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1Lost/{{Tropes A to E}} | Lost/{{Tropes F to J}} | Lost/{{Tropes K to O}} | '''Tropes P to T''' | Lost/{{Tropes U to Z}}
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6* PacManFever: Literal example. In a flashback in "Exodus: Part 2", Walt is playing a modern overhead shooter on a UsefulNotes/GameBoyAdvance SP, a modern handheld system, and you hear the sounds of the original Pac-Man on it. Walt also mentions needing new batteries, when the SP is in fact a chargeable device, not one where you replace the batteries.
7* PairTheSpares: [[spoiler:Sawyer and Juliet]] in Season 5, after [[spoiler:Jack and Kate leave the Island]]. Compared to [[spoiler:Jack and Kate, Sawyer and Juliet's relationship, from their POV, has much longer to develop. We might have seen Sawyer and Kate off and on together for three years, but that was only a few months to them. With Juliet he had over three years.]] In the finale, [[spoiler:Sawyer and Juliet get {{OTP}} status when they're shown together in the afterlife, and Kate with Jack]].
8* PantsPositiveSafety: Nobody, but ''nobody'', has a holster. Count the number of times someone drops a pistol accidentally. It's doubtful you'll need more than one hand.
9* PapaWolf:
10** Given the ubiquity of "[[FreudianExcuse daddy issues]]" on this show, very few fathers on ''Lost'' would go out of their way to protect their children. That said, Ben Linus would like to have a few words with you on the matter. Michael also goes all-out for the sake of '''''WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALT!''''' Speaking of Ben, why don't you ask him how Desmond reacts when his wife and child are threatened?
11** A variation with Charlie for Aaron. He's not Aaron's father, but he's the only father figure he's ever had, and Charlie is very protective over Aaron and Claire.
12* ParentalSubstitute: After [[spoiler:Claire fails to escape the island with them]], Kate ends up adopting her son.
13* PercussivePrevention:
14** Charlie prevents Desmond from taking his place drowning at The Looking Glass by smashing him in the face with an oar.
15** In Season 5, [[spoiler:Richard Alpert]] does this to [[spoiler:Eloise Hawking]] when she tries to follow Jack and Sayid on their way to [[spoiler:nuke The Swan]].
16** Locke to Boone in Season 1 to help him get over Shannon.
17** Sun to Ben (with an oar) in Season 5.
18** Locke to Sayid while he was trying to triangulate the distress signal in season 1.
19* PermaStubble: Almost all the guys. They used salvaged razors to keep from growing full beards.
20* PersonAsVerb: In "Eggtown", after Kate tricks Hurley into revealing where Miles is being held prisoner.
21--> '''Hurley:''' ...You just totally Franchise/ScoobyDoo-ed me, didn't you?
22* PhraseCatcher: ''[[http://www.lostpedia.com/wiki/Phrases Tons]]'' of phrases repeated by various characters. Each phrase is a motif all its own.
23* ThePlan: Ben pulls out many different Gambits.
24-->'''Ben''': How many times do I have to tell you, John ?! I ''always'' have a plan.
25* PlatonicCave: Referenced in the opening of Season 2, inside the Swan Station. Jack states that "none of this is real" (of course, the "real world" is ''outside'' the Cave wherein the Swan station is built). For a double GeniusBonus[[invoked]], this Place show a conversation between two characters named ''Locke'' and ''Hume'' (named after two philosophers who both stated that experience is born from outside influences, like the senses).
26* PleaseShootTheMessenger: Jin and Sun travel to the United States to deliver a large sum of cash to a business associate of Sun's father. The associate, Keamy, reveals that the money is Keamy's fee for killing Jin.
27* PlotArmor: Actually exists in-universe: [[spoiler:anyone chosen/touched by Jacob seems to be unable to die until Jacob gives the OK.]] This applies to a number of the main characters.
28* PlotSensitiveLatch:
29** Sawyer uses one repeatedly and deliberately, to the point of lampshading when we encounter an alternate universe where he's a cop.
30** Hurley's suitcase bursts open as he runs to his flight along with many other mishaps, only to miss it and be forced to rebook... on flight 815.
31* PolarOppositeTwins: [[spoiler:Jacob and the Man in Black. Their differences are highlighted through RuleOfSymbolism, especially referring to their light and dark motifs. Their viewpoints and motivations are also completely different: Jacob believes that humans are inherently good and that they should stay on the Island, while the Man in Black believes that humans are evil and will do anything to leave]].
32* PosthumousCharacter: A lot of people show up after death, whether by flashback, some {{Mind Screw}}y vision or time travel. Special mention goes to Jack's dad who was already dead before the show started, and to the whole Dharma crew, who were [[spoiler:almost]] ALL dead ''twelve years'' before the beginning.
33** The most straightforward type are those characters who were dead before the series even began but have since turned up in Flashbacks. Then there's Jack's [[spoiler: and Claire]]'s dad, Christian, whose dead body Jack was bringing home on Flight 815, but who turned up in numerous episodes throughout all six seasons, whether in flashbacks, in dreams, as a ghost, or a DeadPersonImpersonation.
34*** Other such characters would include: [[spoiler: Susan Lloyd, Frank Duckett, Essam Tasir, Tom Brennan, Jae Lee, Yemi, Angelo Busoni, Kelvin, Emeka, Edward Burke, Tricia Tanaka, Howard L. Zuckerman, Roger Linus, Horace Goodspeed, Emily Linus, Jonas Whitfield, Isabella, [[NoNameGiven "Mother"]], and Claudia.]]
35*** Subverted in the case of [[spoiler: Kate's mom, Diane.]] In [[spoiler: her]] first flashback [[spoiler: she already has a terminal disease. She]] then appears in several other flashbacks that all clearly take place sometime before the first one. But in a FlashForward we discover [[spoiler: she's still alive. "The doctors have given me a year to live for the past 4 years."]]
36** Another unique type are among the Tailies. They would've been alive at the start of the series, but are dead by the time any main character meets the Tailies, such as Goodwin, who debuted as a corpse, then went on to guest star in 4 episodes after that, each one in a flashback taking place earlier than the one before it. The only other dead Tailies named are Donald and [[spoiler: Nathan]].
37** Then there are those characters who died soon after their debuts only to appear in more episodes ''after'' they died than they ever did while they were alive. The most famous example is Ethan Rom, killed in his fourth episode, then appeared in eight more episodes after that. Other examples include:
38*** U.S. marshall Edward Mars (killed in his third episode, appeared in six more after that).
39*** Leslie Arzt (killed in his third episode, appeared in four more later).
40*** Jacob, killed in the very first episode he was played by a professional actor. The actor went on to play Jacob in five more episodes.
