The Euro's Trade Effects

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Euro's Trade Effects PROCEEDINGS OF JUNE 2005 WORKSHOP ON WORKING PAPER SERIES WHAT EFFECTS IS EMU HAVING ON THE EURO AREA AND ITS MEMBER COUNTRIES? NO 594 / MARCH 2006 THE EURO’S TRADE EFFECTS ISSN 1561081-0 by Richard Baldwin comments by Jeffrey A. Frankel 9 771561 081005 and Jacques Melitz WORKING PAPER SERIES NO 594 / MARCH 2006 PROCEEDINGS OF JUNE 2005 WORKSHOP ON WHAT EFFECTS IS EMU HAVING ON THE EURO AREA AND ITS MEMBER COUNTRIES? THE EURO’S TRADE EFFECTS1 by Richard Baldwin 2 comments by Jeffrey A. Frankel and Jacques Melitz In 2006 all ECB publications will feature This paper can be downloaded without charge from a motif taken http://www.ecb.int or from the Social Science Research Network from the €5 banknote. electronic library at http://ssrn.com/abstract_id=886260 1 First draft 8 May 2005; Second draft 29 May 2005; Third draft June 2005. Prepared for the ECB Workshop “What effects is EMU having on the euro area and its member countries?” Frankfurt, 16 June 2005. I would like to thank Nadia Rocha for assistance with data-wrestling. Andy Rose, Volker Nitsch, Howard Wall, Alejandro Micco and Hakan Nordstrom provided excellent comments and answered my many questions about their data and regressions. They also saw early drafts of this paper and eliminated several mistakes but there may be still some left in this version. Special thanks to Francesco Mongelli who carefully read the first complete draft and caught many typos, thinkos and omissions. 2 Graduate Institute of International Studies, 11a, avenue de la Paix, CH-1202 Geneva, Switzerland; e-mail: [email protected] PREFACE On 16 and 17 June 2005, the ECB has hosted a Conference on “What Effects is EMU Having on the Euro Area and its Member Countries?” One and a half decade after the start of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and more than six years after the launch of the euro, the aim of the conference was to assess what can be learned about the impact of economic and monetary integration and how it has benefited the euro area and its member countries. The conference brought together academics, central bankers and policy makers to discuss the existing empirical evidence on changes brought about, either directly or indirectly, by EMU and, in particular, the introduction of the euro in five main areas: Area 1. Trade integration; Area 2. Structural reforms in product and labour markets; Area 3. Financial integration; Area 4. Business cycles synchronisation and economic specialisation; and Area 5. Inflation persistence and inflation differentials. Lead presenters for each of the aforementioned areas had been asked to put together - and interpret - all the available information, flag any open questions, and also discuss the implications in their respective field of expertise. With the benefit of hindsight, lead presenters and discussants have also addressed some initial presumptions with the evidence that has accumulated thus far. In order to exchange information and ideas on the above effects, and increase mutual awareness of ongoing work in the diverse areas, we deemed it useful to issue the five leading presentations, together with the accompanying discussions, in the ECB Working Paper Series. Otmar Issing Francesco Paolo Mongelli Juan Luis Vega Member of the Executive Board Conference Organiser Conference Organiser © European Central Bank, 2006 Address Kaiserstrasse 29 60311 Frankfurt am Main, Germany Postal address Postfach 16 03 19 60066 Frankfurt am Main, Germany Telephone +49 69 1344 0 Internet http://www.ecb.int Fax +49 69 1344 6000 Telex 411 144 ecb d All rights reserved. Any reproduction, publication and reprint in the form of a different publication, whether printed or produced electronically, in whole or in part, is permitted only with the explicit written authorisation of the ECB or the author(s). The views expressed in this paper do not necessarily reflect those of the European Central Bank. The statement of purpose for the ECB Working Paper Series is available from the ECB website, http://www.ecb.int. ISSN 1561-0810 (print) ISSN 1725-2806 (online) CONTENTS Abstract 4 Non-technical summary 5 1. Introduction 6 2. The Rose vine: review of the pre-euro literature 7 2.1. Roots: the world through Rose coloured glasses 7 2.2. Garden pests: biases in gravity model estimations 11 2.3. Rose branch #1: Rose and van Wincoop (2001) 20 2.4. Rose branch #2: omitted variables 21 2.5. Rose branch #3: complicated mis-specification 28 2.6. Rose branch #4: roster-makes-the-sun-rise reasoning 32 2.7. Meta-Analysis: a rose is a rose is a rose 35 2.8. Lessons for the eurozone from non-European experience 36 3. Empirical findings on the