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But for those of us who were watching Lost as it premiered, soaking in the happenings of the island and the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815, calling it a roller-coaster ride is putting it lightly. When the show soared, it soared to great heights. When the show fell flat, it could be infuriating.
We capture a bit of the feelings toward the show at the time. Not so much with a focus on the mysteries of the island or the overarching story, but more for the plot decisions that broke down the patience of many fans. So we’ve ranked seven moments that stand out as the worst from Lost’s run. It also helped to bring back some great memories in the process, which is another sign of a great show. Scroll down and see if it can achieve the same for you.
1) Charlie Goes Bad

Dominic Monaghan as Charlie was one of the original main castaways from Oceanic 815, battling his drug-influenced demons and trying to get sober while dealing with the mysteries of the island. But in Season 2, long before his memorable final moments warning Desmond about Penny’s boat, he’s a bit of a heel. He takes love interest Claire’s son, Aaron, and tries to baptize him, earning a beating from Locke (Terry O’Quinn). This then leads him to help Sawyer take the guns and heroin from the mysterious hatch, assaulting Sun (Yunjin Kim) in the process. It’s a hard left if there ever was one, all to set up his sacrifice and keep Desmond alive for his own confusing journey out of time. Charlie’s shift toward creep after being a fan favorite in the first season is disappointing, but there are other more grievous offenders.
2) Time Traveling Castaways

Anytime time travel is introduced to a story or TV series, things immediately get complicated. Unless the title of your show is Quantum Leap, you better keep the time travel at arm’s length. While it is meant to continue the show’s exploration of free will versus fate, the decision takes some wild swings with its time travel methods. After Ben Linus turns the wheel at the heart of the island in the finale of Season 4, the island demonstrates its ability to move locations. It also controls the island’s ability to go through time, revealed after the jump knocks the wheel off its axis. This causes the survivors to start being unstuck in time, and not in the way that makes the plot even harder to follow. Locke eventually fixes it himself, but it does trap everyone in 1974.
3) Paulo and Nikki

The survivor couple that got some spotlight in the third season to shed light on other survivors away from the main crew. Paulo and Nikki are con artists, with the pair making moves to continue after the Oceanic 815 crash that throws a wrench in their plan to steal $8 million worth of diamonds. What transpires is an episode outlining their actions and point of view during some of the early season’s big moments. They overhear the Others talking about capturing some other survivors, they work with Locke during their trip to the Pearl station, and they even witness the death of Mr. Eko at the tendrils of the smoke monster. The big point I remember is they were given an entire episode in the middle of what we were navigating in Season 3.
They are proven to be pointless after the pair decide to betray each other, with Paulo lying about having the diamonds and Nikki deciding to get back at him by unleashing a poisonous spider. It bites Paulo, paralyzing him for 8 hours. Nikki runs into the same fate after pushing on to kill the spider, attracting more spiders. They are discovered by the other survivors and are unknowingly buried alive with the diamonds, ending their story.












