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Recap / Succession S04E10

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"With Open Eyes"

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"It's all bullshit. We're all bullshit."
Roman

Shiv and Kendall separately tally the board members they think will support the GoJo sale. They learn from Caroline that Roman has joined her in Barbados, and both of them fly there in hopes of swaying him to their respective sides. The three siblings argue about the deal. Meanwhile, Matsson, uncertain about moving forward with Shiv as American CEO, meets with Tom and sizes him up for the position. Greg learns that Matsson will likely drop Shiv and forwards this information to Kendall, who in turn lets Shiv know. After another round of arguing, Shiv and Roman agree to block the deal and present Kendall as an alternative CEO. The three take a swim together and play in the kitchen.

The next day, Kendall, Shiv and Roman drop by Logan's townhouse, as Connor and Willa want to get rid of its contents. Here, Tom tells Shiv that Matsson will give him the job.

At the board meeting, six of the board members support the sale, and six vote no. The tiebreaker vote falls to Shiv, who gets second thoughts and exits the room. Kendall and Roman follow her and a fight ensues between the three. She claims that she cannot see Kendall as leader of Waystar, especially because he killed a man. Kendall claims that the waiter's death was a lie he told his siblings, but this only turns Shiv further against him, as well as alienating Roman. The fight turns physical between Kendall and Roman, and Shiv storms out, disgusted. Shiv votes yes on the deal and the Waystar-GoJo sale is finalized with Tom as CEO.

The siblings go their separate ways. Shiv gets into a car with Tom while Roman orders a drink at a bar and smiles to himself. A despondent Kendall walks alongside the riverside and stares out at the water.


Tropes:

  • 11th-Hour Ranger: Stewy throws his support behind Kendall at the critical juncture. Unfortunately, it wouldn't have made a difference in the end.
  • Adoption Diss: During their final argument, Roman points out that Shiv is carrying the Roy "bloodline", since Kendall's kids aren't his: Sophie is "a buy-in" and Iverson is apparently Rava's child by another man note .
  • Alas, Poor Villain: Even after everything they have said and done, it's weirdly difficult not to feel a little sorry for the fate of the main Roy siblings, since everything they have struggled for was all for nothing, and don't even end up in good positions to go out on. Shiv is forced to continue the cycle of her mother by being in an unhappy marriage with a Waystar CEO (and with a child she's unsure if she wants); Roman is more or less back to being a carefree guy hanging out in bars, but it is still clearly broken by the entire ordeal; Kendall arguably gets hit the hardest, being left alone and in disbelief, having lost everything and destroying every relationship he possibly still had left, with the strong implications of contemplating suicide.
  • Alcohol-Induced Bisexuality: Implied when Kendall teases Stewy about how he kisses guys "on molly".
  • All for Nothing: Greg betrays Tom and Matsson in order to inform Kendall that Shiv isn't going to be made CEO in the event of GoJo taking over. Kendall is able to use this information to get Shiv on his side ... but their bid to stop GoJo fails when they resort to Chronic Backstabbing Disorder. Greg's only able to keep his job because Tom wants him to stay, even though he went behind his back.
  • Ambiguous Situation: Why did Shiv vote for the merger? Because she figured that being the CEO's wife would be a more influential position than being the CEO's sister? Or because she recognized that Kendall wasn't fit for the job and was trying to do the right thing? Or is it because she truly can’t live with the thought of any Roy sibling besides her being the CEO, and decides to sabotage Ken in one last act of spite? Word of Mylod is that Kendall was strutting around like Logan when they're at Waystar, and she just couldn't stand it.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: Greg and Tom, whose Odd Friendship is one of the few on the mend by the finale's ending.
  • Back for the Finale: Subverted. There's repeated discussion in dialogue that Lawrence Yee, unseen since season 2, is under consideration for the CEO job, but he never appears.
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: Shiv finally ends up being in a more affluent position than all of her brothers…at the cost of being in an unhappy marriage with Tom, the new Waystar CEO, with a child she’s unsure she wants, doomed to the same fate as her own mother. Worse still, she is little more than an underling for Matsson, who backstabbed her not long ago.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Matsson underestimates Greg, failing to realise that he's not playing with his phone but using a translator app to understand Matsson and Oskar's Swedish conversation. In the event, though, it proves to be of no consequence as the Roy siblings backstab each other at the crucial board meeting, allowing Mattson to take over Roystar anyway.
