The Prestige TV Podcast - The ‘Lost’ Episode That Got Us Hooked
Episode Date: September 10, 2025On this episode of Hooked, Jo and Rob land on a deserted island to make the case for why the two-part pilot is still the best place to start for those wanting to give ‘Lost’ another shot. (0:00) ...Intro (4:58) Personal relationships to ‘Lost’ (16:58) What makes the two-episode pilot such an effective entry point for the series (33:59) The flashbacks (37:15) Why “Walkabout” is a close runner-up (41:24) The mystery monster (52:47) Who won the episode? (57:07) Standout scenes (01:03:02) Single striking visuals (01:06:53) The most 2004 thing about this episode (01:12:17) Looking ahead to the rest of Season 1 Email us! prestigetv@spotify.com Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of ‘The Prestige TV Podcast’ and so much more! Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney Producers: Kai Grady and Donnie Beacham Jr. Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, welcome back to the Prestige TV podcast feed.
I'm Joanna.
I'm Rob Mohen.
And today we are here to talk about one of my favorite TV shows of all time.
This is an incredible week for me personally.
I know you guys are all excited to hear that.
I am.
Over on House of Rale, I got to show Mallory Rubin,
Buffy the Vampires Slater for the first time.
And here on the Presti TV podcast feed,
I get to show Rob Mahoney Lost for the first time.
We're going to be discussing two-part premiere of Lost today.
Rob, I'm thrilled.
Are you excited?
What a time to be alive.
What a time to be Joanna Robinson.
Let's get into it.
This message is brought to you by Apple Pay.
Forget your wallet.
It's all good because with Apple Pay,
you can pay with a simple tap of your iPhone,
the wallet you never forget at millions of places worldwide,
including websites, apps,
and anywhere you see the contactless symbol.
Security is built in with face ID
so you don't have to worry about your cars getting lost or stolen.
And the best part,
you still earn card rewards, points, and cash back you love.
So say goodbye to the buyfold,
add your card to Apple Wallet and start paying the Apple Way.
Terms apply.
We're here to talk to you about one of my favorite TV shows of all time,
and I feel extremely lucky.
You're listening to this a couple days after we're recording it,
which means I got to record it the same week that I recorded a House of Our episode
with Molly Rubin talking to her about Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
And it's just like double delight for me because here I am to talk to Rob Mahoney,
who's never seen it, here to talk to him about Lost and the double premiere of Lost Season
season one for this hooked episode.
Yes.
Everything is coming up, Joe.
Have you purchased a lottery ticket?
Have you considered any other adventurous pushes out into the world that might benefit you?
We also did Veronica Mars this week and we got to talk about ALA.
It's been a really good week for me personally.
Thanks so much for asking.
Listen, the premise of this pod of this miniseries we're doing Hooked, if this is the first
episode of the miniseries that you're listening to, is the idea is that usually we talk about
an episode that's not the pilot that we feel like is the best.
best example of an episode of the show of any of these like pantheon shows that you could show
to a friend or a loved one to be like, hey, man, if the pilot didn't do it for you, this is the
episode to really get you into this show.
Yes.
However, when we were brainstorming ideas for this, we were sort of saying, well, we should
probably pick a show where the answer is just the pilot.
And I, Rob took me on my word when I said, it has to be lost.
And Rob, having not seen any of loss, is like, are you sure you, you debate?
me on whether or not we could do a two-episode premiere.
You were deeply uncertain.
You had a lot of questions.
But here we are.
I got my way and I feel very good about it.
I will follow you into the dark, Joe.
I will follow you to the deserted island.
You know, I trust you implicitly with these things.
And you were 100% correct.
Sometimes the pilot just rips.
And it does our job for us and we don't have to come up with these alternative examples.
And to be able to do it with a show that I had not seen before, as you alluded to.
and so I get to play guinea pig on how hooked do I feel coming out of this double pilot.
Spoiler alert, quite hooked.
I am ready for my lost binge watch to commence.
The playoffs are here, and you can predict the action all the way to the finals with Fandul
predicts.
Predict the spread, total points, and even the game winner.
Sign up and get a $25 bonus.
Offered by Fandual Prediction Markets LLC, a registered futures commission merchant, 18 plus.
Bonus is non-withdrawable and expires seven days after receipt.
Trading derivatives involve significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
Manage your activity with our consumer protection tool.
Restrictions apply.
See terms at bandule.com slash predict slash bonus dash offer dash herms.
You made me so nervous when you had just watched part one.
And as you should, you're like, I'm saving my my takes for the pod.
We don't want to burn pod in the group chat and then have nothing to say when we get on mic.
But then you were like, but suffice to say I was surprised.
Yeah.
And it made me so nervous that you hated it.
And then I made you confirm for me that you at least liked the first hour.
So that's all I know.
You know, the tension that builds an anticipation of a podcast, you know, maybe it would have amplified it.
I was like, Rob, where are we emotionally about the loss pilot?
So here's the deal.
In case you don't know, loss is a TV show that ran on ABC for six seasons from 2004 to 2010.
It absolutely captivated, dominated, devoured the world for several seasons, not the entirety of the
run for several seasons and is, alas, best known these days for its deeply divisive finale,
which I'm happy to debate Andy Greenwald on if he wants to do a stick the landing on Lost,
Mallory Rubin and I are ready to defend the lost finale to our very bones.
This is reassuring, honestly.
I just want to tell everyone listening right now, I don't care if you've seen this show or not,
the thing that people say rolling their eyes about the loss finale that puts people off watching
the show and figure out what is going on.
is, quote, they were dead all the time.
They were not dead the whole time.
That is not true.
That is people wildly misinterpreting the show.
And it's a huge myth that surrounds loss.
And I'm just here to dispel it.
Thank you.
They were not dead the whole time.
We are not just in purgatory.
We are watching real people do real things.
So, Rob Mahoney, before we get into a little bit more detail about what you loved about,
and I'm so excited that you loved this double pilot.
But before we get into that, why do you think it was that you,
you know, you and I both have never watched Sopranos.
Things can, like, slip by us really easily.
For sure.
But you're a big Lindelof guy.
Why do you think it is that you've never watched Lost?
Well, I think part of it was this was before I knew I was a Lindelof guy.
You know, I really came in through some of his later TV works and other projects.
You weren't a Nash Bridges guy.
I mean.
You weren't there day one with Damon Littlop.
Tangentially.
But that's kind of in its own category.
I think part of it for me is kind of what you alluded to, which was the phenomenon
on of the show, it's the kind of thing where you either get swept up in it or it repels you a little bit.
Like I thought I was a little, I thought I was a little too good for it.
I'm going to be over here watching Deadwood and Arrested Development.
You guys can have your cute little gigantic big honkin sensation show.
Totally.
And so many people in my life were watching it.
So many people were recommending it.
And I was just kind of putting it off and shrugging it off for that reason.
And it appears quite foolishly.
I really understand that impulse, though.
I was thinking about this a lot when Mallory and I were discussing Buffy, which was my introduction to rabid fandom that, like, message boards and all of that.
Definitely.
But Buffy was, during its initial run, still a niche show.
And it is often my preference to really champion a niche show rather than dive headfirst into a massively popular show.
And I know I say that having, like, covered Game of Thrones and all these other massive shows.
And there's joy in that, too.
but there's joy in just sort of like finding someone else who likes the niche thing you like out in the world versus, hey, are you watching the most popular TV show in the world?
I am also watching the most popular TV show in the world.
But I'm glad we're doing it for hooked for that reason.
You know, we have our humble kind of AMC projects.
We have our like UPN originated Veronica Mars.
Like, we need to do something on a slightly different scale.
And this is the kind of show that that welcomes this sort of introduction with all of the fanfare, all of the theatrics, all of the fireworks.
of the two-part pilot,
I think it's perfectly worthy
for this kind of exploration.
I did not watch Lost
from the very beginning,
and it was one of those things
where people were talking about it,
and I think I caught up mid-season,
and I want to say I had to catch up
via a very glitchy,
ABC Go streaming situation.
Oh, wow.
So at least it was legal.
Yeah, it was legal,
but it was deeply grainy.
And, like, the joy of finally,
like the first time I watched this pilot,
especially,
biggest screen possible.
And I know that you just recently got a new television, so I'm so excited that you got to watch
this with the whitest whites and the blackest blacks available to you.
So I wasn't a day one lost fan, but I watched it while it was on, and I was a fan of it.
And then, in case folks don't know, coincidentally during COVID, I started a lost rewatched
podcast, just right before COVID.
You could hear COVID happen if you listen to this podcast.
It's called The Storm.
It was a Lost Rewatch podcast.
We watched every single episode.
We interviewed members.
I went really, really deep on Lost for several years,
leading up to me,
basically right up until I started at The Ringer.
