When an opportunity arose to better the conclusion of "Where is Everybody?" Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling didn't hesitate ...
While this particular episode of The Twilight Zone is far from the show's weakest outing, it also signaled trouble ahead for ...
In 1959, Rod Serling changed TV forever with his series The Twilight Zone. It became a staple on CBS for five seasons, and it was so beloved and inventive that it led to several reboot series and a ...
The Twilight Zone helped to launch the careers of many all-time great performers, but it was Rod Serling's follow-up that introduced Diane Keaton to many.
It's been 50 years since the Emmy Award-winning TV writer and producer died. But watching reruns of The Twilight Zone confirms that the themes Serling tackled remain relevant.
Science fiction continues to be popular, and there is no reason these past shows would not do well with today's audiences.
Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone was a famous proving ground for many rising stars like William Shatner, Robert Redford, ...
Asking anyone to name their favorite episode of The Twilight Zone feels almost as impossible as a camera that can show you the future. Rod Serling's seminal series is simply so vast and varied, ...
(WBNG) - Written to be the pilot episode of The Twilight Zone in 1958, and said to be cast aside by the network for being too grim, the script for “The Happy Place” sat in Rod Serling’s archive up ...
The Twilight Zone often had its own logic, but some episodes had none at all. Several twist endings still don't make sense ...
Rod Serling, who died in 1975, was a 1950 graduate of Antioch College in Yellow Springs. The Ohio Historical Marker honoring Serling, an Antioch College graduate, will be unveiled on the opening night ...