Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
He voiced Baboo, Pudgy Pig, Mongo, Grumble Bee and Lizzinator on Mighty
Morphin Power Rangers; Baboo, Midas Monster, Horsehead, Googleheimer, and
Video Vulture on Power Rangers Zeo; Quincy Modo, Charterville Charlie,
Borgslayer, and Shellator on Big Bad Beelteborgs; Merlock Holmes and
Coconaut in Flint: The Time Detective; Termitis and Praying Mantis on Power
Rangers in Space; Numemon, Chuumon, Angemon, Kokatorimon, Gekomon, Nanimon,
narrator, MagnaAngemon, Upamon, Pegususmon, Sakkoumon, Tsubumon, Vilemon,
Allomon, Chief Cabinet Secretary, Hypnos System, Grani, Goblimon, ToyAugmon,
Piddomon, SkullSatamon, Pagumon and various voices in Digimon: Digital
Monsters; Gasser and Magnetox on Power Rangers Lost Galaxy; Trifire
on Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue; Commandocon and Black Knight on Power
Rangers Time Force; Daemona’s dad and various roles in Phantom Investigators;
and Vacuum Cleaner Org, Helicos, Narrator and Announcer on Power Rangers
Wild Force. He also provided voices for The Adventures of Raggedy Ann
& Andy.
When you
become a long-running multimedia franchise, there are gonna be a lot of
different versions of the same concept for each rendition. The Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise is no different, with incarnations ranging
from dark and gritty to comedic and everything in between.
Saban's Ninja Turtles.
In the
mid-90s, Saban
Entertainment acquired the rights to the Turtles franchise and decided to
produce the first live-action Turtles series: Ninja
Turtles: The Next Mutation. It took elements from the
never-produced fourth live-action film and turned it into a comedic martial
arts action program, similar to Saban’s popular Power Rangersfranchise.
And what better way to promote the show than with a crossover into that
franchise?
Power
Rangers in Spacewas the version produced at the same time as Next
Mutation, and both being on Fox
Kids made the crossover possible. The only hitch was that since both shows
were filmed in different locations, the performers for the Turtles weren’t the
same ones used on their own show. In “Shell Shocked” written by Judd Lynn, the Turtles were
brainwashed by the Space Rangers’
nemesis, Astronema
(Melody
Perkins), to serve her and attack the Rangers. However, the Turtles are
eventually freed from her control and aided the Rangers in defeating her. This
was the second and last time that the Rangers franchise would cross over with
another show outside of comics (the first being Masked
Rider), and due to Next Mutation’s cancellation shortly after
this crossover was deemed non-canon by Ranger fans.
4Kids' Ninja Turtles.
In 2002, 4Kids Entertainment
acquired the Turtles license and produced their own animated series the
following year; simply titled Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles(although it would gain subtitles in future
seasons). Unlike its 1987
predecessor, the series placed more emphasis on a serious tone and action,
as well as featured season-long story arcs that would noticeably make psychological
changes to the Turtles. The 2003 Turtles ultimately came to an end when
co-creator Peter Laird sold the
franchise to Nickelodeon (co-creator Kevin Eastman had previously
sold his stake back in 2000). 4Kids decided to end their incarnation with a
bang while simultaneously celebrating the 25th anniversary of the
franchise with the TV movie Turtles
Forever, written byRob David, Matthew Drdek and series
developer Lloyd Goldfine.
The 2003 Turtles discover that the
1987 Turtles were accidentally brought over from another dimension, along with
their Shredder
(David Wills) and Krang (Bradford Cameron). 1987
Shredder sought an alliance with 2003 Shredder (Scottie Ray) as a way to
finally beat the Turtles, only to have 2003 Shredder take his Foot
Clan and technology and turn them into frightening instruments of war. 2003
Shredder ultimately discovers that additional dimensions exist with their own
Turtles that could potentially stop him, leading him to decide to eliminate
them all by destroying the one he’s identified as the “prime” universe. That
universe contained the black and white 1984 Turtles from the original
Mirage comics. The twelve Turtles are joined by friend and enemy alike to
put an end to 2003 Shredder’s plans. In a meta touch, Eastman and Laird make a
cameo appearance at the end as they put the finishing touches on the first Turtles
comic. Incidentally, during one scene, 2003 Shredder shows the Turtles the
Turtle multiverse which included the movie versions, the various comic
versions, and other random interpretations inspired by the “Guest
Era” of the comics (a span of the first run from #22-44 that were produced
by guest creators and later deemed non-canon by Eastman and Laird).
