Glee season 2

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Glee (season 2)
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Glee
Season 2
Promotional poster and home media cover art
Starring
No. of episodes22
Release
Original networkFox
Original releaseSeptember 21, 2010 (2010-09-21) –
May 24, 2011 (2011-05-24)
Season chronology
← Previous
Season 1
Next →
Season 3
List of episodes

The second season of the musical comedy-drama television series

20th Century Fox Television and Ryan Murphy Television, with executive producers Dante Di Loreto and series co-creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, with the other series co-creator, Ian Brennan
, as co-executive producer.

The series features the New Directions

) round out the list of main characters.

The season received generally positive reviews from critics. The musical performances from the second season expanded on the success of the first season, with the show releasing five soundtrack albums and over one hundred digital singles. The cast decisively broke the record for most charted songs by an act in the 52-year history of the

and over fifty other awards. Three DVDs have been released with episodes from the season: Glee – Season 2, Volume 1 featuring episodes one through ten, Glee – Season 2, Volume 2 featuring episodes eleven through twenty-two, and Glee – The Complete Second Season.

Episodes

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
US viewers
(millions)
231"Audition"Brad FalchukIan BrennanSeptember 21, 2010 (2010-09-21)2ARC0112.45[1]
McKinley High’s glee club and cheerleading squad budgets are cut to allocate more money for the football program and its new football coach
Harry Shum, Jr.
) begin dating.
242"Britney/Brittany"Ryan MurphyRyan MurphySeptember 28, 2010 (2010-09-28)2ARC0213.51[2]
New Directions wants to perform a
Carl (John Stamos), a dentist, treats glee club members Brittany, Santana, Rachel and Artie, all of whom experience Britney Spears fantasies while under anesthesia
. Artie joins the football team, and Finn is reinstated. Will ultimately okays a Spears number and takes a lead role in the hopes of impressing Emma, but the assembly performance ends in chaos.
253"Grilled Cheesus"Alfonso Gomez-RejonBrad FalchukOctober 5, 2010 (2010-10-05)2ARC0311.20[3]
Upon seeing the face of
Jean
about God.
264"Duets"Eric StoltzIan BrennanOctober 12, 2010 (2010-10-12)2ARC0411.36[4]
When Puck is sent to a juvenile detention center, New Directions welcomes Sam (Chord Overstreet) as a new member, and Will assigns a duet competition for the week. Kurt wants to partner with Sam because he suspects Sam might be gay, but Finn and Burt dissuade him, and Kurt sings alone. Finn and Rachel secretly throw the competition so that Sam will feel welcome; the victory dinner with Sam and his partner Quinn turns into a first date for the couple.
275"The Rocky Horror Glee Show"Adam ShankmanStory by : Ryan Murphy & Tim Wollaston
Teleplay by : Ryan Murphy
October 26, 2010 (2010-10-26)2ARC0511.76[5]
After Will learns of Emma's newfound love for The Rocky Horror Picture Show, he impulsively decides to have the glee club perform the stage version of the musical as a fundraiser in the hopes of winning her back from Carl, recruiting her to help him with the production. However, problem after problem, including Sue going undercover to expose the boundary-pushing production on her television news segment, prevent New Directions from performing it in front of an audience.
286"Never Been Kissed"Bradley BueckerBrad FalchukNovember 9, 2010 (2010-11-09)2ARC0610.99[6]
Will separates the group for another boys vs. girls mash-up competition. Kurt, who is being harassed and attacked by Karofsky (Max Adler), spies for New Directions at Dalton Academy, where he meets Blaine (Darren Criss), lead singer of the rival Warblers. Blaine encourages Kurt to stand up for himself, and backs him in a confrontation with Karofsky. Meanwhile, The glee club is in more than just hot water when Coach Beiste discovers that the boys and girls use her as a turn-off method and submits her resignation, but Will convinces her to stay at McKinley. He warns Mike and Sam about how hurt Coach Beiste would be and advises them to stop. Puck returns and develops a friendship with Artie through his community service project; he helps Artie get a date with Brittany.
