Showing posts with label Hurley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hurley. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

I’ve Got Your Number: The Cultural Truth of Hurley in Lost by Pearson Moore



He was cursed and crazy, so out of touch with reality that an imaginary man became his best friend, and an insane man with a vocabulary of six words was his greatest intellectual inspiration. His unearned wealth could not prevent the misfortune that visited all who came into his influence. His father left him, his grandfather died at the lottery press conference, his best friend on the Island was drowned, his girlfriend was murdered. Even the woman who interviewed him was smashed to dust in a meteor strike. He was artless, witless, helpless, hopeless.

In an Island world that prized the strange symmetries of mirror reflection, he provided the most interesting and useful insights into human capacities for harmony. His mirror revealed a reality replete with good fortune, charity, and good will. “I’m the luckiest man alive,” he said, a smile brightening his cheerful face.

“Oh, the ‘sideways world’,” some say, scoffing. “Purgatory.” No. Not purgatory, but reality. In the dark days of the Smoke Monster, his golf tournament brought sunshine. In the most memorable scene of Season Three, he proved bad luck is a state of mind. And in the last minutes of the series, his humanity and clarity of vision were honoured with the Island’s most sacred trust. The mirror revealed a man with greater sanity than any of us possess, a man so blessed that he was entrusted with the very future of humankind. For our sake, for our grandfathers’ and girlfriends’ and children’s sake, we must move beyond the curses and craziness of our lives and adopt instead the peaceful ways, the sane and blessed symmetries of this gentle man, Hugo Reyes.


The First Curse



Admittance to the pantheon of the Island had one strict requirement, and Hurley paid the requisite dues even before reaching his teen years. His mother could be saint or sinner, his youth could see privilege or poverty, but in order to find his way to the Island, his father had to be a scoundrel. Jack’s father was an alcoholic, Kate’s father was a low-life bum, and Locke’s father was a swindler. Hurley, the man who would inherit the throne of Jacob, was given the worst kind of father. David Reyes said he wanted to go fishing, said he would help his son repair the Camaro, said his son mattered, but then revealed in his actions that everything he said was a lie. Hurley’s only solace, when his father abandoned him, was the chocolate bar he held in his hands.

How does a boy react when the only significant person in his life tells him that he does not matter? Hurley took the words to heart. He had no value to others, to himself, to anything of importance. His only contribution to the world would be to serve as a curse. As he grew into adulthood he returned to the only sources of happiness he knew: food and friends.

His mother mattered to him. His friends were important. Since his enjoyment of life was of no consequence, having a positive influence on the happiness of others came to bear increasing degrees of significance to him. Even if he was worthless, perhaps he could leave a positive mark in the world, however slight, by making his friends’ comfort and joy his primary aim. It was a laudable and charitable disposition, though thankless in many ways. While his friends benefitted immeasurably from his selfless commitment to their good cheer, he remained morose, convinced he was a blight. When a deck collapsed under his weight, killing two people, he lost any ability to deal with reality.

Six-Fold Curse



The six Valenzetti coefficients, broadcast on a continuous loop by the Dharma Initiative radio station, drove Leonard Simms insane. The reaction could have been worse; Leonard’s partner at the Navy listening post, Sam Toomey, took his own life to end the curse of the numbers. When Hurley used the numbers to win the Mega Lotto Jackpot his troubles should have disappeared. Instead, he experienced even greater degrees of misery. His grandfather died, the house he purchased for his mother burned, the man cleaning his lawyer’s office windows fell to his death. Misfortune followed everyone around Hurley.

The curse did not originate with Hurley. The Valenzetti Equation was a product of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. It was humankind’s ultimate curse, defining the number of years until the human race annihilated itself, “whether through nuclear fire, chemical and biological warfare, conventional warfare, pandemic, overpopulation.”

Valenzetti is referenced only once in LOST, in the lower left corner of the Swan Station blast door map, where a cryptic notation indicates “low relevance to Valenzetti-related research activity.” But without an understanding of the Valenzetti Equation, the final hour of LOST constitutes the culmination of a simple adventure story. On the other hand, with the grand equation in hand, we discover its solution, and we understand the thesis of LOST. I will have more to say about the Valenzetti Equation at the end of this essay.

The numbers permeated the series, from Jack’s seat number (twenty-three) in Episode 1.01 to Rousseua’s map to the Swan Station serial number to Hurley’s investiture as Protector. Episodes that did not feature references overt or sublime to the six famous integers were unusual. Perhaps there were a handful of such episodes in which writers absent-mindedly forgot to place at least one easily-recognised allusion. It didn’t matter; bloggers and analysts made up the references if they were lacking.

The numbers surrounded Hurley, which he first understood as a curse. Whether scourge or benefit, the numbers were connected to Hurley as they were to no one else, and he would have to learn to walk his path with them or in spite of them. More than any other element of the LOST mythology, the numbers were imbued with a heavy sense of inevitability. Because the strongest mythological undercurrents of the series pointed toward the numbers, we knew subconsciously that Hurley would be involved at the highest levels of the final resolution. The fact that Jacob instructed Hurley to bring Jack to the lighthouse (Episode 6.05) was no accident, and neither was it a direct result of Hurley’s ability to speak with the dead. Jacob knew he had to save Jack and Hurley from the Man in Black’s ravaging of the Temple because these two Candidates were destined to become Protectors. Far from acting as a curse, the number eight carved into the cave ceiling next to Hurley’s name proved to be both his salvation and his destiny.

Golf Together or...



Hurley thought himself cursed. If asked, he would almost certainly have said he was not happy. Yet he brought more happiness into the lives of his fellow survivors than anyone else on the Island. Episode Nine’s golf game was certainly the most memorable diversion of Season One, organised at Hurley’s insistence when he realised everyone was becoming unnecessarily stressed by the strange events in the jungle.

Whether he was dispensing smiles to cheer up depressed survivors, giving Jin a thumbs up when he rose in the morning, organising golf games, or distributing food from the Dharma pantry, Hurley was the supreme instigator of almost every movement toward what my generation called peace, love, and togetherness.

Perhaps we occasionally saw him as the comic, or the buffoon—the humorous relief in otherwise cheerless situations. Perhaps we considered the golf game and later events as merely the diversions that everyone at the time must have understood them to be. But Hurley’s leadership in the social realm had far greater consequences than a mere afternoon’s entertainment. Live together, die alone, Jack was wont to say. Yet Jack became a dividing point, not a centre of attraction or reconciliation. Hurley liked just about everyone, and everybody loved Hurley. Even in the most trying situation, Hurley endeavoured to bring people together. Jack had an intellectual awareness of his famous motto. Hurley carried the motto in his heart, lived by its words, and practiced them in almost every phrase he uttered and every action he took. The successful resolution of the great conflict—the battle with the Smoke Monster—was more a result of Hurley’s cheerful team building than Jack’s epiphany and rise to leadership.

Libby



Libby was not only Hurley’s lover, but more importantly, she was antagonist to Dave, Hurley’s imaginary friend. While Dave was busy trying to get Hurley to stuff food in his mouth or throw himself off a cliff, Libby urged Hurley to liberate himself from addictions, and especially his addiction to food. She never told him what to do or how to do it, but she became the most positive force in his life.

Libby and Hurley had both been treated at the Santa Rose Mental Health Institute. They became exemplars of the topsy-turvy nature of the LOST world. We accept the notion that “crazy people” are those poor souls who are incapable of living normal, healthy lives. Yet these two former crazy people carried on a romance that was marked by greater sanity than any other relationship on the Island. While Sun and Jin were cheating on each other and Kate was trying to arrange her schedule so she could sleep with Jack one night and Sawyer the next, Libby and Hurley were just two young people in love. More than that, they appreciated each other, helped each other, and gained strength from each other.

