The Lost Season 5 Countdown

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Welcome

Welcome one and all to the official blog page for station #12, The Shotglass.


Here at The Shotglass, we class ourselves as friends, not just a group of Lost fans that happen to be in the same place at the same time. We like to bring a fun element into the Lost community.

We have our own chatroom where we like to grab a dharmabeer, kick back and chat about whatever comes up. We have various pages of our blog--- which are ever expanding.

We want to hear what you think of the pages so please, get in contact, leave some feedback, what you would like to see here, what you like, what you don't like, or any improvements we could make. After all, we couldn't do this without you. Your contributions make us able to do what we do.

We also have a weekly competition for hatch hottie of the week. There are 2 separate competitions, one for girls, one for guys. Girls email entries to
  • Croucher


  • Guys email entries
  • Toni
  • And
  • Niki

  • Thanks for your support everyone. Hope to hear your thoughts soon

    Niki, Toni, Wes and Croucher.

    Sunday, March 1, 2009

    Matt's 1950 Merc... STUNNING!

    Thanks to my buddy in the biz....These are the latest pics of Matt Fox's 1950 Mercury that won many awards at a recent car show in California....

    Sorry about the mix up. Thanks for the pics!!! Keep in touch at dharmaholics@gmail.com

    NIKI




    Saturday, February 21, 2009

    What do you make of this photo?

    Dharmaholics,
    I happened to be wandering through pics at my fave Matthew Fox site and came across some that were interesting....

    We saw JIN in a Dharma jumpsuit-NOW guess who else gets to wear one?



    That's right-FOXY! But what do u think this means? Could he be a Dharma member in another parallel universe? Or is it an undercover operation? NOTICE: the suit says: JACK and I believe "WORKMAN" underneath!

    Roger????Our beloved founder????

    MATTHEW FOX on DETAILS...

    So I was at a bookstore the other day and there was my FOXY! On the cover of DETAILS!!! The photos are great and he discusses his 1950 Mercury that he had restored! (NOTLOST- don't forget to tell him I want a ride!)

    Here's the cover pic:



    And here's a pic of Matt's Merc:(complete with GHOST FLAMES!)




    MATT CALL ME!!!!! lol....NIKI

    WHAT AN EPISODE!

    Hey Dharmaholics,
    Niki here, updating from a secret hatch called The Shotglass in an undisclosed location in time AND space....

    WHAT AN EPISODE! Mind-blowing episodes are back! I really enjoyed this week's epi cuz it had me saying what we all usually say during LOST: "WTF?"!!!!

    Here's a recap expertlt done by Kristin over at E! online~ENJOY!

    WHAT WE LEARNED

    There's No Place Like Home:
    In the words of Kate Austen, "We're back." Lo and behold, to get back to the land of Oz, you just implement drunk Jack's wackadoodle plan of getting on a plane and hoping for it to crash! According to Mrs. Hawking, the key was to replicate the circumstances of their first crash as closely as possible and then just ride along a certain flight path identified by the pendulum over the energy cell at the Lamppost Station. (Uh, sure, lady.) But luckily for the kiddos involved, the replica didn't have to be perfect, which explains why Aaron (who was present, albeit itty-bitty, when 815 crashed) could be left behind.



    Over the Rainbow:
    Despite the fact they may be dragging some innocent flight attendants with them, I was honored and proud to watch the Oceanic Six as they experienced a little in-flight turbulence on Ajira 316 and still flew directly into their oncoming fears. Our brave little toasters are going back to the Island! They don't have to?they are safe and rich back in the real world?but they're like Navy SEALs, and now that they have a choice in the matter, they're not leaving their friends behind!

    ?Donde Esta Desmond?
    Desmond has done his dream-induced duty and is now returning to the loving arms of Penny. Do you think that reunion sticks, or is Mrs. Hawking right about the Island not being done with Des? Post in the comments.


    They Totally Totally Told Each Other So!

    Boy, Jack and Locke are still so angry at each other! Locke's suicide note was, well, one big fat guilt-complex-inducing rendition of "I told you so," and Jack was crankypants squared when he was left alone with "Jeremy Bentham." Can't we all just get along?

    Easter Eggs:
    (Attention, English professors: Next time you're trying to explain "intertextuality" to your students, just bring up Lost, and they'll get it right quick...)

    Ben was reading James Joyce's Ulysses, which is, of course, a psychedelic Irish novel that had a few Easter Eggs of its own and was based on the ancient myth of Odysseus, a lost sailor who is kept from his love, Penelope, by a series of wildly unbelievable but nonetheless thrilling adventures.
    Commenter Jules tipped us off to a C.S. Lewis nod: "Did anyone notice The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe reference with the Lamppost Station? They came out of the wardrobe at the lamppost, and it was where they knew they could get back to their world." Holler!
    Christian Shephard's white shoes/black shoes situation continues the show's flirtation with those constrasting colors.

    Jack's seat number was 8C, and the flight left from gate 15.

    Some Burning Questions:
    This was a good old-fashioned Lost episode. You can tell because of how we are left with tons of new questions after the fact! To wit:

    How did hero Hurley learn of Ajira flight 316 from his jail cell, with time to spare to buy up all the seats? (God, that dude is awesome.)?
    Why did Hurley bring a guitar? Was it to re-create Charlie's presence on the original flight, or is it for Charlie on the Island?
    Why is Sayid in cuffs, and how did he learn about the flight?

    Are passenger Caesar (Sa?d Taghmaoui) and Sayid's escort Ilana (Zuleikha Robinson) just unlucky schmucks who are about to land on Lost Island, or are they undercover O6 escorts sent by Team Hawking??
    What kind of magical childcare did Kate find for Aaron?
    Who beat up Ben Linus and why? I mean, beating up Ben is all in good fun, but it's hard to get the drop on the dude, so who done it?!
    If there was no crash of Ajira 316, did the Losties just flash out of the plane, and if so, how is that going to be explained short of an episode of Fringe?

    THANKS KRISTIN!!! Remember GIVE US YOUR THOUGHTS!
    EMAIL US @ the_shotglass@hotmail.com
    OR POST A COMMENT ON OUR MYSPACE PAGE! www.myspace.com/the_shotglass

    Wednesday, February 11, 2009

    Here's your TIME TRAVEL lesson for the day...

    Wanna get smart? Here's the CASIMIR EFFECT explained...



    NIKI

    Let's recap the Dharma Initiative....With Alvar Hanso

    Seeing what we have so far in season 5 let's look back at one of the Dharma Films and listen to what Alvar Hanso had to say.....Remember ole "JUGHEAD" the bomb was during the 1950's....



    NIKI

    PLEASE WATCH THIS VIDEO!

