Silicon Valley’s parade of great characters expands as we’re introduced to “cool” lawyer Ron Laflamme — a kind of younger, slicker version of David Brent; the sort of guy who breaks into ...
Silicon Valley. Comedy 2014. 2,258. Add to Wishlist. From HBO and the offbeat mind of Mike Judge ('Office Space,' 'Beavis & Butthead') comes this comedy series that delves into the outrageous world of tech start-ups and the socially awkward underdogs trying to navigate its lucrative potential. Read more.
Apr 24, 2016 · While Eleanor Rigby spins in her grave and Cathy Rigby calls her lawyer, let’s check in on Hooli head honcho Gavin Belson. Publicly humbled and humiliated, Gavin calls a press conference to say...
May 17, 2015 · Silicon Valley is a phenomenal show with phenomenal music. Here is a complete list of the songs that are played at the end end of each episode during the credits. The songs from Season 1, Season 2, Season 3, Season 4, Season 5, and Season 6 are included.
Ben FeldmanBen Feldman (born May 27, 1980) is an American actor and producer....Television.Year2014–2019TitleSilicon ValleyRoleRon LaFlammeNotes13 episodes24 more columns
Although he has the cringeworthy attitude of Instagram king Dan Bilzerian, Russ's actual billionaire backstory is all Shark Tank's Mark Cuban. Both guys made their billions in in similar ways — Russ sold “radio on the Internet;” Mark sold Broadcast.com — and offer three comma club paraphernalia, as Sorgatz points out.Apr 21, 2017
WinnieWinniePortrayed by:Bridey ElliottFirst appearance:"Bachmanity Insanity"Last appearance:"Hooli-Con"Occupation:Facebook engineer2 more rows
Gavin is based on two real-life CEOs, Sergei Brin (formerly of Google) and Jeff Bezos (Amazon), as well as Gavin Newsom, the current Governor of California and former Mayor of San Francisco. The role of Gavin Belson was given to Matt Ross after he auditioned for the role of Peter Gregory.
Hooli is a fictional company on HBO's series “Silicon Valley,” which is loosely based on Google.Apr 26, 2016
The Pied Piper algorithm from the show Silicon Valley is a video compression software program written in C that achieves a Weissman score in the fives. This type of video compression technology is said to be able to actually shrink the internet by as much as 10 percent with widespread adoption.
Gilfoyle credits himself as an online security expert, and as such is responsible for system administration and server configuration at Pied Piper.
While at Hooli, Richard worked on the Pied Piper algorithm. However, even though Richard created one line of code on the algorithm on a Hooli laptop which would mean that Pied Piper would be property of Hooli, Richard's contract with Hooli was void due to a clause preventing him from leaving.
Hooli is a desktop and mobile app aimed at helping teams communicate more efficiently, mainly “for tracking shorter sprints or following up with meetings,” according to the company's website.Sep 8, 2014
Monica Hall is a rising star on the VC landscape, much like real investor Megan Quinn.Apr 6, 2018
Pied Piper, the fictional startup headed by a tech genius who created a revolutionary algorithm from Silicon Valley, doesn't exist in real life. But Terark does. It's nowhere near Silicon Valley – the startup is based in Beijing – but fans of the show will find a lot familiar about the Chinese compression startup.Jun 23, 2017
Aviato is a software aggregation program that takes all the information from social media whenever Frontier Airlines is mentioned and organizes it by region and airport and which are hubs and which aren't, developed by entrepreneur Erlich Bachman.
Gavin Belson, portrayed by Matt Ross (recurring season 1, starring season 2–6), is the CEO and founder of tech giant Hooli and the series' main antagonist, who embodies the soulless corporate culture that Richard is desperate to avoid with Pied Piper.
Erlich Bachman, portrayed by T.J. Miller (seasons 1–4), is an arrogant entrepreneur who founded an innovation incubator in his home after the purchase of his airfare collator Aviato. Erlich still holds on to his glory days in the valley, wearing Aviato T-shirts and driving a Ford Escape adorned with Aviato logos.
Richard quits his job to pursue his compression application Pied Piper. The company initially starts out as a simple data compression platform, but when this, and a videochat that Dinesh created with the algorithm fails, Richard pivots toward creating a new, decentralized internet, called PiperNet.
Cast and characters. Main article: List of Silicon Valley characters. Thomas Middleditch as Richard Hendricks, a coder and founder/CEO of Pied Piper. T.J. Miller as Erlich Bachman (seasons 1–4), an entrepreneur who runs an innovation incubator in his house and owns 10% of Pied Piper.
