r_lost Subreddit Lost Reddit r/lost Backup by RTP on Telegram – Telegram
r_lost Subreddit Lost Reddit r/lost Backup by RTP on Telegram
16 subscribers
10K photos
761 videos
2 files
19.5K links
r/lost subreddit backup on Telegram. A Backup Project by @RoadToPetabyte and @Reddit2telegram Join our subreddit backup on Discord and Pinterest: https://discord.gg/abCudZwgBr Other Telegram backup https://discord.gg/jsAxt4rUCB
Download Telegram
Today is my birthday and my gift to myself is a LOST marathon

Happy first day of fall and LOST Day to all who celebrate! My fiancé and I both took the day off and I am going to mansplain (I’m a girl) the first season to him.

My mom died when I was extremely young and I never got to meet her. But I thank her every year for giving me the coolest birthday. Fall is my favorite season and LOST is more than my favorite show. My sister also has a Lost-y birthday (December 8, there’s a few things there iykyk). Anyway today we will be starting on episode 1 and I am wearing the Charlie Pace shirt I made with an iron-on when I was in 8th grade. Wild that today I’m 32!! I have lived a full life with this show.

https://redd.it/1nnnm2i
@lostbackup
What does Lost tell about unfairness?

It's quite interesting that I get recommended this sub just when I am writing a fanfic for a character whose fate I found unfair, so I had specific thoughts about Lost, although the topic was probably addressed many times already.


Lost occupies a special place in my heart. I watched it twice, but several years later it ended, and I'm glad I embarked on this emotional journey ignoring the backlash surrounding its ending. However, it was probably one of the themes of the show, but Lost is one of the prominent examples of "unfairness in character fates".

I hope I can articule my thoughts clearly It's a strange feeling actually, because I watched Lost after the first seasons of Game of Thrones, a show famous for its unfair character deaths. Yet I was somehow more impacted by Lost's character deaths because I was expecting them less than in Game of Thrones. Ultimately, Lost also witnesses most of its main characters dying.


With Lost, I learnt how to separate "unfair" from "sad" deaths. Charlie, Juliet and Jack had sad deaths but, at least in my opinion, they were beautiful conclusions from their character arcs. For Shannon, Libby, Ekko, Charlotte and Faraday, on the other hand... as immature as it sounds, I was in denial for a few episodes after they passed away, and was hoping they would return somehow. Why though, I can't really tell. Is it because, aside from Faraday, their character arc feels incomplete? Because I was hoping for a happy end for them? Obviously, these "sad" and "unfair" categories can sometimes overlap each other, and there is no better example for me than Sun and Jin.


And I couldn't do Locke enough justice. What could I say about him that wasn't already said so many times? "Don't talk to me about fair!" is probably one of the episode endings that impacted me the most, and this was one of the very first episodes of the show. Locke is probably the best embodiment of unfairness throughout the entire show, someone who had faith, who believed he was promised to great things, only to have an unceremonious death and to have his legacy stained by The Man in Black. Only after death could he finally find peace...


I just hope I don't sound silly and immature. Fiction occupies a great part of my life, and I tend to believe it has at least partially influenced the person I have become today. And I don't think there is anything wrong in being invested in fictional characters, to wish better for them... Surely, fiction is unfair because reality is unfair. But no matter how much fiction echoes reality, I often try to use as "escapism" in hope for a better world, driven by the (probably naive) idea that fictional characters could have a deserved fair ending, thrived in happiness.


Well, guess who wants to rewatch Lost, now?

https://redd.it/1nnvs2i
@lostbackup