Starwind 4 0 Serial Season
This transcript is annotated! Click on the highlights to read what others are saying. If you'd like to add your own insights, comments, or questions to a specific line, highlight. Updated 1 year ago. Channel QuIcKeNdZ. Video of the Day? Had a 5.5 gallon tank laying around so I just set up with no filtration, no water movement no air stone, only have heater and fluorescent bulb on it, just thought I'd show it for kicks, been up for 4 months if you care.
Patterns • • Matching whole words: • craft — will match 'craft' but not 'minecraft' or 'diablocraft'. • • AND operator: • detachable hats — will match teasers containing the words 'detachable' AND 'hats'. • • OR operator: • gsl starcraft sc2 — matches 'gsl' OR 'starcraft' OR 'sc2' • • Mixing both operators: • sanae ohana pure — matches 'pure' AND 'sanae', or 'pure' AND 'ohana' • • Exact match search: • 'until you like it' — place double quotes around the pattern to search for an exact string • • Wildcards: • *sankaku* — this can find threads contaning links to sankaku • idolm*ster — can match idolmaster or idolm@ster, etc. • • Filtering by name or tripcode: • Prefix the pattern with # to search inside the author field: • #!!3n8yyKtTvbU — matches SHiN!!3n8yyKtTvbU or Ayano Sugiura!!3n8yyKtTvbU, etc. • #Ayano — matches Ayano or Ayano Sugiura or Ayano Sugiura!!3n8yyKtTvbU, etc.
• # — this will match all non-anonymous threads. • • It is also possible to filter by regular expression: • The. Won't match newline characters, use [ s S] instead. • /^(?=[ s S]*detachable)(?=[ s S]*hats)[ s S]*$/i — AND operator. • /^(?![ s S]*touhou)[ s S]*$/i — NOT operator. • /^>/ — threads starting with a quote ( '>' character as an html entity). • /^$/ — threads with no text.
Controls • On — enables or disables the filter. • Boards — space separated list of boards on which the filter will be active.
Example: a jp tg • Hide — hides matched threads. • Pin — puts matched threads on top of the list. • Strict — when available, Highlight filters can match against additional auto-generated tags. This option disables such behaviour and makes the filter only search inside the subject, comment and filename fields. Hide filters are always 'strict'. Settings Options • — Magnify small thumbnails. • — Disable keybinds.
• — Don't spoiler images. • — Wide layout. • — Always show last replies in tooltips. • — Always keep stickies on top. • — Use simple search as default search mode. Sync • Manage Shortcuts • R — Refresh current page. • X — Reorder threads.
• T — Show/Hide pinned threads. • A — Toggle archive redirection. • S — Open search box.
• Esc — Close search box. • Tab — Toggle full thread search. • Ctrl + hover thumbnail — Show last replies in tooltips. • Shift + LMB on thumbnail — Hide thread. • Alt + LMB on thumbnail — Pin thread.
— Born of the but found in many other genres since, the bounty hunter makes a living pursuing criminals for the price on their heads. His line of work often makes him gruff and cynical, if he lives long enough, and in the eyes of some citizens, he may be only slightly better (or worse) than the criminals he hunts. Sometimes, the bounty hunter captures criminals and brings them back to face trial (which is how real bounty hunters operate nowadays).
But other times, especially in Westerns, the bounty hunter's reward is of the 'Dead or Alive' variety, and many bounty hunters of the latter type kill their bounties rather than let them. These kinds of bounty hunters are often called 'bounty killers' or, more pejoratively,.
This has almost never been, though that problem can be if the bounty in question is exceptionally dangerous, put out by a criminal, or wanted by a corrupt, tyrannical, or failed state. Or if this occurs in a fictional setting, obviously. The bounty hunter is one of the most diverse roles and depending on his choices (and his employers) he can be anything.
Sometimes the Bounty Hunter is a villain, a sadist who profits off the death and suffering of others and who couldn't care less about justice. In that case, the best he can possibly be is a who may hunt villains and do the right thing for all the wrong reasons. If that's the case then it is almost guaranteed that he will come in conflict with the heroes either because their head promises the biggest paycheck or because he wants to be the one to capture the criminal and won't hesitate to kill and become himself a criminal over it. Sometimes he's a who wants to bring down the toughest targets. More often, though, he is a just a working stiff who tries to do the right thing — or something close to it. Buried deep within his grizzled, world-weary exterior is still an idealist with a heart of gold. Because there is nothing that prevents a Bounty Hunter from taking both legal and shady bounties, this character is usually a.
