“Seder” is a masterclass in tension and humiliation. Writer Konrad Kay and director Lena Dunham (who helms this episode with unexpected restraint) understand that the most brutal violence in finance isn’t physical—it’s being laughed at by your boss while holding a glass of kosher wine. The D’Thrip will haunt Yasmin for the rest of the season, and it gives the audience the show’s most quotable new verb.
When Felix calls back to scream, he doesn’t use fancy financial terminology. He uses the street’s cruelest diminutive: “Did you just D’Thrip me?” While the trading floor burns, the episode’s centerpiece is Eric Tao’s Seder dinner. In any other show, a Passover meal would symbolize family, tradition, and redemption. In Industry , it’s a gladiator’s pit with matzah. industry s01e04 dthrip
“Don’t apologize. Apologies are just D’Thrips for the soul.” – Eric Tao “Seder” is a masterclass in tension and humiliation
The final shot of Yasmin’s reflection in the HR glass—a perfect visual metaphor for a career that has suddenly become very fragile, very transparent, and very close to breaking. When Felix calls back to scream, he doesn’t