avclub-63cb524a9f51b7858733e1108bf556fa--disqus
The Shredder
avclub-63cb524a9f51b7858733e1108bf556fa--disqus

I get in fights over whether or not Fall Out Boy's early or later works are better.

There's a cult for Mr. Brooks?
I had to google to make sure this wasn't a different film but nope, it's the Kevin Costner/Demi Moore/Dane Cook serial killer vehicle.

I thought about it watching this episode last night and I hope that next season focuses on a new catering crew entirely, as in one that wasn't led by Ron. They've hinted a few times at other teams out there in the field, so let's see how they handle things.

As long as the salsa doesn't come from New York!

but Lost Girls was the shitty prototype for League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and considering how badly Hollywood fucked up League, I would NOT want a Lost Girls adaptation.

We definitely will.

You know what they say about a stick of dynamite in the first act.

Because it was contradictory to what Hurley had told him before.

It could even be that the whole ghost thing was triggered by Oceanic 815 crashing on the Island, since it caused for the greatest accumulation of dead bodies with unfinished business in one area since The Purge. So it *may* have started as The Others but the ghosts of the dead survivors appropriated it.

St. God, you may have stumbled on something. Maybe the finale will feature a dramatic LAX timeline surgery as Jack and Locke fight for survival on the Island.

If we've learned one thing from LOST, it's that car accidents don't kill anyone, unless you get hit by a bus.

Really don't have anything critical to say of this episode.
Aside from the more shocking moments (Desmond down the well, Desmond hitting AlternaLocke with his car, and it being THE MOST EXPLOSIVE EPISODE OF LOST TO DATE) this felt like the biggest amount of piece-moving of any LOST episode this season, which honestly

Desmond (I hesitate to call him "alterna" anything. He seems to have full consciousness of both sides of the timeline.) deliberately hit AlternaLocke with his car.

I'm almost certain that the 42 was more a reference to The Numbers than The Answer. In any Hurley episode you can almost certainly expect the recurring 4 8 15 16 23 42 motif.

Well I hate Star Wars, play video games, and like xkcd. I get the nerd thing more for being obsessive about comics, film, books, and sci fi television, I guess.

Why would I want to watch something essentially mocking a culture I associate myself with? What possible pleasure would I derive from that? I know that Sheldon is blatantly the "stereotypical jerk nerd" but still.

I will never understand the love for this show
especially among otherwise intelligent, forward thinking pop culture nerds.

Blurst? stupid monkey.

Fhtagn: yeah I know but I blanked on that. I meant that he was there in the Alt-Timeline.

We care about the Adam and Eve skeletons because we've been told by the writers that they are central to all the themes and plot presented on the show, and because we've been told that we'd get answers to that.