The Bounty Hunter is increasingly popular in ever since made it cool. It helps that space is thought of as another 'frontier', and Western tropes. And since it's so cool, most often bounty hunters in fiction are depicted as extremely skilled individuals and will prove a challenge for the main characters unless they are either there just to show us how overpowered our hero is or if the bounty hunters are themselves the main character(s). When in the company of actual bounty hunters, you will speak of them as.
Except for who prefers the term 'freelance peace-keeping agent'. See also:, and. • Bounty hunting is the occupation of Jet Black, Spike Spiegel, Faye Valentine, and about 300,000 folks in the universe. In fact, so many people make a living chasing criminals in the future that a cheesy Western-themed TV series (a cross between and an interplanetary ) exists to provide them with intel on known bounty heads. All bounties must be taken alive and bounty hunters are liable for any damage they cause to bystanders or property, which is why, as well as in one particularly unlucky case, crashed into a police station, and once when they weren't given a bounty for stopping an AI in a satellite as it technically doesn't count as 'alive'.
• 's leading characters Ido and Gally/Alita are both bounty hunters, along with half the cast in the early books. • Nagi from the TV series is a bounty hunter who acts as Ryoko's - and her. • The, Rally Vincent and Minnie-May Hopkins (and friends), spend most of their time as bounty hunters when they're not running their titular gun store. Rally and Minnie-May hold the distinction of being one of the most accurate portrayals of real-life bounty hunters that can be found in anime, or at least getting a lot closer to the real thing than most shows do. Unlike most other hunters, they maintain very close ties with their local police forces and are not regarded as being above or outside the law by any means; on one memorable occasion, a crook managed to kidnap Minnie-May because his and Rally's high-speed chase caught police attention and ended with Rally being arrested for breaking traffic laws. • is a sort of the old west-style bounty hunter -. Though as the books and went on, he evolved from bounty hunter to a mercenary, or even an odd-job man.
There's other bounty hunters in the canon, but they're usually of the sadistic type. • In, all law enforcement in their post-magical-apocalypse world is handled by private companies of bounty hunters. The main characters make their money by claiming bounties. Licensing procedures are exacting and complex.
And anyone can stick a bounty on the internet and expect the person to be delivered. • Train, Sven, and Eve from are 'sweepers,' which are essentially the same thing as bounty hunters. • Inverted in, where the main character Vash is the one that has a bounty on his head. A sixty billion double dollar one at that. However, there are many unimportant side characters that are bounty hunters in there, and most of the destruction that follows Vash around is caused by people interested in the price on his head. The secondary protagonists, Meryl and Millie, seem like bounty hunters at first but are in fact insurance agents sent to minimize the massive collateral damage that bounty hunters after Vash always cause. • Nadie of is nominally a bounty hunter, but her actual job seems to blur the lines between bodyguard, hired gun, and assassin.
• There's a large presence of bounty hunters (for relatively small bounties; large bounties are almost always for / types that few people outside high-ranking Marines and fellow pirates could possibly take down) in the world, given that one of the ways the government keeps crime in check is by offering rewards for captured or killed criminals. They, however, pay 30% less if the criminal is killed, as only a live criminal can be given a public execution. It is possible for a bounty to be for live capture only, though to date there is only one known example of this involving a criminal who is also royalty. While given the nature of the story, most bounty targets are pirates, land-based criminals and the anti-government Revolutionary Army also qualify.
• Roronoa Zoro, one of the protagonists, chased bounties for a living before joining with Luffy, and his past helped the Marines give him the epithet 'Pirate Hunter'. His former partners Johnny and Yosaku remain bounty hunters, though seeing as they operate out of the East Blue they mostly chase small-time criminals.
• The pirate and former Warlord of the Sea, Sir Crocodile led the Baroque Works, a fearsome organization of bounty hunters. Infiltrating the Baroque Works, Vivi and Igaram went undercover as bounty hunters as well, one of the reasons why Vivi met the Straw Hats in the first place. The top 5 of them were very strong bounty hunters, particularly Daz Bonez (Mister 1) and Bon Clay (Mister 2). • After the outbreak from Impel Down, it's suggested that Daz Bonez is now a pirate like Mister Crocodile because he joined him. Galdino (Mister 3) is pretty much confirmed as a pirate since he joined Buggy who is now one of the new Seven Warlords of the Sea.