  • Big Brother Bully: Played for Drama. Kendall is 40 and his younger siblings Roman and Shiv not too far behind, and they're all supposed to be corporate professionals, so Kendall getting violent with them when Shiv doesn't do what he wants in view of their employees and fellow board members is a sign that he's really losing it.
  • Big Brother Instinct: Roman doesn't move when Kendall attacks him, but when he tries to grab Shiv, Roman screams at him and pulls him away from her.
  • Blatant Lies: Roman, sporting some stitches after his wading into the protest at the end of the previous episode, claims to have beaten one of the protesters up. Actually, he got knocked to the ground and trampled on by the protesters.
  • Book Ends:
    • The pilot and series finale both revolve around a pivotal moment where a character ultimately ruins Kendall's chances of leading a company — Logan tricking Ken into signing documents that shore up the former's control of Waystar RoyCo in the pilot, and Shiv ultimately casts the deciding vote to merge Waystar and GoJo after a confrontation in a nearby boardroom where Ken becomes emotional and dismissive of the waiter's death in Season 1.
    • In the pilot, Tom reassured Greg that he "has him" (as a loyal subordinate, who he'll keep around) during discussions about the potential succession plan at Waystar. In this episode, when Tom is given the CEO role at Waystar, and despite his anger towards Greg for leaking crucial information to Kendall, he ultimately sticks to his word and tells Greg he's "got him", giving him a subordinate role despite Mattson's thinly-veiled contempt for the "Judas" in his midst.
  • Break the Haughty: It's the culmination of a series-long project, but also within this episode specifically; compare the Kendall swaggering arrogantly through the Waystar offices when he thinks he's got the CEO position locked down, putting his feet up on his dad's old desk and basically acting Drunk with Power even before the vote, with the shattered, broken wreck of a man staggering around the offices and streets aimlessly and who ends up staring blankly at the Hudson with a Thousand-Yard Stare once it's been taken from him once and for all.
  • Brief Accent Imitation: Shiv, Kendall and Roman mockingly put on their mother's upper-class English accent while messing around in her kitchen. The home video clip shows Connor imitating Logan's Scottish accent, complete with his trademark "fuck off".
  • Call-Back:
    • When the family meets at the apartment to clear out Logan's possessions, Greg takes the bell he accidentally used to summon Logan's maid in the 2nd episode of Season 1.
    • Roman's "We are bullshit—we are nothing" comment to his brother is a subtle call-back to Logan's assessment of his kids in "Rehearsal" that "You are not serious people." Logan evaluated his kids as being unsuitable for running the Roy empire, and in that last scene, after the disastrous confrontation between the siblings, Roman is admitting that their father was right.
    • "No Real Person Involved," arguably the show's darkest Arc Words note  is invoked several times, this time pointing back at the Roys — Kendall tries to deny the waiter's death, Shiv is reduced to just a vote, Tom and Matsson are empty suits, Greg is traded like a piece of furniture, and Roman admits that they're all bullshit and all they've worked for is completely meaningless.
  • Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: The Roy siblings ultimately give into their penchant for this, destroying their chances of running the company. Matsson has shades of this too, as he 's perfectly happy to ditch Shiv after promising her the top job — and when Greg finds out about that, he's more than willing to use that information to betray him. Though Greg's own case of this trope backfires on him when the merger goes through anyway, leaving him dependent for his future prospects on the goodwill of two people who know full well what a backstabbing little weasel he is and clearly intend to keep him around solely for the purposes of watching him squirm.
  • Dark Horse Victory: Of the core cast, maligned and distrusted Tom comes out of the series in the strongest position, and he hoists Greg onto his saddle to boot.
  • Deadly Hug: A non-lethal variant; Roman begins expressing doubts about the vote when he sees Gerri walk in. Kendall moves to hug him, then presses Roman's head onto his shoulder so his cuts start opening up as an intimidation tactic.
  • Decided by One Vote: Whether to sell to Matsson or not lands at 6-6 in the Waystar boardroom, with the tiebreaker vote going to Shiv. She has second thoughts at the last minute and ultimately decides to move forward with the sale.
