Apple TV+ took three years between seasons and the wait was worth every second. Severance Season 3 is operating at a level that very few shows reach.
What makes it work (no spoilers):
- The pacing has improved dramatically. Season 2 had a few episodes that felt like stalling. Season 3 hits the gas from episode 1 and never lets up.
- The innie/outie dynamic has deepened in ways I did not see coming. The philosophical questions about identity, consent, and corporate control are sharper than ever.
- Adam Scott gives the performance of his career. Playing two distinct versions of the same person and making both equally compelling is extraordinary acting.
- The production design. Every hallway, every room, every prop in Lumon Industries feels intentional. The set design tells stories that dialogue does not.
The bigger picture: Severance is the most relevant show on television because it is essentially about work-life balance taken to its logical extreme. In a post-pandemic world where remote work and corporate surveillance are real debates, severing your work self from your personal self does not feel like science fiction. It feels like a pitch in a boardroom somewhere.
Where to watch: Apple TV+ exclusively. If you have not started the show, Season 1 Episode 1 hooks you within 15 minutes.
Source: Apple TV+, personal viewing through Episode 3
If you work in a corporate office and watch this show, it will ruin Monday mornings for you. Every waffle party joke at my office now hits different.