Lost Archives

May 13, 2009

The "Lost" Boys Speak

Still feeling bummed over the loss of my bud Tara Costa on last night's "Biggest Loser." So, to cheer me up, I watched this good mini-interview with Darlton. Alan Frutkin of the Hollywood Reporter does the honors...

May 11, 2009

"Lost:" Season Finale Promo

In our deep, dark, desperate and vaguely ridiculous search for clues to this Wednesday's finale, we - Ok, OK me - came across this on Dark Ufo.

It's the Sky TV promo for the two-part "The Incident." I'm not sure how radically different this is from ABC's - and I'd be surprised if they're markedly dissimilar - but it does offer intriguing tidbits.

That metal - thingo? - for instance. What IS that metal thingo? Does Jacob reside therein? Or Widmore? Or the guts of "Jughead," the bomb...? Who or what is inside that metal thingo?

Now, check out ABC's - also posted on Dark UFO - for comparison purposes...(below)

March 16, 2009

Clips: 'Lost,' 'Grey's'...

Welcome to Clips Central, TV fanatics.

My wonderful and hugely talented colleague, Corris Little, has just given me a bunch of clips that should fill your next five minutes happily and profitably. Among these beauties - sneak peeks at this week's "Lost" and "Grey's" AND Carol Burnett's guesting role on "L&O;: SVU."

Plus, I believe the last one is "America's Next Top Gangbanger" ...errr, I think I mean, "Model."

Take it away!




January 23, 2009

"Lost" Invites Sully to Set

medium_chesley-sullenberger.jpg Here's a question without an answer: If Sully had been the pilot of Oceanic 815, would there have been a show called "Lost?"

In any event, TVguide.com has a nice little scoop: They've talked to Carlton Cuse, and he tells 'em he invited Sully to the show's set. No word on whether the Hero of the Hudson accepted.

Says Carlton, "It's funny because there's a special[online] feature which has somebody trying to debunk the Oceanic 6's story" about surviving the plunge of Flight 815. "There's this aviation expert basically saying, 'A water landing is impossible. That part of their story doesn't hold up. You could never land a plane on the water.'"

January 19, 2009

When "Lost" Met "Heroes" (And Walt Grew)

This is one of those things that you probably don't want to watch but if you do want to watch...here it is.

The Fine Brothers' parody of "Lost." They've been around a while, and I always seem to get one in the email. Whatever. Amusing. With "Lost" back on Wednesday, this clips seems like an intriguing combo - "Lost" and "Heroes." This clip ALSO shows what you can do with a little clay, a little Photoshop, and a LOT of idle time...


January 13, 2009

"Lost:" Matthew Fox Speaks

Matthew%20Fox-14.jpg Interesting interview with Fox in the current (or is it forthcoming?) "Details." He says - among many things - that even if he were to get asked for "answers" to yearning, burning fan questions, he wouldn't know them - the answers - anyway.

Go to this link for a few soundbites, and below are some more quotes...

On Lost coming to an end:
“Personally, it’s a relief...I owe this show a great amount, and I think it’s exceptionally good...[but] I am looking forward to the freedom that comes with not working on one project professionally.”

His plans to move from Hawaii to the mainland:
“My major motivation is to be closer to family. My brother is there, my mother is there. We’re hoping to break ground in March, and it will be completed right around the time we’re finishing the last season of Lost in March 2010. I really miss that kind of wide-open space, and there’s a big part of me that wants the kids to live in that mountain air.”

On playing Dr. Jack Shepard:
“When it’s all said and done, you’ll be able to look at the six seasons of Lost and see a pretty amazing character arc. Jack as been evolving, and not necessarily into a good place. We started the show with him being this hero who had no concept of what that required, sort of trying to live up to the expectations...and then finding the way to redeem himself.”

On how Lost will end:
“This show started with a plane crash on an island in the South Pacific, and it’s going to have a very global and epic ending.”

December 3, 2008

"Lost:" Let the Peeks Begin

That tried and true gimmick designed to prime viewer interest in series TV - the "sneak peek" - is about to roll over "Lost" (as if "Lost" needs priming...) ABC will release a handful of 5th season "peeks" tomorrow, I am assured, and meanwhile, some high-profile websites like E! Online and Zap2it have trotted out their "exclusive" peeks. But why go there? It's SO hard to type all those letters in...just click on the link below (which we've borrowed from Zap2it - thanks, '2it!) and watch Kate frantically...well, just click...



November 20, 2008

"Lost:" Season 5 Poster


season5.jpg Always a big deal when the new season poster of "Lost" comes out, and so, here it is...the official "Lost" season 5 poster. This one's circulated on the web, and the one here I filched from Darkufo, hence explaining the water mark in the center. But the best I can tell, this is the real deal.

Observations? Beyond the obvious? We've got the on-island/off-island split, of course. We've got Locke firmly alive and on-island (where ever that dear island may be right now. ) We've got the mirror image, not dissimilar to last season 4 poster's mirror image, of the island/city (see below). We've got a little game going, seeing who's mirrored opposite whom - and WHY. And check out the eyes - who's looking at whom. Sawyer/Kate? Obvious.

Let's see...what else. Oh yes! Black is most definitely BACK.
Lost-season4.jpg And remember all the fun we had with this one? Endless guessing and shots in the dark about where this city is, etc. A glorious waste of time, but fun. (And I learned far more about Tampa's skyline than I ever expected I would in my entire life.)

Meanwhile Losties, an important program note for tonight. Hollywood Reporter says a one minute fifth-season promo will air on "Grey's Anatomy" tonight, complete with a track of a new song from the Fray entitled..."You Found Me." Clever. Very clever.

October 23, 2008

First Look: 'Lost' '09...(Again!)

My apologies - a reader pointed out that I'd posted a dead vid (ABC probably killed it.)

So here it is again....The very first glimpse of the fifth season of "Lost," probably arriving next January (the 29th) or February (the 5th)...

"Lost" fans will eat this up - even if there's not much to chew on. Nevertheless, there are some tantalizing nuggets herein ...

July 29, 2008

"Lost": Mr. Eko Is Still Out There ... Somewhere

Adewale.jpg Of all the "Lost"-related infonalia (that's a new word I've JUST coined - for "information paraphernalia"; you may use it if you like) out of Comic-Con the past few days, I believe the most interesting tidbit is this: Could Mr. Eko return?

The possibility was raised during an "EW"-sponsored discussion with Darlton (Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof) who explained (as I believe they did at TCA) that being dead in the "Lost" universe doesn't actually mean being "dead" in the everyday universe. Of course, "Lost" fans well know this but the applications as far as return appearances by the dearly departed haven't been fully explored. When asked whether Mr. Eko -- Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, or Triple A -- might come back, Cuse almost seemed to hold out the possibility: “Hawaii was not his bag. Real life intervened and forced us to end the arc of that character much sooner than we would have liked.”

