The Prestige TV Podcast - ‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 9: Who’s the Secret Eagan?
Episode Date: March 14, 2025Before heading to the ominous Cold Harbor, Jo and Rob do a check-in on the opening credits (10:08), play a guessing game of “Who’s the secret Eagan?” (13:10), and run through each character’s ...arc in the episode (19:19). Plus, the best zinger of the episode (1:00:19) and payoffs or lack thereof so far (1:05:13). Email us! prestigetv@spotify.com Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of ‘The Prestige TV Podcast’ and so much more! Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Kai Grady Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This episode of the Prestige TV podcast is brought to you by CoffeeMate.
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Hello, welcome back to the Prestige TV podcast feed.
I'm Joanna Robinson.
I'm Rob Mahoney.
We're here to talk to you about the, as Ben Stiller said,
a hundred different times in the official pod this week,
the penultimate episode of Severin.
That's how you know he's a podcaster now.
He loves the word penultimate.
And he has arrived.
So before we get into this episode,
we're here to talk to you about episode nine,
the after hours, written by the creator, Dan Erickson,
and directed by Uda Bricevitz,
who we've already talked about her,
as an incredible TV director previously in the season.
So, excited to talk to you about this.
We haven't talked about this at all, Rob, so I actually don't know how you feel about
this episode.
We're going to do sort of like a big picture look.
Before we do that, some like programming announcements and they're a little bit more
detailed than they usually are.
But with payoffs.
Don't skip ahead like you usually do.
Pay attention.
Okay?
Take notes.
The severance finale is next week.
You may have heard.
I've also heard it's 76 minutes long.
76 minutes long, correct?
Episode 10, 76 minutes long.
So we will be breaking down that next week.
And that finale episode is going to drop Thursday night.
So like right after the finale airs, this podcast, we usually do this on a Friday morning.
This podcast will be up Thursday night next week.
But we have a bonus episode next week because we just want to like squeeze every last drop of milk out of that goat, I guess.
I hated it too.
Yum.
So Wednesday at noon Pacific, Rob and I are doing like a live Q&A mailbaggy thing on YouTube.
So we'll have links up in our socials and stuff like that.
But you can find us on Ringer TV, the YouTube channel.
We will be, you can email us your questions.
Rob, where can they reach us for this podcast?
Always at pineapple bobbing at gmail.com.
And of course at prestige TV at Spotify.com.
If you're, I guess, less fun or you just don't.
feel like bobbing today. So you can you can send your your theories, your questions,
your queries there. Yes, please do. We're going to need them. Like we're going to take questions
live from the chat, of course, but we got to get some fodder to get started. So please send us in
theories, ideas. I think just kind of general questions about the world of the show. It doesn't
have to be guessing at the end game. Like let's yeah, let's have, let's have fun with the goats
among us. That sounds great. So, so yeah, so live Q&A on Wednesday at noon Pacific, Thursday night
drop for the finale pod. And then we'll have a follow-up pod for you guys at the beginning of the
next week where we can engage with all of your emails, your reactions to the finale, all that
sort of stuff. And we might have something more to do, but we will reveal that as it comes.
So that's all of our severance plans. In addition to the ongoing White Lotus coverage,
Rob and I dipped into the pit this week. Rob, this is our third prestige episode together this
week. Do you have any takes left in you? Or did you reserve some takes or severance or you're all
take down? I'm a little take baron at the moment. But, you know, something about these severance pods in
particular, Joe, just brings out the life in us, I think. You know, something about the cold,
desolate wilderness of seeing cure proper, of seeing, you know, Helena in a nice plunge pool. I just
think there's something about this episode that's really going to keep us alive. Well, you notoriously
love to dissect an egg into uncomfortably small pieces and eat it in front of your dad question
mark um even the egg cutter i don't like it i don't either i there are some kitchen implements
where i'm just sort of like we don't need this well yeah it makes me uncomfortable the general rule is
if it's a one use implement you don't need it in your kitchen and it seems like all this thing does
is dice a boiled egg into six identical pieces which you don't need anything to do okay i have a
follow-up question for you on this. Yes. What about like citrus juicer? I mean, you can, that one,
I think you have to have, for one, essential to your kitchen. Also, juices multiple kinds of citrus,
for the record. That's the loophole I thought you were going to find. I think it's allowed.
Follow-up question, apple corer. No. Okay. Cut your apples or eat the apple. You don't need a
corer. Do you know that I used to, I worked in a bakery and, and I didn't know this.
Yeah, just briefly when I was a teenager.
And we had this thing that I love that was almost like a pencil sharpener where you basically like stab the apple onto it and you like crank it and it peels the apple.
And it was just for like mass apple peeling for like various like strudels and pies and stuff like that.
So pretty sick stuff.
Hell yeah.
Stuff.
But no egg cutter.
You mentioned the cold frosty environs that we find all of our eagens and otherwise in.
one last note on sort of timing of next week our listener zach wrote in to point out that the season two finale is airing on march 21st which is the spring equinox aka the day in mythology that persephony emerges from haines and begins spring holy shit
it's also a full moon this week and it's full moon on white lotus this week as well so i don't think they're planning any of this but i don't think so either but if they are the northern californian in me loves
to talk about it.
Yeah.
So, you know.
Okay.
So let's start with big picture thoughts on the episode.
Rob, last week's episode, episode eight, was, I would say, quite controversial.
People felt pretty divided on it.
A lot of people felt quite negative on it.
How are you, you know, and we said it wasn't our favorite episode, but I thought
we found a lot of, like, good stuff to talk about.
Oh, easily, yeah.
What, how did you feel about episode nine?
Where are you sitting with this?
I think you're seeing some of the after effects.
of an episode like that where we talked about
the sort of storytelling momentum
in taking this huge diversion into
Cobel's storyline. And you need that
if you're going to reintroduce Cobel in the story in some
way, if you're going to bring her back with
Mark and Devin and loop her back into the
action, you need to know what she's been up to.
But that also means you have to do a lot of just kind of
moving the chains on the other characters
to get them now in place for the finale.
And so I will say, I did feel a lot of that,
a lot of kind of positioning the pieces on the board.
I also thought that we just had some breathtaking emotional moments in this episode.
And so that to me is a fair enough balance for a penultimate endeavor.
I'm really excited to talk to you about how well those emotional moments hit or not for me as we go through.
But I agree I had like table setter in my notes here.
I had checking in on plotlines we've been away from for three weeks.
Only to sort of clear the deck of players because there's a version of the finale where we don't see.
Irving,
Bert, Miss Wong,
or maybe even Dylan.
I know.
You know?
Like this is like,
it's potentially setting up
but just sort of like,
we've put these characters
to the side
in the case of Irving
maybe forever question mark
or who's to say.
So I thought that was interesting.
And then,
so I liked this episode
better than I liked episode eight,
though, to be clear,
you and I were higher
in episode eight than like some of
the more critical
pieces of the fandom.
But,
my frustration points were a little sharper with this episode than they were with episode
eight because episode eight sort of what Damon Lindelof was talking about when we talked to
him early in the season about like sort of where in the season you can get away with certain
things.
Yes.
And in an episode nine of a 10 episode season, when you have Harmony Cobals show up and dramatically
say Cold Harbor and then not tell them what Cold Harbor is.
Nope.
in a way that no human would ever do that,
only a TV character keeping us in suspense
about what Cold Harbor is would do.
