Give them credit: before they went out,Watch Dark Fantasies (2010) they took at least one really good swing at the tech gods.
Silicon Valley, which returns to HBO Oct. 27, opens its final season with a rarity: Amazon, Facebook and Google are directly called out by name. In Episode 1's cold open, these companies have been hauled before a Senate hearing. A Senator recounts their admissions to various misdeeds. Hooli CEO Gavin Belson (Matt Ross), once the show's big bad, now struggling to stay relevant in a wide world of corporate villainy, cuts in: "we've admitted wrongdoing too!"
The hearing is teed up for Pied Piper CEO Richard Hendricks (Thomas Middleditch) to walk in and give a rousing speech about the importance of internet privacy, even as he pratfalls and exudes Zuckerbergian levels of discomfort. But as with other tech founders that once vowed not to be evil, Richard's position on user rights will acquire some shades of grey by episode's end.
'It's harder to be silly when things are so grave'
Though the satire gets darker and the writing gets sharper, there's a dark cloud hanging over Silicon Valley's swan song. It's the fact that a topical comedy with a six-month gap between writing and screening simply cannot keep pace with real-life tech-world terrors any more.
Silicon Valley is changing too fast and becoming too Orwellian for Silicon Valley— as the showrunners freely admit.
"It makes it harder to be silly, when things are so grave," says Alec Berg, executive producer of Silicon Valley (and guy you might remember from the "inside the episode" bits of Barry)in an interview withMashable prior to the Season 6 premiere."In a way we have a similar thing to [HBO's presidential satire] Veep.It was just time for Veepto hang it up, because satire is about making things more extreme to show their ridiculousness. How do you make things more extreme when they're already off-the-charts extreme?"
Show creator Mike Judge, who knows a thing or two about political satire turning into terrifying reality — he also made Idiocracy— agrees. "In the beginning it was more fun-absurd," he says, casting a glance back at the way-different world of 2014, when Silicon Valleypremiered. "These guys [in tech] were just pompous blowhards back then, and now ..."
"They moved fast and they broke things," says Berg, who often finishes Judge's sentences, referencing Facebook's infamous early slogan. Berg chuckles darkly. "They broke things like the world."
To be clear, Berg and Judge aren't wrapping up the Pied Piper story because of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, or because Mark Zuckerberg seems hell-bent on turning Facebook into a dystopian hellscape of unchecked pro-Trump ads. They're ending it because the tale of a startup growing from strength to strength, from Season 1's incubator to Season 6's vast warehouse HQ, has a built-in time limit.
"It's a show about aspiration," Berg says. "You can only be an outsider for so long. Six seasons is the right amount of time."
At the same time, the comedy well has clearly dried up. There's a lot of sighing and shaking heads as we discuss Zuck, the ultimate outsider-turned-insider. The day after the Silicon ValleySeason 6 premiere in San Francisco, the Hendricks-esque Facebook founder delivered an online address in which he basically shrugged off lies in campaign ads, while the viewer comments chosen by the algorithm were so fawning they would have embarrassed an autocrat.
How do you satirize that?
Or take Elon Musk. The show has fired its share of shots at the Tesla entrepreneur over the years. Musk has fired back, suggesting that the showrunners didn't understand the true spirit of the Valley because they haven't been to Burning Man. (In the five years since he said that, Berg and Judge have resolutely refused to visit the desert festival; however, the pair tease the fact that they are finally featuring a Burning Man-like event in Season 6).
But how do you riff on 2019 Musk with his weird, sad, self-inflicted tweet-based disasters? Can you turn calling a cave diver "pedo guy" in a tweet, then doubling down, then ending up in court for defamation, into a rollicking half-hour of comedy? How about his horrible Harambe auto-tune, or his bizarre pot joke about buying back Tesla stock at $420 a share that led to a $20 million SEC fine and the loss of his chairmanship?
Berg and Judge shake their heads. They got nothing more extreme than that. And if these comedy legends got nothing, ain't nobody got nothing.
'It became about people saving the world'
At least the timing of tech dystopia has allowed the show to go out with a bang — by turning our heroes into more than just delivery vessels for satire. Season 6 sees them turning into something more like, well, our heroes.
"At the start, their aspiration was to make a billion dollars," says Berg, even though Team Pied Piper may have cloaked that greed in claims of saving the world. "Then the rest of the tech business turned to the dark side. So it actually, literally became about people saving the world."
That suggests we'll see an ending for Richard that somewhat mirrors the experience of Thomas Middleditch himself. Not only has Silicon Valleychanged the actor's career (winning him big-time movie roles, making him the face of Verizon), it also led to him becoming an investor in actual Silicon Valley startups — specifically, green tech companies.
"I like to think my investments are a little bit different" than the stereotypical "deliver donuts by drone" kind of company, Middleditch says. "I've certainly met a lot of people who seem like they're making the world a better place."
Then, just like his character, Middleditch second-guesses himself, worried that he's falling into the classic Silicon Valley trap of thinking whateveryou're doing is making the world a better place.
"I don't know. Maybe I've just drunk the Kool-Aid. Maybe I've lost all my edge, my satire."
There's a lot of that going around.
NASA aims to land on the moon in 2 years. Why that won't happen.The best space images of 2023: You've got to see them.Ant Group denies shell listing rumors, warns against stock scams · TechNodeNYT's The Mini crossword answers for June 30Amazon deals of the day: Coleman tent, Ninja Foodi indoor grill, Sony WHThe stunning deep sea footage scientists filmed in 2023Webb telescope just saw something strange on UranusAnt Group denies shell listing rumors, warns against stock scams · TechNodeNASA aims to land on the moon in 2 years. Why that won't happen.Xiaohongshu account ban trends on Weibo hot topics · TechNodeWhat are comets? The secret lives of space snowballs.TikTok Book Awards 2024: Check out the shortlistWebb telescope just saw something strange on UranusUnionPay International partners with WeChat Pay to enable crossAlcaraz vs. Lajal 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for freeDjokovic vs. Kopriva 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for freeApple AirPods Max vs. Sony WHWordle today: The answer and hints for July 1Black Myth: Wukong nominated for Game of the Year at 2024 Steam Awards · TechNodeJamaica vs. Venezuela 2024 livestream: Watch Copa America for free Best Sony deal: Save $31.99 on the ULT Field 1 portable speaker at Amazon Trump's China tariffs reportedly tanked the TikTok deal Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 6, 2025 Best iRobot Roomba j7+ Robot Vacuum deal: Save $300 at Best Buy Best speaker deal: Save $20 on the JBL Clip 5 TikTok ban looms in U.S. Here's the latest. Best Google Pixel deal: Save $200 on the Google Pixel 9 How to watch MLB: See every game your team plays Best SSD deal: Save 40% on the Samsung 990 PRO 4TB SSD at Amazon LG 65 inch UT70 LED UHD Smart TV deal: Save $250 at Best Buy NYT Strands hints, answers for April 7 NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for April 5: Tips to solve Connections #194 Bayern Munich vs. Inter Milan 2025 livestream: Watch Champions League for free NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for April 6: Tips to solve Connections #195 ‘Severance’ surprise pop NYT Strands hints, answers for April 4 Martian dust devil swallows another in rare video Bestway Hydro Best travel deal: Take 30% off Southwest flights Best Fire Stick deal: Save $20 on Amazon Fire Stick 4K
1.5199s , 10139.171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Dark Fantasies (2010)】,Pursuit Information Network