Remember the Twilight Zone episode where the screen went black before the episode ended and all my lights turned off. The plot twist was I forgot to pay my electric bill. Spooky
The other crazy thing about the twilight zone that wasnt mentioned its that most episodes were made with a super cheap budget because they got very restricted So Rod Serling wrote went ahead and wrote some excellent episodes that only took place in a single room or didnt include any crazy expensive ideas that are now considered classics, this man could literally make gold out of thin air
Plus, being an anthology, sets couldn’t be reused between episodes. While your average show can spend more money on the five different sets that they had, The Twilight Zone had to build an air force base one week, a world war 2 reenactment the next, and an alien landing the week after.
@@charlesevanshughes3638 It's not difficult to film on a budget if you were filming at a large studio. Studios had multiple productions at once and a lot of shows will buy or borrow props from movies that finished and use what ever the backlot was dressed up as. For example if there was a big military picture then it wouldn't be hard for Rod to get his hands on some ready made sets and props for his show.
People call me hittler and a terrorist, rod sterling gets it. I say do away with the idea of a country and money and let our species all together blast off ! Interstellar species, build ourselves up share technology. But I guess I’m a p.o.s what was I thinking wanting good for humans. I guess it’s ok if only Neil degrass Tyson says it.
As someone who lives in Ohio. I can confirm that we are the Twilight Zone. I sometimes notice that my brothers are aliens and then I get thrown into a fire erasing my existence from this earth but then I always remember and try to strike back in a neverending loop of suffering. I obviously broke the loop now tho.
John Wick fortenite will ultimately destroy puny Ohio. Take this L dance kid skull trooper is on his way, you have no chance. They are opening up a portal to the Dark Aether, not even Richthofen can stop it. We will destroy both optimus and primus. The zombies hunger for flesh, your time bbn y human existence will be you're undoing djrrehrwrfhh
my favorite episode is the one where aliens invade a neighborhood and everyone suspects everyone else of being an alien until the whole streat is on fire and then you cut to the real aliens watching the whole thing happen and they're like "heh, humans are so predictable. they accuse each other of being what they fear most." or something like that. there's also one where a guy and his dog die and they're wandering the afterlife and he finds an angel anf the angel is like "welcome to heaven, no dogs allowed tho" and they guy is like "get bent" and keeps walking with his dog and finds another angel and says "that's one hell of a place if you can't bring your dog" and the angel is like "bro, that IS hell. that other angel was a devil. let's go to the real heaven, where dogs are allowed btw"
No that’s youtube. TV shows used to literal stop the shop and have the actors do an ad. They don’t do that on tv but they sure as fuck do it on every vid on UA-cam with those OH so zany segues into this videos sponsor.
@@Jayfive276 Still, the TV commercials also appeared in UA-cam ads as well. It's no different considering that repetitive commercials wanted to mess with you to buy their products and we have a right to buy anything WHAT WE NEED, not shoving it right to our faces for the sake of profits. So that being said, Greed is one heck of a sin out of 7 deadly sins.
@@Jayfive276 Maybe they don't outright stop to make an ad, but the product placement definitely acts as constant visual advertisement. Also, they don't only advertise products. Nowadays, advertising ideologies is VERY popular.
Man, I used to be obsessed with the classic Twilight Zone when I was a teen. Even made a few presentations in class about it, and a small website (long gone) while practicing html. Good times.
My favorite episode was "eye of the beholder". No spoilers but that hands down was the craziest twist ending I've ever seen. This show really inspired me to think differently as a kid.
@@Bacopa68 Agreed I was actually introduced to eye of the beholder and found the Twist way too predictable but I still gave the show a chance and it's great.
@@Cyber_Smoke how predictable? i really liked the twist. especially with how much of the internet loves beauty and bullies everyone the idea of things being relative to what is beautiful is an extremely potent and important ideal even today
You are entering the vicinity of an area adjacent to a location. The kind of place where there might be a monster, or some kind of weird mirror. These are just examples; it could also be something much better. Prepare to enter: *The scary door*
To me, this show is the scariest when it comes to atmosphere. There is no ghosts or Alien explanation as to what we are seeing, only that what we are seeing exists in a state of un-existence , a state so unreal the only thing comparable to it is the combination of reality and fiction, a state of twilight.
