Rod SerlingI’ve been a fan of the Twilight Zone since I was a young kid. Every Thanksgiving, channel 5 used to host a “Twilight Zone Marathon” that I would curl up and watch along with a few pumpkin pies and some whipped cream.

I have some favorite episodes: 1) The gremlin on the wing with William Shatner , 2) “No Change,” 3) The librarian one where Burgess Meredith breaks his glasses . . . so many good ones. It’s absolutely mind boggling that the massive collection of shows were all written and directed by ONE MAN: Rod Serling.

He worked through his short life at his vision and gave millions joy. If there is one take-away creative people can get from his life it’s this:

Be patient as you work because you never know which idea will be your “biggie.” Case in point:

Stemming from a (Serling-scripted) Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse entry called “The Time Element” in November 1958, Serling created, executive produced, hosted and (for the most part) wrote the half-hour science-fantasy anthology The Twilight Zone, networked by CBS from 1959 to 1964. The series not only created a whole new programming genre for television, it also offered Serling an opportunity to say things he could never get away with in more conventional dramatizations. The weekly tales remain memorable for allowing the viewer to enter “the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition…” which lay “between the pit of man’s fears and the summit of his knowledge”. (source)

Be true to your vision.