It premiered on HBO on April 6, 2014, running for a total of six seasons of 53 episodes. The series finale aired on December 8, 2019.
Filming for the pilot of Silicon Valley began on March 12, 2013, in Palo Alto, California. HBO green-lit the series on May 16, 2013. Christopher Evan Welch, who played billionaire Peter Gregory, died in December 2013 of lung cancer, having finished his scenes for the first five episodes.
Co-creator and executive producer Mike Judge had worked in a Silicon Valley startup early in his career. In 1987, he was a programmer at Parallax, a company with about 40 employees. Judge disliked the company's culture and his colleagues ("The people I met were like Stepford Wives. They were true believers in something and I don't know what it was") and quit after less than three months, but the experience gave him the background to later create a show about the region's people and companies. He recollects also how startup companies pitched to him to make a Flash-based animation in the past as material for the first episode: "It was one person after another going, 'In two years, you will not own a TV set!' I had a meeting that was like a gathering of acolytes around a cult leader. 'Has he met Bill?' 'Oh, I'm the VP and I only get to see Bill once a month.' And then another guy chimed in, 'For 10 minutes, but the 10 minutes is amazing! ' "
In the fifth season, the Pied Piper team gets new offices and hires a large team of coders to help work on Richard's new internet. Meanwhile, Jian-Yang manages to convince a judge that Erlich is dead so that he can inherit Erlich's estate, including the idea incubator and the 10% share of Pied Piper. Richard promotes Jared to be the new chief operating officer for Pied Piper, and Jian-Yang goes to China to build a knock-off version of Pied Piper.
Richard Hendricks, employee of a tech company named Hooli, creates an app known as Pied Piper which contains a revolutionary data compression algorithm. Peter Gregory acquires a stake in Pied Piper, and Richard hires the residents of Erlich Bachman's business incubator including Bertram Gilfoyle and Dinesh Chugtai along with Jared Dunn, who also defected from Hooli. Meanwhile, Nelson "Big Head" Bighetti chooses to accept a substantial promotion at Hooli instead, despite his lack of merit for the job.
Pied Piper has become a large company of 500 employees with Richard speaking before Congress on his ideology of a new internet that doesn't collect user data. He is shocked to learn that Colin's online game Gates of Galloo, part of the Pied Piper family, has been collecting user data the entire time. Colin refuses to stop, but Pied Piper depends on his game's revenue, so Richard seeks new investment in order to cut Colin loose. He finds shady Chilean billionaire Maximo Reyes, who offers Richard $1 billion. When Richard turns him down, Maximo begins staging a hostile takeover of Pied Piper. Meanwhile, Richard's right-hand man Jared has left Pied Piper to seek a new up-and-coming talent in need of his support. Hooli, once a tech giant headed by Richard's rival Gavin Belson, downsizes drastically after most of the company is sold to Amazon. Pied Piper purchases what remains of Hooli, including its subsidiary FoxHole. CFIUS judges foreign ownership of FoxHole to be a threat to national security, and Maximo is forced to sell all of his shares of Pied Piper. Gavin, free from his Hooli position, launches a new campaign for "Tethics" (tech ethics) which leads to an investigation that would tie up Pied Piper's business dealings. Richard is able to maneuver out of this with the help of Russ Hanneman. However, Pied Piper must now help Russ with his music festival RussFest. At RussFest, Richard suspects Laurie may be sabotaging their software as it is failing. It turns out that neither Yao Net USA nor Pied Piper scale. Instead of quitting, Richard integrates Gilfoyle's AI (with some edits from Dinesh) into PiperNet and it works better than anyone could have expected, allowing Pied Piper to close a deal with AT&T. However, the team soon realizes that in this effort to maximize compression and efficiency, PiperNet's AI has found a way to bypass all encryption, causing a potential global threat if launched. Thus PiedPiper is forced to intentionally fail to save the world from their own creation. They are successful in crashing the launch. There is a 10 year flash forward to see where everyone is, ending with Richard misplacing a flash drive with the potential world security-threatening code on it.
Silicon Valley. Kumail Nanjiani as Dinesh, Martin Starr as Gilfoyle. Photo: HBO. Silicon Valley has always been about the evolution of Richard Hendricks, the coder whose brilliant idea for a compression engine called Pied Piper anchored the show’s two previous seasons.
Enter Pied Piper’s new CEO, Jack Barker, or “Action” Jack Barker as he is known on the ‘net. Action Jack is quite the legend: He created two multi-billion dollar companies and started a fund for cancer research in honor of his late mother. “This guy’s a keeper,” says Gilfoyle.