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Angrimorfee
QUOTE (pigfuck @ Jun 15 2010, 10:24 AM) *


I would maintain that no other scripted TV program in history "listened" to its viewers more than LOST has.

pigfuck
cool.
idolatry
MK speaks the real, ugly truth. It's our duty to listen.
Montana
It seems like many people didn't really understand the show.
registered bitch
QUOTE (sin city @ Jun 15 2010, 07:48 AM) *
QUOTE (Brominated @ Jun 15 2010, 12:03 AM) *
[

Amazing how quickly I forgot about this show after the terrible final season. I don't even reminisce in a good way about it. It's just done, with almost no redeeming qualities to me. After all the time I spent thinking about it and watching it, I'd think it would've lingered in my mind for longer. Nope.


OTM. It's not even an afterthought. Kind of surprising...


If there's something I missed with that finale, I really don't care at this point. Sad, considering what an advocate I was for the show.
zumpano
QUOTE
I can't believe how quickly I forgot about this show, but my memory won't get in the way of letting me post about it on internet forums for weeks afterward...


You guys are hilarious!
Montana
QUOTE (zumpano @ Jun 17 2010, 10:19 AM) *
QUOTE
I can't believe how quickly I forgot about this show, but my memory won't get in the way of letting me post about it on internet forums for weeks afterward...


You guys are hilarious!



laugh.gif
Kennan
QUOTE (zumpano @ Jun 17 2010, 11:19 AM) *
QUOTE
I can't believe how quickly I forgot about this show, but my memory won't get in the way of letting me post about it on internet forums for weeks afterward...


You guys are hilarious!


Meh, it doesn't help that this thread is continuously bumped. It's more like: "I can't believe how quickly I stopped thinking about this show until I'm reminded that it existed when I see this thread on the first page of the forum."
faraway
Anyone see the LOST Epilogue "New Man In Charge" that leaked on the internet yesterday? It does a pretty decent job of tying up some loose ends. Some things (like the palette drops) are explained in detail and for some other things (pregancy issues) the answers are hinted at. Well worth watching.
petras
QUOTE (faraway @ Aug 7 2010, 02:26 PM) *
"New Man In Charge" that leaked on the internet yesterday?


Your a handy guy to have around. Off to the googles.

petras
Ok question..... Why were they driving on the wrong side of the road at the very end there? I thought santa rosa mental hospital was in the USA? So is there any significance to that or was it just a screw up?
Bob Loblaw
Anyone got a link that's still live?
nagode
QUOTE (Bob Loblaw @ Aug 7 2010, 10:11 PM) *
Anyone got a link that's still live?

http://www.trilulilu.ro/SStifler/10107f26c...deo_google_com=
Angrimorfee
Is this the epilogue that was promised for the DVD?
faraway
QUOTE (Agrimorfee @ Aug 9 2010, 08:03 AM) *
Is this the epilogue that was promised for the DVD?


yep.
maztrax
Just completed the 6th and final season on DVD.

I never watched the show when it was on network television because I had heard that one needed to see it from the very beginning to understand it.

So I waited until the series was over and then watched the show from the very beginning on DVD.

Perhaps the best show in the history of television. I look forward to reading all of the posts in this thread.

Mitchell
Yeah take that Jacob Bronowski.
Iowa
wow

the last season MUST have sucked!

only 51 pagers?

SEASON 3: 82
SEASON 4: 85
SEASON 5: 88

the last season should have broke 100 / been double

they truly shot themselves in the proverbial 4-toed foot!
Bob Loblaw
Even though I know there is nothing new on the Lost front, I still get excited when I see this thread bumped.

Only to see a fucking Iowa post.

This is a menace that must be stopped.

Oh no, now I can't stop posting messages full of double returns.

God help us.

