During a tense dinner Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong) attempts to negotiate a payout from the family company with his father, Logan Roy (Brian Cox). As could have been expected, negotiations quickly turn south.
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25 Comments
Jeremy Strong is freakishly talented. Like it actually kind of weirds me out how phenomenal he is in the role of Kendall.
THOSE ARE MY M&M'S GREG GOHD DOMIT
Logan was right.
Hands down favorite scene of the series; maybe television in general.
what season and episode is this again?
What I love is that I think Logan might’ve allowed him to go in that first half after hearing Kendall’s reasoning but lost when he started talking about how he’s actually a good guy. If he just got off his high horse for a moment, he might’ve got what he wanted
This show is one of the gems we will be talking about for years to come. chefs kiss
You can tell that Logan thinks of business as a game, like a game of chess. He enjoys it, but won’t give anyone an advantage, not even his kids
Logan saw himself in Kendall.
That moment when Ken said: "Im better than you" is where the viewer should realize he is not serious person.
If Kendall would've stopped at "you've won", maybe the old man might've actually let him go. But nooo.. he had to be better than him. Shame.
I always geta kick out of billionaires talking about life or death while eating with a silver spoon held by their butler.
What episode is this
To me this is about Logan wanting nothing more than to have Kendall or one of this other kids to succeed him, but Kendall is too broken a person to earn it. Instead he spends his time trying to knife his dad. Unfortunately for Kendall, Logan knows his way around a knife fight in the mud.
Logan was right. Some of us can handle the real world and succeed. Most can't
Jeremy 🙌🏻🙌🏻🤌🏻🤌🏻
Logan fue el villano de una historia mal contada. Quiso a sus hijos, como el mundo le enseñó a querer, pero los siblings cavaron su propia tumba (de millones de dolares)
there's no closure, no conclusions in this scene. it makes it so real.
Wonderful scene that puts on full display how vile and utterly contemptible Kendall is. "Let me out"…this is a grown man who is completely free to do whatever he wants. The problem is he has zero ideas and zero talents, so he could not achieve his current lifestyle by his own effort and he is not quite such a good guy to deal with that. And then the "I'm better than you." Moralistic screeds are generally a cover for impotence and poisonous envy, very good lesson in that for those who see.
What an amazing scene this is. Says so much about power and money.
"oh you just noticed did you?" is such a great riposte, immediately reveals what phonies the kids are but especially shiv and ken. Reminds me of the sopranos ep where carmela cries thinking the longer the kids stay around tony as they grow and become more aware of his crimes the more complicit they become. Its the same with the roy kids, Ken loves to go on about how his dad's empire is evil but the kids are all tacitly complicit in that evil by virtue of enjoying the fruits of that empire and all the money and power for their entire adult lives and becoming more entangled in the roy company's shady dealings. They know its wrong but they could never give up everything their dad's evil has afforded them so they just have various methods of deluding themselves into thinking its not on them or they didn't "really" know
LEGENDARY
I love when Logan Roy takes command of a conversation—especially with his kids. Parents always have the receipts! They know all our weaknesses. In this scene, one of my favorites, he hits them where it hurts by bringing up the kid he killed. Then boom! He takes control and ends the moment on his terms.
I don't understand why logan did not give kendall a way out?
why does this clip start right after the best partttt