Marshall Teller and Simon Holmes contact Mitchell Taylor and Stanley Hope to warn them that a satellite dish salesman wants to bring chaos from their Eerie to this alternate universe Eerie.
Mitchell creates a 13-year-old clone of his dad by accident. The kid turns out to have the same radical hippie beliefs as Mitchell's dad did in the 1960s, when he tried to plant a giant potato bomb in his school. Mitchell must stop him.
Mitchell discovers that the town's paper The Eerie Enquirer makes up their front page stories which then somehow come true. The editor wants their next story to be about a meltdown at the nuclear power plant where Mitchell's mom works.
Mitchell investigates a poltergeist in his school only to discover it's just a kid no one notices to the point of him actually becoming invisible. Mitchell must help him find a way to finally get noticed.
Chronos company sells a high tech coffee maker to the town's bar. When someone uses it, their life gets sped up and once they use up all the time they have, they crumble into dust. Mitchell must outsmart the time thieves behind Chronos.
It's Eerie's annual Jackalope festival. Psychotic professional hunter Buck Corona III, who caught every mythical animal out there, believes that jackalopes are real and plans to catch one. Mitchell and Stanley try to stop him.
Dolly Smith, the vain head of a beauty company, chooses Mitchell's almost equally vain sister to be her next top model. However, Dolly turns her into a living doll to ensure her perfection and Mitchell must save her.
Stanley becomes the latest sidekick of Eerie's legendary insult comedian Howie Lipman. Stanley does well but soon becomes mean even towards Mitchell. Mitchell learns that Howie's sidekicks eventually always go insane.
The star of the most popular soap opera in Eerie visits the town and infects everyone with soap antics turning the whole town into one big soap. He also tries to seduce Mitchell's entranced mom. Can Mitchell's oblivious dad stop him?
Obsessive Bureau of Statistics official Miss Median concludes that Mitchell's family is statistically the most average in the US, and arrives to study and adjust them to fit this description. Mitchell looks for her long lost alien lover.