Taken together, Libby and Hurley made an important statement about mental health. The socially accepted definition of sanity, they argued, has to change. Our attitudes about sanity and insanity need adjustment. I am among those who feel Libby and Hurley had it right. Our common need to amend the definition of sanity is something that goes far beyond the borders of a television series.

A Devout Meditation



Adolf Eichmann, Nazi criminal, at his trial in Jerusalem, 1961

Thomas Merton, The mid-twentieth century spiritual writer, revealed to us the insidious danger of widely-held attitudes toward sanity in his short essay “A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann.” Eichmann was one of the leading organisers of Hitler’s “final solution”—the genocidal extermination of the Jewish race throughout the world. Psychologists examined Eichmann and found him sane, making him eligible to stand trial for his crimes. This is what Merton had to say about the determination of Eichmann’s sanity:

“One of the most disturbing facts that came out in the Eichmann trial was that a psychiatrist examined him and pronounced him perfectly sane. I do not doubt it all, and that is precisely why I find it disturbing.

“If all the Nazis had been psychotics, as some of their leaders probably were, their appalling cruelty would have been in some sense easier to understand. It is much worse to consider this calm, "well-balanced," unperturbed official conscientiously going about his desk work, his administrative job which happened to be the supervision of mass murder. He was thoughtful, orderly, unimaginative. He had a profound respect for system, for law and order....

“The sanity of Eichmann is disturbing. We equate sanity with a sense of justice, with humaneness, with prudence, with the capacity to love and understand other people. We rely on the sane people of the world to preserve it from barbarism, madness, destruction. And now it begins to dawn on us that it is precisely the sane ones who are the most dangerous.”

Throughout the six-year run of LOST we saw countless instances of “sane” people pointing guns at each other, even when there was no apparent reason to be pointing a gun. Jack’s extreme state after having survived the opening of the hatch was illustrated perfectly during the scene in which he chased the fleeing Desmond through the jungle, finally stopping him at the point of his pistol. Desmond was no longer a threat to anyone, he merely wished to leave. Somehow the “sanity” of the moment had convinced Jack of the appropriateness of threatening to shoot an innocent, unarmed man who was fleeing a situation that frightened him.

I make no argument here regarding the merits or practicality of the application of deadly force. Certainly there were other instances of “sanity” that we ought to find objectionable and cause for re-evaluation. One such instance was the Season Three move by the Others to kidnap all the female 815 survivors of childbearing age. Hurley, never constrained to accept other people’s definition of sanity, decided this demonstration of coordinated sanity could not stand. He fired up the rusting Dharma van and mowed down the men who had come to abduct his friends.

The Road to Shambala



If “Tricia Tanaka Is Dead” is not among your top ten LOST episodes I recommend you re-evaluate your ranking. This gem from the mid-point of LOST not only stands as the turning point in the show’s mythology, but it contains the most delightful scene in the entire series.

Until this episode, Hurley was convinced the numbers were cursed, he was cursed, and he could never be anything more than a source of bad luck to anyone interacting with him. A three-minute ride in a twenty-year-old Dharma van turned Hurley’s life around and gave every viewer-participant around the world reason to express hope for the survivors of Flight 815.

“You make your own luck” became Hurley’s new watch words after this amazing ride. The attitude seems contrary to the relentless, destiny-driven atmosphere of LOST. When Hurley popped the clutch and the engine turned over we became witness not only to Hurley’s makeover, but to a completely new page in the book of LOST mythology, breaking philosophical ground that had not yet been opened to our curious explorations.

Particularly in the case of the numbers and Hurley, the idea of free will seemed long buried, the decision having been reached almost with the pilot episode that free will was an illusion. Later episodes hammered away at the idea of inevitable destiny. “Dead is Dead,” “What’s Done Is Done,” and other pronouncements were delivered episode after episode, cementing in our minds the idea that some indomitable force of nature was driving the survivors toward an event of monumental importance that could not be delayed or rerouted or denied.

Hurley’s van ride was the spectacular precursor to Faraday’s Boulder of Season Five and Jack’s acceptance of the yoke of Protectorship at the end of Season Six. Faraday’s Boulder—the idea that a big enough splash in the currents of time could actually change history—was conditional on the idea that human beings are the variables in the flow of spacetime. “What’s Done Is Done” is not an absolute, Faraday said, because human beings could change their behaviours. Sawyer groaned that Faraday’s plan hadn’t worked, since it did not bring Juliet back to life and they were still stuck on the Island. In a certain sense, Sawyer was correct. The placement of the nuclear device atop the electromagnetic leak had not created a new stream in time as Faraday predicted. But it did work in the way circumstances required, catapulting all of them thirty years back to the future so that Jack and Kate could kill the Smoke Monster.

The tragedy of Juliet’s death might have been avoided, had anyone been listening to Hurley. The survivors didn’t need a Ph.D. in theoretical physics to tell them human beings have free will. “You make your own luck, dude,” Hurley would have told them. They could have slain the Smoke Monster two years earlier—and all of them could have taken a Dharma van on the road to Shambala.

The Essential Hurley and the Valenzetti Equation



An illustration from Chapter Three of “LOST Humanity” by Pearson Moore

I have not delved into the most important aspects of Hurley’s character in this short essay. Hurley and the numbers are so important, so central to the thesis of LOST, that they cannot be adequately covered in such a short article, nor even in a relatively long article. In fact, the bulk of a ninety-thousand word book was required to fully address the crucial importance of the numbers. I am right now in the midst of preparing the book for publication.

If we wish to move beyond LOST as adventure story, we need to understand Hurley’s idea of free will. We need to make sense of Jack and Locke’s struggle over science and faith. Most of all, we need to see how the numbers fit into the grand scheme. These ideas are not disconnected elements of a poorly planned mythology. They are fully integrated into the grand story. More importantly, the great ideas of LOST are integrated into the characters, in ways that no other television series I am aware of has been able to achieve.

I spent last summer and my two-month break from essays firming up a new approach to LOST. Over the summer I discovered insights into mythology and characters that reconciled so many disparate and apparently unrelated themes I was surprised no one had stumbled upon the idea. The possibility of such a new discovery seems slim, but hiding ideas in plain sight of everyone is not new to LOST. I am aware of not a single LOST commentator who guessed the sideways world was a depiction of the afterlife or heaven or purgatory. But the evidence was before us for many months, every week , awaiting our understanding.

I will provide a detailed discussion of the Valenzetti Equation, and Hurley will also receive his due, but you will have to wait a few weeks. In the meantime, I recommend a short ride down a steep hill, Hurley at the steering wheel, and Three Dog Night blasting on the 8-Track.

Namaste.

PM
St. Valentine’s Day, 2011

Friday, October 15, 2010

Hurley's Backpack and Underwear!

Update: 18:00 For all of you asking about the underwear here is the photo :)



Thanks to Christian for the following.

Hey I won Hurleys S2 backpack in the LOST auction. Inside I found some rope and pair of underwear?> Weird?

Thought people might like the pics. Maybe someone online recognizes the rope from a scene or can spot it in the show. Was hoping to find it's origin


Wednesday, August 25, 2010

LOST - Season 6 - DVD - Deleted Scene - Fatalities

Thanks to Paweł for the heads up.

From "Fatalities" deleted scene on Lost Season 6 DVD Bonus Features

Monday, August 2, 2010

LOST Auction Catalog Reveals New Information About Hurley’s Afterlife

Thanks to SL-Lost for the the heads up.

These are the same as the photos we posted in the Spoiler Section back in Feb 2010.

