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Uncanny Valley is IUEO now and the subjective version has been split; cleaning up misuse and ZCE in the process


** Simon from "Simon Says" mainly for the UncannyValley aspect of it.

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** Simon from "Simon Says" mainly for the UncannyValley creepy aspect of it.
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* RetroactiveRecognition:
** Creator/DonSDavis played Lt. Wilson in "Living Hell" and General Callahan in "The Voice of Reason".
** Creator/GregorySmith played Paul Stein as a child in "Dark Matters".
** Creator/RyanReynolds played Derek Tillman in "If These Walls Could Talk" and Paul Nodel in "Double Helix" and "The Origin of Species".
** Gary Jones played a TV host in "If These Walls Could Talk" and the FBI ballistics expert Duncan in "A Stitch in Time".
** Creator/MollyParker played Jennifer in "If These Walls Could Talk".
** Creator/TerylRothery played Janet Brevson in "Trial by Fire" and Dr. Lucy Cole in "Re-Generation".
** Jason Gray-Stanford played an airman in "Trial by Fire" and Dylan Venable in "Criminal Nature".
** Creator/JamesMarsden played Brav in "Rite of Passage".
** Creator/GracePark played Satchko Watanabe in "Time to Time".
** Noel Fisher played Brae in "Lion's Den".
** Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgment Day".
** Creator/MelissaGilbert a.k.a [[Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie Half-Pint]] played Teresa Janovitch in "Relativity Theory".
** Creator/RobinShou a.k.a [[Film/MortalKombatTheMovie Liu Kang]] played Major Ronald Neguchi in "Nightmare".
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* RetroactiveRecognition:
** Creator/DonSDavis played Lt. Wilson in "Living Hell" and General Callahan in "The Voice of Reason".
** Creator/GregorySmith played Paul Stein as a child in "Dark Matters".
** Creator/RyanReynolds played Derek Tillman in "If These Walls Could Talk" and Paul Nodel in "Double Helix" and "The Origin of Species".
** Gary Jones played a TV host in "If These Walls Could Talk" and the FBI ballistics expert Duncan in "A Stitch in Time".
** Creator/MollyParker played Jennifer in "If These Walls Could Talk".
** Creator/TerylRothery played Janet Brevson in "Trial by Fire" and Dr. Lucy Cole in "Re-Generation".
** Jason Gray-Stanford played an airman in "Trial by Fire" and Dylan Venable in "Criminal Nature".
** Creator/JamesMarsden played Brav in "Rite of Passage".
** Creator/GracePark played Satchko Watanabe in "Time to Time".
** Noel Fisher played Brae in "Lion's Den".
** Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgment Day".

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* SoBleakItsBoring: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This says it all.


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* TooBleakStoppedCaring: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This says it all.

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Sounds more like a case of Irony As She Is Cast; moving to the trivia section.


* HilariousInHindsight:
** In the episode "Simon Says", Simon has an obsession with wanting to ride the horses on the merry-go-round and is voiced by Creator/CathyWeseluck. His yells of "Horsey, horsey, horsey" become this in light of Weseluck going on to voice Spike in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' who is surrounded by horses (well, ponies) and has a crush on one of the pony characters.
** In "If These Walls Could Talk", Leviticus Mitchell wears a t-shirt that says on the back "capitalism is organized crime." In real life, Creator/DwightSchultz (who plays Leviticus) is a hardcore free market conservative.

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* HilariousInHindsight:
**
HilariousInHindsight: In the episode "Simon Says", Simon has an obsession with wanting to ride the horses on the merry-go-round and is voiced by Creator/CathyWeseluck. His yells of "Horsey, horsey, horsey" become this in light of Weseluck going on to voice Spike in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' who is surrounded by horses (well, ponies) and has a crush on one of the pony characters.
** In "If These Walls Could Talk", Leviticus Mitchell wears a t-shirt that says on the back "capitalism is organized crime." In real life, Creator/DwightSchultz (who plays Leviticus) is a hardcore free market conservative.
characters.

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* DarknessInducedAudienceApathy: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This says it all.


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* SoBleakItsBoring: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This says it all.
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** Gregory Smith played Paul Stein as a child in "Dark Matters".

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** Gregory Smith Creator/GregorySmith played Paul Stein as a child in "Dark Matters".
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** Teryl Rothery played Janet Brevson in "Trial by Fire" and Dr. Lucy Cole in "Re-Generation".

