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Max Headroom

Season One: 1987-1988

Blipverts

  • written by Joe Gannon and Steve Roberts
    based on the British screenplay by Steve Roberts
  • directed by Farhad Mann
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: Network 23 TV reporter Edison Carter investigates the unusual death of a man in a low-rent apartment. Police aren't saying much, and they're not cooperating with Edison's investigations - in fact, they sedate the victim's wife while Edison is interviewing her during a live newscast. Edison's boss gets a call from Network 23's board of directors, ordering him to pull the story immediately - and the moment Edison's camera light goes out when his satellite feed is cut, the police turn on him, and he has to make a desperate escape to the relative safety of the Network 23 helicopter. When he returns to the newsroom, Edison promptly decks his controller, Gorrister, and demands to know why Murray allowd the network's board to pull the story.

    In fact, what neither Edison nor Murray knows is that Edison was dangerously close to exposing the hazardous nature of Network 23's new method of advertising, blipverts. The high-speed, compressed blipverts, while effectively cramming a few minutes' worth of advertising messages into the viewer's brain in nanoseconds, can also cause more sedentary viewers to spontaneously combust. Network 23's corrupt chairman, Ned Grossberg, could care less about the mounting death toll, and resists board member Ben Cheviot's insistence that the blipverts should be pulled in the interest of public safety.

    Murray assigns a new controller, Theora Jones, to work with Edison. Though the jaded reporter is skeptical, he's struck by her beauty - and her prolific hacking skills when she finds Network 23's well-hidden research and development department. The network's R&D isn't so much a think tank as it is a single mind, brilliant boy inventor Bryce Lynch. Edison breaks into Bryce's concealed apartment and finds the only evidence in existence of the deadly nature of blipverts. Before he can transmit that evidence back to the newsroom, however, Edison finds his satellite camera jammed and his network's own security forces hot on his tail. With Theora's help, Edison gets to a motorcycle and nearly escapes with what he's learned, but Bryce springs a trap by remote control, sending Edison's bike airborne. The last thing Edison sees before he slams into it is a clearance sign reading "Max Headroom, 2.3 meters."

    Edison is taken back to Bryce's apartment. Grossberg wants Edison questioned about what he knows of the blipverts, but doesn't want to risk awakening the reporter and allowing him to learn more. Bryce comes up with an alternative: scanning Edison's synapses, transferring his knowledge and memories into the computer, and asking the resulting computer-generated construct what it knows. What Bryce doesn't anticipate, however, is that the artificial intelligence created from Edison Carter's mind - a personality which assumes a name from Edison's last memory, Max Headroom - is every bit as stubborn and smart as Edison himself. And even if Edison is killed and disposed of, Max has worked his way into Network 23's electronic infrastructure, and Max remembers everything Edison has seen, including the vital evidence that could topple the network and its chairman.

  • Season One Regular Cast: Matt Frewer (Edison Carter / Max Headroom), Amanda Pays (Theora Jones), George Coe (Ben Cheviot), Chris Young (Bryce Lynch), Jeffrey Tambor (Murray)
  • Guest Cast: Jere Burns (Breughel), Rick Ducommon (Mahler), Charles Rocket (Ned Grossberg), Hank Garrett (Ashful), Virginia Kiser (Julia Formby), Lee Wilkof (Pat Zein), Billie Bird (Florence Nightingale), Ken Swofford (Gorrister), Viola Kates Stimpson (?), Urene Olga Lopez (?), Pearl Shear (?), Ricardo Gutierrez (Martinez), Skip O'Brien (?), Matt Roe (?), John Davey (?), Taylor Presnell (?), Heath Jobes (?)
  • Originally broadcast: 31 March 1987

