The lesson here? Investors will react, sometimes against their best interests, if they fear “missing out” on the next big thing.Įrlich gives us explicit details on how FOMO works. Due to his keen ability to manipulate others who think like him, Erlich uses FOMO to achieve a Pied Piper bidding war. The current 25-percent owner of C.J.’s blog, Erlich Bachman, is quite adept at his new job as Chief Evangelism Officer of Pied Piper. A vengeful smirk appears on Patrice’s face. As Patrice turns in her Hooli badge and parking-garage pass, she sees an ad soliciting tech-company gossip for C.J. Never use an egomaniac’s words against him, Patrice! Especially if those words are, “We can only achieve greatness, if first, we achieve goodness.” This line is a callback to Silicon Valley’s debut episode it’s the first bit of Gavin Belson bullshit we ever heard. Some potential funds have just become available, too: When Patrice gives Gavin a gentle talking to about his use of live animals in his misguided board meetings, he fires her. So, yeah, Hoover deserves a massive raise. They can scoop up the elephant and drop him into San Francisco Bay, where he’ll join the lost Tiki head from Erlich’s Bachmanity Insanity party. Once again, Gavin’s security guy, Hoover, proves to be a godsend: He knows some guys with a crane.
His bigger concern is how to dispose of the carcass without arousing suspicion. “He had just been rescued from the circus, but as it turns out, he loved performing.” Gavin doesn’t care about poor dead Dumbo, though. “He was old and depressed,” says Patrice, Gavin’s animal dealer, of the now-dead elephant he “considered” in his last board meeting. “How the fuck does something like this happen?” Gavin bellows in the first line of “The Uptick,” the third-season finale of Silicon Valley. Miller as Erlich, Thomas Middleditch as Richard.