The LOST Auction catalog (available at ProfilesinHistory.com) contains details about a deleted scene from the episode “Everybody Loves Hugo“. This missing scene, which might be included on the Season 6 DVDs, reveals that in the afterlife Hurley wins the lottery by playing the serial numbers of a dollar bill he finds on the street. As you can see on the pictures below, the numbers are different from THE Numbers



Source: SL-LOST
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Monday, July 5, 2010

Lost's 11-minute Hurley/Ben epilogue will be called ...

Update: 5th July It seems there will be 2 additional Lost on Locations on the Blu-Ray release.

00:03:22:02 THE SUBSTITUTE (LOST ON LOCATION)
00:04:36:11 HAPPILY EVER AFTER (LOST ON LOCATION)

Update: 28th June Here are some details about DVD/Blu-Ray Additional Materials.

There will be 4 Episodes that feature in the Lost on Location section. (Numbers below are run-times)

00:06:00:20 LA X
00:02:55:06 RECON
00:04:27:00 AB AETERNO
00:05:59:11 THE CANDIDATE

Update: 23rd June Some more snippets about the Full Series Collection

Finally, most of us can't wait for the "new chapter" of Lost -- 12 minutes of never-before-seen footage from Lindelof and Cuse. (Note: This is also available on the Season 6 set.) I was treated to one minute of this. I begged to see more, but no dice.

I don't want to reveal too many spoilers, and there are some spoilers from that 60 seconds, including the "when" and "where." But I will tell you the clip I saw featured Michael Emerson and "Dharma peas." Draw your own conclusions.

Full Article Here

......"The New Man in Charge"

PopWrap has learned that is the title of the Darlton-produced feature starring Jorge Garcia & Michael Emerson, which will be included on both the season six and complete collection Lost DVD's out in August.

For more on this story, click here

Season 6 - Blu-Ray
Season 6 - DVD

Complete Collection
DVD Release - USA (38 Disks)
Blu-Ray - USA (36 Disks)
DVD - UK (38 Disks)
DVD - Canada
Blu-Ray - Canada

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Details on the Lost Series Finale Extra DVD/Blu-Ray Footage

We just caught up with the island's awesome new "No. 1" at the Monte Carlo Television Festival in, you guessed it, Monte Carlo, and here's what he dished:

"It will address some of the issues, like the food drops, and it will deal with what happened on the island after Hurley took over and how he handled things," Garcia reveals of the DVD bonus feature he shot. "It will give you a taste of what took place after Hurley took over as the new number one. There's a little epilogue thing going on with the DVD."

That little epilogue will be available to fans when Lost: The Complete Collection is released on DVD and Blu-ray August 24.

Blu-Ray
DVD

Inside sources also told me that Walt (Malcolm David Kelley) will be shown in the bonus material. "We'll find out what happens to Walt," says the insider. But when asked who else he worked with, Jorge replied coyly: "There are other people in it, but I'm not going to tell you who." Hmmm!

Source: E!Online

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Season 6 DVD Will Have Epilogue of Ben and Hurley on Island

UPDATE: The video of Emerson's interview where he confirms this information is posted on the Media Mentions section of the site for those that want to check it out.

UPDATE: As many fans have pointed out, this epilogue will be available on the COMPLETE COLLECTION not just the Season 6 DVD.

So for those wondering what happened with Ben and Hurley after the Ajira plane takes off, well you are in luck! Apparently there are an additional 12-14 minutes that will be an "epilogue" that will be included on the Season 6 DVD set.

Of course this is a part of ABC's way of making some more money, but at least there is more footage to see. Also some are speculating this is where we will see Walt.

Here is the story from E! Online:

One more reason to love Michael Emerson: He just spilled the goods on an amazing surprise for any Lost fan planning to buy the final, sixth-season DVD. (And trust me, now all of you will be buying it.)

There will be more Lost. There is more to the story, and we will get to see it! Praise Jacob! Or should we say…Hurley?!

“For those people that want to pony up and buy the complete Lost series, there is a bonus feature,” Michael just told our Kevin Pereira of Attack of the Show!, which airs tonight at 7 on E!’s brother network G4. “Which is um, you could call it an epilogue. A lost scene. It’s a lot; it’s 12 or 14 minutes that opens a window onto that gap of unknown time between Hurley (Jorge Garcia) becoming number one and the end of the series.”

Full Story: E! Online
Posted By: The ODI

Thursday, April 29, 2010

'Lost' Collector's Vintage Prints of Final Six


Update: 29th April The site should be open very shortly for people to purchase.

Order Here

Thanks to Andie for the heads up.

Each print costs $49.99, or you can buy the complete collection of six for $249.99. Set your reminders now: The prints will go on sale Thursday, April 29 at 9AM PT at Each print costs $49.99, or you can buy the complete collection of six for $249.99. Set your reminders now: The prints will go on sale Thursday, April 29 at 9AM PT at www.officialLostphotos.com ... and we don't expect them to last long." ... and we don't expect them to last long.



Source: Read Full Article @ AOL

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Episode 6x11/12 - Suddenly Everything Has Changed (Happily Ever After / Everybody Loves Hugo) - By Anna

NOTE: These were initially posted a couple of days ago, but they seemed to cause some glitch on the site because of the code used. So we had to remove them, but they are back! So enjoy the double recap from Anna.

Dear Readers: In the interest playing catch up, I have combined my take on “Happily Ever After” and “Everybody Loves Hugo” together into this single article. Thanks so much for everyone who has been asking about the recaps. I hope once you read this you will find it worth your time as well as the wait. By the way, since it’s a double-episode article, it’s a LONG one, so grab a glass of your favorite Dharma beverage, hunker down, and enjoy!

INTRO: The Gold in the Mountain of Our Madness

In what would now appear to have overtaken “Ab Aeterno” as the best episode of season 6 thus far, , “Happily Ever After”, took a heady turn as the story of Desmond Hume was finally continued. It’s been a long wait, as the last we saw of poor Desmond, he was in the hospital after having been shot by Ben back in the season 5 episode, “The Variable”.

“Happily Ever After” was written by Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, and they really outdid themselves with this one. In a season that has been heavily tinged with the concept of faith and rife with religious references, science-fiction fans finally got their payoff with what can be seen as a companion piece to both “Flashes Before Your Eyes” and “The Constant”.

There was very little time spent on the Island in this installment, as once again Desmond’s special consciousness-jumping abilities were at play here, and just as in the past episodes mentioned, we had a bit of flashing to and fro happening for most of the hour. It really felt like an episode from one of the earlier seasons of LOST as well; there was no Jacob and no Man in Black to worry about. However, the shocks came fast and emotions ran high as at last so many of our questions in regards to Timeline-X and its relationship to the Regular Time-line were given a new depth and an interesting hint of clarification.

(Please note: From this point on, in order to save some time, “Time-line X” will be shortened to “TLX”, and the “Regular Island Time-line” will be denoted with “RTL”.)




Waitin' for a Superman

Poor Desmond. I mean, we all knew the Island wasn’t finished with him, and Charles Widmore made sure that was indeed going to play out. At some point Widmore had him kidnapped from the hospital, drugged, code-named “The Package”, and given a submarine ride to the Island. Of course I think I too would become a bit violent if the first thing I woke up to after that was Zoe. Not to mention, that enraged lip quiver Desmond showed as Widmore broke the news that they were back on the Island was COMPLETELY EPIC and deserves an Emmy in and of itself. Widmore also deserved that hearty beating Des gave him before being subdued by Charles’ ultra-lame band of gun-toting goons.


