I have another definition of the twilight zone and I can see by your reaction lady
you think it is a bit off colour.
As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.
Some things puzzle me and with a headache, that is why they are here.
I was reading Lincoln's War by Carl Sandberg and in Volume 3 he references the Twilight Zone. This book was published in the 1930's, and it fascinates me more that Rod Sterling in his Twilight Zone based that title on what was broadly understood what the twilight zone meant in something odd and bizarre, and for the era we live in, it has come to be a television program about odd things which can not be believed.
I looked up the Twilight Zone and Rod Serling said it was a military term about planes landing.
The Twilight Zone is actually a term Serling borrowed from the U.S. military. Serling, who served as a U.S. Army paratrooper in World War II, an experience that marked many of the stories he went on to write, knew it referred to the moment a plane comes down and cannot view the horizon.
The definition probably originated more in this observance.
There are two main uses of 'twilight zone' that I am aware of. First, it is a technical term used to describe the very dimly lit level of the ocean before you reach the maximum depth light can penetrate. Below this level is only darkness.
Sandberg never explains what his understanding of the term was.
Nuff Said
Golden earring - Twilight zone - YouTube
agtG