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For an article that describes one season of a television show (possibly containing a section for episode summaries), the article should be named first by the name of the show, and then by the season/series number. Alternatively, if each season is referred to by a distinctive name, that should be used instead.
Additional precision is for clarifying within one name, not all names. (That's why episode disambiguations just use the name of the series, and not "("+the name of the series +" episode)" - you don't need to know it's the episode if the episode's the only thing the name can refer to in the context of that series.)
This category is hidden on its member pages—unless the corresponding user preference (Appearance → Show hidden categories) is set.; These categories can be used to track, build and organize lists of pages needing "attention en masse" (for example, pages using deprecated syntax), or that may need to be edited at someone's earliest convenience.
I'm a bit confused over episode naming. I have seen both Episode-name (Show-name) and Episode-name (Show-name episode) used. General naming convention is to describe WHAT the item is, not where it is from - for example, (actor) and (politician) would be preferred for diambiguating two names, and if there were more than one politician, then (Australian politician) and (Canadian politician ...
This template creates a table row, for use in a list of episodes, primarily for television. The number, and use, of columns a table has, is defined by the beginning wikitext of that table (further explained below), and is not defined by this template. In order for this template to provide a table column for a given episode, parameters must either be included or excluded. An included parameter ...
If others think it is a good idea but are unwilling to go through a complicated process of trying to update all the existing episode articles then we could just update the guideline to say either approach is okay for now and let editors move pages as they come across them. - adamstom97 08:50, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
The issue here is not the naming of episodes, but showing the type of presentation that an unnamed pilot is. If a pilot has a name, then fine, it would be "Name of Pilot (Series name)", however the "name" of an unnamed pilot is not, and never has been, "Pilot"; so "pilot" is a type and not an episode name.
The Office is an American television sitcom broadcast on NBC. Created as an adaptation by Greg Daniels of the British series of the same name, it is a mockumentary that follows the day-to-day lives of the employees of the Scranton, Pennsylvania branch of Dunder Mifflin, a fictional paper supply company. The series ran on NBC in the United States from March 24, 2005, to May 16, 2013 ...