"Even Superman has daddy issues."
Four of the six numbers that haunted Hurley on the show hit on Tuesday's $350 million drawing
Two winning tickets, from Idaho and Washington, will share a $380 million Mega Millions jackpot, the second largest in U.S. history.
Sometimes villains can be the good guys. Especially when it comes to helping sick children.
Sunday is the series finale of "Lost." For the past six seasons of "Lost," every single episode has brought us at least one new oddity to ponder. And yet, as frequently as questions are posed, it's not that often a question is actually answered. This is why the love the show, but also what makes it such an ever-evolving mind bender. Now we are down to the final episode. It's a long one -- two and a half hours to be exact -- but it has all us fans wondering, how the heck are they going to tie up all the loose ends? Sadly, they won't.
As the brain trust behind "Lost," which returns for its sixth and final season on ABC February 2, executive producers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse work overtime to keep the show's secrets secret. (It doesn't always work: Some leaks -- like the first hour of the premiere that hit the web Monday -- spoil it for everyone and thus we aren't linking to it here!)
Details on the sixth and final season of ABC's "Lost" -- which premieres (finally!) on February 2 -- have been harder to come by than a smooth landing on Oceanic Airlines.
Across the street from a neatly tended cemetery on the island of Oahu, there is a gated lot where the past, present, and future of "Lost" all come together. The Others' submarine, Henry Gale's hot-air balloon, Locke's outrigger -- all beached on the grass like so many Black Rock shipwrecks.
In the middle of April, I sat around a wobbly Tufts University conference table with 20 of my peers, staring at a triangular plastic speaker. On the other side of a fiber optic connection were the two men who breathe creative life into the most innovative franchise on television. Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, the Executive Producers of Lost, were talking to 20 students via speakerphone about the show they created. I, along with a friend, just happened to be teaching the course that brought them to the table.
IS IT DUMB LUCK OR SHREWD strategy that ABC has the two hottest new shows on TV? No reasonable industry watcher could have fathomed it last May when Steve McPherson, the latest in a parade of new b...