The elderly "Opa" Clyde Globe (Roberts Blossom) disapproves of his son Fenton (Scott Paulin) building a new country home on the site where he accidentally caused a train, the Highball Express, to derail 75 years earlier.
High school jock Brad Bender (Scott Clough), in the running for Prom King and feeling too cool for the nerdy and persistent Shirley Crater (Lisa Jane Persky), is hit by a meteorite during a meteor shower, giving his body magnetic properties.
Johnathan (Casey Siemaszko), a courageous ball turret gunner and aspiring cartoonist, is trapped in the belly gun of his company's Boeing B-17 (named "Friendly Persuasion") after a firefight.
For their science project, three high-schoolers, Andy, Jimmy, and George (Matthew Laborteaux, Gary Riley, and Jim Gatherum), manage to construct an antenna that can pick up interstellar transmissions.
In a world where emotions are personified as human beings, the exhausted Guilt (Dom DeLuise) is made to take a cruise for a mandatory vacation, where he meets and grows attracted to Love (Loni Anderson), causing him to begin neglecting his important duties.
Walter Poindexter (Sydney Lassick), a henpecked, an unhappy, and a frustrated man dealing with his nagging wife Grendel (Nancy Parsons) and his incorrigible sons (Jeff Cohen and David Stone), uses TV to escape his miserable existence.
Walter finds that using the set's remote control allows him to bring any character onscreen into the real world, using it to respectively turn his abusive family into June Cleaver, Arnold Jackson, and "Face" (reprised by Barbara Billingsley, Gary Coleman, and Dirk Benedict).
On Christmas Eve, Santa Claus (Douglas Seale) accidentally trips a couple's burglar alarm and is arrested by cynical sheriff Horace Smyvie (Pat Hingle), locked in a prison cell with a trio of drunks dressed like him.
Jennifer Mowbray (Mabel King), a babysitter from Jamaica, uses the powers of voodoo to get Lance and Dennis Paxton (Seth Green and Joshua Rudoy), the beleaguering and overactive brothers she's charged with looking after, under control.
During the Great Depression, Michael Malloy (Douglas Seale) is tricked into signing an insurance policy so Tony Maroni (Al Ruscio) and his fellow barflies can collect the money once he drinks himself to death, only to learn that they're dealing with much more than they expected.
Horror novelist Jordan Manmouth (Sam Waterston), known for his huge ego and flagrant dismissal of the supernatural, is soon haunted by a phantom with a misshapen face (Tim Robbins), which appears in any reflective surface he looks at.
Balding accountant Murray Bernstein (E. Hampton Beagle) recently purchased a hairpiece that drove him to murder three lawyers, prompting inept defense attorney Harry Ballentine (Tony Kientz) to grow fearful with his new client.
When this discovery becomes public, he becomes subject to a heated debate among campus professors Rand, Gilbert, and Smith (John Alvin, Gary Berghen, and Ben Kronen) about the abilities and limitations of human intellect, proving to be more than he can handle.
Edwin (Andrew McCarthy) learns that his grandfather, Charlie (Ian Wolfe), very recently died in his sleep, yet that doesn't stop the old man from hanging around his apartment, playing the piano, and swapping stories with his grandmother.
Wax-museum dresser Herbert (Danny DeVito) takes a ring from a statue and gives it to his wife Lois (Rhea Perlman) as an anniversary present, which turns her into a wicked seductress.
Harried housewife Joan Simmons (Hayley Mills) encounters a large furry creature (performed by Don McLeod, vocal effects provided by Frank Welker) during a storm, which causes havoc with its appetite for inanimate objects.
High school student Peter Brand (Scott Coffey), utterly obsessed with his sexy classmate Cynthia Simpson (Mary Stuart Masterson), helps his crush cast a spell on their sadistic and tyrannical English teacher B.O.
Little Jonah Kelley (Jake Hart) starts seeing things randomly disappearing to the point where the house becomes sterile, and worries why his status-seeking parents Pamela and Raymond (Clare Kirkconnell and Tom McConnell) are more concerned with their social lives than they are with his problems.
Jo-Jo Gillespie (Bob Balaban), a Broadway lyricist/composer desperate to deliver a hit musical, seeks inspiration from the spirit of George Gershwin (Dana Gladstone), summoned from the dead by psychic Sister Teresa (Lainie Kazan).
A sentient plant-like alien known as "Cabbage Man" ("Weird Al" Yankovic) threatens to destroy Earth if the Miss Stardust beauty pageant doesn't allow contestants from other worlds to compete.
[17] The 1987 film Batteries Not Included was originally planned to be a segment for the series[citation needed], but Spielberg thought the story would work better on the big screen instead of television.
On October 23, 2015, it was announced that NBC was developing a reboot of the series with Bryan Fuller writing the pilot episode and executive producing alongside Justin Falvey and Darryl Frank.
Three of the episodes ("The Mission", "Mummy Daddy" and "Go to the Head of the Class") were packaged together as an anthology film and released theatrically in several European countries such as Spain, France (July 10, 1986) or Finland (June 26, 1987), and also in Australia on September 17, 1987.