Silicon Valley picked up the pace this week, with a quick, sharp episode about betrayal, failure, and the indignities of no longer being a billionaire.
Pied Piper plays dirty
In last weekâs episode, Pied Piper got screwed by a new rival called End Frame, the same people who âbrain rapedâ the team earlier in the season. In âAdult Content,â Russ finds out heâs not a billionaire anymore thanks to a series of horrible financial decisions, and tries to get Pied Piper to merge with End Frame to make quick money. Richard, who may have achieved Peak Timidity this episode, isnât about to do that, no matter how despondent Russ is over having car doors that open normally.Richard doesnât have to succumb to Russâs McLaren-sadness-induced whims: Gilfoyle steals a $15 million sales plan from End Frame by hacking its system, something so illegal that Monica insists sheâs not in the room when the conversation takes place.
Despite initially staging the worldâs quickest moral protest, Richard goes to oddly innocuously-named porn company Intersite and steals End Frameâs deal from out from under them by promising better delivery. Itâs a fantastic opportunity for some visual gags, as Intersiteâs serious CEO delivers corporate-speak to delegates from much less subtly named sites.
Gavin Belsonâs Failure Failure
Speaking of desperation causing out-of-character behavior, the always-deluded Gavin Belson has tipped over some sort of edge here. Itâs less that heâs acting differently and more that his usual bullshit isnât working.In the tech world, failure is often spun into a hard-earned lesson or an opportunity to pivot. But no matter how many times a would-be tech exec hangs a âMove Fast and Break Thingsâ sign or reads the chapters of Steve Jobs when heâs fired from Apple, most of the time failure is just plain bad business. In âAdult Content,â Silicon Valley mocks the the sectorâs fetishization of rebirth and do-overs with a perfectly wrong-headed speech by Belson.
Question! What is failure? To the ignorant or those in conventional industries, the recent Nucleus glitch may seem like a failure in the negative sense. But we in this Valley know that failures like this one are really stepping stones.Yet the only âpre-greatnessâ the Hooli team can come up with is Big/Bag Headâs potato cannon and the vague idea of mind-reading.
To bring us the iPhone, Steve Jobs first had to bring us the Newton. To bring us Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg first had to bring us WireHog. Before he brought us Digg, Kevin Rose had to bring us a whole lot of useless things...then after Digg, as well, for that matter...
The point being, what those in dying business sectors call failure, we in tech know to be pre-greatness.
The idea of a fallen mastermind making a triumphant comeback is one that holds more water than it should in Silicon Valley, and itâs nice to see Silicon Valley take the air out of its tires like this, though Iâm worried itâs a set-up for Belson to actually have a breakthrough.
Final thoughts:
- Continuing the theme of duplicity and failing hard, Dinesh tries to woo a Tinder prospect by making himself seem more dynamic than he really is. He changes his email signature to âSent from my iPhoneâ so it looks like heâs mobile, and actually gets a girl over to the house...only to discover sheâs already had sex with Erlich. And then she has sex with Erlich again.
- âNon Consensual Santaâ might be my favorite porn site name, though âPoop on My Wifeâ was pretty good, too.
Contact the author at kate.knibbs@gizmodo.com.
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