(no offense toward our Lord intended, Fender)
Iowa
hey i LOVED lost

what do you want to talk about

daniel faraday's missing FOOT?

ohmy.gif
Bob Loblaw
I'd rather talk about SOMB missing you.
Iowa
why would they miss me i'm right here?

i'm not going anywhere man

now talk about lost or leave me alone!

mad.gif
Bob Loblaw
Get Lost.
Iowa
NEVER!

mad.gif

you type WORDS...

but all i can read is Blah Blah Blah!

feat. 3OH3!




who was yr fave person on lost?

i liked Ben Linus and LOCKE!

maztrax
This chick who I hung out with for 8 weeks in April/May is holding my complete Lost series hostage. I want it back.
pigfuck
chick doing you a favor
b*derty
after buying a new hd tv, i'm tempted to start this show over for the 3rd time since i got the complete series.
i revisit no other show like i revisit this one.

tjenz
so they were making it up as they went....

QUOTE
One of the main calling cards of the show -- the flashbacks to characters' lives before they crash landed on the island -- was simply a way to cut away from the same old tropical locale. And the out-of-sync storytelling was inspired by Quentin Tarantino's "Pulp Fiction."

If it seemed like the writers were making things up as they went along, by the way, they often were. And also? Lindelof tried to quit the show, again and again.

These were just a few of the admissions Lindelof shared about one of television's most beloved shows Thursday on the seventh anniversary of its first airing on ABC. (You can find audio here.)

He spoke during a keynote at the New York Television Festival, a gathering where independent writers and producers try to meet with executives and find homes for their pilots.

Also read: Marc Maron Kicks Off New York Television Festival With Discourse on Cat Wrangling

Lindelof was an established TV writer himself, working on NBC's "Crossing Jordan," when he first met Abrams. He told interviewer Andrew Jenks, host of MTV's "World of Jenks," that he had been "stalking" an ABC executive friend for years to get a job on Abrams' spy series "Alias."

Eventually the executive, Heather Kadin, called him in January 2004 saying he could meet Abrams about a project.

"The bad news is," he recalled her saying, "it's this ridiculous show idea about a plane that crashes on an island and everyone here doesn't think anything is ever gonna happen with it. But Lloyd Braun who was the president of ABC at the time, just thought he had lightning in a bottle: He wanted to do a drama version of 'Survivor.'"

Braun had told Abrams he had a script for an island drama but wanted him to "work your magic on it," Lindelof said. He said Abrams told Braun he was too busy, but would supervise another writer.

"So Heather told me, you meet with JJ, this pilot goes nowhere, but then you get a job on 'Alias'!"

But the pilot went somewhere. Lindelof came in with plenty of ideas, including non-linear storytelling and flashbacks.

"The biggest issue with a desert island show was the audience is going to get very frustrated that the characters were not getting off the island," he said. "My solution was, hey, let's get off the island every week. And the way we're going to do that is we're going to do these flashbacks. We'll do one character at a time and there's gonna be like 70 characters on the show, so we'll go really, really slow, and each one will basically say, here's who they were before the crash and it'll dramatize something that's happening on the island and it will also make the show very character-centric."

Abrams liked the idea, and also had another: "'There should be a hatch on this island! They spend the entire season trying to get it open. And there should be these other people on the island,'" Lindelof recalled Abrams saying. "And I'm like, ''We can call them The Others.' And he's like, 'They should hear this noise out there in the jungle.' And I'm like, 'What's the noise?' And he's like, 'I don't fucking know. They're never gonna pick this thing up anyway.'"

speech in the diner about the path of the righteous man.

"That sort of flipped the switch in me, and was something that I really wanted to do as a storyteller and 'Lost' was really the perfect opportunity to do it," Lindelof said.

Abrams and Lindelof quickly wrote an outline, and within days, Braun picked up their pilot. (He was soon fired after greenlighting not only "Lost" but "Desperate Housewives," and famously vindicated when both shows became huge hits. "Lost" ensured he would always be a part of the show by making his the voice that said, at the start of each episode, "Previously, on 'Lost.'")

Lindelof said he almost immediately felt overwhelmed by the responsibilities of running the show -- and repeatedly decided or tried to quit. By its eleventh episode, he convinced Carlton Cuse, who had been his boss on CBS's "Nash Bridges," to come in and help him lead the show.

"I was living, breathing, sleeping the show, it was all I thought about, and I would wake up at 3 o'clock in the morning, thinking about Jin," he said.

He said he agreed with critics who said the show could never last more than a season.

