Critical reception Lost has been described by numerous critics as being among the
greatest television series of all time. Bill Carter, television reporter of
The New York Times, defined
Lost as "the show with perhaps the most compelling continuing story line in television history."
Entertainment Weekly put the show on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "Name another network drama that can so wondrously turn a ? into a !" In 2012,
Entertainment Weekly also listed the show at #10 in the "25 Best Cult TV Shows from the Past 25 Years", with a hot-and-cold description: "
Lost was initially celebrated as a moving character-driven drama with a broad humanistic worldview that also presented itself as dramatic cryptography that demanded to be solved. The appeal narrowed as seasons progressed and the mythology became more complex, culminating in a still-debated finale that was deeply meaningful to some and dissatisfying poppycock to others." In 2007,
TV Guide ranked
Lost as the #5 cult show. In 2013, TV Guide ranked it as the #5 sci-fi show and the #36 best series of all time. In September 2019,
The Guardian ranked the show 71st on its list of the 100 best TV shows of the 21st century.
Season 1 The first season received critical acclaim.
USA Today said a "totally original, fabulously enjoyable lost-at-sea series",
Lost had taken "an outlandish Saturday-serial setup and imbued it with real characters and honest emotions, without sacrificing any of the old-fashioned fun." The
Los Angeles Times praised the production values and said "it knows the buttons it wants to push (fear of flying, fear of abandonment, fear of the unknown) and pushes them, repeatedly, like a kid playing a video game." IGN noted that the first season "succeeded first and foremost in character development."
Lost season one was ranked number one in the "Best of 2005 TV Coverage: Critic Top Ten Lists" by Matthew Gilbert of
The Boston Globe, Tom Gliatto of
People Weekly, Charlie McCollum of the
San Jose Mercury News, and Robert Bianco of
USA Today.
Season 2 The second season received favorable reviews, but it was noted that the season "stumbled with some storylines going nowhere and some characters underutilized."
IGN also noted the addition of
Desmond Hume as a standout new character. The
San Francisco Chronicle called Season 2 an "extended, mostly unsatisfying foray into deeper mythology with very little payoff." After winning "Best Drama Series" for season one,
Lost was snubbed by the Emmy Awards in Season 2. Near the end of Lost's second season,
USA Today listed the most popular fan theories during Season 2—the island as a psychological experiment, that the hatch had electromagnetic properties,
string theory of time, and that everyone on the island had developed a "collective consciousness" that allowed them to appear in each other's past. One fan interview by
USA Today said that "Real suspense comes from answers, not questions. Suspense comes not from wondering what's going on but from wondering what happens next. If you withhold answers, it becomes impossible to satisfy."
Season 3 The first block of episodes of the third season was criticized for raising too many mysteries and not providing enough answers. Complaints were also made about the limited screen time for many of the main characters in the first block. Locke, played by Terry O'Quinn, who had tied for the highest second-season episode count, appeared in only 13 of 23 episodes in the third season—only two more than guest star M.C. Gainey, who played Tom. Reaction to two new characters, Nikki and Paulo, was generally negative, and Lindelof even acknowledged that the couple was "universally despised" by fans. The decision to split the season and the American time-slot switch after the hiatus were also criticized. Cuse acknowledged that, "No one was happy with the six-episode run." The second block of episodes was critically acclaimed, however, with the crew dealing with problems from the first block. More answers were written into the show, and Nikki and Paulo were
killed off. It was also announced that the series would end three seasons after the third season, which Cuse hoped would tell the audience that the writers knew where the story was going.
Season 4 Metacritic gave season four a weighted average of 87 based on 12 critical reviews,
The New York Times said the show reveled in critiques of capitalism, using the fictional Mittelos Bioscience and the "malevolent British industrialist" character of Charles Widmore as examples. The critic also said that the show was "in the dark business of exploring just how futile the modern search for peace, knowledge, recovery or profit really is." The critic did go on to say that the series was not as "philosophically refined" as
The Sopranos or
The Wire but that it "has maximized the potential of narrative uncertainty and made it a beguiling constant."
Season 5 The fifth season once again received mostly positive critical reception. Season 5 was given a weighted average of 78 out of 100 by Metacritic.
Alan Sepinwall of
The Star-Ledger said that season 5 may finally be "a day of reckoning between those viewers who embrace the show's science-fiction trappings, and those who prefer not to think about them." Sepinwall also related that "I loved every minute. But I'm also a geek who read
Ray Bradbury and
Isaac Asimov growing up." Heather Havrilesky of
Salon.com criticized the use of time travel, saying that "when a narrator brings magic or time travel or an act of God into the picture, then uses it without restraint, the story loses its anchor to real life." The critic also asked "Why does it matter what Locke and Richard Alpert and Daniel Faraday or anyone else does, when they all seem as clueless and unfettered from reality as we are as viewers? How can these characters have any concrete agenda or strategic approach or philosophical perspective on anything when the rug is pulled out from under them by another Act of God every few seconds?"
