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*** Official Lost Season 6 *** (3 Viewers)

I wonder how long Kate's going to pretend she's with the Evil Others? She looked downright scared while joining the group after the temple massacre.

Also I don't think that the couple of bras Kate had with her on the Oceanic flight would last her 3+ years on a tropical island. I want a little more realism here. LOSE THE BRA, KATE!
apparently you haven't been following the story.she was only on the island for just over 100 days.. then went off island for 3 years, and now has only been back for a little while.. and the dharma people probably provided bras while she was with that group.



also, her breasts aren't that great.. they just happen to be the best on the show.
This needs to be clarified with "... since Juliet died."
Claire's rack isn't getting enough love here.I'd be happy to remedy that.
:goodposting:
 
The deal with Sayid is that no matter what the natural order of things are, he is never able to retain the girl. That scenario can play out in many different ways but the end result is the same, he and this girl aren't together.If he gets the girl, then the world has turned on orbit, which can't happen.
He needs a magnitude 8.8 earthquake.
 
I wonder how long Kate's going to pretend she's with the Evil Others? She looked downright scared while joining the group after the temple massacre.

Also I don't think that the couple of bras Kate had with her on the Oceanic flight would last her 3+ years on a tropical island. I want a little more realism here. LOSE THE BRA, KATE!
apparently you haven't been following the story.she was only on the island for just over 100 days.. then went off island for 3 years, and now has only been back for a little while.. and the dharma people probably provided bras while she was with that group.



also, her breasts aren't that great.. they just happen to be the best on the show.
This needs to be clarified with "... since Juliet died."
Claire's rack isn't getting enough love here.I'd be happy to remedy that.
:goodposting:
She has inspired me to sin. Repeatedly. :confession:

 
I will say this... I've been duped too many times by stupid TV shows.

this is the LAST time I EVER get involved with a fictional TV series.

I generally don't watch this crap, but a good friend told me it was really worth my time.

I've since punched the friend.. HARD.

I'll stick to watching REAL things on tv.. like sporting events and stuff... and only good ones at that.

For my fantasy/sci-fi kick i'll stick with video games, movies or books.

 
Didnt Samurai say something about "Locke" having to kill every living person (or thing?) on the island to escape?
I don't know if it was killing everyone on the island to escape, but he certainly said he wants everyone dead. Jacob said the same to Hurley.Here's the thing though, Ben said the same thing about Widmore when the freighter/Mercs were there.
 
And while we're at it, if NotLocke/smokey is trying to conquer the entire island (join me or die), where will the resistance come from?
I think in the end he may need to kill everybody who is a "candidate"
Kill or 'recruit' maybe... he has two candidates on his team so far with Sawyer and Sayid.
Well, Sayid is already dead perhaps. He may try to kill Sawyer (and Claire, and everybody else) later, but needs people on his side for the time being.Didnt Samurai say something about "Locke" having to kill every living person (or thing?) on the island to escape?
Yup. Looks like divide and conquer to me.
Why does he need to divide and conquer? He appears unkillable in human form, and in smokey form he just flies through the jungle and kills everyone he comes across? His goal has to be something other than just killing everyone or it would be trivial for him to accomplish it.
 
I will say this... I've been duped too many times by stupid TV shows.this is the LAST time I EVER get involved with a fictional TV series.I generally don't watch this crap, but a good friend told me it was really worth my time.I've since punched the friend.. HARD.I'll stick to watching REAL things on tv.. like sporting events and stuff... and only good ones at that.For my fantasy/sci-fi kick i'll stick with video games, movies or books.
Thanks for playing.
 
Yup. Looks like divide and conquer to me.
Why does he need to divide and conquer? He appears unkillable in human form, and in smokey form he just flies through the jungle and kills everyone he comes across? His goal has to be something other than just killing everyone or it would be trivial for him to accomplish it.
Good question. Don't really know.But we do know that MIB can't do certain things, like kill Jacob. So he has to rely on others to accomplish at least some of his goals. Therefore, I would not be surprised to learn he needs the help of others for more of his goals before he can accomplish his ultimate goal of killing everyone and leaving the island.

 
I will say this... I've been duped too many times by stupid TV shows.this is the LAST time I EVER get involved with a fictional TV series.I generally don't watch this crap, but a good friend told me it was really worth my time.I've since punched the friend.. HARD.I'll stick to watching REAL things on tv.. like sporting events and stuff... and only good ones at that.For my fantasy/sci-fi kick i'll stick with video games, movies or books.
Thanks for playing.
:unsure: Dentist is greatness. "Pretty much every day I wake up expecting a bad beat and if I dont get one I consider myself lucky". Something like that.
 
