lost scenery - season 5

Top 20 Fictional Characters | Juliet Burke (Lost)
“It doesn’t matter who we were. It only matters who we are.”

fuckyeahlost:

“You All Everybody” by 100% Soft


Whatever you think I am, I’m not. I’m not a leader, Mr. Alpert. I’m a mess.
Whatever you think I am, I’m not. I’m not a leader, Mr. Alpert. I’m a mess.

fuckyeahlost:

Buenos Aires-based information visualization specialist Santiago Ortiz’s most recent project Lostalgic provides a suite of interfaces for exploring the scripts and character relationships across the 121 episode corpus of the ABC television series LOST.
Working with data scraped from the popular fan site Lostpedia, Lostalgic opens to a list-like super-script of every line of dialogue from the six seasons of the LOST. Zooming down to the resolution of a single episode reveals a staccato arrangement of bar graphs that represent each scene and exchange that occurs between characters. Cells can be hovered over to reveal individual lines and the interface provides a chronological map of the series. Clicking through to the matrix view switches over to more dynamic network of character relationships and this is where the utility of Lostalgic really becomes apparent. The matrix visualization displays shifting social constellations – how characters interact within an episode or across the entire series. Opening up the link between two characters reveals a display with a venn and bar diagrams that maps their shared screen time and clicking on an individual provides tree maps that situate the character in relation to the rest of the cast. The matrix repurposes many of these same visual tropes and represents each episode as a narrative grid for mapping character interactions. There is a also a renactment view that provides a chronological retelling of the series as a ‘thumbnail slideshow’.
Check out Lostalgic. You can also read an interview with Santiago about the project here.

fuckyeahlost:

Buenos Aires-based information visualization specialist Santiago Ortiz’s most recent project Lostalgic provides a suite of interfaces for exploring the scripts and character relationships across the 121 episode corpus of the ABC television series LOST.

Working with data scraped from the popular fan site Lostpedia, Lostalgic opens to a list-like super-script of every line of dialogue from the six seasons of the LOST. Zooming down to the resolution of a single episode reveals a staccato arrangement of bar graphs that represent each scene and exchange that occurs between characters. Cells can be hovered over to reveal individual lines and the interface provides a chronological map of the series. Clicking through to the matrix view switches over to more dynamic network of character relationships and this is where the utility of Lostalgic really becomes apparent. The matrix visualization displays shifting social constellations – how characters interact within an episode or across the entire series. Opening up the link between two characters reveals a display with a venn and bar diagrams that maps their shared screen time and clicking on an individual provides tree maps that situate the character in relation to the rest of the cast. The matrix repurposes many of these same visual tropes and represents each episode as a narrative grid for mapping character interactions. There is a also a renactment view that provides a chronological retelling of the series as a ‘thumbnail slideshow’.

Check out Lostalgic. You can also read an interview with Santiago about the project here.


juliet burke in green | asked by anon

juliet burke in green | asked by anon

(Source: possibilityofmagic)

thelostie:

the other woman

thehotsnow:

I LOVE THIS!

(Source: robbstark)