The Twilight Zone is an
American
anthology television series created by
Rod Serling, which ran for five seasons on
CBS from 1959 to 1964 and remains
syndicated to this day. The show consisted of unrelated vignettes depicting
paranormal,
futuristic,
dystopian, or simply disturbing events, usually brought to closure with some sort of
moral. Rod Serling served as
executive producer and
head writer, having written 92 of the show's 156 episodes. He was also the show's
host, delivering on-or-off-screen monologues at the beginning and end of each episode. During the first season, except for the season's final episode, Serling's narrations were off-camera voiceovers; he only appeared on-camera at the end of each show to promote the next episode (footage that was removed from syndicated versions but restored for DVD release, although some of these promotions exist today only in audio format).
The "twilight zone" itself is not presented as being a
tangible plane, but rather a metaphor for the strange circumstances befalling the
protagonists. Serling's opening and closing narrations usually summarized the episode's events in a cryptic, dramatized manner, thus demonstrating how the episode's main character had "entered the Twilight Zone."
Series history
Development
By the late 1950s, Rod Serling was a regular name in
television. His successful teleplays included
Patterns (for
Kraft Television Theater) and
Requiem for a Heavyweight (for
Playhouse 90), but constant
changes and edits made by the networks and sponsors frustrated Serling, who decided that creating his own show was the best way to get around these obstacles. He thought that behind a
television series with
robots,
aliens and other
supernatural occurrences, he could also express his political views in a more subtle fashion.