My parents showed me almost every episode when I was a kid growing up. It absolutely holds up today and would probably hold up for the next hundred years based solely on the writing. It's that strong.
My favorite one is when they land on some planet with a bunch of people. Except none of the people move. Nobody. Then one guy can move, and this guy laughs and the characters are all frozen in place just like everybody else. Good episode
The slow degeneration of this channel is comparable to that of The Discovery Channel and The History Channel in all but one characteristic - I actually enjoy this one.
my favorite episode is "A Kind of Stopwatch" A man who isn't well liked gets this stopwatch that when pressed freezes time. He uses it at work and a bar to impress the people there as in a "look what I can do" but realizes they don't remember any of it because they were frozen in time. So using this, he walks into a bank and presses the stopwatch and freezes time. He walks behind the counter and pulls out the cart of money from the safe but he drops his stopwatch and rolls over it with his cart effectively breaking it and making him stuck in time....forever
In some of the war episodes you could just feel Rod’s emotion being put into it, and even some of the WWII episodes felt personal considering he suffered from crazy bad PTSD because of involvement in the invasion of the Philippines.
God the Twilight Zone is such good shit. Twenty Two scared the fuck out of me as a kid and it’s still chilling every time I watch it. Same with the talking tina doll. That episode made me sleep bunched up in the corner of my bed so I could see every part of my room just to make sure she wasn’t gonna murder me
Also great is Rod Serling's Library of Congress interview with Foghorn Leghorn. It...escalates quickly after about 10 mins, but it's tragically relevant to today.
The thing that fascinated me about Time Enough At Last is that that the episode made you really pity the character at the end even though he was only on screen for about 25 minutes or so.
In my family, we used to talk about this character all the time, especially because I was as much of a bookworm as he was. Truly one of the most tragic characters to ever be filmed for any show, movie or series.
As a massive Star Trek fan, I really need to watch the orginal Twillight Zone. It laid the groundwork for the orginal Star Trek show and a ton of actors like Shatner and Nimoy were in the Twilight Zone long before they were cast in TOS.
I've actually seen a lot more of The Twilight Zone than I'd realized, even though it existed long before I was born. I recognized about half of the episodes referenced. Although it's so old, I saw some reruns that were still airing on Nick at Nite when I was a kid. I always thought it was a shame when Nick at Nite started cycling out the 50s and 60s shows to make room for the newest reruns that they could get for cheap. I mean, who cares about Mister Ed, but classics like The Twilight Zone are worth remembering. But I guess you're right about cultural relevance - it's tough to maintain it for that long, even with good writing.
I felt so bad for the reading guy. Most people on the show were kinda bad people and got their comeuppance, but sometimes, like in the case of the bank teller and the woman on a doomed earth, did nothing wrong at all.
To be honest, if you want "Spooky," you need to look at the first iteration of "The Outer Limits." Their aim was: "In the final segment/quarter. "Booga Booga! Time to face the monster!";) Rod Serling's monsters were often the human kind, holding a mirror up to the audience. Now and then, Fate would smile upon the boffin, and things would "go North," as in "Night of the Meek." or "A World of Difference.";) Where is/was "The Twilight Zone?" It's an oasis, to eb found just outside "The Vast Wasteland" of 1950's TV.
Fun fact: Rod loved to smoke 3-4 packs a day. Hell, he even plugged his favorite cigarettes on the show regularly. In front of lots of children. Ahhh the 60's!
*Fun Fact:* Rod Serling is also extremely imaginative. One time when he was a kid, he played the "pretending" game with two of his friends. When he got the "bad guy" role, his friend tried to shoot him with a gun, but Serling was protected by his "shield". Then, his other friend lassoed him, but he quickly escaped as he fell down the doortrap. They called him "The Impossibility".
The difference between The Twilight Zone and the creepypasta stories is that they both have different aspects. The Twilight Zone is supernatural and science fiction with a twist that questions our humanity through moral dilemmas and emotional horrors; like what would you do when your greatest fear come out to confront you. Creepypastas, in the other hand, is horror with a twist that contains some mild to extreme grim context and scary monsters that will haunt you down forever. It's not only that make you scared, but also the ambiguity and the unreliable narrative is what makes the story terrifying to the extent of questioning yourself if anything is real or not.