41** Beginning with the first FlashForward in the third Season Finale, we had plenty of characters who were still alive in the main timeline, but were dead by the time of the flashforwards. And since the first flashforward shown is actually one of the last in chronology, this would also include people who were killed in the flashforwards. The first is [[spoiler: John Locke]], whose body is in a closed coffin in that third season finale. It's not till the fourth season finale that the coffin is opened, revealing it's [[spoiler: Locke]], and not till midway through the fifth season are we shown how he ended up there.
42** Other characters who died during this period include: [[spoiler: [[OneSteveLimit Diane of the Others,]] Greta, Bonnie, Ryan Price, [[OneSteveLimit Tom Friendly]], Mikhail, Charlie, Naomi, George Minktowski, Regina, Karl, Rousseau, Alex, Ray, Captain Gault, Omar, Keamy, Michael, Neil, [[RedShirtArmy apparently every single remaining survivor of Flight 815 who was neither a]] main character nor [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse an abducted Tailie]], Charlotte, Nadia, Ishmail Bakir, Mr. Avellino, Elsa, and Abaddon.]] So yeah, a few people died during this period. [[BlatantLies Just a few.]]
43** During the fifth season, the Losties [[TimeTravel traveled back in time]], meeting characters we already knew were dead by the present. Examples include Stuart Radzinsky, a character we had heard about as having [[DrivenToSuicide committed sucide]] but whom we'd never seen till now, Rousseau and her entire expedition, and members of the Dharma Initiative, many of whom will be killed in the Purge, and [[spoiler: Phil]], a DI member who ends up dying [[spoiler: long before the Purge, as a direct result of the Losties' actions.]]
44** And finally, there's the flash-sideways where is [[spoiler: [[EverybodysDeadDave everyone.]] The flash-sideways is the afterlife and "takes place" after everyone shown in it has died.]]
45* PowderTrail: Used to open the hatch.
46* PrecautionaryCorpseDisposal: Those who live on the island (Others and, later, Dharma people) insist on burying their dead, no matter what the circumstances. The Losties later learn that the Smoke Monster can take the form of those who are dead if they haven't been buried.
47* PreemptiveApology:
48--> '''Michael:''' I'm sorry.\
49'''Ana Lucia:''' For what?\
50[''Michael shoots Ana Lucia'']
51* PreMortemOneLiner:
52** "I saved you a bullet!"
53** Averted with [[spoiler: Man In Black himself]]: "I want you to know,[[spoiler: Jack]]...You died for nothing." ([[spoiler: He actually died but much later and [[HeroicSacrifice with purpose]]]].)
54* PrisonerExchange: This is Jack's plan for getting Walt back after he is kidnapped by the Others, lampshaded by Sawyer as "the old PrisonerExchange". Unfortunately, it doesn't go according to plan.
55* ProsceniumReveal: Nikki's first flashback features a proscenium reveal. Nikki is shown pole dancing in a club, then having a confrontation with her boss. The boss shoots her, and the director yells, "Cut!", revealing that Nikki an actress working on a show about strippers who fight crime. The original plan was to have the entire ''episode'' revolve around this ShowWithinAShow, with the proscenium reveal coming at the end. This plan was scrapped when Nikki and Paulo proved wildly unpopular.
56* PromotionToOpeningTitles: The show did this frequently throughout its run.
57** Creator/MichaelEmerson was contracted for just a few episodes of in the second season as Ben Linus back when he was initially known as "Henry Gale". He was so loved/loved to be hated that he became a cast member in the third season, where he served as the BigBad (and then, by the final season, very gradually started to redeem himself).
58** Likewise, Creator/HenryIanCusick (Desmond) was a guest star in the second season before being added as a regular in Season 3.
59** Michelle Rodriguez (Ana Lucia) shows up briefly in the Season 1 finale as a precursor to her bump to the main cast in Season 2.
60** Little known fact: Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje (Mr. Eko) was actually a guest star for a couple of episodes before quietly being promoted to regular later on in Season 2.
61** Somewhat confusing variation: five of the main characters were billed incorrectly as guest stars in the publicity for the season, despite being credited as main cast:
62*** In season 3, this hit Kiele Sanchez (Nikki) & Rodrigo Santoro (Paulo). While they were planned to be main characters with a fairly involved arc, they turned out to be widely hated and not important in the least, and were [[spoiler:quickly killed off]]. The decision to do that was made before their introduction even aired, thus causing the mix-up.
63*** In season 4, Creator/KenLeung (Miles), Creator/JeremyDavies (Daniel), and Creator/RebeccaMader (Charlotte) were not in the promo pictures and were said to be guest stars in press releases. The reason for this is that they ''were'' meant to be guest stars, but as they were filming their first episode the producers liked all three and signed them up...sadly, too late to change the press releases or promo pics. By Season 5 all three were in the promo pics, but Mader was ''still'' a guest star in publicity [[spoiler:due to her character dying just five episodes in]].
64** Creator/JeffFahey actually turned down the same regular contract offered to the other actors playing members of the science team (Creator/JeremyDavies, Creator/RebeccaMader, and Creator/KenLeung) but later became a regular for season 6.
65** Creator/NestorCarbonell (Richard) appeared in several Season 3, 4 and 5 episodes and got a semi-centric episode in season 5 before becoming a main cast member for Season 6 (complete with a completely centric episode).
66** Zuleikha Robinson (Ilana Verdansky) was a presence throughout Season 5 before getting the upgrade at the start of Season 6.
67** After guest-starring on the series for years, Creator/SamAnderson, Creator/LScottCaldwell, [[Creator/FrancoisChau François Chau]], Creator/FionnulaFlanagan, John Terry, and Creator/SonyaWalger finally got their names in the main cast credits...for the final episode. Said episode also added back all of the former regulars appearing, making it so the episode credits an amazing ''twenty-eight people'' as starring.
68* PropRecycling: A golden 1988-1992 Pontiac Bonneville was used by the film crew for four car accidents, making fans believe that this was a supernatural appearance and had a bigger meaning in the story of Lost. Damon Lindelof confirmed in a 2005 interview that the car indeed was the same prop in all episodes. This car became so famous that Lostpedia gave this car its own [[http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/Golden_Pontiac Lostpedia page]].
69** WordOfGod later handwaved this. In a 2009 Official Lost Podcast episode they jokingly said that it was actually Jacob who could only take the form of a car when he was off the Island.
70* PsychicNosebleed: Appears in one episode of season four, and repeatedly during the first half of season five, all related to the effects of time travel.
71* PsychoForHire: The mercenaries in season four, especially their leader, Keamy.
72* PsychosomaticSuperpowerOutage: Locke loses his Island-restored ability to walk after an incident of self-doubt.
73* PsychoticSmirk: Keamy's creepy grin/mouth twitch. For a good guy, John Locke does flash a lot of those. [[spoiler:Even more so once he's replaced by [[BigBad the Man in Black]].]]
74* ThePublicDomainChannel: While a prisoner of the Others, Jack watches Heckle and Jeckle cartoons on a TV set they provide.
