To understand the second season of Severance, it’s worth remembering an important point from the first: When the characters undergo a procedure that “severs” their memories, so they can only remember what happens at work when they are in the office, it essentially creates two consciousnesses — two different people — living in the same body.
This means, for one of them, their only reality is a brightly-lit, sparsely appointed office with cubicles where they perform meaningless tasks in a windowless room for eight hours each day — separated from the other employees who work at the mysterious Lumon Industries on a special floor for the “severed.”
The longer severed people spend in their jobs, the more different the person inside the office, known as an “innie” — becomes from their “outie,” or the person outside. And it all happens inside Lumon, a place with a cult-like internal culture that reveres its founder, Kier Eagan, as a near-divine figure.
If this all sounds like a mind-bending complexity, you’ve hit on why Severance emerged as such an eccentrically surreal, engrossing puzzle box of a series when it first debuted on Apple TV+ three years ago.
Now, over the space of time in which some series debut and are gone, Severance is back with a second installment more gloriously weird and deftly assembled than the original season.
Making the most of fans’ anticipation
This time, the show’s producers — including executive producer/director Ben Stiller — knew fans would be waiting for their work. And they have made the most of that anticipation, crafting a second installment that extends the mysteries hinted at in the first season.