It wasn't his bag because he was arrested and thrown in jail for one night (released next morning; no charges; didn't have a license) and -- I believe -- he had family problems back home in England, too. He was written out, or -- to be exact -- smoked by the Smoke. But as fans know, Mr. Eko's storyline ended before its time; there is much to be resolved, much to be explored. He was a great "Lost" character and his absence remains keenly felt.

What's Triple A up to? He'll star in a live-action "GI Joe" and he's also in Sundance's Annenberg Fellows Program, for which he produced an autobiographical film, titled "Farming," about how "a young African boy abandoned by his parents desperately searches for love and belonging within a brutal skinhead subculture where violence becomes his only companion." Should be out sometime this year.

(ABC Photo)

July 1, 2008

"Lost": Here's the Book Club

wallpaper_rainbow_six_vegas_04_1024_.jpg Here's a great idea. Really. ABC.com is launching a "Lost Book Club." The press release says it all, or most of it, so here ya go: "Do you need a 'Lost' fix? Beginning today, ABC.com is launching the "Lost Book Club" which will give fans new insight on books that have been either seen or referenced throughout the dynamic four seasons of 'Lost. The book list will be added to regularly on ABC.com, with a list also available for audio download on the iTunes Store...Also available on ABC.com will be a message board to discuss the titles, a synopsis of each book, along with when and how it was referenced in the show, and an introduction by co-creator/executive producer Damon Lindelof and executive producer Carlton Cuse. Book examples include Sawyer reading 'Watership Down,' Juliet’s book club reading 'Carrie' [during the book club, no less] and an orientation film hidden behind 'The Turn of the Screw.'"

ICONATOR_dade7f68fa9ec8feba4666cc35b4307f.gif But the challenge is obvious. Think of all the books on this show - dozens, and thematically, you could say they were not exactly conceived under the same roof. This will be one bizarro book club - fun, interesting, wild, and a little/lot schizoid. How else to describe a book club that will include selections like Clancy's "Rainbow Six" (above) and "The Wizard of Oz?"

June 2, 2008

"Lost:" Harold Perrineau Exit Interview

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When Christian Shephard told Michael - Harold Perrineau - in effect that he wasn't needed anymore, he really really meant it - Michael was not needed anymore, and then, kaboom. Turns out Harold - cast in ABC pilot, "The Unusuals" - was not happy with the demise, which he made clear last week. Now, here are some outtakes of an interview conducted by Dan Snierson for "EW;" Bottom line: Harold's had a weekend to sleep on it, and he hasn't changed his mind:

"I wouldn’t say I’m bitter. I’m just like the fans, and I got excited when Michael was coming back. I thought it was really significant when Michael dropped those people off with the Others; I thought he was going to have something just as significant when he came back. I was disappointed that he didn’t. He didn’t get to make amends with those people. And nobody got to see [him try to neutralize the bomb]. Walt didn’t get to see it. Jin got to see it, but wasn’t necessarily so mad at him. And Desmond, who Michael didn’t know at all, was there. I was disappointed more than anything, like the fans were disappointed. Like I think the fans were disappointed...

"Michael’s a black character and I’m a black person, so I have feelings based on it. I can’t really separate those two things — my race and my country and all that stuff. How it plays out in the story, I don’t know, because I don’t know how the rest of the story is going to play out. I accept that this is what [the producers] need to happen for something else to happen later."

By this point, I guess we can surmise that "something else" will not include a Michael redux.

May 30, 2008

"Lost:" Once Upon a Time, There Was a Coffin...

265px-John_Locke.jpg
Well now, LOCKE as Coffin Man.

Of course.

I mean, DUH. It was so obvious all along.

I'm just kidding. It was never obvious - or, I should add, never obvious until about a few minutes in last night when we learn that Jack's holding an obit for one Jeremy Bentham. That was the dead - pun intended - giveaway. The clue so obvious that any of us who just happened to be reading deep into the British and Scottish naturalist/rationalist philosophical movement of the 18th century (and what fun reading that is!) would instantly pick up on. (Plus, he created - per Wiki - the penopticon, a sort of big-brotherish architectural concept that allows the jailers to look at the jailed, but not the other way around. What this has to do with Locke, I'll leave to loftier minds...)

In any event, Bentham/Locke. Locke/Bentham.

I loved the way last night's finale threw a curve ball, though, with Sawyer getting on the helicopter. At that minute, the millions who actually love this character were heart-broken; so THIS is Coffin Man, they sighed. Until he jumped out. Then they were happy again. The Michael-as-Coffin-Man theory ended abruptly just at the moment Christian appeared and said: "You can go now, Michael." (That pretty much officially sealed the deal for Claire, too; she is no longer amidst the living either.)

If there was any doubt about Locke, that was erased just after ten last night, while Hurls was playing chess with Mr. Eko (invisible) and he asks Sayid, "why are you calling him Bentham? His name is...?" But Sayid doesn't let him say it.

Anyway, we knew the name, which gave us a whole hour to cook up new theories about how Locke got off the island, and why he should be off the island. (I couldn't come up with one.)

All in all, last night's finale was splendid - a first rate thriller from start to finish. There were so many nuggets of pure unalloyed joy strewn throughout that I can't think of which one to pick up first, but surely that high camp moment in the blue crystal ice cave, while Ben is turning the wheel, muttering about how he hopes Jacob's satisfied. That ranks as one of the best. (Imagine: You crank a wheel to achieve just the perfect Casimir effect, and a whole island disappears; easy as baking a cake). Keamy as the villain who wouldn't die - until at the worst possible minute? Perfect touch, again. Stray pieces of dialogue that should keep everyone stoked all summer, like that peculiar exchange between Charlotte and Miles.

Miles: "It's just weird you wanna leave, after all the time you spent trying to get back here." Charlotte: "What do you mean?" Miles: "What DO I mean?"

Yes, what DOES he mean. What does ANY of this mean?

Whatever. TV's best show isn't in the answer business.

May 9, 2008

"Lost:" Most Wicked Show on TV


lost-locke.jpg I've sat here all night and day puzzling over "Cabin Fever" from last night. My eyes have dropped out of their sockets. My brain cells - several hundred million worth - have expired. There's nothing left to do but take a sledge hammer to the computer and put it out of its misery.

There was so much - SO VERY MUCH - that to even encapsulate, categorize and otherwise de-mystify any of it would be a tremendous waste of my time and your's. It was the richest mythology episode of the season, and I'll leave it at that.

But let's re-visit one tiny little detail that requires some clarification. During the pivotal scene with Richard Alpert (he's back!) and the young John Locke, a series of articles are laid out on the table, and JL is asked to choose those which he already owns. He bypasses the mitt, picks up the vial of granular substance, gets the compass, pauses briefly over the book, then gets the knife. Miffed, RA storms out.

Here's the question: What was the book?

It was called "Book of Laws." Not "THE Book of Laws." And definitely NOT "Book of Law;" that would take fans down a very precarious and unpleasant path, for that particular book was written by a 19th century mystic who made William S. Burroughs seem like a normal dude. You will - and no doubt - already have Googled the title, "The Book of Laws," but it's a dead end. (Yeah, the title referred to a law tome from the Plymouth colony in the early 17th century...) Could it actually refer to that? Seems doubtful. Very doubtful.