Well, you went really deep on Lost for basically from the time you were hooked on the show
and then went even deeper for the purposes of the podcast.
Yeah, but I wouldn't say that I was like, I loved Lost and I loved talking about
loss and I loved theorizing about Lost, but I wasn't like an obsessive fanatic.
Okay.
And then I covered it in granular detail in a way that made me appreciate it even more.
And it means, I felt like sort of fondly, emotionally attached to my time with Lost.
And now I'm like, this is a text I have studied back and forth every single word, et cetera, et cetera.
So, yeah.
I do find that to be true of the Lindelof stuff in general, where, look, I can't speak to the mystery box elements of Lost.
Clearly, I've barely seen literally any of the show.
But from a character perspective, I find that when you tug on strings, you see where the string goes.
And you can understand how these people are getting from point A to point B, emotionally speaking.
And the other answers are going to come up as they do.
And sometimes they're satisfying and sometimes they're not.
But that's the kind of thing you can trust.
And to have that be even more enriched by the level of granular detail, you were turning over rocks left and right, trying to understand the show better.
Like, that's a really reassuring place to be with a show.
Yeah, and I think you're absolutely right in terms of law specifically when people get frustrated about various mystery rabbit holes that they went down and maybe didn't resolve the way that people wanted. Why is a polar bear on a tropical island? All these other questions that come up in the pilot. And by the way, we are not going to be spoiling other than the fact that I was like they're not dead the whole time. But that's just something I will tell a stranger on the street. So just so you know. You just have a sandwich sign on on the corner.
Guess what? They were not. It was, that's a lie that people tell you to get you to not watch loss.
we're not talking beyond the double premiere because I'm really excited.
Rob's about to watch all of lost in all of his spare time.
I hear basketball starting up again soon, so you're going to have a ton of time to do this, and I'm really excited for you.
I did not say what timeline my watch will be on.
A lot of episodes to get through, I'm very excited about it, but, you know, we're going to have to go at our own pace.
It'll just be a fun thing for you have.
There are huge misses in loss.
There are mistakes were made that the creators will admit were mistakes.
Totally fine.
All of that happen.
But in terms of that character, that emotional attachment that you have to care,
And, you know, it's here in the pilot. And, you know, many, though not all of these characters,
you know, will journey with you through all of the season. And so as soon as I saw them,
it felt like, here are my old friends and I care very deeply about their fates. And I think
that's true from the jump. And then it just deepens sort of as you go. So, season one,
episode one and two, the pilot parts one and two, written by J.J. Abrams.
and Damon Lindeloff, directed by JJ Abrams.
Jay J.J. Abrams gets credit as, like, a creator of loss, but he's not really.
He's here, like, right at the beginning.
Sure.
And then it's Damon Lindeloff and Carlton Kuse's show, basically going forward.
So that is the deal.
Here's what happens in this double premiere in Broadstrokes.
This is the one where Oceanic Flight 815 crashes on Mysterious Island.
We get a couple of flashbacks, which we're going to talk about.
We perform some pit-worthy triage on a beach.
Discover a disturbingly French 16-year-old radio signal.
Oh, and also there's something big, scary and noisy in the jungle.
It ate, question mark, the pilot.
Guys?
Where are we?
Rob, what were you expecting?
You said the word you used to me when you texted me was like you were surprised.
Yes.
So that made me curious.
What were you expecting from this pilot?
And how was it different from what you expected?
I think I was expecting the pilot to be a little more matter of fact.
You know, like we get on the island, the crash has happened.
Let's get into straight, like, Lord of the Flies, mostly human drama,
as these people are like sorting out order and authority among the people who are there.
I was not expecting full on plunge into the mystery box right out of the gate.
And I think that's a lot of what separates, you know,
this from being a good pilot to a really great pilot.
is it has all the stuff that I was expecting.
And then it has that just one of my favorite qualities in any media, which is the,
what kind of show am I watching?
Like, I am not sure and the ground is shifting under my feet as all of a sudden, trees are
getting knocked down by some mysterious monster out there.
As we're getting into, like, creepy voice recordings, like, I knew about the lost polar bear.
That is a thing that if you are a person of the cultural world, you have probably heard about
in some respect.
I had zero idea it was going to be coming in this.
two-part pilot. I assume that was a
midway through season one kind
of reveal. I thought the voice recordings
would be like a season three kind of
turn. And so to get all that stuff
jammed in here feels
incredibly propulsive. And if you'll
pardon it, it is an incredible
hook for an episode like this that is just
dragging you into the following
episodes for the season. I genuinely
think, and I
told you that earlier today I was sort of
in my mind going through
closing scenes in
pilots. And I genuinely think
Dom Monaghan as Charlie Pace
saying, guys, where are we?
Is up there, the top
final beat of loss. There's also one in
part one, which makes me wonder, is this a
Carrie Bradshaw style, Don Monaghan is going to ask a pertinent
question at the end of every episode of Lost? Which I'm not
opposed to for the record. I just want to know where I am.
I can help but wonder. Guys, where are we?
There's also these audio cues
that come with your experience watching Lost
that you become sort of like Pavlovian trained to respond to.
So there's the like boom sound cue that happens at the end of an episode of Lost.
There's also the term I like to use is sounds like a brass band going over a cliff.
There's just this like audio clue of like what is happening?
And the score just goes like, yeah.
You know, you're just like, I don't know what's happening.
My emotions are all triggered.
Michael J. Kino, who is the composer on this show, bears a lot of credit for some of the emotional turmoil that you feel watching this show because his score for lost is absolutely top tier.
You're a Lindelof guy. You mentioned this idea of, like, sort of character threads that you can pull and you know that you can follow them to sort of logical conclusions. Are there other sort of Linda Lafeyan – this is a very J.J. Abrams pilot. We will talk about that. But there are other Linda Lafeyan sort of hallmarks or –
characteristics that you were able to pull out of this episode.
I suspect many more will pop out in retrospect.
When I am sitting where you are sitting now, having seen and experienced all of it, I will see more.
The two that popped out for me are the connectedness of all things and all people.
I feel like it's something that comes up all the time in Lindelof stuff.
And it's like the ways in which people have these very obvious macro sorts of connections.
Like if you are a convict being escorted by a U.S. Marshal on a plane, it's like you are bound together.
or maybe in like a physical, literal way.
And then there are the microwaves of like,
I was mean to this guy at the gate
and now he's just like in my head.
You know, like we are bonded in a kind of different way.
And the fact that the structure of the show
lends itself to tracing back all of those connections
or like fleeting connections between these people
before they crashed on the island.
That feels very Linda Lafian to me.
And I would say the other thing is sort of like
the secrets that we keep and the ones that we keep
to protect us and the ones that we keep for the greater good.
That stuff is like already.
popping out front and center.
I think a great example of the first case that you're talking.
I mean, this will be the show.
Like, how are we all connected, blah, blah, blah.
But I think the best example of that in this two-part premiere,
great shout out for that Shannon moment when she's sort of having her grief over this dead body.
But Jack helping Rose, you know, in a medical capacity.
And then you find out that they were sitting across the aisle from each other on the plane.
Her husband was in the bathroom, and he's like, I'll keep you company while he's gone.
So there's this promise that was made that we've already seen Jack fulfill in a way in his doctor capacity.
But these are just these moments between characters.
Charlie runs by in that first flashback.
And then we see why Charlie was running by.
And it's part of the larger mystery, but they're often character-based moments.
It's not just sort of like how did this process?
person get here, but why did this person get here? And that's a Linda Lofian concern, I think.
So, yeah. What makes this episode a good entry point? We're not going to do our usual
structure, obviously, because, like, Rob can't speak to the larger picture. I will, you know,
come in with some of those thoughts myself in a non-spiler way, but we're going to do it a little
differently and sort of drill down on the things that make just this isolated experience of watching,
you know, an hour and 45 minutes of television so special. J.J. Abrams is sort of famously
killer at launching things.
Most, like,
a JJ Abrams premise
and a JJ Abrams cast
is one of the most
like irresistible things you can have.
That's true of alias.
It's true of Felicity.
That's true of fringe.
Like, there's just all these examples.
He knows how to cast a show
incredibly well.
And then in terms of landing
that project,
that is usually not his specialty.
On the cast front show,
obviously there's a lot of people
who I knew
were on loss, I don't think I fully
realized the scale of
that guys and gals who were going to be appearing
here. Like, I just straight of did not know
Evangeline Lilly was in this show somehow. Are you
serious? I'm completely serious. Just
did not know it. And so she pops up.
It's like, oh, this is, oh, Ian
Summerhalder is here. It's just like,
just an incredible collision of actors
who I like and have great affection for
are just like popping up on the screen left and right.
Most of whom, like,
it is a weird situation where I would say some of the
break, what I interpret from the outside
as being like the breakout stars of Lost
are kind of still most known for Lost.
