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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jean_HigginsJean Higgins - Wikipedia

    Jean Higgins is an American television and film producer. She has worked on the series Lost and CSI: Miami. She won an Emmy Award for outstanding drama series at the September 2005 ceremony for her work on the first season of Lost. She also won a Producers Guild of America Award for television producer of the year in episodic for the first season.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0383410Jean Higgins - IMDb

    Biography. Awards. IMDbPro. All topics. Jean Higgins (I) Producer. Production Manager. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Jean Higgins is known for Lost (2004), Arlington Road (1999) and Last Resort (2012). More at IMDbPro. Contact info. Agent info. Resume. Add to list. Won 1 Primetime Emmy. 3 wins & 8 nominations total. Known for. Lost. 8.3. TV Series.

    • Producer, Production Manager
    • Jean Higgins
  3. Producer at Sony / ABC · Experience: Sony Pictures Entertainment · Education: UCSD · Location: Los Angeles Metropolitan Area · 250 connections on LinkedIn. View Jean Higgins’ profile on ...

    • 250
    • Sony Pictures Entertainment
    • UCSD
    • Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
  4. May 22, 2020 · Lost Would Answer Mysteries Properly If Producer Had Another Chance. By Maki Zatychies. Published May 22, 2020. For the finale's 10th anniversary, Lost producers Jean Higgins and Jeff Pinkner reflect on the impact of network restrictions and fan expectations.

    • In The Beginning…
    • “Tremendous Conflict”
    • Developing “The End”
    • “It Was Never Designed to Answer Everything”
    • Reckoning with “The End” and The Hereafter

    Today, the flashback-reliant narrative of Lost wouldn’t be a dramatically new way to tell stories on broadcast television. But in 2004, it was noticeable and not just because it cleverly freed the series to leave the clutches of the island. “It was an amazing pilotand then, at the end of the pilot, everybody went ‘Oh God—what do we do now? Survival...

    Network television, particularly in the early 2000s, was built around the idea of finding something that the audience likes and giving it to them over and over. (Lost debuted on the very same day as CSI: NY,for Jacob’s sake.) Whatever pleasure centers a particular show tickles, it should tickle with every episode as much as possible. At least, that...

    From the very beginning of the show’s development, the Lost title was meant to have a double meaning. Yes, the characters themselves were physically lost in the world on this mysterious island. But, more crucially, they were each spiritually lost in their own lives. The show always tried to remain true to the characters and, by the end, to some spi...

    Lost arrived in 2004 at the very first moment when audience feedback became a real-time consideration with the advent of the internet. That development—which fueled rabid online viewer speculation, passionate globally connected fan communities, and real-time discussions between creators and audiences—helped transform Lost into a phenomenon from the...

    Beyond the tens of millions of viewers Lost entertained each week, beyond the tens of millions of dollars Lost spent on its blockbuster episodes, the core of the series was always an inclusive exploration of humanity and our own search for meaning in a vast and overwhelming world. To portray that ideal, Lost needed to portray the real world as it i...

  5. May 14, 2010 · My colleague Mary Anne Potts, the editor of the National Geographic Adventure Blog, scored an interview with executive producer Jean Higgins and found out some of the secrets of the show.

  6. May 17, 2020 · “Lost” executive producer Jean Higgins recently told Observer that she has been approached by colleagues who heard rumors of a reboot. But she was quick to shoot them down. “If I was going to do ‘Lost,’ you’d be the first person I’d call,” Higgins said to her colleague. “No, there’s no ‘Lost.’. I don’t know if you could do it again.

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