Rakers

  • written by James Crocker and Steve Roberts
  • story by James Crocker
  • directed by Thomas J. Wright
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: As Max grows paranoid thinking that a napalm-kerosene-and-testosterone soaked kids' show called "Missile Mike" is an actual news report about a man who goes around shooting things and blowing them up, things blow up in Theora's personal life. She receives a rushed phone call from her sister-in-law Winnie, who warns her that her brother Shawn has taken up the dangerous sport of raking. An illegal underground sport with a high body count, raking combines jet-powered skateboarding with no-holds-barred unarmed combat. Theora sets Edison onto the case, but to break into a raking arena - let alone stop a match in which an already-injured Shawn is scheduled to fight - Edison will be risking life and limb. And while Edison thinks raking should be outlawed altogether, Zik Zak is considering both legalizing and sponsoring it.
  • Guest Cast: Virginia Kiser (Formby), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (Pat Zein), J.W. Smith (Rick), Howard Sherman (Simon Peller), Lee DeBroux (?), Joseph Ruskin (Promoter), Wortham Krimmer (Jack Friday), Wynn Irwin (?), Arsenio "Sonny" Trinidad (?), Ricardo Gutierrez (Martinez), B.L. Collins (?), Ron D. Ross (?), Kimberly Delfin (Winnie), Peter Cohl (Shawn Jones), Tain Bodkin (?), Brian Libby (?), Doug Hale (?), Bobby Brett (?), Kawena Charlot (Rick's bodyguard), Kedren Zadikov (?), Jeffrey Weisman (?), Tabi Cooper (?), David Preston (?), Lorilyn Huckster (?), Heath Jones (?)
  • Notes: This is the first episode in which it's hinted that televisions can no longer be turned off. The "Missile Mike" gag is a slight swipe at one of Max Headroom's real-life TV contemporaries, The A-Team.
  • Originally broadcast: 7 April 1987

Body Banks

  • written by Steve Roberts
  • directed by Francis De Lia
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: Two people are stalked and captured by a pair of thugs. They beat the man into unconsciousness, and take the woman who was with him to a body bank, where she's moved to the top of the line for an organ transplant surgery - whether she's a willing donor or not. The man goes to Edison with the story of the attack and the kidnapping, and Edison takes on the story. But he has to go to the streets to find the "blanks," or unregistered citizens, and he has to recruit the help of Blank Reg, a rough-and-tumble but good-hearted blank who runs a pirate TV station called Big Time TV. Reg leads Edison to the two thugs, who in turn put him within arm's reach of the doctor to whom they've been taking their victims - all of them female. But before Edison can ask too many questions, the doctor is killed. Edison is fresh out of clues, and Max may be able to help him, but Cheviot and Network 23's corporate sponsors at Zik Zak want Max's attentions on sponsorship announcements, whether or not it means a woman's life.
  • Guest Cast: William Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Jere Burns (Breughel), Rick Ducommon (Mahler), Virginia Kiser (Formby), Hank Garrett (Ashful), Lee Wilkof (Pat Zein), J.W. Smith (Rick), Scott Kraft (Mel), Claude Earl Jones (Dr. Mason), Robert Dowdell (Plantegenet's doctor), James "Gypsy" Haake (Nurse), John Winston (Plantagenet), Jenny Gago (Nurse), Arsenio "Sonny" Trinidad (?), Peri Kaczmarek (Rayna), Fred Holliday (News anchor), Michael Paul Chan (Japanese doctor), Grace Simmons (Poncho), B.J. Collins (?), Jay Arlen Jones (?), Rick Deats (?), Juliette Cummins (?), and Fang
  • Note: Blank Reg establishes here that books have become a rarity - and are valued only by a select few, including him (though we later learn, in Lost Tapes, that Reg can't read). Reg is played by William Morgan Sheppard who, sometimes credited as W.M. Sheppard or W. Morgan Sheppard, has appeared in everything from Babylon 5 (Soul Hunter) to Star Trek: Voyager (Bliss), with many other genre guest starring appearances along the way.
  • Originally broadcast: 14 April 1987

Security Systems

  • written by Michael Cassutt
  • directed by Tommy Lee Wallace
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: Security Systems Inc. is the world's leading provider of personal and corporate security and surveillance, with access to more priveleged information than any single government in the world. And now a hostile takeover of SS is in the works, and while the company's CEO says she's terrified of the prospects, she outwardly seems calm - and Edison smells a rat. But when he persists in questioning her, he suddenly discovers that his credit and his ID won't work anywhere. He can't go home, can't go to Network 23, and the Metro Cops are hot on his tail. Edison winds up getting help from Blank Reg and Dominique, but he's going to need more help from Max and Bryce - and he can't even hope to approach the Network 23 building without being arrested. Bryce is the only one with the hacking skills necessary to make Edison a citizen again and uncover the secret of who's buying out SS...but even he may be outmatched by the SS central computer.
  • Guest Cast: William Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Carol Mayo Jenkins (Valerie Towne), J.W. Smith (Rick), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Ricardo Gutierrez (Martinez), David Allyn (SSI Tech #1), Peter Mins (SSI Tech #2), Julia Calderon (Mrs. Rebus), Santos Morales (Mr. Rebus), Sally Stevens (voice of A7), Mark Voland (SSI Guard)
  • Originally broadcast: 21 April 1987

