tristiac
Tristiac
tristiac

Where the Mopey Things Are
I was not a fan. Actually I hated the movie. Jonze utilized a beloved children's book to make this hipster nostalgia porn instead of a film that, like the original book, could be loved by all people and more importantly all ages. He neglected to make it involving or entertaining, deciding

New York
"seems to just confirm what every American who doesn't live in New York holds as his or her biggest fear about our country's most cosmopolitan city: They're all ready to make fun of us. Put any one of us - Southerner, Midwesterner, Californian - up on a Jumbotron, and New Yorkers will go out of their way to

yo Killer, kill B, Killer kill!

Sure, why not?
As long as this is somehow Ben and Locke in an alternate timeline together and there are numerous references to Lost, perhaps even some more questions and mysteries to solve.

Biweekly can mean both twice a week, or once every two weeks. It's one of those weird words like "peruse" which means what you think it does and the exact opposite of that.

Richard Kelly's films only give the illusion of having an explanation. It's part of his trick. He's M Night Shymalan sans twist plus David Lynch sans focus and credibility.

Great job, Internet? not so much
This new column has yet to bring anything worthy to my attention. It's mostly annoying stuff I get in forwards. I guess maybe that's the point, but mostly it just makes me hate a lot of the internet.
Yeah, yeah, why do I even bother reading the column then and all that jazz.

The Lessons of Jack and John
LOST has really done a great job of following through with it's Man of Science vs Man of Faith theme. The show it seems is taking the middle ground in this debate. In Jack Shephard and John Locke, we have arguably the two most important and iconic characters on the show and the two

we don't necessarily know that the bomb blew up the island and people died in the alternate timeline. All we know is that it ended up underwater sometime after that happened.

Season 1, Season 6
I really like the parallel structure with season 1. These flashsideways seem to act as some sort of resolution to the problems initially introduced in the season 1 episodes.
In White Rabbit Jack has daddy issues that have fucked him up. In Lighthouse, Jack is able to be the good father his father

The Lighthouse and the Cave
Seems to me that the cave is Smokey's lair and the lighthouse is Jacob's HQ. From these bases, they plan out their strategies involving these all of these pawns.
Why would Jacob need two places to keep track of names and numbers? He wouldn't, which means NotLocke is lying to Sawyer about

This one is me down to all of Brian's problems. I found this one shortly before I moved from New York to San Francisco and it was too perfect.

Allen Iverson
I've posted this before, but it's the best celeb encounter I've ever heard.
A friend of mine was attending Georgetown years ago when Allen Iverson played there. One night, Iverson randomly knocked on his door. My friend had never met him before, but Iverson was drunk and thought he was someone else or

Clue! One of my favorite movies of all time actually. I used to know the whole film line by line. Anyway just wanted to hop on the clue love train.

Smokey the guardian?
Reading about the heiroglyphs (http://lostpedia.wikia.com/… has reminded me that Smokey has been referred to as the island security system by Rousseau, Cerberus by the Dharma Initiative (and they also refer to cerberus vents, which are presumably those spots where Ben was able to summon him from),

well Sawyer is a con man, but he's also self-destructive and very vulnerable right now. I think it could go either way.

Ilana's info
Ilana says that NotLocke can't change forms anymore. When did this occur? Perhaps after they bury his body? Cause it seemed like he was being Alex at the same time that he was being NotLocke (and possibly Christian).

Well are those 6 the only numbers left on the wall not crossed out? Cause Kate could be like 108 or something. Also her name could be there crossed out.

the little girl
I really love the performance of the little girl in this film. It feels so naturalistic, and I understand Tarsem went to great pains during production to make sure that she believed a lot of what was going on around her. Lee Pace does a good job as well and the two of them have a unique chemistry.

You're right Nick Slaughter, it was Rousseau and Karl that we know for a fact are buried. We have no idea what happened with Alex. My bad.