Everyone knew this was the episode that was going to make or break the season.
My favorite episode of Stargate? All of them! My favorite episode of Parker Lewis? All of them!
How that works is our first season was the year we had a threatened writers' strike, so what we did was that instead of doing 22 episodes, we did 30. We put 10 in the bank.
Every episode of 'True Blood' is like shooting a low budget feature.
I've never watched an entire episode of 'American Idol'. It's too mean.
Obviously, it's not cable, it's streaming, but it's the same format. It's the same 10 episodes. It feels like cable as opposed to network.
'Waldo' was one episode I always felt I didn't quite crack. And weirdly, now that feels like one of the more prescient ones.
'Lipstick Jungle' was on the air for 20 episodes - I loved 'Lipstick Jungle.'
Even though the third season of Necessary Roughness was only ten episodes, they were an extremely intense bunch of episodes, especially toward the finale.
They were nicely written and nicely directed episodes [Star Trek: Enterprise]. I enjoyed working with Scott [Bakula]. So it was good to do, and, as you said, it did serve to enhance the Soong legacy.
Hotmail just picked up 12 new episodes of 'Judging Amy'.
Every first episode of a season has been crafted like another pilot.
If I watch an episode of SNL, and there's one thing that I liked, then that's a good episode.
In some subsequent episodes, certain individuals have certain knowledge of certain events that they wouldn't have, if they didn't have access to the future.
Plan for each episode to be a satisfying experience, but still leave the audience thinking, 'Oh, my God! Now what?
We do 32 episodes a season and will have shot 267 episodes by the end of the ninth season... It's impossible to sell that many episodes in the foreign market.