The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott - S2E9: The After Hours (with Sydney Cole Alexander)
Episode Date: March 14, 2025If you did a word cloud of this week’s podcast episode, the number one word would be PENULTIMATE. Because this week, we’re talking all about Season 2 Episode 9 — that’s right, it’s the penul...timate episode of the season. For this momentous occasion, Ben and Adam are joined by Sydney Cole Alexander, who plays Natalie, conduit to the Board and conduit to our fan hotline. They discuss Natalie’s infamous smile, the different way she handles Milchick and Cobel, and how corporate “friendly feedback” can feel like getting stabbed in the heart. Plus, Sydney sticks around to give some Lumon-approved answers to your hotline questions. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, Adam.
Yeah.
Is your experience at work a bit dysfunctional lately?
I don't know. I think it's... it's...
Okay, I'll take that as a yes.
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Are you in a bed and breakfast or like a house or? It's a hotel.
It's like a manor that's been turned into a hotel.
It's very nice.
That's so cool.
I went on a hike today around to the grounds and I got lost and I almost had to like call
the front desk
to ask if someone could come get me.
You could call Mr. Milchick.
Oh, totally.
Hey, I'm Ben Stiller.
I'm Adam Scott.
And this is the Severance podcast with Ben and Adam,
where we break down every episode of Severance.
And today we're talking about the penultimate episode.
I finally get to say penultimate this season.
I like that word penultimate.
Me too.
It's the second to last.
Yeah.
Did that word exist before like four years ago?
I feel like I'd never heard that word until, I don't know.
I've been using penultimate for at least 20 years.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, and I pull it out to impress people.
Well, it's really impressive.
Well, now it's become more mainstream, I guess,
since you're aware of it.
Wait.
Oh my God.
That is so deeply insulting.
Um, anyway, we're talking about the penultimate episode.
Yeah, season two, episode nine, The After Hours, which was written by our favorite brain
in a jar, Dan Erickson, and directed by our favorite brain outside of a jar, Uta Bresowitz.
It's an exciting episode.
We're going to be joined by Sydney Cole Alexander, who plays Lumen's very own Natalie, that face
of the corporation,
who is very hard to figure out what's going on
behind your eyes.
She is so good.
Yeah, and she voices our hotline voice message.
So not only will we talk about what Natalie's been up to
this season, but she also helps us answer
your hotline questions.
That's right.
And then after that, Ben and I will go through the episode.
And finally, of course, Zach Cherry will be back to predict what's going to happen in next week's finale.
You know what? I have a good feeling about this one. I think he's finally going to get it right.
Yeah, I think he will. I mean, he's got to get at least something right.
Like a broken clock is correct twice a day. Yeah.
Consider this your spoiler alert.
Okay, make sure to watch the ninth episode of the second season before listening to this. Consider this your spoiler alert.
Okay.
Make sure to watch the ninth episode of the second season before listening to this.
So just take a second right now and turn us on.
No matter how difficult that may be.
Yeah.
But please come back to us.
So Ben, what's new?
What's going on?
It's funny.
I feel like it's been a few times that we've had to record the podcast after a Nick's loss.
Oh, yeah.
And it's happened before.
And I have to say-
That's difficult for you.
Yeah.
It was a big game last night and I love our team and it's just sort of, you know, this
is the situation that we need to deal with now.
Granted, no O.G.
Ananobe, no Mitchell Robinson.
Right.
But I was there at the game.
By the way, the great Carl Anthony Towns,
all-star fan of the show.
Really?
Yep.
That's so cool.
Yes, he and his wife and he tweeted about it.
Oh, that's awesome.
Yeah, and also Precious Satchua,
who's our strong four,
who sometimes plays the five when he has to.
So exciting that those guys are into the show.
That's great.
And your friend Spike Lee was at the game last night.
Oh, he was.
Spike Lee was there.
Yeah.
He was sort of your role model, right?
You wanted to be Spike Lee.
I did.
I love Spike Lee.
And when I was a teenager,
I got very into do the right thing in the summer of 89.
So when I started my junior year,
I was wearing a neck's cap.
I had grown a goatee.
I had horn-rimmed glasses.
And I considered myself an auteur of sorts.
Yeah.
And then I'm just picturing you doing your dance
that you do during the music dance experience.
With all that gear on.
That's right.
Could not be more white.
There's nothing, nothing whiter than that dance.
When we went to the Knicks game a couple of weeks ago,
Spike Lee was there.
And it was the night that the season was premiering.
Right, it was Friday, January 17th.
Yeah.
It was so fun because that whole week leading up
to the premiere, we had the Grand Central Station thing.
We were doing press altogether in New York.
So it was super fun and it all kind of culminated
on that night.
And it felt like some people at the game
had already watched the premiere by that time,
Friday night.
It was just such a fun time.
And afterwards, Britt and I shared a ride back to our hotel
and we stopped in Times Square
because we wanted to get a photo
of the Severance ad in Times Square.
Right, which is really exciting
because like, I mean, the first time around
there was an awareness of the show,
but this time around there's more people who are seeing it
and there's more publicity and there's more ads and stuff.
So it's been really fun to see that.
That's right. So then Britt and I were taking a photo in Times Square. We wanted to get a photo
of that big... The billboards and... Yeah. We're stopped on the side of the road to try and get a
photo of it. And suddenly we heard from behind us, someone going, Hey, Severance, that's you up there,
Severance. And we were like, what? And we turned around and it was Spike Lee in his car,
kind of driving by and he stopped to talk to us.
He's like, that's you guys.
Oh my goodness.
Yeah, it was amazing.
So this is sort of like a full circle moment for you.
It was.
So I got to finally meet Spike Lee
and talk to him about how rad Sean Titoro is.
Right, was Spike driving his own car
or was he being driven?
No, he was in the backseat.