    HILARIOUS! from NIKI

    Recap of "The Little Prince"

    Here are some good clues and questions brought up by Bonnie Covel at About.com...

    The Little Prince Clues
    Kate says that it was Sun's idea for Kate to see the lawyer.

    Mr. Norton tells Kate that she is going to lose her son. This is a scare tactic to get her to return to the island.

    Daniel seems to think that those who have been on the island for the longest amount of time will be the first to get nosebleeds. Miles gets one a bit after Charlotte and just before Juliet.

    Daniel says the boats are old, but Miles says they are not that old because they have a water bottle with an Ajira Airways logo on it.

    There is a screen cap of Ben's carpet van on some sites. The name on the side is Canton-Rainer, which is an anagram for reincarnation. What does this mean? Will Locke be reincarnated?

    Fans have also pointed out over that BESIXDOUZE (which was written on the box Locke kicked over) can be broken down into Be Six Douze or B612, which is the home asteroid of the little prince in the book of the same name.


    Questions Raised by The Little Prince


    Why did Sun want Kate to see the lawyer? Is she working with Ben to get Kate back to the island? Did Widmore want Kate to see the lawyer? What are Sun's motives?

    Does Charlotte remember Daniel and everyone else?

    What would have happened if Sawyer would have tried to talk to Kate and Claire? Since he wasn't there when Claire delivered, would they have been able to see him?

    NIKI:Is this why we hear the WHISPERS? Are they voices heard during a different time?

    Where are Rose and Bernard and the other survivors who got separated when the Others shot arrows into their camp?

    Where is Vincent and why did his leash get left behind?

    Who is Sun at the Marina to shoot? Ben? YES!!!!!

    SUN seeks revenge!!

    I knew Sun was up to no good as soon as she contacted Kate... And when I saw Jin blown back into time from the freighter blast- I just knew that Ben has EVERYTHING in place for his master plan!

    Here's a sneek peek at the confrontation between Sun and Ben....If you don't want to see it-DON'T CLICK ON IT!

    NIKI

    Smokey fans UNITE!

    Dharmaholics,
    Our favorite ass kicking smoke monster will make an appearence this week on LOST! I love him! He's one of my favorite characters!!!


    Here's the scene if you want a sneak peek....If not DON'T CLICK ON IT!

    NIKI

    Saturday, January 17, 2009

    The Man Who Makes Sense Of ‘Lost’

    WHAT ever happened to the four-toed statue? Why do some inhabitants of the island never seem to age? What is the Smoke Monster? And, as one of the time-traveling survivors of the crash of Oceanic Airlines Flight 815 asks in the premiere of the new season of “Lost,” Wednesday on ABC, “When are we now?”

    With 34 episodes to go in its two final seasons, the stories of nearly 100 characters to wrap up, several Dharma stations to keep track of and a whole lot of time traveling going on, the writers of “Lost” are doing anything but winding down. Yet their task — untangling the seemingly impenetrable mass of plotlines that have become addictive to some viewers of the show and alienating to others — is relatively simple compared with that of Gregg Nations.

    A co-producer and the show’s longtime script coordinator, Mr. Nations has become the keeper of what has been found on “Lost,” charged with tracking everything that has happened and will happen to the characters on and off the island, in addition to charting the many mysterious characteristics of the island itself.

    While most television series maintain a so-called bible — a guide to characters and plotlines that are developed by the creators but revealed over multiple seasons — few if any shows have twists and turns as byzantine as those on “Lost.”

    And unlike many jobs, which get easier as the material becomes more familiar, this one has become exponentially more complicated and challenging with each new episode. That will be particularly true this season, when the island itself starts moving through time as the people who seem to be the guardians of its secrets try to protect it from a shadowy conspirator who could have darker uses for its powers.

    Before the show’s premiere in September 2004, the producers were unsure that “Lost” would last beyond a few episodes. They therefore spent little time keeping track of the interlocking, overlapping and often confounding story lines that began to emerge even in the first episode.

    But when the series proved to be an out-of-the-gate hit, “we quickly realized we needed some system to keep track of all the details, that we weren’t going to be able to do that by memory,” said Carlton Cuse, one of the show’s executive producers.

    Enter Mr. Nations, who has now compiled an archive that, were he ever to print it out, might — as he put it in an interview at the “Lost” production offices on Disney’s Burbank studio lot — give “War and Peace” a run for its money.

    Just how long the entire document is he does not know; he has never printed it out in full, in part because he and his secretive bosses do not want copies falling into the wrong hands. But he has multiple electronic copies, which he keeps in undisclosed locations.

    In addition to charting story arcs and tracking characters, Mr. Nations has noted each character’s sojourns on and off the island, mapped the research stations established by the mysterious Dharma Initiative and recorded the appearances and disappearances of polar bears, Smoke Monsters and an unhealthy array of guns.

    “It didn’t take us very long to learn to rely on Gregg when we had to check out an issue of continuity,” Mr. Cuse said. “He had timelines, charts, dossiers. He took it into a dimension that exceeded anything that we could imagine.”

    Keeping those details straight is likely to be increasingly important as the series speeds toward its climax, jumping both off and back onto the island and among the past, present and future. If Mr. Eko shows up alive or Jack’s chest hair reappears at an inappropriate time, for example, viewers will notice.

    Many have abandoned the show already. After it drew an average of 16 million viewers per episode in its first season, its audience has steadily decreased, to an estimated 13.5 million per episode last season, according to Nielsen Media Research. Some of that decline undoubtedly reflects a drop in overall network television viewership, but it can also be traced to a feeling among onetime fans that the series has left them behind without a good re-entry point.

    ABC points out that even while losing viewers the series has held steady in the program rankings, and that its remaining viewers are among the most loyal. The audience as measured by Nielsen increases by about 20 percent when viewers who tape the show and watch it later are included. (That might not make sponsors happy, however, since those viewers tend to skip commercials.)


    As script coordinator for “Lost,” Gregg Nations is responsible for keeping the show’s many story lines straight.

    And many fans are rabid. Pirated copies of call sheets from the set or breakdowns of a day’s shooting often appear on Web sites devoted to the show, where viewers dissect plot summaries as fervently as Kremlinologists would pore over photos of May Day parades.

    Late last year a promotional video featured Mr. Cuse and Damon Lindelof, a creator and executive producer of the series, giving a tour of the writers’ offices. It did not take long before stills from the video were blown up and posted online to show the walls of the writers’ workroom, where pictures of the cast were divided between sections titled “alive,” “undead” and “R.I.P.” Visitors to one such site commented that the character Jin appeared to be on the “alive” wall, even though he was aboard the freighter that blew up in last season’s finale.

    Mr. Nations acknowledges that he sometimes monitors those sites. “The fans present their theories, and it’s fun to read, but I usually don’t comment on that,” he said. “When I do I’m sort of known for giving very vague answers. It drives them crazy.”