We soon learned that ol’ Charles had been preparing some type of experiment, and Desmond was about to be the main test subject. He explained to Jin that Mr. Hume was the only person on earth that he knew of who had survived a “catastrophic electromagnetic event”, and he needed to ensure that wasn’t just some fluke. Something larger is definitely in the works here; if we remember Zoe needed some information from Jin in regards to the pockets of electromagnetic activity around the Island. At this point, without more information, the only thing that I can think of is that Widmore is perhaps creating some type of a trap, or even has devised a way to kill the Man in Black. I could almost see Desmond as the bait that could lead MIB to his demise, serving as Widmore’s “Shaggy” in a plan right out of the ol’ “Scooby-Doo” playbook.


However, I still do not entirely believe that Widmore is on Team Jacob, either. I think Widmore will always be on Team Widmore, and could just as easily be planning to use Desmond’s ability for his own selfish reasons; i.e. ultimate control of the Island.

One thing I feel the need to ask here is how Widmore knew of Desmond’s talent for surviving catastrophic electromagnetic events, such as the Swan Hatch implosion. My only guess here is Ms. Hawking. She was the one who was right in place and time at that jewelry store during Desmond’s first flash backwards through time. More on her own special “talent” in a bit…


Redneck School of Technology

The last time Widmore assembled a team for “security” on the Island, he put together a most frightening group of mercenaries head up by the beast, Martin Keamy. This time, he brought a horrifying team of….scientists. No wonder they are so very un-threatening when they brandished firearms. This group was definitely not very adept at working under pressure, either, as Widmore decided to move up the timetable on their regularly scheduled plan of events and sent them into a tizzy.


They also don’t seem to be very bright, or at least they’re also horrible at safety protocols. One doofus even flipped the switch while another one of his colleagues was inside Widmore’s Electromagnetic Funhouse, resulting in one very crispy scientist. I was totally expecting to see Brundle-Fly come out of that box at first, but alas, no such luck. Everyone seemed wrecked by what had happened except for Widmore, who remained cold and focused on the overall task at hand. Removing Original Recipe Dead Guy from the fryer right in front of Desmond did wonders for making sure he kept calm and had no worries at all when he was then strapped to a chair and then locked inside, alone.


But not before Widmore gave Desmond a little speech about the sacrifices he has had to make in his efforts to “protect” the Island, and whatever is at stake if the MIB is not stopped from leaving it. He lost his son, the love and respect of his daughter, and the chance to know his grandson. He did leave out the part about all the deaths he is responsible for, and the fact that he also made the sacrifice of their lives. Charles then told Desmond he was going to ask for him to also make a sacrifice, and once again made it clear that some heavy stuff is going to go down if Des does not comply with this request when the time comes.


Feeling Yourself Disintegrate

So much went through my mind during this quick sequence. When I first saw that chair, I immediately figured they were somehow trying to summon Jacob, or force him to materialize in some way. I loved how fast Desmond was able to bust free from it though, making me think again that Team Widmore should have probably brought a more recently-made chair instead of using one that had been dry-rotting in the Hydra station for the last couple of decades. Just remember, no metal objects!


The actual machine reminded me of the photos I have seen of the Large Hadron Collider. The effects in this scene were pretty decent, even as Desmond looked like he was in horrible pain as he was bombarded with deadly amounts of energy. The thought came to my mind that he had literally become The Golden Child at that point; the unlikely savior, the “Fix It Man” for all that had gone wrong on the Island so far. How ironic for a man who once caused the crash of Flight 815 and who then completely abandoned the idea that the work he was doing on the Island pushing that Hatch button was ever helping to somehow “save the world”.


I Was Zapped by the Lucky Super Rainbow

It was pretty obvious that Desmond was going to have another one of his consciousness time-trips; however I did not expect him to end up in his X-Head. We surfaced in TLX just as Desmond was staring at his reflection, as he seemed to be “coming to” right after Flight 815 had landed in LA. At baggage claim he briefly reunited with Claire-X, a woman whose life he had saved back in season three, once from drowning and once from a lightning storm. Desmond’s RTL knowledge bled through a little as he correctly guessed her expected child would be a boy, and then proceeded to reunite with George-X, as in Minkowski from Widmore’s freighter crew. We remember him as the first man Desmond met who had also fallen victim to the electromagnetic time-crazies, and who later died as a result of not having a constant for his mind to ground itself with.


Come to find out, George was taking on a very Mathew Abaddon-like role as Desmond’s driver and employee of Widmore-X. How wild it was to find out that not only was Desmond working for Widmore in this iteration, but that they also shared a kinship not unlike father and son? Once again Charles’ office was ripe with nods and winks to the Island, from the sailboat model Desmond was seen staring at, to the lovely painting of scales with one black stone and one white stone on opposing sides just like the scales seen in the MIB’s cliff-wall cave. (Yes, I do believe that cave was MIB’s abode and not Jacob’s.)

Boy, Widmore laid it on THICK for our man, Des, too. Charles gave him a hug, and mentioned how Des was his top employee, blessed for not having the attachments that root one to a place such as a family. He even went so far as to then toast to Mr. Hume’s “indispensability” as Number One with a healthy shot of his prized MacCutcheon whiskey, something in the RTL Widmore had teased Desmond with as being too good for a such a failure of a man. I got the feeling that Widmore-X was in some way repaying Desmond for his service, or indispensability in the RTL in a very "Through the Looking (Whiskey) Glass" sort of way. In fact, the entire scene practically mirrored the one we had been given in season three’s “Flashes Before Your Eyes”.


It was almost too perfect, this new relationship between Desmond and the father of his bride to be, Penelope. Except in TLX, darling Penelope was completely unknown to Des. Oh well, I suppose a person can only be close to one member of the Widmore family at a time on LOST.


Buggin’

One odd thing that must be mentioned is that in the season premiere LA X, Desmond was seen on Flight 815 wearing a wedding ring. However, in this episode, Desmond-X did not have one on at all and several references were made to the fact that he was single.

Is this further evidence that the time-line(s) are still in the process of being altered? Could it be like all of the other bizarre items that have moved, or have been reversed, or have disappeared altogether throughout the show since the very beginning; some kind of butterfly-effect that alludes to the repercussions of altering the past, whether it be one time-line or the other? Is this going to somehow relate to what Daniel later talks about in this episode; about how they somehow changed things by setting off Jughead?

And finally, are the actions of our characters, namely Desmond, in one or even both time-lines still changing things? I do hope this is one mystery that is not dropped into the Ether of the Unsolved on LOST. Those re-arranging staircase photo frames from Miles’ ghost-busting flashback episode still bug me to this day!


Unconsciously Screamin'

Arguably the biggest reveal of the season so far, besides Richard Alpert’s history and the “cork = Island” metaphor, came through the scene in “Jax” Bar (complete with a Kangaroo logo) where Charlie challenged Desmond about his supposedly “happy” life. We then discovered that back on Flight 815, Charlie, in the bathroom, with the heroin, was not at all trying to commit suicide. He just got a wee bit paranoid at the sight of that Marshall with Kate, and decided to swallow his baggie right as the airplane hit turbulence. Once again the rock god went down via asphyxiation; down deep and into near-death unconsciousness.

During his time down under, Charlie experienced a vision of sorts. He saw a gorgeous blonde with whom he shared “consciousness-altering love”. I suppose it is safe to guess this person was Claire. But he didn’t just see that they were in love, and always had been as if it was pre-destined. He truly felt it.


Charlie somehow knew that there was a Greater Truth to what he had seen when he was knocked out, as if fate itself struck him in the face from his own knuckles where it was once written. Mr. Pace saw the mirror reality, the Real Time-Line, and after that moment every part of his being then wrote off the TLX he was living in as something unworthy of his efforts. This would explain his behavior from the moment he woke up and told Jack he should have let him die, to his death-wish Frogger-game through heavy traffic when Desmond arrived to pick him up from the police station.