@Friendship Honestly, they’re both born of the same place, but it’s not quite a lineage from Twilight to Creepy Pasta. They’re more like cousins with one being older then the other. What’s really interesting is what phenomena will culturally “replace,” creepypasta as the media for weirdness.
The episode with the small alien that attacked the old woman with a knife scared the hell out of me as a child. My older brother would wait till I was in the bathroom and he would make the same noise the alien did while moving a knife back and forth under the door. He still thinks it’s funny too do it today, he’s an asshole.
the Twilight Zone has four incarnations the one presented by Jordan Peele then the TV reboot from the 2000's fronted by Forrest Whittaker then the one from the 80's a feature length movie was mase of and a short-lived radio series from the 2000's with Stacy Keach as the narrator.
Well, we do know of two entrances to the Twilight Zone: The Tower of Terrors at Disney's Hollywood Studios in Florida and Walt Disney Studios park in France.
It was ahead of it’s time in the observance of human nature, of that, not through what you [the viewer] see as dialogue but as genuinely speaking and reacting to the absurdities these characters are placed in. You don’t see clear moral messages of which expected from the usual show at the time. This lack of morality and good endings was of much a curveball to the average american at the time. Tldr: rods a fuckin legend watch the show
I absolutely love The Twilight Zone. I've seen every episode (even those hour-long Season 4 eps that are never on streaming). My favorite is Nothing in the Dark, which really taught me the ridiculousness of humanity's irrational fear of death.
As a little kid, The After Hours was the first episode I managed to see and even then was hooked. My favorite is hands down Night of the Meek. It's so beautiful and charming.
My dad was big into B horror and that sorta stuff when I was a kid. So I saw many of these when I was reallllyyy little. Freaky and the black 'n' white helped that. Not my thing really but I appreciate what it did.
I’ve been rewatching The Twilight Zone lately after showing my son the Simpsons Tree House of Horror version of To Serve Man. I have so many favourite episodes.
The original series is one of my favorite things. "Time Enough At Last" and "Nightmare at 20,000 feet" are a couple of my favorites off the top of my head. Due to rewatch the original series... The new one on CBS All Access isn't terrible
Remember the Twilight Zone episode where the screen went black before the episode ended and all my lights turned off. The plot twist was I forgot to pay my electric bill. Spooky
Scary stuff
Jesus christ man, don't scare me like that
Hi Cody 👋
Deities aren't supposed to have electric bills...
You aren't real Alt Hist Cody can't hurt us.
You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into *The Tylight Zone*
...or North Korea!
@Alex Ramsey Kim Jong Undead?
I didnt know you were a fan of the Twilight movie, a true man of culture 😏
Hey look, a dead man walking
You've just crossed over into Ohio
The other crazy thing about the twilight zone that wasnt mentioned its that most episodes were made with a super cheap budget because they got very restricted
So Rod Serling wrote went ahead and wrote some excellent episodes that only took place in a single room or didnt include any crazy expensive ideas that are now considered classics, this man could literally make gold out of thin air
Plus, being an anthology, sets couldn’t be reused between episodes. While your average show can spend more money on the five different sets that they had, The Twilight Zone had to build an air force base one week, a world war 2 reenactment the next, and an alien landing the week after.
@@charlesevanshughes3638 It's not difficult to film on a budget if you were filming at a large studio. Studios had multiple productions at once and a lot of shows will buy or borrow props from movies that finished and use what ever the backlot was dressed up as. For example if there was a big military picture then it wouldn't be hard for Rod to get his hands on some ready made sets and props for his show.
_"Any state, any entity, any ideology that fails to recognize the worth, the dignity, the right of man, and the state is obsolete."_
*~ Rod Sterling*
My favorite episode, "The Obsolete Man."
any state as long as its ohio
People call me hittler and a terrorist, rod sterling gets it. I say do away with the idea of a country and money and let our species all together blast off ! Interstellar species, build ourselves up share technology. But I guess I’m a p.o.s what was I thinking wanting good for humans. I guess it’s ok if only Neil degrass Tyson says it.
