‘Industry’ season 4 captures tech fraud better than any show on TV right now
What they discover is damning.
“Fake users drive fake revenue drives fake cash,” Sweetpea tells Harper.
The entire company appears to be built on fabricated numbers.
” What’s fascinating about this season of “Industry” is how well it speaks to this moment.
Tender starts as a payment processing platform for adult content.
Whitney is the embodiment of every tech baron cliche.
He’s lobbying politicians for a banking license and hunting for merger opportunities.
To her, Tender is that company.
It’s pride and prejudice — the sugar and spice that help make the world go round.
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Learn from founders and investors who have shaped the industry. Connect with peers navigating similar growth stages. Walk away with tactics you can apply immediately Save up to $300 on your pass or save up to 30% with group tickets for teams of four or more. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW Image Credits:HBO The show nails the tech world with such accuracy that reality itself starts to feel like satire.
Even TechCrunch gets name-checked as part of Tender’s media playbook.
The character is perhaps a nod to the rising “technofacism” criticism of some tech barons.
Harper, meanwhile, is still a calculating sociopath.
“My real passion lies with finding dead men walking,” she says at an investor breakfast.
She ends up raising millions for her new firm.
She is the one character whose existence strains credibility.
“Who needs realism when she’s such a great character,” one Black British founder told me.
Meanwhile, Yasmin is headed down a dark path.
Image Credits:HBO An Icarus moment could be on the way, however, at least for Whitney.
By now, the audience is familiar with how founders in the real world sometimes use deception to overinflate success (like Charlie Javice’s Frank) and allegedly steal from investors and the public (the FTX crypto crash).
There are many such infamous cases, and some are even referenced in the show.
It was a tale of complex accounting and legal gray zones — much like the financial fraud depicted in Tender.
Tender’s fate remains unrealized until the last few episodes run.
One of the best parts about “Industry” is that it moves fast and breaks things.
It’s a rush, a thrill; the visual embodiment of the absence of ethical capitalists.
And yet, just like in real life, we can’t get enough
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