297"The Substitute"Ryan MurphyIan BrennanNovember 16, 2010 (2010-11-16)2ARC0711.70[7]
Will becomes ill, and is replaced by freewheeling substitute teacher
Principal Figgins (Iqbal Theba) is also ill, and makes several changes including firing Will and Figgins (after she finds unsuitable emails on his computer), though she is ultimately convinced to reinstate Will. Kurt and Blaine become friends, and Mercedes
organizes a protest against Sue.
308"Furt"Carol BankerRyan MurphyNovember 23, 2010 (2010-11-23)2ARC0810.41[8]
Sue's Nazi-hunting mother Doris Sylvester (
Principal Figgins (Iqbal Theba) as principal again). Quinn accepts a promise ring
from Sam.
319"Special Education"Paris BarclayBrad FalchukNovember 30, 2010 (2010-11-30)2ARC0911.68[9]
Taking Emma's advice, Will decides to feature some of the less-heralded members of New Directions in the Sectionals competition. With the glee club in disarray and new member Lauren Zizes (Ashley Fink) replacing Kurt, New Directions, the Warblers (augmented by new member Kurt), and the Hipsters face off at Sectionals: New Directions and the Warblers both advance to Regionals. Carl and Emma marry in Las Vegas; Rachel confesses to Finn that she made out with Puck to make him jealous after discovering that Finn had lied about having sex with Santana the previous spring.
3210"A Very Glee Christmas"Alfonso Gomez-RejonIan BrennanDecember 7, 2010 (2010-12-07)2ARC1011.07[10]
The faculty holds a Secret Santa gift exchange, but Sue tampers with it so she gets all the gifts. Artie finds out Brittany still believes in Santa Claus, and convinces the other glee club members not to disillusion her. When Brittany asks a mall Santa to make wheelchair-bound Artie able to walk again, Artie recruits Coach Beiste to play Santa in order to tell her it won't be possible after all. Kurt tells Will that he's fallen in love with Blaine. Finn breaks up with Rachel.
3311"The Sue Sylvester Shuffle"Brad FalchukIan BrennanFebruary 6, 2011 (2011-02-06)2ARC1128.32[11]
McKinley High’s football championship game takes place, and a "Thriller" mash-up is performed during the halftime show. Will and Coach Beiste attempt to get the glee club and the football team to work together, and Sue does everything she can to make sure she clinches Nationals again while attempting to sabotage both the football team and the glee club, with disastrous results: McKinley wins the championship, and Sue loses three cheerleaders and Regionals.
3412"Silly Love Songs"Tate DonovanRyan MurphyFebruary 8, 2011 (2011-02-08)2ARC1211.58[12]
Will assigns the McKinley High glee club to perform love songs in honor of Valentine's Day. Finn sets up a kissing booth for the occasion, to raise money for the club and to kiss Quinn. Puck falls in love with Lauren, but his song to her backfires. Blaine and the Dalton Academy Warblers perform "When I Get You Alone" at a Gap clothing store, but all does not go as planned.
3513"Comeback"Bradley BueckerRyan MurphyFebruary 15, 2011 (2011-02-15)2ARC1310.53[13]
Rachel tries to get back into McKinley High's social swing with the help of Brittany, but her attempts backfire. Sam forms a Justin Bieber tribute band in the hopes of cementing his relationship with Quinn, but later finds out from Santana that Quinn cheated on him with Finn and breaks up with her; he starts dating Santana. Sue tries to sow dissent in New Directions from the inside, and after failing, she becomes coach of Aural Intensity, a glee club rival for Regionals.
3614"Blame It on the Alcohol"Eric StoltzIan BrennanFebruary 22, 2011 (2011-02-22)2ARC1410.58[14]
Principal Figgins attempts to teach the student body about the danger of underage drinking. Rachel throws a party, and after heavy drinking starts, things really heat up with a game of spin the bottle. To Kurt's dismay, Blaine questions his sexuality. Will tries to drunk-dial Emma and is publicly shamed by Sue. New Directions performs at a school assembly on drinking – with disastrous results, if not consequences.
