Season 3 devastating ending is literally broke my heart. But still I am waiting for season 4. Lets see what happened yashmin, Robert and herpers life in future
From the "Kit Harington" Wikipedia article: 'His mother named him after Christopher Marlowe, whose first name was shortened to Kit, a name Harington prefers. He did not learn what his full name was until age eleven. His parents are Sir David Harington, 15th Bt, a businessman and baronet, and former playwright Deborah Jane Catesby. Through his father, Harington descends from Scottish politician Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville. Harington is related to men who were involved on opposite sides of the Gunpowder Plot (1605). He claims a family connection with the leader of the plot, Robert Catesby, on his mother's side, while through his father's side, he is related to King James I, the target of the assassination attempt, and to Lord Harington of Exton, who was in the Houses of Parliament that Catesby and his co-conspirators tried to blow up.'
I started to find the constant Machievellianism of the characters disturbing in season 3. And it then makes you query any attempt at showing them as human. Then I wondered was the show always this bizarre mix of plausible characterisation and intermittent psychopathy? No Sopranos for sure, more a Sex and the Shitty
Rob was the only decent person: but by the end, he too had been corrupted and had become a slimy salesman - a kind of shyster. In fact, he had evolved into something like Henry. He was decent and vulnerable. And what did he get for it? Stabbed in the back.
@@adeel-eh7xq Not feeling good seems to be the point. But I wonder: are they actually helping us realize that this is not the kind of world we want to live in and these are not the sorts of people we want to be? Perhaps, despite the fact that it is a steamy, torrid melodrama, it is also something more? Perhaps it is a morality play about the rot at the core of our culture? That's how I'm taking it. There is a way in which it reminds me of the arc of "The Wire"; it doesn't start out being explicitly "political" or explicitly about "the press" or "the media." But then, it extends its reach. When Gus is fired (end of Season 1) he spends Season 2 involved in politics. And he starts out as a decent person trying to do good. And he gets punished for that, and ends up working for another economic predator. He's corrupted by his attempt to pursue decency in politics. And then the press becomes part of the story as well - particularly in the third season, when we see Yas not only harassed by the press, but also see her manipulating the press for financial ends and actually agreeing to a loveless marriage so she can continue to manipulate the press. Perhaps there is even a sense in which the show implicitly plays on the meaning of the term "industry." At first, it means "the financial industry." But then we are implicitly asked to consider whether politics is just another "industry"; and to consider, as well, how both finance and politics are in bed (literally and figuratively) with the press and the media.
Please someone do a romcom with these two. the chemistry is impeccable.
I needed this. The finale broke me LOL
We really needed this to heal from the finale ❤️🔥
Marisa is a goddess and she knows it, those eyes and that smile are heart melting
my girl yas did rob so dirty but i still love her
Hey bro lol. I would have walked out, Rob was strong
She got him his seed money!
She did him dirty with that seed funding
You could power the National Grid on Abela's charm
After a heartbreak from watching season 3, this is a relief.
yesss gimme more fun Industry cast press stuff!
omgggggggggggggg love them!!!
LOVE THEM ❤❤❤
Harry pulls the most gormless faces but its totally endearing
I love the story line of the characters . Like Ross and Rachael in a way . Marisa is an absolutely superb actress . Season 3 was hers alone !!
Is Harry giving baby girl energy, or 🏳️🌈 energy?
Season 3 devastating ending is literally broke my heart. But still I am waiting for season 4. Lets see what happened yashmin, Robert and herpers life in future
They seem to be their characters.
God hope not
Or not…
I am a man, and i am relentless
That’s so funny, I always thought the same about Rachel Stevens and Rachel from Friends. 💀 And everyone from B*Witched is Monica.
❤❤
Everyone would be destroyed if this happened to you....even if you completely understand ...the range of emotions...why it's a tv show...I love it
why is his hair brown when did this happen
why of course kit Harrington? is he posh?
He's basically got the same lineage as Muck's character does
That makes his casting as Jon Snow equal parts ironic, as well as completely fitting
A lot of English actors are surprisingly (?) posh. Reading about their lineages on some of their Wikipedia pages is crazy.
From the "Kit Harington" Wikipedia article:
'His mother named him after Christopher Marlowe, whose first name was shortened to Kit, a name Harington prefers. He did not learn what his full name was until age eleven. His parents are Sir David Harington, 15th Bt, a businessman and baronet, and former playwright Deborah Jane Catesby. Through his father, Harington descends from Scottish politician Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville. Harington is related to men who were involved on opposite sides of the Gunpowder Plot (1605). He claims a family connection with the leader of the plot, Robert Catesby, on his mother's side, while through his father's side, he is related to King James I, the target of the assassination attempt, and to Lord Harington of Exton, who was in the Houses of Parliament that Catesby and his co-conspirators tried to blow up.'
Sardonic
I started to find the constant Machievellianism of the characters disturbing in season 3. And it then makes you query any attempt at showing them as human. Then I wondered was the show always this bizarre mix of plausible characterisation and intermittent psychopathy? No Sopranos for sure, more a Sex and the Shitty
Rob was the only decent person: but by the end, he too had been corrupted and had become a slimy salesman - a kind of shyster. In fact, he had evolved into something like Henry. He was decent and vulnerable. And what did he get for it? Stabbed in the back.
Yes, the creators seemed to absolutely hate the finance industry and it shows. Not exactly a feel good show.
@@adeel-eh7xq Not feeling good seems to be the point.
But I wonder: are they actually helping us realize that this is not the kind of world we want to live in and these are not the sorts of people we want to be?
Perhaps, despite the fact that it is a steamy, torrid melodrama, it is also something more? Perhaps it is a morality play about the rot at the core of our culture? That's how I'm taking it.
There is a way in which it reminds me of the arc of "The Wire"; it doesn't start out being explicitly "political" or explicitly about "the press" or "the media." But then, it extends its reach. When Gus is fired (end of Season 1) he spends Season 2 involved in politics. And he starts out as a decent person trying to do good. And he gets punished for that, and ends up working for another economic predator. He's corrupted by his attempt to pursue decency in politics.
And then the press becomes part of the story as well - particularly in the third season, when we see Yas not only harassed by the press, but also see her manipulating the press for financial ends and actually agreeing to a loveless marriage so she can continue to manipulate the press.
Perhaps there is even a sense in which the show implicitly plays on the meaning of the term "industry." At first, it means "the financial industry." But then we are implicitly asked to consider whether politics is just another "industry"; and to consider, as well, how both finance and politics are in bed (literally and figuratively) with the press and the media.
something about marisa gives me bad vibes