As someone who lives in Ohio. I can confirm that we are the Twilight Zone. I sometimes notice that my brothers are aliens and then I get thrown into a fire erasing my existence from this earth but then I always remember and try to strike back in a neverending loop of suffering. I obviously broke the loop now tho.
Yes. But what are the manikins like out that way?
@@cocoabutt1711 Are you trying to spell mannequin, or something else? I am not putting you down. I am just asking,cause it is a hard word to spell.
@@strangerinwhite Blame Google (I used it as my spell checker).
HOW DID YOU BREAK THE LOOP THATS IMPOSSIBLE
John Wick fortenite will ultimately destroy puny Ohio. Take this L dance kid skull trooper is on his way, you have no chance. They are opening up a portal to the Dark Aether, not even Richthofen can stop it. We will destroy both optimus and primus. The zombies hunger for flesh, your time bbn y human existence will be you're undoing djrrehrwrfhh
my favorite episode is the one where aliens invade a neighborhood and everyone suspects everyone else of being an alien until the whole streat is on fire and then you cut to the real aliens watching the whole thing happen and they're like "heh, humans are so predictable. they accuse each other of being what they fear most." or something like that.
there's also one where a guy and his dog die and they're wandering the afterlife and he finds an angel anf the angel is like "welcome to heaven, no dogs allowed tho" and they guy is like "get bent" and keeps walking with his dog and finds another angel and says "that's one hell of a place if you can't bring your dog" and the angel is like "bro, that IS hell. that other angel was a devil. let's go to the real heaven, where dogs are allowed btw"
That one about the dog is super smart. Pretty sure heaven with just humans would be a political hell of no escape.
"In the '50's television was like a giant ad"
It still is...
hey kid, wanna buy some BRAIN POWER POWDER??
No that’s youtube. TV shows used to literal stop the shop and have the actors do an ad. They don’t do that on tv but they sure as fuck do it on every vid on UA-cam with those OH so zany segues into this videos sponsor.
@@Jayfive276 Still, the TV commercials also appeared in UA-cam ads as well. It's no different considering that repetitive commercials wanted to mess with you to buy their products and we have a right to buy anything WHAT WE NEED, not shoving it right to our faces for the sake of profits. So that being said, Greed is one heck of a sin out of 7 deadly sins.
@@Jayfive276 Maybe they don't outright stop to make an ad, but the product placement definitely acts as constant visual advertisement.
Also, they don't only advertise products. Nowadays, advertising ideologies is VERY popular.
@@Jayfive276
Use adblocker, guy.
"The Twilight Zone: A Zone of Twilight"
"People die when they are killed"
Justin....WHY?!
Justin "Y do I see you in literally every comment section."
It's the man!, the myth!, the LEGEND!!!
Wow
hello
I do blame y'all for not watching the Twilight Zone already. *The shit is timeless as infinity*
@Why Do I Even Look At The Comments if the allegories are so apparent it can hardly be considered outdated. I'm not exactly a history major myself.
True
It’s literally the fucking middle ground between light and shadow, what is wrong with people, do they have no taste
I'm 25 and was introduced to this show as a small child and have been obsessed ever since. One of the Greatest tv shows in history
Man, I used to be obsessed with the classic Twilight Zone when I was a teen. Even made a few presentations in class about it, and a small website (long gone) while practicing html. Good times.
My favorite episode was "eye of the beholder". No spoilers but that hands down was the craziest twist ending I've ever seen. This show really inspired me to think differently as a kid.
I think "Number 12 Looks Just like You" is spookier and has a similar theme.
@@Bacopa68 Agreed I was actually introduced to eye of the beholder and found the Twist way too predictable but I still gave the show a chance and it's great.
@@Cyber_Smoke how predictable? i really liked the twist. especially with how much of the internet loves beauty and bullies everyone the idea of things being relative to what is beautiful is an extremely potent and important ideal even today
You are entering the vicinity of an area adjacent to a location.
The kind of place where there might be a monster, or some kind of weird mirror.
These are just examples; it could also be something much better.
Prepare to enter:
*The scary door*
Lmao
To me, this show is the scariest when it comes to atmosphere. There is no ghosts or Alien explanation as to what we are seeing, only that what we are seeing exists in a state of un-existence , a state so unreal the only thing comparable to it is the combination of reality and fiction, a state of twilight.