    Born in Texas and raised in Missouri, Mr. Nations, 41, graduated with an accounting degree from Southwest Missouri State University before attending film school at the University of Southern California. Like many who follow that path, he found that a master’s degree qualified him in Hollywood to work as a low-paid writers’ assistant on short-lived series on minor broadcast networks — specifically “Pig Sty” on the UPN network and “Sister, Sister” on WB.

    Those experiences, however, put him in position to fill an opening for a script coordinator on “Nash Bridges,” where Mr. Cuse was a writer and executive producer. A few years later, when Mr. Cuse was looking for someone to fill a similar position on “Lost,” he remembered Mr. Nations.

    Had he a background in computer science, Mr. Nations now says, he might have approached the “Lost” project differently. “The best thing would have been to create a database where everything’s linked, and if we’re talking about Jack and what was established in his first flashback episode, you could click on something that takes you there,” he said. But as an accountant, he was more inclined just to make notes in a ledger. “I’ve just created these Word documents, and I just write everything down.”

    For the most part Mr. Nations does not dwell on what is to come, and in that respect he is sometimes as much in the dark as any other fan.

    While he participates in the mini-camps each year when the writers sketch out the story lines for the coming season, Mr. Nations does not regularly sit with the writers. He is often the first reader of a completed script, however, so that he can advise the show’s production staff, based in Hawaii, on what it will need to shoot the next episode.

    (Mr. Nations has had his own small hand in determining some outcomes of the series; he wrote, with Elizabeth Sarnoff, the fourth episode of Season 4, “Eggtown,” in which viewers learned that Kate, one of the crash survivors, is raising Aaron, the baby born to Claire on the island.)

    But being sometimes privy to writing sessions has created a few complications in terms of maintaining the bible. “Sometimes I remember things from the writers’ room that went through the script stage, that went through various rewrites that they shot, that made it to the editing room but didn’t make it to the final cut,” Mr. Nations explained. “That becomes an issue. Do we consider that canon? Is that part of the mythology? Is that part of the makeup of that character — or because it didn’t air, do we take that away now?”

    The answer, he said, depends. “Sometimes Damon will say: ‘Oh yeah, that’s part of what is going on. Even though we didn’t say it in the script, we all know it and that’s going to be dealt with sometime down the road.’ So I have to be aware of those things too.”

    No one is infallible, of course, and fans of “Lost” have created extended lists online of continuity errors and bloopers. Mr. Nations admits that without his database he would have trouble remembering everything about the series.

    That was evident when a reporter asked him a question that had been suggested by a colleague: What became of the body of Naomi, who in Season 4 was one of the rescuers from the freighter sent to search for the island? She died after Locke threw a knife into her back.

    “She died in the jungle,” Mr. Nations said. “So she must still be on the island.”

    But wait — didn’t Sayid insist on taking Naomi’s body back to the ship?

    “You know, you’re right,” Mr. Nations said. “She was on the ship and the ship exploded. I guess she’s fish food. You found something that I wasn’t tracking. Now I guess I had better.”

    Source: nytimes

    Friday, January 16, 2009

    What is your 'LOST' island IQ?

    I found another fun quiz on USAtoday, click HERE to take the quiz. come back and share your score with the rest on the shotglass. Leave a comment and let us know :)

    Character catch up.

    Here is USAToday's quick refresher of where the main characters are at and where they are headed.


    Jack Shephard
    (Matthew Fox)

    Photobucket



    Where we left him: A disheveled, despondent Jack ended the season in a funeral home with Ben, standing over the body of John Locke/Jeremy Bentham. "I now accept and am a believer that my destiny lies on that island and going back," Fox says, describing Jack's state. (Co-creator Damon Lindelof) "has taken him to the point of being a broken man, and his only option is the one that gives him the biggest salvation," Fox says.

    Where he's headed:
    "From Jack's perspective, the initial part will be about him getting as many of (the Oceanic 6) to commit to going back and then finding out what he's meant to do there."

    Where his beard's headed: It'll be gone. "It's a glued-on situation, which is one of my least-favorite things in the world."

    Where his dad's headed: Jack's father, the supposedly deceased Christian Shephard (John Terry), appeared to Michael (Harold Perrineau) on the freighter before it exploded in last season's finale. "You're going to see that character again," Fox says.

    Kate Austin (Evangeline Lilly)
    Photobucket


    Where we left her: Kate, another of the Oceanic 6, "went on trial and got off relatively scot-free (and) she is playing mommy to Aaron back in L.A.," says Lilly.

    Where she's headed:
    Kate's domestic bliss is disrupted by a lawyer seeking her DNA to determine whether she is Aaron's biological mother. That sends Kate on the run again. On a larger scale, getting back to the island "is the primary focus of all of the Oceanic 6. There's going to be a need for fans to hang onto their hats for the first eight episodes because, as is the case with our show, when we come back, they've completely restructured the whole thing. It can be a little jarring sometimes."

    Kate & Jack? Kate & Sawyer?
    "There are so many answers to that question: Who she should end up with, who she will end up with, who I think she should end up with vs. what 20 million other people think. I think inevitably part of her redemption has to be being vulnerable to and committing to one man."

    Other projects:
    Lilly went to the Toronto International Film Festival for the premiere of Afterwards, in which she plays a young mother estranged from her husband. The film, with John Malkovich, is "poignant, very heavy-hitting."


    Sayid Jarrah
    (Naveen Andrews)

    Photobucket


    Where we left him:
    Sayid, another of the Oceanic 6, is back on the mainland, working as an assassin for Ben. He finally gets together with his true love, and then she gets killed. He kills a man as he helps Hurley escape from his mental hospital. "Basically, things don't go very well for him, if they ever went well for him before."

    Where he's headed: "It's explained what he's suspicious of Ben about. There's a Sayid-centric episode. A lot is revealed in that episode, not just about Sayid, but the whole story."

    Actor's upside: "The great thing about getting off the (fictional) island is you shoot in different locations and get to wear reasonably decent clothes, which is always refreshing."

    On having a sixth-season ending: "Not only was there a shift in momentum, I thought the writing got better. We were always aware that we were part of a piece as opposed to something that would go on meandering and drifting for 10 years or more. I'm very happy with the end date."


    Sun Kwon (Yunjin Kim)

    Photobucket


    Where we left her: "She saw her husband, Jin, getting blown up, along with the freighter and then, years later, she's meeting with Charles Widmore," says Kim.

    Where she's headed: "Obviously, she's planning to avenge the death of her husband," and it is surprising whom she blames. Any chance of reuniting with the presumably deceased Jin (Daniel Dae Kim)? Depends on what form "or what timeline," she says.