The New York Times also commented that "what has been most dispiriting about the current season is the show's willingness to abandon many of the larger and more compelling themes that grounded the elaborate plot: the struggles between faith and reason; the indictments of extreme capitalism, the futility of recovery. All that remains is the reductively limned battle between fate and free will largely playing out, now, in Jack Shephard's belief that returning to the island is his Destiny."
The A.V. Club said of the fifth-season finale, "Me? I found the ending frustrating, but in a good way. This finale was entertaining as all get-out to me, and despite the occasional groaner moment, I think this may be Lost's most purposeful, surprising finale."
Season 6 Season six opened to much hype and curiosity.
The A.V. Club asked, "I'm guessing that one of the biggest fears of
Lost fans as we ride out this sixth and final season—bumps and all—is that we're going to come to the end and find a big nothing in return for all we've invested in these characters. We don't just need answers, we need justifications. Why has whatever happened, happened? Who has called this particular meeting to order, and does it really matter who showed up?" The episodes "
The Substitute", "
Dr. Linus", "
Ab Aeterno", "
Happily Ever After", "
The Candidate", and "
What They Died For" opened to highly positive critical reception while the third-to-last episode "
Across the Sea" was the episode with the most polarized reception of the season. The time spent at the Others' temple was criticized.
E! Online described the show as "lightning in a bottle" and picked it as "Top TV Drama of 2010".
Series finale The series finale opened to highly polarized critical and fan reception. "The End" received "generally favorable reviews" with a Metacritic score of 74 out of 100 based on 31 critic reviews. Eric Deggans of the
St. Petersburg Times also gave the finale a perfect score, stating "Sunday's show was an emotional, funny, expertly measured reminder of what Lost has really centered on since its first moments on the prime time TV landscape: faith, hope, romance and the power of redemption through belief in the best of what moves mankind." Robert Bianco of
USA Today rated the episode perfect as well, deeming the finale "can stand with the best any series has produced." Hal Boedeker of
Orlando Sentinel cited the finale being "a stunner."
The Guardian and
The Daily Telegraph both reported that "The End" had received negative reviews and disappointed its viewers. Alan Sepinwall of
Star-Ledger was less enthusiastic of the finale, stating "I'm still wrestling with my feelings about 'The End'... I thought most of it worked like gangbusters. ... But as someone who did spend at least part of the last six years dwelling on the questions that were unanswered—be they little things like the outrigger shootout or why The Others left Dharma in charge of the Swan station after the purge, or bigger ones like Walt—I can't say I found 'The End' wholly satisfying, either as closure for this season or the series. ... There are narrative dead ends in every season of 'Lost,' but it felt like season six had more than usual." Mike Hale of
The New York Times gave "The End" a mixed review, as the episode showed that the series was "shaky on the big picture—on organizing the welter of mythic-religious-philosophical material it insisted on incorporating into its plot—but highly skilled at the small one, the moment to moment business of telling an exciting story. Rendered insignificant ... were the particulars of what they had done on the island."
David Zurawik of the
Baltimore Sun gave the episode a highly negative review, writing "If this is supposed to be such a smart and wise show, unlike anything else on network TV (blah, blah, blah), why such a wimpy, phony, quasi-religious, white-light, huggy-bear ending. ... Once Jack stepped into the church it looked like he was walking into a Hollywood wrap party without food or music—just a bunch of actors grinning idiotically for 10 minutes and hugging one another."
Ratings Lost aired on the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) from September 22, 2004, to May 23, 2010. The pilot episode had 18.6 million viewers, easily winning its 9:00 pm timeslot, and giving ABC its strongest
ratings since 2000, when
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? was initially aired—beaten only the following month by the premiere of
Desperate Housewives. According to
Variety, "ABC sure could use a breakout drama success, as it hasn't had a real hit since
The Practice.
