Episodes
# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Awakening (Part 1)" | Tobe Hooper | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | September 21, 1996 |
1960-1962: Congressional Aid John Loengard is drawn into an investigation of Project Blue Book and finds himself confronted by its shadowy architects, known as Majestic 12. | ||||
2 | "The Awakening (Part 2)" | Tobe Hooper | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | September 21, 1996 |
1962-1963: Now on the run from Majestic 12, John and his girlfriend Kim Sayers contact President Kennedy and reveal an alien race known as The Hive are conspiring to take over the world. | ||||
3 | "Moving Targets" | Thomas J. Wright | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | September 28, 1996 |
November 23, 1963: The assassination of JFK sets the backdrop as John and Kim visit Jesse Marcel and discover the origins of how Majestic 12 came to be in July 1947. | ||||
4 | "Mercury Rising" | Tucker Gates | James D. Parriott | October 19, 1996 |
January 30, 1964: When Kim has visions of an astronaut being abducted by the Hive, she and John head to Florida as Ranger 6 prepares to send NASA the first close-up pictures of the lunar surface. | ||||
5 | "Dark Days Night" | Matthew Penn | Story by: Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel Teleplay by: Brent V. Friedman & Brad Markowitz |
October 26, 1996 |
February 6, 1964: While in New York, John and Kim discover a Hive plot to hijack the Beatles' broadcast on The Ed Sullivan Show and activate their latest agenda for world domination. | ||||
6 | "Dreamland" | Winrich Kolbe | Steve Apsis | November 2, 1996 |
Early March 1964: Following a lead to Las Vegas, John and Kim are tasked by none other than Howard Hughes to help stop a Hive invasion of Area 51, also known as Dreamland. | ||||
7 | "Inhuman Nature" | Rodman Flender | Melissa Rosenberg | November 9, 1996 |
April 11, 1964: In Wisconsin, John and Kim discover that recent episodes of cattle mutilation may be masking a Hive plot to create the perfect genetic weapon. Airing out of order, this episode takes place chronologically after "Ancient Future". | ||||
8 | "Ancient Future" | Lou Antonio | James D. Parriot & Gay Walch | November 16, 1996 |
March 27, 1964: When The Good Friday Earthquake reveals a 2,000 year old spacecraft buried in the Alaskan wilderness, John and Kim must make a deal with Majestic 12 to prevent Armageddeon. | ||||
9 | "Hostile Convergence" | David Jackson | Story by: Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel Teleplay by: Javier Grillo-Marxuach |
December 7, 1996 |
April 24, 1964: Lonnie Zamora's claim of a close encounter in Socorro, New Mexico puts John and Jesse Marcel on the trail of secret UFO blueprints one step ahead of Majestic 12. | ||||
10 | "We Shall Overcome" | Jim Charleston | Bryce Zabel | December 14, 1996 |
11 | "The Last Wave" | Perry Lang | Melissa Rosenberg | January 4, 1997 |
12 | "The Enemy Within" | Jim Charleston | Story by: Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel Teleplay by: Brad Markowitz |
January 11, 1997 |
13 | "The Warren Omission" | Perry Lang | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | January 18, 1997 |
14 | "White Rabbit" | James A. Contner | Brent V. Friedman | February 1, 1997 |
15 | "Shades of Gray" | Perry Lang | Brad Markowitz | February 8, 1997 |
16 | "Burn, Baby, Burn" | Steve Posey | James D. Parriott | March 1, 1997 |
17 | "Both Sides Now" | James A. Conter | Melissa Rosenberg | March 8, 1997 |
18 | "To Prey in Darkness" | Thomas J. Wright | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | March 15, 1997 |
19 | "Strangers In the Night" | Michael Levine | Brad Markowitz | May 24, 1997 |
20 | "Bloodlines" | Perry Lang | Brent V. Friedman & Bryce Zabel | May 31, 1997 |
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Famous quotes containing the word episodes:
“What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-mens existence strong enough to take upon itself a form of imagined life clearer than reality and whose accumulated verisimilitude of selected episodes puts to shame the pride of documentary history?”
—Joseph Conrad (18571924)
“Twenty or thirty years ago, in the army, we had a lot of obscure adventures, and years later we tell them at parties, and suddenly we realize that those two very difficult years of our lives have become lumped together into a few episodes that have lodged in our memory in a standardized form, and are always told in a standardized way, in the same words. But in fact that lump of memories has nothing whatsoever to do with our experience of those two years in the army and what it has made of us.”
—Václav Havel (b. 1936)