My Favorite Martian
Reporter Tim O'Hara, while covering a flight of the Air Force X-15, finds a spaceship that contains a genuine Martian.
Episode 30 hr 26 min
Uncle Martin has trouble controlling his super-powers when he contacts the common cold, an affliction unknown on Mars.
Reporter Tim O'Hara, while covering a flight of the Air Force X-15, finds a spaceship that contains a genuine Martian.
Uncle Martin reads the mind of George, the dog owned by Tim's boss, and ascertains that the pooch is lovesick.
Uncle Martin has trouble controlling his super-powers when he contacts the common cold, an affliction unknown on Mars.
Tim is suspected of being a Russian spy.
Uncle Martin helps Mrs. Brown's daughter, Angela, with a school assignment about Mars.
Martin is believed to be attempting suicide and is forced into psychiatric therapy.
For the first time in his life Martin falls in love, an emotion unknown on Mars.
To give Tim a chance to feel like a Martian, Uncle Martin grants Tim the ability to read minds for one day.
The trash collector mistakes Martin's spaceship for trash. Now, Martin and Tim must find where it wound up.
Martin finds himself in trouble when his fingerprints match those of a jewel thief.
Martin works with a boy genius to devise a means of accelerating electronic particles in order to reactivate his spaceship.
Tim wants to know what type of man Cynthia would be interested in, so Martin agrees to read her mind to find out.
An attractive lady moves into Tim's neighborhood. Martin tries to get her attention by posing Tim as a hero.
Tim's cousin, Harvey, comes to visit and is bewildered because he doesn't know who Uncle Martin is.
Martin disapproves of news that a cat has received a large inheritance.
Discovering that Mars has briefly spun off its regular orbit and is closer to Earth than usual, Martin feels that time is ripe to attempt a return trip to his home planet.
A sudden flareup of sunspots wreaks havoc on Martin's metabolism, to say nothing of his special powers. As a result, Martin begins levitating, then shrinking, and finally disappears completely.
Martin loses his memory of everything, including his origins.
A museum is about to lay off its curator, until Martin intervenes.
Martin's artwork is praised, but Tim gets all the credit.
Upon learning that the Astro-Dynamics Corporation plans to launch an instrument-bearing rocket into space, Martin hopes to hitch a ride home to Mars.
Tim's reporter career branches out to crime stories, and Martin's antennae prove useful.
When an Asian Head of State visits the area, Martin intervenes to get Tim an exclusive.
Martin finds himself to be the target of snooping when Mrs. Brown takes up detective work as a hobby.
Tim might find himself without a house when Mrs. Brown decides to sell.
Martin finds himself sharing the attentions of Mrs. Brown with a Frenchman, Andre Dupre.
Martin absorbs an electrical charge, but the whole town's power supply is affected.
Martin's antennae attracts a new playmate in a young child.
Martin is seen when he tests the flight worthiness of his spaceship.
Martin disappears at inopportune moments. The solution comes in a hard-to-find vitamin.
Martin's identity is threatened when Mrs. Brown's niece, Paula (guest star Marlo Thomas), starts asking too many questions.
Martin's powers become impaired during an electrical storm.
The strength of the Earth's gravitational pull threatens to accelerate Uncle Martin's aging process. To counteract this, Martin must quickly assemble an antigravitation device.
A wealthy man (guest Alan Hale Jr.) builds a spaceship, and Martin steps forward to take it to Mars.
Martin makes a stew, and Mr. Burns has an unusual reaction.
Martin fills in for Tim at work and gains a high profile interview.
Martin discovers that a toothache's symptoms include impaired eyesight.
CastRay Walston, Bill Bixby, Pamela Britton, Alan Hewitt
WritingJohn L. Greene, Bill Kelsay, Albert E. Lewin, James Komack, Martin Roth
Directed byOscar Rudolph, Leslie Goodwins, John Erman, David Alexander, Jean Yarbrough
ProductionJack Chertok