Lost Episodes
Rejected scripts. Abandoned outlines. Forgotten pitches. Explore the most comprehensive listing of lost Sliders episodes ever made available online.
Lost Episodes
Rejected scripts. Abandoned outlines. Forgotten pitches. Explore the most comprehensive listing of lost Sliders episodes ever made available online.
The Lost Archive
Get a glimpse into the beginnings of Sliders by exploring elevator pitches shared with FOX executives during the pitch process that led to the show's creation.
The Sliders are trapped in Nazi-occupied America and must avoid the Gestapo and stay alive for the duration of their slide.
The Sliders enter an America that's become politically dominated by the far right religious movement.
When Wade encounters a double of her sister, she must wrestle with the decision of whether to tell her that Kelly's fiancee is a violent drunk back home.
Quinn and company slide onto a world that's virtually identical to our own, but it's a world that's been thrust into a horrific state of panic—and possible invasion.
With more than two months on a world close to home, the Sliders disband and go on separate journeys, discovering new passions and re-learning old lessons. But will they all leave this world together?
Get a glimpse into the season two production process by reading elevator pitches for episodes that never made it to air—and some that did.
The Sliders land in a world where physical beauty counts for everything—handsome people are society's haves, unattractive people are the have-nots.
Take a deep dive into the third season production process and discover just exactly what didn't make it to air.
What if I told you everything you knew about "Raging Quinn" was all wrong? That it was a balls-out crazy entry in the Sliders pantheon that featured ultraviolence, grand theft auto, and murder by dolphin? You read that right. Murder. By. Dolphin.
When the Sliders land on a world where she is a singing sensation, Wade must step into her double's shoes to help her recover from addiction and find a love for music once again.
It's a chance to relive the past when the Sliders land on a world trapped in the 70s, giving Quinn the opportunity to bond with a younger version of his father and Arturo the ability to teach his double how to connect with their estranged children.
Take a deep dive into the full outline of the lost third season episode that ultimately paved the way for season four's "Net Worth."
Wade's separation from the group leads to a turbulent showdown when Logan St. Clair tracks them to a jungle world and begins pursuing the Sliders in earnest.
When the Sliders are split up on a world where killer bees are about to level Los Angeles, the Sliders must find a way to stop the invasion and reunite in time for the slide.
With the help of Rembrandt's double, the Sliders assume the mantle of super heroes to defeat a villain, save the city, and rescue Rembrandt from cryoprison.
An intriguing potential two-parter where the Sliders find themselves on a world where time travel is part of life—and it's slowly unraveling both the present and the future.
The greatest "lost episode" in Sliders history comes a little bit closer to being unearthed with a treatment written by the author himself, Tracy Tormé.
Remember that episode where the Sliders landed on the world with werewolves? Or that one where Vincent Turk builds a Kromagg-killing laser beam? You don't? That's because a ton of pre-production on the fifth season was ultimately scrapped, but thanks to the investigative work of the Expert, you can read all about a season that never was.
Read "Black and Bluesy," the original pitch by Janét Saunders & Jennifer McGinnis that became the fifth season episode "The Java Jive."
For those of you wondering how "Easy Slider" started with Kari in leather but never featured her in anything but dowdy dungarees, Janet Saunders' pitch about a Maggie romance—complete with polygamy!—might fill in some of the blanks.

