Succession - Season 4

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.
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Anonymous wrote:I wonder if in some twisted way, Shiv thinks that voting for the deal so that Tom can become CEO might even the playing field in their marriage in a way that might make it almost functional. When their relationship started, Shiv had all the power because she had all the money, and Tom has always had to put up with abuse and disloyalty from her in order to stay in the family and maintain access to the lifestyle he wants.

But even though he's just a figurehead CEO, it's the most real power he's had in his life. He's going to get a big salary, stock options, and he'll have a ton of social power because he's now the US "face" of Waystar/GoJo. He now has real leverage in their relationship, which he's never had before. Shiv still has her billions (more than before thanks to the sale) and all the trappings of being a 1%er -- she knows all the right people and can get access to all the right places. In theory, at least, this move could allow them to operate as something akin to equals. They already have a weird power dynamic where they are both somewhat abusive of the other, maybe maintaining the tension of them both having leverage will help make that work.

Not saying Shiv's a romantic here -- I think she ultimately made a practical choice both for the company and herself. But the shot of her and Tom in the car makes me wonder if she's choosing that dynamic on purpose. Unlike her mom, she comes to the table with a lot of power, so it's not like she's signing up to be the little woman here. She can walk away any time and she doesn't need to ask Tom for anything. She's better off in a divorce now than before the GoJo deal because now she won't have to pay Tom support of any kind, he'll be too rich to justify it.



Interesting perspective. It did seem she was more interested in trying to salvage the relationship once she became pregnant.


Agree. In one scene she's asking Tom if he thinks there's anything left and he's the one saying he doesn't think so. But at the very end he reaches out his hand to her.

For her, the pregnancy could be one of several motives, among other motives like Kendall making a terrible CEO.

I wonder if Shiv and Tom take ACN in a more progressive direction. We'll never know....



I agree Shiv's decision was complicated, and did not come down to one simplistic reason.


She could either be married to the father of her baby with additional billions of dollars and freedom to do as she pleases. Or fighting with her brothers for power when she knows they all aren’t any good at running a business. Seems like an easy choice for Shiv.

The siblings have backstabbed each other many times. They will come back from this at some point.



I don't think Kendall will ever get over it. He's always ready to backstab but never takes any accountability, ever. As one PP said, he saw this as his birthright and sincerely believed he was entitled to it. Shiv needs him for exactly nothing, however. She and Roman will make peace, because he actually gets it. Kendall will continue on as the same self-centered, self-pitying person he's always been, which is why he will inevitably be alone.


DP. I do wonder if Kendall and Shiv will reconcile, though. I never thought they would after Shiv wrote that public letter about Kendall a few seasons ago. I thought for sure that was it. Yet they did reconcile. I think over time, they will again.



Hard to imagine his ever getting over this particular betrayal, but it's a nice thought!


And yet he did get over her previous betrayal - publishing a letter detailing his drug addiction, instability, and mental health. Her own brother.



As bad as that was, singlehandedly ensuring he lost the keys to the kingdom forever is a different order of magnitude. The show runner said this moment would be the defining one of his life.


Agree, not sure why someone keeps grasping for a happy ending. There is no coming back for Ken and Shiv, and even with Tom, she will always know, deep done, he hates her. What Tom her on the balcony was far worse than anything anyone else did to Shiv because he meant the ugly words he used to describe her.


Tom is confusing to me. Back in seasons 1 and 2, he seemed like he legitimately loved Shiv. He was just this goofy midwestern guy who thought he and Shiv were going to be this nice, monogamous supportive couple.

At the same time, he was such a jerk to Greg in season 1. So maybe he never was so great.

I feel like when looking at his relationship with Shiv, she wronged him first (cheating on him) and then it just derailed into a toxic mess where they repeatedly screw each other over.


+1
I actually think, even through everything, he does still love her. Maybe not in the way he did at first, but I think he cares about her. Especially since she's having his child. Yes, he told her that she would be a horrible mother, but I think he was just lashing out with the most hurtful things he could come up with at the time. He wouldn't have driven off with her in the end if there wasn't something still there. Same with her. A toxic relationship for sure, but I do think they still "love" each other.


Nope, he clearly meant every word he said on the balcony. He thinks so little of her, he thought she made up being pregnant. The end of marriage was his betraying the kids’ plans to Logan at the end of season 3.


In that case why is he still with her? What's in it for him? He got her job - and she still has $, but now he has $, too.