    Is Lost's past/present/future dizzying? "No. I've always been fascinated with time travel. If there's a book about it, I'm the first to pick it up. I love the whole idea of time travel on Lost."

    Best feet forward:
    Last summer, Kim went to the House of Ferragamo in Italy, where she had been selected to receive a custom-made pair of shoes. She gets one pair; another will be added to the Ferragamo museum collection, which includes shoes worn by Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn, Kim says. The footwear? "My dream: red-carpet, bling-bling type of shoes."


    Hugo 'Hurley' Reyes
    (Jorge Garcia)

    Photobucket



    Where we left him:
    Leaving the mental institution, escorted by Sayid.

    Where he's headed:
    At first, "I'm palling around with Naveen. That's the start of Hurley's adventure. If last season was about how we got off the island, this season we now have to get back. And how do we do that, especially when the island is gone?"

    Flash-forward? Flashback?
    "Now, it's not as straightforward as it was. You will get a focus on a particular character, but there's definitely jumping around" in time and between characters. "There are different styles of storytelling."

    What he did on his summer hiatus:
    Garcia did international press in Monaco and London and took a vacation in Ireland. He noticed a difference between American and European fans. "Americans have a certain level of cool," he says. "Europeans go right to screaming."


    Desmond Hume
    (Henry Ian Cusick)

    Photobucket


    Where we left him:
    Desmond was one of the castaways who got off the island. "He was rescued. He found the love of his life, Penny, and now he was going off into hiding with her and that would be that. The story could have ended there, but it hasn't."

    Where he's headed: "The last thing he wants to do is go back to the island, but he knows people have been left behind. I think he's a good man living with that dilemma." Since Desmond is Faraday's constant, there could be a connection. As the season progresses, he bumps into other characters, "ever so fleetingly."

    On story pacing: The last six episodes of Season 4 "kind of exploded. I liken it to a cannon going off. Season 5 is different. It's got a lot more to do with sci-fi, with time and space and all those sorts of things."

    What he did on summer hiatus: Cusick, father of three boys, spent time at home with family, hosting his mother, his sister and her children. "We hung out here in Hawaii."


    John Locke/Jeremy Bentham
    (Terry O'Quinn)

    Photobucket


    Where we left him: As Bentham, he was in a casket in a funeral home in Los Angeles. As Locke, he was alive on the island when it disappeared. "I knew by the time I did (the casket scene) there would be more for me to do," O'Quinn says. "I'm still at work."

    Where he's headed: O'Quinn's not sure, but "I love the stuff I've had to do so far." Ben and Locke "have one of the most exciting scenes in the whole series. It's an actor's dream."

    Name game:
    John Locke and Jeremy Bentham are both names of English philosophers. "I'm not sure how that applies to Locke's actions as he goes forward, if he goes forward. The question remains whether it's meaningful or whimsical."

    Momentum as end nears?
    "Absolutely. Anybody familiar with horses understands what happens when you're heading toward the barn. They perk up their heads, and there's a lot more energy. I feel these guys are heading toward the barn."


    Ben Linus (Michael Emerson)

    Photobucket


    Where we left him:
    Ben turned the frozen wheel, disappearing from the island as it moved and, as an earlier episode revealed, popping up in a faraway desert at a future date. "So there's lost time, and lost time is one of the themes of the current season."

    Where he's headed:
    Ben advises Jack on how to get back to the island, leading to interactions with others in the Oceanic 6. "Ben has never had scenes with but half the cast, but suddenly that's changed. He has new and interesting scene partners and scenes with new dynamics."

    Where he could be headed:
    "I think (Ben and Charles Widmore) are now the two forces. They represent the two armies, but a lot of battles take place by proxy or scattered across space and time." As for his take on Ben's nature, "I'm happy to say in a way I'm no clearer on that than I was three years ago."

    From time-travel to vampires:
    Emerson spent his hiatus with his wife, actress Carrie Preston, who was shooting HBO's True Blood. His project: a one-time performance of Tom Stoppard's Every Good Boy Deserves Favor before 5,000 people at the Chautauqua Institution in New York state.


    James 'Sawyer' Ford
    (Josh Holloway)

    Photobucket


    Where we left him: Sawyer, riding in a damaged helicopter with members of the Oceanic 6, whispered something to Kate and then jumped into the ocean to get rid of enough weight to keep the chopper airborne. He swam back to the island, meeting up with Juliet. "He has lost everything he loved basically or has given it up," Holloway says. "Maybe he feels that something is healed by saving (Kate), that there's some redemption there."

    Where he's headed: A shirtless Sawyer joins with Juliet and the freighter folk in trying to figure out what's happening to the island and stop it. As to the wardrobe deficit, "That was an issue I brought up, but they didn't seem to care about my opinion very much. (Eventually) I do get dressed."

    On ending after six seasons:
    "I like the fact we have an end date. I feel the show has become more concise now." Does he know the end? "Hell, no. I wish I knew. I've never been right except when I guessed that the island moves a couple of years ago. That's the only thing I've gotten right in the whole Lost series."

    What he did on his summer hiatus:
    Holloway played Wino, a tattoo artist and stoner, in Stay Cool, a comedy film from the Polish brothers that also stars Chevy Chase, Sean Astin, Hillary Duff and Winona Ryder. "It's fun, because it's such a removal from anything I've done."


    Juliet Burke
    (Elizabeth Mitchell)

    Photobucket


    Where we left her: "She made sure everyone got on the boat and was left in charge of all the survivors on the beach," Mitchell says. "Then it all goes horribly wrong. Of course, the (freighter) explodes," and she thinks all are dead. "All she has in front of her is her bottle of booze and Sawyer."

    Where she's headed:
    "It's a different Juliet because she's in the midst of crisis that is the first part of the season. You're dealing with Juliet in survival mode, which she's always in, but it's more frantic." She interacts with Sawyer and freighter people.

    Sawyer & Juliet? "She's always dealt with him as an irritant, as he has with her. Now, they're thrust together, and it's a funny position for these two people." Possible romance? "You never know where it will go. They definitely have a kind of antagonistic banter."

    Surprised survivor:
    "I've enjoyed Juliet so much," says Mitchell. "This role has gone on longer than I thought it would. She's the kind of character who creates all kinds of problems. She was not particularly well-liked by (the first-season Lost-aways). I thought she would be horribly murdered."


    Daniel Faraday (Jeremy Davies)

    Photobucket



    Where we left him: Good question. "He was (in the ocean) en route to the freighter, bringing people to be rescued. He's the one principal character in sort of a no-man's land."

    Where he's headed:" Faraday is the one character most equipped to translate the phenomenon they're encountering" to both characters and viewers. The character, who arrived via the freighter, "has a pretty intense trajectory this season."