Dr. No said:
I will say this... I've been duped too many times by stupid TV shows.this is the LAST time I EVER get involved with a fictional TV series.I generally don't watch this crap, but a good friend told me it was really worth my time.I've since punched the friend.. HARD.I'll stick to watching REAL things on tv.. like sporting events and stuff... and only good ones at that.For my fantasy/sci-fi kick i'll stick with video games, movies or books.
:thumbup:
 
That Little Voice said:
:lmao: Dentist is greatness. "Pretty much every day I wake up expecting a bad beat and if I dont get one I consider myself lucky". Something like that.
:popcorn: Honestly that's exactly what happens every morning... "how bad can today go... ok.. i can live with that... now let's go out and improve upon that!"And if a day goes by without something bad happening honestly that's a effing rarity... but when it does happen... praise be to Jacob.
 
Sack-Religious said:
I'm losing patience with this season very quickly. They hyped this week's episode to no end in commercials stating something like"we can't show you too much because it will give away all the answers that are revealed".What answers were revealed exactly?
When has the hype built up in the commercials ever lived up to it? Aside from maybe season finales?What answers do you want revealed exactly? Keep in mind that there's still 12 hours worth of episodes coming and they can't answer everything now because they still have those 12 hours of show to fill. If you get answers now why would you keep watching? We're not even half-way through the season yet and people are already pissing and moaning that they're not getting answers quick enough. This is unbelievable to me. This show's always been about a slow burn that weaves many intricate and interlacing stories together that then give answers. I get the feeling that many of the people who are becoming frustrated want a big TA-DA! moment every episode so they can check a question off the list. This show's never done anything like that, so why would they start now in the first third of the final season? There's still plenty of time for the reveals to come since you can tell they're building towards the climax.
I don't disagree with you but last week the previews of the March 2 episode (at least here in Illinois) - was a single screenshot with a voice over talking about how questions will be answered (on March 2).And no delivery. So viewers can have that dissatisfaction with the show (I doubt ABC threw that out all by themselves)
 
One thing (of many) that is a little confusing to me right now is Miles reaction to Sayid dying and what he said to him last night. Miles clearly was impacted when Sayid died. Either he couldnt hear him, was disturbed by what he heard as being odd, or was listening intently to what Sayid was saying from the grave. What and who he actually heard may prove to be very important. We know for a fact that Sayid was actually dead for at least 2 hours and that the water is not what resurrected him, per Miles.

(also, the fact that the water was dirty and they drowned him in it anyway, knowing he would die and not heal was yet another time the Others tried to kill Sayid . . . and the Dogan knew MIB would appear as a dead person to Sayid . . . so why did they want to kill him?)

 
I wonder how long Kate's going to pretend she's with the Evil Others? She looked downright scared while joining the group after the temple massacre.

Also I don't think that the couple of bras Kate had with her on the Oceanic flight would last her 3+ years on a tropical island. I want a little more realism here. LOSE THE BRA, KATE!
apparently you haven't been following the story.she was only on the island for just over 100 days.. then went off island for 3 years, and now has only been back for a little while.. and the dharma people probably provided bras while she was with that group.

also, her breasts aren't that great.. they just happen to be the best on the show.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPrERfZWagk
 
Haters of the show will have a lot to write about...

F'n Spoiler tag isn't working.

SPOILER:

Episode 15 will not have any of the show regulars in it. I think it will be a Richard centric episode.

E Online Check out the second video

 
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Lots of complaining in here. Time to start a new thread. Or, rather, act like a zookeeper and start your own website which will turn into a movie because the complainers are much better writers, thinkers about a fictitious show that has not even ended yet. Go ahead, write your own show and lets criticize it in the FFA. This show is like a Monet, we have spots of story here and there but you complainers need to back up and look at the whole picture however you will not be able to do that until the show ends. So, keep complaining. Me, I am filling out my notebook and enjoying the show each week.
:goodposting: This show has not let me down yet. These guys deserve our patience, they earned it and I expect they will deliver. I am loving this season.
 
Another cool article

http://sepinwall.blogspot.com/2010/03/lost...f-violence.html

A review of tonight's "Lost" coming up just as soon as I have an unfortunate incident involving a boomerang...

