I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin.

Willow ,'Lies My Parents Told Me'


Spoilers 3: First Mutant Enemy, Now the World

[NAFDA] Spoilers for any and all currently running TV shows. All hardcore spoilage, all the time. No white font.


Steph L. - Nov 06, 2004 4:36:22 pm PST #171 of 3486
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

Oh, Zenkitty, good point about the wheelchair. Even though, hell, That Island Just Ain't Right, and could probably spontaneously generate a wheelchair if it wanted to....


le nubian - Nov 06, 2004 5:07:52 pm PST #172 of 3486
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Steph,

in the pilot or Kate's ep, you could see Locke sitting in a seat in the plane. No doubt he was on the plane.


Zenkitty - Nov 06, 2004 5:12:48 pm PST #173 of 3486
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

While ground-dwelling bees could be indiginous to a tropical island, how did boars get there?

Oh, well, if the island can cough up a polar bear, boars should be no problem.


Matt the Bruins fan - Nov 06, 2004 5:30:43 pm PST #174 of 3486
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

Actually European explorers and merchants used to seed islands with pigs as a way to set up a renewable, no-maintenance food source for later travels.

As for the polar bear, I'd say we have the options of scientific experimentation, riding a really big ice floe south, materializing from Walt's comic book, or a Coca Cola promotion gone horribly wrong.


JoeCrow - Nov 06, 2004 5:40:27 pm PST #175 of 3486
"what's left when you take biology and sociology out of the picture?" "An autistic hermaphodite." -Allyson

Actually, the boar thing's the most likely of the lot. The folks who settled the Polynesian islands were big fans of the pork, and dragged pigs with them wherever they roamed. Pretty much any island in the South Pacific that ever had humans on, unless it's had a total ecological collapse, will have pigs on it.


Zenkitty - Nov 06, 2004 5:45:21 pm PST #176 of 3486
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

Glad to have a sense-making explanation for the pigs, at least.

Though, you know, those aren't domesticated-type pigs. Those are wild boars. With tusks.


JoeCrow - Nov 06, 2004 5:46:49 pm PST #177 of 3486
"what's left when you take biology and sociology out of the picture?" "An autistic hermaphodite." -Allyson

JoeCrow - Nov 06, 2004 5:47:48 pm PST #178 of 3486
"what's left when you take biology and sociology out of the picture?" "An autistic hermaphodite." -Allyson

Easiest way to get "wild" boars is to leave domesticated pigs alone in the jungle for a few generations. Feral pigs are hard to tell from the original wild stock.


Matt the Bruins fan - Nov 06, 2004 5:52:01 pm PST #179 of 3486
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

That brings up something... it just occurred to me to wonder what that herd of swine that Jesus drove the demon into was doing hanging around considering the Jewish strictures against pork. Belonged to occupying Roman forces, I guess?

Hmm, so from a certain point of view he could have been seen as a radical zooterrorist...


Zenkitty - Nov 06, 2004 5:52:45 pm PST #180 of 3486
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I did a quick Google, and it seems that both the wild and the domestic pig are Sus scrofa. So, you're right, they're not actually different species, as I had thought.