eurozone 36 3.1 MSO (2003) 37 3.2 Berger and Nitsch (2005) 41 3.3 Flam and Nordstrom (2003) 42 3.4 Other studies 47 4 Collection of clues 48 4.1. Spatial variation of the Eurozone Rose effect 48 4.2. Timing of the Eurozone Rose effect 52 4.3. Sectoral variation in the Eurozone Rose effect 54 5. What could it be? 56 5.1. Spurious results 56 5.2. Microeconomic changes that might produce a Rose effect 61 6. Battery of diagnostics 66 6.1. Checking for spurious results 66 6.2. Real changes 67 7. Concluding Remarks 67 References 68 8. Appendix on methods 71 Comments by Jeffrey A. Frankel 76 References 87 Comments by Jacques Melitz 91 References cited 98 European Central Bank Working Paper Series 99 ECB Working Paper Series No. 594 March 2006 3 Abstract This paper reviews reassesses the methodology and principal findings of the “Rose effect”, i.e. the trade effects of currency union, looking at both EMU and non- EMU currency unions. The consensus estimate suggests that the euro has already boosted intra-euro area trade by five to ten percent. The paper discusses a gamut of models that might explain the Rose effect in Europe and suggests a series of empirical test that could help identify the economic mechanisms involved. Key words: Rose effect, exchange rate volatility, monetary union, gravity model. JEL codes: F12, C33, E0 ECB Working Paper Series No. 594 4 March 2006 Non-Technical Summary The paper is articulated in three main parts. The first part reviews the origins, methodology and principal findings of the empirical literature that has looked at currency unions preceding EMU. The specification of the gravity model and estimation strategies are newly reassessed. As a result the trade effects of currency unions for non-European cases are completely recalibrated (i.e., the trade effects are still important but less sizeable than in early estimates by Rose and others). One needs to keep in mind that cases of pre-euro currency unions usually pertain to small (and often poor) countries adopting the currency of a larger partner country. I.e., such studies do not carry direct policy implications for the euro area. The second part of the paper reviews the trade effects of currency unions – i.e., the euro -- for the European Economic and Monetary Union thus far. The bottom line of this literature is that the euro probably did boost intra-Eurozone trade by something like five to ten percent on average, although the estimated size of this effect is likely to change as new years of data emerge. The third part of the paper investigates the economic mechanisms that might be driving the euro’s trade effects. A theoretical model is presented. Diverse competing hypotheses are examined and a battery of diagnostic tests -- that could help reject some or all of the theoretical explanations – are lined up. The way forward needs to be guided by detailed theoretical hypothesis as to HOW the euro affects trade. As there is not enough data yet to answer the question “How much did the euro boost trade?” one needs to tackle the question “If the euro boosted trade by sharpening competition, then in which dataset should we find the footprints?” and some footprints will have nothing to do with trade. In a nutshell, studies of trade effects need to come out of their infancy and move beyond the question of ‘how big is the magic.’ ECB Working Paper Series No. 594 March 2006 5 1. INTRODUCTION The euro must be the world’s largest economic policy experiment. Six years ago, European nations accounting for 20% of world output, 30% of world trade and 300 million people found themselves using the same currency. Given the importance that monetary regimes have on economies, switching to the euro should have had effects all across the board – changing everything from union’s wage bargaining to educational exchanges and corporate investment strategies. Every problem looks like a nail when you have a hammer in your hand, so being a trade economist I am naturally drawn to the euro’s trade effects. In this paper, I review the empirical literature on the trade effects of currency unions for non-European and European cases. This is done in sections 2 and 3. My bottom line summary of this literature is that the euro probably did boost intra-Eurozone trade by something like five to ten percent on average, although the estimated size of this effect is likely to change as new years of data emerge. Then I collect together the clues in section 4 and use them in section 5 to speculate on the sorts of economic mechanisms that might be driving the euro’s trade effects. I come up with a set of competing hypotheses and, in Section 6, propose a battery of diagnostic tests that could help reject some or all of the theoretical explanations.
