Watch S1 "Cold Reading; Uncle Devil Show" with Fubo for $0 Today
A radio director opts for realistic sound effects; a 5-year-old boy gets powers from "Uncle Devil."
A radio director opts for realistic sound effects; a 5-year-old boy gets powers from "Uncle Devil."
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The Twilight Zone
S1 "Profile in Silver"A time-traveler (Lane Smith) prevents the assassination of John F. Kennedy but must deal with the unexpected consequences.
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S1 "Dead Run"An out-of-work trucker takes a job transporting condemned souls to hell.
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S1 "One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty"A man (Peter Riegert) can change the course of his life by traveling into his past.
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S3, EP20 "A Game of Pool"A hotshot pool champion who has defeated all his peers only has one more opponent in his sights - the long-dead legend, Fats Brown.
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S1 "Button, Button"A couple is offered $200,000 for pushing a button that will kill a stranger.
The Twilight Zone
S1 "Cold Reading; Uncle Devil Show"A radio director opts for realistic sound effects; a 5-year-old boy gets powers from "Uncle Devil."
The Twilight Zone
S1 "Welcome to Winfield"A dying drifter leads an agent of death to a town where people live forever.
The Twilight Zone
S1 "To See the Invisible Man"Heartless man is sentenced to invisibility for a year.
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Stories based on the legends and lore of Death Valley, California.
Zane Grey Theatre
An anthology series based on the novels of Zane Grey.
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.