Okay.
So yes, he was driving from the backseat,
which is really weird.
You know, part of it that was so funny
was his kind of amazement at us standing there
and then also being up on the thing.
Like he was getting a kick out of that.
Like he was a kid.
That's like a full on New York moment, right?
Completely, totally.
We're in Times Square, Spike Lee, after a next game.
It was a big deal.
Yeah.
Well, Sydney Cole Alexander is here.
Should we talk to her?
Oh, yeah.
We are so thrilled to welcome our guest today,
the incredible Sydney Cole Alexander, who plays Natalie, is here with us on the podcast,
Sydney, thank you for doing this. Thank you so much for having me. I'm excited to be here.
You're such a great, unique character on the show. Natalie is many different things. Do you remember
how you got the part when we started? Yes, absolutely. I remember every detail.
I got the audition, did the audition,
and then I was called in for a callback at the studio.
And I remember my manager called and was like,
so Ben Stiller is going to be in the room.
And I'm like, oh my god, what am I going to do?
This is crazy.
Because I grew up watching you.
And sometimes you get a producer or director session
and you have to Google the person to know who
they are but that was not the case for me. And I think at the
time I was still getting really nervous during my auditions
like papers would be shaking in my hands. And so I'm waiting to
come in and I'm waiting for that feeling to happen and I it
didn't happen and it was weird. I kind of felt like the stars
aligned. And I was like, okay, what's happening right now?
And I entered and you were so friendly and you were like, oh, you went to LaGuardia High School
and we were chatting about that. And so I did the audition and I remember I left and I called my
boyfriend at the time and I was like, I bombed that audition. I was horrible. There's no way
I'm booking this role. And I think it's because I wasn't as nervous
as I normally was.
I just didn't know what was happening.
It felt unfamiliar and it felt strange.
Interesting. Yeah.
It's interesting that you didn't feel like you did well
because you were so great.
I remember you were so great and so unique.
And you hadn't really done that much, right?
When you got the role.
No, actually I got brought in for the camera test
to check out the hair and makeup.
And after, you were like, OK, you can step out now.
And I stood directly in front of a light.
And you looked at me, and you're like,
you're standing in front of a light.
And I was like, oh.
And I moved to the side.
And then you were like, have you done TV before?
Oh.
And I was like, not a lot.
And you were like, well, this is great for you.
Congratulations.
And you're so friendly and welcoming.
And I was like, oh, I hope he doesn't fire me.
Oh, no.
No, it was really exciting because, you know,
you were obviously so good.
And it was like, oh, this is fun because this
is like a new talent that the world is going to see.
You know, I remember so many times auditioning
and being so crazy nervous
and so specifically hitting every beat I wanna hit
and purposefully performing each little thing nervously.
And you're right that when you're relaxed,
that's when it's over, you feel like nothing happened
and it had to be boring and unspecific and shitty,
but you were just relaxed.
And that's when it's kind of probably at its best
and you don't even realize it.
That's such a good point.
I think so, because it doesn't feel
like you're performing, you know?
Yeah.
And then the first day on set was really quick
because we just did that news, that little news section.
Write the news story that Mark's watching on TV. So that was really quick.
Oh yeah, where you're a talking head on the local news.
So we blew through that scene.
I think it was like 10, 15 minutes we shot only,
which is like so fast.
And then when I came back for my first scene scene,
Ben, you had seen my crest commercial that had come out.
Exactly.
And you were like, give me the crest smile.
And I was like, what?
And so the smile just kept getting bigger and bigger. And you were like, give me the crest smile. And I was like, what?
And so the smile just kept getting bigger and bigger.
And it's so funny,
because I think especially because I went to
performing arts middle school and high school and college
and people are like, oh, commercials,
I don't wanna do commercials.
And you really never know,
like that commercial influenced Natalie
on a piece of work that I'm really proud of.
So I feel like I'm like, yeah, commercials.
You never know, it might be an incredible experience
that kind of gives something else a little something.
And Natalie's smile, man.
It's like incredible.
No, yeah, it's incredible.
And I remember that too.
And it's also a time when the scenes that we were doing
early on in the show with
Cobell and you and you were still finding it. We were still experimenting with the tone.
I mean, there were scenes that we shot a couple of times because we were trying to figure out
what Cobell should feel like. And you and her, I remember just have that amazing scene where she
just kind of comes right up into your face there and you have to
just sort of listen to her and feel her energy and then you know also you always have the board in
your ear and the scene you know the first scene with her where you're you know where you put your
finger up. Okay so the board is conveying pretty strongly that the severance procedure is provenly irreversible
Yes, and that this knowledge should be a given for a person managing a severed floor
Yes, of course while of course getting MTR to their projected numbers by the quarterly deadline in three weeks
Yes, of course
We are quickly rekindling our yield down here with our nimble new refiner.
And for what it's worth, I'd like to...
The board has concluded the call.
Yes, okay.
Thank you.
And may I...
Goodbye, Harmony.
It just became kind of iconic, I think, for the show
and so specific to the tone of the show,
but you really locked in in such a great way to find that sort of veneer, not to use a tooth term,
but you know, the fake whatever. But it's not fake. It's like a very, I think people connect with it
because it's so indicative of what it's like to work at a company where people are always on the outside.
They're so nice.
Yeah, I think so.
I think we can use all dental terms with Sydney.
And like you're really able to floss
right in between the beats.
There's no gingivitis in your work at all.
But for me, it was fun working on those scenes.
I remember talking to you a little bit
because I did know at that point, it was fun working on those scenes. I remember talking to you a little bit, because I did know at that point,
it was one of your first experiences.
And it was fun to just kind of like do it with you
and see how you were really just,
it was almost like I could feel you sort of like
just becoming more and more comfortable in your work.
And I think, you know,
to be new at an experience like that,
that's not easy to do.