"If we put it on the air and we're like, there's a polar bear in the jungle, somebody better know where the fuck that polar bear came from," he said. "That pressure was enormously debilitating."

Abrams, meanwhile, had "plausible deniability" because he had left the show in Lindelof's hands to focus on movies, Lindelof said: "When the torch-wielding mob shows up at his house, and they're like, 'Where does the polar bear come from?' he could say, I'm working on 'Mission Impossible,' go to Damon."

He said he resolved to quit after 13 episodes, then after the first season. Eventually the show went six seasons with him and Cuse in charge.

Lindelof eventually recognized unintentional parallels between himself and Jack, the show's lead character. He said it didn't occur to him at first that both he and Jack, played by Matthew Fox, were reluctant leaders mourning the recent deaths of their fathers.

Eventually he was given his out from the show that was making him "miserable," he said. In its third season, ABC agreed it would go six seasons in all.

A turning point came at the end of the third season, when he watched dailies of Charlie (Dominic Monaghan) dying. He cried over not only the character, but the impending end of "Lost."

He also said the show might not have lasted more than three seasons without the Internet, because it allowed fans and the show's creators to spur each other on. He noted that 23 million people tuned in for the first episode, and only 13 million for the finale -- a sign that the show lost many people as it went on. But those that stayed with it did so in part because the Internet gave them somewhere to vent, he said.

"What got them through those periods of doubt and 'Are you gonna break my heart?' was their feeling that they were communicating with us," he said.

But trying to please fans was a Catch-22.

"There were these two things happening on the show from the minute it began. The first thing was that the audience really wanted to feel like they had an impact on the show," he said. "And the other thing was, you didn't want us to be making it up as we went along. You wanted us to have a plan, you wanted us to have a big binder with the entire show and you didn't want us to deviate from it. And the audience didn't realize that there's a huge contradiction between these two ideas. If you want to have a say, then there can't be no binder. And if there is a binder, then we're basically gonna be like, we don't care what you guys have to say. We're just turning to page 365 and we're doing Lupitas."

He added: "The show had to become sort of an exercise in, 'Here's what it's gonna be, guys: We're gonna come out and we're gonna play our set, and once the set is over you guys can shout out what songs you wanna hear and we'll do those for the encore.' And that was the way that we modulated it, and maybe it worked and maybe it didn’t.

"But the interaction of the Internet and our genuine desire to hear what the fans were saying and make ourselves accessible to the fans was absolutely essential to the show's success. I am absolutely convinced that we probably would not have made it to season three or season four at the most if the Internet didn't exist."

As for that job on "Alias"? It never panned out. The show wrapped after five seasons in 2006, four years before "Lost."
TSLOW
they were making the pilot up as they went.

they wrote the pilot over a period of 2 weeks. writing is also known as making up stuff.

there's no smoking gun, no a-ha moment to be had. you either enjoyed what they came up with or you didn't.

from everything i've read/heard, they knew most of where they were headed, allowing for blanks to be filled in as the story took on a life of its own. for instance, a big chunk of their story was forced to change after the guy who played mr. eko decided he didn't like hawaii anymore and asked off the show. cue ben linus.

they've said repeatedly they were treading water in seasons 2 into 3 b/c they didn't know when the series was going to end. once they got an end date, they were able to start lining things up.

and no, i'm not damon lindelof.
b*derty
Sad to read about it being a burden to lindelof.
I always hoped there was more of a plan, but it really did become a fanshow where there was a dialogue
Between the two.

In other news I just started season 4 for the new go around.
b*derty
QUOTE (TSLOW @ Sep 28 2011, 02:14 PM) *
and no, i'm not damon lindelof.

Huh, no one thought you were.

Until now.
Montana
Most good writers make shit up as they go along.
b*derty
QUOTE (Montana @ Sep 28 2011, 03:22 PM) *
Most good writers make shit up as they go along.

You're a great writer.
The Luscious Phil
Can we just turn this into a Terra Nova thread now?

theremin
Anyone watch Person of Interest?
b*derty
QUOTE (theremin @ Sep 28 2011, 04:36 PM) *
Anyone watch Person of Interest?

