For Richard this means an excited exclamation of celebration and achievement.
What do you do when you discover that your dead mentor was secretly working on the same project you want to dedicate your life to and you discover all his helpful notes? You “woo” of course. Woo!” “Woooo! Wooooo! WOOOO! WOOOOOOOOO! WAAAGHOOOOHHHHOOO!” Though he doesn’t realize it’s as a guest lecturer until he sits down for what he assumes is his first day as a student. so…” Of course, then the admissions person remembers seeing Bighead on the cover of Wired and suddenly he’s accepted into the University. Stream Season 4 episodes of Silicon Valley Trailers, Characters, Behind the Scenes & More HBO online and access extras such as interviews, previews and episode guides. “Yeah a lot of those classes were at 11 a.m. classes but really a lot more incompletes than anything,” the admissions officer says about his transcript. He initially applies to be a student, which does not go well. His newest venture is guest lecturer position at Stanford. He just kind of aimlessly wanders around life without a care in the world and somehow in the process gains countless riches, accolades and honors. honestly surprised that they didn’t title the episode Basic Minimum Requirement since it already. It’s barely a sight gag but rather a standard walk and talk that happens to be set in hell, itself.īighead is almost like a reverse Job. ‘Silicon Valley’ Season 3, Episode 4 Recap: ‘Maleant Data Systems Solutions’. This, however, is one of the better subtle ones they’ve ever done. Silicon Valley often does its best satirizing the “real” Silicon Valley with big, ridiculous, showy scenes. It’s unfortunate because Richard and Monica are surrounded the aforementioned “task rabbits” – dozens of dead-eyed assistants wearing lanyards and picking up food for their respective boss or ridesharing customers. “Maybe I just drop this one, move on and become some pathetic, fucking task rabbit, you know?” This is an unfortunate line that Richard utters while he and Monica are shopping at a Whole Foods-esque grocery store. But as Jared does unhelpfully point out: “I once saw him throw a sloth down the stairs after a presentation.” What an ominous statement and a hilarious callback to Gavin’s animal-heavy Hooli presentations. Sure, Gavin isn’t likely to kill Dinesh, especially after the events of the end of the episode. In the span of one episode he’s gone from being on top of the world to being at the bottom of it to potentially being the target of a revenge murder. “I think you might be the first Pakastani man killed by a drone within the United States.”ĭinesh is having quite the season of Silicon Valley. To do so will mean making friends with Gavin, the man who already has a patent for that very concept. Most importantly, however, Richard gets started on what will presumably be his life’s work: building a new internet – a better one this time, connected freely through everyone’s mobile devices.