  • Digging Yourself Deeper: When Shiv confronts Kendall with his involvement in the death of the waiter as a reason why he is unsuitable to be the CEO, Kendall brushes this off by claiming that he was simply lying about having done it — not stopping to realise that either way this just makes him look worse, as he is either (a) desperately denying culpability in a death he caused just to get a job (which actually is the case), which makes him seem untrustworthy and at least somewhat sociopathic, or (b) was willing to lie to his siblings about having caused someone's death in order to play on their sympathies towards him, which also makes him seem untrustworthy and at least somewhat sociopathic.
  • Downer Ending: As far as the Roy kids' chances of trying to be the heir apparent to their father's company goes, this episode marks the end of that — and seemingly their relationships with each other — for good. Shiv and Roman both turn on Kendall in the climactic board vote, resulting in an incredibly ugly public spat laying bare how none of them are truly ready for the CEO position. Waystar is subsequently bought out by GoJo, with Tom installed as a lapdog CEO for Mattson.
  • Driven to Suicide: Kendall tells Shiv that he's been groomed for CEO since he was seven, and he "doesn't feel like [he] can live" without it, implying he'll kill himself if he loses the vote. The episode ends with him staring out over the Hudson River, seemingly contemplating suicide.
  • Entitled to Have You: The climax basically makes this clear, if it wasn't already so, that Kendall has this attitude towards the entirety of Waystar-Royco; his entire argument can essentially be boiled down to "I should be CEO because Daddy promised me when I was a kid and I'm the eldest boy and if you don't vote for me I might kill myself!", and he reacts with violent petulance when both Shiv and Roman quite reasonably point out that this isn't good enough reasoning to elect him chief executive officer of a major global media juggernaut.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • Roman is visibly and vocally disgusted when Kendall claims to have lied about killing the waiter, immediately switching to Shiv's position. As the siblings' subsequent fight devolves into a physical brawl Roman yells at Kendall for hitting Shiv, because she's pregnant.
    • Despite intending to betray Kendall by voting against him and bringing up many of his lowest moments as reasons why he shouldn't be CEO, even Shiv clearly views Roman's decision to bluntly bring up the fact that Logan apparently believed that Kendall wasn't the true father of his children as a low blow.
    • Shiv is somewhat mixed between appalled and disgusted by Kendall's lie about killing the waiter.
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good: For given values of "evil" and "good", of course, given we're discussing the Roy family. But while Kendall is confused and outraged by Shiv considering voting against him to begin with, he appears genuinely bewildered when Shiv and Roman react with disgust and immediately drop any support for him when he claims that he was lying to them about having killed someone. Not that it would have changed her decision, but still.
    Kendall: Why?!
    Shiv: "Why"?! I love you. I really — I love you, but I cannot fucking stomach you.
  • Evil Is Petty: Regardless of what one thinks of Kendall, it seemed that Shiv's initial reason for voting against him was that she couldn't stand that it wasn't her, so if she decided that no one should win.
  • Fatal Flaw: Each of the sibling's main character flaws ends up scuttling their chances at both retaining control of Waystar-Royco and in having any kind of meaningful relationship with each other going forward:
    • Shiv's untrustworthiness and willingness to stab others in the back; she has second thoughts about voting for Kendall and betrays him at the last second.
    • Kendall's inability to cope with real pressure; he increasingly falls apart when trying to convince Shiv to vote for him, in ways that ultimately reinforce that Chronic Backstabbing Disorder or no, he genuinely has no ability or place being in charge of a major corporation. Also his hypocrisy, since the way he instantly tries to claim he didn't actually have anything to do with the waiter's death when it's brought up sickens both Shiv and Roman.
    • Roman's snide cruelty; he brings up the fact that, according to Logan, Kendall's children aren't actually his own, which simply pushes Kendall's last remaining button and leads to a physical fight which only proves how unfitting for leadership Kendall is and cements Shiv's decision to vote against him.
  • Friendship Moment: Although furious with Greg for leaking information to Kendall which gave the Roy siblings a chance to stop the GoJo deal, Tom nevertheless uses what influence he has with Matsson to allow Greg to keep his job at Roystar.