That I felt like I felt the sort of the gears behind the storytelling,
you know, sort of groaning and creaking a little bit.
Even the delivery, just Cold Harbor.
It's like this is not human interaction.
I know Harmony Cobel is on her own wavelength,
on her own planet in a lot of senses,
but this is just not how any of this part.
part of the story would go. I think overall, the Mark and Harmony stuff continues to mystify me
as far as why that is being executed in the way it is. And we can get into it as we get into
that part of the story. But I have no answers as to why almost any of that is happening other
than it needs to happen to get the story where it needs to go. And that's not really satisfactory
to me. Thank you so much for sharing with us your incredible Harmony Cabell impression. And that
reminds me that I should tell listeners
we here at
the ringer at Spotify are currently
unable to put clips into
our podcast for
very boring reasons that we don't need to get into
but you will
not hear any clips from the episode
unlike last week where we crammed like so many clips
in you won't hear any place from the episode
was it our fault? It might have been
you won't hear any clips from the episode and we can't
even do the burving drop so we're going to have to rely
on Rob's impression is
to get us through. And this week of all weeks to not have the burving drop is heartbreaking. It's tough. No crab
rangoon. Like, we're bereft, honestly, but we'll soldier through. I want to start, I do want to go sort of
like plotline by plotline, but I want to start with this, like, let's check in on the opening credits.
Okay. Because this is something that we've been like looking at every week, not every week,
but like as the season evolves, we're sort of like, oh, that's what that vial of milky goo is. It's the
medicine that Mark's taking or that's why there's an ice flow or that's why there's this
that and the other stuff. And so I'm looking at it. I'm like, what's still left that I don't feel
like has been fulfilled by the plot yet? Is it the dozens of cure babies? Oh, we're going to get
there. That's my last thing. First of all, more explicit Mark v. Mark scenarios. Do you know what
mean? Yes. That's such a foundational part of the opening credits. And I don't know.
that I feel like I've felt them in conflict with each other.
Would you say that in the opening credits it is V?
Because it's a lot of like Mark Yankin,
the other version of himself around,
pulling him through various holes and orifices.
And it's,
it's not what you want.
It's not what you want to see.
Come out of a human head.
But I always interpreted it a little bit more as...
Mark helping Mark.
Not necessarily like helping repositioning,
maybe saving in some instances,
maybe whipping about,
but not necessarily being in direct conflict, if you know what I mean.
Okay.
So I feel like there's some scenarios where it seems conflicted,
but you're very right that there are also some scenarios where one is carrying the other,
let's say, like under that elevator curtain part of the opening credits.
Okay, there's that.
So Gemma in the testing floor elevator we've seen.
But that image in the opening credits flashes between Helena and Gemma.
and Gemma. And on the one hand, that could just be, hey, these are two women that have captured Mark's fancy, or are we going to see, as seem to be indicated in this episode, Hallie and or Helena get on that elevator and go down to the testing floor before all is said and done.
I mean, despite all of the Mark and Harmony and Devin plans, Helly's the person who's actually closest to getting to the testing floor, to the extent that when she goes down there, she will still be Helly, which we don't really know.
She won't be though. That's the one that's the thing I'm, okay, here's a theory I saw on Reddit this morning. Credit to the Redders, they're the best. That really intrigued me. And again, we're going to save most of our what's going to happen in the finale, even though I just started talking about it for our Q&A. But if Heli and Mark both get on that testing floor elevator and go down, it will be their outies on the testing floor.
Yeah.
It will be Chinese diner, zoo food energy down on the testing floor.
And that's very exciting to me.
Is that not exciting?
They're not going to make it out of that elevator.
Those two in a confined space, I put nothing past them.
I think that could be really fun.
Okay, last one at least.
Proliferation of baby cures.
That's one way to put it.
That brings me now to a segment I'm calling Secret Egan.
And the game I would like to play with you, Rob Mahoney.
I'm so glad that there's just an endless variety of shows we can apply secret baby logic too.
You know, Secret Baby for sure, but also this is reminding me of like in the, were you a Battlestar Galactica person?
Oh, of course.
So say we all, Joe.
Yeah, Secret Cylon or at the height of Thrones mania, secret Targaryen.
Like, this is a game we like to play.
Okay.
So Secret Egan.
We get in this episode, when they're breaking into the birthing cabins.
she's one of James, right?
Like that fake pregnant Devon is one of James, which the implication is that Jamie Egan, like Elon Musk, has decided to just sort of spread his seed all around.
He's a betterment of humanity.
He's a busy man.
There was an item in the newspaper that mentioned that a woman got pregnant while she was severed.
Yes.
That was a whole thing.
I think it was a news report.
It was like a TV news report where Natalie had to explain how it happened on like CNN effectively.
One of James is what I would say.
Okay.
So let's go down a list.
Okay.
And I would just like to hear your input.
Number one, Ricken.
By far the funniest secret Egan possibility.
I really hope Rickon isn't Egan.
Rickon's on my list.
Okay.
Rob says yes.
I'm just going to take notes here.
Okay.
Harmony, Cabell.
I think
Twofold
Yeah
Is she an Egan
And then has she had a child
By an Egan
I think no and yes
Is what we're being positioned for
Like the
Her showing up
At the birthing site
Knowing just what to say
sounded a lot to me
Like she's been on the other side
Of that situation before
Where she was the one being smuggled in
Perhaps
Plus her
Our listener, Holly, wrote, Harmony, if not an actual lactation consultant, knows enough to assist Devin maybe from personal experience.
Yeah.
So not an actual Egan herself, but perhaps the mother of an Egan.
And we already mentioned this early in the season, but could that Egan in particular be Helena, Helly?
We know nothing about Helena's mom.
Yeah.
I think if Harmony is, in fact, the mother of an Egan, it would almost have to be Helena, just based on the characters on
the board unless it's like, oh, there was a mystery baby that is since dead or out of the story
for some reason.
Like the narrative knots, I think, would start to tie themselves if it's someone we don't know.
And so, yeah, if there's, if there's going to be a connection, it would be to Helena,
which I don't love, to be honest with you.
Me neither.
Mark or Devin.
No, I don't think so.
I agree.
Okay.
Drummond.
Yes, but like extended family.
I think he's more of a cousin or something.
Or like just like a Egan, yeah, like an Egan.
I mean, I guess they all are. I don't like that word.
Anyway, okay. A connected, distantly connected Egan.
Yes.
And then I felt a little uneasy in my heart and my mind and my soul and my stomach when I googled whether or not the following actors were biracial.
But I did do that. So let's talk about this.
Okay.
Miss Wong.
Possible.
Possible.
Possible.
Dylan.
No.
Okay. And then here's my fave personally. On the pot on the official pod this week, which was like not the most, I think I got the least out of this particular official pod. Not out of entertainment, but like I think they're just holding all their cards very close to the best right here before the finale. So I understand why. But their interview this week was Cindy Cole Alexander who plays Natalie. And she had this really interesting part where she was talking about early in the season, the two encounters between.
between Natalie and Milchick, when Milchick is trying to have this sort of like, hey, have you a person of color, had this same experience as I, a person of color? Can we find fellowship in common cause here? Yeah. And what Cindy Cole Alexander said is like that she is an actress made this choice to lean into Natalie's what she called light skinnedness to say, no, we are not the same you and I. I am a light skinned like person of color and you are not. And that makes me different. Slavis.
quote unquote, like better, like in the warped imaginations of a Natalie.
Right. So could a Natalie be a secret Egan?
