If you tuned in on April 22, for a new episode of Lost and got disappointed when you saw a cheesy recap, here’s the reason why. “Lost” is gearing up for it’s 100th episode airing on April 29. That’s right. After 99 episodes of following the survivors of Oceanic flight 815, “Lost” has reached a echelon that most shows only dream about.
How do you celebrate 100 episodes?
You do it in style, with the best cake makers around. Cast members “Lost” got together with the cast of “Ace of Cakes,”to celebrate the show’s 100th episode with a cake cutting ceremony on location in Oahu, Hawaii. Needless to say, “Ace of Cakes” provided the cake for the party.
The centennial episode, “The Variable,” will be an episode that no “Lost” fan will want to miss. Daniel Faraday is back. And, he’s ready to spill the beans about all the secrets of the island. Phew. To think we had to wait 100 episodes to finally get the low down. Well, I for one enjoyed the right, however turbulent it was.

The “Lost” 100th episode milestone which airs WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29 (9:00-10:02 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network.














Faraday deserved to get shot. Duh, they’re called Hostiles for a reason. Why they heck would you run inside an enemy camp shooting away.
And, his mother is an idiot for not warning him or trying to get a message to him somehow.
I still wonder if he’ll be coming back. I know it’s 99% unlikely he will. Seeing him cry in relation to the crash seems to have obvious implications, but maybe he was remembering something else — something that was left out of his book that would cause events to change. What could really have caused him to be so dramatic as to cry from seeing a wreckage he was not directly involved in unless something else happened in the overall puzzle?
The only reason he would cry is because he couldn’t stop the crash from happeneing because he died. That, however, means that he would have to have been knowledgeable about his own death and his failure - meaning he somehow got that information in the future, or rather his present self’s past before visiting the island.
“The Variable” was utter disappointment. Very little new information was given; half of the time was dedicated to commercials. They should have saved money on cake and paid more for a more interesting plot.