I remember my first roles on TV shows
that were smaller than your role
and being really nervous
because you have to just come in there and perform
and it's just a whole, it's a lot, it's a lot.
But you seem to really settle into it
and have like an inner sort of confidence
that really served the character well.
Thank you so much.
I was a little nervous because you know,
it's like first day with a larger scene on set with a legend with Patricia Arquette.
But what was helpful for me was just coming in really, really prepared because I can overthink sometimes when I know I'm prepared.
I don't have the room to overthink that much because I'm like, I've done the work.
I know that. So now I can kind of just relax and see what the other actors are giving me.
And since there's so much talent in this show,
it was kind of easy to just look into people's eyes
because it's unlike an audition,
I'm not having to imagine what the other person is doing.
There's so much coming back toward me to work with.
So I think it was like a mix of preparation
and then also just being awestruck
by all of the hardworking people around me
that were just so obviously
talented and benevolent.
Unlike all of the characters in the show are not all so benevolent.
All right.
This is a perfect moment to take a quick break.
We'll be back right after this.
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So for season two, Natalie really kind of has to shift her focus to Milchik a bit more than Cobell.
So how did that change Natalie and what she was doing
for you?
Oh, I love that question.
I think for me, first of all, like I had worked
at a company that reminds me of Volumen.
So I knew what it was like to like be on the receiving end
of friendly feedback, but it feels like you're being
stabbed in the heart.
And so I felt like I kind of understood the world and how people communicate
in that way.
And so for me, there's a lot of back and forth with Harmony and a lot of like.
Threat because she's not following the rules.
And that was pretty clear to me.
But then when it comes to Milchek, like, he's so by the books, especially
in season one, and he's such a company man, and he's so committed, that I felt like there
was room for Natalie to have a different relationship with this individual. And so because he hasn't
questioned me, because he has, he seems to like, be more inquisitive
about how to go about things,
and I didn't feel threatened by him.
I felt like I could have a slightly different tone with him
than I did with Harmony, who, to me,
it's like the closer she gets to the board,
the further away I'm getting to the board.
And so that creates some tension between us.
But Milchik is a different case.
Yeah, I mean, it is interesting everybody's sort of ambitions or sort of prerogative working
at the company besides being committed to the company and to the ideology of the company,
but also just the, you know, the ambitions that each character has within the company
for what they want personally.
And I mean, I think we start to see that in season two,
especially in episode three, that scene where Tramiel
gets the black hair paintings, the re-canonicalized paintings.
And you two both did such great work with that scene.
And I remember we all talked about it to really get
each person's perspective working on it.
How did you approach that scene?
Because I thought you both had so much subtext going on
in that scene that was very, very complicated and layered.
So I tried to think about, like, so we're all people in this world,
and some things we're conscious of and other things are subconscious.
So I tried, like, as an actor to understand everything
that was happening subconsciously. I thought about how interesting it is if two black characters are having a different
black experience. And I asked myself like, well, would Natalie choose to kind of lean on her being
light skinned? Like, would she take that path? And I thought the answer was yes. And so even though
And I thought the answer was yes. And so even though there were moments
where I felt like sympathy come up,
because I think that Natalie is very empathetic.
I think that's why she's so great at manipulating,
because she can feel what people are feeling immediately,
but she lacks sympathy.
And so when there were moments
that where I started to feel sympathetic,
I tried to just like push it back down
in order to maintain my status in the company, because I
think that while she may have sympathetic feelings, her drive
to maintain as close to the board as she can, is more of a
priority for her. So I what I tried to do is kind of like, let
those things come up without letting them take over
completely because I don't think that Natalie, at least now in her journey, would be able to do
that because this is everything to her. And so I thought about like, okay, well, if Dremel's
going to approach it this way, and I approach it from a different way, I think that that's more
interesting to see two people who are struggling
with a similar problem, but are approaching it differently
and responding to it differently.
And you can kind of see their different levels
of humanity in a way.
What I also appreciated when we were doing this scene
and watching you guys work,
was how in the moment you were with each other,
so like you come in with like a lot of ideas about subtext
and ideas of where you're coming from,
but then it felt to me in the best way
that the two of you were then just sort of
in the moment with each other
and reacting to the other person's energy
in a way that made the scene very alive.
Yeah, it's fascinating to watch the two of you
grapple with this situation without saying a word.
Yeah. And then the next scene that I really enjoy is the way you're sort of playing Ricken like a
violin. It feels to me like it's just, again, so much interesting subtext and in a way it's even
more mysterious thing going on there. Whatever talk you guys have been having when Devin walks in.
But surely beer and juleps cannot fill the void left by love.
Indeed, only wine can achieve this.
But it is famously costly.
Which is why sadness is among the most recurrent issues facing the poor.
Remarkable. So astute.
Is it? That's what I was going for. Hi. I'm asking the poor. Remarkable. It's so astute.
Is it? That's what I was going for.
Hi.
Oh, my babe. Um, this is Natalie Kalin from Lumen.
Is everything okay?
Oh, yes, God, yes. Natalie just stopped by to, um, discuss my book, actually.
Oh.
It's a joy to meet you, Devin.
You must be so proud.
Hmm.
I am.
I'm sure you know by now that your husband's work has found its way on Taurus Everett floor.
Yeah, do we know how that happened yet?
So we've actually moved beyond that that and we are now discussing the,
what was the term you used?
The result.
The result.
That was a really fun scene to shoot as well
because I remember we went through
so many different variations of like,
for a lack of a better word,
Natalie may be flirting a little bit,
like how much, how can she be professional,
how can she flirt and like, where is the line?
And kind of playing around.
And that's one thing that's so wonderful
about working with you, Ben, is that you,
I feel like you really allow the actors
to try different things and go too far
and then pull it back and change the size
of whatever we're doing.