Like the specter and the shadow of this show,
I think looms pretty large over a lot of this cast.
And some people have been able to break out.
Some people had long and successful careers
before appearing on the show.
But it is kind of a mixed bag
in terms of what kind of launch pad loss turned out to be
for a lot of these people.
It is interesting.
I won't sort of spoil for you
out of the people who get sort of minimal screen time
who rises to the top,
though you might have a sense of that.
Yeah. But what's clear from the two-part pilot is that of Angeline Lilly's character, Kate, and Matthew Fox's character, Jack, are like two main characters of this pilot. And then also Don Monaghan, who was the most famous person in the cast at the time, having just done Lord of the Rings. Charlie is like the third. These are the three characters who get little flashbacks inside of the episodes. These are like the three, you know, leads of the show in a show that is very much an ensemble show.
And I think it's wild to me that, so you were just like, oh, it's the woman from Anne Man?
Like, where do you know of Angelie Lillie from?
It's not from Lost.
I mean, the woman from Ant Man, the woman from the desolation of Smog, you know.
Oh, oh, of course.
The woman from the heart locker.
You know, I think that's what we're going for.
Tariel from Hobbit movies.
Sure, of course. As we all know.
Got it.
Desolation, Smog.
Amazing.
But yeah, but to your point, yeah.
Ian Summerholder, this is like a big launch in his career before the vampire diaries.
Daniel Day Kim, Josh Holloway.
You know, there are a bunch of people who really got their toehold.
But to your point, with someone like Josh Holloway, who is great on Lost, and we're still waiting for what he's going to...
This is like what we were talking about last time with Veronica Mars.
We're still waiting for what Jason Doring is going to do after Veronica Mars.
it's going to sort of be his thing and we're still waiting.
It's not, it was not his HBO show that came and went Josh Holloway.
So what will it be for him?
Maybe that's our fault.
Maybe we should have been covering Duster, you know?
Maybe that's on us.
We considered it.
Okay.
We are launched right into the action without a Veronica Mars voiceover,
without a Joan Harris tour of the office to orient us.
And the disorientation is kind of the point.
We've talked about this, like the way in which these other pilots that we talked about,
Breaking Bad, Mad Men,
Veronica Mars have this job of orienting us, making sure that we know who everyone is,
and we know what the order of the office is or why Walt wound up in a Winnebago in the desert
or, you know, the social milieu of Neptune High or whatever it is.
In loss, the disorientation is the point, so it doesn't have the burden of that.
You're introduced in this very, like, loss is such an, to your point, is such an interesting
showed to try to nail down in terms of genre because the prompt was, give me survivor, but make it fiction.
Right.
That's what the suits that ABC wanted.
But you've got Damon Lindelof here who loves Twin Peaks, so you're going to have like some weirdness in here.
And you've got Damon Lindelof as someone who loves character.
And you've got JJ Abrams as someone who loves a spectacle.
And a close up.
Yeah, a close up of Jack's eye.
So you've got a guy isn't a suit in the jungle.
And there's a dog here, and you're immediately like, this is a weird setup.
And then we follow Jack as he emerges onto the beach into chaos, but chaos that makes logical sense to us.
Oh, it's a plane crash.
And though this is not an ordinary event, it's an event that we recognize versus just guy in jungle in a suit with a mini bottle of booze in his pocket.
And so it's just like, it's this cool sort of surreal moment that bleeds right into this.
And watching it after covering the pit with you,
I was just sort of like, oh, the pit owes a lot of...
Probably does.
A lot of favors to this opening of Lost Air.
Well, I mean, they are successful for the same reason,
which is the pacing of these opening episodes,
is really remarkable.
And I think some of it is what you're alluding to,
which is like, you put screaming people on a beach with wreckage.
We all know what happened.
Like, you don't need to be told.
And it turns into like a masterclass lightning round show, don't tell.
We are just moving from case to case,
injured person in peril to person in peril.
And as you're going through all that,
obviously it's just propulsive in a watching capacity.
Like, I'm just hooked on what is going to happen next.
Who's the next person needs to be pulled out from a jet engine
or away from a jet engine?
But you're also getting all the little character moments
that are telling you about these people as you go.
Who is willing to help?
Who is stepping up to do this?
Who is calling for their loved one who they can't find?
You're feeling in all these gaps really, really quickly
in a way that you and I, Joe,
we've been talking about all these other pilots have been returning to.
Like, how efficiently are you able to set up your cast of characters and how broad can that
cast be in a pilot?
And even for the shows that do it really efficiently, how are you able to also make it an
entertaining episode with its own story that is satisfying in its own way?
And this is the answer to how you do it.
Like, it's incredibly efficient storytelling.
But it also has that, like, roller coastery feel right from the jump where I'm just like,
I'm locked into the rhythm of the show to the point that when we,
finally do ease up and zoom out.
It's like, okay, I kind of know in a broad sense who some of these people are, who some of
them are to each other.
And now we can kind of reset the stage and figure out like, okay, what is the next thing
we have to accomplish?
It's like, as a piece of entertainment, it is just pure adrenaline joy.
And it looks great.
You know, the fuselage looks amazing on the beach.
You know, they're filming on Oahu in, you know, the same place that Jurassic Park was filmed.
and you could tell, you know, like everything is just absolutely gorgeous.
But when you dive into it from a, just pull apart this screenplay and figure out the magic trick that they pulled off here.
Yes.
Tracking the character whose name you learn when and what, you know, kernel of information you get about them when and how natural all of it feels.
When we find out that Charlie is in a one who.
Wonder Band.
When we find out that Said was in the Republican Guard, you know, like all of these, when we
find out that Sawyer is a racist piece of shit, like, all of these moments are inside conversations
that feel like fun and natural.
And like, Saeed makes this revelation while he's trying to fix the radio.
And Charlie tells, you know, Kate, you know, sings a little you all, everybody while they're
hiking to try to find the wreckage.
You know, we're doing something.
And we're dropping, oh, Boone, that's my brother, God's gifted.
humanity like blah, blah.
Like, that's all inside of these
other moments and it's all just carefully
sort of nested,
like a little like Russian doll
sort of inside of a plot that's just going, going, going.
And this is where I think the survivor structure
that you described really pays off.
You can feel like in the same way
that a reality show kind of comes out in the edit
of like what information as you're saying
in lost case, like do you reveal first
and how does that anchor our opinion of that character?
Right.
You can see the same kind of storytelling happening here.
You can see the same kind of archetypes from reality TV happening here as far as like,
oh, here's the do-gooder Dr. Hero.
You know, here's the, you know, attractive woman he happened to stumble upon it.
Now they are, like, bonded together in this very alchemical way.
And you have, like, all of these very easy stand-ins for people we know,
here's the superficial woman painting her nails.
You know, it's like all of these things are very recognizable immediately.
And then you get the entire show, I imagine, to peel back, to subvert,
to tell us more about who these people are.
I thought the way that is done with Kate and her flashback specifically is just like really smart storytelling.
And so like that's the part of the show I am most looking forward to is, okay, we have, you know, the one line synopsis summary of all these characters.
And we started to get a little deeper with Jack and Kate and Charlie.
How does it dramatically transform our understanding of who these people are as we get every little bit and piece along the way?
I think the best of like, you know, the fact that Charlie Payton is.
is in a ban and also has a heroin habit is not that surprising.
The fact that Kate, who we've seen, be so both scared and deeply terrified and also quite
heroic and has some leadership qualities to her and has some like, I'm here for the
group qualities to her to have that revelation of, oh, she was the one in handcuffs is just one
of the many genius beats of the show.
But then to get that revelation, oh, she's the one in handcuffs.
And then if you rewatch, you see like the first time we see her, she's rubbing her
wrist because she just took the handcuffs off of them and stuff like that.
To get that information, and in that same beat, you get that information, you watch her
put the oxygen mask on the piece of shit, US Marshall before she puts it on herself.
And so then you learn even another thing about Kate is that even inside.
of this information we have that, you know, she's being brought in to justice, quote, unquote,
but there's something about her that is the person that we thought we were getting to know also.
So that's, again, like triple layers deep on a character inside of this massive cast.
I'm just going to, I wrote this down from memory.
I think I got everyone, but we'll see.
Here are the characters that we were supposed to be at least somewhat tracking in this two-episode pilot.
Jack Kate Charlie
Syed Shannon Boone
Hurley Claire
Rose John
Sawyer son
Jin Michael Walt
I'm sorry
Vincent good boy
What a good boy
I was about to say
You better name that dog
Vincent not to mention
the flight attendant Cindy
and the pilot
Greg Grumberg
Breast and Pieces
and the polar bear
and the polar bear
of course
and whatever it is
that's making a lot of stompy noises
in the jungle
and whatever French woman did
the VO for the recording.
Yes, the French woman on the radio.
Great point.
Great shout.
