10 Things That Already Haven’t Aged Well About Lost

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Lost began on September 22, 2004. It was an immediate success, winning the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series, beating out the likes of Deadwood, Six Feet Under, 24, and The West Wing. It came to an end on May 23, 2010 after six seasons and 121 episodes.

RELATED: LOST: 5 Reasons The Pilot Is Perfect (& 5 Ways Its Not)

It’s been ten years since its controversial finale, and television has changed a lot in that time. Most of the change stems from the dominance of cable television, which has allowed for more expensive, expansive, and more complex programs. As such, some aspects of Lost have been lost in time.

These are ten things that already haven’t aged well about Lost.

10 The Finale

lost jack sad

Unfortunately, Lost was dated the second its final credits began rolling. That’s because the finale was enormously controversial, deemed an enormous disappointment by many. It received middling reviews and remains hotly divisive to this day. Its dispiriting finale is widely known, and many people who haven’t seen the show know that it has a schismatic ending (at best). It discourages new viewers from watching the show, leaving Lost behind in the pop culture zeitgeist of the 2000s.

9 The Visual Effects

To say that the visual effects have dated is not surprising in the least. The show began in 2004 – well before expensive visual effects were a mainstay in television – and the network TV budget discouraged detailed visual effects. As such, many of the show’s visual effects look quite bad today. Some of the most questionable include the polar bear, the submarine, Locke falling from the window, and the freighter explosion. The pilot still looks great, though…

8 The Episode-Ending Musical Montages

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