I think he loves her, and sees her for who she is. She might now see herself for who she is, too.


Shiv would still be a major asset to Tom, especially in terms of social legitimacy. And her money would help him, too - he's not a billionaire yet and I would assume Matsson will try to squeeze him on salary and stock options because that's how Matsson runs companies -- he's all about lean and mean so he gets to keep all the profits.

Tom's always been an outsider in that world and he hates it, a major reason he worked so hard on his career is the hope that it would one day legitimize him in Shiv's world. Well now he has that legitimizing job, but if he loses Shiv it could still undermine his ability to move effortlessly in that world, especially if he doesn't have the "f**k you" money it takes to move in those circles easily.

But I also do think he loves her on some level. He can be very tender and kind with her. He can also be cruel and cutting. She is almost never tender with him. Real question as to what their dynamic would be if they do in fact stay together and co-parent. I think realistically it will implode because she won't be able to resist baiting and poking at him, and with his newfound legitimacy, he will ultimately not be willing to take it anymore. But who knows. Maybe the combination of her dad's death, motherhood, and finally giving up on any dream of succeeding her dad will unlock something in Shiv we haven't seen before. People don't change easily but they do sometimes change, and becoming a parent and losing a parent are just the sort of crucibles that sometimes spur that kind of change.


He said he was mostly attracted to her money earlier this season. I believe he meant every word he said in the balcony scene. And he just took the job she thought was hers without a moment’s hesitation. Whatever love he had for her prior on the early seasons is long gone.


It's inaccurate to say that he said he was "mostly" attracted to her money, as opposed to her other qualities. He was just admitting that the money obviously played a role and was hugely appealing to him, as someone who had worried about money every day of his life before them. Plus he was acknowledging that Shiv's money is inextricably tied to everything about her. If he's attracted to Shiv's confidence, part of that is just money. If he's attracted to the way she speaks, her education, or her interests, money is part of all of that. The idea that you could love a billionaire on totally separate terms from their money is ridiculous. At that level, money shapes you.

I think he was honest in the balcony scene but I also think he was honest when he expressed tenderness towards her about the pregnancy at her dad's funeral, or when he reminisces about how they met. I think their relationship is messed up but also complex. Also, having been through it, I think it takes a remarkably hard hearted person to not feel love for someone who is carrying your baby. There is something primal about that.


He destroyed her relationship with her father and just took her job. That isn’t love.


Not to me. People decide for themselves what they are willing to accept in relationships and how to define love. I can't imagine being in a non-monogamous relationship, but some people think that's normal and even preferable. To each their own.

I also wouldn't say he destroyed her relationship with her father -- Logan did that on his own. It would actually be more accurate to say Logan destroyed Shiv's relationship with Tom, or that the money and power plays corrupted all of their relationships with each other. Giving Tom all the agency in that scenario is inaccurate.

And he didn't take her job -- it was never her job. She chose to believe Matsson was going to give it to her but he made no promises and clearly just used her. Yes, it's horrible that Tom winds up getting the thing she wanted. Awful. I would not accept that betrayal from my own husband. But also, unlike Shiv, I wouldn't propose that we open the marriage on our wedding night or kind of blithely accept that my husband might go to jail as a scapegoat for my father's company's crimes.

This relationship doesn't function like a normal marriage. These are the sort of people who "have an arrangement." Like how Logan and Marcia agreed to stay married and Marcia went on a permanent shopping trip to Italy while Logan basically lived with Kerry. But Marcia still loved Logan on some level (as did Kerry). I don't get it, but there it is.


Second all this.

This is the best summary I’ve read so far:

https://apple.news/AdyEcJLw7RcmFEHEyZM386g


Oh that is a good summary. Agree on pretty much all points. I really do think people are glossing over Shiv and Roman agreeing at the end that they shouldn't take over Waystar, that it's not what their dad wanted and it's also not what makes sense in any way. I see many people focused on the idea that Shiv betrayed Kendall or that Shiv is capitulating to Tom and I just don't think it's about that at all. It's about Shiv, and then Roman in agreement, realizing that they are fighting for and over something that isn't theirs, was never theirs. Their dad wanted to sell the company. He knew none of them was capable of taking over, he wanted to take it out of their hands. Their mom worked with him to do it.

It just took until the last moment for two of the three kids to accept this hard truth. And Kendall never will, and that's why he's Kendall.


