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Twin Peaks had a 16.2 rating, with each point equaling 921,000 homes with TVs. [52] The episode also added new viewers because of what ABC's senior vice-president of research, Alan Wurtzel, called "the water cooler syndrome", in which people talk about the series the next day at work. [52]
The first season originally aired on ABC in the United States between April 8 and May 23, 1990, consisting of eight episodes.. The feature-length pilot opens with the discovery of the plastic-wrapped body of high school student Laura Palmer, an event that profoundly impacts the residents of the small town of Twin Peaks, Washington.
The small northwest town of Twin Peaks, Washington is shaken when the body of Laura Palmer is discovered washed up on a riverbank, wrapped in plastic. FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan) is called in when Ronnette Pulaski, who attended the same high school as Palmer, is found wandering on a bridge before lapsing into a coma.
Pages in category "Twin Peaks season 2 episodes" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. E.
The Twin Peaks Tapes of Agent Cooper, which compiled many of Cooper's recorded diary entries that featured in the first season and the beginning of the second, along with specially recorded entries including several taking place before the pilot. One of the specially recorded entries takes place the night of Cooper's arrival in Twin Peaks and ...
The Real Twin Peaks, aka Twin Peaks Day, is celebrated every year around Feb. 24 — the day Agent Dale Cooper rolled into Twin Peaks (at 11:30 a.m. to be exact). Fans flock for a weekend filled ...
Twin Peaks explored the dark side of Americana using elements of detective stories, soap operas, and horror, and Lynch himself appeared as the recurring character Gordon Cole.
In her positive review of the episode, The A.V. Club ' s Emily L. Stephens gave the episode an A, writing that the "comfort" of the original Twin Peaks is "entirely eschewed", praising the Glass Box subplot as "a remark upon the creation and the consumption of television and film" and calling the episode an "unfiltered Lynchian vision ...