Did anyone, like, failed to land with you or did they, you know, there are certain people
we, you know, like John Locke is here to be mysterious and tell us about backgammon, you know,
like there are certain characters who are, you know, Hurley seems friendly and doesn't like
the side of blood, but we don't really know anything about him, you know, his history.
And so like that there are certain things that we don't get, you know.
Claire is pregnant.
That's all we know.
Is there, are any of these characters that failed to, like, connect with you or you were like,
that wasn't an interesting way to meet that archetype.
Those kinds of meetings, the characters who we know little about,
I'm mostly intrigued by, and I just want to know more about them.
So none of them really fell flat for me.
The one that didn't quite work for me was Charlie,
and I think it's because the drug stuff is like such an,
it's like such a clear faint, and maybe there's a double faint,
and this is a head fake, and we're going to swerve some other way that I don't expect,
but that was the one time in these two episodes where I felt
a little ahead of the curve of what the show was dishing out.
and everything is so mysterious and everyone's backstories are so closely held,
that even feeling that felt different than everything else that was happening on screen.
You were like, oh, a twitchy guy has disappeared into the bathroom.
I fucking wonder why.
He sprinted to the front of the plane and everyone is trying to figure out where he went.
Like he obviously hit something, probably drugs in the bathroom.
He's either a junkie or a mule or maybe both.
Like that just seemed like where we were headed with all that.
I think that's completely fair with Charlie.
For my part, I will say, I think the least successful part, like in terms of your
exactly right that we are presented with various archetypes that will then be subverted.
That is, that's just the show, right?
And there are ways in which this information is so interestingly doled out.
Like I think, you know, you mentioned we first meet the character of Michael screaming for Walt.
We find out that Walt is his son.
And then we find out that he doesn't quite know how old Walt is.
And we find out that Walt doesn't even live with him, that he lives with his mom who just died.
Can I first say very relatable in that way?
Because I am the kind of person who, if someone asks how old I am, will occasionally give the slightly wrong answer and then have to correct myself. So who among us?
No, that's, if you ask me about most people that I love and care about, I could not tell you actually how old they are precisely.
Now, we are not their parents. So, yes, there's a different reflection in that in specific. But we're learning more about him as we go.
That's a great moment of like, oh, this guy doesn't know how old his kid is? Yeah. Okay. Despite seeing how concerned he was about where Walt was.
Well, also, I mean, when he says we'll get you a new dog, just like very clear, this guy does not know how to fully dad.
Not great.
Not great.
I would say for me, the biggest failure in this double premiere, which I think is so good, in terms of like we will subvert expectations around them.
But in something that I don't think they had a full handle on, I will say the son and gin relationship.
This is the couple who speak only Korean in the double premiere.
And, you know, Jin is sort of like, it's us first.
This is very like Joel and Ellie Last of Us.
Like, we are concerned with us.
Then sort of makes his public bid with some, you know,
see food that he has procured for people that nobody wants to eat.
Least of all the pregnant woman.
Just ungrateful.
Literally the only person who seems to fully appreciate, like,
the fresh uni he's dishing out is Claire's baby.
Other than that, come on.
on. But isn't Claire not supposed to be having sushi? Look, desperate times. All right?
Fair enough.
This is fascinating you say this, though,
because I found myself really compelled by their relationship.
I'm compelled by it.
I think they just,
it's the one case where I think they swerved a little hard in a direction,
if that makes sense,
that they then don't find a natural way back from.
I think that makes total sense.
But I do think having two characters in this case speaking Korean,
where all of the audience,
you know,
in my case,
people who don't speak Korean,
like I am reading every bit of body language,
every bit,
every kind of social cue and detail trying to understand who these people are,
reading into their hesitations, like are these people who only speak Korean?
Are these people who are choosing to speak Korean, even though they do speak English to create that barrier,
like an us versus the world or us alone kind of thing?
Like, I'm really captivated by what we've seen from them on screen, even in these first two episodes.
So I'm eager to see kind of what becomes of them.
Other than sort of the instances that we've mentioned, Michael not knowing how old Walt is,
etc.
Et, et cetera.
Are there any,
do you have any favorite instances
of, like,
telegraphing a relationship
dynamic without overtly
saying the thing?
I actually think,
even though that one is a little heavy-handed,
it might be gin and son.
It might just be, like,
the, again,
just the way they are,
like, those two actors
are physically responding
to each other's dialogue.
It's something that,
like, I'm already locked in on
in terms of,
like, clearly there is a male patriarchal
protectiveness
slash assertiveness,
slash, I mean, maybe it feels almost like a little misplaced, like a little overcompensating in a way that I don't know if that's what you're alluding to as far as maybe being pitched a little bit intense or if that's part of the character. I don't really know any of that yet. But that's all fun stuff to dig into two episodes in. Absolutely. Okay. So we've mentioned that we have three, we have a flashback for Jack, a flashback for Charlie and a flashback for Kate. And this is all like what they were doing on the plane before the crash. And I'm really,
glad we're doing this next to our Veronica Mars
coverage because having just come off
a show where we were quite
critical of how they used, how they overused
flashbacks inside of that.
Lost is a show
that is just, his first couple
seasons are just anchored on the concept
of a flashback. So many
shows copy the Lost
model going forward where you have, you know,
in this first episode,
you know, we've got
Jack and Kate and Charlie, but going
forward, you will have a, it's a
Blank episode. It is a Kate episode. It is a Jack episode. It is a Charlie episode. It is a John
episode. It's whatever. And so you will get flashbacks that will help you understand a bit more
who that character is while they're working their way through some drama on the island.
And what is so genius about the way in which Lost employs that as a rule is, again, it's not
about how this person got here. It's about why this.
this person is making the choices that they're making on the island.
Absolutely.
What it is about how they got, like who they are, why they are, the way that they are.
And you slowly peel back the layers on these characters to find that out.
So that is like a, you know, any given Netflix show might try to pull off that trick nowadays.
That is like a fairly common sort of idea, but Lost really pioneered it.
How do you feel like these sort of mini flashbacks that we get for Jack, for Kate, and for Charlie,
work inside of this double premiere.
They're incredibly effective.
I think you're right to point out the contrast.
And to me, a lot of it is, like, what's striking to me hearing you kind of unpack the
role that the flashbacks play and kind of the way they're deployed is they are answering
questions that we actually already have as a viewer, right?
Like, you see these people, you see them on the beach.
I'm like, John Locke, why are you the way you are?
Like, I genuinely don't understand this man or his whole deal.
I can't wait to see more of him.
but like that's a character I want to know more about.
And by virtue of the structure of the show,
putting all these people on a plane,
all for their individual purposes,
all who had complete lives leading up to that moment and the crash,
those are questions we have.
Just by, you know, you see them and the way they act on the island, as you said,
and I want to be able to reverse engineer who these people are based on their backstory.
Things like Veronica Mars often are grinding the action that we're invested in to a halt.
Yeah.
To then tell us about something that we didn't know we needed to ask,
But then, of course, yes, like, oh, you know, here's a murder suspect, here's this other element, here's this character motivation that you didn't know about.
Like, that stuff's helpful and I think can be good and can, in retrospect, feel valuable.
But as far as the momentum of a show, like, these are flashbacks that are accelerating that momentum and not taking it away.
Are you looking for support in your weight management journey?
Zepbound terzepatide may be able to help.
Zepbound is a prescription medicine used with a reduced calorie diet and increased physical activity.
to help adults with obesity, or some adults with overweight who also have weight-related medical
problems to lose excess body weight and keep the weight off. Zepbound is approved as a 2.5, 5, 7.5,
10, 12.5, or 15 milligram injection. Zepound contains terseptide and should not be used with
other terseptide-containing products or any GLP1 receptor agonist medicines. It is not known if
Zepound is safe and effective for use in children. Don't share needles or pens or reuse
needles. Don't take if allergic to it, or if you or someone in your family had medullary thyroid
cancer, or if you've had multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. Tell your doctor if you get a
lump or swelling in your neck. Stop zepbound and call your doctor if you have severe stomach
pain or a serious allergic reaction. Severe side effects may include inflamed pancreas or gallbladder
problems. Tell your doctor if you experience vision changes before scheduled procedures with
anesthesia if you're nursing pregnant, plan to be, or taking birth control pills. Taking
Zep bound with a sulfoniluria or insulin may cause low blood sugar. Side effects include nausea,
diarrhea, and vomiting, which can cause dehydration and worsen kidney problems. Talk to your doctor.
Call 1-800-545-99-9 or visit Zepbounds.lily.com.
