Silicon Valley (season 6)
The sixth and final season of the American comedy television series Silicon Valley premiered in the United States on HBO on October 27, 2019, and concluded on December 8, 2019. The season consisted of 7 episodes.[1]
Silicon Valley | |
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Season 6 | |
Promotional poster | |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Release | |
Original network | HBO |
Original release | October 27 – December 8, 2019 |
Season chronology | |
Cast
Main
- Thomas Middleditch as Richard Hendricks
- Josh Brener as Nelson "Big Head" Bighetti
- Martin Starr as Bertram Gilfoyle
- Kumail Nanjiani as Dinesh Chugtai
- Amanda Crew as Monica Hall
- Zach Woods as Donald "Jared" Dunn
- Matt Ross as Gavin Belson
- Suzanne Cryer as Laurie Bream
- Jimmy O. Yang as Jian-Yang
- Chris Diamantopoulos as Russ Hanneman
Recurring
- Chris Williams as Hoover
- Bernard White as Denpok
- Arturo Castro as Maximo Reyes
- Ben Feldman as Ron LaFlamme
- Helen Hong as Tracy
- Henry Phillips as John Stafford
- Nandini Bapat as Gwart
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
47 | 1 | "Artificial Lack of Intelligence" | Mike Judge | Ron Weiner | October 27, 2019 | 0.448[2] | |
Richard is questioned by Congress regarding data collection and promises that Pied Piper will never collect its user data and that they are creating a decentralized internet. Jared begins to worry about all the new changes, as he is no longer working with Richard closely and his office is on the other side of building. Richard learns from Colin that they are indeed collecting data from their customers, including recording their conversations via their gamer headsets. Hooli's merger with Amazon is approaching and Gavin learns that their properties will be rebranded, which makes Gavin furious. Richard has Gilfoyle use his new compression and inference API to index all the recorded conversations. Wanting Colin out, Richard and Jared blackmail him with the indexed conversations which detail Colin's terrible behavior which includes stealing from the company. However, Colin turns it around on them and impresses his board members by presenting the API as a fantastic tool for data mining. Jared returns to the Hacker Hostel where he meets Gwart, a new programmer. | |||||||
48 | 2 | "Blood Money" | Mike Judge | Carson Mell | November 3, 2019 | 0.383[3] | |
Colin has inserted ads into Gates of Galloo using their API. Jared resigns from Pied Piper, now that the company has significantly changed. Jared instead wants to help Gwart, the eccentric new programmer at the Hacker Hostel. All of Hooli's major apps have been consumed by Amazon and Gavin is given three months by his board members to recoup their investments. Pied Piper's head of HR, Tracy, tricks Gilfoyle into catching up on his backlog of work. Tracy tries to assign Gilfoyle five coders, but he insists on doing all the work himself. At a charity event, Monica and Richard bump into Laurie Bream, who is now the CEO of YaoNet and has moved the company to the US. Richard later speaks with Maximo Reyes, a shady Chilean businessman who is interested in Pied Piper. The next day, he offers Richard $1 billion for 10% of Pied Piper. Richard asks Monica for advice, but she leaves the decision to him. Richard goes to the Hacker Hostel to ask Jared for advice, but once Richard insults Gwart, Jared chases Richard out of the house. Richard then meets with Maximo who makes it clear to Richard that he wants to invest in his company but they will mine data. If he declines, Maximo tells Richard "it will be very bad for you." | |||||||
49 | 3 | "Hooli Smokes!" | Liza Johnson | Sarah Walker | November 10, 2019 | 0.459[4] | |
Richard declines the $1 billion offer from Maximo much to the chagrin of Dinesh and Gilfoyle. The move was meant to gain enough money to move Pied Piper forward without Colin and his data-collecting online game, their main source of income. However, Colin ends up selling his game to Maximo. Pied Piper thus loses both of them. Distraught, Richard walks through the park only to bump into his arch-rival Gavin Belson, head of Hooli. Gavin's multi-billion dollar search giant is on the verge of collapse. Richard spills his troubles to Gavin and proposes they help each other. Gavin declines and leaves to use the information he learned from Richard to buy out Gwart's app. Horrified, Jared then approaches Pied Piper with the details of the buyout which reveals how little Hooli is valued these days. Richard proposes they buy Hooli. While Gavin is participating in a triathlon, Richard and the Pied Piper inner circle rush to the Hooli board members to get them to sign the buyout. They succeed and in a reversal of fortune, the once young-inexperienced start-up entrepreneur is now head of the company that offered him a $10 million buyout in the first episode. However the success may have come at the expense of friendship and morals. | |||||||
50 | 4 | "Maximizing Alphaness" | Liza Johnson | Daisy Gardner | November 17, 2019 | 0.452[5] | |
Pied Piper has taken over former tech giant and rival Hooli, and with it Richard's former manager, Ethan. Although valuable for his tech and leadership skills, Ethan publicly mocks Richard by bringing up embarrassing incidents from his days as a new Hooli employee. Richard takes Dinesh's advice to assert his role as CEO. Monica, after successfully negotiating Pied Piper's buyout of Hooli seeks to join a 'Women in Tech' forum. Although she has no desire to join female empowerment groups, it includes her former boss Laurie and other influential movers and shakers. Gilfoyle, ever the loner, now finds he must play manager to former Hooli employee John, who may be his equal. Meanwhile Hooli's founder and former CEO, Gavin Belson has left the tech world to write a romance novel. Jared, whose troubled childhood in a series of abusive foster homes is often alluded to, finally meets his birth parents. | |||||||
