Category Archives: Characters (and their actors)

Second sneak peek for 6×04 “The Substitute” Why are you on this Island?

Wow, this is a great clip. I think this scene may turn out to be one of the show’s all-time classics.

A bit of it was shown in an earlier promo, but there’s more here.

I think it’s safe to watch even if you are trying to be mostly spoiler-free — it’s more of a tease than a spoiler.

It’s got notLocke telling Sawyer he can answer the question of why he is on the Island — and promising that he can prove it.

This looks like it is going to be an amazing episode!

LOST Sneak Peek 6×04 “The Substitute” with Locke — spoiler

This is a short scene from the next episode, featuring Sideways Locke. It shows the Sideways version of something that happened in one of the most memorable LOST episodes ever. Very exciting!

It’s somewhat spoiler-ish, so don’t watch if you want to stay completely unspoiled. Otherwise, enjoy!

What does it mean to be “claimed”?

Jack: Why would you people want to kill Sayid?

Dogen: We believe he has been (says something in Japanese).

Lennon: Closest translation is “claimed.”

Jack: Claimed. By what?

Dogen: There’s a darkness growing in him. And once it reaches his heart, everything your friend once was will be gone.

Jack: How can you be sure?

Dogen: Because it happened to your sister

If Claire was claimed, and Sayid is in the process of being claimed, then how do we explain Locke and notLocke? Claire and Sayid appear to have one body each, but Locke/notLocke have two.

If, say, notLocke is the claimed version of Locke, then who or what was the body in the box in the Season 5 finale? Why does Locke get an extra body, when no one else does? Is it because Locke really is, as he had long hoped, special? Or is it that the transformation/doubling of Locke was something different from the transformation of Claire and (potentially) Sayid?

Oh, Sawyer

Sawyer remembering Juliet in 6x03 What Kate Does

Sawyer remembering Juliet

My favorite scene in “What Kate Does” was when Sawyer said it was his fault that Juliet died — “I made her stay on this Island because I didn’t want to be alone.”

Josh Holloway was completely convincing and very moving in this scene. It reminded me that it was his acting skill, in large part, that had made the Sawyer-Juliet love story the best love story of the show.

Jorge Garcia does a podcast based on the script

Beth (Sidekick22) and Jorge Garcia (Hurley)

Beth (Sidekick22) and Jorge Garcia (Hurley)

This is funny. Jorge Garcia (Hurley) and his girlfriend Beth (Bethany James Leigh Shady, aka Sidekick22) made a podcast last summer based on their reading of the script for “LA X.”

They were trying to figure out what was going on, and they kept on saying things like “I don’t get it, I don’t get it.” “Wait, what?” Hah.

This is the first podcast in a series. You can listen to it here: Jorge Garcia podcasts 6×01-02.

For future installments, take a look at the blog they set up just to distribute the podcast: Geronimo Jack’s Beard.

Also check out Beth’s personal blog, and if you haven’t seen it already, Jorge’s.

Via LOSTblog.

Photo of Beth and Jorge by Michael O’Donnell, from Geronimo Jack’s Beard

LOST-Themed Bud Light commericials

These were shown during the Super Bowl.

This one has Dr. Chang:

This one is a take-off on Season 1:

Oedipus LOST — a theory about Jacob

Oedipus Rex

Getting in one last theory right under the wire before the new season begins …

We know that Jacob brought the LOSTies to the Island, and before that, he brought the Black Rock ship, and before that, he brought other people — the ones who came, fought, destroyed, and corrupted, in the words of the Man in Black.

The big question, of course, is why is Jacob bringing all these people to the Island?

One thing we know about the LOSTies is that, as a group, they have an extraordinary number of Daddy issues.

What if that were actually the reason that Jacob chose them?

And if that were the case, then why?

Suppose that Jacob himself has Daddy issues. Suppose, also, that Jacob is on the Island not because he wants to be, but because he has to be. There’s a hint of that, I think, in Jacob’s oddly impassive reaction to the Man in Black when the MiB said he wanted to kill him.

Combine the two ideas: Jacob having his own Daddy issues, and Jacob being stuck on the Island for centuries against his will. That suggests some sort of crime and punishment, with the Island being a place of exile, a prison. Because of the Island’s strange time-warping properties, Jacob’s sentence spans far more than a normal single lifetime.

Such a long sentence implies there must have been a horrible crime. And the worst crime that exists that involves Daddy issues would be patricide. Maybe, like Oedipus Rex, Jacob — way back in his original life, eons ago — had killed his father.

And now he is stuck, seemingly forever, on an Island prison. Maybe there is only one way for him to end his sentence — by restoring some balance to the world by doing something that would counteract his terrible crime. Only in that way could he atone and be forgiven.

Maybe Jacob’s task is to heal people who have been harmed by terrible rifts with their fathers. More precisely, maybe he is trying to show them how to heal themselves. Success in this task would be the only thing that could release him from his centuries-long sentence.

Perhaps he has tried, and failed, with all the previous groups he brought to the Island — which is what was frustrating the Man in Black. But the current LOSTies do seem to be responding to Jacob’s guidance, and many of then have, while on the Island, come to terms with their Daddy issues and grown beyond them.

Two possible holes in the theory: (1) If the Island is a prison, how did Jacob get off so many times? and (2) What is the role of the Man in Black?

Perhaps Jacob was able to leave only when certain conditions were right, and only for the purpose of choosing people to bring back. As for the second question, maybe the MiB was a participant in, or at least an accessory to Jacob’s crime. Since the MiB does not believe that Jacob will ever be successful in his task, maybe the MiB sees killing Jacob as the only way to bring his own long exile to a close.

And perhaps Jacob could not succeed in his task of guiding enough people beyond the Daddy issues which had warped their lives. At the end of “The Incident,” when Jacob told Ben that he had a choice — he could choose to listen to notLocke, or he could choose to walk away –Ben was so caught up in his Daddy issues, projecting onto Jacob all the rejection he had felt from his own father, that he could not make the right choice. Ben, at that moment, could not get past his Daddy issues, and for Jacob, that meant both failure, in his task as a guide, and death.

Picture of Oedipus Rex from an 1896 production, via Wikipedia

(edited 1/31/10)

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