I think it's possible. I would say the fact that she was also given the paintings
suggests that she, I mean, she's clearly being othered in a way that's similar to Belchick,
for sure. I'm going to say no, just because I, frankly, I don't want too many secret eagons
on the board. And so if I'm already putting one or two up there, I don't want Natalie to be
one as well. Okay. So to recap, it's Ricken.
I hope so.
I really hope so.
And unfortunately, perhaps Harmony has, you know,
a mothered a secret or acclaimed Egan.
Okay.
So that has been the stomach-churning game of Secret Egan.
If you have nominations for this bleak, bleak game,
you can email us at pineapplebobbing at gmail.com or prestige TV at Spotify.
Yeah, who else could it be?
like Mark W.
Secret Egan,
Alia Shawcat,
Secret Egan?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sure.
Random, was he an Italian guy?
What was the other guy?
He was.
Okay, thank you.
Secret Egan.
That was a hatred, Italy.
It's all right.
You know, James has been abroad.
You know, like he is a busy man.
He's a man about town.
Like, I'm not putting any...
He's a continental traffic.
Again, I think he's capable of anything.
That's true.
Okay.
Let's do, let's go.
sort of person by person as we go through this episode because everyone is kind of siloed into their own story by design. We are, we are meant to say, wow, Milchick's plan of basically decimating the MDR camaraderie has certainly worked and everyone's in their own little side plot. But let's start not with a member of the MDR team. Let's start with Milchick.
Okay. Milchick v. Drummond. This is an incredible encounter, obviously.
Um, what, do you think that the only reason he wasn't fired on the spot is because of this intensive pressure around the completion of Cold Harbor?
Basically, yes.
No other way he would not be fired on the spot for what he did here, right?
This was the like, I'm throwing my badge and gun on the table and storming out of the office speech.
Yeah.
So, yeah, it felt like he was quitting, even though obviously he was.
he is not. And I think the nature of this interaction overall and Milchick kind of asserting some of
his authority and asserting some of what actually is his jurisdiction, I think sets up pretty
effectively the stuff with Mark on the phone and the subsequent scenes. Like that that almost
doesn't happen if he's feeling desperate and under the gun and like Drummond is all like on his
back trying to get Mark to come back in to finish Cold Harbor ASAP. And so like the idea of
giving Mark the day, I think is dependent on this exchange happening.
That said, Joe, I will say this exchange felt very mixed to me and some of it very, very flat.
The monosyllabically situation I enjoyed, him rightly pointing out, not my job, not my, not my circus, not my monkeys out in the outside world.
Devour Feculence, way too cute.
Yeah.
Way, way too cute.
I kind of agree with you, even though I, you know, my understanding is that it is quite.
popular a moment among people.
A satisfying thing to say to one's horrible boss.
But somehow less satisfying than eat shit.
Yeah.
Were you fellow Buffyhead reminded of, because our listener Vinnie pointed out that when he
says to put that monosyllabically, he then follows it with monosyllables.
Right.
It's not my fault.
What Mark Scout does when he is not at work, it's yours.
Did it remind you at all of Buffy and Spike out for a walk?
Bitch.
Bitch.
I'm always thinking about Spike when I can.
I kind of agree.
So there's a few like callbacks inside of this episode.
This is more of a resolution, not a callback.
But there's a few moments that call back in ways that satisfy me.
You know, like this episode ends with She's Alive, which was the cliffhanger.
of the season one finale.
One more for the road.
If someone who does have access to clips and can put them together in a super
cut in a way that we no longer can,
can put together every time someone this season has said some variation of
she's alive, I would love to see it.
Nothing tops the season one finale of the slow mo.
Oh, the slow mo's so good.
But, you know, there's a couple different callbacks,
and some work and some don't, and yeah,
some feel a little too cute for me.
And I'm inclined to agree with you.
As for Ms. Wong, who is sent to Gunnell Egan's Empathy Center in Svalbard, where she will work to steward global reforms.
This feels to me like a Milchick call rather than a Lumen call.
Definitely.
This is Milchick being like, you hung me out to dry, you narct on me, I do not like having you here, you're at, I'm sending you to Spallbard, which like if you thought it was cold and dreary and key,
year. Wait till you get a load of Smallbarn. That's tough. Anything you want to say about Miss Wong's
departure here or sort of the role, if we don't see her again this season or at all, the role she played
this season? I'm a little confounded by the character. And some of that is like, was she just
here to add to the weirdness of the dynamic and to kind of sop up mystery as we're going
along and trying to figure out who she is and what role she plays? Obviously, there is the element of
taking this idea of child labor,
which is so critical to the Lumen identity
and transposing it into an office setting
and calling it a fellowship.
All good.
All good here.
No problems whatsoever.
It's a classic rebranding.
Classic rebranding.
I appreciate the PR work.
Yeah.
At the end of the day,
I still have so many questions about Ms. Wong.
I hope this is not the end of her story.
Like, if the end of her arc
is her as a little girl with her earmuffs waiting for the bus,
Like I'm, I understand what we're doing there, but it feels like kind of a missed opportunity given her presence throughout this season and given like how fascinating that character could be. And so I'm, I am still waiting for something with Ms. Wong. And I hope this show like continues to pay off her presence in the story. I'm just a little worried that she might be out of here.
Let me tell you my inside baseball reason why I think, um, this is the last we see of Ms. Wong. How soon do you think it's going to be until we get severance season three?
eight years
yeah this is a classic
this is a classic
I source this back to the TV show
Lost where they had a
a kid in the first season
and then he just got really tall
and they had to sort of contort the plot
to write him out of the show
tall Waltz
so this happens all the time
on shows when you cast kids
this is why
this is why allegedly
the Harry Potter actors
for the
potentially ill-advised
HBO show
Who's to say?
HBO show that they're making.
I think they're making it like back to back to back to back because those kids are going to grow.
Yeah.
And they have to try to like outpace them.
So Miss Wong, the actress who plays Miss Wong, Sarah Bach, I believe, has just enrolled in college.
Yeah.
I want to say Northwestern.
I saw a clip of her as like a little meet and greet clip at Northwestern.
What a delight.
Yeah.
And she was talking about like, was it Britt Lauer?
It was like one of one of her, one of the.
I think it was.
Who, like, recommended her, like, that she'd check out Northwestern.
What a wreck letter to get, Britt Lauer.
Yeah.
Britt Lauer rec letter for Northwestern.
But, like, yeah, I mean, you know, anyway, I feel like that's probably the last we'll see Ms. Wong.
And I think your idea of her as a mystery sponge is one thing.
But I think mostly it's just a sort of show, and I could be wrong.
They seem to really like her.
But, like, I think it's meant to show, yes, the history of child labor at, at,
Lumen.
Sure.
And then also, yeah, the potential insidious future.
We talked about this in the previous pod, this idea that's floated in one of the
newspaper clippings about Lumen experimenting with severing as young as five.
Yeah.
So in terms of like that degree of child labor, grim, quite grim.
I think putting us inside that process of a child being indoctrinated, being brought up in
the system and the way that harmony was.
was, for example, different timeline, but similar, like similar circumstances, that is helpful to
have.
Smage less ether, like a little bit.
I would certainly hope.
I just think overall this season, what I'm coming to, and maybe I'll feel differently
on the other side of the finale, a lot of the backstage stuff we've gotten as to the
operations at Lumen H.Q, the Milchick storylines, I thought, initially led with so much
promise and so much like potential emotionality and ultimately kind of fizzled out for me.