Nick's Ninja Turtles.
Nickelodeon’s first outing for
their newly-acquired Turtles franchise was the 2012 CGI-animated Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles. They opted for a return to the lighthearted fun
reminiscent of the 1987 series while injecting a bit of the seriousness (and some
original characters) of the 2003 version. So, it was only fitting that the 1987
universe would make several appearances during the course of the show (outside
of the theme being the 2012 Turtles’ ringtone). And, unlike the non-union 4Kids
who couldn’t use the original actors for Turtles Forever, the 2012
series was able to employ them readily (heck, Rob Paulsen—who was part of the 1987
series—was already a regular cast member for 2012).
The first instance were cameos in
both parts of the two-episode “The Manhattan Project” (aka “Wormquake!”)
written by Brandon Auman and
John Shirley. The 2012 crew sees the
1987 characters through a portal in the first part, while the team actually
appeared at the end of the second part to deal with a giant worm-like creature
that had entered their dimension through a portal. They became a major part of
the story in their next appearance, “Trans-Dimensional Turtles” (again by
Auman), when the 2012 Turtles—currently on a space adventure in the past to
stop the sinister Triceratons
from constructing a weapon that will destroy Earth in the present—end up transported
to the 1987 universe where their counterparts ask for help in stopping Krang (Pat Fraley) from destroying both
their dimensions with a special bomb. As a nod to the original series, the
Turtles were rendered in a mimicked cel animation style whenever they were in
the 1987 world. This episode had a bit of fun with continuity as well,
retconning Krang’s origin to his being Kraang
Subprime’s (Gilbert Gottfried)
cousin that was banished to the 1987 world. Similarly to Turtles Forever, an
additional bomb was placed in the “Prime” dimension which was rendered in a
comic book panel style, black and white, and featured the 1984 Turtles as silent
animatics. Because this technically took place in the past, the episode ended
with the 1987 Turtles confronting the giant worm from their last cameo, which
by extension led to an encounter with the mutant Tiger
Claw (mistakenly sporting the eyepatch he had not yet acquired by this
point).
Their final main appearance was in the
three-part series finale that spanned across “Wanted: Bebop & Rocksteady”,
“The Foot Walks Again!” and “The Big Blow-Out!” by Peter DiCicco, Mark Henry and Jed MacKay. 1987 Shredder (Kevin Michael Richardson,
replacing the late James Avery)
and Krang come to the 2012 dimension to continue Krang’s earlier plan of
dimensional destruction. They had to employ the 2012 Bebop
(J.B. Smoove) and Rocksteady
(Fred Tatasciore) to help with their plans when they accidentally left their
versions behind, and discovered that the 2012 henchmutants proved more
effective than theirs when they’re sent out to capture the 1987 Turtles that
followed them. In order to combat Shredder and Krang’s plans to open a portal
to Dimension
X and call in an army of rock
soldiers, the 2012 Turtles attempt to turn their counterparts into genuine
ninjas (their fighting was ineffective as a commentary to the neutered violence
forced on the original series) and get some help from their human allies, the Foot
Clan and the Mutanimals
(whose roster included characters voiced by Corey Feldman and Robbie Rist, who provided Turtle
voices in the live-action films). Ultimately, it took Bebop and Rocksteady
deciding that they didn’t want the world destroyed to turn on Shredder
and Krang and help ruin their plans. This trilogy not only closed out the 2012
series (even though it wasn’t the intended finale) also served as a 30th
anniversary celebration of the 1987 series as it aired just a few weeks shy of
the original’s debut.
One final encounter happened
between the 2012 and 1987 Turtles. In the short Turtles Take Time (and
Space), the 2012 Turtles get sucked into a time vortex when Michelangelo (Greg Cipes) plays with a
scepter that April (Jessica
McKenna) bought. They’re shunted onto a pirate ship, back into their
aquarium when they were babies, and an extreme dimension where the Turtles and
Shredder were jacked. Finally, they returned to their lair only to discover it
was the lair of the 1987 Turtles. Only Cipes and Townsend Coleman reprised their
respective roles as Michelangelo for the short.
His best-known voice roles were that of monster maker Finster and the
evil Lord Zedd in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers,Power Rangers Zeo and
Power Rangers in Space, as well as Lokar and a Two-Headed Parrot. He also
provided the voice to Microchip in Spider-Man: The Animated Series;Piranha
Khan in Big Bad Beetleborgs;Mutantrum in Power Rangers Lost
Galaxy; Vademon, Wizardmon, Armadillomon, Ankylomon, and Shakkoumon in Digimon:
Digital Monsters; Movor in Transformers: Robots in Disguise; and appeared on screen as Thin Man in Power Rangers Time Force.
