One of many memorable scenes from one of the greatest TV series of all time. There had to be over 2-3 dozen memorable one just like this one. I miss LOST😩
So fine: you are good, but we are much better. Yes of course, Ben was a mass murderer, but claimed, he ( they) belonged to the good ones. Very good indeed in denying the reality.
@@verenamenzel4701 this is what Ben and Juliet did .. they perceived others' weaknesses and capitalized on them. Sawyer knew that letting others know his depth of feeling for Kate would give them the upper hand, that's why he always tried to hide it. In one of his flashbacks he tells a fellow con you should never let anyone know you have a 'significant other', they'll use it against you. But Sawyer's feelings for Kate were so strong, he didn't abide by his own rules, the Others ALL knew Kate was his "girlfriend", they called her that on MANY occasions, the priests in the Temple knew it, Radzinski and Phil knew it. "Now TELL us where your GIRLFRIEND is!" And you know what? They knew Sawyer was Kate's boyfriend, too. Calling him "your lover", "your boyfriend", even after Jate and Suliet had happened.
@@bertramsey yes, juliet and ben were the worst characters of lost, much more than mib. So juliet was pulled into the hole/ hell,bc. she caused the radioactivity across the island -from jealousy and was guilty for the death of pregnants and their babies- and also jack as her companion had to die. Only left over were skate, hurley and for uncertain reason ben. Perhaps he still had to suffer some time. Yes I remember that quote he gave to this 'buddy' in prison. Sawyer read so many books, he would know a lot about psychology and manipulation. In opposite to ben and juliet,sawyer used his abilities for having a good life through conning- ben and juliet used their evil games just for fun and entertaining.The Others always were good psychologists and had their surveillance cameras all over. They always knew more than we expected.
Ben wasn't a mass murder. He killed his father, Keamy, Jacob and Widmore (with very good reasons) and John Locke (without a good reason). So, is this a mass murder? Of course not.
The truth is that Sawyer never did read "Of Mice and Men". He was only brainwashed into believing he had done so (and that he was a big reader), and fed a few lines from it. His name is a near-anagram of "Ray Shaw", the title character of "The Manchurian Candidate", and based on that character. However, Sawyer's brainwasher failed to take one thing into account: his need for reading glasses.
@@sigmaLama Did you ever wonder what "candidate" meant on _Lost_ ? The word came up a few times but the show left it for the audience to infer its meaning. The audience was led to believe there was some kind of choice to find someone to fill a job some character ostensibly had and was leaving. However, the evidence is much stronger that it's a reference to the Richard Condon novel _The Manchurian Candidate_ , and that the few characters who utter that word are using it as a cute way of saying "brainwashee", and that what they're trying to do is determine which characters had been brainwashed. Sawyer was the easiest to figure as a brainwashee, since his name is a near-anagram of "Ray Shaw" and he models that character's misogyny, misanthropy, and bookishness. However, those appearances were probably imposed by his brainwashing, as well as the name "Sawyer". It would seem his brainwashers had a sense of humor in giving him that name and modeling him on Condon's character! But if he'd really been a big reader, he wouldn't just now discover that he needed reading glasses. So it means his brainwashers goofed. But Ben saw thru that, figuring Sawyer had been programmed only with a few passages from literary works. He didn't recognize the passage from _Of Mice and Men_ that Ben mentioned, even though it was a fairly prominent one -- I knew it, and I haven't even read Steinbeck -- and was a book Sawyer had quoted from previously. The makers of _Lost_ gave us other clues as to who was a "[Manchurian] candidate", by including subtle details as to their brainwashers having goofed. We can tell Saïd is such a "candidate". He's supposed to be Moslem. Yet he reached for the Koran with his left hand, which a Moslem from that part of the world would be conditioned not to do, even though he golfs left-handed. He looks at a calendar on the freighter and remarks how close it was to Christmas time, which a Moslem would not have been thinking about. So he's only been brainwashed into thinking he was a Moslem. Http://users.bestweb.net/~robgood/teach for further analysis. I was a friend of Damon Lindelof via his father since Damon was a teenager, and I recognized in _Lost_ much that had passed between us. Simply put, the real plot of the show is extremely different from what it appears to be on the surface. It looks like a fantasy adventure story, but actually it's a viewer-solvable cloak-and-dagger mystery with no fantasy element and only one piece of sci-fi, extending the real world work of Michael Persinger. The time travel, monster, and mysterious diseases are fake, all part of a Big Store grift. The most innocent-seeming characters are villains, hilariously so. When you realize what's really going on, if you have a sense of humor as dark as mine, you'll LOL a lot!