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** Teryl Rothery Creator/TerylRothery played Janet Brevson in "Trial by Fire" and Dr. Lucy Cole in "Re-Generation".



** Grace Park played Satchko Watanabe in "Time to Time".

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** Grace Park Creator/GracePark played Satchko Watanabe in "Time to Time".
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** Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgement Day".

to:

** Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgement "Judgment Day".
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* Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgement Day".

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* ** Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgement Day".
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* Creator/NicoleOliver played Jill Cooper in "The Deprogrammers" and Heather Catrell in "Judgement Day".
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** "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]": Two {{Energy Being}}s have been living on Earth for centuries, [[BodySurf stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom; [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper one of said energy beings]] was UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper himself. Detectives Terri and Girard end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terri's body after she mortally wounds Girard and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terri and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terri opts to kill herself to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.

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** "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]": Two {{Energy Being}}s have been living on Earth for centuries, [[BodySurf stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom; [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper one of said energy beings]] was UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper himself. Detectives Terri and Girard end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terri's body after she mortally wounds Girard and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terri and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terri opts to kill herself to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.

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** [[SerialKiller Wayne Haas]], from season 1's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S1E9LivingHell Living Hell]]", is a vicious murderer who targets women. Several years before, he had a neural transmitter installed in his brain which inadvertently allows Haas to [[ElectronicTelepathy share his thoughts with any person who possesses the same implant]], although Haas is mistakenly believed to have since died. He's [[EstablishingCharacterMoment first shown]] chasing a woman through the woods and killing her, before deciding to play around with the corpse when he notices his "audience," the episode's protagonist Ben Kohler. He later hires a prostitute, and, for fun, [[ForcedToWatch forces Ben to witness]] how he gruesomely stabs her to death in his bathtub. When Ben investigates Haas's apartment with the doctor responsible for the implant, Haas kidnaps her to cut out her brain and leaves Ben behind to take the blame for the other women the police claim he murdered over the previous months.
** [[NaziGrandpa Karl Rademacher]], from season 5's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E12Tribunal Tribunal]]", during UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust, was the SS commandant of an [[POWCamp Auschwitz subcamp]] made up to look like a "model" camp for inspections by the Red Cross. When they leave, he usually has the prisoners [[DeadlyGas gassed by the hundreds]]. The episode opens in 1944 as Rademacher makes his daily rounds to select a prisoner to execute in front of the rest, which he considers "the only joy I get from this miserable job". When he selects Leon Zgierski at random, his wife Miriam begs him not to, so he selects her instead and shoots her in front of her husband and daughter Hannah, later having [[WouldHurtAChild the child gassed to death]]. He gives instructions to the prisoners to write letters to their relatives to tell them how wonderful they have it there. When one man objects, Rademacher orders him sent outside and shot, before amending the order so he can personally shoot the prisoner. After the war this unrepentant war criminal lives incognito for many decades in the United States. Rademacher's cruelty and brutality ultimately becomes his own doom when, thanks to a TimeTravel device, he is sent back to his own camp dressed up as an inmate. When his younger version runs into him, he demands that the rowdy old man beg for his life before [[KarmicDeath he kills his older self for being Jewish]].
** In season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", two {{Energy Being}}s have been living on Earth for centuries, [[BodySurf stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom; [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper one of said energy beings]] was UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper himself. Detectives Terri and Girard end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terri's body after she mortally wounds Girard and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terri and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terri opts to kill herself to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.

