Lost

indeed it is: http://www.lostpedia.com/wiki/Image:Cap08.jpg

also check out this little easter egg from the opening chase scene: http://www.lostpedia.com/wiki/Image:RandyFFfilm.jpg

Is that the pic. of Jacob?

What’s going to be great is if Jack’s dad isd Jacob. Claire and Jack find him, and both go “Dad”? Then Jin and Sun come along and go “Uncle?”

YOu know, with lost ocming back, its always made me want to do a lost podcast, but I could never find anyone to do it with.

Help me out here… I don’t recognize the guy.

Its randy, Hurley’s old boss at the Chicken shack. No matter what hte does, he jsut can’t get rid of Hurley.

it’s hurley and locke’s former boss Randy Nations.

Ahhh, nice catch.

He was Locke’s boss too? Oh your right, at the box company in “Walkabout”. Is it bad that I know this much about a show? lol

Okay, I’m the spoiler here- I’m still disappointed with LOST but not disappointed enough to stop watching. I can’t agree that it’s better than BSG, but Emilyfromohio, if you do a LOST podcast, I’d listen.

I’m a week behind. What was up with the extra episode tonight, the 8:00 one? Was that new, or a re-run of last week? The DVR program descriptions say last week’s show and the 8:00 episode are different shows.

Happy Valentimes’ Day, all.

xfd

they’ve been replaying the previous episode every week this season.

Thanks much!

This isn’t very spoiler-y but it gets to the heart of my belief about LOST and it’s characters, specifically the revelation this week.

It has been said before but I have to really say it again: these people were meant to be on that island. Why? Because it seems that everyone really reaches their full potential, or idealized self, on the island. It brings out the best in people or it makes them pay/work out their demons so they can bring out the best (but like Juliet says, free will still exists on the island, but I’ll get to that some other time).

Jack becomes what his father told him he could never be, a leader. Kate faces the problems she has and finally stops running. Sawyer, a con man, becomes a true hero in the face of adversity. Locke, the proverbial manipulated loser, becomes a hunter and in some ways a mystic. I could go on and on but “The Economist” really exemplifies what I’m saying with the character of Sayid this past week. Those of you who saw know what I mean.

And that is why they must go back. The real world (with the possible exception of Juliet and Desmond) offers nothing for the castaways. Sawyers says it perfectly: “I’ve got nothing to go back to.”