75* ThePurge: The name given to the toxic gas attack that effectively wiped out the DHARMA Initiative's presence on the Island. Certain members, such as Ben, were allowed to join the Others and survive the attack.
76* PutOnABus: Walt, the one kid on the show, had to be written out to hide his clear progression through puberty, while only months pass in-show.
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Q]]
80* TheQuietOne: Eko, during his introduction. [[spoiler: They do eventually tie up his storyline in the epilogue.]]
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:R]]
84* RageAgainstTheReflection:
85** [[spoiler:Sawyer shattered a mirror in frustration in his flashsideways in "Recon."]]
86** Also in "Lighthouse": [[spoiler: Upon seeing that Jacob has been watching the Losties for quite a long time, Jack goes batshit and smashes every mirror in the place.]]
87* RasputinianDeath:
88** Mikhail "Patchy" Bakunin, from the third season, is zapped by the sonar fence, only to come back a few episodes later. In the season finale, he is shot in the chest with a harpoon gun, then comes back to life minutes later, only to die while blowing open an underwater window with a grenade.
89** Martin Keamy, the main villain of season four, as well. He is shot in the back four times, stabbed in the back once, and only dies after being stabbed repeatedly in the heart.
90** Juliet is trapped by heavy chains, falls hundreds of feet down a shaft, detonates (or not) a nuclear bomb right next to her... and only dies in the next episode.
91* RealLifeWritesThePlot:
92** A fun example: the show premiered in September 2004, and the next few seasons took place over the 108 days after that. Jack is a big Red Sox fan, and there was a recurring line about the famous Curse. So naturally, when Ben wanted to prove that he had a way of getting off the island, he showed Jack the Sox winning the 2004 World Series ([[YearInsideHourOutside which in reality had been the year before, but in-show only a couple of weeks]]). Jack's response? "If you wanted me to believe you, [[RealityIsUnrealistic you should have picked a different team]]."
93** Walt’s actor started to hit puberty not long into the show, so he wasn’t able to pass for 10 for very long and had to be written from the show before his growth spurts and changing voice could show. The segments in 2007 were able to have him return without issue, so he starts CommutingOnABus starting in Season 4.
94* RealityHasNoSubtitles: Zig-zagged. In the first season, Korean couple Sun and Jin would speak among themselves, and the show would provide English subtitles. But when they spoke in front of others who did not understand Korean, no subtitles appeared.
95* RealityIsUnrealistic:
96** At the start of the show, some viewers complained that Claire's accent was too over the top. The actress is a real Australian. Similar complaints have been made with Sawyer's southern accent (it's Josh Holloway's own accent).
97** Following "Maternity Leave", there were complaints about the actress playing Alex looking "as old as the actress playing her mother". The actress and the character were the same age at the time.
98** The amount of prop-C4 on the ''Kahana'' was thought to appear to be too little and was doubled. The original amount still would have been able to blow up the freighter, though.
99** An in-universe example is when Jack refuses to believe Ben that the Red Sox could have won the World Series.
100** During Season 2, there were some complaints about Eko's flashbacks, which show Nigerians speaking English. In reality, English ''is'' the official language of Nigeria.
101* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Richard Alpert. And, of course, [[spoiler:Jacob and his enemy.]]
102* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Locke gets an alarming number of these, mostly by Ben, Jack, and even [[spoiler:posthumous ones by The Man in Black, while ''[[GrandTheftMe he's wearing Locke's skin like a suit]]'']].
103** Of course, the part about Locke in that speech by the Man in Black is just a tangent in him delivering a TheReasonYouSuckSpeech to Ben. The [=MiB=] concedes that even though Locke was pathetic, there was something inherently decent about him, unlike Ben.
104* ReassignedToAntarctica: In Season 5, Dr. Chang threatens to reassign Hurley to shoveling polar bear turds if he mentions the corpse he saw.
105* RecapEpisode: ABC, [=Sky1=], and RTE 2 liked to throw together recap specials to air before premieres, finales, or after a hiatus.
106* RecurringExtra: the show went to a great deal of trouble to keep its extra pool consistent over years: Main Camp, Tailies Camp, Ajira Survivors, The Others (both modern and during the 70-s), Kahana crew etc. all spotted mostly the same share of background faces who contributed absolutely nothing to the plot except when being suddenly killed as a RedShirt deserves. In some cases extras were even asked to reprise their roles years after their original appearance, simply because events of a scene would happen at the same time and place.
107* RedemptionEqualsDeath:
108** Cause-Effect flipped with Michael, who is ''unable to die'' until he redeems himself.
109** Averted with [[spoiler:Benjamin Linus]], who is redeemed and survives to the end of the series.
110** [[spoiler:Sayid sacrifices himself after giving Jack the information he needs to stop the Man in Black by taking a bomb and running as far as he can with it]].
111* RedemptionInTheRain: Played with in Locke's case. We see him in the rain, but we don't see how he was redeemed until later.
112* RedHerring:
113** When Sayid is attacked and has his equipment sabotage during his attempt to triangulate Rousseau's signal, suspicion immediately falls on Sawyer due to him being a massive {{Jerkass}} with an established grudge against Sayid. When Sayid dismisses him as a suspect due to his alibi of setting off a flare miles away seconds before Sayid was attacked, Locke points out that Sawyer, an avid smoker, could have used a cigarette to create a fuse that would set off the flare without him needing to be physically present at the time. It turns out that Sawyer is completely innocent, and Locke was the real attacker.
114** In the first few episodes, there's a lot of focus on the fact that Sayid was pulled out of line by airport security on his way in. Combined with his oftentimes odd behavior and his confirmed dark past, there are a few hints that Sawyer's racist theory from the second episode might have some weight to it. The season one finale then reveals that Shannon reported him to security to troll Boone and all Sayid did was innocently leave his bad unmonitored.
115** Late Season 3 and early Season 4 put a lot of effort into implying that Kate may be pregnant with Sawyer's child, which ultimately is just a smokescreen to distract from TheReveal that [[spoiler:she's raising Aaron in the flashforwards.]]
116** [[Recap/LostMissingPiecesE02TheAdventuresOfHurleyAndFrogurt "The Adventures of Hurley and Frogurt"]]: Neil "Frogurt" a character often mentioned by the producers as far back as Season Two who was said to play an important role in the plot. His debut kept being "postponed" until he shows up in Season Five... and is riddled with flaming arrows for being such a whiny little bastard.
117** A not-so-straight version, but the main rumour during the airing of the later part of season 5 said that either Sawyer, Daniel, or Ben would die. A lot people thought it would be Sawyer, due to his CharacterDevelopment, finally making something of his life, and of course, having fallen in love with [[spoiler: Juliet]]. In the end, it was [[spoiler: Daniel]] who died, but almost nobody guessed that [[spoiler: Juliet]] would kick the bucket too, thus in a sense killing off the happy version of Sawyer.
