S.O.S.
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S.O.S.
Summary
S.O.S. is a television series episode[1]. S.O.S. ranks in the top 6% of television_series_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- S.O.S.'s instance of is recorded as television series episode[3].
- S.O.S.'s director is recorded as Eric Laneuville[4].
- S.O.S.'s screenwriter is recorded as Steven Maeda[5].
- S.O.S.'s screenwriter is recorded as Leonard Dick[6].
- S.O.S.'s follows is recorded as Dave[7].
- S.O.S.'s followed by is recorded as Two for the Road[8].
- S.O.S.'s part of the series is recorded as Lost[9].
- S.O.S.'s IMDb ID is recorded as tt0771861[10].
- S.O.S.'s original language of film or TV show is recorded as English[11].
- S.O.S.'s publication date is recorded as +2006-04-12T00:00:00Z[12].
- S.O.S.'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0c5s96[13].
- S.O.S.'s title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'S.O.S.'}[14].
- S.O.S.'s Metacritic ID is recorded as tv/lost/season-2/episode-19-sos[15].
- S.O.S.'s production code is recorded as 219[16].
- S.O.S.'s TV.com ID is recorded as shows/lost/s-o-s--675890[17].
- S.O.S.'s season is recorded as Lost, season 2[18].
- S.O.S.'s Trakt.tv ID is recorded as shows/lost-2004/seasons/2/episodes/19[19].
- S.O.S.'s set in environment is recorded as fictional island[20].
- S.O.S.'s Kinobox film ID is recorded as 392380[21].
Why It Matters
S.O.S. ranks in the top 6% of television_series_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (29 views/month).[2] S.O.S. has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] S.O.S. is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]