    Quick study:
    Daniel Faraday is a physicist, and Davies has had a lifelong interest in physics. "As a kid, I was fascinated with the field of electromagnetism. Of course, the godfather of that is Michael Faraday, and Daniel Faraday is obviously named after him."

    Meaningful role:
    Davies' father died before the start of the season, as did a close friend very recently. "I was struck by how (Faraday's story) happens to resonate with certain aspects of my life that I've been contending with," Davies says. "I'm grateful to have this trajectory of Faraday's story line."


    Charlotte Lewis
    (Rebecca Mader)

    Photobucket


    Where we left her:
    Charlotte was on the disappearing island, as was fellow freighter colleague Miles (Ken Leung). Earlier, she had kissed Faraday and then walked away. "That's basically like, ‘What? Now I've got to wait the whole hiatus to find out what that means.'" Mader says.

    Where she's headed: "We're all sort of on different missions. Half the people are trying to get off the island, and then you're trying to figure out what Charlotte (and others) are doing and then all of a sudden it's a really remarkable fight for survival."

    Why freighter folk fit in:
    "The reason we worked so well is because we were an integral part of the story line," Mader says. "I think the reason, when it didn't work before, was that people felt, 'Why do we have to have these people?' It didn't make sense, like the people in the back of the plane or that random new couple that was supposed to have been there all along."

    What she did on her break: Mader plays the ex-wife of Ewan McGregor's character in an upcoming release, Men Who Stare at Goats. It stars George Clooney, Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges.

    Source: USAtoday

    Thursday, January 15, 2009

    Addicted to LOST

    Fir those of you who have a facebook account, there is a really fun application you can add called ADDICTED TO LOST. There is a cool trivia section, quizzes, you can send other facebook friends pictures and videos from the show. Its quite fun really and helps pass the time. Click HERE to view the application

    Lost showdown. Vote for your favourite LOST moment.

    On ABC. com, you have a chance to vote for your favourite LOST moments. I have voted and it would be great to hear what everyone voted for. Click HERE to be directed straight to the page.

    Wednesday, January 14, 2009

    Its alomost time!!!

    Its almost upon us. The season 5 premiere airs in just over a week from now. We have been busy here at the shotglass over the last few days, trying to keep you guys updated on all cast news, interviews etc. As some of you may have heard, our spoiler devil CROUCHER has returned from his travels, so you can expect plenty of juicy spoilers over on our spoiler page. I'm sure there will beplenty f theories coming this way from both myself and Keeping Pace. Soif you have anything you would also like to add, email Toni Or Niki and we will get it added. Alternatively, you can add your thoughts on the forum, which again will be updated with theories, episode discussions, podcast discussions and also spoilers for those who wish to read them.

    Don't forget, it's almost SHOTGLASS BIRTHDAY time. So over the next weekend, we will be havin a shotglass style celebration for those who wish to raise a glass or 10.

    Thanks a lot for your support over the Hiatus guys.

    TONI

    Tuesday, January 13, 2009

    Red Carpet LOST Season 5 Reveals






    Source: lost.com

    Season 5 Trailer

    This is a good one kids. I wont say too much about it for those who don't want to be spoiled. But it looks like a new addition for on lucky LOST couple :D


    TELEVISION: Preview: ‘Lost’ in Time & Space

    I’ve just seen the two-hour premiere of season five of Lost [ABC Wednesdays, 8/7C, beginning on Jan. 21st]. You think it was strange and wild and exhilarating before? Just wait until you see what’s next!

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    Lost, Season 5

    Although my agreement with ABC is that I can’t give away plot points, I can, perhaps, give clues. I can tell you that Vincent’s back – and that Sawyer plays a more prominent role. I can tell you that things have changed between Benjamin Linus [Michael Emerson] and Sayid [Naveen Andrews]; that Hurley [Jorge Garcia] has reached his limit on lying – and that Sayid’s life may depend on him; I can tell you that a potential legal problem may change Kate’s [Evangeline Lilly] and Aaron’s lives, and that Charlotte [Rebecca Mader] may not be well. And speaking of Hurley, remember Dave? And Charlie’s enigmatic appearance at the mental institution ["I'm dead. And I'm here"]? I can safely say that Hurley sees dead people.

    There are lots more clues that I could give you in that vein, but when the events to which they allude happen, all that’ll happen is that some answers will be given [like why Hurley finally reaches his limit with The Lie] and more will be asked [like what’s happening to the people who were left on the island]. Even the titles of the two parts of this season’s premiere have titles [Because You Left & The Lie] that are carefully gauged to give hints that spawn unexpected answers and set the stage for more [and possibly bigger] questions. As is always the case with Lost, context is everything.

    Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof co-wrote Because You Left and Stephen Williams’s direction keeps up a pace that matches that of last season’s three-hour finale. Revelations are given in quick bursts and emotional moments in almost a state suspension – but no scene lasts for more a few moments. The Lie, written by Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz and directed by Jack Bender, keeps up that pace, for the most part but lingers a bit more over the key emotional sequences, giving them more heft as the give and take of answers and questions mounts.

    I have to say that I enjoyed the season five premiere episodes as much as the three-part season four finale. Everyone we care about gets a choice moment or two and the plot forges onward. The rollercoaster ride that is Lost is definitely maintaining the quality level it regained last season.

    Source: eclipsemagazine.com

    Jack Vs Jack

    Jack's back!

    Twice.

    With the welcome return of 24 on Sunday and Lost on Jan. 21, two of television's coolest shows, we also get the return of two of its coolest characters at no extra charge.

    They would be Jack Bauer and Jack Shephard, played by Kiefer Sutherland and Matthew Fox, respectively.

    When last we left them, Bauer was saving orphans in Africa and then he was arrested; he'll appear before a Senate committee questioning him about torture and other human-rights violations (uh, duh).

    Shephard, meanwhile, was rescued by Penny, after Locke and Ben moved the island. Believe it or not, that actually makes some sense if you're familiar with the show.

    So who's the better Jack? While it seems certain that in a fight Bauer would rip Shephard's arm out of its socket and beat him to death with it, that doesn't necessarily make him the better man.

    Let's compare them head-to-head, and may the best Jack win.

    How Jacks stack up

    Comparing intense Jack Bauer of '24' with tortured Jack Shephard of 'Lost'

    Occupation

    Bauer: At various times, a member of the Army, the LAPD, the CIA and the Counter Terrorist Unit.

    Shephard: A surgeon stranded on a mysterious island that seems to exist outside the normal workings of the universe.

    Advantage: Tie. For last.

    Education

    Bauer: UCLA grad, master's degree from University of California-Berkeley.

    Shephard: Unknown college, medical school.

    Advantage: Shephard, but closer than you'd think.