118* RedShirt: Done with an appreciable amount of LampshadeHanging. The show has actually shown a lot of restraint in killing off unnamed/minor survivors. At least until season four, and then the {{Red Shirt}}s start dropping like flies over the rest of the series.
119* RememberTheNewGuy: Subverted.
120--> '''Hurley:''' Dude... Nikki's dead.\
121'''Sawyer:''' Who the hell's Nikki?
122* ReplacementGoldfish: Ben tries to make this out of Juliet twice, once for Sarah Shephard and again for Annie, and both times it fails.
123* ResearchInc: the Hanso Foundation, subverted by [[spoiler:Mittelos Bioscience which is a front for the Others]].
124* ResetButton: Played with. At first, the plot of season 6 seems to take place in two separate timelines: one where the detonation of the hydrogen bomb did this and sent everyone back to a somewhat altered version of the Oceanic flight, and another timeline where everyone is still stuck on the Island. The series finale, however, reveals that [[spoiler: what was believed to be the alternate timeline was actually the afterlife.]]
125* ResetButtonSuicideMission: Deconstructed in Season 5. The characters in 1977 undertake the extremely reckless mission to detonate a hydrogen bomb on top of the electromagnetic energy pocket that will cause their plane to crash on the Island thirty years later, racking up a huge number of casualties on the way, on the assumption that it will all be undone when their mission succeeds. In the end [[spoiler: not only does the mission fail, it's implied to have [[StableTimeLoop caused the very disaster they were seeking to prevent]], and results in Pierre Chang losing his arm, along with the deaths of a large number of DHARMA Initiative workers, Daniel, Juliet, and Sayid, who becomes [[FaceHeelTurn a servant of]] [[BigBad the Man in Black]] for most of the final season after he is seemingly resurrected by him.]]
126* RestrictedExpandedUniverse: In the video game ExpandedUniverse, nothing your character does can really affect the plot, so you end up doing various side things to advance your own story, while the show's plot happens offscreen.
127* {{Retcon}}:
128** In the pilot, Charlie sings the chorus line of Drive Shaft's hit song "You All Everybody", and the only explanation for how it's so monumentally different from when we hear it later is that the song hadn't been written yet.
129** In their only centric episode, “Exposé”, Nikki and Paulo are placed in the background of scenes that they clearly were not in before.
130** In the pilot, Shannon is quite clearly just screaming nonsense syllables after the crash - in subsequent flashblacks, she is just as clearly saying "Boone."
131** Claire talks with both Thomas and her friend about her mother in "Raised By Another" in ways that would be extremely odd if her mother were [[spoiler:in a coma.]]
132** When Boone gets on the Nigerian plane’s radio, the voice on the other side was clearly a random voice saying “There WERE no survivors of Oceanic 815”. “The Other 48 Days” changes this to Bernard saying “WE’RE the survivors of Oceanic 815”.
133* RetroactivePrecognition: Season 5 did this a lot once the Time-Travel started.
134* TheReveal: Plenty, which are usually reserved for season finales.
135** The general rule for ''Series/{{Lost}}'' is that no matter how huge the Reveal (contrary to popular belief, the show has answered a ''lot'' of long-standing questions), it will mostly just raise new questions. The other general rule is that the audience is expected to solve many of the mysteries themselves. For every big reveal, there were a dozen or more clues and many fans who'd already figured things out themselves. This is why so many casual fans and detractors say the show "doesn't answer all the questions": a lot of the answers are inferred and not given to you at face value.
136* RhetoricalRequestBlunder: Juliet is being recruited by "Mittelos Laboratories", but says she couldn't possibly join unless her ex-husband "gets hit by a bus". She meant it rhetorically. They, on the other hand, hit him with a bus.
137* RiddleForTheAges: There are many hints that a group of Ancient Egyptian settlers once lived on the Island, such as the hieroglyphics at the Temple and in the Heart of the Island cave, and of course, the giant foot that was once a statue of Tawaret. However, details about what the Egyptians did on the Island or what happened to them are scarce.
138* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Sayid, under Ben's instruction, upon [[spoiler:Nadia's death]].
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:S]]
142* SacrificialLion: [[spoiler:Sayid, Sun, and Jin's]] deaths make it clear that even though there are only three episodes left, absolutely no one is safe.
143* SaharanShipwreck: The ''Black Rock''. It was foisted onto the island by a massive tidal wave.
144* SassyBlackWoman: Rose is an example.
145-->"If you say [[SurvivalMantra 'Live together, die alone']] to me, Jack, I'm gonna punch you in your face."
146* SatanicArchetype: The two deitylike figures on the island, [[spoiler:Jacob]] and the "Man in Black," both share numerous traits with the devil as a way of making it unclear who is good and who is evil:
147** [[spoiler:Jacob]] has blonde hair, likes wine (and uses it as a metaphor for evil "corked" by the island), interferes with the lives of the characters in subtle ways, and is explicitly called "the devil" by the Man in Black, though he was presumably saying this metaphorically to [[BeliefMakesYouStupid exploit]] [[spoiler:Richard]]'s Catholic faith. He's also played by Mark Pellegrino -- Lucifer in ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''.
148** The Man in Black is a shapeshifter and manipulator, known for taking the forms of the dead and deceiving mortals. He cannot kill [[spoiler:Jacob]] himself and must use someone else to do it. He takes the form of a [[spoiler:giant cloud of black smoke]] that sometimes looks like a slithering snake. He has been called "evil incarnate" and a personification of hell by various characters.
149* SayMyName:
150** '''"WAAAAAALLLLLLLLTTTTTT!!!"''' Michael became infamous for how much he screams his son's name.
151** And in the finale: [[spoiler:'''LOOCCKKKE!!!''']]
152* ScaryBlackMan:
153** Mr. Eko at first, what with the beating a man to death with a stick then taking a 40 day vow of silence, but once we see his past and his CharacterDevelopment it becomes a subversion.
154** Abaddon plays this completely straight: calm, stoic, mysterious, and overall always seeming to know much more than he lets on. [[spoiler:It's what makes his sudden death from multiple gunshots from nowhere incredibly jarring]].
155* ScottyTime: During TheGreatRepair of the Ajira plane in the GrandFinale:
156--> '''Miles''': Hey, how much longer 'til we get this thing in the air?\
157'''Frank''': I still have to check the electrical and the hydraulics. Five hours, maybe six.\
158'''Richard''': You've got ''maybe'' one.
159* ScreamingBirth: Aaron's birth ([[spoiler:in both universes]]), as well as Ben's.
160* ScreamingWoman:
161** One iconic image of the show is Shannon doing this in the pilot.
162** Claire's got quite a set of lungs in her as well.
163** But none can dream of competing with Sun's spine-chilling scream in the Season 4 finale.
164* SealedEvilInACan: Almost literally. [[spoiler:According to Jacob, the Man in Black is evil itself, with the Island as the cork of the bottle containing MIB.]]
165* SecretTestOfCharacter: [[spoiler:Implied to be the point of the entire show in the season 5 finale. Jacob expected Ben to fail, and sure enough...]]
