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episode's and epilogue
* In the episode's epilogue, Delenn notes that the Telepath War, the Drakh War, and strains within the Interstellar Alliance would be major events in the subsequent 20-year timespan.
In the episode's epilogue, Rose tries to tell Pete about her origins, but he is unable to handle this information and slips away to deal with the aftermath of the Cyberman attack.
In the episode's epilogue, it is stated that Jackie is pregnant with his child.

episode's and is
An episode is considered " First Run " if aired within two weeks of that episode's initial air date.
This is illustrated on this episode's page on InfoSphere.
The episode's significance is in his forced introspection about his life, and its meaning, while contemplating his impending death by formal execution ; only in formal trial and death does he acknowledge his mortality and responsibility for his own life.
Also in the episode " Flaming Moe's ," a person in the bar is shown to have that episode's provocative name ( Hugh Jass, or " Huge ass "), and when he takes the phone, Bart quickly explains about it being a prank call and they hang up with Hugh Jass saying " what a nice young man.
Every episode's name is meant to be a suffix to the word " bottom ".
A still photo from the episode's shoot scene with Mike Wallace is on page 68 of the book 60 Minutes ': 25 Years of Television's Finest Hour ( 1993 ) by Frank Coffey.
At the two-part episode's conclusion, Pike is reunited with Vina and given the illusion of perfect health.
Although it is implied that nuclear warfare has destroyed humanity, film critic Andrew Sarris notes that the episode's necessarily unrealistic format may have been what allowed its production to commence:
Logan St. Clair was created to be a recurring character, which is evident in the episode's dialogue, but only appeared once.
The fifth and final episode's status is unknown, but presumed to exist.
The daughter has taken to calling Jerry " Uncle Jerry ", but by the episode's end, it is said she now refers to him as " daddy "-to the clear discomfort of Elaine and Jerry.
The ship is shown ( by a postcard ) to have reached a planet named Siluria with its dinosaurs at the episode's conclusion.
*, an unnamed female voice that presents a short tale in the prologue before each episode that is often related to the theme of the episode's title.
The music during the episode's final scene, for example, is the same as that which played at the conclusion of the Fourth Doctor's regeneration into the Fifth in Logopolis.
The episode's story is similar to Guardian's first comics appearance ( as Weapon Alpha ) in Uncanny X-Men # 109.
The audience's first critical assumption — that this is a " musical episode " where the Buffy cast is presumably unaware that they are singing — is overturned when it becomes clear that the characters are all too aware of their musical interludes and that determining the supernatural causes for the singing will be the focus of the episode's story.
The episode's setting is stated in dialogue and a newspaper masthead as being 18 – 25 December 1981, and Sarah Jane's experiences with the Doctor and UNIT are in her past, indicating that the Third and Fourth Doctor serials took place more or less contemporaneously to their original broadcast dates.
He demonstrates mastery of whatever field of science is convenient for a given episode's plot ; however, in the episode Mars University when asked what he is teaching, he responds: " The same thing I teach every semester, the mathematics of quantum neutrino fields.
The episode's name is the first usage of the phrase " Where No Man Has Gone Before " in Star Trek.
* The episode's title is a reference to the third line in the nursery rhyme " Rock-a-bye Baby ".

episode's and shown
The episodes were filmed and then shown to preview audiences, whose laughter was recorded and then mixed into each episode's soundtrack to provide a laugh track and avoid the use of canned laughter.
In his 1959 promotional film shown to potential sponsors, Rod Serling summarized an earlier version of this episode's plot under its original title, " Death, Destry, and Mr. Dingle.
After each episode's transmission on BBC One, terrestrial viewers were shown a ten-minute featurette on an aspect of its making.
In the first-season X-Files episode Ghost in the Machine, Eurisko is the name of a fictional software company responsible for the episode's " monster of the week ," facilities management software known as " Central Operating System ," or " COS ." COS ( described in the episode as an " adaptive network ") is shown to be capable of learning when its designer arrives at Eurisko headquarters and is surprised to find that COS has given itself the ability to speak.
Many episodes began with a prologue of a person being killed by the episode's menace ; while nothing graphic is shown, it was more grown up than most shows aimed at children.
Steven Dean Moore, the episode's director, researched into the design of every aspect of Indian culture shown in the episode.
In some cases, the scene leading up to the previous episode's ending is shown instead of a montage.
* From Tara's gravestone ( shown in the Season Seven episode " Help "), the episode's final scene ( and her death ) occurs on May 7, 2002.