3715"Sexy"Ryan MurphyBrad FalchukMarch 8, 2011 (2011-03-08)2ARC1511.92[15]
When substitute Holly Holliday fills in for the absent sex education teacher, she joins forces with Will to teach the kids of New Directions the facts of life. Santana and Brittany ask Holly's advice about their relationship. Emma heads up the Celibacy Club, and she and her husband Carl face some issues in their marriage with Holly's help, notably her continuing celibacy; when Emma confesses to still having feelings for Will, Carl moves out. Finn and Quinn get back together. A warning from Blaine prompts Burt to give Kurt "the talk" about sex.
3816"Original Song"Bradley BueckerRyan MurphyMarch 15, 2011 (2011-03-15)2ARC1611.15[16]
When their planned anthem for the show choir Regionals competition is axed due to Sue's sabotage, New Directions writes and performs original songs to compete against the Dalton Academy Warblers and the Sue-coached Aural Intensity; Kathy Griffin and Loretta Devine guest star as judges Tammy Jean Albertson and Sister Mary Constance. Meanwhile, Blaine falls in love with Kurt after hearing him singing a song, and the two share a kiss and begin a relationship. New Directions wins the Regionals competition.
3917"A Night of Neglect"Carol BankerIan BrennanApril 19, 2011 (2011-04-19)2ARC179.80[17]
The glee club performs songs from artists that they feel are neglected at a benefit in an attempt to raise money for Artie, Mike, Tina and Brittany's
Academic Decathlon
team. Sue makes a plan to sabotage the fundraiser; when Sunshine, who now sings for rival club Vocal Adrenaline, offers to perform for the benefit, her director, one of Sue's allies, pulls her from the show. Lauren convinces Mercedes to become a truly demanding diva to get what she wants.
4018"Born This Way"Alfonso Gomez-RejonBrad FalchukApril 26, 2011 (2011-04-26)2ARC188.62[18]
Santana blackmails Karofsky into starting an anti-bullying club in order to convince Kurt to return to McKinley High and New Directions; Kurt returns and the Warblers serenade him in farewell. Lauren runs against Quinn for prom queen and, with Puck's help, digs up some surprising information about her past. Most of the glee club tries to convince Rachel not to get a nose job after Finn breaks her nose while dancing.
4119"Rumours"Tim HunterRyan MurphyMay 3, 2011 (2011-05-03)2ARC198.85[19]
Sue revives The Muckraker, the school newspaper, and prints
April Rhodes (Kristin Chenoweth
) returns to try to convince Will to perform on Broadway with her.
4220"Prom Queen"Eric StoltzIan BrennanMay 10, 2011 (2011-05-10)2ARC209.29[20]
As the race for prom queen heats up, Principal Figgins recruits New Directions to perform at the prom. Mercedes is distressed because she doesn't have a prom date, and Rachel arranges for Sam to take the two of them as a group.
Jesse St. James (Jonathan Groff
) returns to woo Rachel, which angers Finn. Kurt attempts to help Karofsky deal with his sexuality, and takes Blaine as his date to the prom. A surprising pair wins Prom King and Queen, with dramatic repercussions.
4321"Funeral"Bradley BueckerRyan MurphyMay 17, 2011 (2011-05-17)2ARC218.97[21]
As New Directions gets closer to Nationals, Will brings in Jesse to give advice on how to win the championship; Rachel is the only one happy with his efforts. Sue sabotages the club's travel itinerary to New York, though Will's ex-wife Terri ultimately fixes the damage. When Sue's sister Jean dies and Sue is unable to cope, Finn and Kurt get the club to help them plan her funeral. Finn breaks up with Quinn due to his lingering feelings for Rachel.
4422"New York"Brad FalchukBrad FalchukMay 24, 2011 (2011-05-24)2ARC2211.80[22]
New Directions heads to New York City for the National Show Choir Championship and faces Vocal Adrenaline once again, taking time to see landmarks while there. Will prepares to head to Broadway with April while hiding it from the kids. Finn is desperate to win Rachel back, and Kurt helps Rachel to make a decision about her future. The performance by New Directions includes an unplanned interlude, which imperils their chances of victory. Back in Ohio, Blaine and Kurt declare their love for each other.