This episode is brought to by Whole Foods Market. Spring is here, so celebrate it with fresh,
juicy, seasonal produce and some very tasty, limited-time flavors. New Whole Foods, Market
peach apricot rose Italian soda. Perfect for a picnic or brunch, as is their trending mango
Yuzu chantilly cake. But if you're on the go, new 365 strawberry pretzels make a great
sweet snack. That sounds delicious. Get savings with yellow sale signs storewide and everyday low prices
on 365 brand items. Enjoy the fresh flavors of spring. Save at Whole Foods Market.
This episode is brought to by Boris Head. What if we
told you the taste of deep fried turkey is now available at your local deli. Well, Bor's Head just did that.
Bursting with flavor, perfectly seasoned with that indulgent taste that usually means pointing
your whole day around it, presenting the Friars Turkey Breast only from Borgeshead.
Backyard Tradition now available behind the counter. Visit your local deli today. Discover the
craftmanship behind every bite. Borershead committed to craft since 1905. I feel very confident
in us picking this double pilot as the hook episode of the show.
I do think in the grand scheme of thing,
the most convincing argument that people could make for a different episode
is episode four Walkabout, which is John Locke's episode,
which is a stunner of an episode.
And so it is a moment that a lot of people cite as like,
oh, my God, this is why I watch Lost.
We should say that.
I know people have been emailing us at Prestige TV.
at Spotify.com about this series, about the hooked concede, about various shows and what they think
a hooked episode is. I almost want to come through this a little bit. There is like the hooked
episode that gets you on board. And then there's like the oh shit episode. And to me they're often not
entirely the same thing. One of them is it kind of take, again, takes you to a place that you maybe
didn't know the show could go or shows you a version of the show that you didn't think could exist.
There's an amplifying effect to that is to me almost separate from what we're trying to do with
I can't wait to see what happens next sort of thing.
And there's two different natures, like two different ideas when it comes to hooked,
which might not be a clean concept for a podcast, but there's like, there's this, which is
this, this pilot ends, guys, where are we?
Boom.
And you just want to press play on the next thing.
You can't wait to see what happens next.
And then there's, this is what the show is, which is a little different.
That's sort of what we've been trying to drill down on with like something like Mad Men.
I think the Breaking Bad episode we picked was very much more like that literal hookiness.
But with like our Mad Men or Veronica Marr's choices, we're like, this is actually more what you can expect from the show, which is just like a little different than like a grab you.
So I guess we're coming up with like all kinds of taxonomies.
It's true.
Oh shit.
There's the grabs.
There's the like I'm insecure storytelling hands kind of idea.
Then we also got an email from a listener who was like suggesting that we should do a miniseries called Unhooked, which is like what is the episode?
that, like, kicked you off, like, killed forever your interest in a show. And I think that
is interesting to think about. Absolutely interesting to think about. I do think it's worthy
to discuss whether a two-part pilot and premiere should qualify. Yeah. And I say that especially
because, look, I... You were anti this. I was a little skeptical of it. Like, obviously,
they are of a piece and they are telling a story that is a two-part story. Yeah.
From the, I was going to say safety, from the whatever 2025 is, I on my couch.
can hit next on Hulu and watch the next episode of Lost.
This was not a double-batch same night premiere.
This was two separate weeks, two separate episodes.
I think by a certain definition, it's just kind of episode one and two have lost.
I don't entirely disagree with you.
And episode one, I think, does end with like a pretty neat hook.
For sure.
You were pretty much in.
Oh, yeah.
When I was rewashed, like, you watched episode one,
before I watched my episodes.
And, like, bearing that in mind, when episode one ended, I was like, we maybe could have
stopped here.
I was like, we actually probably could have stopped here.
I honestly had seen all I needed to see as far as, like, an investment in a show.
Yeah, but there are certain character beats that I think are so important in the second
episode.
In terms of, like, they simply do not have the time to give you little moments with everyone.
And so you just need that extra hour to sort of give you that Saeed and Hurley conversation or give you these various other things.
It's so Jack and Kate and Charlie focused in that first hour.
So I think just getting the full scope of what is on offer here is sort of how I think about it.
But it's a fair point.
Ultimately, I'm glad we did it for exactly that reason.
Like I do have a better sense of all of these other characters, many of whom I want to talk about in greater detail.
but like yeah it would have been a much narrower scope on what we have been talking about
it's like a huge ensemble show and that in itself is maybe not a fair representation of what
lost is one and two in total is maybe the fairest representation of that who which characters
do you want to talk about are you saying like right now or as you can save it for some of
our prompts yeah i have some dialed up okay all right right um before we get there rob there's a
mystery monster in this episode there's certainly
is.
How does that?
Can I give you a little bit of trivia?
Please.
When we first, you know, it's really Claire who's like identifying like, guys, what's
that?
What's happening over there?
But the character of Rose, it's, there's overlapping dialogue.
So you might not on first watch here, this.
But Rose is like, it sounds familiar.
It sounds like something from home.
And people ask her where she's from.
She's from and she says the Bronx.
A fun fact is that the sound design that they use there.
does include the sound of a printing receipt in a taxi cab.
So that's just like a sound design joke essentially.
I mean, it's a tremendous bit.
A ticker tape of a taxi cab receipt,
which children, once upon a time,
taxi cabs used to print receipts before everything is digital.
They still do.
They still do print them.
But the sound design of all of the monster sequences really does make it.
And the sort of like walking the line of like,
is this an animal?
Is that a mechanical kind of roaring?
Which, as you alluded to, is, is in the sauce there.
The fact that it's impossible to place, I think is what makes it so good.
So I love a mystery.
I love a monster.
I love a mystery monster.
I am game for all of this stuff.
And especially in the way I was describing earlier,
where it's sort of like transforms what you think you're watching and where you think
you are.
And it's, you know, Joe, you're so right to point out, like, the fact that we don't have
like a natural sort of point of view character or like a tour.
guide character to take us around the island.
Like we are firmly in the other, there's those two buckets.
Either someone is taking through the world and telling you all the rules and showing you
what's what, or we, along with the characters, are trying to figure out what the hell is
happening.
And I feel like the sound design and the deployment of the monster specifically is the
crystallization of that idea of even if they thought they knew where they were and
clearly they're way off course and could not pinpoint themselves on a map even if they
tried, they don't know what universe they're in.
how this polar bear got here, what this monster is,
where these sounds are coming from.
Like, the accelerating nature of those mysteries,
I think is just so compelling for a show like this.
And I love that you shout out this sort of that moment
where we find out that they're way off course.
The use of the pilot in the pilot, once again,
shout out JJ Abrams, regular, great grumber.
But, like, the fact that, like, you know, he's ailing, you know,
we're inside a bit of plane that's like precariously teeter you know very Jurassic Park-esque
precariously teetering out of a tree you know we're at a sharp angle everything is is and there's
a monster in the jungle all of this is putting pressure on us and also the pilot is asking
questions that he who is like sort of a de facto would be a de facto leader if he were not now just
like bloody pulp should be asking which is how many survivors and so we find out how many
survivors and we find out how long it's been since they crashed.
These are questions he's asking Jack, and then he gives Jack information about where
these many miles off course.
And this constant refrain we hear from especially characters like Shannon of they'll take
care of it, whoever the they are when they get search and rescue is named.
But several times characters will be like, oh, they will do this or when they find us.
And it's this idea of like someone is watching and taking care of us.
Someone is at the wheel somewhere.
And it's, no, it's you guys are, it's you guys are going to have to figure it out, you know.
And Jack in his, you know, very Noah Wiley in the pit, Robbie, like, in his, the natural authority that comes of being a medical professional and a medical emergency.
Right.
Get slotted into this leadership role.
But as you alluded to, as well as Survivor, Lord of the Flies is definitely the DNA here.
So it's like, who do we want leading us?
And who will they decide they want leading them?
And will that always be the same answer going forward as it is in a medical emergency
about on the beach?
Yes.
Look, now that the initial wave of trauma flood has happened in terms of the physical, well,
it's still happening.
I mean, surgery is still in progress.
So things are happening.
But yeah, once the dust settles, who is your kind of peacetime president?
You know, who are you deferring to in that capacity?
I do have an information question for you that I was not sure about from these two episodes.
when they do return from this expedition to the cockpit
where they meet the pilot and then lose the pilot
and then run off into the jungle,
many, many things happen.
Yeah.
When they return, they tell Ian Summerholder's character Boone
that there are no survivors from the crash.
To me, that read initially as like,
they're not going to tell people about the pilot.
Maybe they're not going to tell people
that the plane was so horribly off course.
I wasn't quite clear how much had been conveyed
from the Trinity who went out.
on the expedition and came back as far as like how fucked everyone is from a search party perspective.
That's a great stay tuned question to ask.
Though I will say, as we enumerate all the mysteries of the island, like who is this French woman?
What is she mean when she says, you know, they're all dead?
What is that about that 16 year old mystery, all this sort of stuff like that?
What if it's just like Juliet Benosh hiding in the mountain?
You know, I'm just saying there's lots of very.
satisfying answers to where that plot line could go.
