The best episode directed by Joshua Marston is "5/1", rated 8.8/10 from 8 user votes. It was "written by Aaron Sorkin". "5/1" aired on 8/5/2012 and is rated 1.6 point(s) higher than their second highest rated, "The Silence".
An anonymous source gives details on an imminent story of national importance. When the President calls a televised speech that night, the 2.0 staff cuts short its 1-year anniversary party and rushes back to the newsroom.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Aaron Sorkin
David and Keith struggle to create parent-child boundaries; When Brenda and Nate get some ambiguous news, it confirms their views on life and death; Ruth fills her schedule with activities, but has trouble unwinding; Claire meets an interesting guy at work, and makes an effort to fit in; Margaret lets a cat out of the bag; and George drops a bomb on Ruth.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Bruce Eric Kaplan
Prince revamps the team in his image with mixed results, leading him to question if he wants to keep any of them at all. Chuck, clearing his head upstate, leads a crusade against a local blue blood. Meanwhile, Wags, Wendy and Taylor all try to wrap their heads around their new positions under Prince. Season premiere.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: David Levien
In order to keep a client from being convicted of murder, Alicia must obtain a stay of execution for a guilty man; Eli tries to stay ahead of a client's possible scandal.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Robert King
Russ and Barb receive a visit from their estranged son. Some new information sees Carter's defense team securing a bail hearing.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Diana Son
After running into a successful designer on the street, Ben and Cam hook up with Hidemi, a top Japanese buyer, but their business takes a surprising detour when they show him their none-too-Crisp jean sample. Meanwhile, Rene runs into unexpected problems locating cash stashed in the basement of a woman who's divorcing his ne'er-do-well cousin Tito. Rachel, hoping to bring fresh energy to her relationship with Darren, is flummoxed by his euphoric reaction to the party drug Ecstasy.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Arty Nelson
Prince instructs the trading floor on a new play but is met with skepticism. Taylor and Wendy try to nail down Prince’s intentions, while Wags struggles to hide a conflict of interest. Meanwhile, Chuck decides to go after the entire billionaire class, first tackling the plight of the New York City doormen.
Director: Joshua Marston
Writer: Emily Hornsby