And that freedom is just really wonderful.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's necessary on this show too,
just because we never quite know where the line is.
And we don't do a lot of improvisation,
but the two of you in that scene,
it was really fun to watch.
And that's the thing, it's just a take.
I always remind myself, it's just one take.
You can try something, it can be awful.
Doesn't matter, it actually can be helpful sometimes
because you're not gonna use that one,
but it helps get you somewhere else maybe.
That's true.
So all season we've been asking fans
to call in with questions.
And as you know, you were kind enough
to record the outgoing voicemail message for us.
Thank you again. Of course.
Now, would you be down to give some Lumen approved answers
to some of these questions?
For sure.
All right. All right, let's listen to the first one. Hello, to some of these questions? For sure. All right.
All right, let's listen to the first one.
Hello, this is Stephanie with Schitt's Calling.
I'm interested in becoming a severed employee.
Previously, I've been able to bring my dog to work with me
and I was wondering if that was a possibility
working on the severed floor.
If so, would my dog need to undergo
a severed procedure as well?
Thank you, Praise Keir.
Wow.
Interesting.
Interesting question.
Fabulous question.
Well, I would have to say that Lumen has a strict policy against bringing in animals
unless it is a service animal.
And as far as a severance procedure goes, yes, the dog would have to be severed and then they could work with the
goats and wrangle in all of the goats and be a sheepdog if you will. That's really the
only option.
Wow.
That's smart.
Wow.
I'd like my dog to get severed because my dog half the time has issues with me.
Really?
Something happened. Yeah. But that's another story.
I'd like my dogs to get severed
and maybe the severed half of them would be trained
and they would do what I say.
Misbehaving dogs, weirdly enough,
my cats listen to me pretty well.
They'd even do tricks for treats.
And they come when I call them, I know.
Will you take my dogs for like two weeks
and teach them how to do that?
Are they food motivated?
I don't know what motivates them.
Every dog is food motivated.
Are you more of a dog person or a cat person, Sydney?
Oh, I've always been a dog person,
but over the pandemic, I fostered three cats
and then I somehow ended up with two.
But I had them when they were two and a half weeks old
because they were abandoned.
So they're very attached to me
and they even sleep through the night.
They drool when I pet them.
They run to the door like dogs when I come home from work.
I think they're very strange cats. Very dog-like. I know. I pet them. They run to the door like dogs when I come home from work. I think they're very strange cats.
Very dog-like.
I know.
I love cats.
Cats are great.
I didn't, I thought they were fine before this,
but now I love cats.
So I would say I'm both a cat person and a dog person.
I don't think I can choose.
All right.
Should we listen to the next hotline question?
Yes.
Hey, this is Simon calling from Sydney, Australia.
And because I'm calling from so far away,
I have two quick questions.
The first one is about Natalie.
I love her board scenes.
And I guess I just want to know,
is anyone actually giving her any feedback
or message through the earpiece?
Or is that just her performance?
It's brilliant.
It's incredible.
And I love her face.
The second question is around your opening credit scenes.
And I've noticed that in some episodes you feature it and some you
don't. I've seen that across other shows lately. I'm interested to know if
there's some thinking behind that. Thanks guys, brilliant show. Love it.
I mean first of all I'm impressed that someone's watching the show in Australia.
I know. Is that naive to be impressed because that's really exciting. It's far
away. Can I tell you something that's really exciting. It's far away.
Can I tell you something that's gonna blow your mind Ben? Yeah.
I'm in Ireland right now.
Oh my God.
Wait, what?
You're in Ireland?
I'm in Ireland.
Did you not see my sweater?
I was gonna comment on your sweater,
but I didn't want the listeners to feel left out.
I was like, that's a cool sweater.
Did they give you that when you got off the plane?
Like in Hawaii, you get a lay?
No? That's right. They put a sweater on you. A cable knit sweater. Did they give you that when you got off the plane, like in Hawaii, get a lay? No?
That's right.
They put a sweater on you.
A cable knit sweater.
So the thing to impress you, I'm in Ireland.
They have the show here too.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Do they dub it with Irish accents?
Yes.
We all have Irish accents.
Incredible.
That's a good question though, I think, Sydney.
Yeah.
My Lumen approved answer would be
that to question the board's existence
is very inappropriate.
And this suspicion that this person seems to have
is they might need a wellness check for that.
Mm-hmm.
You have to even ask about that.
It's a little bit. I know.
It's a little Simon.
I mean, I don't know how they do it in Australia, Simon,
but we don't question the board here.
No.
Yeah, that's Australian for board.
Yeah, and I have to say, Sydney,
whatever you're doing there,
we could watch you listen to the board all day.
It's great.
And then the little sound effect they put in,
of the crackle.
Yeah, and also the finger, the finger is pretty great.
Oh, it's so fun because I'd never do that to anyone in real life.
So it's so fun to be able to do it and acting because it's just so condescending.
It's just what an experience.
Yeah, I remember when we were editing that scene the first time in the first season,
it was just so much fun to watch you hold that and how long we could just watch you listen for so long
that we would extend it as long as possible.
This is so much fun.
Well, what about the opening credits?
Opening credits, yeah.
I mean, I've heard some people expound on theories
about when we do and don't have the opening credits,
and it's really something that is a choice that we make
based on the episode, really, you know,
what feels right or not.
We kind of did, in the first season,
we didn't have the opening credits in the first episode,
so we thought second season we'll do the same thing.
And of course we have a new opening credit sequence
for season two.
So that's been fun to see play out
and I hope as the season has gone by,
as we get to episode 10 coming up,
that some of the little fun little Easter eggs in there
have been noticed, which I am sure they have by our incredible audience that sees everything.
They see everything.
Isn't it amazing?
It's crazy.
The Reddit page is insane.
