Author: ssw15

  • Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern are still dead.

    Beginning of the month, on 4/2/10: I saw a roving “Hamlet” at the World Financial Center (going on from 4/1/10 to 4/18/10)  – great stuff!  Presented by the New York Classical Theatre.

    (for anyone interested, Columbia University’s own King’s Crown Shakespeare Troupe is going to do a roving “Measure for Measure” on campus, April 29-May 1, 2010 – free and fun, if you’re going to be up at Morningside Hts; got to put in a plug for Alma Mater).

    And, in other areas of the arts: I did get to see the “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo” – quite a movie (here’s the link to what I think is the official movie site).  Graphic on the sex, rape, and violence – but quite a movie.  Plus, gets the point very much across that Sweden is not just the land of Ikea and happy sunny people.

    Plus, back in March (March 19, 2010, to be exact), I had enjoyed the Victorian photo-collage exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art – “Playing with Pictures: The Art of Victorian Photocollage” was great stuff – small, intimate, but vivid.  As noted in the art review in the NY Times by Roberta Smith, it’s remarkable about what the women in the 19th Century did, influenced by their society and their culture – making art out of little photographs and other media; taking into consideration their views of the domestic sphere, humor, and popular culture for that time (Lewis Carroll’s weird stuff of the Alice adventures came from somewhere; Charles Darwin did have an impact; the British Royalty was no small stuff).  Smith notes:

    “Playing With Pictures” refreshes your appreciation of the essential fuzziness of art history and of the collective, even osmotic nature of invention. It suggests that women’s art history (a phrase I’m not entirely comfortable with, but never mind) is still only just beginning to be examined and understood. [….] In all fairness, “Playing With Pictures” includes the work of one man and also a French woman, but in the main it demonstrates how upper-class English women — some of whom knew one another — introduced cutout photographs into the albums of watercolors, sketches and writing that had long been an approved female leisure activity.

    The NY Times’ website included a slideshow as a sample.  Really enjoyable.  At the Metropolitan Museum of Art until May 9, 2010.

    So, in this edition of “Sunday Routine” in the NY Times, Moby doesn’t quite go into what he does on a Sunday. But, he sounds cool anyway, talking about tea and pancakes and stuff.  Meanwhile, Vanessa Williams (who was on the touching  series finale of “Ugly Betty” – the whole cast being sweet and moving forward) talked about her Sunday, doing brunch and  her Sunday matinee on Broadway (Sondheim, of course).  WNBC’s Gabe Pressman – still working in his 80’s, even if on blog format – talking about he takes it easy on Sundays.

    I watched the second half of the “Ugly Betty” series finale, and remembered how I liked the show and the characters’ good humor (before the more pointless storylines got in the way).  I liked that they left the ending open – that at the least, Betty moved on to a more exciting future, while letting us wonder if she and Daniel really did hit it off (as more than just friends).

    Have to catch this week’s episode of “Lost” – but otherwise, all lost by how crazy this last season has been.   Television Without Pity did a nifty little feature about a universe where “Lost” never happens and the cast has to do other projects. Basically, Terry O’Quinn got to continue his pre-Lost career of character roles, Matthew Fox somehow lands some other hit, and Ian Somerholder still gets on that Vampire diaries show. Oh well.

    Plus, because it’s April, usually something weird happens at a college campus (usually a protest) – so this seems like something different at Alma Mater: a silent sit-in of Low Library (an administrative building, not a real library, besides housing old archives), to reclaim space, for a mere 30 minutes:

    The students were part of what organizers called a sound-installation flash mob. The idea of the event, entitled “Everything Listens,” was to reclaim the library as a space of contemplation.

    “We’re trying to reawaken Low because it has been dead as a library for 75 years,” one of the organizers, Jess K. Smith, said shortly beforehand. “We’re going to make the trek backwards with books in hand.”

    For 30 minutes, the dozens of students read their books and listened to the downloaded composition.

    Then, one and two at a time, they rose to their feet and slowly left the building.

    Weird.  And, strangely cool to me, for some reason.

    The news about Conan O’Brien going to TBS in the fall – well, I wish Conan the best of luck, even if my reaction was: TBS? Then again, the analysis (such as by tv critic Alan Sepinwall) was quite correct – FOX would have had a hard time getting affiliates on board, when they are making better money with Seinfeld and Simpsons reruns (well, that’s the case in NYC area FOX anyway).

    So, this will have to be as the arts post for the time being.  More in the next post, covering other topics.