Recommended publications
  • Hearing Nostalgia in the Twilight Zone
    JPTV 6 (1) pp. 59–80 Intellect Limited 2018 Journal of Popular Television Volume 6 Number 1 © 2018 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jptv.6.1.59_1 Reba A. Wissner Montclair State University No time like the past: Hearing nostalgia in The Twilight Zone Abstract Keywords One of Rod Serling’s favourite topics of exploration in The Twilight Zone (1959–64) Twilight Zone is nostalgia, which pervaded many of the episodes of the series. Although Serling Rod Serling himself often looked back upon the past wishing to regain it, he did, however, under- nostalgia stand that we often see things looking back that were not there and that the past is CBS often idealized. Like Serling, many ageing characters in The Twilight Zone often sentimentality look back or travel to the past to reclaim what they had lost. While this is a perva- stock music sive theme in the plots, in these episodes the music which accompanies the scores depict the reality of the past, showing that it is not as wonderful as the charac- ter imagined. Often, music from these various situations is reused within the same context, allowing for a stock music collection of music of nostalgia from the series. This article discusses the music of nostalgia in The Twilight Zone and the ways in which the music depicts the reality of the harshness of the past. By feeding into their own longing for the reclamation of the past, the writers and composers of these episodes remind us that what we remember is not always what was there.
    [Show full text]
  • Season 5 Article
    N.B. IT IS RECOMMENDED THAT THE READER USE 2-PAGE VIEW (BOOK FORMAT WITH SCROLLING ENABLED) IN ACROBAT READER OR BROWSER. “EVEN’ING IT OUT – A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON THE LAST TWO YEARS OF “THE TWILIGHT ZONE” Television Series (minus ‘THE’)” A Study in Three Parts by Andrew Ramage © 2019, The Twilight Zone Museum. All rights reserved. Preface With some hesitation at CBS, Cayuga Productions continued Twilight Zone for what would be its last season, with a thirty-six episode pipeline – a larger count than had been seen since its first year. Producer Bert Granet, who began producing in the previous season, was soon replaced by William Froug as he moved on to other projects. The fifth season has always been considered the weakest and, as one reviewer stated, “undisputably the worst.” Harsh criticism. The lopsidedness of Seasons 4 and 5 – with a smattering of episodes that egregiously deviated from the TZ mold, made for a series much-changed from the one everyone had come to know. A possible reason for this was an abundance of rather disdainful or at least less-likeable characters. Most were simply too hard to warm up to, or at the very least, identify with. But it wasn’t just TZ that was changing. Television was no longer as new a medium. “It was a period of great ferment,” said George Clayton Johnson. By 1963, the idyllic world of the 1950s was disappearing by the day. More grittily realistic and reality-based TV shows were imminent, as per the viewing audience’s demand and it was only a matter of time before the curtain came down on the kinds of shows everyone grew to love in the 50s.
