Watch S6, EP17: Auto Intoxication with Fubo for $0 Today
A prospector who buys a hearse earns jeers from all around him.
A prospector who buys a hearse earns jeers from all around him.
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Death Valley Days
S14, EP26 "Lady of the Plains"A socialite takes over a wagon train when the wagon master is killed in a raid.
Death Valley Days
S14, EP25 "An Organ for Brother Brigham"A man insists on taking a pipe organ to Utah.
Death Valley Days
S6, EP17 "Auto Intoxication"A prospector who buys a hearse earns jeers from all around him.
Death Valley Days
S18, EP26 "Early Candle Lighten"When a cook skims gold nuggets off miners while working at their camp, his assistant reaches out to his sister from Tucson in an attempt to save him from hanging.
Death Valley Days
S18, EP25 "The Duke of Tombstone"Sheriff Ray Ritter and wife Joanna have a bright future until a gambler arrives to collect his poker winnings, which includes half of Tombstone, Ariz.
Death Valley Days
S18, EP24 "The Contract"After Manning cheats to secure an army freight contract, his competitors Red Eagle and Little Fawn must find a way to turn the situation in their favor.
Death Valley Days
S18, EP23 "Clum's Constabulary"When a white settler dies on their reservation, Apache policemen must solve the murder before vigilantes take matters into their own hands.
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Each week, a half-hour episode will focus on a select team and explore previously unaired footage and sounds from game preparation, the sideline and following the final whistle.
Death Valley Days
Stories based on the legends and lore of Death Valley, California.
The Twilight Zone
"The Twilight Zone" was the brainchild of Emmy Award-winner Rod Serling, who served as host and wrote over 80 episodes of the original show's 150-plus episode run. It's a strange mix of horror, science-fiction, drama, comedy and superstition. Serling introduced each episode, and many of the black and white hours concluded with a surprise ending. Actors such as Burt Reynolds, Roddy McDowell and Robert Redford made appearances in some of the more well-known stories.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents
The familiar "plink, plink" of the theme song, accompanied by the line drawing of a man in profile immediately identifies the show as "Alfred Hitchcock Presents." The famed director opens almost every episode with the words "Good evening ..." After a joke -- usually about the evening's sponsor -- Hitchcock lays the groundwork for that episode's freestanding story of suspense and terror.