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LOST UNIVERSITY / NOW AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAY

LOST UNIVERSITY / NOW AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAY
From J.J. Abrams, the creator of Alias, comes the action-packed adventure that became a worldwide television event. Stranded on an island that holds many secrets, 48 plane crash survivors must band together if they hope to get home alive. The survivors of Oceanic Flight 815 discover that the island holds many secrets, including a mysterious smoke monster, polar bears, housing and hatches with electricity and hot & cold running water, a group of island residents known as "The Others," and a mysterious man named Jacob. They find signs of those who came to the island before them, including a 19th-century sailing ship called The Black Rock, a downed Beechcraft plane from a failed drug run, the remains of an ancient, four-toed statue, as well as bunkers belonging to the Dharma Initiative -- a group of scientific researchers who inhabited the island in the recent past.

Sledgeweb's LOST ... STUFF Lost Media  Prison Break Online. Ver Serie Lost for a reason, a blog for LOST fans — “Each of us was brough Lost story website The Lost Podcast with Jay and Jack (Super Deluxe: AAC) Lostpedia 42 reasons to tune in to 'LOST' final season: #31-42 The final season of LOST is upon us. To celebrate, the LOST Examiner has created his top 42 reasons to tune in to the final season of LOST. If you are one of the few who left the series early on, or just a rabid LOST fan looking for everything LOST, this is the LOST list for you. Of course, there are too many good reasons that we could give you for tuning in to this final season of LOST for us to really list out every one of them (though I am sure that many have tried). Here, we are giving you our 42 most compelling reasons to tune in to season 6 of LOST. 42 was the largest of the LOST numbers, and, as we all know, 42 is the answer to everything. Top 42 reasons to tune in for season 6 of LOST: #31-42 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42.

Lost Article Notice: If you care about that kind of thing, many of the following links will feature spoilers, particularly for those watching at the pace that Channel 4 dripfeed the UK releases of 'Lost'. I've been as impressed with the way that the creators of Lost have enabled interaction around the show as with the show itself. Perhaps 'enabled' could be replaced with 'coordinated' or even 'manipulated', but strategically, the call-and-response relationship between the form of the show and the unfolding interaction across varying platforms would appear to indicate a very sophisticated understanding of contemporary media indeed. To aid communication, I've attempted to illustrate this process with a hastily-produced graphic score (below), but first, some set-up ... A while ago, I wrote about a theory of using the ripples made possible by new media, to enable a trackable 'social life of a broadcast', based on our work at BBC radio. Johnson wrote about Lost specifically in The Times a while back.

The Tail Section 6.00 Ju. Recap. Malgré ça, histoire de vous remettre dans le bain et de vous offrir (quand même) un petit quelque chose en guise d’introduction à la saison 6 de Lost, j’ai décidé de retracer tout le parcours de la série. Du début à la fin. Depuis son premier épisode jusqu’au dernier. Mais attention, hein, pas n’importe quelles photos. Sauf dans les quelques cas où j’aurais (peut-être) sacrifié le côté esthétique de certaines entrées au profit de blagues faciles. Du coup, il y en a pour tous les goûts. Une dernière chose. Bons flashbacks ! Le Crash Pilot (Saison 1, Episode 1) À l’époque de sa diffusion, en 2004, l’épisode pilote de Lost était le plus cher jamais réalisé, avec un coût situé entre 10 et 14 millions de dollars. Par contre, ce que certains se sont demandés c’est si on ne nous prenait pas légèrement pour des cons. Pff... La Bronzette Tabula Rasa (Saison 1, Episode 3) Le Golf Solitary (Saison 1, Episode 8) La Mort de Charlie (Première Partie) N’importe quoi. Christian et Sawyer autour d’un verre

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