    [Show full text]
  • Poetry Prose
    CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND PROSE Poems by Wallace Stevens Dylan Thomas E. E. Cummings Gavin Ewart Kerker Quinn Ruthven Todd Kenneth Allott Roger Roughton Short Story by Isaac Babel A Labrador Ballad - An Appalachian Ballad A Greenland Folk-Legend July 1936. Monthly. Sixpence CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND PROSE July 1936 Monthly Sixpence CONTENTS POEM E. E. Cummings THREE POEMS Kenneth Allott FAREWELL TO FLORIDA Wallace Stevens Two POEMS TOWARDS A POEM Dylan Thomas DOLLFUSS DAY, 1935 Gavin Ewart WORM INTERVIEWED Ruthven Todd MAKING FEET AND HAND,S Benjamin Peret MORALITY PLAY Kerker Quinn SOLUBLE NOUGHTS AND CROSSES; or, CALIFORNIA, HERE I COME Roger Roughton THE BALLAD OF Miss COLMAN (Anon) THE PROUD LAMKIN (Anon) NUKARPIARTEKAK (Anon) IN THE BASEMENT Isaac Babel Poem by E. E. Cummings little joe gould Has lost his teeth and doesn't know where to find them (and found a secondhand set which click)'little gould used to amputate his appetite with bad brittle candy but just (nude eel) now little joe lives on air Harvard Brevis Est for Handkerchief read Papernapkin no laundry bills likes People preferring Negroes Indians Youse n.b. ye twang of -little joe (yankee) gould irketh sundry who are trying to find their minds (but never had any to lose) and a myth is as good as a smile but little joe gould's quote oral history unquote might (publishers note) be entitled a wraith's progress or mainly awash while chiefly submerged or an amoral morality sort-of-aliveing by innumerable kind-of-deaths (Amerique Je T'Aime and it may be fun to be fooled but it's more fun to be more to be fun to be little joe gould) Three Poems by Kenneth Allott Decor The shunting of course goes on all day and night the coupling, the buffers, the points, the hammering the ever-open door of all-night kitchen (Everything here is fresh every day your lordship.) and the great arc lights splutter every night and the trains are very tiresome with their blue flashes the small hours, all night and every night.
    [Show full text]
  • Miles Romney Jr., Chronicler of the Neglected Truth
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1990 Miles Romney Jr., chronicler of the neglected truth Christine L. Johnson The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Johnson, Christine L., "Miles Romney Jr., chronicler of the neglected truth" (1990). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 2982. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/2982 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Mike and Maureen MANSFIELD LIBRARY Copying allowed as provided under provisions of the Fair Use Section of the U.S. COPYRIGHT LAW, 1976. Any copying for commercial purposes or financial gain may be undertaken only with the author's written consent. MontanaUniversity of MILES ROMNEY JR. CHRONICLER OF THE NEGLECTED TROTH By Christine L. Johnson B. S., Montana State College, 1958 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Montana 1990 Approved by Dean, Graduate School / Dat UMI Number: EP36377 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted.
    [Show full text]
  • Favorite Twilight Zone Episodes.Xlsx
    TITLE - VOTING BRACKETS First Round Second Round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship Final Four Elite Eight Sweet Sixteen Second Round First Round Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes Votes 1 Time Enough at Last 57 56 Eye of the Beholder 1 Time Enough at Last Eye of the Beholder 32 The Fever 4 5 The Mighty Casey 32 16 A World of Difference 25 19 The Rip Van Winkle Caper 16 I Shot an Arrow into the Air A Most Unusual Camera 17 I Shot an Arrow into the Air 35 41 A Most Unusual Camera 17 8 Third from the Sun 44 37 The Howling Man 8 Third from the Sun The Howling Man 25 A Passage for Trumpet 16 Nervous22 Man in a Four Dollar Room 25 9 Love Live Walter Jameson 34 45 The Invaders 9 Love Live Walter Jameson The Invaders 24 The Purple Testament 25 13 Dust 24 5 The Hitch-Hiker 52 41 The After Hours 5 The Hitch-Hiker The After Hours 28 The Four of Us Are Dying 8 19 Mr. Bevis 28 12 What You Need 40 31 A World of His Own 12 What You Need A World of His Own 21 Escape Clause 19 28 The Lateness of the Hour 21 4 And When the Sky Was Opened 37 48 The Silence 4 And When the Sky Was Opened The Silence 29 The Chaser 21 11 The Mind and the Matter 29 13 A Nice Place to Visit 35 35 The Night of the Meek 13 A Nice Place to Visit The Night of the Meek 20 Perchance to Dream 24 24 The Man in the Bottle 20 Season 1 Season 2 6 Walking Distance 37 43 Nick of Time 6 Walking Distance Nick of Time 27 Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • New to Hoopla
