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Hi, I'm Paul. This is my website and it's the only place to find all the information you need about handjobs. You can currently see me on the FX show The League as Andre and on NTSF:SD:SUV:: on Adult Swim. Listen to my Podcast HOW DID THIS GET MADE on Earwolf.com

“LAPIDUS NOOO!!!!!“ or ”WHAT HAPPENED TO FRANK?” or even “Where is Frank?”
These are things that NO ONE said in last night’s episode of LOST. That’s right, there was no love for Captain Frank’s demise. I guess the moral of the story is, don’t oversleep and miss your flight because if you do death will find you. Come to think about it, Frank really had a “Final Destination” like life, he may have dodged death a few times but it finally found him, at least he didn’t die in a hawaiian shirt.
I like to think that when Jack cried last night, it was for Frank and no one else.
BEST LINE - Frank Lapidus: [to himself] Weirdest damn funeral I’ve ever been to…          
R.I.P. Cpt. FRANK LAPIDUS 1950’s -2007
Last Night’s Episode was pretty self explanatory but soe cool insights from Damon and Carlton at EW

Why was it so important for Lost to prove that it can be downright homicidal during its last season? To establish once and for all that the Locke-ness Monster is the true villain of season 6 and quite possibly all of Lost. “There is no ambiguity,” says Cuse. “He is evil and he has to be stopped.”
Lindelof elaborates: “In many ways, the season was structured as a long con on behalf of the Man In Black. Once we revealed that Locke was the Monster, we knew the audience would immediately mistrust him, and we would have to spend at least a dozen episodes of Locke trying to convince the audience that he did not have malevolent intention, that all he wanted to do was get off The Island. But everything he was doing was leading up to one moment, which was [trying to] get the candidates in one fell swoop. He knew if he killed just one of them, everyone would know what he was up to.’”
And Sayid? Lindelof explains: “Sayid’s entire season-long arc has basically been, if you tell him that he is evil, you can convince him he is evil. But if you tell him he is good, maybe you can convince him he is good. We basically decided that in a moment of pure instinct, if he did something, if he sacrificed his own life in favor of saving the other people’s lives, that would convey to the audience, ‘This guy was actually a good guy.’”

LAPIDUS NOOO!!!!!“ or ”WHAT HAPPENED TO FRANK?” or even “Where is Frank?

These are things that NO ONE said in last night’s episode of LOST. That’s right, there was no love for Captain Frank’s demise. I guess the moral of the story is, don’t oversleep and miss your flight because if you do death will find you. Come to think about it, Frank really had a “Final Destination” like life, he may have dodged death a few times but it finally found him, at least he didn’t die in a hawaiian shirt.

I like to think that when Jack cried last night, it was for Frank and no one else.

BEST LINEFrank Lapidus: [to himself] Weirdest damn funeral I’ve ever been to…          

R.I.P. Cpt. FRANK LAPIDUS 1950’s -2007

Last Night’s Episode was pretty self explanatory but soe cool insights from Damon and Carlton at EW

Why was it so important for Lost to prove that it can be downright homicidal during its last season? To establish once and for all that the Locke-ness Monster is the true villain of season 6 and quite possibly all of Lost. “There is no ambiguity,” says Cuse. “He is evil and he has to be stopped.”

Lindelof elaborates: “In many ways, the season was structured as a long con on behalf of the Man In Black. Once we revealed that Locke was the Monster, we knew the audience would immediately mistrust him, and we would have to spend at least a dozen episodes of Locke trying to convince the audience that he did not have malevolent intention, that all he wanted to do was get off The Island. But everything he was doing was leading up to one moment, which was [trying to] get the candidates in one fell swoop. He knew if he killed just one of them, everyone would know what he was up to.’”

And Sayid? Lindelof explains: “Sayid’s entire season-long arc has basically been, if you tell him that he is evil, you can convince him he is evil. But if you tell him he is good, maybe you can convince him he is good. We basically decided that in a moment of pure instinct, if he did something, if he sacrificed his own life in favor of saving the other people’s lives, that would convey to the audience, ‘This guy was actually a good guy.’”

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