Susie Wiles seems to criticize Bondi, Vance and talks Trump in Vanity Fair ...
Even after The Twilight Zone officially ended its original run in 1964, creator and host Rod Serling tried to keep the series alive by adapting one of its most iconic episodes into a movie. In ...
It's been 50 years since the Emmy Award-winning TV writer and producer died. But watching reruns of The Twilight Zone confirms that the themes Serling tackled remain relevant. This is FRESH AIR. On ...
Rod Serling's historical marker will be installed at the Antioch College campus (his alma mater) in Yellow Springs in a ceremony led by Gov. Mike DeWine. Serling enrolled at Antioch after serving in ...
What could be more nostalgic than a trip through "The Twilight Zone," the great Rod Serling series that aired from 1959 to 1964, and has never been far from our TVs (or hearts) since? Yet the irony is ...
The Twilight Zone creator studied at Antioch College in Yellow Springs before starting his writing career at WLW in 1950. He returned to teach at Antioch College in 1962. Award-winning television ...
“The real monsters aren’t in outer space. They’re within us — our fears, our hatreds, our need to blame.” Rod Serling, TV Guide Interview, Oct. 1959. “The tools of conquest do not necessarily come ...
In February 1945, World War II had entered its final year, but 20-year-old Rod Serling didn’t know that. He, like the many soldiers around him, both ally and foe, only knew the death and destruction ...
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (WBNG) - Rod Serling moved to Binghamton from Syracuse when he was just two years old. As a young man, he fought in the Pacific in World War II before gracing the silver screen with ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Heather Wishart-Smith is a board director who covers innovation. There is a fifth dimension, beyond that which is known to man. It ...
Television writer Rod Serling, right, huddles with producer-director Fielder Cook, backstage at a New York rehearsal for a precedent-making telecast of Serling's "Patterns," on Television Theater.