  • Happy Passover, Happy Easter, Happy Spring – 2010

    Nice weather.

    The Muppets with an Easter video – the bunnies sing anyway.

    Washington D.C.’s cherry blossom festival!  (Associated Press’ raw video)

    Interesting profile of Butler U’s president, Bobby Fong – an American-born Chinese American, who grew up loving baseball – and now has a Final Two men’s basketball team in the NCAA championship (hat tip from Asian Angry Man).

    Ok, seriously – who had Butler going all the way like this on their brackets?

    I did have Duke, but I didn’t have them as the final champion.  No, I had Syracuse, so I’m clearly no prognosticator.

  • March Madness 2010

    So, half my NCAA Men’s basketball brackets are gone.

    But, so cool that Cornell’s still in it!  Ivy League is represented!  So, of course, all kinds of coverage is done about this: how those Cornell kids live in Ithaca, how their Shining Moment is hopefully lifting spirits at the university, which has had an awful lot of tragedy (dealing with suicides this past academic year) and – of course, how academically bright they are (something other than Duke and Stanford, for goodness sake!).  Plus, sounds like they’re getting real excited at IthacaBig Red had a great weekend.

    So, I’ll root for them.  Do well, Big Red.  Not like my Alma Mater’s going to be in the tourney anytime soon.

    The passing of actor Robert Culp.

  • Stuff

    This past weekend’s storm was just nasty and the recovery’s not been easy.

    Remembering the legacy of Andrew Haswell Green, 19th Century urban planner who helped make the modern 5-borough city possible.

    NYC’s ex-health commissioner, Dr. Thomas Frieden, now CDC’s director; love him or hate him for making us cut back on transfat and salt, he’s making big changes at CDC (and bringing NYC aspects with him).

    Peeps in the ABA Journal – it’s that time of year again…

    The passing of Merlin Olsen.  I remembered he was one of the cast on “Little House on the Prairie,” and he was also a football commentator, and then it was awhile when I learned that he was a pro football player – Hall of Famer?!- that’s quite a life.

    The passing of Peter Graves.  He’ll be missed, but at least we’ll always have his oeuvre — yeah, he was Capt. Oveur in the Airplane! movies, but he’ll especially be remembered as Jim Phelps of Mission Impossible.

  • Oscars 2010

    At the moment, watching the Oscars on my non-cable, digital-ready tv – which was always the plan anyway, sort of – but became the reality once ABC Disney pulled the plug off its station on Cablevision.

    When I visit my cable tv, it is strange to see no ABC.  Kind of amazed that someone (namely, ABC – specifically WABC) found a way to look more evil than Cablevision (who needs to find a better business model than negotiating with each of the networks and  stations like this and then facing the debacle of losing a station or network) and that ABC got the guts to pull this off on Oscar night.

    Frankly, I dislike both Cablevision (who is still evil anyway as it is for many reasons, namely having owners who are not smart about their other products – the teams of Madison Square Garden) and ABC (well, still, I’d give them credit, they’re negotiating dirty and didn’t hold their breath about how they pulled it off, like FOX did with the college bowl games back in January).  It’s all about negotiating dirty.  Whether either side would get what they wanted from this – who knows.

    Oh – update (as of 8:55pm) – ABC has a crawl that alerted that they just came to an agreement in principle with Cablevision and are back on Cablevision households.  I checked my cable tv and that is indeed the case.  I’m sticking with my non-cable tv, thanks anyway; I don’t trust it when cable companies and others control the tv, really.

    Movie weekend otherwise – saw “The Hurt Locker” on Saturday – great movie!; Jeremy Renner was excellent; and the movie leaves you thoughtful about war.

    Saw Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland” today.  3D glasses atop of my own glasses is kind of irritating with an initial headache; otherwise, it was an okay movie; visually appealing but kind of puzzling with the story.

    Although in all honesty, Alice on Syfy was just as visually exciting and creepy, but had less of the weird British stuff.  Both Alices did a whole female empowerment thing, but I kept wondering if Tim Burton’s Alice could be a little less wan (so pale and hesitant, although that’s more the character than the actress) and why did she have to be so young when she originally went to Wonderland in the first place?

    Plus, Tim Burton’s Alice movie was a little slow in some parts and I kept wanting more tension than just “Alice, you must fill your destiny” (really?  is that all?).  Tim Burton’s Cheshire Cat was creepy and helpful simultaneously.  Johnny Depp’s Mad Hatter wasn’t nearly as mad-insane as just mad about oppression by the vile Red Queen (Helena Bonham Carter was funny and creepy).

