avclub-85d6e9c8255c0364fb67b5ac8a25eea3--disqus
Chrissy
avclub-85d6e9c8255c0364fb67b5ac8a25eea3--disqus

Hot is a temperature, people.
This felt like an extended version of the gang watching the screen saver during a meeting, or debating who vs. whom. Personally, I enjoyed it, although I agree it was inconsequential. Considering the glee with which we all pick apart media, pop culture and celebrities, though, I'm

Ooh - that I like.

Creepy - just as I was reading this comment, an ad for that Last Templar movie with Mira Sorvino came on. Duh duh Duhhh! I think I just had an Umberto Eco seizure.

I'm sort of bummed that Clementine and the baby aren't included in the people Sawyer cares about, but it was still a nice moment. He definitely cares about Kate and Hurley, at any rate.

Well, I think the more important thing is that Ben has agents living among us - that there are people off-island who are committed to his agenda. That's a pretty big thing we didn't know before. I mean, we've seen Friendly and Alpert off-island, but they lived their lives on-island - this woman ran a business that

I am 99% certain that Cindy was among the Others that Locke found after he left the Orchid. Which means your Other-ness might not be determined by being born there, but something else (this is particularly true if Charlotte was born there, as seems to be the case).

The whole point of Juliet's exam of Sun was to find out when she got pregnant. If you get pregnant off-island, you're ok. I agree, though, it looks like the pregnancy issue is newer.

I thought it seemed flimsy too, but then I realized that if the Six told the truth, there would be rescue missions. There'd have to be. Granted, they wouldn't find anything, but if Widmore is trying to keep the island for himself, it would give him all the more reason to find and kill the remaining survivors, so

The flaming arrows were awesome looking, and served a useful purpose. Now that the group no longer has a camp or a home base, having extraneous characters is problematic. Kill off everyone without a name and setting up the scenes and keeping track of everyone gets a bit easier, I think.

It's like learning a foreign language - best to start young.

But the island moved into the past, not the future. It should still exist.

Well, if the first scene is any indication, maybe we will be getting some "island" flashbacks sprinkled throughout. Smoke Monster's first steps, and so on.

This is why the island disappearing, from the perspective of the helicopter, bugs me. Unless it moved physically as well as temporally (which the show has not indicated, at least not through Faraday), it should still be there. Otherwise it ceases to exist after the freighter blows, and Jack and the gang are going

It seems really weird that Faraday wouldn't have mentioned that they were also moving in space.

I think we're supposed to be getting a ruthless vibe from Sun, and part of that is leaving her child behind and not seeming particularly concerned or interested. Kate's barely had a single post-rescue scene that didn't either include Aaron or mention him. Have we even seen Sun with her child since the birth? Maybe

If Jin's dead, it's because the island doesn't need him. And if he's alive, he must be very pruney.

I get the impression that Adam and Eve will be one of the last mysteries that gets solved. I think it's going to turn out to be at the core of the whole mystery.

Noel Murray is unstuck in time. He's seeing the future of Lost!

I believe Arzt talks about him…"that guy who owns a frozen yogurt chain" or something. Definitely more of a fan joke than anything else, but he was in some webisodes. Or one webisode.

Wasn't that scene in the finale? I swear I've seen it in its entirety before.