My parents showed me almost every episode when I was a kid growing up.
It absolutely holds up today and would probably hold up for the next hundred years based solely on the writing. It's that strong.
*"Ohio is the Twilight Zone."*
That line aged really well!
Rod Serling was a genius
Tyler: "Owl edge hub"
Me: "Have youtube captions somehow made their way into the audio now?"
*We had to act out "Murder on Maple Street" for our school.*
I went to a fun class.
I love 4th of July. Not because of fireworks but because there's a Twilight Zone marathon on Syfy all day!
My favorite one is when they land on some planet with a bunch of people. Except none of the people move. Nobody. Then one guy can move, and this guy laughs and the characters are all frozen in place just like everybody else. Good episode
The slow degeneration of this channel is comparable to that of The Discovery Channel and The History Channel in all but one characteristic - I actually enjoy this one.
And I can be like taking a tab of Acid.
*Tyler is an alien? Tyler is an alien.*
*Aliens.*
The Twilight Zone is between the Dawn Zone and the Dusk Zone.
Nah, it's between the Dusk Zone and Night Zone.
Isn't twilight after dusk? 😯🤯
@@clamum There's also a morning twilight before dawn.
"The night is always darkest just before the dawn."
TLDR: Ohio is the twilight zone
As an Ohioan I can confirm that it certainly is the twilight zone
My favorite episode of the Twilight Zone: The Cleveland Browns live in hell.
Always has been
It would explain a lot actually
What are u guys talking about? Ohio doesn't exist
My mom owned all the episodes on VHS, I can't tell you how many times I've binged watched them
my favorite episode is "A Kind of Stopwatch"
A man who isn't well liked gets this stopwatch that when pressed freezes time. He uses it at work and a bar to impress the people there as in a "look what I can do" but realizes they don't remember any of it because they were frozen in time. So using this, he walks into a bank and presses the stopwatch and freezes time. He walks behind the counter and pulls out the cart of money from the safe but he drops his stopwatch and rolls over it with his cart effectively breaking it and making him stuck in time....forever
I'm very stoned right now, good timing.
In some of the war episodes you could just feel Rod’s emotion being put into it, and even some of the WWII episodes felt personal considering he suffered from crazy bad PTSD because of involvement in the invasion of the Philippines.
Thank you for talking about my favorite shows
God the Twilight Zone is such good shit. Twenty Two scared the fuck out of me as a kid and it’s still chilling every time I watch it. Same with the talking tina doll. That episode made me sleep bunched up in the corner of my bed so I could see every part of my room just to make sure she wasn’t gonna murder me
Also great is Rod Serling's Library of Congress interview with Foghorn Leghorn. It...escalates quickly after about 10 mins, but it's tragically relevant to today.
"The Twilight Zone: A Zone of Twilight"
"Every 60 seconds, a minute passes in Africa"
“We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold.”
I remember saying something like.. I feel a bit lightheaded; maybe you should drive....
@@andrewcath4615 you’ll see the bats soon enough
@@iameternalsunshine "We can't stop here, THIS IS BAT COUNTRY!"
When the guy drops his glasses, if you don't feel that pain, you have no heart.
The thing that fascinated me about Time Enough At Last is that that the episode made you really pity the character at the end even though he was only on screen for about 25 minutes or so.
In my family, we used to talk about this character all the time, especially because I was as much of a bookworm as he was. Truly one of the most tragic characters to ever be filmed for any show, movie or series.
I once met a traveller from an antiqued land, he said:
Thank you, very cool
As a massive Star Trek fan, I really need to watch the orginal Twillight Zone. It laid the groundwork for the orginal Star Trek show and a ton of actors like Shatner and Nimoy were in the Twilight Zone long before they were cast in TOS.
I want to see an episode covering "Its the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown!" I enjoy your brand of humor
Oh god yes, I would love to hear his hilarious voice, phrasing, and pacing summarize the Peanuts.
The sad truth is that Charlie Brown was telling that story from a rehab facility 20 years after Linus froze to death in that field.
Or maybe the metaphysics of the Nightmare Before Christmas?
I've actually seen a lot more of The Twilight Zone than I'd realized, even though it existed long before I was born. I recognized about half of the episodes referenced.