Could Darlton have thrown a Red Herring in our midst, sending "Losties" down a path that leads nowhere?

Naaaah. They'd never do that. (Would they?)

Lindelof: Darlton will Fade to Black

DamonLindelof.jpg
Interesting interview with "Lost" co-boss, Damon Lindelof, who tells the Hollywood Reporter that when the show ends for good in a couple of seasons, he and his other half, Carlton Cuse - both known to fans as "Darlton" - will "go into hiding for many, many months" at an "undisclosed location."

Here's the outtake from this morning's story:

"David Chase set a great example when he went off to Paris after 'The Sopranos' ending, which is great because all these people are going to be asking, 'What does it mean? What is it?' " he said. "The fact that there's no one really around to answer that question, it forces people to come up with what they think it means. We can guarantee our show will not end with a cut to black, it will be more clear than that. But whenever anything you love ends ... there's a certain disappointment."

What means this? Just another little "Lost" mystery. Separately, Darlton confirmed that they'll get two extra hours padded onto the last two seasons, for a total of 34, to wrap up their grand mystery. (And speaking of DC, he just signed a one-picture deal with Paramount; no word on what the movie will be, but it will be a "drama,." the studio confirmed.)

May 2, 2008

"Lost": Dear Old Dads

lost_wideweb__470x312%2C2.jpg

Another fine, fine "Lost" last night, and we're left with these themes (class): Fathers and sons (and daughters); death and transfiguration (or resurrection); and that "Lost'" age-old fave, "Life is but a Dream." Hurls as the mad man, who speaks truth to the deluded? That's another nice twist that I never saw coming.

I'd like to get into greater detail but time -- not much right now -- and the fact that I STILL haven't caught up with last week's episode (and will this weekend) leaves me behind the eight ball here, but I think we can all agree on the possibility that last night offered momentous developments and a momentous consideration: That the Oceanic Six may all be dead, after all, and that these flash forwards exist in some half-lit world out of time and space. I'm babbling -- I tend to do that -- but Hurls' declaration that "we're all dead -- we never got off that Island" has to rank as one of the most gorgeous shockers of the season to date. Which means that Jack and Kate's post-Island love nest is but a ... yes ...dream, or nightmare, too.

The fathers: That Jack's would return is neither surprising nor unexpected, but that CLAIRE'S? Never saw it coming, and certainly have no idea what it means -- and why it would mean that she'd leave Aaron, thus setting up the other possibility that Claire, at least in this world, will never be seen again. (In which "world?" Is the world of the Island the only real one, while the flash-forward world is the land of the walking dead? Meaning: That those who remained behind were alive, perhaps, while those who left were not? And that possibly Aaron is dead, too? Puzzles upon puzzles ... )

[Meanwhile, 'my bad: an insightful reader reminds me of something that I ENTIRELY FORGOT - and rather than explain, here's the full comment from Tody OB: "Maybe I'm not reading your comment above correctly, but you do know that Claire's father is Jack's father Christian? It was established a while ago in a Claire-centric episode and hinted at in an Ana Lucia episode.....

Doc Jensen at EW.com has posted a very intriguing theory that Claire is a ghost herself already; that she never survived the explosion of her house. And that's why Miles took such an interest in her. Check it out; he splains it way better than I do."]

I must run now, before I say anything else that I may regret [see above], but here's another thought: Does anyone believe that the bodies beneath the dirt, the ones that Miles uncovered (while hearing voices), were actually Karl and Rousseau. I can't imagine they were, but...

(Above: Finally, together, forever and ever ... ?)

March 20, 2008

"Lost:" Meet Kevin Johnson

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Stop me if you've heard this story before but...last summer I was in this restaurant in Hollywood with one of my best friends on the planet (Mike Hruska) when who should casually stroll in but Harold Perrineau.

This entrance, after...a day at the Press Tour in Beverly Hills (how we suffered) where critics angrily confronted the boss of ABC Entertainment, Steve McPherson, when he refused (declined, perhaps is the better word) to tell them the huge secret about the new season of "Lost," because Darlton (Carlton Cuse/Damon Lindelof) planned to break the news to the nerds...errrr...the highly intelligent people down in Comic-Con, then being held at that very moment in San Diego.

Well, you just won't believe what happened: The critics started a full scale riot! They broke up the furniture. Started throwing their computers (laptops, to be exact.) Epithets were strewn about. A terrified McPherson reached for his cellphone and called Darlton; we overheard him: "Can I tell these nerds...errrr, highly intelligent people...the secret?" he said over the din.

He raised his hand. Suddenly, there was silence.

"Michael," he said, "is coming back to 'Lost.'"

This is a true story, sort of, with a few embellishments.

Anyway, Harold was so amused after I told him about that morning's Press Tour riot that he proceeded to tell me what was going to happen when he reappeared this season as "Kevin Johnson," and who the "Oceanic 6" were, and...

Well, I can't tell you any more or he would kill me.

In any event, the most anticipated "Lost" of the season: In thirty minutes.

March 14, 2008

Getting 'Lost' with Ji Yeon

yunjin.jpgWhile my esteemed colleague Verne Gay was taking down names on “Lost” last night, I was taking down numbers.

Sun’s visit to Jin’s (flash-forward) grave revealed a death date on his tombstone, which you could still-frame to read as 9-22-2004 -- the date “Lost” premiered and the date given for the Oceanic 815 crash. So it seems likely Jin didn’t “survive” after all. (Besides, as The Captain on Daddy Widmore’s boat said, all the passengers are “dead,” right? Unless Benjamin Linus had easy access to 300+ substitute corpses. Although knowing Ben . . . )

Another interesting note: While Sun [Yunjin Kim in ABC photo, left] was flashing forward to the delivery of daughter Ji Yeon, husband Jin was busy flashing back to the early days of their marriage. The producers were sneaky -- sure did seem he was buying that giant panda for her while racing to the birth hospital -- but it was actually pretty obvious from the start. Did you get a gander of that GIGANTIC cell phone Jin was carrying? Sooo archaic. Must have been four years old! (Was that the series’ first simultaneously interwoven flash forward/back?)

And whassup with Hurley? The big guy seems to be making the rounds of the farflung Oceanic 6 survivors, serving as the connecting link between them all. Or -- wait a minute -- is that really the real Hurley? Hurley/Hugo? Double-life dude? Doppleganger? Ben Linus turned shapeshifter? And what about Naomi? (Just threw that in for vintage “Electric Company” viewers.)

Sneak a peek at next week here. Or rewatch last night’s episode.

"Lost:" Oceanic Six (Finally) Named

Another big night on "Lost" (and aren't all you non-"Losties" out there totally amused by the navel lint-picking we "Losties" continually engage in? Sorry but no apologies forthcoming...): harold-perrineau.jpg

I do believe we finally have the full tally of our Oceanic Six - those who "survived" the crash of 815, were rescued, and became (in the future) almost as famous as Britney Spears. They are...

