Or we’ll see Shiv interviewing nannies at least. I agree Connor and Willa would be doting parents, but Connor at least has zero common sense and the kid would be spoiled terribly. I wouldn’t be surprised if Willa isn’t pregnant by the end of the season. |
I’m guessing only ATN carried his concession speech |
I keep expecting her to miscarry from the immense stress she is under. That is a neat way to wrap it up without any real decision being made. And will always leave her with the what ifs. |
This is an interesting theory that could work. She is clearly now on the outs with her brothers, and Tom may have some resentment for being forced to “make the call.” They may both find themselves on the outside and brought back together by this. I wonder if once Tom crashes from the coke the reality of having a baby on the way will change him. |
I had a similar thought, I mean lower level people probably give speeches to their volunteers/staff, but not televised. However his family has a network. So that was probably a bone thrown to him to concede to help Menken. |
Same. I felt sick and sad from start to finish. Gd Trump has really done a number on us, in every possible way. And he's not even over. Jesus. |
Disagree. I thought it had shades of the 2016 election, shades of 2020, and really captured the chaos of a newsroom on election night. |
This whole show has been about how these horrible people are constantly trying to break free of the ruinous cycles they live in - just, over and over, and over and over, they try to do something new and end up doing the same thing, stuck in the same luxurious trap. I think the ending will have to be that everything has changed, and nothing has changed, and they are still stuck - and because they are so powerful, we're stuck, too. |
This episode was far from Lazy writing. It touched us all so much, a terrifying idea of what could happen in the next election, and brought up history from 2016/2020. It was a great episode, perhaps the best one I've seen on Succession (Logan's death was the best acting). |
Agree, and I also appreciate how much this episode refused to soften any of the characters or make any of them sympathetic. There was a moment when I felt bad for Shiv (when she tells Tom about the pregnancy and then he asks if she's just using this as a tactic) but I didn't find her very sympathetic. But even in that moment, I can recall a million times when Shiv was very cruel and terrible to Tom and I kind of get where he is coming from. It reminds me of Veep, which could also be a hard watch even when it was very funny, because it's incredibly cynical about the people it portrays. But that cynicism allows them to be honest in a way a lot of scripted series are not. It's brutal but, I think, revealing. This episode was miserable to watch but will also stay with me a long time in a positive way, in terms of shaping how I think about media and politics and who has my best interests at heart (hint: none of the people in charge). |
+1. Succession has gone from a delightfully cynical take on corporate America to preachy political message fiction with an After School Special level of writing nuance, and all the ominous music and pensive close ups don’t really make up for the crude and simplistic storyline. |
The last line by Kendall about how some people just don't know how to cut a deal.
i was confused for a bit but I think I now get it and it's so brilliant. He is wracked by guilt b/c of his role in getting a fascist elected and he is assuaging that guilt by blaming Nate/Jimenez for not agreeing to block the deal. Anyone have a different take? The writing on this show is just amazing. |
This is an example of the lazy writing. In the world that Succession has established, there is literally zero chance that the Jimenez campaign would not agree to block the deal at that point. Killing one merger is a really small price to pay to keep a fascist out of the White House, right? Instead we are asked to believe, what, that they were just too honorable to make that kind of deal? The idea that a major political candidate in that world would not be compromised enough to jump at the opportunity is absurd. When did Succession turn into The West Wing? |
IMO Shiv used that moment to tell Tom she’s pregnant as a manipulation tactic. She starts out asking him to meet privately during an enormously frantic and stressful time period at work when he has no extra time. Yet she picks RIGHT NOW to take him aside and say “hey, I’m sorry for the way I spoke and what I said last night”. And then expects he to get in line and apologize to her. When he doesn’t react the way she expects, she uses the other information in her toolbox: her pregnancy info. She weaponizes this info and blurts it out. Right there and then. She’s had plenty of other chances in much less frantic moments and knowing the person she is and all her history of being so mean to Tom she uses this as a way to get him to act like she wants. Of course he’s suspicious of her motives and truthfulness. Anyone would be. |
Agree. The pregnancy was a little bit of a bombshell, but I don't think it becomes a big, dramatic point with an abortion story. Because that would suck up all the air in the room, and I don't think that's the goal here. |