For instance, at work. I regularly talk to colleagues about Lost, and several of them watch it. Because I'm a week ahead of them via nefarious means (Australia is currently only a week behind the US), they ask me about things and what I might know. But more often than not, I'm having to remind people about important stuff from the past that might relate to current plot lines. For instance Sawyer, and his daughter, things like that etc. Most of them have forgotten all about that, so if and when it comes up again they may have forgotten completely.
I know the show can be enjoyed on an ad hoc basis to some degree (eg watching the Constant. My Partner who never watches, watched that with me, and told me it was the first Lost Ep he had truly enjoyed). But more often than not unless you've watched from the beginning and have basically lived the show like most of us in the forum, you probably won't have any idea at all what's happening.
Have the producers shot themselves in the foot to some degree by making the show so serialised? Would a more Trek style Episodic style make it more popular?
So my final question is... we're a fairly intelligent bunch around here. Do you need to have a fair level of intelligence to "get" Lost?
I know the show can be enjoyed on an ad hoc basis to some degree (eg watching the Constant. My Partner who never watches, watched that with me, and told me it was the first Lost Ep he had truly enjoyed). But more often than not unless you've watched from the beginning and have basically lived the show like most of us in the forum, you probably won't have any idea at all what's happening.
Have the producers shot themselves in the foot to some degree by making the show so serialised? Would a more Trek style Episodic style make it more popular?
So my final question is... we're a fairly intelligent bunch around here. Do you need to have a fair level of intelligence to "get" Lost?