There is really no question that approving the GoJo deal was the rational decision for any investor in Waystar from an investment perspective, and Shiv of course had a huge position. GoJo's likely significantly overpaying, and Kendall will obviously run the company into the ground if the deal is not approved -- he is not his father and is nowhere close to qualified, as the show has made painfully clear. That's not why she made the decision, though.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.


Ha ha the funny thing is that I agree with both of you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.


+10000

This show was not deep.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.


Hahaha I am hardly a fan boy. But if you watched that show and thought it was glorifying wealth than you're just not that smart. I'm not saying its super deep. I'm saying it was CLEARLY a criticism of wealthy nepotism, and reading it as...glamourous rich corporate soap is just, not particularly observant.
Anonymous
I do think the show has layers and I would argue the acting performances were really good (in part because I think those performances imparted layers that may not be that evident otherwise).

But I also see people saying this show is on the level of The Sopranos or Mad Men and I really don't agree. One thing about the show is how narrow it's focus is. It's like the same 12 people in similarly looking rooms doing similar stuff for four seasons. Compare that to how expansive and layered some of these other shows were, and the level of growth and change you see in the characters, or the time period covered by the show. Like thinking about the journey Walter White goes on, or how Betty Draper adapts while always staying very much herself over two decades, or the way the Sopranos developed characters like Dr. Melfi or Christopher over the course of the show, or how Tony's and Carmela's marriage shifted and changed.

I think Succession was an interesting show but I don't think it's on that level. I think Paddy Considine gave a more interesting performance on House of the Dragon (a sort of silly show, but the role gave him a lot to do) than Brian Cox on Succession. And I love Brian Cox! But the show didn't always give many of these characters that much to work with, outside the three main siblings.
Anonymous
Interesting point PP. No one grew or changed really in the show.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Show was boring and repetitive until the very end. Finale was a snoozefest. It was a chore for us to plow through this season.


Agree with this after the first season. Just the same plot and stories each episode. Yes, I know the kids were abused and that’s why they’re horrible but this could have been one season long. Nothing ever happened.
Anonymous
I don’t know if the writing became that mediocre or nobody on the show can act outside of the patriarch who died too early to carry this turd over the finish line. This season was so amateur and the obsession with this show makes no sense. The same plot and same visuals every episode for four seasons. Another boring a** boardroom vote to end the series? Did anyone think the “Superbowl” was dramatic and suspenseful? Did anyone buy the new president was literally Hitler (!) and Kendall’s wife and Shiv were terrified? It was all so over the top it became a joke. And Shiv and Tom’s relationship was just one corny cliche after another. To me this all fell flat.
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Anonymous wrote:I wonder if in some twisted way, Shiv thinks that voting for the deal so that Tom can become CEO might even the playing field in their marriage in a way that might make it almost functional. When their relationship started, Shiv had all the power because she had all the money, and Tom has always had to put up with abuse and disloyalty from her in order to stay in the family and maintain access to the lifestyle he wants.

But even though he's just a figurehead CEO, it's the most real power he's had in his life. He's going to get a big salary, stock options, and he'll have a ton of social power because he's now the US "face" of Waystar/GoJo. He now has real leverage in their relationship, which he's never had before. Shiv still has her billions (more than before thanks to the sale) and all the trappings of being a 1%er -- she knows all the right people and can get access to all the right places. In theory, at least, this move could allow them to operate as something akin to equals. They already have a weird power dynamic where they are both somewhat abusive of the other, maybe maintaining the tension of them both having leverage will help make that work.

Not saying Shiv's a romantic here -- I think she ultimately made a practical choice both for the company and herself. But the shot of her and Tom in the car makes me wonder if she's choosing that dynamic on purpose. Unlike her mom, she comes to the table with a lot of power, so it's not like she's signing up to be the little woman here. She can walk away any time and she doesn't need to ask Tom for anything. She's better off in a divorce now than before the GoJo deal because now she won't have to pay Tom support of any kind, he'll be too rich to justify it.



Interesting perspective. It did seem she was more interested in trying to salvage the relationship once she became pregnant.


Agree. In one scene she's asking Tom if he thinks there's anything left and he's the one saying he doesn't think so. But at the very end he reaches out his hand to her.

For her, the pregnancy could be one of several motives, among other motives like Kendall making a terrible CEO.

I wonder if Shiv and Tom take ACN in a more progressive direction. We'll never know....



I agree Shiv's decision was complicated, and did not come down to one simplistic reason.