@@goodmaro It is CANON that Sawyer was easily brainwashed. We saw it in Room 23, when Sawyer was entranced by the film (and the sunflowers in it!) and Kate had to snap him out of it! and later, in LaFleur, we see him robotically picking a sunflower and bringing it to Juliet. She doesn't look at all surprised, because if you'll notice, those sunflowers are all over the house. On the kitchen table, on the table next to Sawyer's reading chair, on Sawyer's bedstand. Juliet has flowers on her shirt. And in her home in the 2000s, she had hats trimmed with flowers and pictures of flowers on her bedroom wall. And of course, LaFleur means "flower". Lastly, in "the Man in Charge" we take a last look into Room 23. And in the "brainwashing chair" sits a dummy that bears a striking resemblance to Sawyer.
@@bertramsey See, even as closely as I've examined _Lost_ (it was my friend's son Damon's show), there are always people like you who catch things I miss.
@@goodmaro It's a brilliant piece of filmmaking. There are still clues to find. The answers are not as simplistic as most people think they are. And how cool that you are friends with Damon's dad!
Ben was just really wanting to use the “don’t you read” line! Lol! Great actors and the best show
Michael Emerson stole that show! Brilliant actor!
Ben literally pretended not to know where the quote was from just so he could throw it back in Sawyer's face a minute later.
Swayer met his superior.
@@jrewing1512nah sawyer wasnt conned by fake locke yet ben did
I read this book, just becouse of Sawyer hahaha
Me too jaja
I am from Italy, I just bought the book from Amazon thanks to Sawyer too
@@Leonardinho097 cazzo io l’ho comprato tre giorni fa
@@lorenzoweiss5122 ahahaha pure tu incuriosito dalle parole di Sawyer e Ben?
@@Leonardinho097 precisamente!
The final phrase is a killer😂
"C'mon it's time to go back to your cage"
Ben Linus at his best.
One of many memorable scenes from one of the greatest TV series of all time. There had to be over 2-3 dozen memorable one just like this one. I miss LOST😩
"Locke: Why do you find it so hard to believe?
Jack: why do you find it so easy
Locke: It's never been easy!"
My favorite
Locke was badass in season six
@@siyabongacele9844 That wasn't Locke. That was the man in black.
@@jrewing1512 I know.. my point was Terry O'Quinn was baddest in that character of MIB he played it so well
Sawyer loves Kate so much and Ben knows it and uses it against him. In Season 4 as well.
So fine: you are good, but we are much better. Yes of course, Ben was a mass murderer, but claimed, he ( they) belonged to the good ones. Very good indeed in denying the reality.
@@verenamenzel4701 this is what Ben and Juliet did .. they perceived others' weaknesses and capitalized on them. Sawyer knew that letting others know his depth of feeling for Kate would give them the upper hand, that's why he always tried to hide it. In one of his flashbacks he tells a fellow con you should never let anyone know you have a 'significant other', they'll use it against you. But Sawyer's feelings for Kate were so strong, he didn't abide by his own rules, the Others ALL knew Kate was his "girlfriend", they called her that on MANY occasions, the priests in the Temple knew it, Radzinski and Phil knew it. "Now TELL us where your GIRLFRIEND is!" And you know what? They knew Sawyer was Kate's boyfriend, too. Calling him "your lover", "your boyfriend", even after Jate and Suliet had happened.
@@bertramsey yes, juliet and ben were the worst characters of lost, much more than mib. So juliet was pulled into the hole/ hell,bc. she caused the radioactivity across the island -from jealousy and was guilty for the death of pregnants and their babies- and also jack as her companion had to die. Only left over were skate, hurley and for uncertain reason ben. Perhaps he still had to suffer some time. Yes I remember that quote he gave to this 'buddy' in prison. Sawyer read so many books, he would know a lot about psychology and manipulation. In opposite to ben and juliet,sawyer used his abilities for having a good life through conning- ben and juliet used their evil games just for fun and entertaining.The Others always were good psychologists and had their surveillance cameras all over. They always knew more than we expected.
I wrote sth. on ana lucia the worst thing is over
Ben wasn't a mass murder. He killed his father, Keamy, Jacob and Widmore (with very good reasons) and John Locke (without a good reason). So, is this a mass murder? Of course not.
That watch always gave me anxiety
I miss this show so much
I watched this scene right as I was reading of mice and men in school.
Now, Ben's writing his own f*** Country song!? LOL
A guy goes nuts if he ain't got nobody 🎶
😹😹😹😹😹😹😹
The song at the ending is incridibley amazing
Fly man do you know the name? I love it
giulia ghelfi - It is Kate’s theme
ruclips.net/video/38M9IlLxwaU/видео.html
Sawyer and kate 💝
Sawyer and jack
Kate & Bernard
The con man got conned! XD
Twice. Later Hurley will do the same.
What do you mean there is no escape of this island. You can literally swim that distance to the next island.
literally
Considering that Sawyer was on a blown up raft, he should have realised he could jump and swim.
