Do your appropriate joins between the tables and their IDs as you would expect, and also join onto the result of a subquery that determines the total episode count using the Episodes table.
SELECT SeriesCount.NumEpisodes AS #OfEpisodesInSeries,
S.id AS SeriesId,
S.name AS SeriesName,
E.id AS EpisodeId,
E.name AS EpisodeName,
C.id AS CreatorId,
C.name AS CreatorName
FROM
Series S
INNER JOIN
Episodes E
ON E.seriesId = S.id
INNER JOIN
Creators C
ON S.creatorId = C.id
INNER JOIN
(
SELECT seriesId, COUNT(id) AS NumEpisodes
FROM Episodes
GROUP BY seriesId
) SeriesCount
ON SeriesCount.seriesId = S.id
SQL Fiddle Schema:
CREATE TABLE Series (id int, name varchar(20), creatorId int)
INSERT INTO Series VALUES(1, 'Friends', 1)
INSERT INTO Series VALUES(2, 'Family Guy', 2)
INSERT INTO Series VALUES(3, 'The Tonight Show', 1)
CREATE TABLE Episodes (id int, name varchar(20), seriesId int)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(1, 'Joey', 1)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(2, 'Ross', 1)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(3, 'Phoebe', 1)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(4, 'Stewie', 2)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(5, 'Kevin Kostner', 3)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(6, 'Brad Pitt', 3)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(7, 'Tom Hanks', 3)
INSERT INTO Episodes VALUES(8, 'Morgan Freeman', 3)
CREATE TABLE Creators (id int, name varchar(20))
INSERT INTO Creators VALUES(1, 'Some Guy')
INSERT INTO Creators VALUES(2, 'Seth McFarlane')