Although it's so old, I saw some reruns that were still airing on Nick at Nite when I was a kid.
I always thought it was a shame when Nick at Nite started cycling out the 50s and 60s shows to make room for the newest reruns that they could get for cheap. I mean, who cares about Mister Ed, but classics like The Twilight Zone are worth remembering.
But I guess you're right about cultural relevance - it's tough to maintain it for that long, even with good writing.
One of my all time favorites is room 22 or the “room for one more honey” episode.
His synopsis of the Twilight Zone episodes simultaneously bother me and entertain me. I love it.
Yo, if you kids like playing Among Us, you're gonna love "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street"
I felt so bad for the reading guy. Most people on the show were kinda bad people and got their comeuppance, but sometimes, like in the case of the bank teller and the woman on a doomed earth, did nothing wrong at all.
All this time I didn't realize how accurate a parody "The Scary Door" was
I’ve watched every episode multiple times. It’s my favorite tv show ever.
Me: W-wait Ohio is the twilight zone?
Rod: always has been.
w-why do people write with a stutter like this?
@@TJfromEarth t-to express shock
@@SanoKei D-duh
TJ Connell W-why do people perpetuate terrible memes?
@@TJfromEarth regular writing practice to depict a stutter in written word, hijacked by furries
In summary, rod serling was brilliant man for creating the twilight zone anthology.
if i have to hear every time you utter the word 'spooky' im becoming closer to the twilight zone.
It is my opinion that without The Twilight Zone, there would be no SCP.
To be honest, if you want "Spooky," you need to look at the first iteration of "The Outer Limits." Their aim was: "In the final segment/quarter. "Booga Booga! Time to face the monster!";) Rod Serling's monsters were often the human kind, holding a mirror up to the audience. Now and then, Fate would smile upon the boffin, and things would "go North," as in "Night of the Meek." or "A World of Difference.";) Where is/was "The Twilight Zone?" It's an oasis, to eb found just outside "The Vast Wasteland" of 1950's TV.
I'm glad you mentioned it because The Outer Limits was also a great show.
The 90's remake wasn't half bad either but not as good as the original.
This video is literally the Rick and Morty interdimensional cable episode.
Rod Serling is just the best.
when i was younger i honestly thought The Twilight Zone and Twilight were the same thing
Me while watching any episode of KnowledgeHub: "I like your funny words magic man"
Fun fact: Rod loved to smoke 3-4 packs a day. Hell, he even plugged his favorite cigarettes on the show regularly. In front of lots of children. Ahhh the 60's!
*Fun Fact:* Rod Serling is also extremely imaginative. One time when he was a kid, he played the "pretending" game with two of his friends. When he got the "bad guy" role, his friend tried to shoot him with a gun, but Serling was protected by his "shield". Then, his other friend lassoed him, but he quickly escaped as he fell down the doortrap. They called him "The Impossibility".
Based
The Twilight Zone is probably an inspiration of the Creepypasta community today.
The difference between The Twilight Zone and the creepypasta stories is that they both have different aspects.
The Twilight Zone is supernatural and science fiction with a twist that questions our humanity through moral dilemmas and emotional horrors; like what would you do when your greatest fear come out to confront you.
Creepypastas, in the other hand, is horror with a twist that contains some mild to extreme grim context and scary monsters that will haunt you down forever. It's not only that make you scared, but also the ambiguity and the unreliable narrative is what makes the story terrifying to the extent of questioning yourself if anything is real or not.
@Friendship
Honestly, they’re both born of the same place, but it’s not quite a lineage from Twilight to Creepy Pasta. They’re more like cousins with one being older then the other.
What’s really interesting is what phenomena will culturally “replace,” creepypasta as the media for weirdness.
Creepypasta is closer to Goosebumps, iirc.
The episode with the small alien that attacked the old woman with a knife scared the hell out of me as a child. My older brother would wait till I was in the bathroom and he would make the same noise the alien did while moving a knife back and forth under the door. He still thinks it’s funny too do it today, he’s an asshole.
Has Nixon from five at the beginning makes this the best video ever.
