As someone who began this column
writing exclusively about TV and for who it still occupies at least
three-quarters of his time, I’ve always had immense respect for the men and
woman who have devoted their lives to writing about this medium. I’ve paid
tribute to many of them in the past such as Alan Sepinwall and Nikki Stafford and
there are countless others out there who do great work to this day.
And as someone who has done
rewatches and episode guides for his own personal column I have enormous
respect for those who have done so over the years. Sepinwall and Stafford have
been my north stars for that work over the past twenty years: Stafford for
everything from Buffy to Sherlock; Sepinwall for more highbrow
shows such as Breaking Bad, Mad Men and his most recent book on Better
Call Saul. As someone who has more than once stayed up all night reading an
episode guide he’s just bought, I am always in awe of what they do and on
occasion have tried my best to emulate them.
This brings me to the foundation
of this column. While it hasn’t been a de facto subject for my blog proper I
have always been the biggest fan of Lost to the point that I wrote two
separate episode guides that I published at my blog. The first, written while
the show was still airing, bears the mark of a young neophyte who still takes
television personally and frankly draws too much influence from the work of
Nikki Stafford, who broke ground on the subject with her Finding Lost books
while the show was airing. The second written over the past two years was done
mostly by rewatching old VHS recordings of the series done almost entirely when
the series was originally airing on ABC. It attempted to look at the show, with
distance and several years of experience to look at the show from two
perspectives: in the context of how groundbreaking Lost was in the
context of what television was like during this period and also to see the
flaws that were apparent in the show after several rewatches and comparison to
other to television shows that I’ve seen in all the years since.
Around the time I was finishing
the final touches on that rewatch I became aware of a new book that seemed very
much to be paralleling what I was working on: Lost: Back to the Island. The
writers are Emily St. James and Noel Murray.
Both have impeccable credentials
as critics: both of them served as TV editor for The A.V Club and have
written for the New York Times and Vanity Fair. St. James has more credibility
with me on two fronts. Under their previous name (she apparently transitioned
sometime in the past few years so I’ll withhold it out of respect) she was one
of the co-writers of the brilliant Monster of The Week: A Critical Guide to
The X-Files. Those of you who have read my column know that I am an
enormous fan of that series and I had bought and devoured that volume multiple
times well before I began writing about it here. More significant to me St.
James is currently writing for Yellowjackets and fans of this column
know just how much I love that particular series. (One week and counting until
Season 3!!)
It was a given the moment I heard
of it that I was going to purchase this book and read it from cover to cover as
quickly as possible. At the same time I had concerns. The first was
proprietary. I hope that someday to publish the collection of reviews I wrote
in book form at some point and St. James and Murray had beaten me to the punch.
This didn’t come as a shock, though, considering that the 20th
anniversary of the series premiere was fast approaching when I decided to begin
my attempt I figured it was inevitable that at least one episode guide would
come out by that point. Still I was afraid of duplication in my material.
The second concern was more
personal. While I was writing my episode guide Burn It Down: Power,
Complicity and a Call For Change in Hollywood had been published by Maureen
Ryan. A ‘behind the scenes’ look about TV in Hollywood, it dealt with the toxic
atmosphere and abuses in TV shows during this era. I wrote a longer article
about it when it came out so I will refrain from relitigating my issues with
Ryan and the issues she raised. That being said, after several rewatches I had
become aware of patterns I couldn’t ignore about the treatment of many of the
minority characters on the show and while I chose to mostly set them aside in
my rewatch, I was slightly afraid St. James and Murray would use their guide to
grind an axe against a show I will always love.
After reading the book, I have
concluded that first while there are inevitably some parallels I am basically
covering new material and also that while the writers don’t ignore the behind
the scenes problems, they by and large don’t let them get in the way of
reviewing the series objectively. That is a relief to me because that is what I
consider the standard of what a critic should do. And it means I can add this
volume among my always growing library of these kinds of works with the
possibility of reviewing it later on.
But I also think this is an
opportunity for me to do something I haven’t really done that much on my own column:
engage in debate about a TV show based on the publications of other critics who
I respect. This is not for lack of material but a lack of time on my part: so
many great shows, not enough hours in the day. More to the point a lot of my
blogs are about current shows rather than past ones with some exception.
However having rewatched Lost more often than any series save Homicide
or The X-Files I do feel qualified to engage in passionate debate on
certain aspects of the show.
This series will be an attempt to
engage in my own opinions about key takeaways of my own opinions after multiple
rewatches and how they compare and contrast with some of the ideas posed not
just by Back to the Island but that Nikki Stafford has written about in
the Finding Lost series. By and large I won’t be pulling material that
I’ve previously written in both my episode guides but rather arguing for larger
themes that I gather from the series as a whole. And while I personally think
that there has to be an expiration on spoiler alerts (especially after fifteen
years since the show ended) if you haven’t seen Lost you might want to
tread lightly as I’m going to be spilling quite a few secrets.
With that in mind, let’s head
back to the island – and beyond.
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