Julie Delpy, like, there's a number of French women I would happily encounter.
Any one of the women in Portrait a Lady on Fire, like, whoever's waiting for us in the jungle, I would happily receive them.
They mentioned that the tail section landed elsewhere.
Yes.
So that's just, like, a big question mark that is existed.
Disconcerting.
The way the plane was ripped apart, very disconcerting to watch.
I love when you, I don't know if you're like me, but you're like,
watching, I love, part of the flashback of who was sitting where on the plane when it crashed is
like really fun.
You know, you're just like, okay, John is sitting right behind Rose.
Charlie crawls over Shannon and Boone, who go out of their way to say they weren't in first class.
Because if you were in first class, that means you were in the tree with the pilot, right?
And so when she's like, he saved our lives, it's like, if they were in first class, they'd be dead in the tree.
Yeah.
But they were sort of a bit back.
And it's just like Charlie made it all the way to front of the plane.
and then somehow made it all the way far enough back
that he survived the crash as well.
And that's all just like fun little like puzzling, puzzle making that you can do.
And just a pro move crossing the aisle like that by Charlie
in order to evade.
One that I really learned, I think, from the wedding singer
when a guy is trying to escape Billy Idol.
And really the only way you can get away from Billy Idol
is by crossing to the other side.
And both the wedding singer and Charlie's flashback have a dangerous
a cart going down the aisles, a bodily harm moment.
Watch those elbows.
You know, it's a real hazard.
It's a jungle out there.
Okay, so I'm just going to race through some of our usual questions
about spoiling anything for you just to like, you know, do due diligence to what we usually ask.
Sounds great.
Is it a setting location typical or atypical of the larger series?
Does that matter?
We're on the island.
That's where we need to be.
It's fairly typical.
Makes sense.
The immediate emergency of the plane crash is.
slightly atypical, but
are enough of the main
slash most important characters represented here, does that matter?
Yeah, the gang's all here.
The gang is all here.
Not the entirety of the series gang is all here,
but like our season one gang is all here.
Do you want more characters that we've met in these first two episodes?
I don't think you can handle it.
And then most important relationships,
I would say we can get into this a little bit more.
But I just think, you know, I think like having a son and gin moment,
having a Michael Walt moment,
having, you know, Jack and Kate's, you know, unfurling conversations, Shannon and Boone, Shannon
talking to Claire, Saeed, talking to Hurley, like, it's all, they're all sort of, you know,
and Sawyer doing whatever the fuck Sawyer wants to do inside of these episodes. Like, it's all
Jack and Wall, John and Wall, like, it's all, it's all sort of in the mix here. There's
too many things to pick from, and they're all important, as it turns out. So that's the great news.
So that's, that's sort of all the bare bones sort of something we wanted to raise.
through. I appreciate the sensitivity.
I'm almost compelled to ask you
about different character dynamics and
like whose arc I should be looking out for.
But I feel like whether the cast is big, I want
to know as little as possible.
Can I tell you another fun fact, which is
so like, okay, then this is not a
spoiler, but years
ago, before
I started the Lost podcast, I was at
an HBO
party, and it was when
Watchman was on, so Damon
Lindelof was there. And I never met
him and I like forced a friend of mine to introduce me to him so that I could tell him we were
about to do a lost podcast.
And he was like very, very nice and gracious.
And he was like, really?
Every episode?
And at that party, he told me a fun fact about the pilot script, which is that originally
for Boone, our guy Boone Carlisle, Ian Summerholder, they wanted to call him five as in like
he was the fifth, Boone Carlyle the fifth sort of thing.
So, like, his name was five.
And then they decided against that.
So they just did, like, a find and replace in the script for five and changed it to Boone.
But then when you get to, like, either Jack or Kate counting, like, one, two, three, four.
It just said, like, one, two, three, four, Boone in the script because they just did, like, a blanket find and replace.
I love that story.
So something about Ian Summerholder does just read, like, you would, you would be the
fifth in a lineage, you know?
Like, maybe that's my like rules of attraction brain seeping in, but just the man reads uppity.
I don't know what to tell you.
It's the way that, I mean, Ian Somerholder, one of, you know, God's gift to humanity.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
He's so, like, he's so beautiful.
Well, and to inhumanity in the vampire sense.
Absolutely.
He's so, he's like such a, like, objectively beautiful person, but his eyes are just like a little
too close to you in a golden ratio sense that makes you think.
like, yeah, you might be the fifth in the line of something.
Absolutely.
I love the Boone moment that I love is when Jack's like, go, yeah, sure, go get me some pens guy.
And then he comes back, he's like, I didn't know what kind to get.
So I got all the pens.
And great.
I want to say in the great sibling feud of Shannon and Boone, I got to say I'm team Shannon
in this whole ordeal.
Like, everyone's been through a lot.
Let her paint her toenails, you know?
Like, I think it's okay.
Shannon is a real, like, 2004, this series comes out.
People hate Shannon.
Yeah.
When I, you know, we're in our Paris Hilton is on Veronica Mars era of culture, you know,
and people are just like hating the Shannon archetype.
When we covered it, I was like quite defensive.
I found myself quite defensive of Shannon.
I get it.
I feel like we've really like come in a sort of like Cordelia Chase kind of way, like really come
some ways on these characters.
Yeah.
Come on.
All right.
Episode MVP, aka the honorary Bill Simmons, who won the episode trophy?
Rob, who are you giving this to?
It's very clear for me, Joe.
It's Sawyer.
Tell me about Sawyer.
He shot a bear.
Where did it come from?
Polar Bear Village.
I don't know.
Easily the most interesting character to me so far.
Just like right, just with a bullet, in some ways, like, he's clearly being misjudged by other people,
as is almost everyone on the beach.
In some ways he is exactly the kind of asshole
who other people have determined that he probably is.
That's sort of like some true, some false binary.
I find really fascinating with him.
I am also just like personally speaking,
and maybe this is something I need to reflect on,
deeply skeptical of Jack.
And so the fact that there is a character
who's calling Jack out on his like hero bullshit,
I just feel bonded to that character.
Maybe not in, you know, the ins and outs of his specific kinds of racism,
but I'm glad that he is involved in the plot.
I'm glad for the presence that he is providing in this show.
So you're like, yeah,
yeah, so what I'm hearing for you is that you love a man who accuses an airman of being a terrorist.
Not what I said.
But you need some bad people.
Also, like, not everyone can be goody two shoes.
Not everyone can be rowing in the same direction.
Like, I need somebody who just wants to pick up the gun, shoot the bear, and answer questions later.
I have a lot of thoughts and feel.
feelings about Sawyer that I can't wait to someday talk to you about.
It'll be a treat.
But I was hoping that you would feel an interest in Sawyer, which can be a hard sell for some
people in this pilot, given some things he does.
I will say there's a prompt that I dropped in here for a couple bullet points down just
so that I could have an excuse to talk about Sawyer, which is a single striking visual.
And I genuinely think it's Sawyer sitting in the curve of the fuselage.
reading this letter after having just like introduced himself to us as like an absolute asshole
having what is clearly an emotional reaction to a letter with this like massive backdrop of
the jungle behind him and it's just like the way it's framed it's just sort of like you don't
know everything about this character yet which is true of every single character on the show
but like he's the one who is he and like I would say Jin are the two characters who like in this
pilot, we are sort of being asked to judge and dislike and then also be curious about
at the same time.
Well done.
Gosh, who won the episode trophy, though, I think I have to give it to Evangeline
Lily's Kate.
I think I was familiar with Matthew Fox from Party of Five.
I was familiar with Don Monaghan from Laura of the Rings.
This is Evangeline Lilly's introduction to the world.
You didn't have the benefit of Desolation of Smauke leading to win.
She is so Canadian, though her character is not, but she's so Canadian.
I think Kate Austin, though she's not my favorite, lost character, is so compelling.
And this is, again, when we talk about the character, someone said this to me when I was covering every episode of Lost that really unlocked it for me, which is Kate Austin is a JJ Abrams character.
She's a very Sydney Bristow.
Yes.
It alias, a very felicity character.
Like, this is a very Ray in Star Wars.
Like, this is a character that JJ Abrams loves to create.
Then she becomes a JJ Abrams character in a Damon Lindelof show.
And that just, like, eventually some of those pieces don't fit anymore.
But, like, that was such a revelation to me.
I was like, yeah, of course.
She is a J.J. Abrams confection.
And she works so well here.
And, you know, the moment where she has to take the boot.
off of a dead body.
And we are asked sort of to just be with her in the silent horror of that moment.
But the very sort of the utilitarian, like, I need these boots to do the thing is, you know, barring.
Well, actually, I'll get to another Kate moment.
But like that, that to me is what hooks me most about this double premiere.
