Greg called Kendall and Kendall told Shiv. What do you mean Greg alerted Shiv? |
They all betray each other constantly but it doesn’t mean it hurts less. I don’t believe the Caribbean offering was serious. No promise they make each other is worth the paper it’s printed on. They made and reneged on deals every five seconds. |
Sorry if this has been addressed. I haven’t seen the final ep.
So I’m confused about what happened to the siblings’ interest in Nan Pierce’s company. That was a major plot line early in the season. They wanted to sell to GoJo so that they could buy this company. Their offer was accepted. I realize they then pushed their Dad to get more from Mattson, since they spent more than they anticipated on Pierce. But did I miss a conversation where they decided to forget about Pierce? To me it seems that whole plot line fell by the wayside. |
It was a handshake deal, predicated on the GoJo deal, but not binding. The kids could theoretically go for it now, but they don’t have to. It’s not like they put down a deposit. |
It's like the game of Bitey that Shiv teaches Tom. They all hurt each other and they expect to be hurt. Shiv has brought Tom into the Bitey relationship fold. |
If the kids had not intervened and Waystar had bought PGM, the resulting company would likely have been too big for GoJo to buy, right? |
No, Logan was going to buy Pierce after selling Waystar |
This is the heart of it. |
+1 Agree with all of the above. Yes, I was actually impressed with the way in which Tom described himself. A worrier. A grinder. Someone who doesn't sleep at all because he's constantly up all night worrying. Without even realizing it, he is telling Mattson exactly what he wants to hear. This is why he got the job. Mattson knows Tom is the only serious, viable candidate - someone who didn't attend Logan's funeral because he was *working*. That was a great scene, mainly because Tom had no idea he was actually interviewing for the CEO position. |
It's strange to me how much of the commentary on this show seems to just skip right over the fact that the Roys are obviously a family dealing with tons of abuse, and that informs everything that happens in the finale.
Like I don't know, maybe I'm crazy, but it seemed to me that in choosing to vote for the deal at the end, Shiv was making a mature decision in recognizing that none of them were equipped to run that company and that they needed to move on. I don't see her joining Tom in the car as her claiming some kind of power wrt Waystar, but about her focusing on her family and marriage and seeing if she can make it work. It seems like Roman also realizes that his drive to run the company has basically nothing to do with what he actually wants or what makes sense, but is just about his messed up relationship with his dad. And the way Kendall just kind of devolves further and further as the season goes on, throwing away his kids, his siblings, his own tentative grasp on mental well being, for this pipe dream of succeeding his dad... I see people who appear to be upset or angry that he was denied that dream and I don't understand why, it was an unhealthy obsession. These kids were abused. Their father was abused. They've never been exposed to a functional marriage or, like, basic emotional maturity or communication skills. Like Jesse Armstrong said -- it's a tragedy. These are tragic figures. It just seems weird to get mired in which one was best suited to become CEO (trick question, they are all ludicrous candidates for that job) or to get angry on any of their behalf at anyone else for thwarting them in that goal. Who cares! None of them should be running a company, they should all go get like 30 years of therapy and stay as far as possible from Waystar. Just really having a hard time processing the commentary that seems to ignore the fact that the show is centrally about the dysfunction in this particular family and how it has ruined their lives. |
Show was boring and repetitive until the very end. Finale was a snoozefest. It was a chore for us to plow through this season. |
They literally ended up in the exact same spot where they were in the pilot:
Roman out of the company and kooky; Shiv outside the company, but Tom in; Kendall thwarted yet again. |
Precisely. It was 39 episodes of the. same. exact. s***. It speaks to how simple pretentious proles are that they think this is smart television. Wow helicopters. Wow private jets. Wow black luxury SUVs and cars. Wow corporate offices in a skyscraper. Wow a penthouse. Wow a country estate. Wow board room squabbles. Wow people boozing. Wow Roman said something a 7th grader might find edgy and humorous! Wow Kendall and Shiv overacting again. At its core this was such a painfully boring and cheesy soap opera. |
I think you missed the point. Which IMO was that all the the money in the world cannot bring you happiness, and that the world is deeply and tragically effected by the mercurial whims of rich people who became extremely powerful due to nothing but their birth. They show the country falling apart because of a decision Roman made capriciously in his own self interest and then you see their grief and sadness at...becoming billionaires because they never were able to get their father's approval or win the childhood race he set out for them. It isn't wow all those things. It is showing all those things as vacuous and pointless and how gross it is that obscenely wealthy people sit in them and wallow about how awful their lives are. |
The instagram-fication of television. Commoner wannabes lap up this shallow crap. |