THE HBO SHOW INDUSTRY : A WALK ON THE RUTHLESS SIDE

Graduates  from all walks of life compete for a coveted  position at Pierpoint, a top investment bank in London.

The graduates include  Harper Stern (Myha’le), a black  upstate New York native who uproots her life in pursuit  of success,  despite  having lied about the university  she attended.

Other graduates include Harold (Hari) Dhar (Nabhan Rizwan), a state-school graduate  and child of Hindi-speaking immigrants, Augustus “Gus” Sackey(David Johnsson), a gay black British graduate  from Eton and Oxford,  Robert Spearing (Harry Lawtey) is a white, working-class Oxford  graduate who is eager to please, and Yasmin Kara-Hanani (Marisa Abela), a privileged, well-connected  child of Lebanese parents  with an underachieving,  drug addled  boyfriend.

There are more than just dinner parties and vicious spats on the set of the black-hearted  INDUSTRY.  Nasty people doing jobs you don’t understand; that’s the core business  of the show, that’s utterly compelling,  a hit show about cut-throat  young people competing for success  in the world of  fintech.

Yasmin is now up to her swan-like neck in Britain’s  right-wing political fringe. Harper is running a fund elsewhere  and tangling  with a new, nascent  bank called Tender, headed up by Machiavellian  Whitney Halberstram(Max Minghella).

INDUSTRY is not for everyone.  Writers and producers, Mickey Down and Konrad Kay’s drama about young city bankers is zeitgeisty,  iconoclastic  and slightly  inaccessible.  The BBC-HBO co-production has morphed from an intriguingly cool chronicle of trading floor hierarchies  and after-hour hedonism (read– a lot of masturbation) into a kaleidoscopic  and mercilessly  entertaining  study of money and status and power in the UK.

Along the way, the show has accrued  huge acclaim  and a hard core following,  with its jaw-dropping scandalous,  sex-and-drugs strewn action and unusually  complex subject matter. The show gives its excellent  cast ample opportunity  to prove themselves  on screen.

At the heart of INDUSTRY  is Yasmin and Harper’s  twisted, yet bizarrely relatable love story. The pair need each other in a really bastardised way, a way that is really reflective of many female  friendships. There is something Shakespeare like about their dynamic  of mutual envy. Harper resents Yasmin’s wealth,  her status, her choice  to use her femininity  as a weapon. Yasmin, meanwhile,  covets Harper’s  gravitas and capacity to mingle with key people, and  listens to her when she is speaking in a professional  setting. Its also a show that’s incredibly  effective  at dramatising  the insidiousness of patriarchy.  The series is also darkly funny, although  it’s a far stretch from  satire.

INDUSTRY’s most pervasive motto is what happens  when the transactional  nature  of finance  bleeds into everything  else, and lessens your own humanity, our ability to be vulnerable and to empathise,

For me, the interesting character was Rishi, degenerate gambler, drug addict and philanderer,  a character  that melds masculinity with working in the world of investment banking, all of which window dresses for what is going on inside him.

Binge worthy.

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