I saw the second half of the premier. It was good. I'll talk about that over Terra nova.
theremin
QUOTE (b*derty @ Sep 28 2011, 06:08 PM) *
QUOTE (theremin @ Sep 28 2011, 04:36 PM) *
Anyone watch Person of Interest?

I saw the second half of the premier. It was good. I'll talk about that over Terra nova.


I liked the premise a lot, but thought the episodic plot of the episode wasn't very good. The same sort of thing we've seen a bunch before. Reminded me of the plot of a steven segal movie or something.
The Luscious Phil
QUOTE (b*derty @ Sep 28 2011, 07:08 PM) *
QUOTE (theremin @ Sep 28 2011, 04:36 PM) *
Anyone watch Person of Interest?

I saw the second half of the premier. It was good. I'll talk about that over Terra nova.

But, Terra Nova has dinosaurs and stuff.

b*derty
QUOTE (The Luscious Phil @ Sep 28 2011, 06:07 PM) *
QUOTE (b*derty @ Sep 28 2011, 07:08 PM) *
QUOTE (theremin @ Sep 28 2011, 04:36 PM) *
Anyone watch Person of Interest?

I saw the second half of the premier. It was good. I'll talk about that over Terra nova.

But, Terra Nova has dinosaurs and stuff.

So does Jurassic Park 3.
Bob Loblaw
I thought Person Of Interest was fantastic, and Terra Nova was better than I expected.
flinchy17
I thought Terra Nova was underwhelming. The 20 minutes it took to explain the situation they face with overpopulation, have the dad get arrested, break out somehow, and then get his daughter in some way and run through the portal seemed really rushed, and predictable. I thought the second half was rather uneven too. They're definitely trying to set the show up as Lost, but rather quickly it seems. Fox cancels shows like these pretty fast (Firefly anyone?)
The Luscious Phil
About 85% of the fun of Terra Nova is recognizing that the first season will lay out all of these "ideas" and "hooks" but the show will probably not be picked up for a second season, meaning they will always remain a mystery.

The other 15% that I enjoy is that it jam-packed the pilot with so many cliches that it actually takes trite writing and plotting to the next level.
Dread
I'm enjoying Person of Interest right now. For a network "procedural," it's starting off stronger than most. While I don't think they're going to pull a Fringe and present a huge arc that will be the main theme of the show by episode six, I wouldn't be surprised if they do.

There's that Once Upon a Time show that's on ABC in a couple weeks and I guess it has some Lost people involved (they even have a few Lost easter eggs, I've read/seen... like a clock shown ticking over to 8:15). Yeah, so the show is like a "darker" Enchanted or that Fables comic series, but it doesn't look half bad. I'll give it a shot, for sure.
b*derty
QUOTE (Dread @ Oct 4 2011, 08:36 PM) *
I'm enjoying Person of Interest right now. For a network "procedural," it's starting off stronger than most. While I don't think they're going to pull a Fringe and present a huge arc that will be the main theme of the show by episode six, I wouldn't be surprised if they do.

There's that Once Upon a Time show that's on ABC in a couple weeks and I guess it has some Lost people involved (they even have a few Lost easter eggs, I've read/seen... like a clock shown ticking over to 8:15). Yeah, so the show is like a "darker" Enchanted or that Fables comic series, but it doesn't look half bad. I'll give it a shot, for sure.

When does "Alcatraz" start? I can't wait for that


Finished season four this morning. Great last two episodes but so many endings in the last half hour
Dread
I think Alcatraz is in January or February. I kind of keep forgetting about it, too. Hopefully it'll be good.

Once Upon a Time's pilot is up on imdb.com. I haven't watched it yet, but I read a review. They gave the show a positive review, and said the only real flaw is that the show does suffer from a few fluff moments. The comments section was a little more varied though. Some couldn't stand the lead actress (maybe some post-HIMYM hatred?), some thought it was a blatant rip-off of Fables (I'm sure they're only the 234,764th person to say that). I might watch it tonight or just wait until Sunday.

I was watching Person of Interest last night, and Michael Emerson's character had a bit of a Ben moment in the beginning, and I thought this guy is NEVER going to get away from playing Ben for the rest of his career.
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