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"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" is the 22nd episode in the first season of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone. The episode was written by Rod Serling, the creator-narrator of the series. It originally aired on March 4, 1960, on CBS. In 2009, TIME named it one of the ten best Twilight Zone episodes. [1]
Monsters on Maple Street was picked up for distribution by Mr. Kenney's label, Ghetto Crush, and quickly became a top seller on the label's website, . The Smyrk traveled to Los Angeles in August 2006 to record six new tracks for the album New Fiction. This album was recorded over a month in Mr. Kenney's home studio.
"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" Ronald Winston: Rod Serling: Rene Garriguenc: March 4, 1960 () 173-3620: A power failure causes the residents of a suburban ...
Many Twilight Zone episodes, like “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street,” touched upon real-life issues. CBS via Getty. Gig Young in 'The Twilight Zone' episode 'Walking Distance'
In an updated version of the original series episode The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street, an unexpected power and water failure prompts the residents (Andrew McCarthy, Titus Welliver, Kristi Angus, and Peter Williams) of a quiet suburban neighborhood to grow increasingly suspicious of their new neighbors and accuse them of being terrorist ...
Episodes such as "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" and "I Am the Night—Color Me Black" offered specific commentary on current events and social issues. Other stories, such as " The Masks ", " I Dream of Genie ", or " Mr. Denton on Doomsday " were allegories , parables , or fables that reflected the moral and philosophical choices of the ...
As if we needed another reason to love the furry Sesame Street character, Cookie Monster gives us a unique rendition of “12 Days of Christmas,” where he shares the 12 different kinds of ...
The monster knew their every thought, could feel their every emotion; and when they made him angry, which was often, he would banish them into a cornfield from which there was no return. And the most frightening thing about this monster was that he was only six years old. Now it's forty years later, and the people of Peaksville are still in Hell.