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** [[SerialKiller Wayne Haas]], from season 1's ** "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S1E9LivingHell Living Hell]]", Hell]]": [[SerialKiller Wayne Haas]] is a vicious murderer who targets women. Several years before, he had a neural transmitter installed in his brain which inadvertently allows Haas to [[ElectronicTelepathy share his thoughts with any person who possesses the same implant]], although Haas is mistakenly believed to have since died. He's [[EstablishingCharacterMoment first shown]] chasing a woman through the woods and killing her, before deciding to play around with the corpse when he notices his "audience," the episode's protagonist Ben Kohler. He later hires a prostitute, and, for fun, [[ForcedToWatch forces Ben to witness]] how he gruesomely stabs her to death in his bathtub. When Ben investigates Haas's apartment with the doctor responsible for the implant, Haas kidnaps her to cut out her brain and leaves Ben behind to take the blame for the other women the police claim he murdered over the previous months.
** [[NaziGrandpa Karl Rademacher]], from season 5's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E12Tribunal Tribunal]]", Tribunal]]": [[NaziGrandpa Karl Rademacher]], during UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust, was the SS commandant of an [[POWCamp [[PoWCamp Auschwitz subcamp]] made up to look like a "model" camp for inspections by the Red Cross. When they leave, he usually has the prisoners [[DeadlyGas gassed by the hundreds]]. The episode opens in 1944 as Rademacher makes his daily rounds to select a prisoner to execute in front of the rest, which he considers "the only joy I get from this miserable job". When he selects Leon Zgierski at random, his a random man, the wife Miriam begs him not to, so he selects her instead and shoots her in front of her husband and daughter Hannah, daughter, later having [[WouldHurtAChild the child gassed to death]]. He gives instructions to the prisoners to write letters to their relatives to tell them how wonderful they have it there. When one man objects, Rademacher orders him sent outside and shot, before amending the order so he can personally shoot the prisoner. After the war this unrepentant war criminal lives incognito for many decades in the United States. Rademacher's cruelty and brutality ultimately becomes his own doom when, thanks to a TimeTravel device, he is sent back to his own camp dressed up as an inmate. When his younger version runs into him, he demands that the rowdy old man beg for his life before [[KarmicDeath he kills his older self for being Jewish]].
** In season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", two Time]]": Two {{Energy Being}}s have been living on Earth for centuries, [[BodySurf stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom; [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper one of said energy beings]] was UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper himself. Detectives Terri and Girard end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terri's body after she mortally wounds Girard and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terri and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terri opts to kill herself to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.
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Formatting.


* MagnificentBastard: From the episode "Zig Zag", Zig Fowler is a cyberterrorist in a near-future society where almost all data is controlled by the [[GovernmentAgencyOfFiction Department of Information Technology]]. Founding the Syndrome cell from the shadows with the mission to free people at any cost, Zig fakes his own death and assumes the meek Cliff Unger persona in order to infiltrate the department and gain access to its central processor room. After a year, Zig's implant reverts back to its original settings, whereupon he joins up with his old comrades again, who were not even privy to his real identity. Zig stages an armed takeover of the Department offices to bomb it, manipulating his former boss through word trickery into arming the bomb with his own implant, ultimately dying in a blaze of glory as the entire city is destroyed.

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* MagnificentBastard: From the episode "Zig Zag", "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S6E19ZigZag Zig Zag]]": Zig Fowler is a cyberterrorist in a near-future society where almost all data is controlled by the [[GovernmentAgencyOfFiction Department of Information Technology]]. Founding the Syndrome cell from the shadows with the mission to free people at any cost, Zig fakes his own death and assumes the meek Cliff Unger persona in order to infiltrate the department and gain access to its central processor room. After a year, Zig's implant reverts back to its original settings, whereupon he joins up with his old comrades again, who were not even privy to his real identity. Zig stages an armed takeover of the Department offices to bomb it, manipulating his former boss through word trickery into arming the bomb with his own implant, ultimately dying in a blaze of glory as the entire city is destroyed.
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** In "Breaking Point", [[spoiler: Laurie Holden can be seen blinking during closeups even though her character's suppose to be dead]].

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** In "Breaking Point", [[spoiler: Laurie Holden can be seen blinking during closeups even though her character's suppose supposed to be dead]].
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** In "Breaking Point", [[spoiler: Laurie Holden can be seen blinking during closeups even though her character's suppose to be dead]].
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* DarknessInducedAudienceApathy: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This pretty much says it all.

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* DarknessInducedAudienceApathy: This show ran on so many uses of the CruelTwistEnding that ''it was the former TropeNamer''. This pretty much says it all.

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* SpecialEffectsFailure: The ending of "Flower Child" from 2001 doubles as this trope mixed with NightmareFuel, and it's clearly ''bad'' 2001 CGI, at least by modern-day standards.

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* SpecialEffectsFailure: SpecialEffectsFailure:
**
The ending of "Flower Child" from 2001 doubles as this trope mixed with NightmareFuel, and it's clearly ''bad'' 2001 CGI, at least by modern-day standards.standards.
** The special effects for the aliens in "Dark Matters" have not aged well.