166** [[spoiler:Miles thinks that he failed.]]
167* SeinfeldianConversation: Charlie and Hurley debate the old "Who would win in a race between Franchise/TheFlash and ComicBook/{{Superman}}" question in the beginning of the episode "Catch-22".
168** (For the record: [[http://i49.tinypic.com/2cg0kgl.jpg It's The Flash]].)
169* SenselessSacrifice:
170** Boone stays in a plane while it's falling, hoping that he can use the radio to get an SOS message out, and is crushed when the plane lands; despite Jack's best efforts, he dies that night. The signal only reaches the ''other'' survivors of the crash, who dismiss it as a trap.
171** [[spoiler:Charlie sacrifices his life to give Desmond a message that the people on the freighter aren't to be trusted, hoping he'll pass the message on to his friends. Only half of them heed his warnings and flee into the jungle, and the half that ''do'', including his girlfriend Claire, are the ones that end up attacked anyway. The only upside is that the half that still contact the freighter are on guard against Daniel's team, which eventually ends in a positive alliance]].
172** [[spoiler:Juliet detonates a nuclear bomb during the Incident, hoping that doing so will reset the timeline, prevent Oceanic 815's crash, and ensure she never has to come to the Island. Instead, the bomb is what causes the Incident, which is what eventually draws everyone to the Island over the course of the next three decades, including causing the pregnancy problem that Juliet was brought to the Island to solve]].
173* SexForSolace: After seeing Jack flirting with Juliet, Kate goes straight to Sawyer and jumps him at his tent. He sees her subtly crying and puts two and two together, but goes with it anyway.
174* SexGod: Sawyer ReallyGetsAround and a lot of his partners tend to comment on how good he is in bed.
175-->'''Ava:''' [laying in bed panting] Wow. Jimmy, you are... unbelievable.
176* SexSignalsDeath: [[spoiler:Shannon after sleeping with Sayid, and Ana Lucia after sleeping with Sawyer]].
177** More like ''romance'' signals death. [[spoiler: Charlie, Libby, & Charlotte died when their relationships were finally starting to work out]].
178* SexySurfacingShot: In "Confidence Man", the episode's teaser has Sawyer [[ShamelessFanserviceGuy confidently]] walking out of the ocean naked in front of Kate. [[IgnoreTheFanservice She's not impressed.]]
179-->'''Kate:''' [[TeenyWeenie Must be cold]] without your trunks.
180* ShakyPOVCam:
181** Used occasionally with the Monster.
182** And at least once with a boar.
183* ShapeShifting: This was [[spoiler:the Man in Black]]'s MO until [[spoiler:killing Jacob]] [[ShapeshifterModeLock locked]] him as [[spoiler:Locke]].
184* ShapeshifterGuiltTrip: The Smoke Monster [[spoiler:aka The Man in Black]] used this a lot on the main characters: [[spoiler:he appears to Jack as his late father, to Eko as his late brother, to Ben as his late daughter, to Richard as his late wife...]] you get the idea.
185* ShapeshifterModeLock: [[spoiler:The Man in Black, after killing Jacob, can only change into John Locke when not in smoke form.]] And in the SeriesFinale, [[spoiler:he's {{Shapeshifter Mode Lock}}ed into a human being when the island's keystone is pulled out by Desmond, allowing him to be killed.]]
186* ShipSinking: [[spoiler:Sawyer and Kate]] and [[spoiler:Nadia and Sayid]] in the finale.
187* ShipwreckStart: The first episode begins with survivors of the Oceanic Flight 815 wandering around the beach on the island where they are now stranded amidst the wreckage of their plane.
188* ShooOutTheNewGuy:
189** Ana Lucia was introduced and shortly after being incorporated to the main cast started showing up very prominently and was getting more screen time than established characters. The fanbase generally hated her and saw her as intrusive and an unlikeable bully. She didn't last out the season. WordOfGod, however, is that her death was written in from the beginning as Michelle Rodriguez only agreed to appear in a single season.
190** Nikki and Paulo were introduced in season three. Everyone hated them. The only episode they ever got ended with them being unceremoniously [[spoiler: buried alive.]]
191* ShoutOut: [[http://lostpedia.wikia.com/wiki/Cultural_references Lostpedia]] is doing a better job at pointing these out than we should ever hope to do.
192** In season 5, Hurley is seen in the airport reading a trade paperback of ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'', written by current ''Lost'' producer, co-writer, and story editor Brian K. Vaughan.
193** The numerous books that Sawyer and others read, which often are the inspiration for the current plotlines.
194** Juliet's flashback shows her ex-husband being abruptly run over by a bus. ''Film/FinalDestination'' much?
195** The Man in Black is very similar to Creator/StephenKing's world-hopping villain Randall Flagg, especially his incarnation from ''Literature/TheStand.'' In Ab Aeterno, the scene where he makes a deal with a chained and starved [[spoiler:Richard]] (who at this point has been chained in the ship for several days) parallels the one between Flagg and a starved and imprisoned Lloyd very closely. Then again Lost seems to have quite a few similarities with ''Literature/TheStand'', which makes sense considering Team Darlton says the book was influential on the creation of Lost.
196** Incidentally, Randall Flagg is mainly known, among a few other names, as The Man in Black throughout ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' series. This makes sense, seeing as at one point Team Darlton were gearing up to adapt the books into a movie series before giving it a pass.
197** A preview for one of the later episodes of Season Six has the [[Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory nightmare-inducing Gene Wilder song]] playing.
198** The last scene of the finale is a ShoutOut to the ending of ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'' with everyone [[spoiler:actually being dead, but happily reunited and ready to [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence move on together]]]].
199** A few shots, namely the first appearances of Christian Shephard, seem to reference ''VideoGame/HalfLife1'', and the game itself appears in "The Greater Good." The game developers returned the favor in ''VideoGame/HalfLife2: Episode 2'' with a couple of Easter Eggs referencing the Dharma Initiative.
200** Season 1 has Charlie's date mention [[Series/TheOfficeUK a paper company up in Slough]].
201** A number of episodes are directly named after works of classic literature - ''Literature/TheShapeOfThingsToCome'', ''Literature/OfMiceAndMen'', ''[[Literature/AliceInWonderland Through the Looking Glass]]'', ''Literature/TheLittlePrince'', ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities'', ''Literature/StrangerInAStrangeLand'', ''Literature/CatchTwentyTwo'', etc. Some of these books are directly referenced in the episodes as well. Other episode titles are less direct - for instance, "The Man Behind the Curtain" and "There's No Place Like Home" are both references to ''Film/TheWizardOfOz''. The episodes [[Music/JeffersonAirplane "White Rabbit"]], [[Music/BruceSpringsteen "Born to Run"]], and [[Music/TheAnimals "House of the Rising Sun"]] are named after popular songs.