Sun (revealed last night)

Jack

Kate

Hurley

Sayid

Aaron (this being Claire's baby.)

Now, we have to wait to see whether this list will be formally confirmed, but Darlton (Damon Lindelof/Carlton Cuse) said in an interview in TV Guide recently that they will do so after the March 13 episode; that was last night, so we await confirmation. Meanwhile, the identity of Aaron as a O 6 is possibly debatable, because Jin could also have been one of the O 6, who just happened to die after he was rescued.

Whatever. The joy of lint-picking.

Now, what's the significance of all this? Honestly, I don't have a clue. But...these six do appear to all be members of those who stayed with Jack (except for Hurley and arguably Kate; oh dear.)

Also, does Ben count? That's an interesting question because he clearly does get off the Island, but clearly not considered an O 6 member.

Oh, yes, how could I forget: Michael Dawson - Harold Perrineau - finally returned last night. We haven't seen him of course since he sailed off into the sunset with Walt.) He was swabbing the deck, so to speak, and quite clearly is Ben's plant on the freighter.

Ah, "Lost" lint-picking. Almost as good as the first cup of coffee in the ayem.

March 7, 2008

"Lost:" Juliet (and her Romeo)

Juliet2.jpg
Wherefore art thou...?


Not much time to break down last night's "Lost" - sorry, friends, but I'd only add to the confusion if I had any more time to puzzle this out.

Nevertheless, we point out one (maybe two) intriguing developments: First and foremost, of course, we learn that Charles Widmore is in fact the boss of the Freighter People and that he does want the island for his own evil purposes, possibly even more evil than Ben's purposes. (And Ben, grossly lovelorn in his flashbacks with Juliet, becomes more demonic with each passing week...)

Next, "The Tempest:" That's the name of the other hitherto-unknown DHARMA station in the jungle, that one with toxic gas. And yes, those rascals at "Lost" have gone ahead and layered in another literary reference that only wants to make us scramble to Wikipedia or dig up some well-thumbed, ink-stained, rumpled "Cliff Notes" edition on the play. Is Ben Caliban? Is Juliet Miranda? (And who the hell then is Prospero.) Curse you, "Lost" writers. CURSE YOU!

And OK, here's another thing: The man/woman on the boat? I'm open for suggestions. Locke has to "sit down?" What or who could be so dramatic and shocking that Locke will be gobsmacked when he hears the name? (I'm still wondering whether Juliet's long-lost sister, Rachel Carlson, is on board...Naomi's bracelet with the initials, "RC," remember? Could she be tied to Ben in some way? But Locke wouldn't even know who she is, so...)

Curse you, "Lost" writers. CURSE YOU!

Bottom Line on "The Other Woman:" Yet another brilliant outing by TV's best drama. "Lost" keeps getting better and better and better and...


February 29, 2008

"Lost:" At Least it was a Bloody Military Dream

Ya know, I don't often confess to this sort of thing - being the sort of fellow who watches TV with a jaundiced eye, and fully expecting the worst and often getting the worst. But last night's 44 minutes of "Lost" were among the most satisfying forty-four minutes in front of the tube in my life. 112237__desmond2_l.jpg

It wasn't merely a brilliant episode, which pushed the Mythology forward more rapidly and richly than any episode in my memory, but it was an emotional release. This, I say, by way of explaining that I actually cried when Penny and Desmond finally - finally, oh God, FINALLY - connected. Yes, what a silly ass I am - shedding a couple of hot tears over a reunion we've been waiting a year for, when the world is going to hell, and the economy along with it, and Newsday whacking 120 jobs...Yet here I am, blubbering over Penny and Desmond.

"I love you," said Desmond.

"I love you too," said Penny.

"Me, too, me TOO," said a silly ass who pretends to be a TV critic.

Oh what a fool am I, but who cares? This is why we watch TV - to escape the follies of our daily existence, and no TV show I can think of has more successfully achieved that standard - OK, maybe "The Sopranos," maybe "The Wire," maybe... - than this one. Desmond_Penelope.JPG

There wasn't one, single, solitary false note, or at least nothing that let us momentarily try to reconcile Desmond's past history on "Lost" with his time-travel toggling last night. It was an episode in and of itself, pulling in just enough back story to enrich that spectacular climax. (And that wonderful off-key endnote, when Faraday stares at the piece of paper and learns that HIS "constant" will be Desmond.)

As always, "Lost" was a joyous hall of mirrors that forces the viewer to navigate - mentally - off-screen to understand, or attempt to understand, the maze (rat's maze! another wonderful touch) of references and links.

Minkowski? Our dearly departed communications man? Named for the German mathematician who - to quote "Lostpedia," which as usual is the indispensable source for such matters - created the "hyper-dimensional manifold in which Einstein's equations for special relativity are perfectly solvable."

Hyper...huh, whaaa??? That strange outgrowth of quantum mechanics which establishes, sort of, that we exist simultaneously, in different realms of "realities," hence hyper-reality.

Now you're crying too. I'm sorry. But I hope you see my point: That there's nothing like "Lost" on TV, never has been, never will be, and four seasons in, that I still care so deeply means a.) That I need to get a life; or b.) These guys are doing something right.

February 22, 2008

‘Lost’ gets lost in Kate-dom

Well, every week can’t be last week. After that thrilling Sayid episode, “Lost” calmed itself down last night. No assassinations, forbidden love affairs, shocking betrayals or revelations, really. Even that last-second “reveal” of perhaps another one of the Oceanic Six turned out to be a bit of a dud. Of course, nobody said it had to be a character with tons of dialogue. Or any. (Heh-heh.)

The episode was Kate-centric, which reminds me why the first half of last season was soooo annoying. When love-tangled Kate is supposed to be a catalyst, the show starts shutting down emotionally. (Ironic, no?) That whole Jack-or-Sawyer dilemma was a distraction that drove me batty, and setting it in driving rainstorms in zoo cages didn’t exactly perk things up. Last night’s flash forward to Kate’s post-rescue travails was also numbing stuff. So she’s on trial for killing dear old dad. Is this news? Could it be more blandly delivered? How expressionless can actress Evangeline Lilly get? Ditto Matthew Fox? How anybody can care if these two uptight characters get together or not is beyond me. Put them under fluorescent light, and they’re even more dreary.

lost ben locke.jpgAnd all this futureworld mopery is taking time away from the meaty happenings back on the present-day island. “I’m exactly where I wanna be,” said Miles, the psychic helicopter dude held prisoner by Locke’s tribe, who wanted to speak to former island biggie Ben, another captive. Ken Leung and Michael Emerson may be the two current most interesting actors in this mix, so things could have heated up. But theirs was a fleeting meeting. It was Locke who came between them, though, and Terry O’Quinn is another fascinating soul, proclaiming last night “I’m responsible for the well-being of this island.” Never mind the castaways on it.

