| Season:Episode | Title | Runtime | Air Date | User Rating | Queue | |
| Season 1 | ||||||
| 12 | Prophecy Girl | 45:18 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 11 | Out of Mind...Out of Sight | 44:46 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 10 | Nightmares | 44:51 | 05/12/1997 | |||
| 9 | The Puppet Show | 44:56 | 05/05/1997 | |||
| 8 | I Robot, You Jane | 44:50 | 04/28/1997 | |||
| 7 | Angel | 45:00 | 04/14/1997 | |||
| 6 | The Pack | 44:53 | 04/07/1997 | |||
| 5 | Never Kill a Boy On the First Date | 44:52 | 03/31/1997 | |||
| 4 | Teacher's Pet | 45:05 | 03/24/1997 | |||
| 3 | The Witch | 45:02 | 03/17/1997 | |||
| 2 | The Harvest | 45:02 | 03/10/1997 | |||
| 1 | Welcome to the Hellmouth | 43:27 | 03/10/1997 | |||
| Season:Episode | Title | Type | Runtime | Air Date | User Rating | Queue | |
| 1 : 12 | Buffy Will Die | Excerpt | 00:49 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | Three In One Night | Excerpt | 00:56 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | Earthquake | Excerpt | 01:33 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | Buffy Dies | Excerpt | 03:01 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | Slayer Quits | Excerpt | 02:14 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | Xander Rejected Again | Excerpt | 01:14 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 12 | The Master Dies | Excerpt | 03:09 | 06/02/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Invisible Girl | Excerpt | 00:51 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Have a Nice Summer | Excerpt | 02:29 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Angry Ghost | Excerpt | 02:31 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Listen | Excerpt | 00:53 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Be My Deputy | Excerpt | 01:05 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Mitch Is Gonna Die | Excerpt | 01:22 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 11 | Marcie the Knife | Excerpt | 01:55 | 05/19/1997 | |||
| 1 : 10 | Smoking Kills | Excerpt | 02:33 | 05/12/1997 |
I'm also a bit confused with your final statement, that everything after the bible is a fabrication. Are you suggesting that everything before and including the bible is firmly set in reality? I would suggest that everything ever written down is a fabrication of some form or another. Fiction and literature didn't just spontaneously come into being after the biblical canon was established; their roots are just as deep as those of religion.
In conclusion, regardless of how intelligent a television show has the potential to be, it's still just a television show and its primary concern should be to tell its own story. The average viewer most likely has no idea who Moloch, the Phonecians, or Allen Ginsberg are, but they will still be able to follow the narrative and perhaps even walk away from it with a different understanding of how the internet affects our ability to communicate with one another. That is the most important aspect of this episode, not where Whedon got his ideas for naming demons.
And I agree, being a technopagan sounds pretty awesome.