202** The blast door map shows [[Series/ThePrisoner1967 "possible location of Number Six."]]
203** Most of the Numbers probably don't have any deeper meaning beyond the fact that they add up to 108, but Lindelof has [[http://web.archive.org/web/20060718000520/http://www.eonline.com/Gossip/Kristin/Trans/Lindelof/index2.html confirmed]] that 23 is a reference to the writings of Creator/RobertAntonWilson (and probably ''Literature/TheIlluminatusTrilogy'' in particular), and 42 is pretty obviously a reference to ''Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy''.
204** Also one to Karl Marx:"Religion is opium for the people". In season one, the Beechcraft has lots of small inconic statues of St.Mary, with a lot of heroin inside.
205** A subtle one at the beginning of season two: Locke and Hume meet in [[PlatonicCave a cave]]...
206** In ''Lighthouse'', as a counterpart to ''Franchise/StarWars'' tributes in the show :
207--> '''Dogen''': What are you doing ?\
208'''Hurley''': Nothing. I'm just...you know, looking...'cause I'm a big fan of temples and like, history... Franchise/IndianaJones stuff.
209** Tricia Tanaka, the asian reporter killed in Hurley's flashback, is very similar to WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy's "Asian Reporter Trisha Takanawa".
210** Juliet is named after the titular character in ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet''.
211** A number of people, separated on different parts of a mysterious island, experiences some strange MindScrew events, all while some guy, "keeper of the island" roams around. ''Theatre/TheTempest'' springs to mind.
212** One episode prominently features the novel ''Literature/TheThirdPoliceman'', which served as a ColbertBump for the novel and caused a spike in sales.
213** The penultimate episode of season 3 has Locke lying in the "corpse pit", unable to move is legs. He gets hold of a revolver, and considers shooting himself when Walt shows up at the edge of the pit, urging him to get on with his purpose. The scene is a frame-by-frame reference to a similar scene in ''Film/NineLives'' from 1957, where Norwegian war hero Jan Baalsrud was in a similar situation, almost shooting himself with a gun while a Sami rescuer watched him from above.
214* ShowWithinAShow: ''Exposé'', starring Billy Dee Williams. [[StylisticSuck It's pretty cheesy.]] Locke is shown watching it in the episode before it is featured.
215-->[[CatchPhrase "Razzle dazzle!"]]
216* SigilSpam: Dharma Initiative logos are found everywhere on the Island. Playing cards, ping-pong balls, chocolate cookies - '''everything''' inside their stations has a Dharma logo. It is even stamped on the fin of a live ''shark'' for crying out loud! And on random doors embedded in rocks that don't lead anywhere. And on ''all'' of the supplies.
217** In another variation of this trope, they also had multiple variations of their logo for everything one could possibly think of.
218* SlasherSmile: This is the only type of smile Ben is capable of making.
219* SlidingScaleOfContinuity: The series is a frequently cited example of ContinuityLockout because of this.
220* SmallSecludedWorld: The island usually works so that no one gets in and no one gets out. [[spoiler: This is because Jacob said so.]] In the final episode, [[spoiler:Hugo takes over as the guardian of the island and changes the rules.]]
221* SmugglingWithDolls: Mr. Eko's drug ring smuggles heroin inside tiny doll-sized statues of the Virgin Mary.
222* SomethingOnlyTheyWouldSay: Jack realizes he's met Desmond before from Desmond's calling him "brother". Then Desmond recognizes him when he asks "what he's running from".
223** [[spoiler:The Man-in-Black to Richard]]: "Good to see you out of those chains." An unusual example in that we the viewers don't know its been said before when we first hear it.
224* SongsInTheKeyOfLock: Yes, that's a Beach Boys tune that Charlie is entering on the keypad in the Looking Glass.
225* SoundingItOut: When Sawyer shows Kate the letter "a little boy" wrote to "Sawyer", prodding her to read the whole thing out loud. When she stops reading, he says "Oh don't stop now!" implying the most dramatic part of the letter is yet to come. It partially happens again in a season three episode, when Sawyer hands the letter to [[spoiler: Anthony Cooper, the person it's intended for]], ordering him to read it. But this time the letter isn't read in its entirety, so presumably, the audience is expected to know what it contains. (Also, in the second setting, the reading-out-loud is a bit more natural.)
226* SoundtrackDissonance: "Make Your Own Kind Of Music" is played by Desmond in the first scene of Season 2 from inside a hatch built to contain a cold, frightening secret.
227** "Downtown" playing during Juliet's near-breakdown and as Flight 815 crashes in "One Of Us".
228** "Better Every Day" playing as Michael revs his car into a wall.
229** "Catch A Falling Star" plays while [[spoiler:Claire, Sayid, and Kate walk through the destroyed temple at the end of "Sundown."]]
230* SoWasX:
231--> '''Hurley:''' Do not open that! There's dynamite and it's mega-unstable. \
232'''Richard:''' I know that.\
233'''Hurley:''' Well, so did Dr. Arzt. And I was wiping him out of my shirt two days later.
234* SpannerInTheWorks: Juliet in Season 3, Hurley, early Season 5. Purposefully, just to piss Ben off. Desmond in the season 3 finale, mainly because he is the ''only'' person Ben didn`t know anything about.
235* SpoilerOpening: Happened all the time with recurring characters like Christian Sheppard, Charles Widmore or Jacob, whose actors were only credited for their appearances. Averted with François Chau as Pierre Chang, who was never credited for his appearances except for the very final episode. Also, subverted almost all the time with the main cast: on the show with non-linear story-telling and dead people frequently appearing as ghosts, remaining in the main credits after your character was just shot does '''not''' guarantee your survival:
236** Boone is the first main character to die, yet Ian Somerhalder remains in the credits for three more episodes until the end of the season, appearing as Boone's corpse and in flashbacks.
237** After Shannon is shot, Maggie Grace remains in the credits for two more episodes, appearing as her corpse.
238** When Ana Lucia and Libby get shot, both Michelle Rodriguez and Cynthia Watros remain in credits for three more episodes until the end of the season, appearing as corpses, hallucinations and in flashbacks.
239** After Eko is killed, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje remains in credits for one more episode as his corpse.
240** Notably, after Charlie's very prominent and very emotional death Dominic Monaghan stays in credits all the way through the premiere of the next season. He is still dead and only appears as a ghost though.
241** The above example are why the creators were able to get away with Jin's NoOneCouldSurviveThat moment in Season 4 finale. Daniel Dae Kim remained among the main cast, but it was perfectly logical for him to only play Jin through flashback (or, given the nature of Season 5, the TimeTravel). He has in fact made a flashback appearance before being revealed as NotQuiteDead.
242** Similarly, while Juliet was in absolutely no position to survive the end of Season 5 (she manually detonated a freaking ''hydrogen bomb''), Elizabeth Mitchell is still listed in the credits of the Season 6 premiere, though as a guest star instead of a regular. Turns out Juliet's wounds were fatal after all and she finally passes away after saying her FinalWords.