    New to Hoopla - January 2014 A hundred yards over the rim Audiobook Rod Serling 00:37:00 2013 A most unusual camera Audiobook Rod Serling 00:38:00 2013 A murder in passing Audiobook Mark DeCastrique 08:35:00 2013 A sea of troubles Audiobook P. G. Wodehouse 00:30:00 2013 A short drink from a certain fountain Audiobook Rod Serling 00:39:00 2013 A small furry prayer Audiobook Steven Kotler 09:30:00 2010 A summer life Audiobook Gary Soto 03:51:00 2013 Accelerated Audiobook Bronwen Hruska 10:36:00 2013 American freak show Audiobook Willie Geist 05:00:00 2010 An amish miracle Audiobook Beth Wiseman 10:13:22 2013 An occurrence at owl creek bridge Audiobook Ambrose Bierce 00:28:00 2013 Andrew jackson's america: 1824-1850 Audiobook Christopher Collier 02:03:00 2013 Angel guided meditations for children Audiobook Michelle Roberton-Jones 00:39:00 2013 Animal healing workshop Audiobook Holly Davis 01:01:00 2013 Antidote man Audiobook Jamie Sutliff 08:23:00 2013 Ashes of midnight Audiobook Lara Adrian 10:00:00 2010 At the mountains of madness Audiobook H. P. Lovecraft 04:48:00 2013 Attica Audiobook Garry Kilworth 09:46:00 2013 Back there Audiobook Rod Serling 00:35:00 2013 Below Audiobook Ryan Lockwood 09:52:00 2013 Beyond lies the wub Audiobook Philip K. Dick 00:22:00 2013 Bittersweet love Audiobook Rochelle Alers 06:21:00 2013 Bottom line Audiobook Marc Davis 07:31:00 2013 Capacity for murder Audiobook Bernadette Pajer 07:52:00 2013 Cat in the dark Audiobook Shirley Rousseau Murphy 09:14:00 2013 Cat raise the dead Audiobook Shirley Rousseau Murphy
    [Show full text]
  • Twilight Zone Series 3: Shadows and Substance Checklist
    Twilight Zone Series 3: Shadows and Substance Checklist Base Cards # Card Title [ ] 145 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 146 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 147 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 148 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 149 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 150 A Quality of Mercy [ ] 151 A Game of Pool [ ] 152 A Game of Pool [ ] 153 A Game of Pool [ ] 154 A Game of Pool [ ] 155 A Game of Pool [ ] 156 A Game of Pool [ ] 157 The Dummy [ ] 158 The Dummy [ ] 159 The Dummy [ ] 160 The Dummy [ ] 161 The Dummy [ ] 162 The Dummy [ ] 163 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 164 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 165 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 166 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 167 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 168 I am the Night-Color Me Black [ ] 169 Execution [ ] 170 Execution [ ] 171 Execution [ ] 172 Execution [ ] 173 Execution [ ] 174 Execution [ ] 175 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 176 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 177 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 178 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 179 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 180 A Passage for Trumpet [ ] 181 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 182 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 183 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 184 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 185 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 186 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 187 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 188 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 189 Of Late I Think of Cliffordville [ ] 190 Jess-Belle [ ] 191 Jess-Belle [ ] 192 Jess-Belle [ ] 193 Jess-Belle [ ] 194 Jess-Belle [ ] 195 Jess-Belle [ ] 196 Jess-Belle [ ] 197 Jess-Belle [ ] 198 Jess-Belle [ ] 199 The Parallel
    [Show full text]
  • C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\Desktop
