[We see Hurley sitting by a fire reading a manuscript entitled "Bad Twin" by Gary Troup. Sayid enters carrying a pole and the radio.]
HURLEY: Hey, check this out. I found a manuscript in one of the suitcases. It's like a mystery book.
SAYID: I want to show you something.
HURLEY: Cool, you fixed it.
SAYID: We'll see. [handing Hurley the radio] Hold on to this. Don't expect anything. The chances of getting a signal are slim at best.
[Sayid plants the pole in the sand and turns on the radio. We hear static.]
HURLEY: Static's good, right?
SAYID: No, reception is good.
[Sayid changes the dial and we hear Danielle's transmission.]
HURLEY: Wait, what's that?!
SAYID: It's Rousseau's signal.
HURLEY: Oh, crap.
SAYID: [changing the dial] But this radio has a wider bandwidth.
HURLEY: Hold it, stop! Do you hear that!
RADIO ANNOUNCER: [spotty reception] That was the old classic "Just A-Sittin' and A-Rockin'" by Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, featuring Cootie Williams on the trumpet. Up next on WXR, the Glenn Miller Orchestra with Moonlight Serenade.
[The song begins to play with good reception.]
HURLEY: Whoa, you hear how clear that is? It's got to be close, right?
SAYID: Radio waves at this frequency bounce off the ionosphere. They can travel thousands of miles. It could be coming from anywhere.
HURLEY: Or, anytime. -- Just kidding, dude.
Taken from lostpedia.com
Wallpaper by jbritz22, http://jbritz22.blogspot.com