  • Graceful Loser: Played with; of the siblings, Roman is the one who eventually has the ability to Know When to Fold 'Em, realising that neither he nor the others are cut out to run a huge corporate media conglomerate like Waystar-Royco and that they should just walk away from it. However, this doesn't mean that he's happy about the deal going through, and he basically has to be prodded into being in the same meeting room as Matsson to sign the final paperwork and smiling through a brief photo op.
  • Heel Realization: Or at least as much as can be gotten from a member of the Roy family. Roman's choice to no longer back Kendall is backed by an outburst where he claims none of the siblings are truly cut out to lead the company and that every power play they've done to try and earn leverage is for naught. While all the Roy children are distraught by the episode's end, Roman's demeanor shows that by comparison to Shiv and Ken, he's ultimately more accepting of the reality of the situation.
  • Henpecked Husband: Defied; after four seasons of being pushed around by Shiv, the balance of power ultimately shifts within their marriage once Tom nabs the top spot of CEO at Waystar-GoJo. His request for Shiv to go downstairs and wait in an SUV for him to leave signals the first notable change in her demeanor, as she ultimately complies with his request without question.
  • Hiding Behind the Language Barrier: Subverted. While getting drinks with Greg (an American who they know doesn't understand Swedish), Lukas and Oskar converse in Swedish about dropping Shiv as CEO. However, Greg is able to covertly use a translator app to understand them, and quickly informs Kendall.
  • History Repeats: Despite her fears of turning out like her mother, Shiv ends the show in a similar position as Caroline was a few decades ago — unhappily married to the Waystar CEO, with a child she's not even sure she wants.
  • Hope Spot: The "meal fit for a king" scene, where the Roy siblings childishly act like kids playing together for the first time in the series, takes place at around the episode's halfway point the night before the climactic board meeting, making the viewers think that maybe they can genuinely rally together despite their previously shaky relationships.note  Unfortunately, they end up backstabbing each other as always, except this backstabbing results in signing away the family company.
  • A House Divided: The ultimate reason of the ultimate fall of the Roys. Once again, the siblings resolve to unite and work together in order to fend off an external threat, this time Matsson's takeover bid... and once again, their inner tensions and resentments undermine their efforts, leading to the whole thing falling apart. This time, it's a messy meltdown in a meeting room with just the three of them, one which leads to Shiv voting for the sale to go through, and the implied destruction of any kind of relationship they may have had going forward.
  • Hypocrite: Shiv vents about how Kendall is so self-centred, but she is clearly no different, thinking that she should be the CEO.
  • I Resemble That Remark!: A dark non-comedic example. Shiv tells Kendall he'd make a terrible CEO, and Kendall responds with a furious public scene in front of the board that more or less proves Shiv right.
  • It's All About Me: Kendall's final "pitch" to Shiv about why she should vote for him pretty much boils down to why being CEO is good for him, as opposed to a concrete reason for why he would be good for the company or a better fit than his siblings as CEO.
  • Jerkass: As if it wasn't clear by now that Matsson is an absolute prick, even after he's decisively won and the takeover bid is accepted, he can't stop himself from making a gloating cheap shot to Roman about whether or not the deal has a returns policy.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: None of the siblings are wrong when they claim that neither of the other two has what it takes to be CEO.
  • Kick the Dog: After Shiv tells Matsson that Tom is just a bootlicker who will always "suck the biggest dick in the room," Matsson tests this assertion by openly talking about wanting to sleep with Shiv to Tom's face, purely to gauge how submissive Tom is.
  • Know When to Fold 'Em: Roman is the only one of the siblings to really demonstrate this; after Shiv makes it clear she's not voting for Kendall, the latter starts blurting out some clearly half-baked idea to try working on Frank of all people, only for Roman to shut him down by pointing out that "we're bullshit", and that none of the siblings are equipped to run the company.
  • Left Hanging: While the main question of "who will succeed Logan as CEO?" is resolved (it's Tom) many other threads from the series — such as the outcome of the election, what will happen in Tom and Shiv's marriage, how Kendall will cope with losing his chance to become CEO, whether or not Matsson will receive some comeuppance in the form of either the reveal of his dodgy India subscription numbers or the looming accusations of sexual harassment, and so on — are never resolved. The creators state that this is deliberate, as they essentially wanted to create the effect of the camera simply losing interest in each of the Roy siblings the very moment it became clear to us and them that they would never achieve their goal of taking over the company.