    The Twilight Zone Checklist SEASON ONE (1959-60) Episode Aired Stars U Where Is Everybody? 10/2/59 Earl Holliman, James Gregory One for the Angels 10/9/59 Ed Wynn, Murray Hamilton Mr. Denton on Doomsday 10/16/59 Dan Duryea, Martin Landau The 16-Millimeter Shrine 10/23/59 Ida Lupino, Martin Balsam Walking Distance 10/30/59 Gig Young, Frank Overton Escape Clause 11/06/59 David Wayne, Thomas Gomez The Lonely 11/13/59 Jack Warden, Jean Marsh Time Enough at Last 11/20/59 Burgess Meredith, Jacqueline DeWitt Perchance to Dream 11/27/59 Richard Conte, Suzanne Lloyd Judgment Night 12/04/59 Nehemiah Persoff, Ben Wright, Patrick Macnee And When The Sky Was Opened 12/11/59 Rod Taylor, Charles Aidman, Jim Hutton What You Need 12/25/59 Steve Cochran, Ernest Truex, Arlene Martel The Four of Us Are Dying 01/01/60 Harry Townes, Ross Martin Third from the Sun 01/08/60 Fritz Weaver, Joe Maross I Shot An Arrow Into the Air 01/16/60 Dewey Martin, Edward Binns The Hitch-Hiker 01/22/60 Inger Stevens, Leonard Strong The Fever 01/29/60 Everett Sloane, Vivi Janiss The Last Flight 02/05/60 Kenneth Haigh, Simon Scott The Purple Testament 02/12/60 William Reynolds, Dick York Elegy 02/19/60 Cecil Kellaway, Jeff Morrow, Kevin Hagen Mirror Image 02/26/60 Vera Miles, Martin Milner The Monsters Are Due on Maple St 03/04/60 Claude Atkins, Barry Atwater, Jack Weston A World of Difference 03/11/60 Howard Duff, Eileen Ryan, David White Long Live Walter Jameson 03/18/60 Kevin McCarthy, Estelle Winwood People Are Alike All Over 03/25/60 Roddy McDowall, Susan Oliver The Twilight Zone Checklist SEASON ONE - continued Episode Aired Stars UUU Execution 04/01/60 Albert Salmi, Russell Johnson The Big Tall Wish 04/08/60 Ivan Dixon, Steven Perry A Nice Place to Visit 04/15/60 Larry Blyden, Sebastien Cabot Nightmare as a Child 04/29/60 Janice Rule, Terry Burnham A Stop at Willoughby 05/06/60 James Daly, Howard Smith The Chaser 05/13/60 George Grizzard, John McIntire A Passage for Trumpet 05/20/60 Jack Klugman, Mary Webster Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Super! Drama TV March 2021
    Super! drama TV March 2021 Note: #=serial number [J]=in Japanese 2021.03.01 2021.03.02 2021.03.03 2021.03.04 2021.03.05 2021.03.06 2021.03.07 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun 06:00 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 06:00 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:00 TWILIGHT ZONE Season 4 06:00 #26「Little Girl Lost」 #28「The Little People」 #30「Hocus-Pocus and Frisby」 #32「The Gift」 #34「Young Man's Fancy」 #36「Cavender is Coming」 #1 「In His Image」 06:30 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 06:30 THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 3 06:30 #27「Person or Persons Unknown」 #29「Four O'Clock」 #31「The Trade-Ins」 #33「The Dummy」 #35「I Sing the Body Electric」 #37「The Changing of the Guard」 07:00 07:00 CRIMINAL MINDS Season 7 07:00 CRIMINAL MINDS Season 7 07:00 CRIMINAL MINDS Season 7 07:00 CRIMINAL MINDS Season 7 07:00 CRIMINAL MINDS Season 7 07:00 07:00 STAR TREK Season 1 07:00 THUNDERBIRDS 07:00 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #16 #11 「Painless」 「From Childhood's Hour」 「Epilogue」 「There's No Place Like Home」 「Hope」 「The Galileo Seven」 「SUN PROBE」 07:30 07:30 07:30 08:00 08:00 SUPERNATURAL Season 13 08:00 SUPERNATURAL Season 13 08:00 SUPERNATURAL Season 13 08:00 SUPERNATURAL Season 13 08:00 SUPERNATURAL Season 13 08:00 08:00 ULTRAMAN towards the future 08:00 THUNDERBIRDS 08:00 #19 #20 #21 #22 #23 #4「the storm hunter」 #12 「Funeralia」
    [Show full text]
  • Twilight Zone Nightmare As a Child Cast
    Twilight zone nightmare as a child cast Fantasy · A schoolteacher keeps seeing a strange little girl in her apartment building. The Twilight Zone (–) Episode complete credited cast. Watch The Twilight Zone - Season 1, Episode 29 - Nightmare as a Child: Schoolteacher Helen Foley finds a Cast & Crew: RECURRING AND GUESTS · EDIT. With the entire original run of The Twilight Zone available to watch instantly, we're partnering with Twitch Film to cover all of the show's Original airdate: April 29, Cast: Helen Foley: Janice Rule. Markie: Terry Next week on the Twilight Zone, 'Nightmare as a Child.' I hope. Watch The Twilight Zone: Nightmare as a Child from Season 1 at The Twilight Zone - Guy Gets Stuck In The Twilight Zone Guest Cast. One of the largest lists of directors and actors by MUBI. The actors on this list are ranked according to MUBI users rating. The Twilight Zone Episode Nightmare as a Child Cast: Rod Serling, Janice Rule, Shepperd Strudwick, Terry Burnham, Michael Fox, and The Twilight Zone Episode 48​: ​DustJanuary 2. Find movie and film cast and crew information for The Twilight Zone: Nightmare as a Child () - Alvin Ganzer on AllMovie. A schoolteacher who has blocked out the details of her mother\'s murder encounters a strange little girl intent on making her recall the murderer\'s identity. Sure, “Nightmare” has a fairly typical Twilight Zone twist, but what it's really about is a woman realizing that the death of her mother wasn't what. Child on Find trailers, reviews, and all info for The Twilight Zone: Nightmare as a Child by Alvin Ganzer.