There were more hints about the fracturing of the time/space continuum, or alternate realities, or whatever mumbojumbo you wanna call it, with Miles saying to Kate, “Who knows, maybe you didn’t survive the crash.” And the helicopter carrying Sayid and Desmond hasn’t arrived at the supposed rescue boat, even though it left “last night.”

Others can parse the meaning of the $3.2 million dollars Miles tried to blackmail from Ben, and other persnickety clues. My interest will never be that detailed. But the power of the island does intrigue me, along with its ability to shape the societies that exist upon it. Only eight passengers “survived” the crash, we’re told. Does that mean some stayed and some returned to civilization? Did Kate “survive” or not? What the heck IS Ben’s deal? Whassup with Miles and the rest of his study group? And how come future Jack wants to go back?

It can’t be only to screen Hurley’s VHS copy of “Xanadu.”

[Above: Terry O'Quinn and Michael Emerson in ABC photo from March 6 episode of "Lost."]

February 20, 2008

ABC shows back in action

“Lost” will have lots of company by April as new episodes return to ABC’s lineup for such faves as “Desperate Housewives” and “Ugly Betty.” In the midst of the post-strike shuffle, “Lost” will move back to 10 p.m. Thursday behind a returning “Grey’s Anatomy” – just in time for May’s Nielsen sweep (April 24 - May 21).

The network has announced the following fresh-episode dates:

“Samantha Who?” - Monday, April 7 at 9:30 p.m. (six new episodes)

“Boston Legal” - Tuesday, April 8 at 10 p.m. (six episodes)

“Desperate Housewives” - Sunday, April 13 at 9 p.m. (five episodes, plus two-hour finale)

“Brothers & Sisters” - Sunday, April 20 at 10 p.m. (four episodes)

“Ugly Betty” - Thursday, April 24 at 8 p.m. (five episodes)

“Grey’s Anatomy” - Thursday, April 24 at 9 p.m. (five episodes)

“Lost” - Thursday, April 24 move to 10 p.m. (five episodes)

Catch up to previous episodes at ABC's streaming media player.

February 15, 2008

"Lost:" Inscrutable Nuggets

sayid.jpg
Hitman.


This flashforward world is a hell of a world, is it not?

Up is down. Left, right. North, south. Sayid works for Ben.

Say...whaaa?

Anyway, I'm tired of asking questions (without any answers). So maybe the best way to
get an instant handle on last night's "The Economist" is to do a quick list of the top five
oddities, top being the oddest:

1.) Not merely that Ben is off the island and that Sayid works for him as a HITMAN, but that Ben is a vet. Who knew he loved dogs.

2.) Sayid's rough love scene. This is a tough man to love - witness the departure of Shannon (killed by Anna Lucia) and Nadia, presumably dead too. Now Elsa. Who was her boss who isn't an "economist...?" (Sorry, just can't resist questions...) Meanwhile, we also learned the name of another member of Oceanic 6 (Sayid), which makes - I think - four. So two to go.

3.) The bracelet. Naomi's bracelet, with the inscription, "N, I'll always be RobinWeige_Grant_12170267_400.jpg
with you. RC." Of course, we all have to ask, who's "RC," so let's just ponder this a moment. In the entire "Lost" hierarchy of characters - Tailies, Losties, Flashbackies, Others, etc. - there's only one "RC." That's Rachel Carlson, Juliet's sister (played by Robin Weigert). (Biblical significance to name, for she was Jacob's wife, who could bear no children.) Oh, there are plenty of Lostian theories about Juliet: That she was actually a guy; or that Jack rescued her in the car, preventing him from doing that header off the bridge.

Or this: That Rachel has teamed up with Desmond squeeze Penny to find her long lost sister. Hmmmm.

Beyond that, why would Naomi have any sort of tie to Rachel? I haven't a bloody clue.

(Of course, some people think the initials read "RG," in which case to all of the above - never mind. But I'm fairly certain it was "RC." Isn't this SAD that I've even gone on this long about it?)

4.) Daniel's payload. "Oh no, this is not good," he says after the little projectile slams into the ground, and the numbers don't sync up on the respective digital clocks. Why "no good." With Daniel Faraday, I think you've got to go to his namesake Michael, who discovered the laws of electromagnetism - basically by showing that a changing magnetic field produces an electric current (and that "magnetism" and electricity are one in the same.) Isn't "Lost" fun? You learn stuff. But what does any of this have to Daniel's "Oh no" line? I haven't a bloody clue.

5.) Finally, Jacob's disappearing house and that line (of sand or gunpowder?) in front. Oh come on. Did anyone really expect the house to be there when Locke pulls up in front? But where did it go? All together now...I haven't a bloody clue.


‘Lost’ is an equal-opportunity employer

lost%20naveen%20leung.jpg

You know what’s great about “Lost”? OK, one of the many things that’s great about “Lost”? It’s such an international stew of various ethnicities. And on this show, that’s really no big deal.

Last night’s jaw-dropping new ABC episode (SPOILERS AHEAD) had a thrillingly meaty “flash-forward” for Sayid, played by Indian-Brit Naveen Andrews. Our favorite Iraqi ex-“torturer” seems fated, upon his return as the fourth revealed member of the “Oceanic Six,” to become some kind of besieged assassin for baddie (or is he?) Ben.

The episode “The Economist” (“He’s not really an economist”) also continued the storyline for mysterious new “psychic” helicopter arrival Miles, played by Chinese-American Ken Leung. And let’s not forget two other longtime Asian-ethnicity cast members, South Korea-born Daniel Dae Kim and Yunjin Kim.

Four Asian actors prominently featured on one show? That’s gotta be some kind of record.

“Lost” also has several key black performers in not-quite-departed ex-regulars Harold Perrineau (Michael) and Malcolm David Kelley (Walt), plus Marsha Thomason (“Las Vegas”) as this season’s is-she-really-dead mercenary Naomi. You can probably add Lance Reddick (“The Wire”) to the list as the forbidding airline “lawyer” in recent flash-forwards, who looks to be around for awhile.

And how about Jorge Garcia (Hurley/Hugo) and the underused Nestor Carbonell (never-aging “Others” mastermind Richard)?

As for last night’s episode, if you missed it, or just loved it lots, you can read a concisely detailed recap here. And/or you can watch it here.

[Above: Ken Leung, Evangeline Lilly, Naveen Andrews in ABC photo from Feb. 14, 2008 episode of "Lost."]

February 12, 2008

"Lost:" Only Five More in the Can. Sorry.


08_davieslost_lg.jpg

The Hollywood Reporter's Nellie Andreeva has the Big "Lost" News of the Day: Carlton Cuse confirmed to her yesterday that the show will produce five more episodes which will be (sigh) still three short of the original order.

He told her, "We're going to have to hit the ground running, go from zero to 100 mph in a matter of days to make as many episodes as possible."

