- Homeland Security refers to the bald guy as "The Observer".
- The diner's jukebox is playing Willie Nelson's cover of Patsy Cline's Crazy - a song regularly featured on Lost.
- Why was the Observer so specific about the jalapenos? Why eleven - why not a dozen?
- Screenshots of Observer's Notebook. He was writing from right to left.
- Screenshots of View Through Observer's Binoculars
- Crane had Massive Dynamic sign on it
- Peter - "There's nothing special about me" - foreshadowing that there is something unusual about him, probably due to something Walter did.
- Fringe seems to be fond of the element
Iridium. Walter used
an "organo-iridium compound" to enable Roy McComb to perceive the
"Ghost Network" in episode S01E03.
Fun facts: Only 3 tons of iridium are produced a year, and the Iridium Anomaly is linked to the massive extinction event that killed off the dinosaurs.
- The guy in the watchcap is John Mosley, wanted in connection for a double homicide in Seattle a month ago. He has a record of drug felonies.
- IMDB lists Mosley as "The Rogue". I don't know what the source of this is or whether it's canon or not.
Mosley's Gun:

- Mosley's watchcap has Green and Red Dots. The dots have appeared in the view through the Observer's binoculars and on Olivia's Uncle's kayak in her hallucinogenic contact with John Scott.
- It seems like Mosley "heard" the signal Walter elicited from the macguffin.
- Mosley's Duster doesn't have Washington State plates.
- Nitpick: the warehouse where the macguffin was a secure site, complete with FBI and Army guys in full combat gear. Why is their total perimeter defense one balding, slightly overweight, overly polite, FBI guy talking on his cellphone?
- Slight Nitpick: OK, Mosley has a cool gun. That doesn't explain why no one in the warehouse even gets a shot off at him.
- Nitpick: Walter mention Project Thor, a "subterranean torpedo" that he worked on for the Army. Nobody asks him: how was Thor supposed to work, how far did you get on it, did William Bell work on it too?
- Nitpick:

Broyles has a room and 2 people devoted exclusively to the Observer - a totally bald guy who always wears a suit. Yet he walks around him at the hospital (in episode s01e02 - Same Old Story) and never notices him.
- Everyone at the warehouse is dead.
- Major Nitpick: Why is there NO security for the macguffin at Walter's lab? At the warehouse it looked like a good portion of the 10th Mountain Division was there in full battle gear, yet Broyles and Olivia leave it at Harvard with only Astrid, Peter and Walter. And Broyles didn't want to move it because it wouldn't be safe. This is so undeniably stupid that it soured the whole episode for me.
- Nitpick: Mosley shot Colonel Henry Jacobson point-blank before he hooked him up to the mind-reading machine, yet the Colonel isn't dead and doesn't appear wounded.
- Mosley's mind-reading machine looks cobbled together, not slick and hi-tech.
- Maybe Nitpick: It's 700 miles from Boston to Roseville, Virginia. I don't know if the plot allows for John Mosley and his baby-shit yellow Duster to spend 10+ hours driving back to Boston from questioning Jacobson in Virginia . Unless of course he flew, but how did he get his gun and mind-reading device onto an airplane?
The Observer:
- Doesn't taste things very well, hence his choice of condiments.
- Is expressionless, but not emotionless.
- Calls the macguffin "the beacon".
- Says he can't touch the Beacon.
- From the titles: "Observers Are Here" - Plural?
- Tombstone Screenshots. The dates are wrong for Robert Bishop to be Walter's father - Robert died in 1944 and Walter was born in 1946.
- Mosley (refering to Peter's buried relative Robert): "Shame you never met him" - Has Mosley met Robert Bishop, prior to 1944?
- Why the heck does Peter need to dig carefully? The Beacon travels through the earth but can be damaged by a shovel?
- Serious Nitpick: Why doesn't Olivia have the whole 7th cavalry with her? She learned where Walter hid the Beacon at the Federal Building, I dare say there might be some law-enforcement types hanging around.
- Mosley can kill an entire warehouse full of heavily armed and armored soldiers and FBI agents, but he has to run away from from Olivia armed with a pistol?
- Mosley isn't bulletproof, or even bullet-resistant
- Observer: "Departure on schedule"
- Apparently the Observer can read minds.
- Nitpick: You know what Broyles doesn't mention at the hospital? That they've recovered Mosley's weird-ass gun, and his homebrew mind-reading machine that he likely had in his car. They're like...clues.
- Walter's story about how the Observer saved his and Peter's lives suggests that the Observer had knowledge of the future.
- You know why I'm going to watch Fringe next week? Because Olivia considers Johnny Walker whiskey and dry granola a suitable dinner.
Consider:
- Mosley's mind reading equipment could be related to Observer's abilities.
- Mosley's cap and the Observer's binoculars share the 4-dot logo. sidebar: When did secret conspiracies start putting their logos on products?
- Mosley as "Rogue"
- Is it significant that Mosley never took off his watchcap? Didn't it seem kind of bulkier than normal?
Hypothesis: Mosley worked for whatever group the Observer is in. He went awol, cobbled up a mind-reading machine from what he learned in the group, and has some kind of mind-reading/mind-control blocking tech under the watchcap-like aluminum foil or copper mesh.
- What was Mosley going to do with the Beacon once he acquired it?
- Mosley and the Observer are not part of the Latin-Speakers.
- Who sent the Beacon, and for what purpose? Both times it has appeared it seems that it hasn't actually done anything worthwhile. I would suggest that you don't make strange things suddenly appear in Quantico unless you want them to be noticed by the Federal Government.
The Observer may have some superhuman abilities, but he still needs:
- A Watch
- Money (and he's a generous tipper)
- Binoculars
- Notebook
- Cellphone
- Gun
- Food
Text appears to be a Unix/Linux shell script:

I may be the first person to notice this - worship my mighty otaku geek skills.
Questions and Inferences:














