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Welcome!
Welcome to Lost-TV, the first unofficial fansite for the hit ABC drama series Lost. The show, created by JJ Abrams (Alias) and Damon Lindelof, premiered 22 September 2004 and will return to our screens for its sixth and final season sometime in 2010 (date and time have yet to be announced). The site itself was launched on 20 March 2004, even before the series was picked up. To contact the webmaster, send an email to webmaster@lost-tv.com.

Announcements and Exclusives
The Complete Fifth Season of LOST on DVD Available to Pre-Order at Amazon.com!
Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on DVD is set to be released on December 8, 2009, but you can pre-order your copy today on Amazon.com! The 5-disc DVD box set is packed with special features, including: 7 Lost on location, A Day with Josh Holloway, Los Angeles crew tribute with Michael Emerson, the 100th episode, Time Frame and Continuity, Bloopers, and Deleted Scenes. The set is available for you to pre-order at Amazon.com. Also available for pre-order is Lost: The Complete Fifth Season on Blu-ray.

LOST to Return for Season Six in 2010
Lost will return to our television screens for its sixth and final season in 2010! Stay tuned for news from ABC on when and what time Season Six of Lost will be making its debut. If you need something to tide you over until then, then watch FlashForward, which starts airing on ABC on September 24, 2009 at 8pm Eastern/Pacific, 7pm Central. The show's cast includes two Lost cast members, Sonya Walger (Penny) and Dominic Monaghan (Charlie). Visit our partner site FlashForwardTV for more information on that series.

Transcript for March 15 Show of Fictional Frontiers with Sohaib Now Available
The transcript for LOST-TV's third monthly appearance on the radio show Fictional Frontiers with Sohaib, held last Sunday, March 15, 2009 at 11:00am ET, is now available online. Fictional Frontiers is a live one-hour journey through the comic/novel, film, and television universes. Seeking caller opinions, host Sohaib Awan will engage listeners in one-on-one debates and discussions. In addition, Fictional Frontiers will tap into its reservoir of industry guests for insights into upcoming trends and projects. In Episode 39, LOST-TV celebrated its fifth anniversary with a live segment featuring webmaster and site creator Master Xander, as well as monthly guest, staff member, and forum moderator Scott Gotschall. The transcript is now available here, and you can listen to it here. Check out past transcripts at our exclusives section.

News and Updates
Thursday, July 15, 2004
The Washington Post - In the Church of J.J., a Congregation of 'Lost' Souls 
   LOS ANGELES, July 13
   Visited the Church of J.J. today.
   Its founder, J.J. Abrams, has a new series on ABC called "Lost." It's about a bunch of people who survive a plane crash and find themselves on an island inhabited by a big scary monster who, grievously, is not a vegetarian.
   The Reporters Who Cover Television worship at the feet of J.J. for reasons we do not entirely understand.
   The Church of J.J. sprang up right about the time Abrams created WB's hot-chick-in-college series "Felicity," which was supposed to be Very Big, only it turned out it was only a moderate success and its popularity was contingent upon the star's hairstyle. And everyone knows the mark of a true hit is its ability to survive a change in the star's hairstyle -- like Jennifer Aniston on "Friends."
   Even more of TRWCT joined the Church of J.J. when he created ABC's hot-chick spy drama "Alias." "Alias" was definitely going to be Very Big, only it turned out that even when it aired after the Super Bowl the show still got only a middling rating, even though its star did not change her hair -- though she did dump her husband.
   But church membership never stopped growing. So naturally ABC suits asked Abrams to step in and save a new show it wanted to order that included a plane crash, an island and a big, scary monster.
   Miracles happen every day in the Church of J.J. For instance, although middle-aged women will not survive a plane crash on a remote island, miraculously all of the hot young ones will, as will all of the hot young men. Also surviving will be one young though fat male, one middle-aged man and one precocious child.
   Equally miraculous, the hot young women's bikinis will survive the crash and will be found in time for the promo shots, no matter how far they were flung upon impact, though their sensible shoes will be lost in the wreckage and they will have to pull sensible shoes off the feet of dead middle-aged women whose bodies are strewn around the crash site.
   Really, is it any wonder there are so many followers of the Church of J.J. among TRWCT?
   This morning, at Summer TV Press Tour 2004, surrounded by 11 hot young plane crash survivor-actors, plus the one young fat guy, the one middle-aged guy, the one precocious kid and a partridge in a pear tree, J.J. talked to his fans.
   One critic noted that the premise might cause a viewer to comment, "What a stupid show."
   But "Lost," the critic continued, "went way beyond 'that could never happen,' " and, he forecast, viewers will not say, "What a stupid show."
   "What," the critic wondered, "is the difference between those two kinds of shows, and how do you do it?"
   "I have no idea why anything doesn't work or does," J.J. responded calmly.
   "I think the idea is to take a premise that is maybe a B premise and, whether it's the spy world or characters who crash-land on an island, say, 'How do you do this A?' "
   Speaking of B premises, that big, scary monster seemed difficult for the critics to swallow. But, J.J. assured them, the monster is not the star. And though he said he understood their skepticism, he asked them to believe.
   "If you have a monster and it's, you know, you call it a monster, it's like, then it's sort of disposable and silly and feels kind of irrelevant or gimmicky. If you have something that represents terror and represents fear and represents sort of the darkness of this place, to me, that's incredibly valuable."
   "Lost" is not "Gilligan's Island," critics were assured, because guest stars will not be washed up on shore each week, though they will be featured in flashbacks to the survivors' precrash lives, J.J. explained.
   And "Lost" won't be like "Survivor" in that the big, scary monster won't devour one of the survivors each week, as it did in the pilot.
   What, then, is it? critics wondered aloud.
   "I've just got to say that the fact I don't know how to answer that question in a way that would satisfy anyone who's not seen the first few, six episodes of the show is why I'm so excited," J.J. replied.
   After nearly an hour of this, critics finally asked him to reveal whether this island is on Earth and whether Big Scary Monster had a master, to which J.J. replied: "I have to say, the fact that you would ask that question is one of the things that gets me excited. It's, like, you don't want to do a show that is so weird, you go, 'Oh, it's like this creepy science- fiction show only.'
   "But to me, if this show were on, I would watch it," he said.
   SOURCE: The Washington Post
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