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Cinnamon, Rollin, Jim,
Willy, Barney
Season 3, 1968/69, 25 episodes
Producer Stanley Kallis, except where indicated
Regular Team as in season 2: Jim, Rollin, Cinnamon, Barney, Willy
The opening credits for the third season were:
Martin Landau renewed his contract for another year for $6,500 per show (his wife, Barbara Bain, was getting $2,500 per show).
The creator of the show, Bruce Geller, apparently didn't get along with William Read Woodfield and Allan Balter, who had been appointed as the new producers by the Studio, and Stanley Kallis took over after the ninth show.
The Desilu logo did not appear again, and the programme was now explicitly produced by "Paramount Television", using two different logos.

| Transmission Date |
Episode No |
Season No |
TX Order |
Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 Oct 1968 | 51 | C1 | 4 | The Mercenaries * |
| 29 Sep 1968 | 52 | C2 | 1 | The Heir Apparent * |
| 1 Dec 1968 | 53 | C3 | 8 | The Diplomat * |
| 6 Oct 1968 | 54 | C4 | 2 | The Contender (Part 1) * |
| 13 Oct 1968 | 55 | C5 | 3 | The Contender (Part 2) * |
| 10 Nov 1968 | 56 | C6 | 5 | The Execution * |
| 8 Dec 1968 | 57 | C7 | 9 | The Play ** |
| 17 Nov 1968 | 58 | C8 | 6 | The Cardinal * |
| 24 Nov 1968 | 59 | C9 | 7 | The Elixir ** |
| 4 Jan 1969 | 60 | C10 | 12 | The Exchange |
| 15 Dec 1968 | 61 | C11 | 10 | The Bargain |
| 12 Jan 1969 | 62 | C12 | 13 | The Mind of Stefan Miklos |
| 23 Dec 1968 | 63 | C13 | 11 | The Freeze |
| 19 Jan 1969 | 64 | C14 | 14 | The Test Case |
| 26 Jan 1969 | 65 | C15 | 15 | The System |
| 2 Feb 1969 | 66 | C16 | 16 | The Glass Cage |
| 23 Feb 1969 | 67 | C17 | 18 | Live Bait |
| 16 Feb 1969 | 68 | C18 | 17 | Doomsday |
| 2 Mar 1969 | 69 | C19 | 19 | The Bunker (Part 1) |
| 9 Mar 1969 | 70 | C20 | 20 | The Bunker (Part 2) |
| 23 Mar 1969 | 71 | C21 | 21 | Nitro |
| 6 Apr 1969 | 72 | C22 | 23 | The Vault |
| 30 Mar 1969 | 73 | C23 | 22 | Nicole |
| 13 Apr 1969 | 74 | C24 | 24 | Illusion |
| 20 Apr 1969 | 75 | C25 | 25 | The Interrogator |
| * Producers William Read Woodfield & Allan Balter ** Producer Robert E Thompson |
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Episodes were often not broadcast in the same order that they were produced, especially at the begining of a season. I have therefore given three numbers in this table.
The episode number represents the production order over the entire series, the season number represents the episode production order within the season, and TX Order represents the original transmission order.
For example, The Mercenaries was the 51st episode made, the first season three episode made, but the fourth shown.
With Paramount's takeover of Desilu, their convention was used for double episodes, such as The Contender, which was to give each part a separate episode number.
Click on the links in the list to see a brief synopsis of the episode. (No spoilers.)