Bon Clay is still in Impel Down, but he's now the 'queen' of Newkama, the 5.5th level. • While their primary job is scrapping retired ships, the Franky Family of Water 7 also did bounty hunting work on the side. This came to an end after the Enies Lobby Arc, when their leader Franky was issued a bounty of his own and joined the Straw Hat Pirates.
The rest of the group move into other, less dangerous jobs. • Machika in.
She's following in her grandfather Zol's footsteps, although the bounty hunting part doesn't come up all that much. • Yuya of, hunting down 'the man with the scar on his back' who killed her brother.
She periodically threatens to turn in Benitora or Kyo for their bounties. • deconstructs several aspects of the trope. Gene Starwind and his kid partner Jim are technically odd-job men rather than bounty hunters, not least because. And in the rare case where a bounty is put out, the reward they get is usually far less than the trouble they spent on it. In the end, most of their time is spent on unrelated activities like treasure-hunting and squaring off against the pirate clans.
• The Warriors of the Organization in function a lot like the example of above. When a yoma preys on a settlement, the citizens round up money and make a request to the Organization. They dispatch a Warrior who slays the yoma and one of the handlers appears later to pick up the money. Reasonably, if the Warrior is slain, the Organization does not collect the fee until another Warrior successfully completes the mission. Blurring the lines of the trope, however, is the fact that while the Warriors do seem to have money (Clare once dumped a huge sum on Raki's lap when she was assigned to fight an Awakened One and Theresa could afford rather fancy clothes for a certain ), they do not actually seem to want or even need the money.
Bubble Shooter 5 02 Serial Mom. Their job is to kill yoma; it's what they do. Various motivations have been shown, but a pure mercenary motive has yet to be evident in any of the Warriors. • Almost all ninjas in, good or evil, are this in one way or another. Successful ninja almost invariably have somebody who will put a bounty on their head, be it the legitimate government of a rival nation or a criminal organization. And capturing criminals is one of the many missions that a ninja could be hired for. • In, after the case gets, they have occasional encounters with bounty hunters who want to bring them in.
The one group that appears on screen, the Canis Niger hunters, nearly capture Nodoka before being. • is this in the Frozen Teardrops novel.
• Some hunters from are bounty hunters. In-universe, this type are called blacklist hunters.
Not only that hunters in general are strong, hunters are also rich, thanks to their hunter licences. • In, when Crisis puts out the 'Dead or Alive' bounty on Lupin, at least three bounty hunters enter Zufu to attempt to capture/kill him. Lupin is so busy trying to escape from them that Inspector Zenigata manages to arrest him. • Hazuki is one in, and is drawn to the prospect of Alka's 7000 gold bounty Palam put out on her.
There are others, but they're killed within moments of seeing Alka. • 's job is a variation of this, hunting down undiscovered alien species and cashing them in to the Alien Registration Center for sizable bounties. He's generally fairly inept at this and often fails due to incompetence, bad luck or (in some cases) letting the bounty go for their own good.
What exactly happens to the aliens after they're brought in for registration never specified and seems a bit inconsistent. While deliberately letting aliens he's befriended go might imply that it's something unpleasant, it could just as easily imply that Dandy is too stupid to know since Alien Registration Center are certainly not portrayed as villains.
• Ryo Saeba of is stated to have worked as this near the end of his stay in the US. • ' catches interstellar fugitives, whether they're running from the law or just rich crime lords. It's a job that basically allows him to be a complete ass to everyone around him and still get paid. • DC also had a comic called Manhunter about a superpowered bounty hunter that retrieves super villains who jumped their bond, strictly for the money.
• In the series of graphic novels, the Saint of Killers spent a while working as a Headhunter in the old west, long before transmuting into the he is today. • In, Jon would supplement his mercenary work by undertaking bounty hunting jobs. •, discussed in the examples below, first appeared as a character in.
• Johnny Alpha, the protagonist in the stories from the British. • was employed to hunt down unregistered superheroes, for about an hour, during. Then he was sacked, mainly thanks to Cable. It didn't help that the first heroes he went after were the, who were registered.
• After 's disbarment in her late-2000s series, she became a Bounty Hunter employed by a bail bonds company owned by her former law firm. • The title character of the graphic novel. • Exeter from. A 'Lesser Race' being who hunts fugitive Lesser Races out of a sense of self-loathing. •, though on being called a '.