Probably a lot farther than it looks. What happens if you get totally exhausted mid way, in the deep water?
Ben: You are being watched.
Sawyer: Come again?
Ben: Oh, nothing. Never mind.
I Just finished that book, damn!!
Ben was nice to the rabbit and even snuggled him so it was hard to hate him then.
You’re pretty good, sawyer… We’re a lot better
La soledad !!!! toda la compañia que nos rodeamos por evitar la soledad
Swayer may have been a con artist but He met his superior in Ben Linus.
Nah man in black easily conned Ben yet Sawyer immideatly knew it was someone else
That bunny.looks like mine ❤
Cute rabbit
Soo cute!!!
Going on 25 and still never had a girlfriend.
why are you telling us this?
30 here
@@kadjimann.sanity194331
Now you’re 30
The truth is that Sawyer never did read "Of Mice and Men". He was only brainwashed into believing he had done so (and that he was a big reader), and fed a few lines from it. His name is a near-anagram of "Ray Shaw", the title character of "The Manchurian Candidate", and based on that character. However, Sawyer's brainwasher failed to take one thing into account: his need for reading glasses.
@@sigmaLama Did you ever wonder what "candidate" meant on _Lost_ ? The word came up a few times but the show left it for the audience to infer its meaning. The audience was led to believe there was some kind of choice to find someone to fill a job some character ostensibly had and was leaving. However, the evidence is much stronger that it's a reference to the Richard Condon novel _The Manchurian Candidate_ , and that the few characters who utter that word are using it as a cute way of saying "brainwashee", and that what they're trying to do is determine which characters had been brainwashed.
Sawyer was the easiest to figure as a brainwashee, since his name is a near-anagram of "Ray Shaw" and he models that character's misogyny, misanthropy, and bookishness. However, those appearances were probably imposed by his brainwashing, as well as the name "Sawyer". It would seem his brainwashers had a sense of humor in giving him that name and modeling him on Condon's character! But if he'd really been a big reader, he wouldn't just now discover that he needed reading glasses. So it means his brainwashers goofed. But Ben saw thru that, figuring Sawyer had been programmed only with a few passages from literary works. He didn't recognize the passage from _Of Mice and Men_ that Ben mentioned, even though it was a fairly prominent one -- I knew it, and I haven't even read Steinbeck -- and was a book Sawyer had quoted from previously.
The makers of _Lost_ gave us other clues as to who was a "[Manchurian] candidate", by including subtle details as to their brainwashers having goofed. We can tell Saïd is such a "candidate". He's supposed to be Moslem. Yet he reached for the Koran with his left hand, which a Moslem from that part of the world would be conditioned not to do, even though he golfs left-handed. He looks at a calendar on the freighter and remarks how close it was to Christmas time, which a Moslem would not have been thinking about. So he's only been brainwashed into thinking he was a Moslem.
Http://users.bestweb.net/~robgood/teach for further analysis. I was a friend of Damon Lindelof via his father since Damon was a teenager, and I recognized in _Lost_ much that had passed between us. Simply put, the real plot of the show is extremely different from what it appears to be on the surface. It looks like a fantasy adventure story, but actually it's a viewer-solvable cloak-and-dagger mystery with no fantasy element and only one piece of sci-fi, extending the real world work of Michael Persinger. The time travel, monster, and mysterious diseases are fake, all part of a Big Store grift. The most innocent-seeming characters are villains, hilariously so. When you realize what's really going on, if you have a sense of humor as dark as mine, you'll LOL a lot!
@@goodmaro It is CANON that Sawyer was easily brainwashed. We saw it in Room 23, when Sawyer was entranced by the film (and the sunflowers in it!) and Kate had to snap him out of it! and later, in LaFleur, we see him robotically picking a sunflower and bringing it to Juliet. She doesn't look at all surprised, because if you'll notice, those sunflowers are all over the house. On the kitchen table, on the table next to Sawyer's reading chair, on Sawyer's bedstand. Juliet has flowers on her shirt. And in her home in the 2000s, she had hats trimmed with flowers and pictures of flowers on her bedroom wall. And of course, LaFleur means "flower". Lastly, in "the Man in Charge" we take a last look into Room 23. And in the "brainwashing chair" sits a dummy that bears a striking resemblance to Sawyer.
@@bertramsey See, even as closely as I've examined _Lost_ (it was my friend's son Damon's show), there are always people like you who catch things I miss.
@@goodmaro It's a brilliant piece of filmmaking. There are still clues to find. The answers are not as simplistic as most people think they are. And how cool that you are friends with Damon's dad!
@@bertramsey I *was* friends with David Lindelof, but he died in 2002 -- a few months after Charles Raspil, who'd introduced me to him.
Theres nowhere to run
3:38