243** Following Daniel Faraday's death Jeremy Davies remained in the credits for the remainder of the season, again as his character's corpse.
244** The biggest subversion though comes with John Locke, who continued to make appearances after his death, being seemingly resurrected. It was eventually revealed that he was in fact dead, and his likeness was used by the Man in Black. For almost two season straight, Terry O'Quinn primarily portrayed the MIB, only showing up as Locke in Flashbacks, FlashSideways and as a corpse.
245** Finally, in Season 6 Naveen Andrews, Daniel Dae Kim, Yunjin Kim and Zuleikha Robinson all remain in the credits until the end of the series even after their characters are killed, appearing in the FlashSideways.
246* StableTimeLoop:
247** Throughout season five, Locke and Richard exchange a compass that appears to only exist in a time loop. Richard gives it to Locke in 2007, Locke then time-travels and gives it back in 1954, and Richard holds on to it until Locke ([[spoiler:who is actually the Man in Black]]) instructs him to give it back to his past self in 2007, starting the loop once more. It never leaves either of their possessions, and there's no explanation for how it even came to exist in the first place.
248** Sayid attempts to kill [[spoiler:Ben as a child, forcing Kate and Sawyer to turn over the mortally wounded child to the Others, with the implication that these events will unalterably set the kid on the path to being the cold hard bastard he is in the present]].
249** [[spoiler:Daniel's entire life is revealed to be the cause of a time loop, since Eloise killed him in 1977 while she was pregnant with him, dooming them both to their destinies. In essence, Daniel was quite literally born to die]].
250** [[spoiler:The survivors alongside Juliet attempt to prevent the Incident while they're in 1977 so that none of them end up going there, effectively resetting the timeline to 2004. As it turns out, the survivors' attempt to prevent the Incident ends up ''causing'' it, thus leading to all the circumstances that brought them there (the creation of the Hatch for the 815 survivors - and thus the freighter expedition for Daniel and Miles - and the pregnancy problem for Juliet)]].
251* StarTrekShake: The crash of Flight 815 and the earthquakes in the finale.
252* StealthPun: In the PilotEpisode, the pilot himself meets a nasty end.
253* SterilityPlague: Women who conceive on the island cannot give birth there. Those who try all die. It turns out that the island's electromagnetism sets off an immune response that attacks the fetus, killing both mother and child.
254* StockBeehive: As a rare non-cartoonish example, the first season's sixth episode, "House of the Rising Sun", has a few key characters dealing with a MASSIVE, paper-made underground beehive. It looks more like a dome-shaped, hollow mushroom rather than your stereotypical beehive, but it's clearly different from real world beehives nonetheless. It's lampshaded slightly when Charlie points out that beehives are supposed to be in trees.
255* TheStoic: Juliet starts as one of these thanks to all the hardships she's had to deal with since arriving on the Island, but her time with the survivors starts to help her drop this trait.
256* SuddenlyAlwaysKnewThat: Kate suddenly has tracking skills; they weren't revealed before because YouDidntAsk.
257* SuperCellReception: In the season 4 finale, [[spoiler:Keamy is wearing a heart rate monitor set to transmit a signal to detonate C4 back on his ship should he die. When he dies far underground at the Orchid station, somehow the transmitter is capable of transmitting through dozens of feet of earth and out to sea to trigger the detonator.]]
258* SurprisinglySuddenDeath: Happens quite frequently. In fact, the very first onscreen death features a man being sucked straight into a jet engine.
259* SurvivalMantra: ''"1... 2... 3... 4... 5..."''
260** "Live together, die alone" also qualifies.
261** Time Travel Survival Mantra: "Whatever happened, happened."
262** An unspoken mantra seems to be "Don't trust Ben."
263* SurvivalistStash: The Dharma stations end up being used as these, but this is almost certainly not their intended purpose.
264* SuspectExistenceFailure: In the episode "The Other 48 Days", Nathan was suspected of being a spy from the Others. He was murdered by the real spy, Goodwin, who hid the body and let the other survivors believe that he had escaped. In this case, the action was justified in the dialogue, as he was worried that if Nathan refused to change his story under Ana Lucia's planned torture, she'd eventually realize he was telling the truth.
265[[/folder]]
266
267[[folder:T]]
268* TactfulTranslation: Sayid pulls this one while interrogating one of his countrymen in "One of Them."
269* TakeANumber: In "The Lie", Ben arrives at an empty butcher shop, not intending to buy anything, and takes a number. This number (342) has thus been heavily scrutinized by fans.
270* TakeMyHand: Sawyer to [[spoiler:Juliet]] in the season 5 finale.
271* TakeUpMySword: [[spoiler:Jack replaced Jacob as the guardian of the island, and then Hugo replaces Jack.]]
272* TapOnTheHead: So many times, without anyone ever developing any noticeable longterm effects.
273** At last subverted in season six, when Sun suddenly gets neurological side effects from bumping into a tree.
274* TemporalParadox:
275** The magical compass bouncing between the time-travelling Locke and Richard seems to exist in a loop: Present-Locke gives it to Past-Richard in 1954, then Present-Richard gives it to Locke in 2008 before Locke leaps into the past to give it to Richard.
276** Also, Jack's theory was that [[spoiler:detonating an H-bomb on the Island]] would stop the plane from crashing in 2004, thereby somehow magically whisking all the main characters to their pre-crash lives once again. But how would [[spoiler:the bomb have been detonated]] if they never crashed on the Island in the first place, [[spoiler:since the crash survivors are the ones who go back in time to do it]]?
277* TemporaryScrappy:
278** Dr. Leslie Arzt, an obnoxious KnowNothingKnowItAll who [[RememberTheNewGuy pops up out of nowhere]] a few episodes before the end of Season 1 to parody [[TakeThatAudience fan complaints]] about the show only focusing on a small number of the survivors. He joins the "A-team" on one of their missions, whining and belittling them the entire time, before being promptly blown up waving around a stick of mouldy old dynamite, [[TooDumbToLive while in the process of giving a lecture about how dangerously unstable it is.]]
279** Neil "Frogurt", a background character who appears in a webisode in which he is a {{Jerkass}} to NiceGuy Hurley while being TheGhost on the show itself, with the showrunners frequently hyping up his debut and joking that he was the key to all the show's mysteries. When he finally shows up in the series proper in Season 5, he does nothing but complain and is as unhelpful as possible, before being killed out of nowhere by a flaming arrow while [[DeathByIrony whining that the survivors can't get a fire going]].
280* ThanatosGambit: [[spoiler:Locke]]'s death is the key to convincing Jack that everybody has to go back.
281** Also, [[spoiler:Jacob]] did this, as he [[spoiler:brought most of the characters to the island so he could find his replacement when the Man in Black found the loophole he needed to kill him]].
