Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith | Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace | Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones | episode | Human Nature (Doctor Who episode) | What You Leave Behind (DS9 episode) | The Prodigal (Angel episode) | The Fusilli Jerry (Seinfeld episode) | Sanctuary (Angel episode) | I Fall to Pieces (Angel episode) | Faith, Hope & Trick (Buffy episode) | Episode | Another Century's Episode | You're Welcome (Angel episode) | Xenosaga Episode III: Also sprach Zarathustra | Xenosaga Episode I: Der Wille zur Macht | Why We Fight (Angel episode) | Tribunal (episode) | ''Top Gear'' Series 9, Episode 5 | The Vengeance Factor (TNG episode) | The Screwfly Solution (Masters of Horror episode) | The rustic Frank's Cafe at 502 E. Galbraith St. in Hebbronville was featured in 2004 in an episode of Bob Phillips | The Ring (Angel episode) | The Opposite (Seinfeld episode) | The Naked Now (TNG episode) | The Lars Homestead set from ''Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope | The Ladies Who Lunch (Desperate Housewives episode) | The Face Painter (Seinfeld episode) | The episode was set in the fictional town of Kroner, Kansas (''Kansas prairie pictured''). | The Battle (TNG episode) |
In 1959, he was cast as General Phil Sheridan in the episode "One Bullet from Broken Bow" of the NBC western series, Bat Masterson, starring Gene Barry in the title role.
In the first five episodes produced, in Covington, Georgia, he is seen to be a rebellious wildman, often treading on the edge of, or totally breaking the law (the first episode, "One Armed Bandits", for example, begins with a chase in which Cooter has stolen the Sheriff's Police patrol car).
He made an appearance, along with fellow Ugly Betty actor Eric Mabius, in the CSI: Miami episode "One of Our Own", and another as a gay hustler in HBO's Big Love.
During season one, episode one, of the television series Downton Abbey, the cook, Mrs. Patmore, has a pot of "salt of sorrel" on the kitchen preparation table that one of the servants uses to clean the brass and copper pots.
In episode one, Paine (played by Brennan Brown) prosecutes the British soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre.
Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated the episode one star out of five.
Taking The Flak was filmed around Arusha, Tanzania, in the autumn of 2008 although episode one (the pilot) was filmed in January 2007 in Nakuru, Kenya, with a working title of The Calais Rules.