Power
Rangers In Space is the fifth incarnation of the Power Rangersfranchise,
and the sixth season overall. It was a direct continuation of Turboand utilized footage from Toei Company, Ltd.’s 21stSuper Senti series, Denji Sentai Megaranger.
It was also the conclusion to what has become regarded as the Zordon-era of Power Rangers.
Dark Specter.
Dark Specter (Terence J. Rotolo &
Christopher Grey) has assembled his United
Alliance of Evil to celebrate his capture of Zordon (David Fielding & Robert. L. Manahan) and his
beginning to drain his powers. Meanwhile, the former Turbo Rangers—T.J. Johnson
(Selwyn Ward), Carlos Vallerte (Roger Velasco), Ashley Hammond (Tracy Lynn
Cruz), and Cassie Chan (Patricia Ja Lee), along with Alpha 6 (Wendee Lee,
bringing him closer to the original Alpha 5 inflections)—had
journeyed into space to help Zordon and encountered a new Red Ranger: Andros
(Christopher Khayman Lee, who originally
didn’t want the role after being constantly compared to Tommy Oliver because of his
long hair), a human with telekinetic abilities from space colony KO-35. After some
convincing to let them help, Andros gave the Earth Rangers new Astro Morphers
restoring their powers (however, this time T.J. was blue since red was already
taken, and Carlos was black instead of green). Together, they simultaneously
searched for Zordon while protecting Earth from Dark Specter’s minions.
The United Alliance of Evil.
The United Alliance of Evil was
comprised of villains from the previous seasons, including Rita Repulsa (Carla Perez & Barbara Goodson), Lord Zedd (Ed Neil & Robert Axelrod) and their
minions, as well as Master
Vile (Tom Wyner) from Mighty Morphin; the Machine
Empire’s Royal House of Gadgetry and their minions from Zeo; Divatox (Hilary Shepard Tuner) and her
crew, and General
Havoc (Wyner & Richard
Cansino) and his army from Turbo. However,
the primary foes for the season were the newcomers: leading them was Astronema
(Melody Perkins), actually Andros’ sister Karone who was abducted by the
ruthless bounty hunter, Darkonda (Steve Kramer); Ecliptor (Lex Lang), who
raised Astronema and taught her to be evil; and the Quantrons, Astronema’s
robotic foot soldiers. Divatox’s nephew Elgar (Kenny Graceson & Derek
Stephen Prince) was chosen to accompany Astronema as her guide for her attacks
on Earth (however, Astronema kept him out of her hair with busywork around the Dark Fortress).
The Psycho Rangers.
Along with the typical assortment of
monsters,
the most notable of Astronema’s attack against the Rangers came in the form of
the Psycho Rangers.
The Psycho Rangers were twisted versions of the Power Rangers who could draw on
the energies of Dark Specter. When their humanized forms were destroyed, they
reverted to their true forms as monsters. Each one was made unbeatable by the
Ranger of their corresponding color and could absorb their energy upon their
defeat.
Carlos, Cassie, Andros, Ashley and TJ on the Astro Megaship.
The Space Rangers operated out of
Andros’ Astro
Megaship, which was created by Zordon and Alpha 5 on Eltar. It provided for
all the Rangers’ needs, from a Synthetron which could replicate any food they
wanted, to the SimuDeck where they trained against holographic and robotic
opponents, such as the Craterites.
The ship could be fully manned by a crew of 16, or operated by a skeleton crew
with the aid of the ship’s onboard computer, D.E.C.A. (Julie Maddalena). The
ship could also become the Astro
Megazord by combining with the Astro
Megashuttle that the Earth Rangers arrived in. Each Ranger had their own
personal Zord, the Mega
Vehicles, which were created by Zordon and hidden on one of Jupiter’s moons
for emergencies. They combined to form the Mega Voyager.
Forming the Multi Attack Rifle.
Along with the standard Astro
Blaster, each Ranger had a Galaxy
Glider; essentially, a jetboard that allowed them to travel through space
without a ship. Each Ranger also had their own personal weapons that could be
combined together to form the Multi
Attack Rifle, or with their Astro Blasters. Black had the Lunar Lance,
Blue the Astro
Axe, Yellow the Star
Slinger (a rapid-fire slingshot), and Pink the Satellite
Stunner (a satellite-like gun that fired energy rings). Red had the Spiral
Saber and the Battlizer
Gauntlet, which added energy to his punches, fired a laser, or gave him
Battlized Armor increasing his strength, defense and gave him the ability to
fly.