People don't make the mistake twice. • The was briefly a bounty hunter shortly after being kicked off the police force. • The 21st century version of Nighthawk in is a bounty hunter.
• In the 2005 miniseries, Colleen Wing and Misty Knight ran their own bail bonds firm. • book (in French Chasseur de primes) is a hilarious parody of the trope. Following a short introductory treatise on the general status of bounty hunters in the, we get introduced to the titular character, Elliot Belt, a notorious and unscrupulous representative of his trade.: Elliot Belt's appearance is an obvious nod to Western actor Lee Van Cleef, particularly his acting roles as merciless bounty hunters. • In the legal system, some superheroes make a living by registering as bounty hunters with the local authorities.
They are sanctioned to capture criminals (super-powered and otherwise), and are paid by picking up checks made out to their real identities (which are kept secret from the public). • As the series is a Western, bounty hunters often show up in, with more than a few forcing confessions out of their quarries (in case they're just suspects) and, in at least one occasion, using the body of some random man to try and claim a bounty on another criminal. • An alternate universe had as a licensed bounty hunter in a version of the Marvel Universe. • staring, based (very loosely) on real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey. Unfortunately, it basically deletes or downplays all of the things that make Domino's story unique, and turns the character into a typical Hollywood cliche. • plays one in; he's trying to catch a fugitive to get a $5000 reward so he can buy back the ranch that was stolen from him.
• features a number of bounty hunters. It may be the definitive example of the name being misapplied; 'mercenary' or 'hired gun' may be a more accurate term, as they are commonly hired for purposes like guarding, theft and assassination. • Greedo shows up first, trying to capture Han Solo and cash in on the bounty Jabba the Hutt has placed on him. • The Empire eventually hires the services of a number of bounty hunters, most notably.
(Pictured above with fellow bounty hunter Dengar, who he occasionally teams up with.) • features Boba's father, Jango. Like Boba, he's supposedly the best bounty hunter in the galaxy. Also like Boba he operates more as an assassin and mercenary than an actual bounty hunter. Or at the very least, he's not choosy about whether the bounty he's pursuing is a legal one, so long as the credits are good.
Note Technically, the bounty/assassination contract he's working is legal in the eyes of the Neimoidian government, but very much illegal in the eyes of the Galactic Republic government. • 's, especially the latter two movies of the, have bounty hunters as protagonists.
• In, the and his rival and partner Mortimer were bounty killers. • In, the Man With No Name engaged in a con involving turning in his partner for the bounty on his head, freeing him from the noose by shooting off the rope, and then splitting the take between them.
The villain Angel Eyes is a much darker version. His very first scene involves his target trying to pay him to kill his employer by offering more than what he was paid. Angel Eyes takes the money but simply tells him 'When they pay me, I always see the job through' and shoots him. In the very next scene, he collects his money from his employer and says the exact same line before brutally murdering him.
• In 's, the title character guns down a number of bounty hunters looking to collect on his $5,000 head. • In, two main characters are bounty hunters with differing methods: Major Marquis Warren, a black former Union soldier who prefers to shoot first and turn in the bodies, and John 'The Hangman' Ruth, who is famous for his insistence on delivering his prisoners alive so he can watch them stand trial and hang. When they meet each other at the start of the film in a snow-covered wilderness, Major Warren is sitting in the middle of the road on top of the frozen bodies of three dead criminals, while Ruth is riding in a stagecoach with his fugitive Daisy Domergue handcuffed to him to prevent her escape. • John Hurt's character, Jellon Lamb, in is a drunken bounty hunter who believes in neither God nor evolution, but is a big racist. He has a lot of fun with the.
• In, another Spaghetti Western, the majority of the villains are bounty hunters, and they operate exactly like assassins. The protagonist is a bounty hunter paid by the families of their victims to bring them to justice. The film is often seen as an intentional counterpoint to the Leone Westerns. • Beck, the main character of, is a 'retrieval expert' hired mainly to collect debts or other stuff that his boss wants from people, or in the case of the main plot of the movie, track down people who have cut and run and bring them back to him. He's described in many summaries as a 'bounty hunter.'