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** "The New Breed": the BodyHorror transformations that the main character goes through, not to mention his increasingly desperate attempts to stop the nanobots [[spoiler:culminating in an attempted suicide that fails due to the bots fixing him]].

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** "The New Breed": the BodyHorror transformations that the main character Andy Groenig goes through, not to mention his increasingly desperate attempts to stop the nanobots [[spoiler:culminating in an attempted suicide that fails due to the bots fixing him]].
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* SpecialEffectsFailure: "Flower Child" from 2001 doubles as this trope mixed with NightmareFuel, and it's clearly ''bad'' 2001 CGI, at least by modern-day standards.

to:

* SpecialEffectsFailure: The ending of "Flower Child" from 2001 doubles as this trope mixed with NightmareFuel, and it's clearly ''bad'' 2001 CGI, at least by modern-day standards.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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** Don S. Davis played Lt. Wilson in "Living Hell" and General Callahan in "The Voice of Reason".

to:

** Don S. Davis Creator/DonSDavis played Lt. Wilson in "Living Hell" and General Callahan in "The Voice of Reason".
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** [[NaziGrandpa Karl Rademacher]], from season 5's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E12Tribunal Tribunal]]", during UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust, was the SS commandant of an [[POWCamp Auschwitz subcamp]] made up to look like a "model" camp for inspections by the Red Cross. When they leave, he usually has the prisoners [[DeadlyGas gassed by the hundreds]]. The episode opens in 1944 as Rademacher makes his daily rounds to select a prisoner to execute in front of the rest, which he considers "the only joy I get from this miserable job". When he selects a random man, the wife begs him not to, so he selects her instead and shoots her in front of her husband and daughter, later having [[WouldHurtAChild the child gassed to death]]. He gives instructions to the prisoners to write letters to their relatives to tell them how wonderful they have it there. When one man objects, Rademacher orders him sent outside and shot, before amending the order so he can personally shoot the prisoner. After the war this unrepentant war criminal lives incognito for many decades in the United States. Rademacher's cruelty and brutality ultimately becomes his own doom when, thanks to a TimeTravel device, he is sent back to his own camp dressed up as an inmate. When his younger version runs into him, he demands that the rowdy old man beg for his life before [[KarmicDeath he kills his older self for being Jewish]].

to:

** [[NaziGrandpa Karl Rademacher]], from season 5's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E12Tribunal Tribunal]]", during UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust, was the SS commandant of an [[POWCamp Auschwitz subcamp]] made up to look like a "model" camp for inspections by the Red Cross. When they leave, he usually has the prisoners [[DeadlyGas gassed by the hundreds]]. The episode opens in 1944 as Rademacher makes his daily rounds to select a prisoner to execute in front of the rest, which he considers "the only joy I get from this miserable job". When he selects a random man, the Leon Zgierski at random, his wife Miriam begs him not to, so he selects her instead and shoots her in front of her husband and daughter, daughter Hannah, later having [[WouldHurtAChild the child gassed to death]]. He gives instructions to the prisoners to write letters to their relatives to tell them how wonderful they have it there. When one man objects, Rademacher orders him sent outside and shot, before amending the order so he can personally shoot the prisoner. After the war this unrepentant war criminal lives incognito for many decades in the United States. Rademacher's cruelty and brutality ultimately becomes his own doom when, thanks to a TimeTravel device, he is sent back to his own camp dressed up as an inmate. When his younger version runs into him, he demands that the rowdy old man beg for his life before [[KarmicDeath he kills his older self for being Jewish]].

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* ParanoiaFuel: "Free Spirit" is a prime example of this, as [[TheDisembodied a disembodied person]] with a grudge goes after the scientists responsible for his state by [[BodySurf possessing all sorts of people]] to off them one by one, his victims never being able to know where the danger might come from. In the end he reveals [[spoiler:that he framed the protagonist for several murders by taking control of her body, then visits her in prison to assure her that he'll be tormenting her for some time to come.]]

to:

* ParanoiaFuel: ParanoiaFuel:
**
"Free Spirit" is a prime example of this, as a [[TheDisembodied a disembodied person]] with a grudge goes after the scientists responsible for his state by [[BodySurf possessing all sorts of people]] to off them one by one, his victims never being able to know where the danger might come from. In the end he reveals [[spoiler:that he framed the protagonist for several murders by taking control of her body, then visits her in prison to assure her that he'll be tormenting her for some time to come.]]]]
** The ending voiceover of "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S1E10CornerOfTheEye Corner Of The Eye]]" suggests that beings such as aliens in the episode may now be walking among us, and even be someone you know...

