That's been suggested. Could be.
'Shindig'
Lost 2: Tied to a Tree in a Jungle of Mystery
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I can imagine that -- Penny would have no idea. And apparently, he has some relationship to the Hanso Foundation.
Finished the finale. Kept me interested the whole time, something new for an episode this season. I think I like the new direction with the flashforward, or the flashforward being the present and the island and flashbacks being the past, whatever. Glad that tptb showed us they were rescued now instead of it being the last scene of the last episode and being so cliche and trite. It hooked me again, and I'm glad.
Charlie had me bawling like a baby when he accepted his fate, saved Desmond, and spent his last few moments writing something important rather than some random lyric he just thought up. I had misted up a little when he hugged Hugo last week. I really liked their friendship.
Walt! Locke! Ben is eeeeeevil.
Actually excited for February now.
Actually excited for February now.
Que?
You heard her.
Not coming back till February.
um, well, let's hope that absence makes the heart grow fonder, and not more forgetful.
I'm sure there will be three recap shows to catch you up.
I'm sure there will be three recap shows to catch you up.
ahahaha. so true. am i wrong or did Lost really start that trend of recap episodes being billed as "new" episodes?
I think it was an ABC invention, they've done the same for Desperate Housewives and Grey's Anatomy.
I thought Jack was making a statement that he knew was "ironic." I figured his dad was dead at that point.
Jack also tried to claim that his dad prescribed drugs for him. Do addicts usually engage in that much irony while desperate for a fix? It seemed like more than a wry reference to me.
I loved Hurley, loved Charlie, loved Danielle's nonchalant elbow to Ben's face. Ben makes no sense. Sixteen years of keeping a secret, then "this is your mother"!? What was the point of that secret?
And how the hell did the disturbed custodian's kid become the boss of the others? Why do non-aging Batmanuel and indestructible Eyepatch take orders from him? What's the story behind these people Hanso considered "natives"? How could Ben and Batmanuel step in and use Hanso resources without the company knowing about the massacre of their people?
Color me dubious about this new approach to the timeline. I'm even less confident that any of these questions will be answered in the new short seasons if they open up the future (the present?) to the story.