  • Long-Distance Relationship: Willa and Connor, who are only the happiest couple on the show by default, are planning to live apart; Willa will stay in New York while Connor becomes an ambassador as Mencken had indicated. She says that long distance might add some "spice" to their marriage. Shiv teases her sister-in-law with the fact that Mencken's status as President-elect is being challenged in the courts, notably dimming Willa's smile.
  • Madness Mantra: A downplayed example. While he only yells it twice, after all his other attempts at convincing Shiv to vote for him fall on deaf ears Kendall is reduced to simply shouting "I'm the eldest boy!" at her... within hearing distance of the board and employees present, which simply makes him appear delusional, petulant and immature. And what makes it even worse is that everyone present knows it's not even true.
  • Mama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: Weaponised when Roman claims that Kendall's kids aren't "bloodline". While this confirms that Sophie was adopted, the implication that Iverson is not Kendall's biological son raises a hitherto-unasked question about Ken's family note . If what Roman says is true.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: Shiv dismisses her husband to Matsson as a toadying bootlicker... which, as it turns out, is exactly what Matsson wants in a CEO. As opposed to her.
  • Not Helping Your Case: Kendall's tirade against Shiv, coupled by him actively dismissing the death of the waiter in Season 1 in defiance, is ultimately the straw that breaks the camel's back for Shiv. And even if she was still convinced, Ken's tirade is shown to be audible by much (if not most) of the office, causing them to reel in shock.
  • Old Retainer: As Kendall wanders down to the Hudson River at the end of the episode, he is shadowed by Colin, Logan's loyal body guard who is possibly a more-than-competent battle butler underneath his calm demeanor. While Colin could be there to prevent Kendall from committing suicide, his looming presence suggests that Kendall will never get out from under the shadow of his father. The sense of menace is not lessened by the fact that Colin is one of the few people who knows all the facts surrounding Kendall's role in the death of the waiter at Shiv's wedding.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Matsson shows genuine fear and rage for the first time on the show when he finds out that Greg snitched to the Roys regarding his actual plans for appointing Tom as his CEO and potentially upending it. Though it ultimately doesn't matter in the end, Matsson ultimately loses all respect for Greg, with only Tom preventing him from flat-out terminating him on the spot.
  • Puppet King: Tom sells himself as potential CEO to Matsson by promising following and asskissing. Matsson apparently agrees with this, and the show ends with Tom CEO of the merged Waystar-GoJo company, with Matsson heavily implied to be calling the shots from behind the scenes.
  • Pyrrhic Victory:
    • Tom gets the top spot at Waystar-GoJo — with the salary and benefits to match — but at the cost of ultimately being a corporate lapdog to Matsson, who only kept him on because he's completely subservient and willing to cut costs to the bone. He's also stuck in an unhappy marriage to a woman who is at the very least unsure if she wants the baby she's carrying.
    • This extends to the three siblings — the sale of Waystar to GoJo ultimately nets each of them around a billion in the buyout, but functionally shatters the dreams of all three in various fashions.
      • Roman is right back to where he was at the start of the series — a lost kid spending time in bars.
      • Shiv ends up in a situation where she has no real power and is following her husband's lead on a permanent basis. The fact that she does not appear to want the baby she's carrying means that she's more or less emulating her mother, something she has long feared. She's also unlikely to reconcile with her brothers any time soon.
      • Kendall's impulsiveness leads to him losing the last opportunity he might have had to run Waystar, and he's left dejected and with everyone (save for his bodyguard, Colin) having abandoned him; he's hinted to be contemplating suicide as he sits overlooking the Hudson River at the end.
    • Despite backing the wrong horse, Greg remains at Waystar — albeit with a pay cut and knowing full well that the man who owns the company holds him in contempt as well as having lost his only genuine friend, meaning his future is uncertain at best.
    • Although he's not seen in this episode, Mencken has one of these too — yes, he is the President-elect, but it's stated that there's a judicial challenge to the result in Wisconsin (which proved to be crucial in terms of electoral college votes), and even if he overcomes that, he'll have a public order nightmare to deal with as those who oppose him have taken to the streets in protest. He also no longer has key allies in the Roy siblings.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: With Tom installed as Matsson's puppet CEO, Frank and Karl both decide to activate their "golden parachute" retirement plans.