Darlton's (Carlton and Damon Lindelof) plan is apparently to squeeze the original eight remaining into five - which, no matter how you slice/dice it, is a stinging disappointment to "Losties." What's being dropped? What loose ends won't get tied? What mysteries will remain stubbornly unsolved? (Eh, they'd probably remain stubbornly unsolved anyway...) These final three (shortened) seasons will be as carefully mapped as any final arcs in TV history - now the map has a bunch of white spaces on it.

Enough whining and moaning. At least five is better than none.

There was some hope - admittedly dim - that ABC would order the final eight when the strike ended (for a total of sixteen this season), but in these now very parlous times, the strike has forced the network to cut costs, and this is just one obvious way.

February 8, 2008

'Lost': Who Was That Guy?

After watching last night’s “Lost,” I couldn’t get this mystery out of my head.

No, not what the heck is Ben up to, but rather, where I had seen this guy before?

leung.jpg

The man in question played Miles, one of the four “rescuers.” When he’s not parachuting onto the island. he apparently works as some kind of ghostbuster. Dude also has a serious chip on his shoulder.

Then it dawned on me: Miles, or Ken Leung, the actor who played him, appeared in a memorable "Sopranos” episode last year. He played one of Uncle Junior’s fellow “rest home” residents, a poker-playing guy with — hey! — a big-time chip on his shoulder.

If you recall, there was some flack kicked up when that episode ran because Leung’s character, Carter Chong, was an Asian-American with a serious rage issue. It aired on April 22, just six days after Seung-Hui Cho massacred 32 people at Virginia Tech, spurring some critics to lambaste HBO for bad taste. Alas, it was nothing more than bad timing.

Anyway, I’m glad I figured out that mystery. Now, I can get back to figuring out what the heck is going on with Ben.

(ABC photo of Ken Leung as Miles.)

February 1, 2008

Debate = Big Numbers, Too


Amazing ratings from last night's two major events - the debate and "Lost."

"Lost" got sixteen million - see below - but what about that lovefest...errr, "debate" - between Hill and Obama. Here's the relevant pull-quote from the CNN press release. Take it away, CNN:

061128_clinton_obama_hmed5p.hmedium.jpg

"Last night’s CNN Democratic Debate from the Kodak Theater in Los Angeles California is the #1 debate in every demographic among all primary debates in cable news history with 8,324,000 total viewers; 1,257,000 18-34 viewers; 2,963,000 18-49 viewers and 3,257,000 25-54 viewers."

Bottom line: That 8.3 million is, if I'm not mistaken, one of the highest audience levels in CNN's long history. It's truly a remarkable number for CNN.

(Picture courtesy MSNBC)

‘Lost’ return = great ratings

hurley%20lost%20401.jpg“Lost” found big ratings for ABC -- big being a relative term in this fragmented era -- and led the network to victory the first night of February sweeps.

Last night’s 9 p.m. season premiere got the series’ best Nielsens in a year, averaging 6.7 in adults 18-49; NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice” and CBS’ “CSI” managed just 2.8 each. Even the “Lost” recap hour at 8 p.m. earned a 4.9, handily beating Fox’ “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?” at 3.1.

Thursday’s “Lost” season premiere drew a total of 16 million viewers. (An estimated 8.3 million watched CNN’s Democratic debate between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.)

More details at the Media Life report here.

"Lost:" Questions, Questions (and More Questions)

MarshaThomason.jpgNow that we've all experienced the thrill of The Return of "Lost" (parts one and two), I have questions. Many questions. I see that the exemplary website Tvtattle recently posted a "48 'Lost' Questions" - all great ones, by the way - but let's see if we can top that based on just those two hours last night.

And, so here goes (in no logical order whatsoever). Fifty-four questions:
- Why did Locke really kill Naomi - the ravishing Marsha Thomason?
- Is he nuts?
- Is Naomi really dead? (Or course not! Repeat: OF COURSE NOT!)
- Does Miles see ghosts? (Or just talk to them?)
- Where do you buy one of those funky ghost vacuum cleaners anyway?
- (Walmart?)
- What is "The Wire's" Col. Cedric Daniels - Lance Reddick - doing in "Lost" anyway?
- Any chance Bunk Moreland might show up too?
- (And how about Jimmy McNulty?)
- Why did Daniel Faraday squint at the light and talk about the refraction?
- The name "Faraday?"

(Michael Faraday: The great English chemist/physicist who effectively determined the principles of electromagnetism which - ultimately - helped shaped the special theory of relativity, etc.)

- Any significance?
- What do YOU think?
- Why is Karl such a dork?
- Why does Flashforward Jack want to grow a beard?
- Why did he shave it?
- Why does he have such a lousy basketball shot?
- Where is Flashforward Kate?
- Why couldn't SHE visit Hurls in One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest Rest Home?
- Where is the REAL captain of Oceanic 815?
- Who was that rotting dude in the driver's seat of Oceanic 815?
-Where was Desmond during the second hour?
- Didn't Locke have the kidney on the OTHER side removed? (Just wondering...)
- Why was there a polar bear in Tunisia?
- Why is there a polar bear on the ISLAND?
- If Oceanic 815 went down near Sumatra, does that mean the island is somewhere nearby?
- There are over 150 million people in Indonesia - what are the chances none of them would know about an island this strange?
- Hey! I thought 815 was heading from Sydney to LA, so what was it doing in the Indian Ocean?
- Or was that REALLY O 815 down there on the ocean bottom? (Answer: Of COURSE NOT!)
- Are all the tailies dead? (I guess so...)
- Does the Island polar bear wear a collar too?
- About the other Others - why do they need a social anthropologist to find Ben?
- Why do they need to find Ben?
- Who's Ben's plant on the boat?
- Is there a boat?
- Why is Miles such a jerk?
- (But Ken Leung was great - crazy great in "The Sopranos" - wasn't he?)
- What happened to Walt?
- Is Locke gonna introduce everyone to Jacob? Lance_Reddick_06.jpg
- What does Jacob think about that?
- Does Charlotte - Rebecca Mader - seem kinda strange to you too?
- When does Michael show up?
- How did the helicopter make it to the Island without crashing?
- Why didn't Bearded Guy pilot 815?
- What was he doing in the Bahamas?
- How did Miles know there were O 815 survivors but Charlotte did not?
- Why does Flashforward Charlie want Flashforward Hurls to go back to the Island?
- What's Flashforward Jack so afraid of?
- Who - or what - remained behind?
- Will there be flashback sequences during the flashforward ones?
- Will there be flashforward sequences during the flashforward ones?
- Is there such thing as "real time" in "Lost" anymore?
- Does anyone know what I'm talking about?

January 30, 2008

Do your ‘Lost’ homework

lost%20tree%20crop.jpgRevisiting last spring’s two-hour “Lost” season finale (tonight 9-11 on ABC/7) isn’t the only way to catch up to the show’s goings-on before Thursday’s 9 p.m. fourth-season premiere.

If you haven’t already run across the web’s ubiquitous “Lost in 8:15” (also downloadable free at iTunes), it’s worth that much time to watch a recap of the previous three seasons’ main plot points. They’re narrated almost hilariously fast and with dry dollops of wit, but they certainly do the trick.