I'm so glad I don't know how to use Reddit.
I'm so glad I'm old.
All right.
Well, thanks for the messages, everybody.
Keep them coming, please.
And Sydney, thanks so much.
It's great to talk to you, great to see you.
So much fun working with you on the show.
You're so good in the season, so thanks.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, thank you, Sydney.
This has been wonderful,
and I'm just so honored to be a part of the show.
Thank you for having me.
All right, it's time for us to take a quick break.
When we come back, Ben and I will talk all about Episode 9.
The MDR team continues to search for answers as they try to piece together memories from the overtime contingency.
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It's time for us to break down this episode.
It starts with our first peek at Helena's daily routine.
She goes for a swim and then eats an egg with her dad.
Let's listen to some of that.
On a mother's day.
Yes.
What you eat?
I'll watch.
Man. Yeah. I just have to ask Ben, did this scene and the eggs gross you out? Well it actually was inspired by my life because my dad used to like to watch me eat eggs in
the morning.
Really?
No.
I didn't.
This is all Dan Erickson, of course. I mean, eggs gross
me out. Anytime I see a shot, like when she's splitting the egg with the weird egg splitter.
Yeah. I made sure when Uta was shooting and I would just stay far away. You were offset.
It looks like literally Ben's nightmare unfolding. Yeah. Also, by the way, it's just interesting that we get to see for the first time the
Egan mansion where they live and that they're living together.
Yes. Odd.
And the swimming routine in the morning. I think there's obviously the undercurrent of
the drowning that happened in 2004. And those shots are really elegantly done
by Huda Brushowitz and David Lansenberg,
our cinematographer for the episode.
But you know, just the space, seeing a new space,
the idea that they live basically very close to Lumen.
Yes.
Which we see as the camera pulls back.
Yes.
You see the water tower.
And that was part of like trying to,
this world that everybody's in there
is sort of in a weird way, it's all kind of connected.
And even though it's vast and it's reach,
it's also kind of very, very small too.
Also just Helen is like what her life is,
what her day to day is.
It's really interesting to see her kind of by herself,
clearly, at least as a audience member,
I'm still reeling from what happened in 204,
and clearly she's been kind of forced to go back down there
as Heli, and she didn't want to,
she wanted to continue faking it,
and she's been kept out,
and her dad is clearly disappointed, upset,
something is going on and he's certainly not being upfront about it.
All that to say this breakfast scene is really potent because you can tell she is wanting
something some communication from him and he's not giving her anything.
Yeah, he's not super warm.
No, no, that's not super warm. No. No.
That's not the word I would use.
And then he says it's a momentous day, and Mark has other plans.
He's playing hooky.
Right.
Helly's looking for him.
Milchik's looking for him.
Drummond is looking for him.
So we don't actually see what's going on with Mark and Devin until kind of deep into the
episode, and you start getting this feeling that people are looking for him.
Yeah, I think, you know, we know that this is the day that is getting close to finishing Cold Harbor and you can feel the stress that Milchik is under calling
Drummond, getting the call from Dr. Mauer on the testing floor.
Right.
There's obviously a lot of dominoes are falling here by you
Not being there right milchick is
Tasked with having to get you back right okay, so let's talk about what's going on with mr.
Milchick he starts making moves inside lumen starting with getting rid of his deputy floor manager miss Wong
Let's listen to him breaking this news to her
unveil floor manager, Ms. Wong. Let's listen to him breaking this news to her. Unveil.
Eustace Wong.
Today marks the end of your Wintertide Fellowship.
Congratulations.
Your bed will be moved from your parents' home
to the Gunnell Egan Empathy Center in
Svalbard where you will work to steward global reforms.
I thought I'd be finishing the quarter.
Empathy awaits, fellow Wong.
Empathy awaits.
This is really interesting.
What's he doing?
I think, well, first of all,
we know the Wintertide Fellowship is what Cobell
was a part of.
She was a Wintertide Fellow when she was younger.
And so she's obviously on a track, right?
I guess to go up the corporate ladder there, it seems,
but it's a little bit early.
So it seems like he might be making that call. There's been tension between them, but it's a little bit early. So it seems like he might be making that call.
You know, there's been tension between them,
but you know, it's a move.
I mean, we've been seeing her take liberties here and there,
particularly in conversations with him
and sort of getting her cockles up a little bit with him,
maybe inappropriately.
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to tell how much of this
is him just following protocol
and maybe what's underneath, you know, even with smashing the ring toss game, which is part of this ritual. So he says you have to make a material sacrifice and it's very much,
I think, according to protocol and the way that you're supposed to do things.
But also I can't imagine that there's not a little something there inside of him that is taking a little bit of pleasure and seeing her have to
smash her game that she's always playing.
For sure.
And I almost feel like Milchik is just sort of in this episode, taking
charge of his own path here at Lumen and Miss Wong, it's almost like she's
just causing a little bit of drag on his like aerodynamics of what he's trying to do.
Sure.
Later, he's sort of breaking free a bit
and taking the reins a bit with his relationship
with Drummond, and here we see him
unshackling himself from Miss Wong.
Yeah, for sure, and then it goes right to the Drummond scene
where he basically lets him have it,
and it's been building up and
for me watching that scene it's probably the most human that we've seen Milchik. You want
to listen to that scene? Yeah I do. Devour feculence.
It means eat shit shit, Mr. Drummond.
What did you just say to me?
I am manager of the severed floor, which means two things.
First, I am owed a measure of respect, even by my superiors.
Second and more obvious, that said floor comprises the whole of my jurisdiction.
To put that monosyllabically,
it's not my fault what Mark Scout does
when he is not at work.
It's yours.
So awesome. Go Milchek.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, it needed to be said.
Oh yeah, I feel like people are gonna stand up
and cheer when they see this moment.
