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Television pilots within a series.. This category includes pilot episodes that were not broadcast as the series premiere.. It also includes backdoor pilots, i.e. films or miniseries that serve as a proof of concept for a full series, but may be broadcast on their own even if the full series is not picked up.
Has the ability to manipulate gravity and shoot energy blasts. Became the new permanent Radiant Black after winning a fan vote. Radiant Red (Satomi Sone) — An Asian-American woman with financial debt. Has the ability of matter-absorption; Radiant Pink (Eva Reyes) — An Hispanic internet streamer who has the ability to open portals.
Written by Ann Donahue, Carol Mendelsohn and series creator Anthony E. Zuiker and directed by Danny Cannon, the episode also served as a backdoor pilot episode of the spin-off series, CSI: Miami, set in Miami. The episode aired on CBS on May 9, 2002.
A backdoor pilot is a film or miniseries that serves as a proof of concept for a full series, [9] but may be broadcast on its own even if the full series is not picked up. [10] The term may also be used for an episode of an existing television show that serves to introduce a potential or already planned spin-off. Such backdoor pilots commonly ...
The two-part episode Knight Rider episode "Mouth of the Snake", [1] was a backdoor pilot for a 1984 series to be called All That Glitters. Rejected by NBC, the lead character and actor were recycled for a short-lived 1985–1986 series titled Code of Vengeance , in it, David Dalton ( Charles Taylor ), a Vietnam veteran -turned- drifter ...
The backdoor pilot aired near the end of season four, simply titled "Toni's Boys" (season 4, episode 23). The episode starred Barbara Stanwyck as Antonia "Toni" Blake, a wealthy widow socialite and friend of Charlie's who ran a detective agency she inherited from her late husband.
"The Farm" was produced to serve as a backdoor pilot for a proposed spin-off series starring Wilson as Dwight, which NBC ultimately did not pick up. The episode received mostly negative reviews from television critics, with many criticizing Dwight's farm storyline and some critics calling it a "Frankenstein episode".
A spin-off in television is a new series containing characters or settings that originated in a previous series, but with a different focus, tone, or theme. For example, the series Frasier was a spin-off of the earlier series Cheers: the character Frasier Crane was introduced as a secondary character on Cheers, and became the protagonist of his own series, set in a different city, in the spin-off.