• Steve McQueen plays a bounty hunter in the 1980 film The Hunter where he gives Levar Burton, a fugitive who can't believe the guy can just up and grab him off the street, a copy of the quote from the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Taylor v. Taintor (please see the ), which Burton incredulously reads out loud. The movie is about a real-life bounty hunter, Ralph 'Papa' Thorson (who can be seen in a cameo serving Steve McQueen a beer). • In, Rick Deckard and other 'Blade Runners' who hunt down and kill replicants on Earth are essentially bounty hunters.
In, they are, in fact, called bounty hunters. • Over-the-top Leonard Smalls in. • Domino Harvey from the eponymous Tony Scott film,.
A case of, sort of. • The repo men in seem to like exoticizing their jobs by thinking of themselves as bounty hunters of cars. • In, Robert De Niro plays a former cop turned bounty hunter who catches a former mob bookie and must make a moral choice of whether to collect the bounty or turn the bookie back over to the crooked cops who got him kicked out of the force. A competing bounty hunter constantly tries to steal the bookie away from him. • Gerard Butler plays one in • Bounty hunters are sent to eliminate the titular creatures in and are featured to some extent in all of the sequels.
• One drops in partway through. • Jake Sharp (Woody Strode) in. • Many bounty hunters show up in, all in pursuit of the title character.
Johns and Toombs are among them. Is almost entirely set on a ship full of them, which is where Toombs came from. The ship in is half this, half private military force/slave ship. • Rutger Hauer plays one in. • Creighton Duke in is a bounty hunter who specializes in capturing serial killers. King Schultz () in.
Django himself becomes one when he starts to assist him. • Sekulik in is paid by the Germans to hunt down partisans.
• In the Western, Dan Nodeen (Christopher George) is a bounty killer. •: Likely the is Saul from the, who was first shown accepting payment for arresting the followers of Christ.
This is before Christ struck him blind and he had a, changing his name to Paul. • The titular character in Janet Evanovich's series is a bounty hunter, albeit a spectacularly bad one.
She's in terrible shape, dresses more Jersey Girl than SWAT, frequently has her cars blown up (and a funeral home, once), and keeps her gun unloaded in the cookie jar (not that she's licensed to carry it anyway). Luckily for her (and fans), she's got Ranger, an ex-Special Forces 'primo bounty hunter', and his 'Merry Men' to clean up after her. Ranger jokes that his company's budget has a line-item for Stephanie's misadventures, listed under 'Entertainment'. • Pretty much everyone who works for Vincent Plum Bail Bonds falls into the same description.
Luckily for them, their clients are just as woefully inept at jumping bail as they are at recovering them. • Just about everyone in Mike Resnick's are bounty hunters. The largest bounty in the universe, the one they all secretly (or openly) hunt after, is Santiago himself. Some have actually succeeded, but they don't live long enough to boast of it, because Santiago is a and has a lot of allies. • In, Holly and Mulch are forced to become bounty hunters in order to pay the rent for the offices to their PI business. Unusually for this trope, the bounty hunting is portrayed accurately, in that they're searching for a criminal who has skipped bail and are forbidden to carry weapons. • In 's, a bounty hunter is trying to grab a relative of a man from whom they had obtained the right to own his gene sequence, but when it was lost, they are of the impression they can obtain a DNA sample from one of his relatives by suing her, then filing for a writ to have her brought into the court where they were located.
• novels introduced the character of Leo Bonhart, who is really good at his job and so utterly vile at the same time that he makes look like a puppy. • The titular Witchers also qualify to a degree, taking out monsters with bounties on their heads. • Lots of Richard K.
Morgan's characters, including but not limited to Takeshi Kovacs from the series and Carl Marsalis from, fall into some flavor of this trope. Kovacs is an ex-UN Special Forces operator who works as a private investigator, mercenary, and general hired gun, while Marsalis is ex-British Special Forces who specializes in hunting down genetically modified people on behalf of the government. Neither is a particularly nice guy, but then again, they don't inhabit very nice worlds either. • by Walter Moers has Book Hunters, who could have been taken straight from, except that they make underground raids for old books. They got the patchwork armor and rusty swords and like to prey on each other for the greatest prizes. • Velith Il-nok of is definitely a stand-up individual who is in the profession for the good it does rather than just getting paid.
It's interesting in that, even while being alien, he is more 'human' than some actual human characters. • In the short story by Desmond Warzel, Stitsky is a Bounty Hunter of the contemporary sort who makes his living retrieving bail-jumpers; as the story commences, however, he's overstepped his jurisdiction, having accepted a couple's commission to locate and retrieve their runaway son.