Well, you are in my brain today, Joe, because that, you know, we like to pick a standout scene from these episodes.
episodes, that was my standout scene.
It was the specific prompt of Kate wanting to go along on the hike.
You're going to need some better shoes.
And again, silently, plucking these boots off of this dead man's body in a way that, like,
everything had been so propulsive in this pilot to that point.
You didn't really have time to stop and sort of account for the devastation of what has just happened.
And then, as you said, like the practical realities that are coinciding with that.
It's not just there are all these dead bodies and we need to figure out something to do with these dead bodies.
it's we're going to have to kind of loot these dead bodies
for the supplies that we may need just for the,
just for the realities of surviving on this island.
Coinciding with, she looks up and gets the orange-slice smile
from John Locke across the way in a way that's making me think,
what the fuck?
I am like kind of, it leaves me in such a strange place
because it's like kind of comforting in a way
and kind of creepy in a way.
And that sounds like John Locke.
That means I'm exactly where the show wants me to be.
I am already wondering more about both of these characters
and how all of these people are going to deal with the reality
of what just happened once it finally settles in for all of them.
Once the screaming stops, the internal screaming begins.
And now all of these people are going to have to pluck boots off of various corpses
in order to figure out how to go on.
And like, that was the sort of moment that to me was like, okay,
this is not just the show that can do the boom, boom, boom,
triage of the initial crisis.
It's also the show that's going to slow down.
It's also the show that's going to give us the character moments.
It's also the show that's going to give us the mystery into who these people are
and how they are trying to interact with each other,
whether John Locke was trying to reassure her doing a weird bit,
maybe just eating an orange and forgot he was eating an orange.
I don't know, but I would love to find out.
I can't wait for you to find out.
For me, the standout scene is Kate and Jack when he is giving his angel hair pasta sort of story.
to her.
Just a horrifying visual to imagine.
Exactly.
Like that, again, that feels like a very Lindelof moment to me.
Jack, who is, you know, the big hero of the introduction to the show, is then telling her a story of, like, failure and fear and vulnerability.
And he's doing it as a bid to, like, get her to steady her hands as she does something for her.
Yes.
He's also inside of.
this scenario where
I'm so sad that I can't
talk about a future thing that Jack does, but
like, is that of a scenario where he's like
I,
the Jack Savior Complex, the Jack Hero
the Complex, the Jack, I can save everyone.
I can run around and I can help Claire
and I can help Rose and I can help all
these people unless they get literally
sucked into an engine.
You know, like I can do it all.
But I've got this cut
my back that I can't reach.
And I need to ask someone for help, you know?
And it's just sort of like, what is the, what is, in terms of like that social interaction
of community, you know, what is, what is that moment?
I need to ask this woman who I don't know for help.
I need to trust her.
She can do this.
She's very hot, but is she competent?
I don't know.
Can she sew?
Can she sewed her drapes?
So that was with a machine.
So who knows?
I love that he's got that, like, travel sewing kits that's in, like, so many people's luggage.
And, you know, and then Kate as, you know, someone who is presented is quite competent, you know, she, like, gets a gun off Sawyer later.
Like, there's, like, a lot of stuff that she can do.
But her fear, her fear as she tucks herself inside of, like, a mangrove tree and is, you know, counting to five, her fear in this moment.
Like, all of that, his failure, her fear inside.
of these heroic moments for them
is the absolutely intoxicating
I'm going to use the Maliborubin
word brew that is
that is lost, you know?
It's really delivering
a lot of different emotional
wavelengths within these first two episodes
in a way that is really impressive.
And I think transcends, as we've been talking
about with these other pilots, the sort of like Wikipedia
entry version of the show or even the like
we are selling this to the network version
of the show. It is, we are
delivering out of the gate
on the promise of who these characters already are to each other
and who they could potentially be to each other.
And there are a lot of compromises that they had to make, of course,
to get this through to the network, I will say.
And as you watch season one,
a mandate that they were given in season one
is that there needed to be a plausible explanation
for everything that happens on the island,
even like a monster, you know,
because ABC was like too, like genre shows
did not have this kind of like mass appeal.
Yeah.
this was kind of a risky move.
And so, you know, barring, you know, the X-Files was, of course, a cultural phenomenon.
Buffett was a niche cultural phenomenon like these things existed.
But on this scale of what Lost becomes, this is a different animal altogether.
Absolutely.
It's also, I would say, baked into the DNA of something like the X-Files, that it's like,
there are no answers for some of this stuff.
Right.
You know, it's like there are things that we can answer and there are things we can't.
to come into this as like a plane crash show
that then quickly becomes a mystery show.
Yeah.
I can understand the thinking of why you want to maybe
like give people a little bit more firm ground to walk on,
but it does defeat the purpose of what the show is kind of trying to be
based on these first two,
it would seem.
And I will say eventually like the show,
the show, the first season is so popular.
Yeah.
But eventually the network is like,
okay, do your weird this.
Like, do your rudeness.
It's fine.
Okay.
I already mentioned my single striking visual.
I'll pick another one.
Look, there's a lot.
Actually, I'm going to pick two.
One is John Locke.
You mentioned the orange peel smile.
That's great.
The John Locke holding up the back gammon pieces, two players, one black, one white is like an absolutely iconic visual.
I can imagine.
From this episode.
And then I will also say the choice to have Kate find the captain's, like, wings in the water,
and then to get the reflection of his body up in the tree in the reflection of the water.
That's good shit, Jill.
That's good.
That's good shit.
JJ, you can do it.
You are capable of it.
All right.
What would you pick here?
I think for me, it's sort of, again, in a different register where it's the visual of a collapsed hurley on top of the surgery scene.
Where a lot has been happening.
And yes, there have been like quips to this point and like a little light humor.
I would say especially like Charlie kind of has that role throughout some of it through these first two episodes.
But we're just like in the midst of a crisis.
and we're pulling off like full scale physical comedy.
And it's like a legitimately like very important moment
in terms of deflating some of the anxiety
from the episode in this surgery
that I really appreciated and that we can have
all of these beautiful visuals,
all these dramatic elements that we're introducing to the show,
all these mysteries, and we can also have fun with it.
Not a lot of shows can pull that off.
And so I was very appreciative.
I think that is a sort of a Linda Lafeyan like pull
that I always appreciate is that
once you get outside the first season
of the leftovers, which has its
ups, but is fairly unrelentingly grim,
but when you think about those later seasons,
which you and I talked about
in previous Prestage TV podcast episodes,
or when you think about Watchmen,
like all of this is dealing with
incredibly heavy, emotional stuff.
And there's just like a bit of whimsy also there.
You gotta take the piss out of the thing.
You know, because in a way,
it will amplify the grief, the difficulty,
the, like, all of the heavy
emotions you're trying to get into.
It's like a little bit of a salt on the watermelon situation where it's going to
intensify what you're getting from these other elements of the show.
I already mentioned Michael G. Kino as this key player.
I just want to mention that a musical cue that we get inside of this episode is one of my
favorites, actually, it will recur.
It's called like the traveling theme.
And it's when Sawyer and Kate and Shannon and Boone and Charlie and Said are like grappling
up a cliffside via Vines, essentially, right?
And it's just like this very jaunty,
like we're going somewhere on the island music
that you hear a lot.
But it's called, and I think in honor of Shannon,
it's called Hollywood and Vines.
That's what that track is called
because every single Michael Jekino track for Lost
is like a,
we'll piss off Rob Mahoney pun.
Hollywood and Vines is one of my face.
I like a pun.
I just think we need to show a little restraint
some time.
Okay.
But Michael G. Kino
did not get that memo.
No, that's okay.
You know what?
Again, if you do the work like that,
you get the fuck you privileged to everyone else.
I'm trying to give you one that is not a spoiler.
I'll give you,
there's one that's called,
I can't even say it out loud.
You can't even say it out loud.
It's Shannon.
I actually do like shenanigans.
It's shenanigans.
You do?
Okay.
And you know what?
Maybe I'm just full on Shannon-pilled at this point.
You know, I'm willing to go along with anything
Shannon-related.
I love how boom's like,
clearly you found your look in.
The sunbathing was very funny.
Yeah, and then, like, Claire trying to participate with her, like, eight-month belly,
and she's just like, I will take a layer off.
I am also doing this.
And also, Shannon being the kind of woman who, like, clearly doesn't know how to talk to a pregnant person.
Or anyone.
I mean, honestly, it's kind of an alien in her own, right?
Okay.
What's the most 2004 thing about this episode?
I actually think from a production and storytelling perspective, it is a moment you've already cited.
which is when Kate gets scared and does her count to five.
And we do not get the cutaway flashback to Jack telling her about it,
which I feel like if this show were made today,
that note is coming from somebody of like,
oh my God, I'm so worried people aren't going to,
why is she counting to five?
This test audience didn't understand it.
That's so depressing, yeah.