There’s also Thursday night’s 8 p.m. ABC special “Lost: Past, Present & Future,” promised by the network to “relive their story of survival to prepare for the shocking Season 4 premiere that will change everything.” And of course, those with hours to spare can watch full hour installments via DVD, download or ABC.com’s free streaming episodes, all three seasons’ worth.

January 28, 2008

"Lost:" Clues

Ok, as it turns out, after that last blog posting, ABC did send a follow-up email saying that it would - indeed - have to kill me if I gave up any plot details to this Thursday's two-hour "Lost" premiere.

This then leaves me with two options. 1.) Not give up any details, in the interest of personal safety, or; 2.) Give up some stuff but make it so oblique and obtuse that even ABC would have a hard time in court justifying the elimination of a TV critic (even though most courts are favorably disposed to actions of this sort.)

I'm gonna go with Option No. 2. Why bother (you ask)? Because this is "LOST" - the only scripted show left on TV, with maybe a "House" here, or a "Prison Break" there. What am I supposed to? Sit on my hands and pretend I haven't SEEN THE FIRST HOUR?! (which I have.)

Bottom line: It's good, very good. Anyway, without further ado, herewith some visual clues to the first hour of "Lost," back Thursday. At first glance, they may make no sense. At second glance, they make no sense. But trust me, each has something to do with Thursday's biiig show... (And assuming this doesn't bug you TOO much, I'll post clues to the second hour later.)

Lemons1.jpg

1.)That's right - lemons.

90310o.jpg

2.)Sweet ride. (Or was.)

Elizabeth_Hurley.jpg

3.) Thursday's key storyline centers on...

image.jpeg

4.) Great movie - but who's crazy and who isn't?

107556.JPG

5.) Can you, ummm, follow a lock? hmmm

001.jpg

6.) He's alive! Uhhhh, no, he's not. Or is he? Or...


"Lost" Flashforwards


ABC, bless 'em, appears to have had a change of heart regarding fourth season review copies of of "Lost." At first, the network seemed to indicate there'd be no advanced look at the Jan. 31 opener, and now it's effectively letting the entire world see by sending out streaming copies to TV critic types. get-attachment.aspx.jpeg

The great unwashed mass of us got our first look via the web on Friday, while DVDs apparently arrive today. Why the "change?" No idea, except that review copies had already started to trickle out to the "enthusiast" part of the review trade; one such aficionado, Docartz, even got a look at the first FOUR episodes weeks ago, and posted raves on websites like Underground. (Unclear whether TV Guide did - as it claimed - because one ABC insider said they only saw SCRIPTS for the first four episodes.)

ABC's late Friday offer to check out the episodes was accompanied by one of those "don't reveal plot details" lines - it was firm, though stopped short of adding "otherwise we will have to kill you."

In fact, it was quaintly charming: Here's a direct lift from said press release:

"We kindly ask that you use discretion in reviewing this show by not revealing any plot details that contain spoilers. We also ask that you refrain from discussing the following:

- The ****** ***.

- Any details about ******’s flash forward, or that *** even has a flash forward

- ******

- Who goes with ***** and who goes with ****


- Any details about the four strangers/********* people’s back stories/flash*******."


OK, we kindly won't (and I've thrown in an extra asterisk here and there, just to throw off any informed guesstimates...) By the way, Newsday's own - the one, the only, the incomparable - Diane Werts, will review later this week.


January 25, 2008

"Lost:" Rewind, with Explanations

"Lost" can be inscrutable in the best of circumstances, but what'll it be like with words on the screen - explaining action, symbolism, allusions, flashbacks, flashforwards, and whether Kate is really into Jack or Sawyer?

ABC's got an "enhanced" version of third season finale - "Through the Looking Glass" - that'll air next Wednesday at 9, night before the two-hour premiere. "Enhanced?" That's writing on the bottom third of the screen. Per ABC: "The enhanced version of 'Lost' will include text on the lower third of the screen and will 'let viewers in' on clues in the show, as well as give back story to catch new viewers up for Season Four."

We await illumination.

lost-strangerinastrangeland-sawyer-kate_1172166225.jpg
Explanation, please.

January 18, 2008

"Lost:" The City Mystery Deepens

LOST_Y4_AdArt_Vert_Proof.jpg Well, I've gotten some response to my blog entry about the mysterious city in the "Lost" poster (see way below), which clearly means this poster has struck a national chord. Just what IS this city, and what IS that interesting dark letter, or circle that hovers over the building? Is the whole meaning of "Lost" in this poster? Is...

Anyway, we now respond to reader mail. Someone disputes my notion that this might be LA (though I still think it's Chicago.) He/she wonders: Have I ever even been to LA because there's no water line near downtown, which I obviously should have known about? Yes, Mr./Ms. LA! I have! In fact, I was born and raised in California. I'm a third-generation Angelino. Next question.

Someone also asks, could the poster city be Portland (below)?

Portland%20from%20Freemont%20Bridge.jpg

Unlikely.

Or, how about Tallahassee?

loc6_450.jpg

I don't think so.

Someone also wondered, what about Singapore? Well...?

countries_singapore01.jpg

I'm starting to like this idea.

OK, let's get the LA question out of the way. My new penpal, "Bob" says, "it's definitely LA...you can make out the Bonaventure Hotel and the US Bank building's distinct outlines." That sounds reasonable to me...

CA9002.jpg

...though I'm still not a hundred percent certain we're there yet. (How about Long Beach...anyone for Anaheim?...)

January 17, 2008

"Lost:" Let the Games Begin

"Lost" doesn't return for a couple more weeks, but that's all the more reason for producers/ABC to start playing headgames with fans right...about...now.Lost.jpg

As "Lost" headgamers know by now, ABC has been running a poster of the show that features a reflection of a big city in some lagoon; cast members are staring straight ahead, and behind them - a stand of palm trees. Why aren't the trees reflected? Obviously a cute visual cue to remind viewers that last season ended with a flash forward that took place in some large city; pretty sure it was LA, but I'd have to go back to watch the episode again. Some speculation that it was New York too because Jack was (apparently) reading an NYC paper (Oh, and by the way: If you want a better shot of the one that I posted here, which crops off the city top, then go to DarkUFO.)

In any event, here's the game: What city is this? Again, probably LA, but...might it be Chicago? That tower in the center looks like the Sears one while the buildings arrayed around it look a little bit like the vista from far out on Lake Michigan.

Whatever...and this is what "Lost" does to your head - play with it.

Meanwhile, I've got another blog posting on this mystery, responding to the VERY CONSTRUCTIVE comments that some readers have made. Go here to check 'em out.

chicago%20skyline2.jpg
Hmmmmmm

December 26, 2007

'Lost': The Trailer

How much does ABC want to you to tune into "Lost," which returns on Thursday, Jan. 31?

Well, today they announced a semi-nifty way to catch up on all three previous seasons: You can check out a special 8-minute, 15-second trailer called “Lost In 8:15.” (Clever, no?)

lost.jpg


The trailer is available at ABC.com and additional websites and tells the story to-date of the survivors of Oceanic Air’s Flight 815.

