Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This episode contains Quantum Leap's final "Kiss With History", the series's famous running gag. Just before Sam takes the talent show stage, the act before him is a seven-year-old kid with sunglasses and a saxophone, who's introduced as "Little Billy C, all the way from Hope, Arkansas!", implying that the kid is then-new president Bill Clinton.
The following contains major spoilers from Quantum Leap’s two-hour finale on Tuesday. Proceed accordingly. Ben and Addison finally reunited on Quantum Leap, and it felt so good, but also left us ...
Tuesday’s episode of Quantum Leap found Ian and Magic sitting across from Gideon, ... I’m resigning from Quantum Leap.” With the two-hour season finale set for next Tuesday at 9/8c, the show ...
Quantum Leap is an American science fiction television series, created by Donald P. Bellisario, that aired on NBC for five seasons, from March 26, 1989, to May 5, 1993. The series stars Scott Bakula as Dr. Sam Beckett, a physicist who, believing he has invented a way to travel through time, voluntarily subjects himself to an experiment that he believes will prove the validity of his ...
Quantum Leap is an American television series that first aired on NBC from March 26, 1989 to May 5, 1993. The series was created by Donald P. Bellisario, and starred Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell. This list is in chronological order of broadcasts with 97 episodes produced.
The following contains major spoilers from Quantum Leap’s Season 1 finale. Proceed accordingly. Quantum Leap’s Ben Song may have completed his mission, but his journey through time is only ...
The world of espionage isn’t all fun and games. That’s the lesson Ben learned in Quantum Leap‘s midseason finale on Wednesday, which took him to Giza, Egypt in the year 1961. After landing ...
"Pool Hall Blues" is a 1990 episode of the American science fiction television series Quantum Leap. Lead character Sam Beckett "leaps" (travels through time) into the body of an African American man in 1954: Charlie "Black Magic" Walters, one of the (fictional) greatest pool players in America, and a childhood mentor of supporting character Al.