War

  • written by Martin Pasko, Rebecca Parr, Michael Cassutt, and Steve Roberts
  • directed by Thomas J. Wright
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: A news package broker contacts Network 23 and offers exclusive access to a terrorist group - for a premium, of course. Cheviot refuses to buy, and when the White Brigade blows up an entire city block, only rival network Breakthru TV has coverage of the event. Network 23's board fumes over Breakthru's sudden ratings surge - in the middle of a global rating sweep - but they jump at the chance of having Edison Carter expose the sinister link between Breakthru TV and the terrorists themselves. Edison eventually tracks the terrorists to their headquarters, and finds that their entire war is being fought on television, a war of publicity with as few casualties as possible to avoid negative reaction from the viewers. But when the bombers feel that their deal with Breakthru TV is no longer serving their cause, they change their policy regarding casualties...in a drastic way.
  • Guest Cast: Gary Swanson (Frank Braddock), Virginia Kiser (Formby), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (Pat Zein), Richard Lineback (Hewett), Robert O'Reilly (Croyd Hauser), Lisa Niemi (Janie Crane), J. Michael Flynn (Lucien), Arsenio "Sonny" Trinidad (?), Ricardo Gutierrez (Martinez), Tom Miller (Breakthru TV Reporter), Michael Colin Ward (Officer Wendt), Randall Caldwell (Phil), Yana Nirvana (Police Chief), Spencer Allan (Breakthru TV Anchor)
  • Notes: Guest star Robert O'Reilly may be best known to genre fans as Gowron, the leader of the Klingon Empire in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine. This episode is also the source of the series-defining exchange: "Since when has news been entertainment?" "Since it was invented."
  • Originally broadcast: 28 April 1987

Blanks

  • written by Steve Roberts
  • directed by Tommy Lee Wallace
  • music by Cory Lerios
  • Story: Just as Simon Peller wins another term through the public telelection system, satellite signals go haywire, interrupting broadcasts on all the networks. And TV isn't the only thing affected - even bank service has been disrupted. Then an ultimatum is issued: if Peller doesn't reverse his policy of imprisoning all blanks - unregistered citizens with enough computer know-how to remove their identities from the central computer - the central computer will be crashed. Bryce and Theora hatch a plan to find the hackers by getting their attention with the most advanced artificial intelligence in the world - Max himself. But when the hackers take the bait and keep him, not allowing Max to return to Bryce's computer, Edison has to resort to more extreme measures to keep a systems crash from laying the city to waste at sundown...and someone he considers a friend may be on the wrong side of the fight.
  • Guest Cast: William Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Peter Crook (Blank Bruno), Virginia Kiser (Formby), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (Pat Zein), Howard Sherman (Simon Peller), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Lisa Niemi (Janie Crane), Elizabeth Gorcey (Woman), Tom Everett (Tracher), Rob Narita (Ronald), Kenneth White (Police Officer), John Durbin (Police Officer), Lycia Naff (?), Cynthia Stevenson (?), Brian Brophy (?), Sandra Sexton (?), John Fleck (?), and Fang
  • Notes: This is the first episode where Bryce's alma mater, the Academy of Computer Sciences, is mentioned; Blank Bruno was Bryce's instructor before going underground.
  • Originally broadcast: 5 May 1987

