Season 2 has a somewhat different style from the first season, with its quiet, pensive opening, Serling's introductory remarks over the credits, with the emphasis on imagination, feels more open ended than any other season. It's The Twilight Zone In Search Of Itself, not yet defined by certain kinds of episodes even as one can see, thematically, prototypes of what was to come later on here and there.
The first season was more urban, the second more suburban, more Middle American feeling. There seem to be fewer "wild deviations" from the norm in season 2, understandably so since the previous season had essentially defined the norm for the series, broadly speaking. The second season feels "trickier" overall, with more playfulness as to what's real and what isn't, less darkness.
There were more spooky and/or ambiguous characters in season 1, it seems (Mr. Wickwire, Pip, Professor Daemon, Nightmare As A Child's Peter Selden, et al), with stronger implications of human nature being at times something inherently flawed, whether evil or deeply conflicted at the core, while in future seasons people's fates were often determined by some deus ex machina, things from "without" more than or as much as character, or maybe that's just my take.
Also, starting in season 2 The Twilight Zone became more kid or youth friendly. There's a consistency of maturity, of adultness, if you will, in the first season, that never returned, not 100%.
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