And if you happen to be going to the movies this holiday season, there's a good chance you can see a shorter "Lost" trailer as well.

December 14, 2007

"Lost" Back Jan. 31...On Thursday

lost_l.jpg
The gang is back...on Thursdays!

Big news from the "Lost" front. The drama returns late January (the 31st) but the twist is this: It's been moved from Wednesdays to Thursdays at 9. What happens to "Grey's Anatomy," you reasonably ask? Well, there is a strike on and by that time, the "GA" episode well will be drier than an Atlanta reservoir. Enter "Lost," with at least a half a dozen fresh ones. ABC is hoping - maybe even praying - that the strike is over by the end of that abbreviated run so that "GA" can find it's way back home.

(You'll also note: "Desperate Housewives" will be held until March.)

There may be at least one other little reason for the "Lost" move from Wednesday to Thursday - get it out of "American Idol's" way. "Lost" - still firmly beloved by its many fans - has struggled on Wednesdays somewhat. With "Grey" off the air, it could easily surge on a protected Thursday berth.

Here's the rest of the mid-season ABC line-up, fresh off the press release; some shows are coming up in February, some staggered in March:

MONDAY (JAN) 8:00 p.m. “Dance War: Bruno vs. Carrie Ann”
9:30 p.m. “Notes from the Underbelly”
10:00 p.m. “October Road”

MONDAY (FEB) 8:00 p.m. “Dance War: Bruno vs. Carrie Ann”
9:00 p.m. “Samantha Who?”
9:30 p.m. “Notes from the Underbelly”
10:00 p.m. “October Road”

MONDAY (MAR) 8:00 p.m. “Dancing with the Stars”
9:30 p.m. “Samantha Who?”
10:00 p.m. “The Bachelor”

TUESDAY 8:00 p.m. “Just for Laughs”
8:30 p.m. “Just for Laughs”
9:00 p.m. “According to Jim”
9:30 p.m. “Carpoolers”
10:00 p.m. “Boston Legal”

TUESDAY (MAR) 8:00 p.m. “Just for Laughs”
8:30 p.m. “Just for Laughs”
9:00 p.m. “Dancing with the Stars the Results Show”
10:00 p.m. “Boston Legal”

WEDNESDAY 8:00 p.m. “Wife Swap”
9:00 p.m. “Supernanny”
10:00 p.m. “Cashmere Mafia” (“MEN IN TREES” beginning Feb 27)

THURSDAY (JAN) 8:00 p.m. “Ugly Betty”
9:00 p.m. “Grey’s Anatomy”
10:00 p.m. “Big Shots” (after special premiere of “Cashmere Mafia” on Jan 3)

THURSDAY (FEB) 8:00 p.m. “Ugly Betty”
9:00 p.m. “Lost”
10:00 p.m. “Eli Stone”

FRIDAY 8:00 p.m. Drama encores
9:00 p.m. Drama encores
10:00 p.m. “20/20”

SUNDAY (MAR) 7:00 p.m. “America’s Funniest Home Videos”
8:00 p.m. “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition”
9:00 p.m. “Oprah’s Big Give”
10:00 p.m. “Desperate Housewives”

May 4, 2007

SCOOP: 'Lost' moving toward its last? (UPDATED)

UPDATED MAY 7 -- "Lost" has three seasons left, containing 48 total episodes, or just slightly longer than two full regular seasons. The Hollywood Reporter writes Monday that the show will air 16 episodes next season and each of the following two.

Click "Continue" below to see ABC's press release.

ORIGINAL POST MAY 4 -- E! Online is posting some "Lost" scoop.

To wit: ABC will supposedly announce shortly that the show (already renewed for this fall) will run just two more seasons. That would allow the producers to aim at a finale knowing how many episodes they have to unravel their plotlines before it. Then maybe the clues and revelations can be parceled out at a steadier pace, without the kind of time-killing folderol (Castaways in Cages!) we suffered last fall.

Read it all here.

Continue reading "SCOOP: 'Lost' moving toward its last? (UPDATED)" »

March 14, 2007

TV FREEBIES: ‘Lost,’ ‘Jericho,’ ‘Andy Barker’

The home of the $1.99 episode, iTunes is offering some free TV downloads you would actually want.

andybcrop.jpgPlay catch-up: Before they returned from winter hiatus, both “Lost” and “Jericho” offered refresher episodes summarizing what happened last fall. Both recap hours are still free for the grabbing.

Preview: Download the pilot of NBC’s new well-reviewed (including by me) comedy “Andy Barker, P.I.” casting Andy Richter as an accountant/detective who sleuths as if auditioning for “Police Squad!” The show premieres Thursday night at 9:30.

[NBC photo by Mitchell Haaseth.]

February 15, 2007

VERNE GAY: In Over-Heated Praise of "Lost"

Praise the Lord: "Lost" is right back where it should be, and then some. Last night's episode felt like deja-vu-all-over-again: A show that knows what it's about, but has spent the last few months pleasing whatever rabble it feels it’s been forced to please, namely ABC or whiny fans who Just Want Answers. To hell with answers. There are none. That's the whole point of "Lost" (or should be.)

Mysfying...strange...referential...literary...ridiculous...mysterious...incomprehsible (in a good way)..."Lostian." Enough with the hyperbole: There's too much to cover in a short blog entry, so here goes:

First, yes, that was the terrific Irish actress, Fionnghuala Flanagan, who played "Ms. Hawking" (no relation to Stephen, of course) at the jewelry store, and who was blessed with one of the most memorable lines in this memorable series history, and I quote:
"If you don't do those things, Desmond, every one of us is dead, so give me the sodding ring."

Great! It doesn't get better than that, anywhere, on any show. Fans's of Showtime's "Brotherhood" will remember her as Rose Caffee.

Next: Yes, of course this was all based on Ambrose Bierce's (poor Ambrose, who went insane, and also disappeared himself) "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," and of course, you all knew that because you remember that back in the Feb. 8, 2006 episode, entitled "The Long Con," Locke was alphabetizing books, and one of them was authored by Bierce. A big deal for lots of "Lostian" reasons, notwithstanding the fact that the show owes some of its existence to "Twilight Zone," which famously based an episode on said story. Also, the whole idea of "flashbacks" is presumed to be inspired by "Occurrence" too, sending millions of "Lost" fans on a wild goose chase in which they assumed everyone on the island was perhaps seeing their lives flash before their eyes.

And so so much more: The scene in the Widmore office. I tried, dear reader, I tried to read the letters on the painting by Des' head - the one with the polar bear and the upside down Buddha, but alas, failed. I came up with this: "E72AHAM," and probably got some of it wrong. But what the heck. There are no answers. This is "Lost."

Next week's episode? "Stranger in a Strange Land." Now, if I can only find that old copy of Heinlein....

Cusick.jpg
Oh Henry...We missed you, man. We missed you.

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