And again, to get that.
They were second screening and they missed it.
They totally missed it, even though it was dialogue.
Yeah.
Another way in which I just feel reassured
that this is not a show that takes my attention
and my just baseline intelligence as a viewer,
this is not critical thinking.
This is just listening to the show
and understanding what's happening for granted.
This is a show that's going to reward you
for paying attention to not even a detail,
but just kind of the baseline executions of the plot and the characters.
I love that.
I think we've already talked at length about Shannon.
I think as like a 2004 archetype, she's like pretty clear.
I would say also, so, yes, comes out in 2004.
The television show 24 is enormously popular.
We are in like the echoes of 9-11 into the Iraqi war.
And so Saeed as a character, the conversation about him being like pulled out of line and padded down in the airport,
Sawyer's suspicion of him, Hurley's realization that he was in the Republican Guard, all that sort of stuff.
And just in general, this actually is like, so I would say Saeed and Shannon is sort of like these,
we've got our finger on the pulse of some kind of conversation moment.
And then I would say on the flip side of that, this sprawling international cast is very unusual for television at this time.
For sure.
And so, you know, to have Son and Jin speaking in Korean,
to have, you know, the character Said here and all the, you know, unusual kinds of people that you get in this Motley assortment.
This was like a huge cast.
And there's been so many imitators, bad imitators of lost after loss, that this might not seem like a big deal, but this was a really big deal at the time.
It was so striking in that way with the international cast that when Claire started talking, I was like, is this an Australian character or is this an Australian actress who's narwhis?
are poking through. You know, like, what is happening here exactly?
Claire's from Australia. You're, as you continue on your journey, so the Oceanic is the flight
from Sydney to Los Angeles. So why were all these characters in Australia in the first
place is a, you know, we know why Michael and Walt were there? But why was everyone else in
Australia? It's a good question to ask. You're going to hear some quote-unquote Australian
accents on this show. That's just some of the worst stuff I've ever heard of my life.
I genuinely can't wait.
Really, really good.
Anything else you want to say before we do a brief sort of spoiler-free look ahead if I'm even capable of that?
Not particularly.
I just, I think these episodes are successful in delivering on hooking you in a way, as I alluded to earlier, by like, I didn't know what I wanted from these two episodes.
And the fact that they were able to supply that and give you a backdoor way into a different kind of show, I think it's just really evolved storytelling.
for this sort of introduction.
And I don't know how it's done.
Like, I don't know how you pull all this off within this,
I think relatively finite runtime,
given all that they accomplished.
But I am in awe of it.
It is incredibly impressive.
I'm on the hook for the show.
I also, we would be loath, not to mention,
look, there have been many lost homages,
crossovers, references,
not just, as you said, Joe,
in terms of shows, like, kind of trying to rip off the concept
or the structure of the cast or whatever it is,
but the numbers kind of pop up everywhere.
We were talking about them earlier this year with severance.
Severance, yeah.
But coming off of Veronica Mars, where they also make an appearance as the fortune cookie numbers,
you know, a fortune that Duncan gives Veronica to kind of reignite their relationship.
So, you know, even within the hooktiverse, lost as an outsized presence.
Normal is the watchword is what I heard.
Okay, so I'm so excited.
I genuinely cannot believe my luck in this, like, weird sort of podcast.
asking for Bermuda Triangle that we find ourselves right now. We're like you and Mal and I are covering
alien Earth together. I get to show Mal Buffy, which is one of your favorite shows. I get to show
you Lost, which is one of Mal's favorite shows. It's like, I feel very fortunate to be like sort of
in this time. It's beautiful. Mal's Joy and Mallory's joy in watching the first season of Buffy
the Vampire Slayer, your joy and your sort of like assertion that you're going to keep watching Lost.
Yeah. I can't wait to hear your takes on Lost. I'm so excited.
excited for this. So again, I know
you have tons of spare time to do that.
You're at sort of rep screenings in L.A.
every night now and stuff like that.
Guilty. But we'll see what we can do.
But let me be our first
in-person affirmative testimonial
that you proposed the hooked episode.
I watched it. I'm hooked. We did it.
Mission accomplished.
We did it. All right.
Please text me when you get to walk about
and let me know what you think about it.
Anything that I can say in a
relatively spoiler-free way, just guess what
larger themes or storylines or characteristics are seated here.
I will just say, I think we've already covered most of this, but I'll just say, you know,
like, caring about all of these characters is something that Lost will continue to do.
The flashback structure, which we already talked about.
This moment as, I mean, as you might, like, a couple of visuals that always come to mind when
I think about this pilot, Shannon sort of standing there, like, scream sobbing in front of the
fuselage is one of them.
And then Charlie, who just recently rubbed some heroin on his gum,
sort of like walking, stumbling around, like, in a dazed state or like a sharpying the word
fate on the tape on his, like, fingers and stuff like that.
Like, there are these moments and seeds that are plant, there are little details planted here
that someone who's watched the show a million times, the backgammon game, all this sort of
stuff that is just going to like continue to come back and back and back and back and back around.
So, like, you know, this I, lost was the first show in.
side of a rising internet fandom that really got the accusing finger of,
did you have this all planned out when you started?
Yeah. And they did and they didn't.
Yeah.
Which honestly is probably the way you should do it.
We talked about this before, I think, on this podcast, which is just sort of like...
I mean, Breaking Bad is such a compelling counter example.
Absolutely.
And with something like Severance, like I don't need them to, you know,
severance a show that we really like and we also found a bit messy also at the same time.
I don't need them to...
I love mess.
I'm like, again, this is my preferred zone.
You and Marie Kondo.
I love it.
I don't need them to know exactly where they're going.
I do need them to be authentic to their characters.
Yes.
And I do need them to...
What I want a show to do when they present twist and turns,
or twist and turns that are there to serve character and serve plot,
and not just to shock and awe.
That's the one.
Like, that's really key to me.
And that's something that, for something like Game of Thrones,
delineates early Thrones to later Thrones.
Later Thrones was just like, how can we replicate the high that we get,
God of surprising you in the early seasons.
And we'll just do it, you know, willy-nilly just to shock you,
whereas in early seasons of Thrones, it's like,
here are these complex character choices that led up to this tragic and disastrous moment.
And so it's just like, it's, it's,
it's just a, I really think it comes down to caring about your characters.
If you care about your characters, you're going to be authentic to their choices.
And if you care about them, you're going to care that you put them in premises that make sense for the choices that they've made.
And if those, if those premises, if those tragedies, if those twists and turns provoke emotional response from the audience, they only will if you've hooked us into character as well as, as premise.
So that's where I am.
There is so much.
can understand in a different way or forgive or kind of just blot out as from a plotting perspective
if all of that character stuff is on point. And like I will trade the lore master show Bible
every day for a showrunner or a creator or a writer who has an actual good sense of who their
characters are. And if you're nailing that, like we will let the mystery be. Like we will forgive a lot
and we will understand a lot in a different context if you can pull that stuff off.
You beat me to the let the mystery be drop. I love that.
that for you, Rob. Okay, so this is
it for hooked,
colon lost. Hopefully you
watch these episodes and you are hooked
and want to watch Lost if you haven't already. They were
not dead the whole time. I just like to say that one last time.
Just to reiterate. It's really important that you know that.
We'll be back. As we mentioned, we're
covering task on a weekly basis
with Bill. We're going to
be covering slow horses at the end of the month.
We've got a couple more hooked episodes
coming hopefully with some guests.
with some friends, which should be a lot of fun.
Some pals are going to be joining us.
So that is the plan.
And then Rob and I are covering Alien Earth every week over in House of R for the rest of that run.
So anywhere else that folks can find you, Rob Mahoney.
That's about it for right now.
NBA season is almost upon us.
But mercifully, I think we're going to get through some of this very chunky, very good TV before the basketball really kicks up.
Absolutely.
All right.
I will see you all soon.
Thank you to Kai Grady and to Justin Sings.
and bye.
This episode is brought to you by Netflix's remarkably bright creatures.
What if a Pacific octopus held the key to a mystery that could heal your heart?
Well, that's Tova's reality.
An elderly widow working at an aquarium.
Tova forms an unlikely friendship with the cramudgeonly Marcellus,
whose remarkable intelligence leads her to a life-changing discovery.
Remarkably bright creatures is now playing.
Only on Netflix.
The right window treatments change every.
everything, your sleep, your privacy, the way every room looks and feels.
At blinds.com, we've spent 30 years making it surprisingly simple to get exactly what your home needs.
We've covered over 25 million windows and have 50,000 five-star reviews to prove we deliver.
Whether you DIY it or want a pro to handle everything from measure to install, we have you covered.
Real design professionals, free samples, zero pressure.
Right now, get up to 50% off with minimum purchase, plus get a free professional measure at blinds.com.
Rules and restrictions apply.