"You think you know me, but you don't. I am a good man." -Sayid

Dude, you tried to kill Baby Hitler. You might want to reconsider that statement.

"Lost" is all about eternal struggles - good vs. evil, science vs. faith, free will vs. destiny - and fundamentally about man vs. his own nature. John Locke wants to be a big man but can't overcome his own smallness. Jack Shephard tries to fix everything and usually winds up destroying it.

And Sayid Jarrah wants to be a good man free to enjoy the love of his good woman, but instead he's always the man brought in when people need killing.

Where the last two weeks brought us alternate versions of Locke and Jack who managed to break their emotional cycles - a Locke at peace with his disability and unremarkable life, a Jack reaching out to his son in a way Christian never reached out to him - we discover that Sayid in any timeline, in any locale, at any age, is always going to be the one called upon for a bit of the ol' ultra-violence. He doesn't want it, but he can't escape it. Alt-Locke gets a wife, Alt-Jack gets a son, and Alt-Sayid gets... a chance to put a couple of bullets into Keamy? And to watch his beloved Nadia raise a family with Sayid's brother Omar - the same Omar who needed Sayid as a child to kill the chicken for him, and who needs him as an adult to take care of his Keamy problem? Oh, and he gets a bloody, non-English-speaking Jin in a freezer? Where's the fair in that?

I still feel Cuse and Lindelof made a tactical error in giving us the sliding doors timeline without telling us in advance what it is, because until we do, they have all the weight and meaning of a dream sequence. But the more we see of them, the stronger my feeling grows that we're seeing the series' epilogue in advance. It may not turn out this way, but at the moment it seems the flash-sideways are where the castaways wind up after the war with Smokey ends, as some kind of reward from one of the celestial powers going to war over the island, be it Jacob or Smokey. Smokey does seem awfully confident in the prospect of letting Sayid see Nadia again, after all.

And if that's the case, the rewards seem mixed at best. Locke gets Helen back (and gets to live, for that matter), but is back in the damn chair. Jack gets a son, but also a life that's otherwise as broken as the one he had the first go-round. Kate is free of Marshal Mars, but still a fugitive. And Sayid has Nadia in his life, but not really.

But from what we know of these characters, and of their tortured histories, maybe this is exactly what they asked Smokey and/or Jacob for. Sayid knows in either timeline that he's too much the killer to deserve Nadia, but at least this way he gets to know her, and to have a pretext to see her whenever he can stand it. Kate isn't rewarded for her return to LA like she was as one of the Oceanic Six, but she's also not in a cell and for now gets to be around Aaron's mother. Jack has a means to address his daddy issues that don't involve his actual daddy. Dogen gets his son (and his life) back. Etc., etc. Not wholly happy endings, but the best anyone may feel they deserve.

Whatever the flash-sideways mean, they definitely work better when built around the show's stronger characters/actors - Locke two weeks ago, or Sayid tonight. Again, I'm not demanding answers so much as I am entertainment, and watching Sayid kick ### in two timelines, even as both versions recognized that they're doomed to be killers, was damned entertaining. Naveen Andrews is often at his best when Sayid is at his most despairingly self-reflective, and that moment when he fixed Ben with a grin and said there wasn't time for him anymore was one of Andrews' strongest (and certainly scariest) of the series. When all you're good for is killing, and yet the monster wearing your dead friend's face says that killing is the only way to get back the woman you love, how do you deal with that? On the list of things the "Lost" characters have had to swallow, that epiphany feels particularly brutal.

It had been a while since we got to see a good Sayid fight - the last one that strongly registers for me is the one he had with original recipe Keamy in the season four finale - and we got a real corker in his broom-handled throwdown with Dogen. And in 2004, we saw him cut through Keamy's goons(*) and then Keamy himself(**), not letting himself be fooled by the man's promises to clear Sayid's brother's debt.

(*) Were they all members of his mercenary team from season four? I recognized the bald guy, but wasn't sure on the others.

(**) He was only on the show for a season, and not featured all that much in that season, but Kevin Durand always made an impression as Keamy. Lots of actors might have his sheer physical size, but there's a sense of danger (insanity?) that you can't build at the gym, you know?