You put these out pretty fast and i like you and your takes. Keep it up man
Tyler is actually in the Twilight Zone and that's why some episodes seem normal and others seem like a cry for help
I’ve seen some of the episodes you use as footage and the context makes them so much funnier
the Twilight Zone has four incarnations the one presented by Jordan Peele then the TV reboot from the 2000's fronted by Forrest Whittaker then the one from the 80's a feature length movie was mase of and a short-lived radio series from the 2000's with Stacy Keach as the narrator.
'It's a Good Life' a must watch twilight episode.
Wait what 60 years old. I was watching it like a year ago and i thought it had recently come out but it had a weird style
Would be cool to see a concept like that, but no, The Twighlight Zone is really so old that it's not in color.
Þe Twilight zone is where all þe spooky stuff happens, it's like Spookystan, but in black and white.
Watching Tyler talking about Twilight zone is like watching two incomprehensible concepts duke it out.
To Serve Mankind
It was called "It's a good life"
@@PvblivsAelivs oh okay, thanks.
Grew up watching Twilight Zone and the outer limits as a kid.
and some other weird shows I don't remember.
12:10 truley a joke ahead of its time
Well, we do know of two entrances to the Twilight Zone: The Tower of Terrors at Disney's Hollywood Studios in Florida and Walt Disney Studios park in France.
The twilight zone is America. Thank you for talking about the midnight sun, it’s my favorite episode because of its message
The mesage being that "global warming is a fever dream"
It was ahead of it’s time in the observance of human nature, of that, not through what you [the viewer] see as dialogue but as genuinely speaking and reacting to the absurdities these characters are placed in. You don’t see clear moral messages of which expected from the usual show at the time. This lack of morality and good endings was of much a curveball to the average american at the time.
Tldr: rods a fuckin legend watch the show
10:20 "i like you're funny words magic man"
This is taking me back to middle school when my friends and I would do Rod Serling impressions.
Yeah we weren't...we weren't the popular crowd.
@Why Do I Even Look At The Comments This was like 2014. Again, *not* popular....
Exposition
*shows Speedwagon*
Mmm yesh quite bizzare
Bloody love this show, thanks for featuring it.
One day I'll show my kids your channel
I absolutely love The Twilight Zone. I've seen every episode (even those hour-long Season 4 eps that are never on streaming). My favorite is Nothing in the Dark, which really taught me the ridiculousness of humanity's irrational fear of death.
And suddenly, this channel makes sense!
Howdy, it's the spooky undead cowboy Gene Autry telling you that most Twilight Zone episodes were made in the 60's.
-Wait, the Twilight zone is Ohio?
-Always has been!
Even your summaries of the episodes have me spooked. Yep, I'm that terrible with scary stuff.
Said before: There is only ONE Twilight, and it's a ZONE.
You have just observed New Years Day of 2020 the year an entire planet entered the twilight zone
As a little kid, The After Hours was the first episode I managed to see and even then was hooked.
My favorite is hands down Night of the Meek. It's so beautiful and charming.
In my opinion, the Twilight Zone is one of the greatest TV series ever put on the air and my personal favourite. Thank you so much for this review!
One of the most important men in horror.
Where would be without his influence?
The twilight zone franchise keeps on thriving!
You've entered into, The Scary Door
My dad was big into B horror and that sorta stuff when I was a kid. So I saw many of these when I was reallllyyy little. Freaky and the black 'n' white helped that. Not my thing really but I appreciate what it did.
7:34 favorite twilight zone episode glad someone is talking about it.
I am now thoroughly spooked. Thanks tyler
I’ve been rewatching The Twilight Zone lately after showing my son the Simpsons Tree House of Horror version of To Serve Man. I have so many favourite episodes.
Sequel to that one episode: Quest for an Optometrist office.
Now this.. this is why I love spooktober
This is one of my favorite shows ever
Twilight Zone and the Outer Limits reboot are my shit, best programming ever aired.
Edit: Oh and how tf could I forget about Alfred Hitchcock
The original series is one of my favorite things. "Time Enough At Last" and "Nightmare at 20,000 feet" are a couple of my favorites off the top of my head. Due to rewatch the original series...
The new one on CBS All Access isn't terrible
The crazy wizard at the end there got me
Everything after 2008 is a Twilight Zone.
Me a 2008 Born
Dear god I’ve been binging it since the first of October..