The Academy

  • written by David Brown
  • directed by Victor Lobl
  • music by Michael Hoenig
  • Story: Hackers are disrupting network transmissions by hacking into satellite transmissions with their own high-power signals. Cheviot assigns Bryce the task of tracking down the pirates, and Bryce finds the source of the rogue signal - and then hesistates, pointing the finger instead at Blank Reg's Big Time TV van. Metrocops arrest Reg, and Dominique pleads with Edison to help clear her husband's name. Theora discovers that the real source of the signal was the Academy of Computer Sciences - Bryce's alma mater. Edison susepcts (and Max knows) that Bryce falsified the coordinates given to the authorities. But given the tight-knit nature of the ACS students, and Network 23's sponsorship of the school, does Edison stand a chance of clearing Reg's name?
  • Guest Cast: William Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), James Greene (Judge Wade), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (?), Sharon Barr (?), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Dick Patterson (Headmaster), Mya Akerling (Partridge), Christopher Burton (Stratton), Barry Pearl (Judge), Melissa Steinberg (?), Maureen Teefy (Shelley Keeler), Bill Dearth (Prosecutor), Paul Martin (?), Joe Hart (?), Sue Marrow (?), Tom Fitzpatrick (?)
  • Notes: This episode features one of Max Headroom's most spot-on prophetic moments, with a pretty accurate prediction of the kind of home shopping networks which are fairly common now. Before you dismiss it as an easy prediction, check the original airdate of the episode and think again.
  • Originally broadcast: 18 September 1987

Deities

  • written by Michael Cassutt
  • directed by Tom Wright
  • music by Chuck Wild
  • Story: Televangelism is just as prevalent in the future as in the present, and nowhere is this as evident as with the Vu-Age Church, the first religious organization to operate primarily on TV. But Vu-Age's promises of video resurrection have gotten Murray's attention, and he assigns Edison to the story. But somewhat atypically, Edison shows little enthusiasm for the prospects of blowing a resurrection scam wide open. As it so happens, Edison's lack of enthusiasm is centered more on Vu-Age's high priestess, Vanna Smith, who is also an old flame of his. When Edison refutes her claims that video resurrection is a reality, Vanna Smith points out that Edison's own alter-ego is proof to the contrary. When she and Edison start to rekindle their old relationship, Murray wonders if there's less to the story than he imagined, or if Edison's losing his edge.
  • Guest Cast: Dayle Haddon (Vanna Smith), Hank Garrett (Network 23 Board Member), Lee Wilkof (Network 23 Board Member), Sharon Barr (Network 23 Board Member), Gregory Itzin (Vu-Age Salesman), Rosalind Chao (Angie Barry), Michael Margotta (Male producer), Peg Stewart (Female producer), Brenda Hayes (Jennifer Marks), Gary Ballard (Humphrey Marks), Clarence Brown (Vu-Age Client), Dale Raoul (Vu-Age Client), Ron Ray (?), Larry Spinak (?)
  • Originally broadcast: 25 September 1987

Grossberg's Return

  • written by Steve Roberts
  • directed by Janet Greek
  • music by Michael Hoenig
  • Story: The latest telelection is upon the public, and a vicious mudslinging war is being waged on the airwaves by incumbent Simon Peller and rival candidate Harriet Garth. Network 23 is squarely in Peller's court, but Garth is being backed by Network 66 - where Ned Grossberg, the unscrupulous ex-Network 23 executive who was ousted after the Blipvert scandal, is slowly taking control. While Edison and Murray fight to keep 23's coverage above the war of words, Grossberg is playing all sides against the middle, and his aim is to take over Network 66 from the inside, not to propel a particular candidate into office. And if that means engineering a political scandal that not only takes down Garth, but destroys the career of Edison Carter as well, Grossberg won't hesitate to do it.
  • Guest Cast: Charles Rocket (Ned Grossberg), Caroline Kava (Harriet Garth), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkoff (Pat Zein), Sharon Barr (?), Howard Sherman (Simon Peller), Rosalind Chao (Angie Barry), Andreas Katsulas (Bartlett), Brett Porter (?), Stephen Elliott (Thatcher), Karen Hensel (?), James F. Dean (?), John Hamelin (?), Donald Burda (?), Lisa Peders (?), Rachelle Ottley (?), Brian Little (?), J. Jay Smith (?), Saida Pagan (?)
  • Originally broadcast: 2 October 1987

