2011年2月17日星期四

it got to the point where we had both gotten so good that when one of us would start the game

Host: Was this a bit like your own King of Kong-type competition?Horowitz: Kind of...Kitsis: But there's no kill screen.Horowitz: There was no kill screen, but by the end of it, it got to the point where we had both gotten so good that when one of us would start the game our first man would take a half an hour and the other one would have to go watches off and do whatever.It just became too much of a time suck.As with everything related to Lost, there's a plot twist.In this case, the twist is that the sub already was called Galaga and that some people knew this.

Somehow, despite discussing this show obsessively with my wife and fellow devotee reporter Patrick Klepek, I never picked up on it before.08-06-2009 Lost Podcast""His parents can recite the days from memory.What parent couldn't, for such my watches watershed trauma in the life of a boy and his family.On September 4, 2008, they found out he had a tumor in his brain.He was in the intensive care unit, often screaming in pain, until September 13, when he was transferred up to Unit 35.That stay lasted until September 18.

He had the PICC line, a catheter he carries inside of him, inserted then.Every time he comes back here, they plug it into something.Sometimes it's an IV on a wheeled stand, dripping saline.Other times, it's feeding him chemicals - poison, fundamentally.His dad, wearing jeans and a weather-beaten NBA Live 2003 t-shirt, pushes this watch rack, hand on his 7-year-old son's shoulder.They are here, in Portland, Oregon, at The Children's Hospital at Legacy Emanuel, to begin another battery of chemotherapy.This time will be the ""B"" treatment in the cycle; it makes the hair fall out.

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