She could either be married to the father of her baby with additional billions of dollars and freedom to do as she pleases. Or fighting with her brothers for power when she knows they all aren’t any good at running a business. Seems like an easy choice for Shiv.

The siblings have backstabbed each other many times. They will come back from this at some point.



I don't think Kendall will ever get over it. He's always ready to backstab but never takes any accountability, ever. As one PP said, he saw this as his birthright and sincerely believed he was entitled to it. Shiv needs him for exactly nothing, however. She and Roman will make peace, because he actually gets it. Kendall will continue on as the same self-centered, self-pitying person he's always been, which is why he will inevitably be alone.


DP. I do wonder if Kendall and Shiv will reconcile, though. I never thought they would after Shiv wrote that public letter about Kendall a few seasons ago. I thought for sure that was it. Yet they did reconcile. I think over time, they will again.



Hard to imagine his ever getting over this particular betrayal, but it's a nice thought!


And yet he did get over her previous betrayal - publishing a letter detailing his drug addiction, instability, and mental health. Her own brother.



As bad as that was, singlehandedly ensuring he lost the keys to the kingdom forever is a different order of magnitude. The show runner said this moment would be the defining one of his life.


Agree, not sure why someone keeps grasping for a happy ending. There is no coming back for Ken and Shiv, and even with Tom, she will always know, deep done, he hates her. What Tom her on the balcony was far worse than anything anyone else did to Shiv because he meant the ugly words he used to describe her.


Tom is confusing to me. Back in seasons 1 and 2, he seemed like he legitimately loved Shiv. He was just this goofy midwestern guy who thought he and Shiv were going to be this nice, monogamous supportive couple.

At the same time, he was such a jerk to Greg in season 1. So maybe he never was so great.

I feel like when looking at his relationship with Shiv, she wronged him first (cheating on him) and then it just derailed into a toxic mess where they repeatedly screw each other over.


+1
I actually think, even through everything, he does still love her. Maybe not in the way he did at first, but I think he cares about her. Especially since she's having his child. Yes, he told her that she would be a horrible mother, but I think he was just lashing out with the most hurtful things he could come up with at the time. He wouldn't have driven off with her in the end if there wasn't something still there. Same with her. A toxic relationship for sure, but I do think they still "love" each other.


Nope, he clearly meant every word he said on the balcony. He thinks so little of her, he thought she made up being pregnant. The end of marriage was his betraying the kids’ plans to Logan at the end of season 3.


In that case why is he still with her? What's in it for him? He got her job - and she still has $, but now he has $, too.

I think he loves her, and sees her for who she is. She might now see herself for who she is, too.


Shiv would still be a major asset to Tom, especially in terms of social legitimacy. And her money would help him, too - he's not a billionaire yet and I would assume Matsson will try to squeeze him on salary and stock options because that's how Matsson runs companies -- he's all about lean and mean so he gets to keep all the profits.

Tom's always been an outsider in that world and he hates it, a major reason he worked so hard on his career is the hope that it would one day legitimize him in Shiv's world. Well now he has that legitimizing job, but if he loses Shiv it could still undermine his ability to move effortlessly in that world, especially if he doesn't have the "f**k you" money it takes to move in those circles easily.

But I also do think he loves her on some level. He can be very tender and kind with her. He can also be cruel and cutting. She is almost never tender with him. Real question as to what their dynamic would be if they do in fact stay together and co-parent. I think realistically it will implode because she won't be able to resist baiting and poking at him, and with his newfound legitimacy, he will ultimately not be willing to take it anymore. But who knows. Maybe the combination of her dad's death, motherhood, and finally giving up on any dream of succeeding her dad will unlock something in Shiv we haven't seen before. People don't change easily but they do sometimes change, and becoming a parent and losing a parent are just the sort of crucibles that sometimes spur that kind of change.


He said he was mostly attracted to her money earlier this season. I believe he meant every word he said in the balcony scene. And he just took the job she thought was hers without a moment’s hesitation. Whatever love he had for her prior on the early seasons is long gone.


It's inaccurate to say that he said he was "mostly" attracted to her money, as opposed to her other qualities. He was just admitting that the money obviously played a role and was hugely appealing to him, as someone who had worried about money every day of his life before them. Plus he was acknowledging that Shiv's money is inextricably tied to everything about her. If he's attracted to Shiv's confidence, part of that is just money. If he's attracted to the way she speaks, her education, or her interests, money is part of all of that. The idea that you could love a billionaire on totally separate terms from their money is ridiculous. At that level, money shapes you.