    Enjoy Oscars night!

  • Goodbye, Vancouver 2010

    Well, the end of the Olympics.  Kudos for Canada’s men’s hockey team for winning gold.  Kudos to Team USA for putting the effort to try to beat Team Canada.

    Although, this meant that President Obama owed Prime Minister Harper a case of Molson’s beer for losing the friendly bet.  Oh well.

    The pictures on tv of Canadians in Vancouver taking to the streets in celebration over the hockey victory was great tv to see.  Seems like all of Canada is happy (Montrealers taking to the streets of downtown!).

    Kudos to Vancouver for the effort in making a memorable Olympics, even if it was a little snow-deprived.

    The Closing Ceremony was odd – yes, it was nice to see the clown help “fix” the missing fourth column of the Olympic cauldron.  Nice to see William Shatner, doing a whole patriotic thing (as NY Times’ live blog noted, by reporter Ian Austen, “Shatner’s opening line ‘I’m Bill and I’m proud to be a Canadian” is a riff on an exceptionally popular beer commercial from several years ago” – so cool that I wasn’t the only one who caught it!  Yes, it was a funny twist of a very popular Molson’s commercial – one of which I remembered actually did get aired in the States; see below).  Catherine O’Hara and the curling thing was funny.  Michael J. Fox – kudos!

    But, parts of the closing ceremony was way over the top – the Michael Buble’s Maple Leaf Forever, the inflatable Monties, and beavers.  The giant table hockey figures with gold medals – now that was terrific.  But, really, the whole thing was total Canadian camp.

    The handover to Sochi 2014 was a bit surreal.  I won’t enter the whole arena of international political intrigue, but sometimes, with the Olympics’ attempts at being about goodwill and sports, the whole patriotism/nationalism thing can be a bit grating on the nerves.  At least the Russian salute to Sochi felt a little (a) abstract and (b) heavy-handed at the same time.  Yeah, we know you weren’t happy with your medal standings and you’re a little peeved that the world doesn’t fear/admire you like it was during the Cold War, but get over it.  Can’t you be like the Canadians and be nice?  (well, except for hockey, which as Newsweek’s Mark Starr notes, Canada really did needed it more).

    Neil Young’s singing his song, while the torch was turned off (both the one inside the stadium and the one outside) – that was poignant.  Strangely, that was the same song he sang on Conan O’Brien’s last “Tonight Show.”

    On a tangent, kind of twisted that, during the Olympics, NBC otherwise promoted the return of Jay Leno, as if Conan never happened.

    John Furlong, chief executive of the Vancouver Games, had a nice speech, praising Vancouver and Canada for the efforts; but, his attempt at the French portion of his speech was on the range of not good French (and I’m not saying my French is any good, but he could’ve been a little careful about it).  Otherwise, I liked how he was sensitive about acknowledging the tragedies and triumphs of this Olympics.

    The rest of the closing ceremony was pretty much a hit or miss for me; unless one is a fan of the music, it really was to entertain the crowd at BC Place, rather than for the tv audience.   The big negative was NBC’s shifting to Jerry Seinfeld’s new show at 10:30pm.  Yes, it was made clear in the promos and the tv guides that this would happen, but that it actually DID happen was disgusting.  Bob Costas telling us viewers to come back at 11:30pm and then shifting to Seinfeld’s new show just like that?  Ugh!  Graceless, NBC!  Absolutely graceless!

    Then by the time we return to the closing ceremony at 11:30pm, the whole time delay was what it was; but the Times’ live blog made it clear that the ceremony actually ended at 11:07 EST.  So, NBC – you blew it.  You could have made up for your showing of the Olympics (which was nice with the hockey game live, as was the 50K men’s cross country skiing live, but not so nice for lots of other things) – but you chose not to.  Granted, you probably have some kind of contractual obligation to Seinfeld to air his show, but sticking it in the middle of the last night of Olympics – so not cool, NBC.  So not cool.

    And then you stick in a reminder to watch for London 2012.  Okay, sure – but couldn’t you have waited until the end of the show to stick in the reminder?  This was still the Winter Olympics and they just did the handoff to Sochi!  Have a little consideration!

    I’ve come to the realization that the NBC coverage was most irritating because the Olympics was actually on our continent.  Then again, I don’t remember being very pleased with how either Salt Lake City or even Atlanta was covered so… oh well.  At least, it’d be nice to just have a time stamp for when what occurred, if you’re going to do things on tape/time delay.  Just a little nice, just for the sake of, say, accuracy on tv.