And while Sayid was showing off his hand-to-hand and small arms skills, Smokey was putting on a much grander show of force, and preceding it with a good old-fashioned campaign of terror, using Sayid to whip the Temple crew into a frenzy (and then to take out Dogen and Lennon) before doing his smoke monster thing that he does so well. Sometimes, all I need from "Lost" are the simple pleasures, and a good Smokey rampage is high on that list.

Now, I'm not entirely sure what the point of the Temple characters were, other than to stand around and be cryptic for a handful of episodes before Sayid and Smokey wiped them out, but we end the episode in a much more interesting place than we began it. Smokey is building himself an army, and one that includes the crazy (Claire), the converted (Sayid), the suspicious (Kate and Jin), the fearful (Cindy and the kids) and the don't-give-a-damn (Saywer), and he's currently carrying himself like a man certain of victory. Ilana and the rest of the gang from the beach finally linked up with some other character (even if Miles is the only one to actually stick with them). If Dogen never entirely had a point, at least we're done with him and the Temple.

And since the show skipped over the Sun-centric episode we might have expected given how all the previous episodes followed the air pattern of season one, we know that Lindelof and Cuse aren't going to just give us parallel drawings of early episodes.

A much, much stronger outing than last week.

Some other thoughts:

• So how does Alt-Jin go from being detained by TSA agents at the airport to being taped up in Keamy's freezer? I'm guessing the money the TSA was so interested in was a payoff that got confiscated, and Keamy wasn't interested in any excuses.

• I'm really hoping Andrews' more pronounced British accent - both in the Temple and as Alt-Sayid - is a deliberate choice with a meaning, and not Andrews just getting his signals crossed in the final season.

• Anyone want to set the over-under on how long before Crazy Claire gets Kate alone and tries to cut Aaron's location out of her?

• I'm not exactly where Dogen ranked on the Others' corporate hierarchy relative to Ben, but the two guys clearly attended the same leadership seminar, one that involves lying and torturing when the truth upfront would be much more useful - and that then puts you in a very bad spot when you suddenly need your torture victim to trust you. The Others need a better HR rep next time out, I think.

• Jack makes a brief cameo when Sayid goes to see Nadia and his brother at the hospital, and it doesn't appear that either he or Sayid recognized each other in the way that Kate seemed to know Jack, or Jack seemed to know Desmond, in previous scenes/episodes set in the LA X timeline.

• Did I mention that I loved the Sayid/Dogen fight?

What did everybody else think?
 
I think it's interesting that in all the chaos last night, that smokey only killed unknown lackeys in the temple. It was Sayid that made the major blows.

As someone pointed out earlier, maybe Sayid intentionally left both bodies in the water to be resurrected - but that would be a little hard to believe considering Sayid doesn't even know the waters work. That could be his shot at redemption.

But he would still be on the hook for lives lost at the hands of unLocke.

 
Did Dogen actually give us a clue of how to kill notLocke? Or was that just posturing to try to ensure Sayid's death at the hands of noLocke?

NotLocke did speak to him, so we can't be entirely sure that plunging some sort of bladed weapon into his chest, before he speaks, would actually kill him. An interesting prospect though.

 
I'm not going to complain. But this season is like watching an entirely different show and I liked the old show better.

Like somebody else mentioned, the previous seasons were about symbols, hatches, etc.

All that is basically meaningless as we head towards the conclusion.

 
I'm not going to complain. But this season is like watching an entirely different show and I liked the old show better.Like somebody else mentioned, the previous seasons were about symbols, hatches, etc. All that is basically meaningless as we head towards the conclusion.
I hear where you're coming from, but YOU made the show about symbols, hatches, etc. As the post above that quoted the blog said, the show has always been about the struggles of the characters - good vs. evil, science vs. faith, free will vs. destiny - and fundamentally about man vs. his own nature. The symbols and the hatches were there as plot devices, but the fundamental nature of the show has always been those struggles. This season, that struggle is right up in your face and not necessarily used as subtely as has been done in the the past, but the show is fundamentally the same.
 
I think it's interesting that in all the chaos last night, that smokey only killed unknown lackeys in the temple. It was Sayid that made the major blows.

As someone pointed out earlier, maybe Sayid intentionally left both bodies in the water to be resurrected - but that would be a little hard to believe considering Sayid doesn't even know the waters work. That could be his shot at redemption.

But he would still be on the hook for lives lost at the hands of unLocke.
That saying does not apply to this show.I still really enjoy the show, but I'm finding it funny how a lot of people are defending the writing like it's gospel. LOL at someone saying Payne made the show about symbols and hatches when they were focal points in the storyline for the first few seasons and always used as a cliffhanger to bridge episodes and seasons.