51 | 5 | "Tethics" | Pete Chatmon | Lew Morton | November 24, 2019 | 0.311[6] | |
Richard is incensed that after years of standing up to Gavin Belson on ethical issues, he has been one-upped when Gavin creates the "Tethics" pledge. Richard vows to expose Gavin's hypocrisy while his co-workers and advisers urge him to sign the pledge. Gavin, the silver-tongued former head of tech giant Hooli has one more trick up his sleeve when it comes to manipulating Richard. Meanwhile Gilfoyle and Monica are accused of being bad managers. They engage in a contest to see who can win the favor of their co-workers. Jared has returned to Richard's side and is now attempting to gaslight his former protege Holden. The brash and ultra-confident billionaire investor Russ Hanneman returns to Richard to convince him to install free internet infrastructure for his RussFest event. | |||||||
52 | 6 | "RussFest" | Matt Ross | Carrie Kemper | December 1, 2019 | 0.414[7] | |
Pied Piper is turned down for a massive deal with AT&T and Richard keeps the news a secret, just as the company is gearing up for RussFest, a massive festival in the desert funded by the brash, impulsive billionaire Russ Hanneman. Richard promises Pied Piper can create an entire infrastructure for the festival using his unproven decentralized internet concept. This includes running all systems on the network including using smartphones for all purchases such as pay toilets, food and water plus a giant hologram of Russ. But the network keeps slowing down during the festival causing fears of a total failure which could result in a blackout with angry, rioting festival-goers. Is it because a rival is trying to sabotage them? Meanwhile Jared can't stop thinking about Gwart, the eccentric genius programmer he served before she was hired away by Pied Piper's rival YaoNet. Jian-Yang creates a fake girl's coding camp as his latest unethical scheme, using Pied Piper's name and claiming to be original Pied Piper investor Erlich Bachman. | |||||||
53 | 7 | "Exit Event" | Alec Berg | Alec Berg | December 8, 2019 | 0.454[8] | |
Thanks to Richard using an AI to self-improve Pied Piper's network, Pied Piper closes a deal with AT&T. However, mere days before the launch, Richard notices a discrepancy with the network's data transfer system. Gilfoyle tells him the AI has improved the efficiency of the network so well that it learned how to decrypt several strong encryption schemes, potentially threatening global privacy. The group decides to intentionally botch the launch by shipping faulty code, Dinesh excluded. At launch day, Gabe reverts the code, forcing Dinesh to upload the faulty code by himself. Pied Piper's launch is a failure and shuts down as rats flood the streets of major cities worldwide. In a documentary 10 years later, Richard is now a professor at Stanford University, Big Head is Stanford's president, Dinesh and Gilfoyle own a cybersecurity firm, Monica works for the NSA, Jared works at a nursing home, Gavin Belson is a romance novelist, Laurie is serving time in prison, and Jian Yang has stolen Erlich's identity and fled to a foreign country with his fortune. Richard says he still has a copy of the original Pied Piper code on a flash drive but cannot find it. |
Production
In April 2018, it was announced that HBO had renewed the series for a sixth season.[9] In May 2019, HBO confirmed that season six would be the final season and that it would consist of seven episodes; the show had production delays to accommodate producer Alec Berg, who runs the HBO comedy series Barry.[10]
Reception
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the season holds a 92% approval rating, with an average rating of 7 out of 10 based on 12 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads, "Though the strangeness of reality threatens to one-up it, Silicon Valley's final season is funny, fearless, and still playing by its own rules to the very end."[11] On Metacritic, the season has a score of 78 out of 100 based on 4 reviews.[12]
References
- "HBO Comedy Series SILICON VALLEY Returns October 27 for Sixth and Final Season". HBO. October 8, 2019. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (October 29, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 10.27.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved October 29, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 5, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 11.3.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 12, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 11.10.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 19, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 11.17.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (November 26, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 11.24.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 4, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 12.1.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
- Metcalf, Mitch (December 10, 2019). "Updated: ShowBuzzDaily's Top 150 Sunday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 12.8.2019". Showbuzz Daily. Retrieved December 10, 2019.
- Petski, Denise (April 12, 2018). "'Barry' & 'Silicon Valley' Renewed By HBO". Deadline. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
- Andreeva, Nellie (May 31, 2019). "'Silicon Valley' To End With Abbreviated Season 6 On HBO; EPs Promise "Fitting Conclusion"". Deadline. Retrieved May 31, 2019.
- "Silicon Valley: Season 6". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
- "Silicon Valley: Season 6". Metacritic. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
External links
- Official website
- Silicon Valley – list of episodes on IMDb