    I’ll check more of the reactions/analyses during the next day or two; no doubt, there are reactions…

    Oh, and yes, this is the Molson commercial (I’m pretty sure that the actor in this commercial is the actor from the series “Strange Days at Blake Holsey High,” the tween/teen sci-fi series that had aired on NBC and otherwise on Discovery kids channel – Canadian-made, I think, since most of the cast was Canadian).   (checked imdb.com, Jeffery Douglas, who played Professor Z, in the boarding school setting of the series, and the user comments seem to confirm that he is Joe of the Molson commercial.  And, yes, he is Canadian).   Oh, and William Shatner did do his own mock up of the Molson commercial – but he says he drinks Labatt (oops).

    I’d like to embed these odd videos, but will have to figure that out another time.

  • Olympian TV

    I’m probably watching too much or too little Olympics; or, rather, like everyone else, grumbling about why NBC’s coverage is so… schizophrenic (yeah, I know, it’s to get that casual viewer; but must you keep switching from ski jump to snowboarding and then back to figure skating in a three hour stretch?  The last 10 seconds of the USA v. Canada men’s hockey game on Sunday night, while MSNBC had to show the whole thing?  Could you put a little time stamp – like “This occurred at 12:30pm PST” so that I can figure out that this was not live tv and still feel okay about it?).

    Watching the women’s figure skating short program round was pretty cool.  South Korea’s Kim Yu-Na taking the lead with her James Bond mix; that was a performance of energy and athleticism.  Plus a whole country putting tons of pressure on her.

    But, the real powerful watch was Canada’s Joannie Rochette, as she skated despite (or inspired by?) the passing of her mother only two days previously.  The whole audience was trying to keep her going, and I admit that I felt teary watching her.   Scott Hamilton, US champion/analyst, was all emotional in his voicing that this was not about points.  Just reading the NY Times article about it made me feel sad again.  Plus, Mike Starr of Newsweek is right: the appropriate word to describe what Rochette had was “fortitude.”

    Seriously, I’d hate to judge the skaters – how do you do it when the human element is involved?  Grief, strength, the weight of nations on their shoulders?  It really isn’t just points or what trick you pull off.

    Spoilers about this latest episode of “Lost” – turn away if you don’t want to see my comments… So, I still managed to catch “Lost” – Jack and his daddy issues!  Alternate Jack kind of trying to resolve his daddy issues, with a heretofore unseen son (!) (who’s the mother?  Well, I’d say maybe the ex-wife was Jack’s ex from the main universe, but who knows?  Is it even important to know?).  Plus, I kind of like the portrayal of the sideways alternate universe lives of alternate John Locke and alternate Jack.  Not caring for the alternate Kate (who still seems like a crazy) or even alternate Claire.  Meanwhile, main universe Claire is creepy crazy.

    I’m still not sure how much I want answers from “Lost,” but I think I’ll accept a resolution of some kind.  Seeing alternate Jack having hope – that was nice.  If main universe Jack can get something positive – well, it’d be nice to see; whether we viewers will actually get to see it – that’s another story.

    Did catch a few minutes of Craig Ferguson’s interview of Stephen Fry – without an audience!  How cool; it was kind of like a funnier, wittier Charlie Rose (without the roundtable).  Reactions by critics (Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly; David Bianculli of Television Worth Watching; and Dana Stevens of Slate)  are that this was great tv and that maybe Craig should do it once in awhile to keep things cool on network late night tv.  I sure agree!

    Oh, and great post by Ken Tucker about that Old Spice commercial: how it got made and how that actor in the Old Spice commercial ought to be on more tv.

  • Post Super Bowl/Lunar New Year/Winter Olympics 2010

    I’m still not sure of what to make of a lot of the Super Bowl commercials this year.  (check out the coverage by Time’s James Poniewozik reviewing of the stuff) – I mean, really – two consecutive commercials of guys in their underwear?  Has the economy gone that bad to give us this crap?…

    But, kudos to New Orleans; too bad for Indianapolis; and guess Miami is a really popular spot for Super Bowl (at least, they seem to keep going back to Florida).

    Happy Year of the Tiger! (thought it was cool to see a little of the Lunar New Year celebration in Vancouver on tv; link here for the Canadian coverage of it).

    And, Happy Winter Olympics 2010!  The opening ceremony was pretty nifty, I thought.  You don’t have to go all Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony extravagant (but having an LCD doesn’t hurt).  I’ve suggested on Facebook about shipping the snow on the east coast to Vancouver.  Otherwise, I’ve been on massive Olympic watching.  I think I really want to go to Vancouver – it looks so nice on tv (and is where many tv series are filmed anyway, so how cool is that?  And, the food?).