Production

The season was produced by

20th Century Fox Television and Ryan Murphy Television, and aired on Fox in the US. The executive producers were Dante Di Loreto, and series creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, with Murphy serving as showrunner and co-creator Ian Brennan acting as co-executive producer.[23][24] All episodes were written by Murphy, Falchuk and Brennan. Murphy and Falchuk directed three episodes each, while other episodes were directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon, Eric Stoltz, Adam Shankman, Bradley Buecker, Carol Banker, Paris Barclay, Tate Donovan and Tim Hunter. Each episode cost $3.2 million–$3.8 million to produce, an increase of 20 percent on the first season,[24] with the exception of the Super Bowl episode, which was estimated to cost as much as $5 million,[25] and the season finale, which required a week filmed on location in New York City, and was the most expensive Glee episode yet, at a reported $6 million.[26]

The season began airing on September 21, 2010, in the 8 pm (ET) timeslot on Tuesdays.[27] A special episode aired after Super Bowl XLV on February 6, 2011.[28] Fox planned to move the show to the 9 pm time slot on Wednesdays following the Super Bowl,[29] but the network later revised its schedule, leaving Glee on Tuesdays in order to concentrate on building up its weaker Wednesday and Thursday line-ups.[30] Episode eighteen, "Born This Way", became Glee's first 90-minute episode. Its runtime was extended from the standard 60 minutes to allow the inclusion of more musical numbers.[31] The season concluded on May 24, 2011, with the episode moved to the 9 pm (ET) timeslot following the American Idol finale.[32] The commissioning of a third season was announced on May 23, 2010, before the first season had concluded airing.[33]

Murphy intended the second season to accentuate focus on formerly minor characters, particularly Santana, Brittany and Mike. He commented, "Everyone gets a chance to shine this season. Instead of going bigger and overstuffing Season 2, which people would expect, we’re going under it. We'll pick up on the stories of our main cast, but we’re also going to spend time on the support characters. Everyone gets their moment."[34] Not all of his plans came to fruition; in July 2010, Murphy claimed that glee club co-captains Finn and Rachel would remain in a relationship throughout the season,[35] however this was abandoned in favor of a love-triangle storyline to generate conflict.[36] One unintended development was the emergence of Kurt as a central character—his role grew in prominence as a result of the writers' desire to do justice to the gay bullying storyline.[31]

Reluctant to produce too many tribute episodes, Murphy limited the season to two:[37] the Spears tribute "Britney/Brittany",[38][39] and "Rumours", the series' first episode to pay tribute to an album, Fleetwood Mac's Rumours.[40] The fifth episode, "The Rocky Horror Glee Show" served as an additional homage to The Rocky Horror Show.[41] Although Murphy had planned to showcase original songs in Glee as early as October 2009,[42] they featured for the first time during the second season, after he found a way to include the concept organically, in the form of a glee club assignment.[31][43]

Cast

Naya Rivera (left) and Heather Morris (right) were both promoted to the main cast in the second season of the series.

The twelve main cast members from the first season returned for the second:

Heather Morris and Naya Rivera, who portrayed the formerly recurring roles of Brittany Pierce and Santana Lopez, were promoted to series regulars,[44] as was Mike O'Malley as Kurt's father Burt Hummel.[45]

Supporting cast members

Carl Howell, a love interest for Emma;[57] and Gwyneth Paltrow appeared as substitute teacher Holly Holliday.[58]

Meat Loaf and Barry Bostwick, who both starred in The Rocky Horror Picture Show, appeared in Glee's Halloween Rocky Horror tribute episode,[59] playing right-wing television station managers and colleagues of Sue.[60] Adam Kolkin portrayed an eight-year-old Kurt in the third episode of the season,[61][62] and in the seventh episode, child actors portraying preschool-aged versions of New Directions were featured.[63] Sue's mother Doris Sylvester was also introduced this season, played by Carol Burnett.[64] Journalist Katie Couric made a guest appearance as herself when she interviewed Sue during "The Sue Sylvester Shuffle".[65]