Finally, we now know for sure the connection between the RTL and TLX, and that for some of our characters it is actually seeping through to the point where they are starting to remember. Even better, Love seems to be a main catalyst. The effects this will have on the RTL characters is yet to be seen. But it should get quite interesting if they too begin to realize there are additional versions of themselves in a timeline that now appears as if it was never meant to be.


Chrome Plated Suicide

On the way to the engagement where Charlie was scheduled to play with Widmore’s musically-gifted son, he and Desmond had a lovely discussion about choice. So many times we have seen this in LOST, as the show seems to have built itself upon the foundation of the entire Fate Vs. Free Will debate from philosophy. However, Charlie really wanted Desmond to understand what he had been trying to tell him in regards to their current state of reality, and pulled a bit of a “Jacob” in this scene. He told Desmond he has a choice, and then proceeded to give him a little push…by grabbing the steering wheel and heading right into the nearby marina (where RTL Desmond had been shot by Ben), car and all.


It is in this scene where Desmond (once again) tried to rescue Charlie from drowning that his memory of the RTL is finally sparked. All it took was Charlie’s hand to the car window and BUH-BLAM Desmond saw the “Not Penny’s Boat” message written when our favorite bassist died in season three’s “Through the Looking Glass”. Desmond was of course extremely shaken by this sudden flash of a memory that was from somewhere else. Charlie’s plan to wake Desmond up and open his eyes to the reality he was in completely worked.

On a quick side-note, I believe the one of the overall themes in LOST is not “Fate Versus Free Will”, but rather it should be seen as “Fate AND Free Will”. Again, we need both opposites to form the Whole, just as I have mentioned before that people are always going to have a little bit of both “Good” and “Bad” in them. The message of LOST is not really just a focus on opposites, but it shows us how they are reconciled within a person, within each of us throughout our lives. For this is how the Universe rolls.

It’s all one big Donkey Wheel of Yin and Yang, baby!


The Abandoned Hospital Ship


Of course, a local car accident would not be complete without a trip to St. Sebastian’s Hospital. Desmond’s second and more intense set of flashes to the RTL came from a ride through a magnetic scanner in the form of an MRI machine. This is the point where he saw Penny, and most likely felt their love just as Charlie experienced his relationship with Claire when he was unconscious.

Desmond’s abilities come from exposure to that original “catastrophic” Swan Hatch implosion, so it makes sense that further bombardment with electromagnetism would cue even more memories. I loved how the MRI technician gave him a BUTTON to push in case of panic, which he used with a quickness and then high-tailed it out of there to find Charlie. Desmond was totally spooked, and he needed to know for sure that what he was seeing had some grounding in some kind of reality, even if it wasn’t the one he was currently living in. And since Mr. Pace and his death-defying underwater vehicle stunt was the initial catalyst, Desmond went on a mission to track him down. Well, for that reason and for the fact that Desmond thought Charlie had tried to kill him.


As Desmond stood at the nurse’s desk and asked about Charlie’s whereabouts I turned to my other half and said, “I bet we’ll see a Jack cameo…”, but before I could finish the sentence, out he walked right on cue into the scene. Unfortunately Jack couldn’t help Desmond on his Pace-hunt, but it was nice that they ran into each other again, and I’m sure it won’t be the last time in TLX they meet, either. How many lives have these two bruthas now met each other in, anyway?


Do You Realize??

Cue a hospital-gowned and crazy-eyed Charlie, who dashed and darted through the hallways yelling, “None of this matters! None of this matters!” as the staff, and Desmond, chased behind him. Hysterical!


When Desmond finally cornered him, Charlie admitted he was trying to show Desmond something. Desmond demanded to see Charlie’s hands. With a sly grin Charlie asked Des, “You felt it, didn’t you?”, and then refused to accompany him to the concert that he was scheduled to play. Charlie then repeated the mantra once more at Des, “THIS doesn’t matter. None of this matters! All that matters is that WE FELT IT.” Desmond was stunned with that deer-in-headlights type of expression, and as Charlie walked off, he suggested that Des stop worrying about him and start looking for Penny.

Now I no longer feel bad for being unable to truly connect in an emotional way with the TLX. Shall I repeat what Charlie said once more? Feel free to join me here: “NONE OF THIS MATTERS!!!

Ah the sweet, sweet smell of reveal!


Love the World You Find

After losing Pace, Widmore tasked Desmond with being the one who would break the news to his wife, who had been working on the big event. Surprise! Ms. Hawking from the RTL is now Mrs. Widmore-X. What an interesting twist that the “complicated” couple would still be together in this incarnation of their relationship. In addition from the way everyone acted, from Big Daddy Charles, to George Minkowski Driver Extraordinaire, to the party staff, Eloise was the one who ultimately wore the pants in the Widmore family.


With her huge, white Hair-Helmet of Higher Power and her butter-knife Nazism, Eloise was refreshingly cool about Drive Shaft’s inability to perform at the event, and accepted the “unpredictability” of working with rock stars. As she let Desmond off the hook, she even threw out Dan Faraday’s old mantra, “What happened, happened”, which we would soon learn to be oh so ironic in oh so many ways.

Eloise however did not predict Desmond would hear the name Penny Milton called from a guest list nearby and actually quesion it. In a huff she pulled Desmond aside and privately began to scold him for looking for whatever it was he was seeking. She demanded that he STOP, as someone had affected the way he was “seeing things” (i.e. Charlie). Furthermore she told Desmond that she didn’t understand why he would be looking for anything, as he already had a “perfect life” and had managed to attain the one thing he had apparently always wanted, her “husband’s approval”. I loved how Desmond refuted her claim to know what it was that he really wanted.

Overall the scene was a great shocker, as once again Eloise revealed herself to have more information about Desmond, his life, and their current “reality” than she ever should have. This completely mirrored her RTL role as advisor to Desmond and his ultimate Island destiny back in “Flashes Before Your Eyes”.

By the sounds of it, someone or something might have actually created TLX and set Desmond up with what they/it thought he wanted most in the RTL. LOST’s mysterious double time-line had just become even more delicious with the meeting of these two characters who both seemed to be able to step beyond the bounds of time itself. Even Eloise’s pin seemed to echo the fact that she knew that there are two timelines, as she wore two parallel lines of silver with a starburst-like explosion at a point along each one. Jughead, anyone?


The Observer

During their conversation, Ms. Hawking/Widmore also told Desmond that what he was doing by seeking out Penny was a “violation”. A violation of what, “The Rules”? Whose “Rules”...Jacob’s? I wonder. Call me crazy, but I am getting bad vibes from the White-Haired Wonder. As in, I am starting to wonder if she is somehow in cahoots with The Man in Black.


Based on what we have seen, it is MIB, not Jacob, who has been going around making promises to everyone in order to woo them to his ragged court of merry men. He told Claire she would see Aaron again, Sayid that he would see Nadia, Sun would be reunited with Jin, Sawyer could leave the island, and so forth. Is it possible that at some point, perhaps way back in the past after she shot Daniel, that MIB came to her as well and made a similar bargain?

This could potentially explain why all throughout Daniel’s life Eloise had been grooming him for his “destiny”, pushing him away from his love of music and instead towards science and ultimately the Island. It could also explain why she seems to know so much, more than anyone, and why she is constantly showing up at important decision-making moments in Desmond’s life, to ensure he continues on the proper path.

That path would be the one that would eventually help free the Man in Black and possibly create this “alternate” reality at the same time. As Ms. Hawking, she once told Desmond that pushing the Swan Hatch button would be the most important thing that he would do in his life. For if it wasn’t for Desmond being on the Island and being the one to allow the system failure at the Swan hatch, John Locke - the man MIB needed to find his loophole - would have never crashed there in the first place.

