Widmore has screwed up his daughter's life enough to deserve the title 'evil', not to mention faking an entire planeload of people....
Spike ,'Sleeper'
Lost 2: Tied to a Tree in a Jungle of Mystery
[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.
Do we know that was Widmore though? Do we know that from anyone not involved with Ben? I can't remember.
The helicopter pilot seemed to imply that it was not Widmore who faked the crash site.
There is also the possibility that the helicopter pilot (forgot his name, but is oddly...HOT) has been entirely mislead by Widmore. MHO that Widmore did fake the sunken ship and Thai bodies, but mr pilot doesn't know that because he's just trying to find out the truth....and was recruited for the mission when he called in to denounce the TV coverage as a fake. Widmore would want to get a rabble-rouser like him out of the way. Since we all know flying to and from the island is suicide :)
Oh! I had a theory earlier.
Okay, so it's all well and good to say "the island won't let you die," but didn't Michael try to kill himself with the gun that whatshisname (Zeke?) gave him? Maybe the gun was rigged.
Michael bought the gun at a pawnshop. Which isn't to say that Zeke didn't go to the pawnshop first and plant the gun.
Did they both have guns? Or did Zeke take Michael's gun from him? Because that would blow my beautiful theory. Oh, well. It was fun being brilliant for a moment.
I don't think Widmore is a nice man, and he definitely treated Desmond like shit in previous episodes, but I'm going to save "evil" until I really know what his motives are. He isn't yet as bad as Locke's father, but I'm going to wait and see...
Do you think it is possible that a 3rd party planted the plane and bodies. Conveniently Ben and Widmore have blamed each other - what if the Hanso Foundation people did it?
Sometimes, in between my annoyance and frustration, I give the Lost folk the benefit of the doubt. I know they went to the ass-pull school of storytelling, but I figure it must be damn near impossible to handle a survival story with so many characters (with their respective development arcs and inter-relationships), while progressing the overall arc of the show without it getting tedious.
Then I watched Jericho.
Well, Jericho did drop a bunch of stuff in the second season.