    Personality:

    Bauer: Filled with violent rage, which he often acts upon, thanks to loss of wife at hands of traitorous mistress.

    Shephard: Filled with tremendous self-doubt and guilt, thanks to alcoholic surgeon father.

    Advantage: Uh, hmm . . . Bauer in a fight, presumably.

    Beer-buddy compatibility:

    Bauer: Low, due to violent nature and a since-kicked heroin habit (which he got while undercover).

    Shephard: Lower, due to history of alcoholism in his family.

    Advantage: Bauer, though you want to hide the weapons after that fifth beer.

    Catch phrase

    Bauer: "IT'S A BOMB!"

    Shephard: "WE HAVE TO GO BACK!"

    Advantage: Shephard, obviously. He just wants to get back to the island. Who wants to blow up?

    Handiness in emergencies

    Bauer: Can fly planes, rig explosives, handle any weapon, speak several languages, take a beating and administer one; not especially hindered by conscience.

    Shephard: Willing to fight, use a gun. Conscience is present but can be gotten around. Good surgeon.

    Advantage: A draw. Bauer to kick some serious butt in the clutch, Shephard to sew you up afterward.

    Willingness to bend rules

    Bauer: Chopped off a man's head to show he means business. Shot a man's wife in the thigh to get him to talk. Executed his own boss.

    Shephard: Deliberately sliced his captor's kidney during an operation. The usual threats while holding a gun, etc.

    Advantage: Bauer. Constitutional rights or guilt are no match for his intensity.

    Good qualities

    Bauer: Intense loyalty. Expertise with various weaponry. Often feels bad after, say, shooting his boss in the back of the head.

    Shephard: Intense loyalty. Expertise with scalpel. Often feels bad after, say, everything.

    Advantage: Not sure there really is one.

    Overall

    Bauer: Intense-beyond-belief guy willing to do anything for what he thinks is right. You just don't want to be on the wrong side of that evaluation.

    Shephard: Slightly less-intense guy willing to almost anything (though not to Bauer-like levels) to help those he cares about (though that's a moving target).

    Advantage: If you're saving the nation and possibly the world from destruction, Bauer. If you're saving the passengers of a downed airplane, Shephard.

    Winner

    Neither.

    We'll go with Hurley and Chloe.

    Source: azcentral.com

    CAST is EXCITED about what's to come in season 5! Jorge explains...

    [from the National Ledger...]



    The final finale of "Lost" isn't expected 'til 2010, but already things are heating up on ABC's one-of-a-kind series, which begins airing its fifth season Jan. 21 with a three-hour premiere. Jorge Garcia -- aka Hurley -- reports that the cast did a lot of guessing about the mysteries surrounding their characters and their strange island surroundings "during Season 1, but after that it slowed down. Last season, when they announced there was going to be an ending, we started guessing again. There's definitely a sense of pacing that is going toward something on the show. We're excited, like Season 1."


    According to him, "The stories are crazy this year. This one definitely takes it to another level." As for himself, the challenge in playing his lottery-winning, formerly institutionalized character remains "to try and make Hurley's craziness come from a real place. That has been a big challenge for me as an actor, along with some of the physical stuff. You have no idea how hard it is to march with purpose in sand in tennis shoes when you have to do it over and over again."

    TAKE THE LOST TEST AT EW.COM!!!!

    Hey Dharmaholics! Niki here, and I found a GREAT TRIVIA game to get you ready for the new season of LOST! There are 34 questions in all! See if you can get a PERFECT SCORE! NO CHEATING!!!!
    Enjoy!
    NIKI
    LOST TRIVIA

    Monday, January 12, 2009

    Season 5 New pic!!

    Looking for stories to keep you looking forward (even more than you are already) to the upcoming season of LOST, I happened upon a picture that has got me very excited, worried for someones safety, intrigued, in fact so many things I couldn't list them all. This picture is apparently from the 2 hour season premiere, so I will post a link to the picture so anyone who wants to stay clean, can stay clean.

    I want to sell my soul!

    'Lost'

    Again, contains a few mild spoilers!

    Time travel? Rescue? Expect the creative forces to keep viewers on a roller coaster during the penultimate season.


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    It's been eight months since the island moved us. Yes, we know that's not island time -- because we also know that we have no idea what island time is.

    What we do know is that we, the “ Lost" couch potato castaways, saw Ben turn the wheel hidden in a room below the unfamiliar Dharma Orchid Station, the sky white out, and the island vanish. All of this culminated a time-traveling, Emmy-nominated season of past and future stories that split up the "Lost" tribe -- rescuing some people after 108 days, leaving some to linger on the island, and killing others.

    If none of the above makes sense to you, yes, it's too late to pick "Lost" up now. That's what DVDs are for.

    For four seasons, viewers have flashed back and forward through a maze of puzzles. When the penultimate season of the ABC hit premieres on Jan. 21, executive producers promise that answers will come our way, but it might take fans a moment to notice -- because the fifth season takes viewers on yet another narrative roller coaster.

    "Although the show occupies the same world, we're always driven not by rules but by what is the best way to tell stories in any given season," executive producer Carlton Cuse said. "Viewers will have to adjust to a little bit of a different mode this year, but we think that in that challenge also is the excitment that keeps 'Lost' fresh."

    First, we got to know our castaways through flashbacks of events that happened before Oceanic Flight 815 crashed in the South Pacific on Sept. 22, 2004. Then, viewers caught glimpses of them in the future, a future that revealed that some of them were rescued. The groundbreaking storytelling then took another turn when viewers became privy to future events that predated the future they'd already seen.

    This season, the flashbacks and flashforwards will still exist, but another storytelling approach will dominate. And in classic "Lost" tradition, the producers won't explain what they're doing ahead of time.

    "We're really happy with the scripts that we're writing, but at the same time, there's this complete sense of fear and second-guessing in terms of whether or not the audience is going to groove on what we're doing," co-creator and executive producer Damon Lindelof said. "The show is taking on a new model in terms of the way we tell stories and finding a balance between what's happening off the island and on the island. Are the characters having an emotional experience no matter how crazy it is? That's the part we're focused on."

    The first seven episodes will focus on the aftermath of Ben's (Michael Emerson) pronouncement to Jack ( Matthew Fox) in the last scene of last season that the Oceanic 6 must all return to the island, including Locke (Terry O'Quinn), who has died. Jack's challenge is to enlist the rescued castaways to go back, but that will prove tricky since he and Kate (Evangeline Lily) have broken up; Sayid (Naveen Andrews) is trotting the globe, killing people for Ben with Hurley (Jorge Garcia) in his custody; and Sun (Yunjin Kim) has gone rogue.