Of course I could be totally wrong here, but it is just very odd to me that she seems to be the only character in LOST that knows what is going on throughout both timelines. It is possible that some of her fore-knowledge came from owning Dan’s journal after she shot him back in the 70’s. However this does not explain her actions in TLX. I am definitely keeping my stink-eye on that woman now. In my view, if she was really one of the “good guys”, then she would want Desmond to find his love and wake up from the manufactured dream-world that TLX seems to now be.

She also told Desmond he is not “ready”. Does something have to happen in the RTL for Desmond to be ready to accept his role in TLX? Part of me doesn’t want to read too much into this line in particular. To me it sounds like Eloise being Eloise and talking down to him as she had before in that “knower of all things” kind of way.


Girl with Hair Like an Explosion

As a defeated Desmond stuck his tail between his legs and prepared to drink himself into oblivion, a knock came to the limo window from one Mr. Daniel Faraday…I mean, Widmore. I think I heard the entire East Coast viewing audience exclaim upon the sight of Our Beloved Physicist!


Except in this incarnation, Dan had been able to fulfill his dreams of being a musician, as he had been the one scheduled to play a classical piece with Charlie’s rock band. Even in TLX, Daniel enjoyed a little experimentation. You see, some things never change, no matter what the filmstrip says in Room 23.

Daniel immediately asked Desmond if he believed in “love at first sight”, and began to tell a tale of his own recent experience with the idea. He went on to describe a striking, blue-eyed, red-haired beauty at the local museum, eating a chocolate bar, which was a dead-on (no pun intended) description of his RTL love lost, Charlotte. Dan claimed it was as if he had “already met her” and “already loved her”. This story pretty much echoed what Charlie had relayed to Desmond earlier at the bar.

That same night, while he was presumably in a near-unconscious state, Dan woke up and scribbled some ultra high-level quantum mechanics equations into his journal. He claimed to have no knowledge whatsoever of what it all really meant, as he was just a musician.

However just like Charlie, he too got the sensation that their current lives in TLX were not proper, not correct. Daniel was able to go even further and proceeded to tell Desmond that he believed he had somehow, somewhere, set off a nuclear bomb in the effort to avoid some type of major catastrophe. He theorized that this is what had somehow caused them to now be in a different reality.  Dan said to Desmond, “What if this…all this…wasn’t supposed to be our life?” and that, “for some reason we changed things”.


I loved that the page from Daniel’s journal was also quite relevant. If one looked closely, it was the page which contained that diagram from the RTL journal that mentioned “Real Space” and “Imaginary Time”. It almost would seem this exactly mirrors the situation we now have on LOST overall where the whole has splintered into the two.


The Secret of Immortality: This Strange Feeling, This Impossible World

I also find it fascinating that so far the only characters to truly begin to see through the TLX reality on their own are Charlie and Daniel, two people who happened to have also died in the RTL. Whereas our other castaways have only demonstrated faint acknowledgement in fits and spurts (often sparked by looking into the mirror) these two men have experienced more than a glimpse to the point of being able to recognize the TLX as being something false. I believe this is due to their proximity to the unconscious, as Charlie’s visions came to him during a near death experience, and Daniel’s quantum epiphany came to him in a dream.


In LOST, unconsciousness and even death seems to be a portal of sorts; to where is left to our imagination. I like to refer to as The In-Between. My favorite example remains from the episode “?” where Charlotte Malkin was pronounced dead, and then came back to life while screaming John Locke’s name. She then later approached Eko with a word from his dead brother, Yemi.

In fact, all of the show’s references to the Underworld, Water, and Mirrors - all archetypal symbols of The Unconscious that I’ve discussed in article after article - have come to the forefront and their importance is now being revealed in a new and amazing way.

We saw the start of true cross-over last week in “The Package”, when Sun knocked herself out in the RTL, just as she was looking into the mirror in TLX, and then awoke to no longer be able to speak English just like her TLX counterpart. However with Charlie and Daniel, the bleed-through of timelines has been truly confirmed. I believe now we will only see it continue to escalate, and our still-living RTL characters will begin to feel that something odd is afoot as they continue along with their TLX lives.


Finally, showing our characters with an eye opened in a close-up was also given an even greater significance. It is love at first sight that initially clues Daniel into things not being what they appear to be. Charlie’s tattoo of the famous Beatles lyric, “Living is easy with eyes closed”, has also taken on a new meaning after this episode, where we learn he too had opened his eyes to a false reality.  

Vision and sight are now more substantially involved, yet the concept has been rippling through the show since the very first moment of the “Pilot” when we saw Jack’s eye open as all hell was breaking loose at the crash-site nearby. It almost makes one question which reality is true, if either one, and all of those discarded “VR theories” of seasons past start rushing back to memory, each carrying a new and urgent sense of truth.


Race for the Prize


Speaking of rushing, Daniel could tell that Desmond too had become aware and “felt love”, along with the fact that something was wrong with the current life he was living. His ultimate gift to Mr. Hume was the reveal that the Penny he was seeking was his half-sister, and he provided Des with the time and place (time and space) where he could finally find her.

What a perfect location it was to have them meet at the stadium where RTL Desmond once trained for a sailboat race, where he (presumably) first met Jack Shephard, and where he basically broke it off with Penny until the race was over and his mission could be accomplished. That mission was of course to gain her father, Charles Widmore’s, approval. I suppose this is why the “creator” of this TLX reality might think a connection between Charles and Desmond would be the more important issue that needed to be addressed.


Perhaps something (cough-MIB-cough) was even able to read RTL-Desmond’s mind in order to obtain this information when he was on the Island. Perhaps it misread Desmond’s motives as being all about Widmore, since he was technically not with Penny at that point in time. And perhaps this is why in TLX, Charles and Desmond are buddy-buddy and Penelope is out of the picture altogether. Not to mention, if Desmond was in love with Penny, this would create a “constant” bond of consciousness between time-lines, and he might just start to see through the veil-X that’s been pulled over his eyes, basically just like we saw happen in the episode anyway.


Hit Me Like You Did the First Time


Poor Desmond. The moment his hand touches Penny’s during their adorably awkward introduction, he instantly passed out cold. I suppose he had an overload of sorts, just through her touch. Now that’s what I call consciousness-altering love!


BUH-BLAM! Desmond woke back up in Widmore's Electromagnetic Fun Box, and discovered he had only been unconscious for a few seconds. Once again his eyes were checked, and Team Widmore remarked in amazement how he survived that huge bombardment of energy.

Charles once again apologized to Desmond, but before he could properly explain himself, Desmond interrupted him and said that he understood. Now that his RTL consciousness had connected with TLX, perhaps he suddenly became aware of some greater purpose in a way that he never had realized before. Widmore was visibly surprised at this; even more so when Des agreed to work with him immediately on the important task Charles had mentioned having planned for him.

As Zoe and a couple of tech-goons led Desmond back to the station, they were suddenly and violently jumped by The Zombie Sayid. Snap crackle pop! Necks were cracked and a gun was cocked. And of all people, he let Zoe live, and told her to run. Run away she did.

Thanks Sayid, thanks a lot. Zoe is the new Frogurt, and I eagerly await her flaming arrow.


Desmond, still in a state of “awareness afterglow” seemed as if he had no clue what was really going on, and since he only knew Sayid as a friend who once helped save his life, my guess is that he had no choice but to believe Mr. Unfeeling when he said that Team Widmore was a bad crowd to be running with. So without further ado, The Amazing Electromagnetic Dream-Des and The Zombie Sayid marched off into the jungle.



