Ahead of the Apple TV+'s second season finale, pick up these tees, coffee mugs, totes more gear to show your love for one of ...
doing Lumon things (by which I mean, sorting numbers while not having a clue what said numbers mean). SEE ALSO: 'Severance' Season 2 may already be the best show of the year: Review The stunt ...
"Severance" production designer Jeremy Hindle and Starburns Michael Granberry tell IndieWire how a lack of surveillance footage from Season 1 led to the stop-motion sequence in the Season 2 premiere.
SEE ALSO: I went to the 'Severance' pop-up in Grand Central. It was wild. Seeing a character this young at the heart of Lumon Industries immediately set off alarm bells in Severance fans' heads ...
Apple TV+ wasted no time renewing Severance for Season 2, thanks to its immense popularity. But there's one more thing that played an important role. But "Lumon is Listening" doesn't just imply ...
The legendary actor’s voice can be heard in the ‘Lumon Is Listening’ video that is shown to the employees of Macrodata Refinement during the second season’s first episode, ‘Hello Mrs ...
He’s maintained a foothold in multiple distinct eras, and now he’s doing the same with a deceptively small but potentially pivotal part in Severance ... cameo as the Lumon building in an ...
During the “Severance” season 2 premiere, which was released Friday, Jan. 17, on AppleTV+, viewers were introduced to Miss Huang (Sarah Bock), the new Deputy Manager of Lumon’s severed floor.
Severance is an Apple TV+ series that is based on the plight of Lumon Industries' employees. The characters undergo a program called "severance," leaving them unaware of their life outside work.
Severance is finally back, and everyone’s obsessed with the Apple TV+ sci-fi thriller’s newest character: Sarah Bock’s disconcertingly young Lumon Industries employee, Ms. Huang. So ...
The first season of Severance Season depicts the "innie" as the personality and memories that exist only within the Lumon workplace. Innies have no memories or knowledge of their "outie" selves.