each season. There are special features included, but I had trouble finding them at first, since they aren’t listed well. The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series has the episode lists on the inside of the case ![]()
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