    Fascinating story about Vancouver’s ex-mayor, Sam Sullivan, who I remembered was inspirational for waving the flag for Vancouver at the closing ceremony of the Turino Olympics 2006 (inspirational, because he was – and is – a wheelchair user who didn’t seem limited by his disability).  The article was compelling for how Sullivan keeps going, despite losing another term as mayor.

    I have to say, Jonny Moseley did a pretty good job explaining moguls as a commentator on NBC; I really wouldn’t understand the sport, but he made it understandable and cool.

    Very happy that Canada finally won home gold with moguls skier Alexandre Bilodeau’s win.

    I’ve been wondering about those blue lines in alpine skiing; thanks, NY Times, for an explanation (blue dye, not computer-generated for tv viewers; but to guide the skiers.

    Seeing Shen and Zhao win the gold in ice skating pairs – that was nifty, since they have come a long way since their first Olympics.

    Hooray for Evan Lysacek for winning gold in the men’s figure skating.  There’s a bit of a debate of whether to award the skater for the whole program or for the tricks (or, is it that those who don’t do the quad playing it too safe?  Frankly, when it got to a point where every man was doing a quad and then destroying their knees and getting shorter careers – the quad just didn’t impress me).  It gets loopy, when it’s about difference of perceptions and personalities and techniques and physical capabilities (Johnny Weir – well, he’s in his own category, which means he’s his own skater, make of that what you will).  So, sorry, but I’m for the whole program – be a skater, not a stuntman.  On t v, Dick Button, commentator and two-time Olympic gold medalist, pretty much said that (wish I could find the link to the video), and so have others (including Todd Eldridgebe the better overall skater).

    Plus, it is about gamesmanship – know how to get the points and be a sportsman.  Hard work works.  Etc.  If it was about innovation and so-called progress, well, sometimes it isn’t about that all the time.  Plushenko didn’t get me excited; Lysacek did (probably because about the whole hard work and determination and pluckiness – I mean, really – no quad?  And being okay with it (i.e., not arrogant, as Plushenko seemed to be, in my opinion) – that takes a lot of personal guts).

    Trash talking Plushenko, amid what is otherwise a nice time (I mean, really – Daisuke Takahashi got to win a bronze to be the first Japanese male medalist – graceful, even though he fell – we should be happy for Japan, but Plushenko – come on – let it go; you got a medal when you came back from retirement) —  hmm.

    I think the future of men’s figure skating are: Patrick Chan, Canada; Jeremy Abbott, USA;  and Nobunari Oda, Japan.  They were impressive, even if they didn’t quite get the Olympics they wanted (they’re young; and Chan – well, he had that whole country on his shoulders – not easy!).

    The Reed family of NJ – an interesting family of Asian-Americans, as the kids of Noriko and Robert – ice dancing for Japan (Cathy and Chris) and Georgia (Allison – who found a guy in need of a female ice pairs partner – well, that happens far more frequently in ice skating than we realize these days, especially with the Internet as a resource).

    Oh that Apolo Ohno.  I’m just glad to be reminded that he’s more than a Dancing With the Stars champion.

    Oh, and J.R. Celski – cool that he won the bronze, but the story of his pre-Olympic injury is pretty gruesome stuff.  (J.R. Celski is part-Filipino, so APA’s are being represented on the medal podium!).

    Hockey – that Canadian national sport – apparently has a lot of guys named Ryan.

    The commercials during the Olympics are actually more entertaining than the Super Bowl’s.  I like the commercial where various Canadian (Canadian-American) celebrities are telling us to go visit British Columbia (Ryan Reynolds, Eric McCormack, Kim Cattrall, Sarah McLachlan, and Michael J. Fox).  The Old Spice commercials where mesmerizing man tells men (via their women) to use Old Spice – hilarious hallucination!

  • Happy Super Bowl Day!

    May the best team win in Super Bowl 44 in Miami.  I’m rooting for Indianapolis, but New Orleans has the feel-good story, what with their own team history and their city’s history.  This Angry Asian Man blog post has some links to great articles about Scott Fujita, who’s a player on the New Orleans Saints; he was raised half-Japanese American, since he was adopted by a Japanese-American dad and a white mom – and cares about civil liberties issues since his Japanese-American grandparents were interned during WWII…. So, even though I’m rooting for the Colts for the Super Bowl, but Fujita sounds like a pretty cool guy.

    Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick with an excellent analysis about what terrorism and politics have done to us:

    But here’s the paradox: It’s not a terrorist’s time bomb that’s ticking. It’s us. Since 9/11, we have become ever more willing to suspend basic protections and more contemptuous of American traditions and institutions. The failed Christmas bombing and its political aftermath have revealed that the terrorists have changed very little in the eight-plus years since the World Trade Center fell. What’s changing—what’s slowly ticking its way down to zero—is our own certainty that we can never be safe enough and our own confidence in the rule of law.

    So, are we letting fear win over the idea of and trust in rule of law? (NOT rule of man, but oh, well; humans are humans). My cynicism/pessimism is creeping in.

    Friday night: siblings and I checked out Restaurant Week, by heading over to Mesa Grill.  Good stuff!

  • While We Wait for the Next Episode of “Lost”

    I had posted my comments about the season premiere of “Lost” (and the series generally) on David Bianculli’s website/blog, “TV Worth Watching,” which I’ll link here, and re-post below, for Triscribers’ reading pleasure!   Be warned – I rambled a bit, but generally, I really enjoyed the season premiere (even if it was a little boring with the alternate universe thing).  Also, Bianculli has a good review on NPR – essentially noting that those who are waiting until the series is over and then watch it all on DVD are missing the fun.

    I enjoyed the season premiere for balancing the tension and humor (Hugo was funny and sweet; Sawyer’s rage against Jack was so raw).

    Otherwise, I was left a little confused (as usual). The “alternate” (?) timeline at LAX airport was a little boring to me, and I wonder if this will be kept up for the rest of the season.

    But, the nuances were interesting to look for: Jack seems to be a little more positive and kinder in the “alternate” time; even “alternate” John Locke seems more vibrant than his sad sack self of the main timeline; plus the return of Boone (how poignant that he tells alternate Locke that he’d stick with him if they were stuck on an island; main timeline Boone wasn’t so lucky, after all, in sticking with main timeline Locke), Charlie, and Claire!; and what is Desmond doing…?

    Terry O’Quinn as “alternate” John Locke and the fake John Locke (a.k.a., Jacob’s enemy) – what an acting power! He pulled off essentially two characters, and it was fantastic to watch.

    I’m not a big serious “Lostie” – I am much more of a casual fan/viewer. I empathize a little with those who gave up with watching and I understand that some were disappointed that “Lost” seemed too convoluted or uninteresting as sci-fi/fantasy or has too many plot holes; but I appreciate that the series has been a fun watch to me. Personally, I was more bored back in Season 2 when it didn’t go into the sci-fi/fantasy stuff and it felt like the writers were running out of ideas. The creative energy has been in place since showrunners Cuse/Lindelof made the decision to keep “Lost” to a deadline, and it sizzles.

    Not every series get that chance to make such a risky decision, and some series – well, I think they should have done that before they lost their creativity (pardon me if I can’t quite give specific examples off the top of my head at the moment).

    Generally, I think there are a lot of different aspects to “Lost” to enjoy or consider – I found empathy with the complex relationships that the characters have with their parents (Jack and his father; John Locke and his parents; poor Daniel Faraday and his mother); the love stories that did work were compelling (Desmond and Penny’s ultimate episode, where Penny is Desmond’s constant; Sawyer and Juliet finding their version of a decent life among the Dharma Initiative; the love and life that Rose and Bernard shared; the tragedy of Daniel and Charlotte – that was just sad how time traveling can really mess things up); and the weirdness – there’s not much on tv that takes as much pleasure in the weird as “Lost” does.

    I’m not a fan of time traveling stories generally, but “Lost” pulled me into how much emotional toil time travel puts on those stuck in time – so “Lost” made the time traveling fascinating, even if I might gnash my teeth over how it drives me crazy!

    It’s possible that some mysteries might never be quite solved – I’m more okay with that than I expected, since the journey has been such an entertaining ride.

    No show is completely perfect; what really matters is whether we’re entertained and get something worthwhile out of it. To me, I want a well-done show, visually and emotionally; packed with plots and characters and heart; and writers who seem to be into what they’re doing in a positive way – that seems to be what “Lost” has been. I find myself caring about the characters, the conflicts, and the questions, even if I’m not as rabid or dedicated to figuring everything out about “Lost.”

    So, I think “Lost” is worth watching; looking forward to seeing what’s next – and feeling a little sad already that the crazy ride that “Lost” is coming to an end soon.