The Ms. Wong stuff similar, like, I was so eager.
to get to know this character and understand her more out of the gate.
This is where we end up potentially with that character.
I just feel a little disappointed, for example,
if Milchick's story this season is coming into his own
by returning to the similar flowery language that he prefers.
I feel like we've got more with the potential clearing out of a number of other characters,
Milchick is primed to be in the mix next week.
And so I hope there's something more.
than plot for him to do.
Yeah, I just feel like Drummond as word police
is such a goofy place for this plot line to end up.
And I think that's what undercuts some of the power in.
Like, Tremel Toemann's given an amazing performance.
And I think ultimately delivers some absolutely phenomenal phone acting with Mark
as he's sort of navigating the aftermath of these conversations.
Yeah, yeah.
I just think it's a weird exchange and it's a weird place for this character.
And who knows where it will end up.
But so far, I'm having a little trouble.
with the milk chick stuff overall.
Who among us hasn't stared at a too small iceberg photo on the wall to inspire us to give grace
to our colleagues, as they call in?
Should we throw one up in the void?
Yeah.
For me here, some ambiance here in the void.
I think it'd be nice.
I also really like that Mark's like, I just need the day.
I'm not sick.
I just need the fucking day.
I support it.
Okay.
So let's turn from those plot lines to something more overtly emotional, which is like Irving and Dylan.
We'll talk about them one by one.
But I wanted to group them together here because I'm going to go ahead and call in front of the pod.
Alan Seppinwall was talking about this episode.
And I was like expressing some of my frustrations.
He pointed out and I really like this point that like Irving and Dylan inside of this episode exist as this sort of like cautionary tale for the love triangle.
quadrangle polycule that we're tracking with Mark and his various ladies.
Oh, yeah.
Previously, Harmony Cabell said quite memorably that there's no honeymoon ending waiting
for Mark, right?
And that hasn't stopped us from trying to like do the math that will make it work out.
There's a lot of math involved, though.
The geometry is getting increasingly complex.
How can Gemma be happy and Heli be happy and maybe even Helena be happy and all the
Marks be happy, you know, and what we see here with the absolute dissolution of the Dillon-Dillan-Dillan
Gretchen Love Triangle.
Yes.
And the Irving, the birving, you want to give us?
Everybody's talking about birving.
Everybody's talking about birving.
Rob, it's incredible.
Thank you.
I really appreciate you.
I have to go to a really deep and dark place in my soul to channel Billy.
But you got there.
I appreciate it, though.
Thank you, Joe.
No, thank you.
And then Irving and Bert and this sad ending for them.
I do want to talk about this.
You mentioned feeling more emotional.
I got really wound up by the Dylan stuff.
The birving stuff.
Oh, that didn't work for you.
Well, it did and it didn't.
Okay.
So we're in.
I had texted you before you saw the episode that there was like an unenegenerated.
expected say nothing crossover you thought i was like my cast member i assumed but what i meant was
they smuggled in dollars price into this show yeah that they that they took a plotline of the
main character of say nothing and this idea of how implicated are you in the dirty deeds if you're
just driving the people to the place where they get shot or otherwise mangled or buried um so it turns
out that Bert, as we
expected, is an enforcer of some
kind for Lumen. A goon.
A hench.
And
but
has such
like
unexplained feelings
for Irving that he is
trying to smuggle him out of
cure before Drummond can do
anything to him, right? Yeah. So they go to this
train station which they filmed in
that still are pronounced it
Utica. I've always pronounced it Utica, but I
think he's right and I'm wrong. Anyway, in Utica on the East Coast, there's a Utica in California
as well, but that's not where they were. And then they say goodbye. And there is this, here's what I'll
say, I am a huge crier at TV shows. You know this about me. I've told you that, like, I cry
during episodes of the pit. Like, this is the thing that I do. I mean, the pit is pulling the heart
strings. They're really going for it hard. Are you a TV crier, Rob? I don't know that I know if you are.
It takes a bit. I think for me, it really takes like more than just a moment.
It needs to be sort of the culmination of a storyline, right?
Like you take me on a journey and that payoff is really going to hit hard by the end.
And so, yeah, I'm not getting there with this.
And I think that speaks to maybe some of the way the burving stuff is handled in general,
which is a little chopped up, a little bits and pieces, a little disparate, a little,
there's like an emotional distance within so much of severance, right?
These are characters who are trying to reconcile different parts of themselves.
And so I feel the distance.
I just think in this case, I also am such a sucker for the looping and the callback and the reference and overall the way that they are trying to close that.
Like these two characters who are so desperate for connection trying to close that distance together.
So the callback that you're referencing here is in season one episode six in the plant room, Irving and Bert share this moment where Bert is like, hey, there's nothing in the handbook that says we can't have lip-to-lip contact.
and Irving's like, well, actually, blah, blah.
And Bert kind of goes for it.
Irving says, I'm truly sorry, but I'm just not ready.
And Bert says, and rewatching that, this scene, actually kind of got choked up.
The season one episode 16, the way that walk in as Bert delivers, just stay, stay here with me.
So I'm not ready, just stay here with me.
Verses I'm ready, I'm ready, I'm ready, I'm ready.
Bert saying Bon voyage buddy.
Well, he gives them the I can't first, or we can't.
Yes. Yes, there's more tender stuff.
But like, versus just stay here with me.
Bon voyage buddy.
I did not love Bon voyage buddy.
No, no, no.
I'm not, I'm not anti the writing of it.
It's a crushing attempt at, you know, distancing himself from intimacy to say buddy.
Yeah.
All of that sort of stuff.
I will say this.
I feel like I'm kind of an easy mark for a cry
and thinking about, you know,
some of the shows that I love the most,
some of the shows that you and I,
like thinking about the leftovers
and thinking about, like,
if you think about a moment like this in the leftovers,
given the way that they built all of those stories,
I would be like sobbing through this.
This would be devastating.
And there is, you know,
and Chris and Andy have been flagging this all season,
there is a sort of like slightly
antiseptic quality.
I will about to
reverse completely when we get to Dylan.
Like I'll talk about that in a second.
But there is a slightly sort of like chilly quality
that kept me at a slight remove.
And I wanted to just sort of like
be devastated and feel it and be swept away by it.
But that's sort of like where I sat with it.
How about you?
I don't think it is a devastating moment.
I think it is somewhat of a bittersweet thing.
And that looks, that is my zone.
as far as this kind of content goes,
like that's exactly what I am looking for.
And so I think part of it is
these characters are not going to have that sort of emotionality.
These are two people who,
in their respective ways,
are quite repressed, right?
Like, Irving, as he, like, explains,
has never experienced this kind of love
or any kind of love like it before.
And so he is desperate to hold on to it so tightly.
And I think the whole idea of what does it feel like to be loved
with an action like this is such a poignant idea
and I really love, I really, I really gravitated towards that as much as anything.
And then, you know, Bert, in his way is not repressed because he's in an openly gay relationship.
He has a partner.
He has a different kind of life.
But he's like this sort of relationship is one that I just found myself wondering so many times with them, as we have with many of the character interactions throughout the show.
Is Bert feeling some echo of what his any self felt?
Or is he merely trying to honor the love that he knows.
existed between him and the inner version of Irving.
I think and, you know, I think, I think, again, Damon Lindelof put this really well when we
were talking to him about it, this idea of like, your soul is your soul is your soul, whether
you're an idiot and an outy.
