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This also allowed Lost to deliver some of the best individual television episodes on television, and here are the best from each season.
6) Season 1 – “Pilot”

The first season of Lost held nothing back and ensured that fans who tuned in wouldnโt change the channel, and most remained hooked for the entire series run. That episode, simply titled โPilot,โ opened after the plane crash, with Jack Shephard waking up disoriented in a jumble with a dog, and then he walked out and saw the fires and explosions from the crashed plane, and leapt into action.
This was the most expensive television premiere ever shot, at over $10 million, and it was well worth it. The pilot episode introduced all the main heroes, showed some of the islandโs mysteries, and ensured that fans would stick around and wait to see what happened next. There might not be a better pilot episode in television history, and it launched the series into the stratosphere.
5) Season 2 – “Man of Science, Man of Faith”

Just like the pilot episode, the second season of Lost started off with a bang, and the best episode of the season was its premiere. The Season 2 premiere, โMan of Science, Man of Faith,โ opened up the islandโs mysteries even further. The opening showed a man in a hatch, living on the island, and preparing in case someone infiltrated his bunker.
This is also an episode where fate plays into the story, including Jack meeting the man in the bunker, a man he knew in the real world named Desmond. Fans were all in by this episode, and over 23 million people watched the premiere, the most-watched episode in the showโs history. While many fans felt frustrated that the show didnโt reveal the fate of the previous seasonโs cliffhanger right away, it did what it needed to do and opened up the biggest mystery on the show in style.
4) Season 3 – “Greatest Hits”

The third seasonโs best episode focused on one of the showโs most underrated and beloved characters. โGreatest Hitsโ was the 21st episode of the season and featured Charlie Pace (Dominic Monaghan). The title refers to Charlie counting down the five most important moments of his life, which are shown in his flashbacks. Meanwhile, he is trying to get to a ship where he feels he can help his fellow survivors find their escape.
Of course, this is the episode right before Charlie makes the ultimate sacrifice and dies to save Desmond in one of the showโs most depressing moments. That makes this a perfect swan song for Charlie. The character dying one episode later makes this an even more powerful moment when looking back on the series. It is not a shock that Charlieโs death in the next episode would hurt viewership when the fourth season premiered.