282* ThatsWhatIWouldDo: Sawyer, after being stabbed by Sayid, tells Jack that he should just let him die, saying that he knows it's what Jack wants to do and that he would do the same to Jack if he were in his shoes. Of course, Jack saves him anyway.
283* ThemedAliases: When Kate is on the run, all of the names she uses are saints' names.
284* ThemedParty: Hurley's mom gives him a tropical-island themed birthday party after he is rescued from the Island. Hurley and his fellow Oceanic 815 "survivors" are bemused by her choice.
285-->'''Sayid:''' Interesting choice of theme.\
286'''Hurley:''' Yeah, my mom... really doesn't get it, dude.
287* ThemeNaming: Many characters are named after philosophers, scientists, or literary figures. Most of the names can grant insight into their characters. Lampshaded in season 5, episode 7, by Charles Widmore when he gives Locke a fake ID with the name "Jeremy Bentham", comparing his sense of naming humor to Locke's parents.
288** The pseudonyms Dr. Pierre Chang uses in the orientation films all have last names related to candlemaking. It's worth noting that Chang's actual name seems to be based upon the name of his actor, Francois Chau: French first name, Chinese last name.
289** Most of the DHARMA Stations (The Swan, The Flame, The Arrow, The Staff, The Hydra, and The Pearl) are related to the mythology of the Greek god Apollo.
290** Ben has a ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'' theme front and back. When he was [[SpotTheImposter first introduced]] he gave the fake name of "Henry Gale," (same name as Dorothy's uncle) someone who actually died on the island after arriving by hot air balloon (like how the Wizard arrived in Oz). Also the first Ben-centric episode was called "The Man Behind the Curtain."
291* ThereCanBeOnlyOne: [[spoiler:With the revelation of Jacob's "candidates", the fact that almost every character's name is written on the cave roof and all but six having being crossed out. In the finale, the ultimate successor to Jacob was Hurley]]
292* ThisIsNoTimeForKnitting: Charlie's reaction to Locke pulling out the equipment for an AerosolFlamethrower:
293--> '''Charlie:''' Hairspray? Uh, I hate to be the one to break this to you...
294* TimeTravel: The main plot point of Season 5.
295* TimeTravelRomance: Desmond and Penny. Also [[spoiler: Sun and Jin]] throughout season five and most of six.
296* TogetherInDeath:[[spoiler:Rest in peace, Sun and Jin Kwon]]
297** Completly averted with the bones in the cave because [[spoiler:they belong to Jacob's brother and a woman he killed, who pretended to be their mother]]
298** Ultimately, [[spoiler:[[TrueCompanions everyone]] at the very end, when they all meet up at the church]].
299%%zce* TokenEvilTeammate: Ben, starting around season 4. Made hilariously obvious when he's part of Ilana's Group.
300* TonightSomeoneDies: Done gratingly with Shannon, Eko and Charlotte. Fortunately, not since.
301** They also made mention that by the end of season 5 they were going to kill off someone important. By the end of the last episode, [[spoiler:Faraday had been killed by his own mother]], [[spoiler:Sayid was shot by Roger Linus; though he got better, sort of]], [[spoiler:Jacob had been knifed to death by Ben]], [[spoiler:Juliet fell down a pit on the island with everybody else and repeatedly hit an armed H-bomb with a rock,]] and [[spoiler:Locke was [[TheReveal revealed]] to have been dead the whole time]].
302** Averted in Dr. Linus, where [[NeverTrustATrailer the previews stated that Ben would "face his demise"]]. He does wind up starring down the barrel of a gun but is instead spared by Ilana after he tearfully confesses his reason for why he killed Jacob.
303** Completely averted with Ilana.
304* TookALevelInBadass: After getting back from the Island, Sun uses her Oceanic settlement money to buy a controlling share in her CorruptCorporateExecutive father's company, effectively making her in charge. And then she knocks out Ben with an oar.
305** While Sawyer was always a badass, something has to be said for the fact that during the time-skip, he turned into a truly capable leader as well, and actually managed to do so without becoming boring, not to mention finally getting over Kate. Former leader Jack, on the other hand...
306** Hurley behind the wheel of a DHARMA bus in the Season 3 finale. Season 6 then has him level up in terms of leadership.
307** It seems like making people badass is one of the island's powers. Locke certainly kicked more ass after the crash than before. And the cute blonde pregnant girl Claire? Yeah, well, the final season seems to show that she followed Rousseau's steps.
308* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Kate in "Every Man For Himself" and Juliet in "One of Us" and "The Other Woman."
309* TortureIsIneffective: The series featured many torture scenes, most of which featured ex-torturer Sayid as [[LaserGuidedKarma the victim]]. In a few cases, the victim knew nothing. In others, the victim simply didn't break down. In one, Sayid eventually broke down, but he responded to the interrogator's attempts to attract sympathy rather than the torture.
310* TranslationConvention:
311** Sayid's flashbacks to Iraq are generally not (apart from in "One of Them", whose flashbacks had English and Arabic speakers) -- since Naveen Andrews doesn't speak Arabic.
312** In "Across the Sea", Allison Janney's character and Claudia exchange a few words in Latin, then switch to English, seeming to confuse some viewers who thought (or at least pretended to think) they were actually speaking English.
313** Averted for Sun and Jin's flashback episodes which are in subtitled Korean as both Yunjim Kim and Daniel Dae Kim were able to speak the language. Richard's flashbacks in "Ab Aeterno" were also primarily in Spanish as Nestor Carbonell is fluent in it.
314* TranquillizerDart: Subverted in an episode where Sayid is shot twice with tranquilizing darts. He pulls one dart out and we're led to believe that the trope is playing straight until he surprises the shooter, who approached him to confirm unconsciousness. Pretty much played straight in a lot of other episodes, featuring darts, gas and chloroform. Namely, some episodes in this respective order are: "Live Together, Die Alone", "Left Behind" and "Something Nice Back Home".
315* TreacherousSpiritChase: The show is replete with examples, starting in the pilot with visions of Jack's father. While the apparitions always require the character to do incredibly ill-considered and dangerous things (such as climbing treacherous rock faces, stealing babies or attacking each other), doing what the spirit says is often beneficial in the long run.
316* TrojanPrisoner: "Don't get mad at me just because you were dumb enough to fall for the old Wookiee prisoner gag."
317** Also, this is how Ana Lucia determines that the raft passengers are telling the truth.
318* TropicalIslandAdventure: The premise of the series, being about the survivors of a plane crash trying to survive on a tropical island.
319* TroubledBackstoryFlashback: Once an episode at least.
320* TrueCompanions: The castaways. Ultimately, [[spoiler:"The most important time of your life was the time you spent with them", to paraphrase Christian Shephard]].
321* TrustPassword: When Desmond starts flashing between the past and present, Daniel actually [[InvokedTrope invokes this trope]] telling Desmond what to say to the past version of Daniel in order to get Past-Daniel to help him.
322** Later on, the same characters reverse it.
323[[/folder]]

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