    [Show full text]
  • Twlight Zone Episode Guide
    a Ed Wynn in One For The Angels EPISODE GUIDE ESCAPE CLAUSE JUDGMENT NIGHT Writer: Rod Serling. Director: Mitch Leisen. Cast: Writer: Rod Serling. Director: John Brahm. Cast: Compiled by GARY GERANI, David Wayne, Virginia Christine, Wendell Holmes, Nehemiah Persoff, Ben Wright, Patrick McNee, Bradley Deirdre Owen, author of Fantastic Television Thomas Gomez. Hugh Sanders, Leslie James Franciscus. A hypochondriac makes a pact with the Devil Murky tale about a passenger aboard a war- for immortality. He then kills someone for First Season: 1959-60 time freighter who is certain the ship will be kicks, but instead of getting the electric chair, sunk at 1:15A.M. he is sentenced to life imprisonment! WHERE IS EVERYBODY? Writer: Rod Serling. Director: Robert Stevens. AND WHEN THE SKY WAS Cast: Earl Holliman, James Gregory. THE LONELY Writer: Rod Serling. Director: Jack Smight. Cast: Pilot show for the series concerns a man who OPENED Jack Warden, Jean Marsh, John Dehner, Ted Writer: Rod Serling. Director: Douglas Heyes. finds himself in a completely deserted city. In Knight, JimTurley. Cast: Rod Taylor, Charles Aidman, James Hutton, the end, we learn that it was all a test to ob- This classic episode concerns one James Maxine Cooper. serve how human beings will respond to ex- Corry (Warden), a man convicted of murder After three astronauts return from man's first treme loneliness during space flights. This and sentenced to spend forty years on a dis- space flight, each of them mysteriously dis- was the only episode shot at Universal tant asteroid. He has only one companion— appears.
    [Show full text]
  • Revenge of the Living Dummy
    TITLE PAGE REVENGE OF THE LIVING DUMMY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 ENTER HORRORLAND The Invitation 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 TEASER FEAR FILE #1 ABOUT THE AUTHOR ALSO AVAILABLE COPYRIGHT You may wonder why my best friend, Molly Molloy, and I were in the old graveyard late at night. I shivered as I thought about what we were doing. Wind howled through the trees, and pale streaks of lightning cracked the sky. “Hurry, Molly,” I whispered, hugging myself as the moon disappeared behind the clouds. “It’s going to storm.” “I am hurrying, Britney,” Molly said. “But the ground … it’s really hard.” We were digging a grave. We took turns. One of us shoveled while the other stood lookout. I felt cold raindrops on my forehead. I kept my eyes on the low picket fence near the street. Nothing moved. The only sounds were the scrape of the shovel in the dirt and a drumroll of thunder, deep but far away. Across from me, an old gravestone made a creaking sound as it tilted in the wind. I sucked in my breath. I suddenly pictured the old stone toppling over. And someone crawling out from the grave beneath it. Okay, okay. I have a wild imagination. Everyone knows that about me. My mom says I’ll either be a writer or a crazy person. She thinks that’s really funny. Sometimes having a strong imagination is a good thing.
    [Show full text]