I think he was honest in the balcony scene but I also think he was honest when he expressed tenderness towards her about the pregnancy at her dad's funeral, or when he reminisces about how they met. I think their relationship is messed up but also complex. Also, having been through it, I think it takes a remarkably hard hearted person to not feel love for someone who is carrying your baby. There is something primal about that.


He destroyed her relationship with her father and just took her job. That isn’t love.


Not to me. People decide for themselves what they are willing to accept in relationships and how to define love. I can't imagine being in a non-monogamous relationship, but some people think that's normal and even preferable. To each their own.

I also wouldn't say he destroyed her relationship with her father -- Logan did that on his own. It would actually be more accurate to say Logan destroyed Shiv's relationship with Tom, or that the money and power plays corrupted all of their relationships with each other. Giving Tom all the agency in that scenario is inaccurate.

And he didn't take her job -- it was never her job. She chose to believe Matsson was going to give it to her but he made no promises and clearly just used her. Yes, it's horrible that Tom winds up getting the thing she wanted. Awful. I would not accept that betrayal from my own husband. But also, unlike Shiv, I wouldn't propose that we open the marriage on our wedding night or kind of blithely accept that my husband might go to jail as a scapegoat for my father's company's crimes.

This relationship doesn't function like a normal marriage. These are the sort of people who "have an arrangement." Like how Logan and Marcia agreed to stay married and Marcia went on a permanent shopping trip to Italy while Logan basically lived with Kerry. But Marcia still loved Logan on some level (as did Kerry). I don't get it, but there it is.


Second all this.

This is the best summary I’ve read so far:

https://apple.news/AdyEcJLw7RcmFEHEyZM386g


Oh that is a good summary. Agree on pretty much all points. I really do think people are glossing over Shiv and Roman agreeing at the end that they shouldn't take over Waystar, that it's not what their dad wanted and it's also not what makes sense in any way. I see many people focused on the idea that Shiv betrayed Kendall or that Shiv is capitulating to Tom and I just don't think it's about that at all. It's about Shiv, and then Roman in agreement, realizing that they are fighting for and over something that isn't theirs, was never theirs. Their dad wanted to sell the company. He knew none of them was capable of taking over, he wanted to take it out of their hands. Their mom worked with him to do it.

It just took until the last moment for two of the three kids to accept this hard truth. And Kendall never will, and that's why he's Kendall.


There is really no question that approving the GoJo deal was the rational decision for any investor in Waystar from an investment perspective, and Shiv of course had a huge position. GoJo's likely significantly overpaying, and Kendall will obviously run the company into the ground if the deal is not approved -- he is not his father and is nowhere close to qualified, as the show has made painfully clear. That's not why she made the decision, though.


Roman and Shiv had seats on the board of Waystar that would have given them considerable ability to rein Kendall in. Certainly if she wanted power, the most opportunity would have been with Waystar, a board seat and likely a significant role within the company. Whereas with the acquisition she is the semi estranged wife of the puppet ceo of an American subsidiary of GoJo. She just didn’t want to hand Kendall the W when she had the ability to deny it to him.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: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.


Several posters have already made these points. I agree with you (and them).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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 have to tell you, what you just wrote epitomizes what a “simple, pretentious prole” would take away from this show. Zero nuance. Zero critical thinking skills. You seem to see everything at face value, with no capacity at all to dig deeper. Let me guess: you are Sanctimonious Twit, back to lecture the rest of us for being “simple,” while you yourself have no concept of reading between the lines. At all. Talk about simple. And incredibly dull.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


Exactly. The PP has missed so many points, I feel sorry for them. What a literal existence.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.


DP. Why on earth did you watch it then? Your posts are hilariously clueless.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: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.


You pretentious fan boys and girls can't admit you were duped into becoming obsessed with a shallow, formulaic, and cheesy prime time soap opera. It's not deep, it was not elevated and genius. It was just Days of Our Lives with a bigger budget.


Hahaha I am hardly a fan boy. But if you watched that show and thought it was glorifying wealth than you're just not that smart. I'm not saying its super deep. I'm saying it was CLEARLY a criticism of wealthy nepotism, and reading it as...glamourous rich corporate soap is just, not particularly observant.


+1
The PP is probably the same simpleton who described the first episode as a boring “baseball game.” I laughed so hard at the utter lack of observation skills.
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