  • Self-Serving Memory: Kendall indulges in a little bit of this with regards to Matsson when trying to convince Shiv to stick to their agreement, referring to him as "the prick who killed our dad"... conveniently leaving out that the main reason Logan was on the flight where he died was because the siblings had pressed him to go to Matsson to try and get a bigger sum for the buyout so they could try and sabotage the deal.
  • "Shaggy Dog" Story: How the scheming and backbiting in the quest over who is going to succeed Logan Roy as the CEO of Waystar-Royco ultimately ends. Each one of his children ends up being ruled out due to both their sabotages and backstabbing against the others and their own numerous personality issues scuttling them. Tom is the one ultimately chosen, but even that is something of an empty Pyrrhic Victory as it's made pretty clear he'll basically be a puppet for Matsson.
  • Slow and Steady Wins the Race: Tom emerges victorious mainly because he's seen as less problematic than the Roy siblings, who all fuck it up for themselves while trying to stab each other in the back.
  • That Came Out Wrong: When confronted with the death he caused as a reason that he shouldn't be CEO, Kendall is taken aback and blurts out "Which?" for some reason (he presumably meant "Who?" but either misspoke in pure shock, or mentally caught himself just before speaking after realising that acting like he didn't know who Shiv was talking about wouldn't sound good either). This, as Roman incredulously notes, just makes it sound like Kendall has such an extensive collection of dead bodies to his conscience that he has trouble remembering them all.
  • Thousand-Yard Stare: Kendall spends most of the final moments of the episode staring blankly ahead as he tries to come to terms with the fact that his dream of succeeding Logan has utterly crumbled away into nothing.
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: Alone of the Roy siblings, ignored and disrespected Butt-Monkey Connor manages to come out of the series pretty well. He's set up in his father's fancy apartment (which Connor overpaid his widowed stepmother for, but still) with his beautiful Trophy Wife, sneakily arranges things so that he manages to get first pick of his father's belongings over the others, may be nominated as the US Ambassador to Slovenia (not exactly a plum diplomatic role, but hey, better than Somalia), and is set to get a pretty sweet amount of cash from the Waystar-Royco sale, which was pretty much the extent of his interest in the business to begin with. It's even hinted that he may actually have been Logan's favourite all along, to the extent that this was even possible (at least, on a personal level); the video he plays his siblings of Logan's dinner with his inner circle, much to the surprise of the others, shows that Connor was present, with Logan appearing to enjoy his son's company and Connor even getting away with some mild teasing of Logan. It's not all wine and roses — Willa doesn't look overly thrilled at the prospect that Mencken might not become president after all, meaning that Connor will be spending all his time with her — but compared to his siblings Connor has things pretty good.
  • Villainous Breakdown: The climax of the episode is essentially this for Kendall, who has become increasingly unscrupulous, ruthless and determined to trample over others in order to win — in short, more like his father — the closer he has come to achieving his goal of becoming CEO. When Shiv begins to have second thoughts, however, he begins acting increasingly irrational in his efforts to change her mind. He begins begging, claiming that he has nothing else in his life, denying his role in killing the waiter in the Series 1 finale when confronted with it, and finally ends up having a mini-tantrum where he simply yells "I am the eldest boy!" at her. He then completely loses it when Roman points out that Kendall's kids aren't biologically his (at least according to Logan), physically attacking Roman and trying to manhandle Shiv when, disgusted, she leaves the room to cast her vote. Finally, when it's all over and he's lost, the last we see of Kendall is him staggering to a bench where he sits and blankly looks over the river, the implication being that he is seriously considering suicide.
  • Wham Line: While the climatic argument was already tense between Kendall and Shiv, one exchange cements their broken relationship not only with how willing Shiv is to strike below the belt, but by Kendall's shocking non-reaction.
    Shiv: You can't become CEO because you killed someone.
    Kendall: Which?
  • "What Now?" Ending: The series ends with Ken alone, having functionally broken all trust with his family members and left alone to ponder what's happened, sitting on a bench by the Hudson River, with only Colin (his security guard) as his one remaining confidant.
  • Wimp Fight: Just like Shiv and Roman's fight in Season 1, Greg and Tom end up duking it out despite both having zero fighting skills.

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