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"The End" is the two-part series finale of the American serial drama television series Lost, serving as the 17th and 18th episode of the sixth season, and the 120th and 121st episodes of the series overall. It aired on ABC in the United States on May 23, 2010.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 7 December 2024. American television series (2004–2010) For the 2021 South Korean drama series, see Lost (South Korean TV series). For the American reality series, see Lost (2001 TV series). Lost Genre Adventure Hybrid Mystery Science fiction Serial drama Supernatural Survival Thriller Created by ...
Lost is an American television drama that debuted on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) on September 22, 2004. The series aired for six seasons, and follows the survivors of the crash of the fictional Oceanic Flight 815 on a mysterious tropical island somewhere in the South Pacific.
Some time after the events of "The End," in 2010, Ben visits two Dharma Initiative workers, Hector (Ted Rooney) and Glenn (Ray Porter), in a warehouse in Guam.Ben dismisses the two workers from their job of loading a food pallet as he is "tying up loose ends," and after paying them, reveals that the Dharma Initiative has not been in existence for over twenty years.
In the U.S., the episode brought in the best ratings for Lost in fifteen episodes. [53] The two-hour Wednesday broadcast on ABC made Lost the fourth most watched series of the week with an average of 13.86 million American viewers, [54] below the third season average of 14.6 million. [55]
Lost, a 2004 American drama series about people who become stranded on a mysterious island; Lost (2001 TV series), a short-lived American and UK reality television series ...
They first appear at the end of the episode "Solitary", [22] and were originally intended to be the sound of the Others in the jungle. [8] This idea was changed, and, by the end of season six, it was established that they were the whispers of spirits of deceased people who had not yet "moved on" (or existed in a state of purgatory). Boone's ...
The season was originally planned to contain sixteen episodes; eight were written before the start of the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike. [7] Following the strike's resolution, it was announced that only five more episodes would be produced to complete the season; [8] however, the season finale's script was so long that network executives approved the production of a 14th episode as ...