Guy Who Got a Headache and Accidentally Saves the World

Before the episode ended, we were given a quick trip back to TLX, where Desmond woke up after fainting right in front of one bewildered Penelope. Their chemistry was unmistakable, beautiful even, and they agreed to go out together for some coffee.


Raise your hand if you thought of Sawyer and Juliet at that moment. Yeah, I knew I wasn’t the only one still holding out for that reunion as well. Oh LOST, you saucy tease, you!

I believe Desmond’s ultimate desire to get his hands on the Flight 815 passenger manifest might just serve as the one grand catalyst for everyone to wake up and stop living with eyes closed in TLX. Just like shaking hands with Penny sent his mind into a whirlwind, perhaps getting the remaining survivors together for a little meet and greet with their RTL loved-ones might also help to jog memories a bit and wake them up from what might just be a type of living dream that they are all now a part of.


I have used the radio receiver as a metaphor for consciousness before. It seems that in this story, all one needs to do is play with the dials a bit; i.e. make physical contact, or even more drastically, be forced into unconsciousness in order to “tune in” to a new “station”. And if one really wants to change the ability to pick up new and exotic frequencies altogether, one simply needs a catastrophic electromagnetic event and voila, one becomes “unstuck in time” itself.

I don't know where the sun beams end and the star lights begin
It's all a mystery
And I don't know how a man decides what right for his own life
It's all a mystery

THE TEST IS OVER...NOW


All We Have is Now

The episode following Desmond’s trip through the light fantastic only continued the theme of consciousness-altering love. In addition, the Hurley-centric “Everyone Loves Hugo” (a title that we all know perfectly mirrors season one’s “Everyone Hates Hugo”) brought along with it of the longest-awaited reunions in the show’s history, a very shocking death, and a few more nice reveals.

Let’s get right to it, RTL events first.


Everything’s Explodin’

I really didn’t expect Ilana’s interruption of Hurley paying his respects to Libby’s gravesite would turn back around and bite her in the arse so quickly. But when she revealed her bag of dynamite that looked like it had just been tossed in there all willy-nilly, after everyone back in season one had made such an effort to wrap and carry each stick with the utmost care, it wasn’t too surprising to see her go BUH-BOOM, Arzt-style. I just didn’t expect it to happen so suddenly, and when she was in mid-sentence.


So much for Jacob’s specially-trained Protector of the Candidates. I mean, that had to be part of his plan, right? To have Ilana cover things until Desmond, Secret-Weapon-Super-Man arrived on the Island?  

Right?


Haven’t Got a Clue

Team Jacob is starting to remind me more and more of The Others with each passing episode. They don’t seem to do a thing anymore except blindly follow whoever decides to spit forth any given direction. The chain of command was completely whack, if not totally non-existent.

In fact, if I remember correctly, it all went a little something like this:

Ilana followed Jacob. Everyone else followed Ilana. Jacob told Ilana to follow Richard in the event of his death. Richard followed the Ghost Whispers of his dead wife. Everyone then followed Ilana, who was following Richard. Ilana went ba-da-boom, now everyone else is following Richard.

And Richard was still determined to blow up Ajira Flight 316, despite what Hurley tried to tell him in objection, which he had in turn heard from the Ghost Whispers of Dead Michael Dawson.


Meanwhile, Camp Lockeness was pretty much in the same situation. In fact, Sawyer even mentioned the fact that they all had just been sitting around twiddling their thumbs while Jin had been kidnapped, and asked MIB when they were getting off the Island. I do love it when a character plays “the audience”.


However, we were all schooled on the fact that “there is a difference between doing nothing and waiting”, as Lockeness put it. He went on to further explain that he still needed Hugo, Jack, and Sun if they were all going to be able to leave.

Cue The Zombie Sayid’s return to the camp after at some point having tied Desmond to a tree not too far away. He clued Lockeness in to the fact that he had obtained “The Package”, and they both then went off towards Desmond’s location. This did not bode well for Mr. Hume, not one bit at all.


However, Des remained for the most part unafraid and unaffected, even while tied to a tree by a man he thought was his friend. More on this in a bit…


Psychic Wall


In the meantime, the Beach Group had decided to go along with Richard on a quest for more dynamite and they would have succeeded, if Hurley hadn’t have blown up the entire Black Rock ship! And quite an impressive explosion it made, too. I must admit, ol’ Hugo had me fooled just like the other beach chumps, as he conned us all into believing he had given in to Richard’s plan after all.


He then pulled part two of his con in the form of telling everyone that Jacob said they should just try talking to Lockeness instead of trying to “blow stuff up”. Richard called him on his bluff, but Hurley brought it right back to Richard and said he didn’t have to prove anything to him. Team Jacob then basically split into the Blow It Up group, consisting of Richard, Ben, and Miles, and the Talk it Out group of Hugo, Frank, Sun, and Jack.

Way to stick together Beach Party!



Michael, Time to Wake Up

That night, Hurley run into Dead Dawson again, and we received an answer to one of LOST’s longest-running mysteries. The use of the tern Ghost Whispers earlier was for naught, as this is exactly what they have now been revealed to be. Not a huge surprise but it was nice to have it finally clarified once and for all. Michael explained to Hugo they are the voices of those who had not been allowed to leave the Island because of the bad things that they did in their lifetimes.


The Island isn’t just a “Cork” holding evil at bay. It’s also prison of sorts for Dead Bad Guys. The question is who’s in charge when the Warden himself dies? Anyone? Anyone…?



Maximum Dream for Evil

In my opinion, the most interesting part of the episode came from the meeting of Lockeness and Desmond. MIB’s way of navigating his way with words was matched equally with Desmond’s cool response to his every question. I must give my props to Henry Ian Cusick for his portrayal of this new version of Desmond who had mind-melded with his TLX-self. He got Lockeness to untie him, all during which he kept giving The Wolf in Locke’s Clothing a very calm yet suspicious eye.


At first, I thought that Desmond was completely clueless to the fact that Locke was not The Real John Locke. Upon re-watching the episode, now I could believe the opposite. Desmond’s attitude while answering Locke’s questions was much different that the way he had acted just a short while ago with Widmore. He was much more guarded, and not in the way a man should be who is among people he trusts.

Then again, he also could just be so used to being captive, in addition to a new laid-back approach overall that may have resulted from the knowledge that he now had a greater purpose.

That…and the fact there’s another version of his self in a parallel universe running about fixing things for everyone.


We briefly saw the strange jungle kid again, who seemed to smile and tease Lockeness this time. I am hoping that smile was for the idea that Desmond was back on the Island, and that a White Rock had just been passed to the MIB once again.


Lockeness and Desmond walked through the night to a location like one we had seen before. How appropriate that they reached one of the stone wells like the one that leads to the Frozen Donkey Wheel. It was revealed that a long, long time ago, an ancient culture on the Island found places on the Island that gave off certain energies and dug wells looking for the source of it. This particular well was so old, it was dug by hand.

Oh yeah, DHARMA did the same thing, just with bigger, more technological hands.


I don’t think that SuperHumeMan expected to be thrown down into the bloody well, man! Just like a kid tossing a coin into a shopping mall fountain, Lockeness made a wish and his Desmond problem went away. Never, ever ask MIB, “What’s the point of being afraid?” when he asks you why you’re not.

Desmond was then left down in the Underworld, fate at this point still unknown.


Thanks To You


Lockeness returned to his camp just in time for the players he had been waiting for earlier to finally show up. Hurley was the first to step out of the treeline and “break the ice with The Smoke Monster”. He negotiated a promise of non-violence between the two camps. Then one by one, Team Talk It Out stepped out of the jungle and right into the place I truly believe they needed to actually be the furthest away from. I am starting to think that Hurley was right, and Jack should step back in as leader before Hugo’s innocent, trust-you-first attitude gets them all killed.