Yeah.
And if you are drawn to someone as an iny, you're going to be drawn to them as an Audi, like,
see also Helena and Mark at the Chinese restaurant.
This is just sort of like idea of a connection that transcends whatever.
That brings four heads together, apparently.
I do think he feels that and has this obligation to fields or this understanding that there's nothing they can do because Lumen's like would never let this happen and it would put Irving in danger and all this sort of stuff like that.
So I think I think he is feeling it, not just like honoring it intellectually, but feeling it emotionally.
That's my understanding of it.
and it's
I love
a like
Bitterspeed is such a good
description of it
I love
they wanted to
but they didn't
that's like a that's a really good
storytelling mode
that I absolutely love
the brief encounters
like sort of thing
so again I just sort of expected
to feel much more than I wound up feeling
I don't know maybe
maybe the pit sort of just like
drained it out of me
I didn't have anything like
I think what sealed it for me ultimately was, yes, some of the echoes in that exchange.
And we even get like the same sort of ponder some music cues that are from that sort of
garden scene in season one here in the train station.
Like we are bringing everything full circle for these characters.
But once Irving gets on the train and the sort of smile that Tuturo is playing there,
I think is part of what brings it home for me.
And this idea that sometimes you do have to let people go.
you do have to get on the train. Sometimes you,
this is what a relationship is meant to be,
to be a thing in your life that is not meant to last.
I love that landing point for these characters because they can't,
like,
there is not a plausible way for them to have a happy ending.
As,
as Harmony laid out for everyone else,
like it's just not in the carts.
And so put him on the train,
bring radar.
Good boy.
What a good boy.
And I like this.
Send off, I will say,
is there a non-zero chance?
this is the last we see of John Totoro on this show.
Absolutely. Listen, there are some questions that still need to be answered in terms of
like who was he talking to on the phone this season.
Yes.
Like all that sort of stuff that makes me feel like we should see him again.
Should for sure.
But also Tuturo has been saying things in interviews all season that makes it sound like he,
here's actually what I think the state of affairs is.
Yeah. Tuturo's not sure if he wants to come back.
So they've done then like an Apple S save.
Like we put him on a train and we could bring him back if we need to or that's the last time you've seen Irving, you know?
That makes sense.
I mean, I think devastated.
Sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, I would be really crushed if we did not get any more Irving, but it's possible.
As would I.
And I hate that you have to write yourself into those corners, but just, yeah, from a cast perspective, I could see John Duturo being like, yeah, I had fun.
We did it.
I'm on to the next thing.
He's a working actor who's in lots of stuff.
He talked about how much he hated.
A sad thing, I think, for all of us is like we haven't seen the MDR team together since the Orpo, right?
And we haven't seen them together in the office since like episode three, which is like what we initially understood to be like the premise of the show.
And they bent over backwards to contort the plot to get them all back together.
But for one episode.
Yep.
You know, so when we see, and we're meant to feel that, when we see Heli alone at the four.
desk, you know, set up.
Like, we're meant to feel that.
But Tatoro has said a number of interviews how much he hated specifically filming under the
lights of the office.
So I wonder if, like, Tertrero's like, I'll come back, but you're not putting me
on that office set for more than, like, a few days.
Exteriors only for John Titoro from here on out.
On radar watch.
Yes.
And I should say that, like, Mallory Rubin, when watching this episode, texted me like five
minutes in and she's like, is a radar going to be okay?
You need to tell me this before I watch more of this episode.
Our listener, Elena, probably wrote in.
And with a fun fact that I didn't know, the dog who plays radar is also the dog who played Mondale on Succession.
The dog is named Ditto, very good boy, playing both radar and Mondale.
So here's the question from Elena.
Okay.
Is this dog better off with burving?
but it won't be. So I guess with Irving on a train, going somewhere, or with Shiv and Tom.
Easily with Irving. Yeah, I agree.
Shiv and Tom had their dog had Montailles on like a little playpen despite their massive flat.
Like the tiniest crate for that dog despite so much room in their house.
Those are not good dog owners. You could tell it from every aspect of their personality.
devastating for our guy Irving you know how old is John Totoro in his 60s would you say
seems fair guess to have you know someone like that say like I've never experienced romantic love at all in my life
yeah as an outy and then we get to Dylan and any who says to Gretchen like my life started when I met you
I did not exist before you.
And she's like, sure you did.
And he's like, nope, it was just finger traps and erasers.
And that was it.
It was nothing, you know.
So I think it's really pointed to have both an Audi in Irving and an innie and Dylan be like, I've never.
This is my first like brush up against the concept of love.
Yes.
What a heady, powerful thing it is.
And to think about every inny on this show, Heli and Mark definitely included,
every relationship we've seen, this is like first love, which is like an extremely potent
brew to quote Mallory Rubin.
So Dylan and Gresh and Dylan.
A proper Mickey 17 thruple in action.
Nice, Mickey 17 reference.
I feel like there's a way these crazy kids could have made this thruple work.
You think so?
And I mean, I'm with any Dylan.
Like, why wouldn't he be happy that, you know, we all get to...
I don't know.
I feel like that short-changing Audi Dylan's anxiety is quite a bit.
I think there is...
Fair.
Obviously, look, there's the...
I love that as we are getting this more complicated love triangle, quadrangle, geometry
happening, we have all of these different aspects of the emotional fallout.
I think Irving's version of that is not even experiencing the love, at least Audi-Urving,
not experiencing it but feeling the pain of losing it.
That's such a weird kind of sci-fi idea that I think not a lot of genres can tackle in the way that severance can tackle.
Helly's pain as she's confronted by Dylan in this episode is this idea that the other version, no, Helies.
She and Dylan have the debrief where he confronts her with the idea that like Mark couldn't even tell the difference between you and Helena.
This idea that your romantic partner wouldn't know you well enough to separate you for.
from your other self. And then I think for Dylan, it's that Gretchen can tell a difference,
but she likes the other guy better. Like she likes the other version of you better.
That she can tell the difference between Audi Dylan and any Dylan and she likes any Dylan
is what you're saying. Yeah. I mean, the whole conversation with her and Audi Dylan when she's,
he kind of braces her and preempts like, oh, are you going to say it didn't mean anything?
And Gretchen's responsive, I wasn't going to say that. Like, it clearly meant a lot.
to her.
She doesn't say, like, she doesn't say better.
Here's my, here's my.
She's going back to him for a reason, right?
Like, and she's keeping it secret for a reason.
Here's, here's, here's my like, sunshine and lollipops hopeful sort of once again,
representing the Bay Area pro-thruple argument.
Um, we love a polycule.
Um, isn't there a way in which the any Dylan and Gretchen interactions,
could like help reawaken Gretchen's connection to Audi Dillon,
remind her what she loved about him in the first place.
Yeah.
And remind her to look for those things in him in his Audi version,
not just him being deeply inept around the house
and all the other things that are true about him.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes.
Or, you know, and this is certainly what Audi Dillon is afraid of,
she gives up on Audi version entirely because she's got access to any Dillon.
Like for sure, that's the thing.
fear, but I feel like there's a way in which all of this could make a rising tide could raise
all boats and we could all sort of like get something out of this. Again, I'm trying to force a
honeymoon ending for fucking someone in this debacle. And Dylan and Gretchen and Dylan are like,
I don't know, maybe my best option here, but maybe not. I love everything that's happening
between them. I just don't see it. I think I think Audi, I think Audi Dylan might have been through
too much to like I totally agree with you that from Gretchen's perspective she is seeing a version
of the person that she loves.
