Dinosaurs follows the life of a family of dinosaurs, living in a modern world. They have TV's, fridges, microwaves, and every modern convenience.
The best episode of "Dinosaurs" season 4 is "Monster Under the Bed", rated 8.1/10 from 164 user votes. It was directed by Brian Henson and written by Adam Barr, Peter Ocko. "Monster Under the Bed" aired on 6/1/1994 and is rated 0.6 point(s) higher than the second highest rated, "Earl, Don't Be a Hero".
The Baby swears there's a monster under his bed, but no one believes him--until it starts dragging victims into its hole.
Director: Brian Henson
Writer: Adam Barr, Peter Ocko
Earl assumes the powers of a superhero, but he's bound to use his might only for the Wesayso Corp.
Director: Mark Brull
Writer: David A. Caplan, Brian LaPan
Questions about life's meaning plague the population, so the Elders dictate a belief system called "Potatoism."
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Adam Barr, Peter Ocko
Earl drives Ethyl to her reunion, and the kids drive Fran crazy when she tries to get them to pose for a portrait.
Director: Jeff McCracken
Writer: Adam Barr, Peter Ocko, Jane Espenson, Tim Doyle
A workplace injury ends up costing Earl his job but it pays off big for him in court.
Director: Mark Brull
Writer: Tim Doyle
Fran and Earl face an untimely extinction when the baby enters his "terrible twos."
Director: Jeff McCracken
Writer: Tim Doyle
Efforts to solve an environmental crisis put the dinosaurs on the road to doomsday.
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Kirk R. Thatcher
The baby goes gaga over a hippo named Georgie, the latest children's idol. But when Earl dresses up as Georgie, he's arrested for copyright infringement.
Director: Mark Brull
Writer: David A. Caplan, Brian LaPan
Earl, Robbie and Roy stumble into a tar pit when they take the Baby into the forest for the traditional dinosaur Wilderness Rite of Passage.
Director: Brian Henson
Writer: Mark Drop
When too many overworked employees drop dead from exhaustion, businesses give dinosaurs two weeks off for a vacation; B.P. Richfield advises Earl to bring his family to WeSaySo Land, which is supposed to be a fun amusement park for the family. What the Sinclairs find is an overpriced, cow themed park that is newly under construction, and they have to stay for 14 days.
Director: Jeff McCracken
Writer: Jane Espenson
Earl makes a deal with the devil (which is a wierd inconsistency in the show) after watching a late night show, "Lifestyles of Those We Envy".
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Mark Drop
Charlene becomes her father's boss when Richfield is pressured into hiring women. The only problem is, Dad won't listen to her.
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Rich Tabach
Robbie and Charlene go against Earl's orders and sneak out to see his estranged sister, Pearl, a country star, perform. Roy falls in love with Pearl and plans to settle down with her, despite Earl's protests.
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Tim Doyle
Charlene's scent gland comes in and Fran explains the one boy who is attracted to her scent is the one she's destined to marry. But Charlene puts out fumes of burning rubber and attracts the school janitor who aspires to be a tree pusher.
Director: Tom Trbovich
Writer: Andy Goodman