Lost’s Co-Creator Was Freaked Out When A Main Cast Member Guessed One Of The Island‘s Secrets
By Lex BriscusoJuly 12, 2026 9:12 pm EST
One of the core secrets behind “Lost” was the mystery of the island, the seemingly deserted land mass that the Oceanic 815 survivors crash onto — and one of the show’s creators was totally freaked out when a core cast member guessed its big secret
During Season 1 of the hit epic, actor Josh Holloway — who played one of the lead survivors, James “Sawyer” Ford — told showrunners Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse that he thought the island was moving its location within the series, even likening it to Darth Vader’s Death Star in “Star Wars.” Holloway recalled their reaction to Vulture: “Damon got all weird with me and he was like, ‘Who’ve you been talking to?’ I was like, ‘I haven’t talked to nobody. Pretend I never said anything.’ And I walked away. So I quit my theorizing right there.”
The idea that the island was moving — a notion that is now one of the touchpoints of the show’s insane plot over the course of six seasons — was originally one that the senior creatives found to be a bit wacky, but in a good way. It came from co-creator and executive producer J.J. Abrams, who introduced the concept while shooting the show’s iconic pilot episode
The Lost creators tried to keep the island’s mystery a secret

ABC
The idea of having the island move survived the initial discussions during the “Lost” pilot and made it into the Season 1 writers room (during what some would call TV’s greatest season ever — 2004-05). There, co-showrunner Carlton Cuse pitched a more fleshed-out interpretation involving constellations and celestial ties. “We all always loved the idea and wanted to keep it as a secret,” co-creator Damon Lindelof explained to Vulture. “When Josh mentioned it, I’m like, ‘Oh, okay. Someone is basically talking to him.'”
For both its characters and its audience, a major part of the journey that is “Lost” was uncovering secrets and finding answers to the show’s deepest questions. The central mystery of the island and its ephemeral nature was revealed to the Oceanic 815 survivors during the three-part Season 4 finale episode, “There’s No Place Like Home” — and after Terry O’Quinn’s John Locke does what is necessary to move the island, his fellow survivors are in disbelief that it even happened at all.
The island was a key part of the story of “Lost” from the very beginning, and it quickly went from being just a setting to also being an entity — one that could be as threatening, bizarre, and even healing as its human inhabitants. If you want to experience similar TV mysteries, check out these TV shows like “Lost.”