Yeah.
From Dylan's perspective, he's saying you cheated on me with this other version of me.
And look, maybe that's the strongest case yet for any personhood is that to Dylan, any Dylan is a
different person from him.
To him, this is adultery.
To him, like his wife has betrayed him.
Yeah.
I think that's where it's hard to reconcile some of the differences between like are these
different people? Are they different versions of the same people? Are, is any Dylan a less jaded,
more naive version of Audi Dylan like we've been talking about all season? Like, I think all of that
is kind of true. I just, here's what I think. And admittedly, I've never been inside a love triangle
with myself and my wife. But like, with the other version of you that your wife told you not to worry
about? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Don't worry about it. Um, but like, are we not all being a bit
hasty. Like Gretchen breaks the news. These are matters of the heart, Joe. They happen in hasty fashion.
Can't we just say, hey, listen, we got to pump the brakes on this for a second.
You're out. He's having a hard time with it. I'm going to keep talking to him about it. Let's see how we feel.
He's threatening to quit, which is effectively killing any Dylan, right? Like, I'll kill him,
essentially. Right. So I understand why Gretchen would be like, I got to put the stop to this to save you, essentially.
But I just feel like there's a way, I mean, I understand.
We're inside of a TV show and it's full of drama.
But like, isn't there just a way that we could all just like take a beat, go to some couples counseling?
But who's going to the counseling?
Which version of Dylan?
Everyone.
I think honestly, I think that's such a huge part of what makes this sort of set up so fascinating is that any and Audi Dylan can never have a conversation.
He could get reintegrated.
He could become one more complete Dylan.
but he's never going to know.
And so his idea of what the any version of himself is is always going to be even worse and even more intimidating and even more painful than the reality.
Via technology.
You want to bust out that retro camcorder?
Send some tapes back and forth.
He said a conversation with Helly.
I mean, did that go well?
No.
Okay.
We're going to come back to that.
Also, the heartbreak.
Dylan, Zach Cherry, like screaming Gretchen, the proposal.
With the ring.
The ring is quite elegant, I got to say.
Beautiful stuff from our guy.
This is the second podcast this week.
I'm going to say this, but any Dylan hidden Swifty paper rings?
Who's to say?
Wow.
I say yes.
But yeah, very sad stuff.
Does the Innes know who Taylor Swift is?
That's a great question.
I guess what transcends like pop culture knowledge and transatlure?
first into knowledge of the world.
Because I would argue knowledge of Taylor Swift is less like, are you familiar with this band?
And more like, are you familiar with this cultural event?
Severance with love and respect is so inconsistent on this front.
We've talked about this.
Alia Shalcat being like, what does Wynn feel like?
Yes.
Versus like they know how to dress themselves.
You know what I mean?
It's just sort of like there's just like, what do they retain?
And early in the season, we did get like long emails from brain scientists who were just sort of like this.
is how memory works or whatever.
I feel like Taylor Swift might be a big enough cultural event that it could sort of
It permeates.
Yeah.
Bigger than wind.
Taylor Swift, bigger than wind.
There I said it.
Okay.
Let's talk about the eagons, the not so secret eagons.
Egg stuff go is what I wrote here in this.
We've already talked about the egg stuff a bit.
One of our listeners, Francesca, pointed out that Helena was eating the taking small cuts
and only eating the boiled white, the outer, the outy of the egg.
I'm not 100% sure on this because I feel like when we cut back to the plate,
I think it's a great call, and I love if this is true.
When we cut back to the plate, it's a little obscured by the angle,
but it looks like some of the yokes are also gone.
So I'm not 100% sure that she's an outy only.
That's it.
If you were in any only, if you're making boiled eggs and only eating straight yokes,
I'm concerned.
I've never heard your accent come through stronger than on the word yoke.
It's because of the y'all hybrid, you know?
Yeah, yoke.
Just the hard why sounds really bring it out of me.
Okay.
And then our listener who signed the email Ted word, so I'm just going to take them for their word that that is their name.
Okay.
Says, would you rather eat a raw egg while James Egan watches you or watch James Egan eat a raw.
egg in front of you.
I'm really scared of what that looks like for him to eat the raw egg.
It's so ghoulish.
I mean, but look, is there something so wrong about a proud supportive father who just
wants to watch his daughter eat raw eggs?
Is that so wrong, Joe?
I would rather you had taken it wrong.
Everything about this was horrible.
Jesus Christ, Jamie Egan.
Oh, my God.
It was gross.
And honestly, look, the whole, I, I.
I really enjoyed.
I wish you'd take them raw.
Please.
That's what he said.
No one say that again.
In the history of the world, no one say it again.
Also, if you are sitting across the room and watching your daughter eat boiled eggs, do not softly moan to yourself.
Don't do it.
Or even I don't, let's, or loudly moan.
How about no moaning at the breakfast table?
No moaning at the breakfast table.
A no moan zone at the breakfast table.
I think we can all agree upon that.
Okay.
Do you think he is not eating himself because of his revolving?
Oh, this dude's a straight blood bag, Joe.
Like, he's being pumped full of nutrients.
He is not consuming food of any kind.
I don't know.
It's soylent.
Soilent in blood bags.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Something is keeping him alive and it's not eggs.
Okay, great.
Okay.
This is what Dan Erickson said in the post episode,
thing that went up on Apple after the episode credits.
He says,
Jamie Egan is never going to give her the foundational love that we all need in order to be human beings.
Duh.
I mean, like, I could have told you that, but not, not duh to him, but like, is this something Helena is only just reading, realizing as she is bisecting and bisecting and bisecting a boiled egg in front of
her creepy, creepy father after her coal plunged swim.
Also, am I just like unwashed swine that I'm, I feel like she is being overly delicate with
this egg white?
Like, she's cutting it into the smallest possible.
You can just eat the one sixth piece of egg white in a bite.
That is a reasonable sized bite.
You can all, I mean, not to be like an absolute rube, but you can also just like take a
boiled egg and take a bite of it, right?
You can.
I will say, I, I, I want.
Once in a different life, Joe, played middle school football.
My middle school football coach would come into the locker room and eat an entire hard-boiled egg, not in bite.
Just pop the whole thing in his mouth and then mash it while talking to people.
It was horrendous.
With like yolk crumbs.
Of course.
They're spraying all over the place.
It was terrible.
That's simply enough for me.
Listen, this is a big day for Jamie again.
everything it's all coming it's all culminating
around whatever's happening with cold harbor
etc etc we don't really understand what it is
do you take it is is cold harbor to him
a breakthrough that will lead to something
or are we supposed to interpret that like his revolving is supposed to happen
today I think cold they have to complete cold harbor
yes so that he can revolve
yes and I don't
know how those two things are related, but that's what feels true to me.
Yeah.
And as Harmony points out on this episode, in that process, Gemma is either literally or at
least figuratively dead.
I mean, I think she makes it sound straight up actually dead.
Yeah.
What does she say exactly?
She says, and if you've completed it, well, well, what?
She's already dead.
But like, she's already dead, honestly, and so like severance could mean like a number of
things. Do you know what I mean? The plausible deniability of this show. Really tremendous.