episode's and have
Some episodes have specific themes, with cartoons to fit that episode's theme.
According to the episode's podcast on Startrek. com, the dog that portrayed the mirror Porthos was known on set as an even bigger " baby " than the dogs which have played the regular Porthos.
The interviews with supposed scientists, astronauts, and others were far too dramatically polished to have been spontaneous, and in any case, the episode's closing credits named the actors who took the roles of interviewees and correspondents.
By the episode's end, it is implied he may have impregnated Noreen, but the possibility is never raised again.
Toying with many television conventions, Monty Python's Flying Circus ( 1969 – 74 ) played around with the concept of cold opens, sometimes having an entire episode before the starting credits, and, in two instances (" The Cycling Tour ", the first episode to have a full-length story, and " The Golden Age of Ballooning ", the first episode of series four ) had no opening credits at all ( the former has a brief title card with the episode's title, and the latter has no titles because Terry Gilliam had not finished the new opening sequence ).
In this episode's version of the future, apparently four of the major American television networks have been bought by ABC and merged into CNNBCBS.
Parts of this episode's plot have been repeated and parodied several times in popular culture, including television shows, films, radio, and music.
However, given the complicated nature of the episode's look, where a lot of things had to be designed from scratch, the studio did not have enough time to finish the episode that summer, and it was moved to the next batch of episodes.
Doug Pratt, a DVD reviewer and Rolling Stone contributor, thought the episode's story was " nicely composed, so you don't have to recognize the Citizen Kane references to appreciate the effort, but it adds to the fun.
A Fox censor named Fox Censor, deleting things from the episode's script, announces that thanks to his editing tonight's Simpsons episode is rated TV-G, stating that the episode will not have " raunchy NBC-style sex " or " CBS-style violence.
In the episode's DVD commentary, Seth Green said that during filming for the scene where Oz and Veruca have supposedly just woken up from mating as werewolves, he was naked except for a " boy-thong ".
Describing the episode's plot to The New York Times, he said "... they have me overthrow the pope because the pope is a wimp, and then I take over the church and give it some guts.
The episode ends with another advertisement for Earth, promising that on next episode the " Americans and Iraqis have an all-out brawl " ( The coalition invasion of Iraq was launched on March 19, 2003, the night of this episode's original airing ).
In season 3 of Sony's serialized reality program The Tester, these cockroaches are featured in the first episode's challenge Bug Out, where each contestant will have a square-glass box placed over their head with the cockroaches in them and then interviewed by the judges.
The two were highly critical of the episode's conclusion, calling it " such a bland way of dying that for a moment, you feel you must have missed the point ".
The official reason has never been confirmed, but many believe that the episode's title may have had something to do with it.
In the episode's final scene, Larson's character ingests an overdose of sleeping pills, disinherits his grandson and sets up a trust fund to take care of the women whom the grandson may have infected with HIV / AIDs.
As the story progresses, Kyle questions his initial beliefs, and forms the episode's central moral by saying that " Family isn't about whose blood you have.
Creator Seth MacFarlane, the recipient of the award, noted that the episode's director, Dan Povenmire, deserved to have received the award for the contribution the visuals made to the episode's win.
When thin Cartman delivers the episode's moralizing statement, saying that it was wrong for them to have encouraged Kenny, Kyle gets suspicious enough and discovers he is not the real Cartman.

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