Succession Season 4 Episode 1 __top__ Link
The episode picks up where the previous season left off, with Logan Roy (played by Brian Cox) facing a new challenge to his leadership. The story begins with a massive family gathering at the company's headquarters, Waystar Royco. The Roy children, Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Roman (Kieran Culkin), Shiv (Sarah Snook), and Connor (Alan Ruck), are all present, each with their own agenda.
Paternal revenge as oxygen; the performance of power; trauma as a team-building exercise.
Greg is caught trying to sell Logan’s vintage wine collection on a dark web marketplace. Tom forces him to drink a bottle of 1982 Pétrus from a sippy cup as punishment. “This is how billionaires learn, Gregory.” succession season 4 episode 1
The episode opens with a sharp contrast. Logan is celebrating his birthday in a room full of "tax exiles" and sycophants, feeling the profound hollowness of his victory. Meanwhile, the "New Gen" siblings are in Los Angeles, buzzing with the manic energy of their new media venture, "The Hundred." However, this venture is quickly abandoned when they realize they can spite their father by outbidding him for PGM (Pierce Global Media).
The episode explores themes of family, power, loyalty, and the corrupting influence of wealth. The show's creator, Jesse Armstrong, continues to critique the ultra-rich and the morally bankrupt systems that enable their behavior. The episode picks up where the previous season
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"The Munsters" sets the stage for a final season defined by "the cycle." The siblings are back in the game, but they are playing with the same desperate, reactive tools Logan gave them. By outbidding their father for Pierce—paying a staggering $10 billion—they win the battle but prove they are still trapped in his gravity. The episode asserts that while the players have shifted positions, the game remains a zero-sum war where the only prize is the temporary feeling of not being the one who lost. Paternal revenge as oxygen; the performance of power;
This pivot reveals the core tragedy of the siblings: they aren't actually builders or visionaries. Their only true North Star is Logan. They don't want Pierce because they believe in high-end journalism; they want it because Logan wants it. Logan’s Isolation