if sombody say LOST is better than x fiels
it is huge laugh
read this
LOST was directly infleunced by x files
The X-Files directly inspired numerous other TV series, including
Strange World,
[100][101] Burning Zone,
[102] Special Unit 2,
Mysterious Ways,
[103] Lost,
Carnivàle,
Dark Skies,
[101] The Visitor[101], with numerous key aspects being carried on to more standard crime dramas, such as The Eleventh Hour, Fringe,
Bones[104]. Some of these included former crew-members of
The X-Files, such as
Lost, whose cinematographer is
John Bartley; the
mytharc-dominated
24, executive produced by writer
Howard Gordon;
Six Feet Under, coproduced by Lori Jo Nemhauser; and
Supernatural, involving directors David Nutter and Kim Manners, and writer-producer John Shiban. In Supernatural, Mulder and Scully are specifically referenced in the "Pilot" and the Season 2 episode "The Usual Suspects" in dialogue between the two main characters, Sam and Dean, who often take on detective type roles themselves. Supernatural, like the first five seasons of the X-Files, is also shot in
Vancouver, Canada.
The X-Files is parodied in
The Simpsons episode "
The Springfield Files," which was part of the The Simpsons' eighth season and aired on January 12, 1997, during
The X-Files' spike in popularity. In it, Mulder and Scully (voiced by Duchovny and Anderson) are sent to Springfield to investigate an alien sighting by
Homer Simpson, but end up finding no evidence other than Homer's word (in humorous Simpsons fashion) and depart. The Cigarette Smoking Man appears in the background when Homer is interviewed, and the show's theme plays whenever the "alien" is on screen, albeit a rather animated version.