Sorry, Captain. I'm real sorry. I shoulda kept better care of her. Usually she lets me know when something's wrong. Maybe she did, I just wasn't paying attention...

Kaylee ,'Out Of Gas'


Lost: OMGWTF POLAR BEAR  

[NAFDA] This is where we talk about the show! Anything that's aired in the US (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though -- if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.


Steph L. - Oct 27, 2004 6:42:37 am PDT #699 of 10000
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

Heh -- from the E! article:

Or how about: Dr. Moreau is at it again!


Dana - Oct 27, 2004 7:31:11 am PDT #700 of 10000
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

So Marlon Brando will show up for sweeps? Talk about your stunt casting.


le nubian - Oct 27, 2004 7:37:29 am PDT #701 of 10000
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

re-animator!


Lee - Oct 27, 2004 7:56:49 am PDT #702 of 10000
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Sawyer wasn't expecting her to be able to out muscle him. Yay! Surprise!

Did she though? I agree that Jack underestimated her, but the way I remember the scene with Sawyer (which may be wrong) is that she surprised him and was able to knock him down, but then he flipped them pretty much right away, so that he was in control, and then Kate and Sayid together pushed/pulled him off.


lisah - Oct 27, 2004 8:00:11 am PDT #703 of 10000
Punishingly Intricate

Did she though?

Yeah, you're right. I was projecting too much maybe. I was yelling (in my head) at the screen "Use your hips! Flip him! Flip him!"


DCJensen - Oct 27, 2004 8:09:18 am PDT #704 of 10000
All is well that ends in pizza.

Post-traumatic stress/sleep deprivation can certainly account for Jack's actions in White Rabbit. The usefulness of those hallucinations (finding water, meeting Locke with the boar) seems a little suspect, though.

I was thinking about that. Triggers. In the former, the ice tinkling in the glass was triggered by the waterfall at the edge of his hearing. His brain just processed it and turned falling water into the hallucination.

As for meeting Locke with the boar on the previous episode, he may have heard Locke grunt, and since he had been told Locke was dead, his overstressed brain made a leap to the other dead person in Jack's life.

Since he was already hallucinating about his dad, these triggering events just blended in.


Lee - Oct 27, 2004 8:34:29 am PDT #705 of 10000
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Yeah, you're right. I was projecting too much maybe. I was yelling (in my head) at the screen "Use your hips! Flip him! Flip him!"

Hee. I was thinking, "If I keep going to Krav [this was pre-back being fucked up] I would know how to get out of that"


beth b - Oct 27, 2004 8:38:14 am PDT #706 of 10000
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

My theory about Jack and his father is slightly different than what I've read here ... I think he did something like turn his father in for doing something doctory while under the influence, casuing his father to flee in shame. I do think Jack's a doctor, but I think there are ... issues.

I like it. finally caught up last night - on the show.

I am in the with camp that says the isalnd is a catalyst. but I could move to the experimetal world camp. occasionaly my Brain goes to Fantasay Island, but it too tacky to stay there long.

I like the idea of JL and the island worship - but I don't kow John Locke's ( meaning the philospher) religious views


Sean K - Oct 27, 2004 8:47:00 am PDT #707 of 10000
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

but I don't kow John Locke's ( meaning the philospher) religious views

Locke's philosophy was a strong influence on Thomas Jefferson, the Founding Fathers, and the Declaration of Independance.

He was responsible for much of modern empiricism, and also the reasoning that created our system of checks and balances.

Probably most important to the show, he was the first to make a really big deal out of epistemology (trying to understand how we know things), argued for the human mind as tabula rasa (that we are empty cabinets, and are capable of picking and choosing the experineces that define us as people, rather than being beholden to them), and was one of the first great liberal thinkers, arguing for the primacy of the pursuit of happiness, and believing in the natural rights of humans.


TomW - Oct 27, 2004 8:50:45 am PDT #708 of 10000
"The fact that we live at the bottom of a deep gravity well, on the surface of a gas covered planet going around a nuclear fireball 90 million miles away and think this to be normal is obviously some indication of how skewed our perspective tends to be."

occasionaly my Brain goes to Fantasay Island, but it too tacky to stay there long.

Only the other day I made a bet with Nora that the last words of the series would be: "Da plane! Da plane!"