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** Creator/MollyParker played Jennifer in "If These Walls Could Talk".



** Creator/MollyParker played Jennifer in "If These Walls Could Talk".
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Changed: 318

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** Season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", which continues the story from the season's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper]]", has two alien {{serial killer}}s who have been living on earth for centuries, [[GrandTheftMe stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom. Detectives Terry Russo and Frank Daniels end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terry's body after she mortally wounds Daniels and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terry and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terry [[HeroicSuicide opts to kill herself]] to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.

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** Season In season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", which continues the story from the season's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper]]", has two alien {{serial killer}}s who {{Energy Being}}s have been living on earth Earth for centuries, [[GrandTheftMe [[BodySurf stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom. boredom; [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper one of said energy beings]] was UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper himself. Detectives Terry Russo Terri and Frank Daniels Girard end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terry's Terri's body after she mortally wounds Daniels Girard and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terry Terri and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terry [[HeroicSuicide Terri opts to kill herself]] herself to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.
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** In "If These Walls Could Talk", Leviticus Mitchell wears a t-shirt that says on the back "capitalism is organized crime." In real life, Dwight Schultz (who plays Leviticus) is a hardcore free market conservative.

to:

** In "If These Walls Could Talk", Leviticus Mitchell wears a t-shirt that says on the back "capitalism is organized crime." In real life, Dwight Schultz Creator/DwightSchultz (who plays Leviticus) is a hardcore free market conservative.
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** Many of the {{Cruel Twist Ending}}s were clearly put in out of shock value instead of wrapping up the episodes in a satisfying manner. As a result, they're often hilarious.

to:

** Many of the {{Cruel Twist Ending}}s were clearly put in out of shock value instead of rather than wrapping up the episodes in a any sort of satisfying manner. As a result, they're often hilarious.
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** Season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", which continues the story from the season's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper]]", has two alien {{serial killer}}s who have been living on earth for centuries, [[GrandTheftMe stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom. Detectives Terry Russo and Frank Daniels end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terry's body after she mortally wounds Daniels and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terry and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terry [[HeroicSacrifice opts to kill herself]] to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.

to:

** Season 5's finale "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E22BetterLuckNextTime Better Luck Next Time]]", which continues the story from the season's "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S5E11Ripper Ripper]]", has two alien {{serial killer}}s who have been living on earth for centuries, [[GrandTheftMe stealing host bodies]] and using them to commit murder after murder for amusement and to alleviate boredom. Detectives Terry Russo and Frank Daniels end up each working with an alien, both claiming they are officers sent to hunt down the killer. At the end, the truth is revealed: the two are partners in crime and have been playing the officers for fun with the only excuse being how bored they are as immortals. The two have been spending centuries playing their games and corrupting good people into killing their friends and partners out of paranoia; they plan to hijack Terry's body after she mortally wounds Daniels and use her police connections to have even more fun. When Terry and her dying partner mortally wound both killers' host bodies, Terry [[HeroicSacrifice [[HeroicSuicide opts to kill herself]] to prevent them from stealing her body, knowing they can't survive long without hosts and unwilling to allow them to continue their rampage.
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None


** In the episode "Simon Says", Simon has an obsession with wanting to ride the horses on the merry-go-round and is voiced by Cathy Weseluck. His yells of "Horsey, horsey, horsey" become this in light of Weseluck going on to voice Spike in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' who is surrounded by horses (well, ponies) and has a crush on one of the pony characters.

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** In the episode "Simon Says", Simon has an obsession with wanting to ride the horses on the merry-go-round and is voiced by Cathy Weseluck.Creator/CathyWeseluck. His yells of "Horsey, horsey, horsey" become this in light of Weseluck going on to voice Spike in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' who is surrounded by horses (well, ponies) and has a crush on one of the pony characters.



** Many of the CruelTwistEndings were clearly put in out of shock value instead of wrapping up the episodes in a satisfying manner. As a result, they're often hilarious.

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** Many of the CruelTwistEndings {{Cruel Twist Ending}}s were clearly put in out of shock value instead of wrapping up the episodes in a satisfying manner. As a result, they're often hilarious.

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