Andros and Zhane.
The Rangers’ number eventually grew
to six, when a battle freed Andros’ best friend Zhane (Justin Nimmo) from
cryo-stasis where he was placed after receiving grave injuries. He resumed his
role as the Silver Space Ranger (the first in either version of the franchise),
and was ultimately the most powerful amongst them. However, his Ranger energy
had leaked while he was in stasis, causing him to unexpectedly morph back in
battle until he was able to get his Digimorpher
recharged. The Digimorpher was the first in the franchise to resemble a cell
phone, and was used by dialing specific codes; such as “2580” to morph. He also
had his own Zord, the Mega Winger,
and his Super
Silverizer weapon could be used as both a blaster and a sword.
Bulk and Skull joined by a nutty professor.
Several long-time recurring
characters were removed from the show: Mr. Caplan (Henry Cannon), the principal of
Angel
Grove High School; Ms.
Appleby (Royce Herron),
a teacher at the school; and Lt. Jerome Stone (Gregg Bullock). The reason
being that the producers felt the characters’ routines had run their course.
However, Bulk (Paul Schrier) and Skull (Jason Narvy) were retained. They were
paired up with a new character, Professor Phenomenus (Jack Banning), a
scatterbrained scientist who was always on the hunt for aliens. Despite being
part of the main cast, Bulk and Skull only appeared in less than half of the
episodes of the show. The Youth
Center was also replaced as the Rangers’ Earth hangout by the Surf Spot,
which was run by Adelle Ferguson (Aloma Wright).
Probably the strangest team-up of
all was with the Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles. At the time, Saban Entertainment
was also producing Ninja Turtles: The Next
Mutation. It was a live-action series that adapted a failed pitch for a
fourth feature film. It was most notable (and notorious) for introducing a
fifth turtle: Venus
de Milo (Nicole
Parker & Lalainia
Lindbjerg). The show also aired on FOX,
which meant the In Space producers
could have their outlandish crossover without issue. In their two-episode
appearance, Astronema brainwashed the Turtles into being her servants to
infiltrate the Astro Megaship and take it for her. Fortunately, they were able
to shake themselves free and aid the Rangers in defeating her. Because Rangers
was filmed in California and Turtles in Canada, the Next Mutation suit performers and voice actors didn’t reprise their
roles. Ultimately, Next Mutation was
cancelled shortly after these episodes due to the poor ratings it received.
Because the show wasn’t much liked by audiences, many Ranger fans consider
their guest-appearance to be non-canon. It was the second and last time Power Rangers would cross over with
another show (outside of comics).
The Phantom Ranger.
Power
Rangers in Space debuted on February 6, 1998 on FOX as part of their Fox Kids programming block. In Space became the place for a number
of firsts in the franchise: it was the first to use an orchestral score instead
of rock, the first to introduce new weapons not seen in the Sentai series as a
way to bolster merchandise sales, the first to be completely serialized over
the course of an entire season, and the first to feature sympathetic and
layered villains. Because there was a lack of usable Megaranger footage, a good portion of the budget was spent on
creating cheap green screen effects for the space scenes and new fight scenes
tinted in different colors to represent alien worlds. Because of these budget
issues, some things had to be cut; such as the episode that would have revealed
the Phantom Ranger’s identity. The series was written by story editor/head
writer/director Judd Lynn, Jackie Marchand, Steve Roth, John
Fletcher and Koichi Sakamoto,
with music composed by Shuki Levy,
Haim Saban (as Kussa Mahchi), Kenneth Burgomaster, Jim Cushinery, Paul Gordon, Glenn Scott Lacey, Jeremy Sweet, Ron Wasserman, Inon
Zur and Lior Rosner.
Surfing through the cosmos.
In 2011, the
original bible for In Space drafted
before Turbo’s second half was
released online. Astronema and Andros were missing from that draft, with the Phantom
Ranger discovering Dark Specter’s plans instead, and the use of the Silver Ranger
was being debated. Dark Specter would have been Carranger villain Exhaus, but Exhaus was used for Turbo’s final monster, Goldgoyle. Divatox
would have been the main villain again, with Rita and Zedd having larger roles.