A reality series featuring open auditions for the show was intended to air on Fox in advance of the season,[66][67] but was cancelled due to Murphy's desire to concentrate on the main series, and fear that the distraction of the reality show might damage Glee.[68] The idea was picked up by Oxygen, and The Glee Project began airing in June 2011, after the end of season. The winner was to receive a multi-episode guest-starring role in Glee's third season;[69] in the finale, all four finalists were given prizes: there were two winners of seven-episode arcs, and two runners-up who were given two episodes each.[70]

Music

Glee's second season saw a shift toward covering more

Forget You", music supervisor PJ Bloom commented, "We're using songs on the show the same time they're charting as new hits." He described the process behind selecting songs, clearing rights, recording, and filming numbers as taking as little as a few weeks to complete. Executive music producer Adam Anders revealed that production and planning even occurs before rights for songs are cleared, as Glee's creators are offered the opportunity to listen to upcoming songs before their release by publishers and record labels.[71]

Darren Criss's rendition of "Teenage Dream" by Katy Perry (pictured) attained the highest first-day and first-week sales of any Glee song to date.

The extended play (EP) Glee: The Music, The Rocky Horror Glee Show was released mid-October 2010 to accompany the fifth episode.[72] Glee: The Music, The Christmas Album, featuring winter holiday-themed songs, was released on November 9, 2010, and Glee: The Music, Volume 4, featuring recordings from the first half of the season, was released at the end of that month.[73] An additional EP tied to the Super Bowl episode, when it was initially planned to also be a tribute episode, was dropped when the tribute idea was;[74][75] Glee: The Music, Volume 5, which featured recordings from that Super Bowl episode through the Regionals competition episode, was released on March 8, 2011.[76] Another soundtrack album, released on April 19, 2011, features the Dalton Academy Warblers: Glee: The Music Presents the Warblers.[77] The final CD accompanying the season, Glee: The Music, Volume 6, was released on May 23, 2011.[78]

Second season musical releases attained some chart success. Glee: The Music, The Rocky Horror Glee Show peaked at number six on the

Loser like Me" which debuted at number six.[87] The single sold 210,000 downloads in that week, second only to the cast's cover of Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream", which sold a record 55,000 downloads on its first day and a total of 214,000 downloads its first week in the US—it became the first Glee Cast single to top Billboard's Digital Songs chart, reached number eight on the Hot 100, and it beat the previous first-week sales record of 177,000 held by debut single "Don't Stop Believin'", which had hit number four on the Hot 100.[88][89] "Teenage Dream" and "Loser Like Me" were the second and third cast singles to be certified Gold in the US; the first was "Don't Stop Believin'", which subsequently received its Platinum certification during the second season.[84]

The record for most appearances by a group on the Billboard Hot 100, previously set by The Beatles, was broken when six songs from the season's second episode, "Britney/Brittany", debuted on the chart the week of October 16, 2010, which put the Glee total at seventy-five. This feat also placed the cast third overall among all artists, behind James Brown and Elvis Presley.[90] Four songs debuted on November 18, 2010, which pushed the number of appearances to ninety-three and surpassed Brown for second place.[91] On February 16, 2011, it was announced that Glee had increased its Hot 100 appearances to 113 songs and moved past Elvis to hold the record for the most Hot 100 entries.[92] Glee ended the second season with a total of 156 Hot 100 songs.[93] The season's cover versions had a positive effect on some of the original recording artists. Following the broadcast of "Britney/Brittany", sales of the Spears songs covered increased by 35,000 units.[24] The episode "Rumours" had an even greater effect on the Fleetwood Mac album of the same name it featured: in Australia, five days after the episode aired, the Rumours album entered the Australian charts at number two, and was at number three the following week;[94][95] it received its thirteen-times Platinum certification in Australia at the end of that month.[96]

Reception

Critical response

It's been a crazy ride this season. As frustrated as I get with Glee's minute-to-minute identity crisis, there have been some truly gorgeous moments of television in the past twenty-two episodes...

