LOST: That Device on Keamy’s Arm


Spoilers Ahead

This might be obvious to some folks, but I’m going to through this out there:

Remember that device we saw on Keamy’s arm that they were putting on right before the soldiers left the boat?

It’s likely that the radio interference that the boat was having was because of that device radioing back to the boat. What would it be transmitting? It’s not like Keamy has an EKG running back on the boat, right?

Well, not quite. What I think he does have is a heart monitor that’s been wired up so that if his heart stops, it’ll trigger the bomb they found on the boat, setting it off.

The real question is, if that’s going to happen, how do Sun and Aaron get away? The boat blows up, and since the island needs them both they survive, to be picked up in the water?

Any guesses?

LOST: Things In The Script You Don’t See On TV

You won’t see the F-bomb dropped on LOST, but you’ll sure see it in the scripts, according to an LA Times article on the LOST scripts:

“In a network environment where you can’t have the characters say everything that they would say, we sometimes try to provide those words parenthetically so that the actors know to perform the dialogue as though they were saying that word,” added executive producer and show-runner Carlton Cuse. “It’s just a way of creating amplitude. ‘Lost’ functions a lot on its intensity. We want people to feel wrung out after they watch an episode of the show. And we’re 3,000 miles away from where the show is shot, so we try to do everything we can in the script to convey a sense of urgency and intensity to the director, the actors, the crew, anybody who is executing the scripts in Hawaii.”

Via LA Times.

You Need To Watch Hour 1 Of LOST’s Finale This Week


You might be thinking of skipping the first hour of the three hour LOST extravaganza this Thursday, just because it’s a repeat of the show a couple of weeks ago, but I’m telling you that you shouldn’t miss it!

Why? On This week’s LOST podcast, we find out that the expanded hour will feature more questions and answers at the Oceanic 6 news conference. How relevant will this be to the story line? Not sure, but if you’re a die hard LOST fan, you won’t want to miss it!

Are we going to find out if there’s another person on that plane, like we’ve already seen?

We’ll see!

Matthew Fox Knows How LOST Ends


The Daily Mirror is reporting in an interview that Matthew Fox, Jack from LOST, is one of the people that knows how LOST is going to end. (My guess, Jack and Kate’s remains are those skeletons they found in the cave back in Season 1).

He’s keeping quiet about it though, even though cast members ask about it:

“Yes, it’s true. They understand I can’t talk about it, but sometimes they’ll ask, just hoping I’ll blurt it out.”

TV Buddy brings up a good question about this. Why did Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof tell Matthew Fox the ending?

What the heck does “Frozen Donkey Wheel” mean?


If you listen to the Lost podcasts (and you should), you might have heard that the final scene of this season’s LOST is referred to as “Frozen Donkey Wheel”.

The producers always come up with some code word that nobody can make sense of for those final scenes. In previous years, they’ve used “The Bagel”, “The Challah”, and “The Snake in the Mailbox” (because it would be “the last thing you would expect”).

Read more about what the producers have to say about this at CTV.ca.