Dream Thieves

  • teleplay by Steve Roberts
  • story by Charles Grant Craig
  • directed by Todd Holland
  • music by Chuck Wild
  • Story: Edison is doing an exposè on "dream houses" - a new industry in which people pay to experience the immersive, tactile sensations of others' dreams - when he encounters an old rival and fellow report, Paddy Ashton. An articulate Irishman who seems out of place as a drifting blank, Paddy still harbors a bit of a grudge against Edison, but also still harbors a dream of being back in the news business. When Paddy turns up dead mere hours after Edison shares a drink with him, Edison latches on to something Paddy was trying to tell him about: dream donors. For some people to buy dreams, others must donate them, usually earning a pittance in the process. Paddy was managing to eke out an existence selling his dreams, but something was troubling him toward the end. Edison goes undercover, going into the dream house as a donor, where he finds that the dream house attendants have been forcing their donors to have more intense subconscious sensory experiences, even if it kills them with their own nightmares.
  • Guest Cast: W. Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Mark Lindsay Chapman (Paddy Ashton), Jere Burns (Breughel), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Jenette Goldstein (Velma), Ron Fassler (Mr. Grieg), Vernon Weddle (Mr. Finn), Robin Bach (Ticket booth man), Vince McKewin (Dream house attendant #1), Stephen Pershing (Dream house attendant #2), Ron Narita (Male interviewee), Steven Rotblatt (Blank), Timothy Dang (?), Peter De Anello (?), Patricia Veselich (Female interviewee), Gary Dean Sweeney (?), Dalton Younger (?), and Fang
  • Originally broadcast: 9 October 1987

Whacketts

  • teleplay by Arthur Sellers
  • story by Dennis Rolfe
  • directed by Victor Lobl
  • music by Michael Hoenig
  • Story: A huge residential building collapses, taking many of its residents with it. Edison is assigned to the story, and when he arrives at the scene of the disaster, he's stunned to see the survivors rejoicing at the rescue of television sets instead of people. Despite the magnitude of the collapse and Edison's live coverage, Big Time TV pulls ahead of Network 23 in the ratings with a mind-numbingly dumb game show - the same show being watched by all of the survivors of the building. A cop at the scene suspects something as up, but when he shares his suspicions with Edison, he's found dead a while later. Despite Reg's annoyance that his viewers want it run for the 11th time in a row, "Whacketts" even pulls ahead of Network 66. Edison and Bryce discover that a subliminal video signal is embedded into the one episode of "Whacketts" that keeps running, a signal that forces its viewers' brains to produce an addictive stream of endorphins. The more people watch, the more hooked they become - and if Ned Grossberg succeeds in wooing Dominique into selling "Whacketts" to Network 66, the entire population could become addicted...just like Max.
  • Guest Cast: W. Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Charles Rocket (Ned Grossberg), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (?), Sharon Barr (?), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Bert Kramer (Biller), Bill Maher (Haskel), Andreas Katsulas (Bartlett), Richard Frank (Lt. Rico Ziskin), Lawrence Lott (Network 23 Anchor), James F. Dean (Chief Negotiator), Craig Schaefer (Cop #1), Morgan Walsh (Cop #2), Edward Beimfohr (?)
  • Originally broadcast: 16 October 1987

Neurostim

  • written by Arthur Sellers and Michael Cassutt
  • directed by Maurice Phillips
  • music by Michael Hoenig
  • Story: Edison tries to find out more about Zik Zak's latest promotional gimmick, the free Neurostim bracelets given away with every Zik Zak burger pack. Whatever it's doing, it's certainly driven sales of the burgers sky-high. But Edison's prying isn't necessarily welcomed by Zik Zak, and since they're Network 23's corporate sponsors, they set out to derail his investigative report by making sure he receives a particularly addictive one. As Edison soon discovers for himself, Neurostim is a mental narcotic, granting its users any dream they wish, at least in their own minds. Bryce thinks the only way to help Edison shake off his Neurostim addiction is to restore his personality by patching Max through the bracelet...but Edison is tired of competing with Max for attention, even in his dreams.
  • Guest Cast: Sab Shimono (Pat Zein), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (?), Sharon Barr (?), Jim Piddock (Mr. Kelly), Evan Kim (Mr. Chen), Jacque Lynn Colion (Burger Lady), Edward Wiley (Zik Zak Waiter), Michael Margotta (Sully), Martin Azarow (Punk), Billy Beck (Frank Knight), Roger Hampton (Sgt. Compton), Michael Strasser (Scumball Announcer), Joan Severance (Edison's dream girl), Julie McCullough (?), Tom Dugan (?), Michael Dobo (?), Frank Kahlil Wheaton (?), Saida Pagan (?)
  • Originally broadcast: 28 April 1988

