Fry finds the fossilised remains of his dog and attempts to resurrect it. The ending of the episode got me all chocked up and made my sister cry.
He decides not to resurrect the dog since he only had it as a puppy and it probably eventually forgot him and went on to have a great life with a more caring owner. The episode ends with a montage showing the dog spending the rest of its life waiting outside his old pizzeria for him to come back.
Another vote for Twin Peaks, but not the pilot. I give the nod to the show where we find out Laura’s killer. First a scene where Mrs. Palmer sees the white horse, then later Cooper and the Log Lady are watching the singer (Julee Cruise?), when they are bathed in a white light. The giant replaces the singer and says “It is happening again”. Cut to the Palmer house, the record is skipping on the phonograph and Leland looks in the mirror and BOB looks back!
Second place to Are You Being Served?, where Captain Peacock is defending his honor in the kangaroo court about having an affair with Mr. Rumbold’s secretary. “I was checking to see if there was any current in the battery” “I thought the currants were in Grainger’s ears”
I don’t know about “best,” but one of my favorite sitcom episodes was the Seinfeld in which George does the opposite of everything he would normally do, and gets a great job and a beautiful girlfriend. Hilarious! “Hi, I’m George… I’m unemployed and I live with my parents.”
I also really liked the last episode of Cheers. “We’re closed.”
Shows that I’ve wanted to rewind and watch them again because they were so good:
The premiere of “Frasier.” It had me in stitches. And I was all ready to hate it because I didn’t think the character Frasier could carry his own show.
“Employee of the Month” in Season 3 of “Sopranos” where Jennifer is raped. The ending went somewhere completely different than I thought it would. Great story.
“I Only Have Eyes For You” of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. What a creative way to reunite, if only temporarily, the long lost lovers. ::sigh::
The “Donny” episode of Just Shoot Me was hysterical.
Charlie and Kirsten’s wedding in “Party of Five” had me in tears.
And finally, the episode of Andy Griffith where Andy is ashamed of Opie for not giving money to charity and it turns out Opie had literally given the little girl the coat off his back. Awwwww, someone give me a hankie!
Married with Children: the three part episode where Kelly Bundy gets her TV Show, and inadvertently showed real Grrrl Power years before it became a fad, before producers forced her to tone the show content waaaaaaaaaay down. “Milk!” Milk??? What happened to “Sex?” It was the climax of a real turnaround of Kelly’s character.
The Facts of Life: the episode where Jo rudely brushed aside would-be suitors: “Keep walking”.
Twilight Zone: A Game of Pool. Featuring Jack Klugman as the pool shark who wanted to be better than the late all-time champ played by Johnathan Winters. The dead guy came back and played him for his soul.
Buffy: Hush. Risky premise that worked. Without it, there would be no musical.
Xena: A Day in the Life.
Star Trek:TNG: The Best of Both Worlds. Picard kidnapped and assimilated by the Borg. Riker is forced to fire on the ship Picard is on.
Classic Trek: The Trouble With Tribbles. Best funny show in a drama series ever.
Favourite single episode: Joel and Maggie’s epic journey that leads to Joel returning to New York…or maybe the episode where Chris (John Corbett) flings a cow.
The West Wing where Mrs. Landingham died, and the subsequent episode (I believe “Two Cathedrals”) that someone already mentioned. I had no idea it was coming, and it really blindsided me. I burst into tears while watching the show, which has never happened before or since.
“Bill Moves On” from NewsRadio was another great episode, and very moving in a non-schmaltzy way.
That episode of Futurama with the dog was unbelievably sad, and the rest of the episode had been typically light-hearted and jokey, so the ending came out of nowhere. I wouldn’t rank it as one of the best episodes of a TV show I’ve ever seen, but it was definitely memorable and depressing.
For the record, the episode is called “Transmutate.”
You also forgot the subplot where the Maximals argue with each other about whether it’s better to let Transmutate live as a malformed being or not – you don’t usually see such morality debates in American “kiddie” shows…
Another touching episode is the one about Fry and his brother, Yancy. Throughout most of their early lives, Yancy had copied Phillip. Phillip finds out that another Phillip Fry was the first to walk on Mars and he thinks that it was his brother who stole his name. They go to the grave of the “first Martian” and it’s revealed that Phillip Fry, who walked on Mars, is really Yancy’s son, named after his missing uncle. The last shot shows Fry staring at his nephew’s statue with the Simple Mind’s song, “Don’t You Forget About Me” playing.
Another great episode was when the head of Richard M. Nixon wins as President of the World.
Wow, lots of good memories in this thread! Some of my nominees have already been mentioned and some haven’t:
“The Inner Light” from ST:TNG
“Ivan” from Magnum: PI
Jose Chung’s From Outer Space from The X-Files
Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose from The X-Files
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (first-season first-story-arc finale) from Wiseguy. Actually, pretty much every episode from the first season. Amazing writing and acting.
Starring: Robert Culp
One of the finest made-for-television science fiction works ever produced. Set in Los Angeles’ fantastic art deco Bailey Building, the suspense is terrific and the villains all too credible. Decades after it was made, this one episode still stands out as a masterwork of direction, effects and camera work.
I’ve not read through the entire thread to see if this one was mentioned already. Even if it has been noted before, it merits being posted again. Back in the early 1960’s, The Outer Limits had a budget of $100,000 per episode, an equivalent of well over one million dollars in today’s money. Some of the plots were schlocky, but the overall tenor of the series was rivaled only by The Twilight Zone for total quality.