Yeah, I mean, it's really a moment where you see him
finally standing up for himself outside of the
adherence to being the company man. Deeper than that, whatever his religious ideology is connected
to the company, which obviously goes pretty deep too. It also, I think, points directly to
the brilliance of Tramell's performance here and just how deeply we as an audience feel for this guy
who technically in the construct of the show
is an antagonist of sorts,
but you know, it's what makes this a little more complicated
is we're all on board with him as a character,
even when he's doing things we don't quite agree with,
he's emotionally involving us to the point of rooting
for him in a moment like this.
Yeah, and I think that's what's interesting about him
as a character too, and Tramiel has talked about it,
that Milchik is ambitious within the company.
So for him to make this choice,
which is to tell his superior to each shit,
is for him really a big deal.
Oh man, totally.
And the way that Tramell says,
monosyllabically.
That's great.
I remember there was one take there where Tramell,
he said monosyllabically,
and then he said the rest of the whole line like that.
It is not my responsibility.
It is yours.
And it was a take we almost used
because it was so interesting and weird,
but ultimately we felt like we didn't go with that one.
But he just, like the fact that he is so brave as an actor
just to go for things like that
and be so centered in his body.
Contained.
Contained and he just, it's all there.
You just feel it and he doesn't have to do anything
on the outside, doesn't have to gesticulate or move.
It's just very centered and locked in
and it's always great to watch.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, Dylan's relationship with Gretchen
reaches a breaking point.
She told her husband, Audi Dylan,
that she's been meeting with his Innie at the
Visitation Suite and he is not happy about it. So Gretchen decides to call it off with Innie Dylan.
Let's hear that. Wait, Gretchen, my life started when you came here. That's not true. You have so much going for you. No, I have nothing else. I have this and I have fucking pencil erasers.
I'm sorry, I have to go.
No, wait, wait. Um...
Gretchen Jean.
Oh my god.
Um, I love you. And I know I'm just an innie, but I love you all the way I do.
Gretchen.
I made this for you. I can give you a life, please.
I'm so sorry.
Gretchen.
Gretchen!
Oh my god.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just one of those storylines that it's very unique to the setup of the
show.
Yeah.
The idea that he's in love with this woman
that he can't have because his Audi has her.
And she of course is trying to, you know,
there's no way that she's gonna be able
to leave her husband for his Innie.
Right, right.
And it just is playing out in a very relatable way
in terms of somebody gets involved with somebody else
while they're in a committed relationship and
Find something in them and then there's also the layer of her seeing in him
What's in her husband, but she hasn't seen for a long time. Yeah, and the way that they played these scenes
It's really really emotional because it's so real even the progress from the first scene with the Audi
Yeah, where you know, she, I think,
is like a stand-up partner in a relationship, says, hey, I kissed this guy. And, you know,
she's like, she's just trying to be honest, because I think she wants to connect with
him. And of course, Audi, Dylan can't take that because he's feeling like, great, my
wife kissed another guy. That's great. That makes me feel great. Maybe I'll go quit.
And then to like the flip side, to see Zach have to play the guy who's just so
in love with her, who just, you know, like, why wasn't he happy for us?
And then he has this little ring that he's made out of, you know, from MDR.
And just hats off to Zach and Merritt playing that scene and Uta Breschowitz
who directed the scene just,
you know, those aren't easy to do to have to do a proposal out of nowhere, but that desperation,
that yearning of just wanting, you know, it's this like the trajectory of where Dylan started out in
season one to this guy who's just has been exposed to the feeling of love and realizing that everything else just pales in comparison.
Yeah, yeah, Zach is unbelievable in this
and Merritt as well on the receiving end
of this proposal that she knows is doomed.
And that Audi conversation in the kitchen
is fascinating for the reasons that you said,
like there's nowhere else where this conversation
could take place except
on this show in this particular circumstance.
And the fact that his reaction is the same
as his Audi's reaction, which is, I'm gonna quit.
Like, they both have the same instinct
for vastly different reasons.
Yeah, I mean, he's heartbroken.
He's kind of where Irving was in episode 201. Totally.
Irving wanted to leave.
And then the scene after in the kitchen with Heli,
where in a way we're seeing Milchik's plan from episode 201,
from the first episode of the season, paying off,
and that his plan was to split them up, right,
to be divisive and to create tension amongst the group.
And you see how hurt he is and how mean he is to Heli
in that scene, because he's so hurt.
So it's really in a way paid off for Milchik.
Yeah, he hits her where it hurts the most,
which is Mark couldn't tell.
That Mark couldn't tell, right.
I think it's a lot that kind of is coming to a head here.
Obviously it's the penultimate episode. So there's a lot of storylines that are really
starting to ratchet up. And then of course, there's Irving and Burt.
Yeah.
The other sort of tragic relationship in the season. Burt and Irving,
after episode six, where you start to feel that there is this
Connection between the two of them even though they're their outies. Yep, you know, there's something there that has come through
But also we learn in this episode that Burt is in fact a Lumen operative and
Has done things, you know, we don't know what, but he says he's taken people places and. Yeah, he says he's just a driver.
Yeah, he says he's just a driver,
but you know, that scene when Irving comes home
and finds Bert there waiting for him,
that's the amazing flip side of Christopher Walken,
who can go from so warm to so cold to so warm again.
And foreboding to affectionate.
Yeah.
And they're like the same sentence.
Yeah.
And he gets him a ticket, a ticket in the train station,
a ticket out of town,
and he says they can never see each other again.
Yeah.
Let's listen to that scene.
I've never been loved before.
Not really.
No. I have. No. No, you have.
How does it feel?
I don't know.
Don't you?
I want to know how it felt.
It's not possible.
Bert, it's okay.
Just go.
I've never had this.
I know. My whole life. I know. I want to.
I want to have it.
Nothing.
I'm ready.
