Drealmcc0y said:
He only surrounded the cabin so he MiB would know as little about what Jacob and The others are up to as little as possible.
And yet, he moved back to the unprotected statue?
What prevented Barry from spying on the Others back when they were camping outdoor, anyway?
Why did Jacob need one specific place to meet with Richard? If they're concerned about Barry spying on them, that doesn't sound like the best strategy, does it?
I think the ash is really cool
A broom. That's all you need. If you can't wait for the wind.
Its true that we never know how the ash is broken. I dont see why thats a problem though, MiB found a way too do it at some point.
See right above: that's not where the true mystery lies, here, in my opinion...
And why did Jacob leave the statue for the cabin? Why did Jacob leave the cabin for the statue?
Well if theres one person who would buy into it..... It would be Locke.
Because Locke is a
complete moron? Yeah, sometimes, he is. Whenever the plot requires it (same with most characters). But a plan that relies on the other guy behaving like a complete moron isn't much of a plan.
And in fact, it didn't work. Until Barry shook things up, and that wasn't part of the plan.
Yeah you're right Erigu, MIB DOESNT NEED LOCKE AT ALL, YOU'RE SPOT ON.
Is that supposed to be sarcasm? Because I assure you it's not warranted, here.
Just try and explain why Barry absolutely needed Locke in order to try and kill Jacob, when it was so simple a century ago, with Richard.
Ben knows that Richard meets Jacob here.
But what of all that stuff about Jacob being a technophobic ghost? Where does that come from? If Ben made that up, isn't it a bit weird that "Jacob" turns out to be exactly that?
im watch the scene where Jacob opens the door to Hurley and I just came to that conclusion of why he did it, pretty simple really.
Because he's
the Ultimate Candidate, a new term you just pulled out of your derriere.
And that's it, too, I imagine. Jacob wanted Hurley to join him and his brother for the Halloween party in the moving cabin. But Hurley fled and Jacob gave up right there.
Who wouldn't be satisfied with such a bullet-proof explanation. It all makes sense.
Yes of course he can teleport? He has done it a bunch of times in the show.
(he's still blocked by the magical ash, yes?)
And then, he also walked / flied around a lot. Chased people. Failed to catch up. And used a boat (presumably, he can't teleport over water,
if that makes sense).
The dreams involving locke throughout the show is genius, they all come from the MiB.
Because it's genius to give Barry so many abilities and have him forget about them 99% of the time.
In this instance he gives Locke the dream to give him the tools to come to him.
He shows up in Locke's dream as Horace, sends him on a quest for the map to the cabin, and finally stops moving said cabin around so he could find it where x marks the spot.
I mean, it was either that or simply appearing to Locke and telling him to move the island, and that would have been awfully pedestrian (not that it bothers him later on).
(You skipped a bunch of things.)
and yet not a single plot hole.
Wow.
the fact that the rules were changed when Alex was killed just shows that its not supernatural unbreakable rules.
And yet:
WIDMORE: Have you come here to kill me, Benjamin?
BEN: We both know I can't do that.
... Okay?
Ben proceeds to tell Widmore he will kill Penny (because fuck the rules), and leaves the premises unharmed (because thank you, rules!).
Consistency!
I dont think Jacob had any powers, unless it came with the territory of being protector.
So he didn't invite all those people on the island after all? He merely knew they'd show up? Because the lighthouse actually allowed him to peek into the future, and never mind if the show didn't say anything about that?
Can you keep track of all the loopholes you're jumping through?
cloud_sleep said:
didn't Jacob partially heal Locke by touching him, after he had been pushed out of a window (the fall should have killed him)?
I'm not sure there's any way to tell if he helped him with that or not...
Still, he instantly healed Ilana and turned Richard into an immortal (who can't kill himself, for some reason).