Justin was to remain on the team and Dimitria would have given the Turbo
Rangers their space powers so that they could travel to save Zordon. Their
spacecraft would have a limited power supply, necessitating their frequent
returns to the Power Chamber to recharge. The Power Chamber, consequently,
would have also been recycled into the Astro Megaship’s interior. They would
have also gained an orbiting base called the new Power Dome. Bulk and Skull
would form a volunteer Citizen Force Group to protect Angel Grove while
the Rangers were unavailable.
On May 13, 1998, a special entitled Power Rangers Funniest Moments made its
debut. It was a clip show hosted by Bosch and featured Bulk, Skull and
Professor Phenomenus. It showed clips from the various seasons and went behind
the scenes of the productions of Turbo: A Power
Rangers Movieand Mighty
Morphin Power Rangers: The Official Fan Club Video. It was the first Power Rangers special to show footage of
the Zyurangers,
and debuted several of the monster suits before they were seen on In Space.
Andros faces Astronema.
Because ratings had significantly
declined by the end of Turbo, In Space was
approached as the conclusion to the entire franchise. In the season’s final two
episodes, the United Alliance of Evil launched an all-out assault on the
universe with all the villains and heroes participating: Rita and Zedd battled
the Gold Ranger; Divatox battled the Alien Rangers; the Machine Empire and
General Havoc attacked the Phantom Ranger and Blue Senturion; Cogs attacked Zhan and the
KO-35 rebels; and Astronema set her sights on Earth with a planet-destroying
Super-Torpedo. Darkonda gave into his ambitions and used the torpedo to destroy
Dark Specter so that he could take over, but Dark Specter destroyed him as
well. That left Astronema the new Queen of Evil. Andros faced Astronema in battle
and he was forced to kill her, and then, on Zordon’s insistence, killed Zordon
by destroying his energy tube. That unleashed a cleansing wave of energy across
the universe and purified the main villains with many of their minions being
reduced to sand. Astronema was also saved, being brought back to life and
restored as Karone.
Zordon begs Andros to kill him to save the universe.
Ultimately, ratings for In Space rose dramatically; enough to
warrant a continuation of the franchise with another season. However, having
already embraced the annual changing costumes/abilities of the Sentai series, Power Rangers likewise adopted the
practice of having a new cast with each change; making In Space the final season to have a continuing cast and unified
storyline. But, while future incarnations of the franchise would take it to
different places and realities, there would still be some kind of connection to
previous incarnations in the form of team crossovers and character sharing.
“From
Out of Nowhere, Part I” (2/6/98) – A mysterious Red Ranger infiltrates
Sepcter’s Alliance meeting while the Earth Rangers are brought onto the Astro
Megaship.
“From
Out of Nowhere, Part II” (2/6/98) – Andros gives the other Rangers new morphers
and Alpha transforms the ship into the Astro Megazord to repel a criosphinx
attack.
“Save
Our Ship” (2/20/98) – The Rangers take Andros to Earth where they find Ecliptor
and Astronema waiting for them.
“Shell
Shocked” (2/27/98) – Astronema uses her powers to make the Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles into her minions and has them trick their way onto the Megaship.
“Never
Stop Searching” (3/6/98) – Following a lead on his missing sister, Andros finds
Ecliptor waiting for him.
“Satellite
Search” (3/13/98) – The Rangers retrieve a crashed satellite with valuable
information only to have Astronema steal it from them.
“A
Ranger Among Thieves” (3/20/98) – A monster attacks the hideout of thieves that
Andros befriended.
“When
Push Comes to Shove” (3/27/98) – Cassie is blackmailed into a date that takes
them to a building one of Astronema’s monsters attacks.
“The
Craterite Invasion” (4/3/98) – The Simudeck malfunctions and sends a horde of
Craterites into a rampage on Angel Grove.
“The
Wasp With a Heart” (4/4/98) – A wasp monster befriends Cassie, which pits her
against the other Rangers when they make a deal with the Sting King.
“The
Delta Discovery” (4/11/98) – While searching for Zordon the Rangers find a
wounded Phantom Ranger who gives Andros control of the Delta Megaship.
“The
Great Evilyzer” (4/18/98) – Astronema uses Professor Phenomenus’ new device to
run the Delta Megazord evil.
“Grandma
Matchmaker” (4/25/98) – Ashley’s grandmother comes for a visit and is
determined to get her engaged before she leaves.
“The
Barillian Sting” (5/2/98) – An alien insect stings and mutates Carlos, who then
stings and mutates Cassie.