Meghan Brown
The Atlantic
[97]

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gives the season a 79% with an average rating of 7.61/10, based on 29 reviews. The site's critics consensus reads, "Glee loses some of its spark in this reprise, but the series still delights with its frothy musical numbers and sensitive engagement with pressing social issues."[98] The season received a Metacritic score of 76 out of 100 based on 11 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[99]

Robert Canning of IGN wrote that the "New York" season finale "was a decent close to an enjoyable season", while The Atlantic's Meghan Brown called it "an uneven end to an uneven season", and her colleague Kevin Fallon said that season two was "undeniably frustrating" but "there was still ample reason to tune in and enjoy".[97][100] Anthony Benigno of The Faster Times gave the season a "C+", but noted that he was "an easy grader".[101] The A.V. Club's Emily VanDerWerff gave the season a slightly better "B−", and stated: "The season opened and closed strong, but the middle section was mushy and filled with plenty of episodes that just didn't work."[102] Brett Berk of Vanity Fair summed up as follows: "The quality of Glee's second season has been something like the topography of Utah, or the acting career of Amanda Peet—blandly passable and relying on its good looks, but stumbling occasionally upon unfathomable idiosyncrasy, whose presence is at once baffling, frightening, and a bit melancholy—in a good way."[103]

Several episodes drew complaints from

Zap2It wrote, "Yes this show is often erratically written, but what it does best is create a queer fantasia to celebrate 'otherness', with much mirth and little victim-hood. No other show on TV features a cast this diverse: people of color, sexual others, different body types, gender subversion and even the disabled."[108]

Ratings

The season premiere episode, "Audition", aired on September 21, 2010; it averaged 12.45 million American viewers and achieved a 5.6/16

18–49 demographic. The second episode, which featured the music of Britney Spears, was also Glee's second best showing at that point after its April 2010 return after a four-month hiatus, with 13.51 million viewers and a 5.9/17 rating/share in the 18–49 demographic.[109][110] All but one of the next fourteen episodes ranged in viewership between 10.51 million and 11.92 million. The exception aired on Sunday, February 6, 2011, after the Super Bowl: Glee received its highest-ever ratings. Over 26.8 million viewers watched it, with an initial peak of 39.5 million, and an overall 18–49 rating/share of 11.1/29.[111]

When the show returned with its final six episodes on April 19, 2011, after a five-week absence, US viewership dipped below ten million, and on the special ninety-minute episode "Born This Way" reached a season low of 8.62 million, with a rating/share of 3.4/11 in the 18–49 demographic.[112] Only for the season finale, when the show aired an hour later than usual to allow the penultimate night of American Idol to air in Glee's usual slot, did the number of watchers exceed ten million, when the lead-in helped boost viewership to 11.80 million and the 18–49 rating/share to 4.6/11.[113]

For the season as a whole, Glee was number 43 of 268 primetime shows that averaged at least a million viewers, with an average viewership of 10.11 million, while it tied for number 13 of 249 of shows that received at least a 0.5 rating in the 18–49 rating demographic, with a 4.1 rating average.[114][115]

A mid-season feature story in The Hollywood Reporter, which ran on January 25, 2011, stated that Glee had become the most-watched program of US origin in the UK.[24]

Accolades

Jane Lynch (pictured) won a Dorian Award, Golden Globe Award and People's Choice Award for season two.[116][117][118]

During its second season, Glee was nominated for forty-five awards. It won in three categories at the

AfterEllen.com and AfterElton.com Visibility Awards, of which it won four.[122][123] It was awarded a further four awards by the Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association at the 2011 Dorian Awards, with the TV Comedy Performance of the Year accolade resulting in a tie between Colfer and Lynch.[116] Series producer Alexis Martin Woodall won the Television Produced By A Woman accolade at the WIN Awards,[124] where Glee was nominated for three awards in total.[125]

Glee was named one of the

Home video releases

Glee: Season 2, Volume 1 contains the first ten episodes of the season. It was released as a three-disc

