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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

An episode in a series that serves as a sequel to a previous episode. Different from a Two Part Episode, in that there may be several episodes (if not several years) inbetween the first episode and the one that picks up the plot again. Obviously this only applies to series where Stand Alone Episodes occur somewhat regularly. If the whole show is one long Story Arc, there's not enough seperating the plot of one episode from another to make labelling it a "sequel" meaningful. However, if a series has multiple Story Arcs, it is possible for a later Story Arc to be a sequel to an earlier one.

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  • Sequel Episode
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  • An episode in a series that serves as a sequel to a previous episode. Different from a Two Part Episode, in that there may be several episodes (if not several years) inbetween the first episode and the one that picks up the plot again. Obviously this only applies to series where Stand Alone Episodes occur somewhat regularly. If the whole show is one long Story Arc, there's not enough seperating the plot of one episode from another to make labelling it a "sequel" meaningful. However, if a series has multiple Story Arcs, it is possible for a later Story Arc to be a sequel to an earlier one.
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abstract
  • An episode in a series that serves as a sequel to a previous episode. Different from a Two Part Episode, in that there may be several episodes (if not several years) inbetween the first episode and the one that picks up the plot again. To qualify, it's not enough to simply have an object, setting, or character from one episode appear in another, otherwise any series with a Rogues Gallery would consist almost entirely of Sequel Episodes. If Cop Show has the Main Characters arrest a thief and recover some stolen jewels in one episode, and a later episode has the thief break out of prison and cause some more havoc, that's just a One-Shot Character moving up to Recurring Character status. If, on the other hand, a later episode has the cops discover that the stolen jewels they recovered were actually fakes, and they have to interrogate the thief to find out where she hid the real jewels, that is a Sequel Episode; the plot resolved in an earlier episode is reopened and explored again in a new episode. Obviously this only applies to series where Stand Alone Episodes occur somewhat regularly. If the whole show is one long Story Arc, there's not enough seperating the plot of one episode from another to make labelling it a "sequel" meaningful. However, if a series has multiple Story Arcs, it is possible for a later Story Arc to be a sequel to an earlier one. Often uses Cross Referenced Titles. Related to Continuity Nod and Call Back. Examples:
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