“T.J.’s
Identity Crisis” (5/9/98) – TJ loses his memory just as the Rangers are
captured by the fusion of Darkonda and Ecliptor: Darkliptor.
“Flashes
of Darkonda” (5/16/98) – Undercover, Andros wins Zordon’s key cards from a
group of aliens in a game of cards and comes to remember that Darkonda
kidnapped his sister.
“The
Rangers’ Mega Voyage” (9/12/98) – The Rangers use Zordon’s key cards to take
command of the Mega Vehicles.
“True
Blue to the Rescue” (9/19/98) – The Rangers are captured while trying to rescue
Storm Blaster, so Storm Blaster brings Justin Stewart from Earth to rescue
them.
“Invasion
of the Body Switcher” (9/26/98) – Astronema has her appearance changed into
Ashley so that she can invade the Megaship and capture the Rangers.
“Survival
of the Silver” (10/3/98) – Attacks on the Megaship frees Zhane, the Silver
Ranger, who was placed in cryo-stasis due to serious injuries.
“Red
with Envy” (10/10/98) – Andros becomes jealous that Zhane seems to be
interested in Ashley and orders him to stay on the ship when the Rangers head
into battle.
“The
Silver Secret” (10/14/98) – Zhane can only stay morphed for a limited time and
Astronema plans to exploit this flaw.
“A
Date with Danger” (10/15/98) – Zhane rescues Astronema from one of her own
monsters, and the two begin to find a mutual attraction.
“Zhane’s
Destiny” (10/16/98) – The Rangers find the rebels from KO-35 and Darkonda, in
disguise amongst them, tries to turn them against the Rangers.
“Always
a Chance” (10/17/98) – After Carlos injuries Cassie in battle, Adam Park
returns to train with him and restore his confidence.
“The
Secret of the Locket” (10/21/98) – Astronema loses her locket during a battle,
and Andros discovers that it belonged to his sister—who IS Astronema.
“Astronema
Thinks Twice” (10/23/98) – Knowing her past, Astronema decides to give up being
evil and joins Andros in rescuing Zordon.
“The
Rangers’ Leap of Faith” (10/24/98) – Astronema takes the Rangers to Zordon,
which ends up being a trap set up by Dark Specter.
“Dark
Specter’s Revenge, Part I” (10/28/98) – Astronema tries to stop an asteroid
from destroying Earth, but ends up captured and reverted back to evil.
“Dark
Specter’s Revenge, Part II” (10/29/98) – Andros and Zhane head out to retrieve
Astronema, but they find her reverted to being eviler than before.
“Rangers
Gone Psycho” (10/30/98) – When five imposters wreak havoc in Angel Grove, the
real Rangers confront them and discover they’re mind-reading machines sent by
Astronema.
“Carlos
on Call” (10/31/98) – When a little girl discovers Carlos’ identity, she
blackmails him into spending time with her.
“A
Rift in the Rangers” (11/4/98) – Psycho Yellow and Pink manage to capture
Ashley.
“Five
of a Kind” (11/5/98) – To confuse the Psycho Rangers, the Rangers all disguise
themselves as the Blue Ranger.
“Silence
is Golden” (11/6/98) – Cassie has to keep quiet in Angel Grove as the Psycho
Rangers use voice recognition to try and locate their civilian identities.
“The
Enemy Within” (11/7/98) – The Psycho Rangers steal the Mega Voyager, prompting
the Rangers to launch a surprise attack to get it back.
“Andros
the Stowaway” (11/11/98) – The Rangers fight a monster to protect an enslaved
alien Andros rescued.
“Mission
to Secret City” (11/12/98) – Astronema creates a secret city to store her
captives, and Andros has to access his full power to rescue Carlos, Silvy and
himself.
“Ghosts
in the Machine” (11/13/98) – The Psycho Rangers use Astronema’s matter-to-data
conversion machine to restore themselves.
“The
Impenetrable Web” (11/14/98) – Ecliptor manages to infiltrate the Astro
Megaship and keep the Rangers out, and then uses it to destroy the Delta
Megazord.
“A
Line in the Sand” (11/18/98) – The Rangers are teleported to a barren wasteland
and lose the Mega Voyager in a battle with Tankenstein.
“Countdown
to Destruction, Part I” (11/20/98) – Dark Specter order the launch of the
villains’ attack on everything.
“Countdown
to Destruction, Part II” (11/21/98) – While the Rangers face Astronema in Angel
Grove, Andros finds Zordon who wants to sacrifice himself to wipe out all the
villains.