Amazon.com began taking pre-orders for the complete season box set on Blu-ray and DVD in September 2010, the week the season premiered.[149]


Glee – Season 2, Volume 1
Set details Special features
  • 10 episodes
  • 3-disc set
  • Running Time: 464 minutes
  • 1.77:1 aspect ratio
  • English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Glee Music Jukebox
  • Getting Waxed With Jane Lynch
  • The Making of the Rocky Horror Glee Show
  • Exclusive Bonus Song
    • "Planet, Schmanet, Janet"
  • The Wit of Brittany
  • Glee at
    Comic-Con
    2010
DVD release dates
Region 1
Region 2
Region 4
January 25, 2011 (2011-01-25) April 4, 2011 (2011-04-04) March 23, 2011 (2011-03-23)
Glee – Season 2, Volume 2
Set details Special features
  • 12 episodes
  • 4-disc set
  • Running Time: 565 minutes
  • 1.77:1 aspect ratio
  • English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Glee Music Jukebox
  • Building Glee's Auditorium with Cory Monteith
  • A Day in the Life of Brittany
  • Shooting Glee in New York City
  • Guesting on Glee
  • Sue’s Quips
  • Stevie Nicks Goes Glee
  • Santana's Slams
DVD release dates
Region 1
Region 2
Region 4
September 13, 2011 (2011-09-13) September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19) October 5, 2011 (2011-10-05)
Glee – The Complete Second Season
Set details Special features
  • 22 episodes
  • 7-disc set
  • Running Time: 1001 minutes
  • 1.77:1 aspect ratio
  • English
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • All special features on Glee – Season 2, Volume 1
  • All special features on Glee – Season 2, Volume 2
DVD release dates
Region 1
Region 2
Region 4
September 13, 2011 (2011-09-13) September 19, 2011 (2011-09-19) October 5, 2011 (2011-10-05)

References

  1. Tribune Media Services
    . Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  2. ^ Gorman, Bill (September 29, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee, No Ordinary Family, NCIS, Dancing Up; Raising Hope, Detroit 1–8–7, Running Wilde Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 17, 2010. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
  3. ^ Seidman, Robert (October 6, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee, No Ordinary Family, NCIS, Dancing, Parenthood Up; Raising Hope, Detroit 1–8–7, Running Wilde Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 13, 2010. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
  4. ^ Gorman, Bill (October 13, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee, Dancing With The Stars Adjusted Up; Detroit 1–8–7, The Good Wife, Raising Hope, Running Wilde, Life Unexpected Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 17, 2010. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  5. ^ Gorman, Bill (October 27, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee, Dancing Adjusted Up; Detroit 1–8–7, Raising Hope Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 17, 2010. Retrieved October 27, 2010.
  6. ^ Gorman, Bill (November 10, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: NCIS, Glee, Life Unexpected Adjusted Up; Detroit 187, Raising Hope Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 14, 2010. Retrieved November 10, 2010.
  7. ^ Seidman, Robert (November 17, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee Sings Louder, Adjusted Up; Detroit 187 Adjusted Down". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 20, 2010. Retrieved November 17, 2010.
  8. ^ Seidman, Robert (November 24, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: The Biggest Loser Sheds a Tenth; Raising Hope Gains It". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on November 27, 2010. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  9. ^ Gorman, Bill (December 1, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: Glee, Rudolph, The Grinch Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on December 4, 2010. Retrieved December 2, 2010.
  10. ^ Gorman, Bill (December 8, 2010). "Tuesday Finals: One Tree Hill Adjusted Up; Raising Hope Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on December 10, 2010. Retrieved December 9, 2010.
  11. ^ Seldman, Robert (February 8, 2011). "Sunday Final Ratings: Super Bowl Demos Galore, Plus 'Glee' 15 Minute Detail". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on February 10, 2011. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  12. ^ Seidman, Robert (February 9, 2011). "Tuesday Final Ratings: 'Glee' Adjusted Up, 'Raising Hope' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on February 12, 2011. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
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