These two are just heartbreaking and you find out about Irving here that he's
never been in love before. He's never had this romantic love in his life. That's
what he's saying to him. Yeah and then Bert says, well, now you have how do you feel? And the double meaning of I don't know,
because he really doesn't know, but yet he kind of does. I mean, just listening to that scene,
it's always interesting to me on podcasts to listen to these scenes because they have a
different feeling. You hear the music, you hear the sound effects, the atmosphere. But for me,
listening to that scene, I'm just taken by that could be, I mean, Chris Malkin and John Turturro,
what they do with their voices as actors,
that could be a radio play.
Totally.
You're getting every nuance just in the intonation
of their voices and it's so beautiful to listen to.
And yeah, the Verden Irving love story is very, it's sad. It was so beautiful on the inside and they're ripped apart from each other. And I think the fact that Burt decides to do this for him being severed was to try to find redemption somehow, right?
To find like the innocence in himself.
Yeah, yeah.
So maybe, I don't know, it's, you know, he's doing something very beautiful because, and
he doesn't have to do it, but maybe part of that is, you know, what's seeped through from
the severed side.
Yeah.
I mean, I think these guys have a love for each other.
Whether they both consciously can grasp it or not,
it's there.
And the reality is, Bert says we can't have this
because he knows, I think, the reality
of what that would mean with Lumen.
Yet he makes this move to save this guy.
It's interesting how the reach of this company
and what it does, it corrupted their relationship
on the inside.
I mean, it ended their relationship on the inside,
just as it was starting to bloom.
And then on the outside, it's just completely seeping
into both of their lives and corrupting anything
that may be between them.
I would say also just that scene between Bert and Irving at that train station, we were
just we're looking for a really interesting train station and we found it up in Utica,
New York.
Oh, cool.
So we all went up to Utica for a couple of days to film that scene.
And I was talking to Chris when we were up there and he said, yeah, I was here when I was in the circus as a kid.
Really?
Yeah, he was literally a circus performer as a kid
in addition to being a child actor and they played Utica.
Wow, that's amazing.
Incredible showbiz history that Chris has.
But I think it's kind of this beautiful sort of bittersweet ending
that we intercut with Miss Wong getting picked up by the shuttle bus
and with Dylan going to the elevator to basically say what could possibly be goodbye
because he's put in his resignation request.
So everything is leading to this, you know, the ending of the episode.
So Mark and Devin get out to this meeting point out in the middle of nowhere.
And we finally have this sort of like Western kind of standoff between.
It is sort of like that. Yeah, it's cool.
It is. Well, you know, it felt pretty momentous, right?
That this is like, I mean, you have finally decided you need to go to her.
You need her help.
I mean, Devvin's decided.
Mark seems pretty skeptical.
I mean, the only time Mark's seen her is outside his house
when he yelled at her and she almost ran him over.
I think he just doesn't trust her at all.
Like, what good can come from this, basically?
Yeah, but you're also, you have no other option
at this point.
No.
Yeah, you're right. You're forced to have to trust her. Yeah. And of course there's no basis in trust and we
should listen to that scene where you guys first talk because you can hear it in your voice.
Hello Mark.
How are you?
Oh my god so it's so good.
My wife's being held prisoner at Lumen, and I just got brain surgery in my basement.
How have you been?
We're allies now.
There's no need to...
Oh, we're allies now.
We're not neighbors anymore?
Sorry, I just, I guess I'm confused.
Can you, this birthing cabin, you can take us there, right, so we can talk to his any?
Not yet.
Even under the cover of dark, it's perilous.
We wait for night.
Oh, I see.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Can you, this birthing cabin, you can take us there, right, so we can talk to his any? Not yet.
Even under the cover of dark, it's perilous. We wait for night.
Oh, it's perilous. Okay.
Okay. Yep. You want us to wait until the evening?
We don't even know if he's completed the file yet. I assume no.
What file?
Cold Harbor.
You're so funny in that scene. The way that you're like, oh yeah, I'm doing great. I just had
brain surgery. I mean, to me
that's also sort of indicative of what the tone of the show is
that we are trying to go for where she's sort of speaking like she's
in some sort of like speaking like she's in some sort
of spooky serious movie and you and Devon are like,
okay, so cover up night, okay, great, whatever.
Yeah, I'm like, I feel like you guys are kind of being
the audience and Cobell is still being Cobell.
But yet sometimes there's funny stuff
that comes from Cobell too.
Totally.
That's not necessarily self-referential, but like, you know, when she talks about Jack
Frost, the hand of shampoo or something like that.
And it's so, it's like people take turns kind of, you know, poking a hole in the reality
of the heaviness.
That's right.
Which is, you know, I think something you as an actor are uniquely good at.
And Jen too, the way Jen is just saying like, come on.
Yeah, she's like, okay, come on.
Just, all right.
Yeah, great, all right.
This is great.
You're gonna be super dramatic, great,
but we need to deal with this.
And you ultimately have to call in, right?
You have to call in to Milchik
and say, I'm not gonna come in today.
And then we see Milchik decides to let you have a pass.
Yeah, he just sort of lets it go and I think it's really interesting because I think he's
emboldened to loosen the reins. Right, exactly. But there is a huge pressure to get him in
because this is the momentous day and it's not going to happen the way it's supposed to happen
if he doesn't come in. So he's really rebuking his marching orders and you know it's that moment
where he kind of looks at the painting on the wall and the painting is of a glacier. It's like an
iceberg. It's weirdly too small for the wall. When he redecorated Cobell's office, he put in a cool chair, new light,
little bar, record player situation too. Yeah, have his own little music dance experiences in there.
Yeah, sure. And so, yeah, so we're like left then with you saying, okay, let's go, let's do it. You
get in the back of the truck now, like Cobell did in episode 208. And you go out to the birthing cabin,
she has to say the password to the guard at the gate,
which is-
Yeah, this is one of James.
