In the exchange Hurley tells Benjamin that he was a "real good number two," while Benjamin replies that Hurley was a great number one. The large group, now including Ilana, Frank and Ben as well, discussed their plans around the campfire that night. After Jack called the freighter for rescue, Hurley and five other survivors managed to escape the Island by using a helicopter.
My dad imported goods. Charlie decided to join him, testing his fate. Hurley and Sayid first hear this sweet swing classic on a radio at the Arrow station in the episode "The Long Con," and it plays on Jack's car radio during a flashback in "Tale of Two Cities.
Michael apologized anew for killing Libby and directed Hurley toward Locke's camp. Ben tells him he should help Desmond get home and suggests there may be a better way of protecting the island than how Jacob did.
When they arrived at the safe house, they were ambushed by three men, who Sayid killed. Hurley trekked around the Island with Libby, struggling to find Sayid's proposed location, only to wind back up at the Losties' camp. After Sayid did not tell him the way to her shelter, Hurley took off, claiming he wants to find her to get a battery for the raft that Michael built. When he opened them, Charlie had disappeared without a trace. Once they arrive at the Temple, they are almost killed by the native inhabitants until Hurley claims that Jacob had sent them.
The other six are. He later threw a Hot Pocket at Benjamin Linus and surrendered to authorities. Hurley is released and instructed to return to his camp and tell his people that they can never come to this part of the island. Hurley then asked Ben to become his adviser, to which Ben said he was honored. But after running some distance, he saw the cabin in front of him again. Note: He does lose some weight after Season 1, just not much: "Live Together, Die Alone, Part 2" , As Hurley hiked back to the beach camp after being released by the Others at the dock, he came across Locke and Charlie, who were looking for Eko.
Outside, Jacob reappears to Hurley, congratulating him on bringing Jack to the lighthouse as needed for Jack to realize that he is important to the Island.
Hurley wanted to go, but Charlie told him he was too fat and wouldn't fit on the boat. He compared Jack's life with Kate and Aaron to a vision of heaven. Hurley sat with Libby and his other friends in the church as a light engulfed them, letting them move on. During his father's absence, Hurley developed an eating disorder, and later a traumatic accident landed him in a mental asylum where he started seeing an imaginary person.
The police officer sarcastically suggests that he can put Hurley in a mental hospital, which Hurley quickly jumps at. Instead, Hugo won the lottery by using the serial number off a dollar bill he found lying on the street.
His life fell into a rut, but Hurley seemed content getting his job back at Mr. In the flash-sideways, Hurley was finally reunited with his murdered island lover, Elizabeth "Libby" Smith and along with their friends, they moved on. He picked up Aaron and hid in Ben's house with everyone. He began as the main antagonist during the second and third seasons, but in subsequent seasons, becomes a morally ambiguous ally to the main characters.
After rebuffing Sawyer's attempt to talk about Charlie's death, Hurley fell behind the group and got lost. Hurley lowered Jack into the Heart, and when he pulled the rope up again, Desmond, not Jack, was tied to it.
Hurley soon after revealed to the Others that Jacob had died, which shocked the group into securing the Temple. After speaking at Libby's funeral, he agrees to help Michael rescue his son from the Others, who he has blamed for Libby's shooting.
Hurley later came across a naked Desmond, running through the forest. She then tells him that she thinks that they are connected and could be soul mates. She advised him to buy a new shirt and stay away from the cops. He was quickly caught and while being apprehended, he began shouting that he was one of the "Oceanic 6.
He told her his story, and asked her to confirm for him that the Numbers are cursed. Hurley was riled to the point of attacking him, flooring Sawyer and virtually destroying his tent in the process.
As a child, Hugo was very close to his father. An epilogue revealed that he was retrieved by Hurley and Ben to return and use his special abilities to help his father. By the time of the church reunion, it's entirely possible that Walt was simply still alive and hadn't yet freed Michael's spirit.
Richard was another notable absence from the church at the end, leading some to wonder if he was still dealing with immortality. His deal with Jacob after landing on the Island in the s meant that he would remain ageless, but the agelessness seemed to end when Jacob was killed and the Island was temporarily without a living Protector.