On this idea of like revolving who sits with Keir, all this sort of stuff like that,
one of our listeners wrote in to underline the fact that in episode 8 when our favorite character,
Sissy, is talking about like the rooms in the house. She says that room stays shut until all
who remember her sit with Kear. Yeah. So the idea of sit with
here as a phrase just meaning
dead. Yeah, pass on.
Pass on. Yeah, I think that's just something. Again, that's
just sort of like flowery language to think about when we parse whatever they're
trying to say of like be at my side of my revolving. Like, what does that
mean, you know, in the language of this world?
Helly, you already mentioned the Dylan and the Halley conversation which I thought
was really good. Dylan identifying the most hurtful
thing that he could possibly say to her.
but her being the kind of person who's like, fuck it, I'm going to do this.
But her being like, Irving did know the difference.
And what did Irving want?
Irving wanted us to figure out what was going on with the elevator.
So I'm going to do this thing that Irving wanted.
And that is her goal.
She's the last faithful to use Trader's language, left at the cubicle.
And then here comes Dad to say, my hellie, you trade.
tricked me.
I mean, it's better than every other thing he said in this episode.
That's deeply true.
I wish you would take it raw.
Okay, so like, my hell you tricked me.
Do you think this is just a reference to the season one finale where she did indeed trick him there?
I didn't even take it that way necessarily.
I interpreted this as he was promised two things.
one, Mr. Balov was going to be dealt with in this episode.
I don't know that he knows what happened with Irving as if yes.
I'm going to say it's not related to that per se.
The other thing was he was basically assured today is the day.
Today is the day that Cold Harbor will be completed.
And it's very clear we are stuck at that 96% Joe, has not budged all day long.
And so I saw it as him coming in.
It's, you know, 6.30 p.m.
He rolls into the office.
He's like, what the fuck?
We did not come.
We did not deliver on our delivery.
verbals.
On the one hand, yes, and thank you for using the proper Silicon Valley language.
On the other hand, tricked is such an interesting word.
True.
Right?
Like, you let me down.
You lie to, you know, like, you lied to, like, something like that.
Like, hmm, you didn't follow through something, something, something.
But like, you tricked me speaks to like a level of deception, which is not really the case here.
It's just a failure.
Yeah.
If you want to call it that, you know.
So that's why I thought maybe he was talking about.
And he calls her Helly.
He does call her Helly.
You know.
But did he call his daughter Helena at one point, Helly?
Right?
Like maybe that's why she, this hellie was Helly in the first place.
I don't know.
I don't know the answer to that.
I do know that.
See, I thought you could put yourself squarely in James Egan's mind and just channel and understand everything that that blood bag is going through.
I haven't had my solace this morning.
It's very early, Rob.
I don't know what to tell you.
Okay.
Anyway, anything else you want to say about Hally, Helena, like, how is she going to get out of this one sort of situation that we find her in?
I echo her, what the fuck, on Jane reaching the severed floor.
Seeing him down there is a thrill.
I think because especially we are seeing so many of our core four splintering off in these different directions, right?
We don't know if Dylan will ever be back there.
We don't know if Irving will ever be back there.
You know, Mark is in the process of reintegrating and doing.
whatever it is that he's going to do.
Having Helly is kind of the one person holding down the fort.
You need something for her to bounce off of.
And I think James showing up is a pretty interesting variable and a pretty interesting
curveball on what otherwise is quite a small cast of a show.
Good luck to her.
Yeah.
I'll also say about her conversation with Dylan, where she is encouraging him to save the ring.
You know, see who else you can meet down here in O&D with the goat people.
Maybe on...
Not the goat people.
No?
Dream bigger than the goat people.
I feel like you're being very judgmental.
You know,
I feel like there's at least a couple of those goat people who might be open to it.
Well, I hope we never go back to mammalian's neutriple.
Yeah.
But that's not to say Dylan couldn't go back there at his free time.
And I support whatever decisions that that character wants to make.
But it did feel like exactly the kind of thing where like she's like giving advice to herself in a kind of way.
not to seek someone else out, but like she's telling him specifically, that woman is not your wife.
And she almost could not be talking more directly to herself vis-a-vis Mark and Gemma, right?
This idea that like you are a different person.
I need you to be a different person who is not that woman's husband.
I feel like what we really should have seen in this episode is Dylan and Hellie go prowling an O&D for new partners.
You know what I mean?
A little mixer?
Yeah.
Well, O&D mixer.
Let's put on those, like, the dance lights.
Yeah.
Let's crank up the music.
There's a lot of people in that department.
So many.
And you can make anything you need for a proper, like, date mixer setting.
That sounds great.
Now, compare that to the, like, little shit tunnel that they had to crawl through to get to the goat people.
And I think the, the choice is obvious.
Clearly.
Um, okay.
Harmon, Harmony, Devon, Mark.
What are we doing here?
Marks.
What are we doing?
Let's start, let's start at a high.
Let's start on a high.
Okay.
with the sarcasm.
Who do you think?
Who do you think had the better zinger?
Oh, these are, I already know where you're going and these are both so good.
Was it Devin saying, sorry, the wind was whistling over the hole in the back of your skull, so I didn't quite get that?
Or was it Mark saying to Harmony?
Oh my God.
So good.
My wife is being held at Lumen and I just had brain surgery in my basement.
Who is the better, uh, wielder of, of the snark?
in this episode, Rob.
It's got to be Mark, just because I can see party down.
Adam Scott coming out to play, and he's always welcome here.
Oh, my God. It's so good.
A hundred percent party down.
Although honorable mentioned to Devin for the,
am I me or am I a copy machine.
I also very much enjoyed that bit.
Very good. Very good.
Okay.
So I, I'm very frustrated by this,
but I'm hopeful for a payoff in the finale,
but I do feel like quite sort of strung along by,
what happened inside of this episode with this trio or actually square of people.
Something that I did like.
I didn't like the like, let's hang out all day and not talk about anything.
What are they doing for hours and hours and hours?
Maybe she brought some ether and they all like, you know.
Give us some.
Like hook us up, please.
But when we're in Mark, any Marks, Mark S's perspective when he comes into the birthing cabinet
And he's like, what the fuck?
And he tries to like walk out the door.
And Devin says if you walk out that door, he's just going to come right back in again.
Okay, of course, this is like a callback to Hallie and Helena.
Yes.
In a way that could feel overly cutesy.
Yeah.
But to me, I really, really liked it because.
So the thing with Irving that pings for me slightly is like it's outy Irving saying something that builds upon something any Irving said.
Yeah.
And I guess if in like a deeply romantic sense you could say he just knows that he wasn't ready before and he's ready now or something like that.
So let's put that to aside.
And I'll say here, Devin is no way of knowing that this is like something that they have said to Hellier Helena on the floor.
She's not consciously referencing anything.
But what they are doing in the pursuant pursuance of their goal is like using the weapons like the the machinations of their enemy.
Right.
They are treating any mark as like someone without autonomy in order to get what they need, which is to get to Gemma.
It's true.
Are they still heroes that I'm rooting for?
Yes.
But like, you know, what will they stop at to get to their goal?
And when we've seen people treat inies as like prisoners or people with no choice of what to do, those have been villains.
So what are we to make when maybe our most beloved character, Devin, is the one doing it.
You know what I mean?
I think part of what makes that snag to is, and this is a problem, I would say, with mystery box storytelling overall, where the show doesn't want to show its hand as to, for example, why do we need any mark?
Like what information does he have that Kobel doesn't have that would be instrumental in finding Gemma?