Yeah, so we have Devon pretending to be one of James,
which is like, what is that?
Yeah, I know, it's crazy.
And then all of a sudden, we're shifted
into any Mark's reality as you walk into the birthing
cabin and now we're like in your sort of disoriented state of like what's going on here and you're
brought upstairs to meet Cobell.
And we're left with I guess another little mini cliffhanger for the finale.
It's interesting.
What do you think about all the cliffhangers on the show, Adam?
Well, I mean, I have a lot of thoughts just about cliffs,
but as far as cliffhangers go,
you know, I love a cliffhanger.
What do you think about the cliffhangers?
No, I just think it's fun.
I think it's a blast.
Yeah, it's a totally different experience
watching the cliffhangers when the show is
playing once a week than when it's binged.
When it's binged, there's no real point to a cliffhanger, is there?
Except to get people to watch the next episode.
Okay, no, you're right.
That's what cliffhangers are.
By the way, the word cliffhanger is, I'm just guessing, is somebody hanging off a cliff
in like an old serial, Western probably,
to feel what's gonna happen next.
They want everybody to come back and pay
to watch the next one a week later.
Is this the most obvious conversation?
Probably.
But what I think is kind of interesting
is the week to week of it,
when the show's running the first time,
a cliffhanger like that can be much more frustrating
than when you're binging, which is just like,
oh good, I gotta watch the next one.
Maybe you're frustrated because you don't have time
or whatever, but there's a different visceral reaction
that the fans have.
I love it, I love that it spurs conversation
and I love it as an audience member too.
I love a cliffhanger to kind of agonize over.
Right, and hopefully this one has sort of teed up where we're
headed for the final episode. I think it has the ultimate
episode. Now is ultimate what you would say in regards to pen
ultimate because I don't think you say ultimate ultimate means
the best, right? Well, I think pen ultimate certainly means
that the next one has to be the ultimate, because pen, the Latin root of pen,
is what follows definitely is.
So penultimate means the,
no, I just made that up.
I thought, okay.
So we've just gotten word from our producer
that ultimate means being or happening
at the end of a process, final.
Oh, interesting.
Which makes sense, but I've always thought of ultimate
as the best, like the one.
Yeah.
Well, should we listen to Zach's predictions?
Oh man, yeah.
Let's do it. For the next episode?
Okay, this is it, final prediction.
Now, is this his final prediction
or is he gonna predict next week what happens in season three
if there is a season three?
I think this is his penultimate prediction and next week will be his ultimate prediction for season three. I think you're right
Hi Adam hi Ben, you know what I always say a
B are the first two letters of the alphabet and you're the first two people I think of when I think about doing this podcast.
Anyway, here we are back to talk about my predictions for the next episode of Severance.
Now my predictions so far I've been trying to base them off of what's happening in the
episode and I haven't really been nailing it.
But this show is so detailed, it's so complex, there are so many things going on,
I have a feeling I need to be looking behind that.
So, next time on Severance.
Here we have episode nine,
which is the penultimate episode of the season.
And I think you're trying to tell us something,
which is the next episode of the season is gonna be all about pens
I think the innies are gonna pause what they're doing
Everyone's gonna go to the supply closet and they're gonna test out every pen in there until they find the best one
That's right. We got ourselves a pen episode. I hope you all like it
I know you will and make sure to contact Ben, contact
Adam. Let them know what's your favorite brand of pen and what would you write with it if
you had to write something but only had 10 seconds.
What?
Wow. We're totally, that makes no sense, but we are totally in sync on the pen thing the pen ultimate
I think if you did a word cloud of this episode
And ultimate would be the biggest word in the word cloud
That's right
And I feel like Zach and I actually are in sync on the pen the pen idea and this will be the ultimate pen
Episode. Yeah. Well, I'm gonna miss Zach's predictions because they're all so
Wrong me too. And I feel like I'm gonna want him to start predicting things in my life.
Yeah, it's like he's so sweet and endearing and totally off base but like so committed to it.
Yeah.
All right, that's it for this episode. The Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam will be
back next week to talk about season two, episode 10, the finale.
It's almost here.
Oh my goodness.
It's almost over.
It's crazy.
Oh my goodness.
But it's not over yet.
So please stream every episode of Severance on Apple TV plus with new episodes coming
out every Friday for one more week.
And then make sure you're listening to our podcast, which drops right after the episode
airs.
The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller and Adam Scott is a presentation of Odyssey, Pineapple
Street Studios, Red Hour Productions, and Great Scott Productions.
If you like the show, be sure to rate and review this podcast on Apple Podcasts, the
Odyssey app, or your other podcast platform of choice.
Our executive producers are Barry Finkel,
Henry Malofsky, Gabrielle Lewis,
Jenna Weispermann, and Leah Reese Dennis.
This show is produced by Zandra Ellen,
Ben Goldberg, and Naomi Scott.
This episode was mixed and mastered by Chris Basil.
We had additional engineering from Javi Krustas
and Davy Sumner.
Show clips are courtesy of Fifth Season.
Music by Theodore Shapiro.
Special thanks to the team at Odyssey, Maura Curran, Eric Donnelly, Michael
Lavey, Melissa Wester, Matt Casey, Kate Rose, Kurt Courtney, and Hilary Shuff. And
the team at Red Hour, John Lesher, Carolina Pesakov, John Pablo Antennetti,
Martin Valdiruten, Ashwin Ramesh, Maria Noto, John Baker, and Oliver Acker.
And at Great Scott, Kevin Cotter, Josh Martin, and Kristi Smith at RISE Management.
We had additional production help from Kristin Torres and Melissa Slaughter.
I'm Ben Stiller. I'm Adam Scott. Thanks for listening. Thank you.