• features bounty hunters who track down and kill who have escaped into mainstream society and are posing as humans, much like. Many characters express distaste for bounty hunters and their role in society. Unlike in the movie, they are known simply as 'bounty hunters', rather than 'blade runners'. • The sci-fi anthology centers around the adventures of the two titular bounty hunters on the of Riesel.
•: Wax was one of these when he went out to the Roughs. He called himself a 'lawman for hire,' and in his early years he was known for grabbing the most dangerous bounties off the board and coming back a few days later with the target tied up on his saddle. The truth is that in those early years, he was short on money, so he just grabbed the biggest bounties he could find.
Either way, he did such a good job that when the sheriff of Weathering eventually retired, he gave Wax his badge. •: a number of them are sent after Han over stealing from the Besilijic clan, including Boba Fett, who becomes his nemesis. •: in the Council Kingdoms, bounties and, by extension, bounty hunters are how most criminals are pursued and imprisoned. Most notable bounty hunter in the series is Josef, who actually left the job a year prior to the beginning of the story, when Eli convinced him that going with him would let Josef find better opponents.
•: The eponymous star was a Bounty Hunter hired to capture the outlaw gang who murdered his father. His rival, Lord Bowler, was also looking to collect the bounty on those outlaws. •: In one episode, Fiona is working as a bounty hunter and ropes Michael into helping her, only to have the man they capture hire them to prove his innocence. Bounty hunting seems to be Fiona's primary legitimate source of income when she is not working as an illegal arms dealer. •: former mentor and flame returns as a bounty hunter. He tries to get her to work for him to catch crooks, get better pay, and avoid the red tape. Beckett refuses.
He is later killed, causing Beckett to go on a. •: Ben Crowley. •: One reports the whereabouts of the fugitive Chimeron princess to the Bannermen in 'Delta and the Bannermen'. •: This show is a following Hawaiian-based bounty hunter Duane 'Dog' Chapman. His brushes with the law and use of have made him something of a controversial figure. •: Jeffrey Steele, the in the 1981 episode 'The $10 Million Sheriff,' who pursues the innocent Bo and Luke as though they were No.
1 on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List. •: This show is about a team of stuntmen who moonlight as bounty hunters of bail jumpers, for a bail bondsperson. •: Jubal Early from the episode 'Objects in Space' was a bounty hunter sent to collect on the bounty for Simon and River. He quickly proves himself to be a who is in it for the sadism, and is not above threatening to rape Kaylee- or threatening Simon with raping her if he won't reveal where River is hiding- in order to get what he wants. •: Cersei offers a lordship for whoever brings her Tyrion's head, leading to the death of at least one innocent dwarf. Cj7 Soft Top Installation. •: Likewise, Keisuke Nago was a bounty hunter shortly before becoming Kamen Rider IXA. •: In some ways, Kamen Rider Birth could be seen as a Bounty Hunter.
He was hired to retrieve a huge amount of Cell Medals, and in order to get them, has to destroy Yummy or Greeed. This had shades of real world bounty hunters, who are, by law, technically hired to retrieve the bail, which is physically represented by the criminal they're capturing. •: The shows revolves around a crew of interplanetary bounty hunters in a distant star system. They work for an organization of bounty hunters called the Reclamation Apprehension Coalition, commonly known as The Rack. The Rack is highly organized with their members only allowed to take bounties that fit their certification. A Level One warrant is a property retrieval bounty and only allows violence in self defense.
A Level Four warrant is issued against the most dangerous criminals and is dead-or-alive. A Level Five warrant is a straight up assassination mission.
The Rack acts pretty much as a secondary law enforcement agency for the star system. •: Devoted an episode to bounty hunters; the hunters in question were violent thugs though. •: Ilana is (or claims to be) a bounty hunter hired to bring Sayid to Guam. •: After leaving her job at Lux nightclub, Mazikeen becomes a bounty hunter with the LAPD. •: Frequently crossed paths with the Coltons, an entire family of bounty hunters.
They only all appeared together in the for an aborted. •: Vin Tanner used to operate as a bounty hunter; dramatic irony kicked in when he was framed for murder and had to go on the run himself.
•: Jesse in the episode '. •: In episode 4.18, Frankie Wells is this, using the title as a pretense to hunt down her brother's killer.