    Viewers also will see what's happened to Penny (Sonya Walger) and Desmond (Henry Ian Cusick) after she rescued him and learn how Locke left the island and later died. The story of Walt (Malcolm David Kelley), who left the island two seasons ago, will continue, though his father, Michael (Harold Perrineau), died attempting to return to the island in the season finale. Sawyer (Josh Holloway), Juliet (Elizabeth Mitchell) and Charlotte (Rebecca Mader) survive on the island.

    "The conventional thinking might be that we're going to spend the entire season telling the story of how and if these charcters are able to make it back to the island," Lindelof said. "That's not what we're doing. Not by any stretch of the imagination."

    Since death on "Lost" is a relative term, as Cuse likes to say, fans can expect to see more of Jin ( Daniel Dae Kim) whether he survived the freighter explosion or not; the mysterious Christian Shephard (John Terry), whose death caused his son, Jack, to be on the doomed airliner; and Rousseau (Mira Furlan), who was shot to death. The ageless Richard Alpert (Nestor Carbonell) will pop up again. Although fans do not know what happened to Claire (Emilie de Ravin) -- the actress does not have a regular role this season, mind you -- she will appear during the season.

    For that matter, so will Vincent the dog, the only character the producers have committed to keeping alive for the entire run of the series.

    Source: latimes

    Sunday, January 11, 2009

    Lost: Hollywood Insider Preview!

    THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS MILD SPOILERS!!!!

    I would class this as being more hints than spoilers, but if you don't want any hints at all, please don't read.



    Sky1 gets the inside scoop on the first 2 episodes of Series 5 of Lost from Televisionary blogger Jace..."What goes around comes around."

    Truer words were never spoken when looking at the concept of karma. Do our past actions affect our future? Does good bring good and ill bring ill? How important are fate and free will in determining the paths of our lives? Are our lives, like a record, spinning around and around, repeating the same patterns again and again?

    It's these metaphysical questions (and a host of others) that have been explored over the course of the last four series of Lost. I had the chance yesterday to watch the brilliant and provocative first two episodes of Series Five of Lost ("Because You Left" and "The Lie"), which kicks off on 25 January, and naturally fell under the series' deft spell.

    While I'm prohibited by the network from revealing major plot points about the first two installments of Lost, I can offer some rather oblique clues about what to expect and discuss some general points from these early Series Five episodes.

    So, put on your Dharma jumpsuit, and let's discuss Series Five of Lost.

    Televisionary on Sky1 Sneak Peek PicsFirst, I have to commend Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse for once again exploding the narrative framework of this series. Much as Series Four forever altered the way that stories on Lost were told--with flash-forwards rather than flashbacks--so too does Series Five tweak some familiar tropes, offering a very different narrative style than we've seen so far. (Though fret not, those flashbacks are still there, in some small part.)

    Photobucket

    This series, the mission has changed dramatically: our beloved castaways are no longer attempting to get off of the island, but rather, they're trying to get back. And to do so, they'll have to work with the one man that they've all battled against for so long: Benjamin Linus. Ben's overarching mission comprises a large part of these early episodes and his drive to return to that place splinters the already fractious relationships among the Oceanic Six, causing some new alliances to form and some old grudges to resurface. Without revealing too much, I'll say that these Oceanic Six aren't quite a united front as they seemed from that press conference.

    The strain of keeping the true circumstances surrounding the crash of Oceanic Flight 815 a secret are weighing very heavily on the consciences of each of the six and, as we saw from Series Four, cracks are beginning to form in the carefully constructed cover story.

    Televisionary on Sky1 Sneak Peek PicsSomeone knows that Kate isn't Aaron's birth mother and they clearly want Kate to know this information... as evidenced by her surprise visitors in the form of lawyers from the firm of Agostini & Norton, who turn up with a court order to take a blood sample from Kate. But if someone knows the truth about Aaron's parentage, why not go to the media and publicly reveal the truth about Kate and the others? And just who is their mysterious client? Hmmm...

    Photobucket

    The consequences of that fateful meeting between Sun and Charles Widmore, glimpsed in the Series Four finale, are becoming shockingly clear and the full weight of Sun's words is discussed with a surprising candor. Desmond and Penny are shaken from their romantic travels by an unexpected message. Elsewhere, Sayid and Hurley must both make some difficult decisions when faced with attacks from all quarters... and Sayid makes good use of a dishwasher.

    Meanwhile, I can't shake the feeling that the Oceanic Six are nothing more but pawns in the ongoing war between Charles Widmore and Ben. But there are other mysterious operatives working in the shadows as well; whether these people are friends or foes to the Six remains to be seen.

    However, expect to see some familiar faces return as the writers answer some provocative questions about the history of the Dharma Initiative, just what Ben did turning that ancient wheel beneath the Orchid Station, and, yes, why Locke died. Along the way, there's a slew of new mysteries involving compasses, blood, fire, hands, pendulums, archaic computers, and event windows.

    (Yes, it's bloody hard not spilling the beans about just what happens in these two fantastic installments.)

    What else can you expect? Look for an intriguing plot twist with Charlotte, keep your eye on the night sky, and pay special attention to Daniel Faraday's journal, which seems to hold answers to every single question that the remaining castaways need answered. And, oh, Bernard and Rose squabble and cuddle, but that's hardly news, now is it?

    Suffice it to say, the opening installments of Series Five of Lost do not disappoint on any level, once again offering a tantalizing trip down the rabbit hole and through the looking glass. With an end date clearly in their sights, Lindelof and Cuse have ramped up the tension, pacing, and action as we begin our journey towards The End. It's with great excitement (and a little bit of sadness) that we set off on the penultimate chapter in this gripping saga. And these first two superlative episodes only herald at even greater revelations to come in the days ahead.

    Source: Sky.com

    For UK lost fans... LOST on Sky One

    After they left the island some very bad things happened. Now they have to go back. All of them...

    This January we make a long awaited return to the Emmy® and Golden Globe® winning LOST, for its fifth and penultimate season. The jaw dropping finale to Season Four may have finally revealed who was in the coffin, but there are still many questions left to be answered and Season Five promises to set the dramatic groundwork for the final act. Destiny calls for the Oceanic Six but will they answer?

