- In the opening scene I thought we were going to have a flashback to the 90’s because I saw a shiny looking red Geo Storm in a driveway but I was wrong.
- When Ilana was in the foot statue and gathered the ash in the fire pit, my immediate thought was of the episode Cabin Fever back in season four when Richard Alpert visited a young John Locke and presented six object to him, one of which was a container of white ash.
- It seems that Sawyer is more observant when he’s wasted.
- I’m glad the real John Locke was buried instead of being left to rot.
- I’m not sure why NotLocke couldn’t turn into Smokey to chase the kid or to climb down the cliff. Perhaps he’s limited, and I’m not sure if it has anything to do with the real Locke being buried.
- “Don’t tell me what I can’t do!” – That was said by both Locke and NotLocke.
- Sideways Locke was very Job like. He didn’t seem to get frustrated or as mad as I would have thought. After falling onto his lawn and the sprinklers going off, he just seemed to laugh instead of getting angry, but then again he did get a bit angry at Hugo who can’t park his Hummer correctly. Speaking of flash-sideways Hurley, he seems more confident and in charge of things than the other Hurley.
- I have a feeling this Sideways story is going to show that Locke and his father still have a good relationship, and perhaps his father wasn’t the one that crippled him. Why do I think this? Because Locke has a picture of himself with his father in his cube. And in those pictures, Locke appeared to be standing. Sidenote: those cubes looked like the ones I use to work out of at Fidelity.
- I really don’t like the story Of Mice and Men, just hearing the title of that book makes me sad. But it has been referenced several times in Lost.
- Locke’s words about not being able to walk Helen down the aisle sure was touching. I can’t help but think their wedding is going to play a plot in this sideways world. And I also think we’ll see Boone again, since he’s the Chief Operating Officer of the largest wedding business of the United States.
- I thought Helen was suppose to be dead, so I had to do a little research. The flash-sideways occurs in 2004, but Helen actually dies of an aneurysm in 2006. She may still die in 2006, but for now she’s alive and well. But I’m still a bit confused because I thought Locke and her broke up before his trip to Australia.
- If you really liked Helen’s peace and karma shirt in this episode, you can buy it here.
- There’s nothing like being a substitute and teaching about the human reproductive system. Man, that guy has nothing but bad luck, I couldn’t help but feel for him everytime he couldn’t get in our out of his van, especially that one time when he fell onto his lawn and the sprinklers came on. Speaking of sprinklers, I thought it was weird for a sprinkler system control box to be located near the front door.
- I wonder if there is something symbolic of Locke teaching a biology class and PE? Maybe the show is trying to show that this Locke is a man of science?
- In case you missed it: 4-Locke, 8-Reyes, 15-Ford, 16-Jarrah, 23-Shephard, 42-Kwon
- The cave was interesting, and it made me think of Plato’s Allegory of the Cave.
- I wonder if NotLocke was trying to kill Sawyer with that whole ladder thing. And I wonder if that ladder can be called Jacob’s Ladder?
- Next week’s preview caught my attention, it looked like Jack was swinging a sword into a mirror while inside some fancy palace.
Vancouver Time-Lapse
Dad Pleads Not Guilty on Violating Court Order For Taking Daughter to Church
A Chicago man who defied a court order and took his toddler to a Catholic Church service was arraigned today on a charge of indirect criminal contempt in a custody battle that is threatening to put him in jail and draw new boundaries in divorce cases.
Joseph Reyes pleaded not guilty for allegedly violating a court order issued by Chicago family law Judge Edward R. Jordan who had barred Reyes from taking his 3-year-old daughter to church following a dispute over religion with his estranged wife. Reyes’ wife, Rebecca Reyes, is Jewish.
Supine Reading Glasses
These are the glasses that allow you to read while lying supine in bed, eliminating the need to crane your neck. The lightweight glasses employ two optical-quality glass prisms that bend your vision 90º providing easy reading from a recumbent position. Equally useful while lounging outdoors on a hammock, chaise, or on the beach. Includes a hard case.