Lost represents the network's best start for a drama with 18- to 49-year-olds since
Once and Again in 1999, and in total viewers since
Murder One in 1995." For its first season,
Lost averaged 16 million viewers, ranking 14th in viewership among prime-time shows and 15th among the eighteen to forty-nine-year-old
demographic. Its second season fared equally well: again,
Lost ranked 14th in viewership, with an average of 15.5 million viewers. However, it improved its rating with 18- to 49-year-olds, ranking eighth. The second-season premiere was even more viewed than the first, pulling in over 23 million viewers and setting a series record. The third-season premiere brought in 18.8 million viewers. The seventh episode of the season, back from a three-month hiatus, saw a drop to 14.5 million. Over the course of the spring season, ratings would plunge to as low as 11 million viewers before recovering to near 14 million for the season finale. The ratings drop was partially explained when
Nielsen released
DVR ratings, showing
Lost as the most recorded series on television. However, despite overall ratings losses,
Lost still won its hour in the crucial 18–49 demographic and put out the highest 18–49 numbers in the 10:00 p.m. time slot ahead of any show on any network that season. The fourth-season premiere saw an increase from the previous episode to 16.1 million viewers, A survey of 20 countries by
Informa Telecoms and Media in 2006 concluded that
Lost was the second most popular TV show in those countries, after
CSI: Miami. The sixth-season premiere was the first to climb in the ratings year-over-year since the second season, drawing 12.1 million viewers.
Lost gained renewed popularity after becoming available on streaming platforms like
Hulu and
Netflix.
Nielsen Media Research, which records streaming viewership on U.S. television screens, estimated that the series was watched for 678 million minutes from July 29 to August 4, 2024. It later accumulated 1.03 billion minutes of watch time from October 21–27, 2024.
Awards and nominations Capping its successful first season,
Lost won the
Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series and J. J. Abrams was awarded an Emmy in September 2005 for his work as the director of "Pilot". Terry O'Quinn and Naveen Andrews were nominated in the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series category. the 2005 Producers Guild Award for Best Production, the 2005 Director's Guild Award for Best Direction of a Dramatic Television Program, and the
2005 Screen Actors Guild Awards for Best Ensemble Cast. , Michael Emerson received many awards and nominations, including winning a
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series in 2009. It was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Television Drama Series three times (2005–2007), and it won the award in 2006. In 2006, Matthew Fox and Naveen Andrews received Golden Globe nominations for
Best Lead Actor in a Drama Series In 2006, Jorge Garcia and Michelle Rodriguez took home
ALMA Awards for Best Supporting Actor and Actress, respectively, in a Television Series. It won the
Saturn Award for Best Television Series in both 2005 and 2006. In 2005, Terry O'Quinn won a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor in a television series, and in 2006, Consecutively as well, it won in 2005 and 2006 the
Visual Effects Society Award for Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Broadcast Program. Malcolm David Kelley won a
Young Artist Award for his performance as Walt in 2006. In 2005,
Lost was voted
Entertainment Weeklys Entertainer of the Year. The show won a 2005 Prism Award for Charlie's drug storyline in the episodes "Pilot", "House of the Rising Sun", and "The Moth". In 2007,
Lost was listed as one of
Time magazine's "100 Best TV Shows of All-
TIME". In June 2007,
Lost beat out over 20 nominated television shows from countries all over the globe to win the Best Drama award at the
Monte Carlo Television Festival. In September 2007, both Michael Emerson and Terry O'Quinn were nominated for an
Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series, the award going to O'Quinn.
Lost was again nominated for Outstanding Drama Series at the
60th Primetime Emmy Awards in 2008. The show also garnered seven other Emmy nominations, including Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Michael Emerson. In 2009,
Lost was again nominated for Outstanding Drama Series, as well Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Michael Emerson at the
61st Primetime Emmy Awards, of which the latter won. In 2010,
Kristin dos Santos of
E! Online ranked
Lost the best TV series of the past 20 years. In 2013, the
Writers Guild of America ranked
Lost No. 27 in its list of the 101 Best Written TV Series of All Time. In 2014, the series was nominated for the
TCA Heritage Award. In 2016,
Rolling Stone ranked it the fourteenth best science fiction television show ever.
Fandom and popular culture As a mainstream
cult television show,
Lost has generated a dedicated and thriving international
fan community.
Lost fans, sometimes dubbed
Lostaways or
Losties, have gathered at
San Diego Comic-Con and conventions organized by ABC but have also been active in developing many fan websites, including
Lostpedia and forums dedicated to the program and its related incarnations. Because of the show's elaborate mythology, its fansites have focused on speculation and theorizing about the island's mysteries, as well as on more typical fan activities, such as producing
fan fiction and videos, compiling episode transcripts,
shipping characters, and collecting memorabilia. Anticipating fan interest and trying to keep its audience engrossed, ABC embarked on various cross-media endeavors, often using new media. Fans of
Lost have been able to explore ABC-produced tie-in websites, tie-in novels, an official forum sponsored by the creative team behind
Lost ("The Fuselage"), "
mobisodes", podcasts by the producers, an official magazine, and an
alternate reality game (ARG) "
The Lost Experience." An official fanclub was launched in the summer of 2005 through Creation Entertainment.