He did not regain his apparent immortality even when another Protector began working to defend the island. Miles noted a gray hair on Richard's head in the finale, which indicated that his time as a young man was coming to an end.
He undoubtedly died at some point between the Ajira escape from the Island and the reunion in the church. Richard may have been absent because he reunited with the spirit of his wife.
One of the first "WTF? Sawyer managed to shoot it dead before it could kill any of them, but the mystery of where they came from and how they survived on a tropical island lingered. They were chosen due to their adaptability and memory. The bears were evidently modified on a biological level to survive in the climate that should have overheated and killed them; following the Purge that ended the DHARMA Initiative, some of the bears escaped and survived in the jungle to attack and mystify Oceanic survivors many years later.
Nobody ever told anybody at the supply warehouse about the Purge that resulted in the deaths of most of the members of the DHARM Initiative.
So, they kept on sending supply drops to the Island, one of which was enjoyed by the Oceanic survivors who were running low on what supplies they scavenged from the airplane wreckage. It was a simple answer to a big question, but it makes sense. Pregnancy on Lost was a hot topic from the very beginning when the very pregnant Claire survived the crash of Oceanic The show would later reveal that pregnant women who conceived on the Island experienced complications that were often deadly.
Claire was an important variable for study as she had conceived and spent most of her pregnancy off the Island. She safely delivered Aaron with surprisingly few complications, all things considered. Sun became pregnant on the Island and was told by Juliet that she was likely to die if she did not escape; she did, and she delivered a healthy baby girl in a South Korea hospital. As it turned out, it was the extreme electromagnetism of the Island that interfered with pregnancies and resulted in so many deaths.
Claire and Sun survived because they spent most of their pregnancies off-Island. Who built the four-toed statue and the chamber? The easy answer is that the Egyptians were responsible for the statue of the goddess Tawaret, but the show never explained how or when Egyptians were on the Island to erect the statue.
Who was in the other outrigger? That evening, she kisses him. This type of ending is used to ensure that, if a next installment is made, audiences will return to find out how the cliffhanger is resolved.
Many Lost episodes cut to commercial breaks or end on a cliffhanger, and since the middle of season 3 almost every episode has ended on a cliffhanger. The S3 finale is superb and sets up a really fantastic fourth season, so yes it does get better. Much better. Lost got consistently worse with each passing season.
I gave up after the first half of season 3. Does hurley die in lost? Asked by: Regan O'Kon. Does Claire's baby survive Lost? Are they all dead in Lost? Are they dead in Lost? Is Dave from Lost real? It had plenty of ups " The Constant " and quite a few downs Nikki and Paulo , but the finale is still the thing that has viewers divided most. Thing is, some of those viewers, even seven years after the finale aired, just flat out misunderstood what happened in those final episodes.
To put it simply: If you think the characters in Lost were "dead the whole time," you are wrong. Many people mistakenly believe that at the very start of Lost , every character on the show, Jack, Kate, Sawyer, Hurley, etc.
They died in the plane crash of Oceanic Flight , and the Island doesn't actually exist — it's just a representation of Purgatory where all of the characters are overcoming their personal demons after death. The Purgatory concept was a fine theory while the show was running, and there were plenty of moments where it even seemed plausible despite the writers saying otherwise. But the show's ending explicitly closes the door on that idea.
The Island was real — a physical place that humans could come and go from — and the characters of Lost really spent several years on it. This is not a case like Inception where the ending is ambiguous. The ending of Lost was laid out pretty clearly in the series finale, "The End. Watch one of the climactic scenes again , the one with Jack talking to his father, Christian. This is one of the few times when Lost comes closest to an "Architect" moment from The Matrix , in which everything is explained and laid out in front of the viewer.
This is, apparently, where a lot of people just stopped paying attention. Their brains settled into the thought of, "Oh, they were all dead the whole time" and just stopped processing any information. Maybe they turned off their TVs in disgust. But that's not where the show, or even the scene, ends. After Christian assures Jack that the two of them are real, everything that's ever happened to Jack is real, and that all the people in the church most of the other "main" characters throughout the show are real too, Jack asks, "And they're all dead?
Christian replies, "Everyone dies sometime, kiddo. Some of them before you, some long after you. Think about that for half a second.
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