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It contained 22 episodes, plus an unaired episode that was produced during the first season; "Unearthed" aired as a special as episode 11 of season two, days prior to "Johari Window", the first new episode of 2010. Also part of the season was the series' only musical episode, "Brown Betty", which was
"Peter" is the 15th episode of the second season of the American science fiction drama television series Fringe, and the 36th episode overall. Considered a keystone installment of the series, "Peter" is a flashback episode, told as Walter Bishop reveals to Olivia Dunham that his son Peter (Joshua Jackson) is really the Peter of the parallel universe.
The episode received a 4.2/6 Nielsen rating, indicating that 4.2% of American households watched the episode, and that 6% of all televisions in use at the time were tuned into it. [9] " Family Gay", along with " I Dream of Jesus " and " Road to Germany ", were nominated in the " Outstanding Comedy Series " category for the 2009 61st Primetime ...
Murray considered the ending with the appearance of Walternate a "strong finish to a mostly strong episode". [2] IGN's Ramsey Isler gave it 7.8/10, writing that "Fringe 's sophomore season is building up to an epic 2-part finale. This episode doesn't reveal much in terms of overall Fringe mythology until the very awesome ending, and even then ...
Guy appeared in the pilot and in the episodes “Old Habits, New Beginnings”, “A Burden’s Burden”, “Who Wants Cake?”, “Bogie Nights”, “Feather in the Storm”, “Jerri is Only Skin Deep”, and finally “The Goodbye Guy”. In this episode, he is mauled to death by dogs, traumatizing Jerri but allowing her to learn the ...
In the scene when Peter wears the costume from The Greatest American Hero, the theme from E.T. was originally used. [2] Several scenes were cut when the episode aired on television, mostly due to lack of time. [2] The song New Brian sang to Peter was written by series writer Alec Sulkin. [2] The original ending for the episode was a Beverly ...
Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club reviewed the episode more negatively, however, criticizing the writers for using "storylines as a thin spine to hang jokes on," giving the episode a D rating. [2] Jason Hughes of TV Squad commended the live-action sequence featuring Johnson, as well as the utilization of Meg's personality to create an awkward ...
Kevin McFarland of The A.V. Club gave the episode a C+, saying "I liked a lot of the throwaway lines and cutaway material packed around the central plot, but when Family Guy goes all in on one plotline without any other runners, it’s a make-or-break choice. This question about Brian and Peter’s owner/pet relationship didn’t really need ...