HBO’s Succession ended a four-season run on Sunday night. And Siobhan Roy’s final choice, which determined the fate of her father’s empire, exemplifies what the show has been best at, and what its devotees love about it.
Note: We’re about to talk about the Succession finale and its fallout, so if you haven’t watched it and you plan to, this is where you can hop off the train.
Who is she? One last time before the show fades out: Siobhan Roy, played by Sarah Snook, is the youngest child and only daughter of the media mogul Logan Roy, played by Brian Cox, who died in the third episode of the final season. She goes by “Shiv,” and if your first thought is, “Shiv, like the knife?” the answer is, “Yes, exactly like the knife.”
What’s the big deal? Narratively, Succession was about whether any of the Roy children could escape their father’s legacy as a terrible parent who made them into what his oldest son, Connor (Alan Ruck), once called “needy love sponges.” (Answer: No. Needy love sponges 4-ever!) But Shiv’s big move is what the show was about as a television event.
Can’t get enough? Listen to the Pop Culture Happy Hour full recap of the Succession finale.
What are people saying?
Because Shiv knew that Matsson, the aforementioned tech weirdo who bought the company, would appoint Tom as CEO, there are lots of ways to read her choice and her accompanying announcement to Kendall that she just didn’t think he’d do a good job.
It isn’t a matter of financial security. She also has to think of what’s best for her child, not just for herself.
— jenaj (@jenaj3) May 29, 2023
I think watching him grandstand in the room was making her realize she would be pushed out and he dug his own grave in the conference room with her and Roman. You can’t make a guy like that head of anything. The way he lied about the waiter…
— Gabby “now a STRIKE Capt’n” Revilla Lugo 🇳🇮 (@gabbyrevlugo) May 29, 2023
Mattson essentially passed her over for being too strong willed, too full of ideas, and being a woman. whether or not she deserved it in the grand sense, he definitely should have honored their deal
— Adam Sternbergh (@sternbergh) May 29, 2023
So, which one is it?
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