Lost Tapes

  • teleplay by Adrian Hein and Steve Roberts
  • story by Colman Dekay & Howard Brookner
  • directed by Victor Lobl
  • music by Michael Hoenig
  • Story: A yearly festival surrounds the return to earth of debris from fallen broadcast satellites. Edison and Theora get out of the control room to join Blank Reg and Dominique for the festivities, a much-needed diversion as a new censorship body has just notified Edison of his on-air "transgressions" of what has now been deemed good taste. But even off duty, Edison can't help but stumble across a story, when a Metrocop raid hits a nearby home and a man is arrested for showing pirated educational programs to children. A street performer is also picked up by the Metrocops...acting in conjunction with Network 23's new censor agents. The woman's daughter is rescued by Edison, who tries to launch a "live and direct" investigation into the night's events. But if the censors block Edison's broadcasts, will anyone ever learn what really happened...or, for that matter, will anyone ever be allowed to learn anything again?
  • Guest Cast: W. Morgan Sheppard (Blank Reg), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (?), Sharon Barr (?), Concetta Tomei (Dominique), Laura Carrington (Francis), Mike Preston (Drago), John Durbin (Metrocop Chief), Rick Lieberman (Metrocop), Guyy Christopher (Drago's henchman), Peter Crook (Blank Bruno), Ainslee Currie (Mink), Lewis Dauber (Blank Tracher), Richard Lion (Orville), Jason Zahler (Doc Friendly), Melissa Behr (Festival queen), Ed Trotta (Bresson), Larry Cortinas (Man on motorcycle)
  • Notes: This episode, which ABC declined to air during the original network run, yields numerous interesting tidbits - Blank Reg can't read (despite him touting the virtues of reading "old-fashioned" books in an earlier episode), and Murray is divorced with one daughter. This was the final episode produced, and shows a few hints of changes that might have stuck in future episodes: Bryce acting as Edison's controller in Theora's stead, and Theora and Murray being far more involved in the action.
  • Originally broadcast: not aired during the series' original broadcast run

Baby Grobags

  • written by Adrian Hein and Chris Ruppenthal
  • directed by Janet Greek
  • music by Chuck Wild
  • Story: Gone are the days when women had to spend nine months in the throes of pregnancy. Now their fertilized eggs can be extracted and placed in nutrient-rich Grobags, accelerating the birth, eliminating the pain of actually carrying the child, and even allowing parents to pay a premium to "customize" their offspring. One of Theora's closest friends is giving the process a try, but when her baby turns up missing, Edison gets involved in the investigation. While Edison makes disturbing discoveries about the company offering this service, Ned Grossberg begins trying (and succeeding) to woo Bryce Lynch over to Network 66. But when Edison discovers a horrifying link between a wave of disappearances of genetically-engineered genius babies and Network 66's new ratings hit "Prodigies," will Bryce still want to join Grossberg again?
  • Guest Cast: Charles Rocket (Grossberg), Amanda Hillwood (Helen Zeno), Jere Burns (Breughel), Hank Garrett (?), Lee Wilkof (?), Sharon Barr (?), Andreas Katsulas (Bartlett), James F. Dean (Chubb), Millicent Martin (Cornelia Firth), Carl Steven (Christopher Zeno), Rob Narita (?), David Hess (Network 23 Controller), Paula Marchese (Nurse East), Tom McGuire (?), Leigh Kelly (?), Robert Kerman (?), Kim Ameen (?), Mike Narz (?), Mary Kay Swedish (?)
  • Notes: Guest star Amanda Hillwood is the wife of Matt Frewer; she also appeared with him in Lawnmower Man 2 and Doctor, Doctor.
  • Originally broadcast: not aired during the series' original broadcast run

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MAX HEADROOM and all related characters and placenames are the property of Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution and Lorimar Telepictures. This document is not intended to infringe upon their copyright in any way. The author(s) make no attempt - in using the names described herein - to supercede the copyrights of the copyright holders, nor are these pages officially sanctioned, licensed, or endorsed by the shows' creators or producers.

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