    By leaping between different phases of time, the last season of LOST began to put the pieces together for what has been a rollercoaster ride of a series. In the present day it was revealed how the Oceanic Six returned back home and why the others remained on the island – some by choice and some forced by circumstance. Ben was shown turning the frozen wheel and causing himself and the island to vanish to be relocated in a destination yet to be revealed… In the future, the Oceanic Six were revealed to experience far from a welcome return home; Jack (Matthew Fox) is a broken man following the breakdown of his relationship to Kate (Evangeline Lilly), Hurley (Jorge Garcia) is back in a mental institution and Sayid (Naveen Andrews) is working as a hitman for the time-travelling Ben (Michael Emerson). In the final flash forward, Jack and Ben met alongside Locke’s (Terry O’Quinn) coffin and revealed that prior to his death, he had returned from the island to deliver them each the message that their departure caused awful things to happen that cannot be resolved without their return. A depressed, pill-popping Jack was eager to go back to his heroic former life, but can he and Ben convince the fragmented others to return with them? Executive producer Carlton Cuse said: “The people that are off the island… the island seems to be drawing them back, and Ben makes it clear they need to go back. So that’s a lot of what you’ll see…the journey of how those six return.”

    Photobucket

    Along the way, there will be some new additions to the cast: Reiko Aylesworth (24) will play a member of the Dharma initiative called Amy, Raymond J. Barry (Alias) will play Jack’s grandfather, Patrick Fischler (Mad Men) will assume the role of a corporate security man, and Eric Lange (Bones) is a smart and controlling off-island character named Marty. Their role in the grand scheme will remain a mystery until the new season begins.

    Executive producers and writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse recently revealed that only 34 episodes remain of the series, split equally between two seasons. Speaking at a convention earlier in the year, they were drawn on how the journey will be mapped out in Season Five, on the way to the series’ ultimate conclusion. Cuse said: “We’re basically putting together the last two seasons of the puzzle. Our ability to negotiate an end date to the show so far in advance was unprecedented in network TV. It has given us a real sense of what the journey is going to be. We’ve had the chance to do something really extraordinary, and the challenge is to make this engaging and exciting, where everybody is really excited about the final season of LOST.” Lindelof added: “The cool thing about Season Five is that it takes a little while for your brain to fully absorb how the story is unfolding, but hopefully once it does, you’ll realise we’re trying something new yet again.”

    The island is calling again…. Don’t miss the penultimate season of what Empire magazine calls “one of the most compelling shows on television,” launching the week beginning January 24th on Sky1. LOST can also be enjoyed in glorious high definition on Sky1 HD, capturing each blade of grass and grain of sand in the best picture quality available.

    Just before the premiere of LOST’s fifth season, you can catch an exclusive behind-the-scenes special: LOST… ON LOCATION. Presenter and LOST fanatic Iain Lee brings fans access to one of the most closely guarded sets in television, presenting the story of LOST to bring viewers up to speed, as well as examining mythology and key plot points with executive producers Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof, who will be guiding the way and providing the insights you cannot find anywhere else.

    Source: Sky.com

    Saturday, January 10, 2009

    Sawyer Time

    We all noticed a severe lack of the beautiful Sawyer in Season 4. But all is about to get better.

    Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof have said that season 5 will see an increase of our man.

    “What we don’t want to do in season five is basically stand around sort of shifting from one foot to another waiting for the last season of the show,” says Cuse of the acclaimed ABC series that’s set to wrap in 2010. “Like it or not, we decided to take some chances this year and be bold in our storytelling and we’re willing to accept the consequences of that.”

    As the story picks up again, Jack and Ben are trying to reunite the Oceanic 6 and return them to the island, with Locke’s body in tow, in a quest to save the remaining castaways. But it’s going to be tricky convincing everyone to cooperate. And since Ben moved the island at the end of last season’s finale, they’ll have to figure out where — and when — it went.

    Expect a lot of interesting things to happen sooner rather than later. But “Lost” is a character-driven journey, too, so there’ll be plenty of focus on the romantic quadrangle of Jack, Kate, Sawyer and Juliet.

    Speaking of sardonic hunk Sawyer, will he get the screen time he deserves? “We really feel it’s the year of Sawyer,” says Lindelof. “He’s really stepping up in a major way.”


    Source: DocArzt

    BEN IS A CLONE! UPDATE!!!! VIDEO FOUND!!! deleted scenes from season 4 DVDs!

    Here's video of the clone Ben from deleted scenes from season 4 dvds....



    Well, what do u think?
    EMAIL us at
    the_shotglass@hotmail.com
    dharmaholics@gmail.com

    NIKI

    (Previous post)
    well fans, it's been awhile since I have been able to blog due to my lack of internet access....BUT I HAD to hunt down a PROPER internet connection to discuss something that I recently saw on the new LOST dvd release for season 4!

    BEN IS A CLONE!!!!

    If you watch the deleted scene entitled "DESERT STASH" you will see BEN ride a horse into the desert that looks like the one he "jumps" to in time after the wheel incident. HOWEVER, he is checking some rocks for a secret stash of passports and identifications. As he does this, he looks over his shoulder to see HIMSELF lying on the desert floor with the DHARMA PARKA on. Yes, this had me so freaked out that I had to watch it over again about 4 more times!


    We all know that there was a BUNNY experiment with rabbit # 8....The "SHIFT" and how that SAME rabbit appeared....So now BEN is just like bunny #8!!!!Could this explain why we see CHARLIE in other places AFTER he has died---at Santa Rosa...OR how Kate sees Claire in Aaron's room one night in the future....And is this the reason that Ben cannot kill Widmore? Because there is MORE THAN ONE WIDMORE????

    Here's the season 5 sneak peek.....NO MORE YETI!

    I know that you've probably seen this one quite a few times if you have been visiting http://www.abc.com/lost ....It's my beloved JACK shaving the YETI BEARD! NOOOOOOOO!!!! My New Year's Resolution will be to get over the YETI, but it will be VERY difficult! ENJOY!





    NIKI

    Friday, January 2, 2009

    Jazzing up our logo...

    I have a feeling that this season will bring a whole new perspective on everything LOST. So with that in mind, here's our new logo for The Shotglass for 2009!
    Photobucket
    NIKI

    GET READY! Let's RECAP before the BIG PREMIERE!

    Well it's almost here! I don't know about you guys, but I am going thru my dharmahol right now making sure I have enough for the BIG PREMIERE!

    To celebrate the return of our favorite show I have collected some mini animations that you can use for avatars(I found them on photobucket)...With the avatars I have included some QUESTIONS that we need ANSWERED!!!

    First here's a new wallpaper pic for season 5 for all the patient fans! ENJOY!
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    NOW --- LET'S RECAP!.....
    Drink Together-Barf Alone,
    NIKI

    1.Is Jin REALLY DEAD?
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    2. Will Charlotte and Daniel GET IT ON?
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    3. Where's Frank Lapidus?
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    4. Will we see MORE DEAD CHARLIE?
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    5. Will there be more slow motion MOOBIE shots?
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    6. Will we see more of Sayid's pretty FUTURE HAIR?
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    7. How manu BENs are there, REALLY? (my fave question)
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    8. The fate of the YETI BEARD? (*sniff*)
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    9. ARE YOU READY WITH YOUR DHARMHOL???
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