And with that, we were left in the RTL with one mother of a Jackface.



Just Like Before


Ah, another day, another Man of the Year Award. Or so it would seem for Hugo Reyes-X’s mother who has had to repeatedly accompany him to the countless ceremonies and celebrations of his life as her own son’s date. Just as it was in the RTL, mamma Reyes wanted to see her Hugo with a real lady-friend on his arm.


However, Hugo-X, “luckiest man in the world”, world-famous entrepreneur, huge-hearted donator to various charities, was just as chicken as his chain of restaurants. He had everything, and everyone loved him…everyone except for the ladies, that is. Hugo had no idea how to meet women, and I suppose there was a fear that they would only be interested in his wealth, anyway. So his determined mother decided to help out by setting him up on a blind date, and in order to prove to her and to himself that he was not scared, he agreed to meet this “Rosalita” woman Mrs. Reyes played matchmaker with.


Satellite of You

Right as I was about to be totally bummed out that this Rosalita chick stood Hurley up on their blind date…HOLY SMOKES IT’S LIBBY!!! I’m trying to recreate my surprise at seeing her again, and if I could punch you in the leg like I did to my dear fella who was sitting next to me at the time…well, just imagine that, too.


At first, like Hurley, I thought Libby was for some reason now named Rosalita in TLX. He was so adorable as he immediately said how he didn’t expect someone so pretty, then blushed for being so forthcoming. But we then quickly learned that she was not his date at all. Instead, she had recognized him from across the room and was drawn over to introduce herself.


Just as our other currently RTL-deceased characters Daniel and Charlie, Libby seemed to have been experiencing some time-line breakthrough. She grabbed onto Hurley’s hands and held them as she confessed her belief that she was connected to him, “like soul mates”, and asked if he remembered her. I think my own heart skipped a few beats during that moment as I expected their touch would be some kind of fuel that would spark Hurley’s RTL consciousness to reveal itself and he would suddenly answer, “YES!


No such luck. In fact, Dr. Brooks from the Santa Rosa Mental Health Institute stopped by to interrupt them; the same man who was Hurley’s doctor during his own stay at Santa Rosa in the RTL. It would seem that Libby was still a patient in TLX however, and as she was rushed off into the crazy-mobile, Hurley was left standing alone and deflated.


Prescription: Love

Afterward, Hurley went on an understandable depression-fueled chicken-binge, during which a Mr. Desmond Hume “just happened to be” in the restaurant as well. Desmond recognized Hugo hiding behind his greasy bucket of drumsticks and introduced himself while asking whom it was Hurley seemed so upset over. He already somehow knew it was lady-related, that clever devil, Desmond. I think we all know Desmond was totally aware of what he was doing. I just don’t think he quite knew how to get the whole “waking up” ball rolling.


In fact, I think it surprised Desmond a bit when Hugo told him that the “crazy” woman he met mentioned that she already knew him. Wouldn’t you know, the universe seemed like it was doing some of the work for Desmond in that it set the play up, and he now only had to hit the ball; i.e. say the right thing that would get Hurley to make his love connection. After confirming that Hurley felt in his gut that Libby was telling the truth, he advised Hurley to find out where she thought she knew him from.


If I Go Mad

Dr. Brooks claimed that Libby had “issues with reality”, which gave me a nice chuckle since we all could have seen that one coming. With a slash of the pen to check however, Hurley was able to negotiate a little one-on-one time with Libby over at Santa Rosa.


During their conversation, Libby confessed the moment she saw Hugo in one of his commercials, a flood of memories rushed into her mind; memories of a plane crash, an Island, and her attraction to Hurley. I guess after such a conflict of consciousness it is understandable that she would check herself into a mental institution.


Hugo also understood this, and got up his nerve to ask her on a date. And the crowd goes wild!


Lightning Strikes the Postman


Hugo Reyes and Elizabeth Smith finally got their picnic on the beach. It was more than touching, as many of us fans have been waiting and hoping, hoping and waiting, that somehow, someday Libby’s story would be continued.


At this point it doesn’t matter if it had to happen in an “alternate” reality, and for the first time I became shockingly and emotionally involved in TLX.  The moment those two kissed and Hurley’s memories of their love came flooding back to him, in the same kind of flashes Desmond had seen, I began crying uncontrollably. It was probably the most tears I have shed since “The Constant”, and I applaud everyone involved with making that scene everything that it needed to be.  I now cannot even get a few screen-caps of this moment  without having to wipe my eyes.


Of course just as expected, Desmond was watching the two from the parking lot nearby. Mission Hurley Kiss completed. Check one passenger from the list!



The Spontaneous Combustion of John

Next up on Desmond’s Wake Up Tour would be one John Locke, Substitute Teacher. After surviving The Inquisition a-la Benjamin Linus, who assumed the strange man hanging around in his car out front of the school had pervy intentions, Mr. Hume decided to tackle his second Flight 815 passenger.


Or, run him over. My guess is that since Locke-X already had love, Desmond was going to have to do things the hard way. And so hard is exactly how he hit Locke with his car. The scene was so completely frightening, it made me punch my poor other half’s leg yet again at the sheer shock of it. Poor Locke was left shaking on the ground and near death…just where he unfortunately needed to be.

On a quick side-note, this scene occurred right after Lockeness had tossed Desmond down that well in the RTL. I suppose one could say…touché’.


Although I have done my best to avoid the various articles and theories out there, I couldn’t help avoiding the people who, being die-hard Locke fans such as myself, are still holding the torch that somehow he will return to us the man he once was and boot the MIB from that doppelganger body altogether.

We already know that all of Locke’s memories are in there, as MIB told Ben how he knew John’s last dying thoughts. In the event some thought that perhaps he was lying, we were later given a scene where MIB seemed to either be channeling The Real John Locke, or John’s consciousness had suddenly taken over for a second. “Don’t tell me what I can’t do!” Lockeness yelled out, twice.

The scene was curious then, but even more so now that we have connections being made between time-lines. I suppose the question is now about the repercussions of TLX Locke remembering his RTL counterpart.

How disturbing would it be if he remembers dying? Even more so, what would happen if he also “remembers” someone else in his body? Will this be the start of events which eventually allow The Real John Locke’s consciousness to “awaken” within the body that MIB currently inhabits? I don’t know if I really want to buy into that idea completely just yet. I am hoping that something else happens, perhaps something along these lines, but not so obvious.


I did think it was awesome that Ben-X was the first one at the scene of the accident, especially since his RTL counterpart once shot him and left him to die.


CONCLUSION: Oh My Pregnant Head

Since this is probably the longest article I have ever written, I am going to keep the conclusion short. To be honest, I’ve been writing for more than half the day, through the night, and into the morning. My head is spinning and the next episode of LOST airs in less than 13 hours. I believe I now need to go spend some of my own time unconscious so that I can be fully awakened for when our next installment plays out.

I’m sure I’ve forgotten something in this write-up. Or perhaps I mixed up a name. Maybe one of my ideas is so ridiculous, I need to be set straight. Too many puns? My apologies.

Do feel free to comment and let me know, because I also want to know who to thank for getting this far through this thing!

Until then, have a Cluckity-Cluck day!
a.N
www.FourToedFoot.com


*I write about LOST because I love the challenge of deciphering the clues and adding the pieces together. My thoughts are based solely on the show, the LOST Experience, and random research, as I try to avoid spoilers, promos, and even future episode titles. I love to guess what is going on, but I also like to do so in a way that leaves some of the conclusions still up to you. I do not know the answers and am often wrong. Whatever the truth turns out to be, it has been the journey that has meant the most to me.*
Posted By: The ODI