 
I'm not going to complain. But this season is like watching an entirely different show and I liked the old show better.Like somebody else mentioned, the previous seasons were about symbols, hatches, etc. All that is basically meaningless as we head towards the conclusion.
I hear where you're coming from, but YOU made the show about symbols, hatches, etc. As the post above that quoted the blog said, the show has always been about the struggles of the characters - good vs. evil, science vs. faith, free will vs. destiny - and fundamentally about man vs. his own nature. The symbols and the hatches were there as plot devices, but the fundamental nature of the show has always been those struggles. This season, that struggle is right up in your face and not necessarily used as subtely as has been done in the the past, but the show is fundamentally the same.
Oh stop already. We got hit over the freakin' head with Dharma, symbols, magic, mystery, hatches, others x 2 and polar bears for crying out loud. WE didn't make the show about that stuff, it's what the whole show has been about since day one when the unseen whatever the hell it was ripped the dying pilot from the cockpit and tossed him up in a tree, when the whole jungle trembled and shook and we heard some deathly howl that everyone speculated was some kind of prehistoric monster, when Jack chased the ghost of his father or last season when the island f'n disappeared and decided to time travel for half the season!It may have always been about good vs evil but the writers surrounded that struggle with so much fluff that it got LOST (pun intended). If it was truly about this monumental struggle then the whole thing could have been wrapped up in about 2 maybe 3 seasons tops.I disagree completely that the show is fundamentally the same and it's MY fault. Sorry.
 
I think it's interesting that in all the chaos last night, that smokey only killed unknown lackeys in the temple. It was Sayid that made the major blows.

As someone pointed out earlier, maybe Sayid intentionally left both bodies in the water to be resurrected - but that would be a little hard to believe considering Sayid doesn't even know the waters work. That could be his shot at redemption.

But he would still be on the hook for lives lost at the hands of unLocke.
That saying does not apply to this show.I still really enjoy the show, but I'm finding it funny how a lot of people are defending the writing like it's gospel. LOL at someone saying Payne made the show about symbols and hatches when they were focal points in the storyline for the first few seasons and always used as a cliffhanger to bridge episodes and seasons.
Which is part of the problem. The introduce elements as if they are fact to have them disproven later.
 
And here's more criticism - but it's the same old criticism.

Last week, Claire states something like "If Kate took my baby, I would kill her."

This week, Kate states "Claire, I took Aaron." And there's no action taken? Not even a discussion? I understand that the writers state you have to suspend some belief on why people aren't asking questions at certain times but this is the primary facet of Claire's charactrer right now.

You can probably make a case as to why she didn't kill Kate at that point - maybe she needs her now. But there is no conceivable method - not even a suspension of belief - that explains how that conversation doesn't take place. Except poor writing.

 
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I'm not going to complain. But this season is like watching an entirely different show and I liked the old show better.Like somebody else mentioned, the previous seasons were about symbols, hatches, etc. All that is basically meaningless as we head towards the conclusion.
I hear where you're coming from, but YOU made the show about symbols, hatches, etc. As the post above that quoted the blog said, the show has always been about the struggles of the characters - good vs. evil, science vs. faith, free will vs. destiny - and fundamentally about man vs. his own nature. The symbols and the hatches were there as plot devices, but the fundamental nature of the show has always been those struggles. This season, that struggle is right up in your face and not necessarily used as subtely as has been done in the the past, but the show is fundamentally the same.
Oh stop already. We got hit over the freakin' head with Dharma, symbols, magic, mystery, hatches, others x 2 and polar bears for crying out loud. WE didn't make the show about that stuff, it's what the whole show has been about since day one when the unseen whatever the hell it was ripped the dying pilot from the cockpit and tossed him up in a tree, when the whole jungle trembled and shook and we heard some deathly howl that everyone speculated was some kind of prehistoric monster, when Jack chased the ghost of his father or last season when the island f'n disappeared and decided to time travel for half the season!It may have always been about good vs evil but the writers surrounded that struggle with so much fluff that it got LOST (pun intended). If it was truly about this monumental struggle then the whole thing could have been wrapped up in about 2 maybe 3 seasons tops.I disagree completely that the show is fundamentally the same and it's MY fault. Sorry.
It's almost like the middle 3 or 4 seasons were filler.We can only hope that the finale of good vs evil comes down to Juliette, Kate, Claire and Jacks ex having a bikini pillow fight.
 
