![]() ![]() ![]() Through three episodes, Season 3 seems primarily focused on the battle between creative and corporate. Season 2, meanwhile, found Dinesh and Gilfoyle trying to solve a morally repugnant question with mathematics and poor Jared getting trapped in a self-driving car that somehow ened up on a boat.Īs for Season 3, I already have a great deal of confidence in naming the moment I’ll never forget: It’s the horse sex scene. Oh, and that’s without mentioning the greatest dick joke ever put to the small screen. It wasn’t shy on highllights, including Dinesh’s internal struggle after discovering Gilfoyle’s girlfriend wants to sleep with him, or when Erlich seduced the wife of an important judge in a misbegotten attempt at an apology. Season 1 stood out immediately thanks to the specificity of character, place and voice. Even by season’s end, it’s the moments you keep coming back to, rather than the big picture. The exquisitely detailed coding conversations and layered depictions of various tech industry archetypes are pivotal in establishing the captivating world being studied, but viewers are likely still left thinking about one scene or another after each episode. Even though Mike Judge’s satiric take on the wild would-be woods of Silicon Valley stands tall as one of the most consistently and specifically serialized comedies on TV, it’s really a show built on moments. ![]()
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