Silicon Valley is as much about the building of a company as it is about how that affects its prime movers.
Silicon Valley constantly draws on and deepens our understanding of its characters.
This is a beautifully constructed bottle rocket of an episode, shooting out a cascading shower of comic sparks.
Silicon Valley’s humor springs organically from the relationships between its well-rounded characters.
The episode abounds in the excruciatingly awkward would-be-alpha-male slang that is the show’s specialty.
The episode consists of comic meditations on the friction between programmers and the people they rely on.
It probes the disconnect between worthiness and success in a world where sizzle almost always trumps substance.
The episode ties together multiple plot threads by connecting them all to the fate of See Food.
The latest episode of the show takes a satiric look at the all-important yet elusive concept of intellectual property.
The episode is full of wonderfully wooden nerd-boy stabs at what Donald Trump calls locker-room talk.
The latest episode of Silicon Valley skewers the industry’s social mores and morals with precision.
Silicon Valley remains a complicated, heartfelt, and intensely uproarious articulation of the struggle to freely realize one’s creative yearnings.
In the show, even the most progressive form of capitalism hinges on a want to sublimate personal feelings, desires, and opinions.
Glancing over this year’s Emmy nominations is to marvel again at just how much the television landscape has changed in 20 years.
It’s driven by an outrage that acknowledges that our culture is being reshaped, with terrifying rapidity, by opportunistic horndogs.