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16 posts tagged LOST

More of our favorite Greatest Couple also-rans — Sawyer/Juliet, Apollo/Starbuck, and Homer/Marge. Who else do you think deserved the title?

Our Greatest TV Couple tournament is down to the Elite Eight! These four matchups are going to be brutal…

Ross and Rachel (Friends) vs. Marshall and Lily (How I Met Your Mother)

Buffy and Spike (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) vs. Kurt and Blaine (Glee)

Desmond and Penny (Lost) vs. The Doctor and Rose (Doctor Who)

Darrin and Samantha (Bewitched) vs. Lucy and Ricky (I Love Lucy)

We’ve made it to the Sweet 16! Here’s who’s still in the game:

Ross and Rachel (Friends) vs. Derek and Meredith (Grey’s Anatomy)

Marshall and Lily (How I Met Your Mother) vs. Chandler and Monica (Friends)

Damon and Elena (The Vampire Diaries) vs. Buffy and Spike (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)

Kurt and Blaine (Glee) vs. Chuck and Blair (Gossip Girl)

Veronica and Logan (Veronica Mars) vs. Desmond and Penny (Lost)

The Doctor and Rose (Doctor Who) vs. Cliff and Clair (The Cosby Show)

Darrin and Samantha (Bewitched) vs. Howard and Marion (Happy Days)

Gomez and Morticia (The Addams Family) vs. Lucy and Ricky (I Love Lucy)

Vote vote vote!!

Today’s Greatest TV Couples qualifying round: Sawyer/Kate vs. Sawyer/Juliet. (Yeah, we don’t care about Jack/Kate. Deal with it.)

Ohhhh, so that’s what happened.

So Enetertainment Weekly’s own Jeff “Doc” Jensen co-wrote a movie with Lost’s Damon Lindelof, and it’s being directed by Brad Bird, and it’s produced by Disney, and it’ll star George Clooney, and we just learned exclusively that the film’s new title is Tomorrowland.

Excuse us while we squee.

Haaaaaave you been listening to our newest nerd-tastic podcast? Because it’s pretty neat. This week, Doc Jensen and Darren Franich talk Lost and serialization; you know you want to press “play.”

Bonus Cover

Since the start of Lost, we were presented with a diverse group of individuals that had something in common besides surviving a plane crash: They were stuck in ruts of self-destructive behavior that needed to be dismantled. They needed forgiveness and correction and healing; they needed transformation and new meaning. The story encouraged us to believe that The Island offered the means to attain this change. Neat… except The Island’s redemption scheme was a sick, self-serving game designed by an immature intelligence. In the end, the castaways found liberation and renewal and fulfillment, but they got it in a most ironic fashion: By purging Jacob’s defective system and rebooting it. They changed the rules.

Okay, this is actually Doc Jensen’s final Lost column. Probably. We think.

I no longer feel a need to ”make sense” of Lost… which is why I won’t be using this anniversary column to complete the project I began last summer and never finished, entitled ”The Final Theory of Lost.” ”Solving Lost” was a game that gave me pleasure when the show was on the air and doling out puzzle pieces; not so much now that the puzzle, no matter how fuzzy the picture, is finished. Beholding the messy whole, I realized I was good with Lost being messy.

Hey, did you know that Doc Jensen finally published his long-promised last Lost column yesterday, on the anniversary of the show’s finale? Because he did! But instead of being about figuring out the show, it’s about… well, find out for yourself.

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