Scrubs,
Modern Family,
Orange Is the New Black,
Community,
The Office,
Family Guy,
American Dad!,
The Simpsons,
Futurama,
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (under the sketch parody title "Late"), and
The Venture Bros..
Lost is also featured as an
Easter egg in several video games, including
Dead Island,
Half-Life 2: Episode Two,
Fallout 3,
World of Warcraft,
Just Cause 2,
Batman: Arkham City,
Grand Theft Auto V, and
Singularity. Similarly, several songs have been published whose themes and titles were derived from the series, such as
Moneen ("Don't Ever Tell Locke What He Can't Do"),
Veil of Maya ("Namaste"),
Cosmo Jarvis ("Lost"),
Senses Fail ("Lost and Found" and "All the Best Cowboys Have Daddy Issues"),
Gatsbys American Dream ("You All Everybody" and "Station 5: The Pearl"), and
Punchline ("Roller Coaster Smoke").
Weezer named their eighth studio album
Hurley after the character, with a photo of actor
Jorge Garcia on the cover. After the episode "
Numbers" aired on March 2, 2005, numerous people used the eponymous figures (
4, 8, 15, 16, 23, and 42) as lottery entries. According to the
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, within three days, the numbers were tried over 500 times by local players. By October 2005, thousands had tried them for the multi-state
Powerball lottery. A study of the
Quebec Lottery showed that the sequence was the third most popular choice of numbers for lottery players, behind only the
arithmetic sequences 1–2–3–4–5–6 and 7–14–21–28–35–42. The issue came to attention after a Mega Millions drawing for a near-record US$380,000,000 jackpot on January 4, 2011, drew a series of numbers in which the three lowest numbers (4–8–15) and the mega ball (42) matched four of the six numbers. The No. 42 is also the "Mega Number" in Hurley's "Mega Lotto" ticket. The players who played Hurley's exact combination won $150 each (or $118 in California).
Influence Lost has been cited as a key influence on several of its contemporaries. The
ABC series
FlashForward was heavily compared to
Lost, because of its similar use of
nonlinear narrative and mysteries. The
NBC series
Heroes drew comparisons to
Lost during its run, because of some similarities such as its
ensemble cast.
Damon Lindelof was involved in the early stages of the creative process of
Heroes, as he was friends with
Heroes creator
Tim Kring. Ever since its premiere,
The 100 has been compared to
Lost because of its similar setting and the importance of survival in its story. The
TBS comedy
Wrecked has been defined as a
parody of
Lost, because of its very similar premise and multiple references to the drama.
Adam Horowitz and
Edward Kitsis, former writers of
Lost, created the fantasy series
Once Upon a Time, which has also been compared to
Lost. Even though their series started after
Lost ended, they conceived it in 2004. Damon Lindelof was involved in the development of their series. Despite the comparisons and similarities to
Lost, the writers intended the shows to be very different from each other. To them,
Lost concerned itself with redemption, while
Once Upon a Time is about hope. As a nod to the ties between the production teams of
Once Upon a Time and
Lost, the former show contains
allusions to Lost. For example, many items found in the
Lost universe, such as
Apollo candy bars,
Oceanic Airlines,
Ajira Airways, the TV series
Exposé and MacCutcheon Whisky can be seen in
Once Upon a Time. Both during and after
Losts run on ABC, its success led to dozens of new shows attempting to enter the same "mystery-driven sci-fi" genre as networks sought to cater to viewers' evolved affinity and demonstrated loyalty to this specific subset of drama. In 2018, NBC introduced
Manifest, a show about the mysterious disappearance of a commercial passenger jet. While the show's preview and pilot alone sparked media coverage highlighting the show's central mystery to be seemingly the same as that of
Lost, subsequent seasons have furthered controversy around the extent of key similarities. Noted parallels include the passengers' collective experience of
displacement in spacetime, the acquisition of
supernatural abilities and
medical phenomena post-disappearance, the use of
flashback/flashforward sequences to expose dark secrets harbored by passengers, the revelation of unusually high levels of
interconnectedness between the lives of passengers, the polarized beliefs held by passengers regarding
science versus faith as a means to explain their shared experience in different ways. Season 4 of
Manifest reveals a plot twist suggesting the passengers were in some way chosen, prompting critics to point out this same key plot twist introducing
predestination was featured in
Lost.
Getting Lost An
independent documentary film about the development and cultural impact of
Lost titled
Getting Lost premiered on September 22, 2024, which marked the 20th anniversary of the original series'
premiere. The film is directed by Taylor Morden and features interviews with the cast and crew of the show, along with members of the fan community. It also addresses the allegations of a toxic work environment that were revealed in 2023 during the film's production. Canadian movie theater chain
Cineplex held screenings of
Getting Lost in theaters on November 3 and 6, 2024. == Distribution ==