And here's more criticism - but it's the same old criticism.Last week, Claire states something like "If Kate took my baby, I would kill her."This week, Kate states "Claire, I took Aaron." And there's no action taken? Not even a discussion? I understand that the writers state you have to suspend some belief on why people aren't asking questions at certain times but this is the primary facet of Claire's charactrer right now. You can probably make a case as to why she didn't kill Kate at that point - maybe she needs her now. But there is no conceivable method - not even a suspension of belief - that explains how that conversation doesn't take place.
Claire gave her a pretty serious look. I think in the next few episodes something will happen between Claire and Kate.
 
Sorry, perhaps I misspoke. I'm not saying it's anyone's fault, but if you look closely the hatch, the heiroglyphs, etc. were all subtext to further the plot and the main storylines of good vs. evil, science vs. faith, etc. They were key parts of the show, but just because we don't see them now, doesn't mean the show has changed, and that doesn't mean we won't see heiroglyphs or other things we've seen in the past used again this season.

Each season there's been a progression. We've gone from beaches and caves to hatches and barracks to temples to off-island life and trying to get back. Just because we don't see something anymore doesn't mean it's any less important to the overall picture of the show.

What I'm saying is if people are complaining because the show was ALL ABOUT hatches, heiroglyphs, etc. then they aren't really getting what the show is about. Maybe that's why so many people are starting to have issues with the show now. It's not like the majority of shows that are on TV where what you see is what you get.

 
And here's more criticism - but it's the same old criticism.Last week, Claire states something like "If Kate took my baby, I would kill her."This week, Kate states "Claire, I took Aaron." And there's no action taken? Not even a discussion? I understand that the writers state you have to suspend some belief on why people aren't asking questions at certain times but this is the primary facet of Claire's charactrer right now. You can probably make a case as to why she didn't kill Kate at that point - maybe she needs her now. But there is no conceivable method - not even a suspension of belief - that explains how that conversation doesn't take place.
Claire gave her a pretty serious look. I think in the next few episodes something will happen between Claire and Kate.
Seriously. I mean, there was some craziness going on with the black cloud of death swirling overhead and having to crawl out of a pit and walk through a courtyard of corpses to go follow Satan into the jungle and everything... I'm sure Claire vs. Kate isn't settled yet, quit nit-picking.
 
I agree with many of you. In fact, I told myself I wasnt coming in here but since I have been so disappointed, I wanted to get others opinion. Looks like I am not alone.

I knew it was going to be hard to meet the expectations and I said as much earlier in the thread.

I am not giving up on it. I know that somewhere down the line we will get to it. I feel like the past few episodes have almost been like the Paulo and girl I cant remember her name episodes.

This whole thing is coming down to Jack saving the island with Hurley and Jacobs help IMO

 
Wow, this thread sucks now. A couple interesting posts here and there, but lots of whining. If you want to whine, it is your perrogative, but geez, it sure makes this thread suck. Unfortunately, there aren't as many "mysteries" left that this thread is a good discussion about the show. Other than why sideways world exists, this season is no longer an exploration which makes sense since it is the final one. Without the exploration, there isn't much to discuss so the whining becomes the majority of the posts. It was always there before, but there was usually enough to talk about to cover it up a bit.

I miss HULK and FCL. Oh well, probably not much reason to keep reading.

ETA: I think I even miss Levin a bit.

 
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Wow, this thread sucks now. A couple interesting posts here and there, but lots of whining. If you want to whine, it is your perrogative, but geez, it sure makes this thread suck. I miss HULK and FCL. Oh well, probably not much reason to keep reading.
:goodposting:
 
And here's more criticism - but it's the same old criticism.

Last week, Claire states something like "If Kate took my baby, I would kill her."

This week, Kate states "Claire, I took Aaron." And there's no action taken? Not even a discussion? I understand that the writers state you have to suspend some belief on why people aren't asking questions at certain times but this is the primary facet of Claire's charactrer right now.

You can probably make a case as to why she didn't kill Kate at that point - maybe she needs her now. But there is no conceivable method - not even a suspension of belief - that explains how that conversation doesn't take place.
Claire gave her a pretty serious look. I think in the next few episodes something will happen between Claire and Kate.
and it was pretty exciting...
 

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