Like she knows so much more than Mark does.
She doesn't know what's been going on for like the past week at Lumen, but that's about it.
She knows the Cold Harbor is and Mark certainly doesn't.
She has a lot more information.
We certainly don't.
So much more.
And so as a result of that, like normally in order to set the stakes of the show, you have to give us some indication of what it is that we actually need out of these interactions.
And I don't think we have that.
I think we just have characters saying we have to do this.
We have to do why.
Devin says in this episode, we have no choice but to do what Kobel says.
I would argue of many, many, many other choices that you could make.
The only pushback I have on that is like the thing that Mark has that Harmony doesn't,
and it's the reason why he's been able to get away with any Mark, been able to get away with so much,
is like some ineffable understanding of the numbers that you need to complete Cold Harbor.
Yes.
You know what I mean?
I don't know how you interrogate that in a meaningful way.
But that, yeah, you're right that like the woman who fucking invented severance and has run the severed floor, nosy ins and outs of Lumen, has much more intel.
This is the one thing that any mark has that she doesn't have.
Though, again, I don't know if he knows even how to explain what he's done with Cold Harbor.
I thought we got some really interesting feedback from actually two mics, one who went by
Mike and one by Michael. Mike wrote, and maybe there are any annuity, who knows, but Mike wrote,
I'm just as confused as I'm sure all the other viewers of what the fuck is going on with this,
quote, reintegration of Mark. Each episode since the long needle in the brain has given us
hardly any mark time, but when we do see him, we get no reintegration reveal outside of the
one right before he passes out, which seemed like some sort of info dump overload. So like the idea
of giving us, we were like, holy shit, they did reintegration for
mark at the beginning of the season.
But like,
they did not.
Where are we now?
You know, like this many episodes later.
Still sort of twiddling our thumbs waiting for this whole thing to come together.
So which I am feel pretty confident it will in the finale in a way that will probably
smooth over a lot of these like minor bumps and scrapes along the way.
But it's just like in the in the current.
And this is the only time this will be true because after that finale airs,
ever after people can just like binge the season and will not feel this sort of like midseason
antsiness. But as it stands right now, though the cadence of the reintegration reveal is like
pushing my patience slightly. I think I think that's entirely fair. I think they have stretched
this stuff out to a degree where we've gotten a decent amount of mark screen time, but not a lot
of mark propulsion or progress or even emotionally speaking. I'm not saying it has to be reintegrated.
I think episode seven is the high water mark for that, not just for Gemma, but also for Mark in terms of getting his elements of the backstory.
Like that added to the character in a really significant way.
It feels like there's so many balls in the air this season that a lot of the payoffs have nothing to do with what's happening this year, right?
Like the Berving stuff is a great example.
The reason that that Berving kind of like farewell moment works to the extent that it does for anyone.
And as you said, Joe, for you, it was a little bit more mixed.
It all hinges on season one.
It does not pay off.
Everything that happened between Byrd and Irving and season two was misdirection, was taking
them down a side path, was setting up Bert as a potentially nefarious figure, which he kind of is,
but ultimately did not really contribute to the plot or the, or the emotionality of these
characters in any meaningful way.
And I think you could say the same thing about a lot of what's going on with Mark,
where there's a lot of him tripping out post-reintegration, him collapsing into the floor,
him seeming to regain consciousness.
And in a way where I just thought there would be a little bit more.
bleeding over at this point, but the very fact that we have to go to the birthing cabin to advance
the plot tells us that this is not a reintegrated character. This is a guy with a hole in the
back of his head that's oozing that for some reason we throw in the back of a pickup truck.
That's a bad choice for a guy with a hole in his head. Do not do that either.
Okay. To recap, no moaning at the breakfast table. If you've got a hole in your head,
you get to sit in the front of the car. Is that unreasonable?
It's despite the cloak and dagger of the sort of operations that they're in.
Are you saying we, okay, and I'm not opposed to it, are you saying we should have slapped a wig on Mark and put the baby bump under his shirt?
Of course.
Okay, great.
I would love to see it.
Or get a different car.
Do whatever you have to do.
I just, I feel like putting him in a bumpy.
There was certainly, there was no room in the rabbit.
I'll tell you that much right now.
No room in the rabbit at all.
Okay.
Michael wrote, and this made me laugh, maybe the cure Lumen is really working on as a way.
to make people not slow down to one tenth speed
every time they say the words cold
harbor.
But how are you going to project
how ominous it is if you don't say it
at that speed?
Cold harbor.
Anything else? I think we've gone a little
long and we've got plenty that we want to say for
like our Q&A and stuff like that. Anything else you want to
touch on in terms of this episode, Rob Mahoney?
I think just one thing as we're kind of
closing the loop here from the secret eagans
into harmony, getting them into
the birthing retreat, which is we get an email a couple weeks ago from Elise, who talked about
how every adult woman on the show so far has been in some way connected to the idea of birth
or rebirth. Yeah. And I think Elise brought it up in the context of the great pregnancy debates
that we've been having all season about. Is Helena going to be pregnant? Is like what is the
situation with Gemma and her ongoing like fertility? Like all of this stuff has been in the air,
but it's also in the air with Harmony 2, who is not only the mother of severance, as we found out,
but if she does end up being Helena's mother
or the mother of an Egan child of some kind
to met some end,
I think that would make sense thematically
with a lot of what we've been dealing with.
And it's why more than ever I don't want
Helena slash Helen to be pregnant
because that's interesting,
but I would like there to be some female characters on the show
where that is not.
It's an ambitious goal, Joe.
Okay, thanks.
Thanks for rooting for me.
Before we go, this listener asked to not be named, but I didn't.
We got an email from a listener telling us to check out the track in the bath by Lemon Jelly.
Did you have a listen?
I did have a listen to this.
One minute in to that track.
It's a long track.
It's a six-minute track.
One minute in, if you care to listen on Spotify, wherever you get your music, you'll hear the Severance theme song, a very familiar progression of notes.
And I haven't been able to find an interview where the composer, like, references this song.
So I don't know.
That's, it's interesting.
Yeah.
Is it a direct inspiration?
Is it the collective unconscious?
Is it an in in in-Audy and alternate lives in music?
Is Lemon Jelly actually the Audi of the iny that is the composer of the Severance theme?
Shout out to the Severance music.
It's amazing.
And like this, this idea is.
Or like lifting a little bit, a few notes from something happens all the time, obviously.
One might call it art, you know?
That that's how this stuff is made a lot of the time.
It is a wild moment.
You're like in this vibey track and then all of a sudden you're like, oh.
What is this existential dread I feel?
Why do I have a, why do I have a compulsion to not eat any eggs in front of anyone ever again?
All right.
So pineapplebobby at gmail.com.
Yes.
Ringer TV on YouTube is where you'll find us next week at noon for a live Q&A.
PrestigeTV at Spotify.com is where you can also send questions, comments, concerns, theories.
Observations. We have a few like sort of bigger picture observations that are less than Theory Corner that I want to save for that.
So I'm excited to get to that. We've had so many amazing emails from you guys this season.
It's been really incredible.
Wonderful.
Thank you to the early morning crew on this, our last Severance Friday morning.
record. So thanks to John Richter, to Justin Sales, to Johnny Beach, and filling in for Kai.
And thanks for Rob Mahoney. Thank you, Joe. Thank you to eggs. Thank you to Jane Egan.
Yeah. Make sure to eat your yulks. And we'll see you soon, y'all.
