

With just two episodes, Industry does not hold back on the drama and tension. However in the second episode of the series audiences are given a different tone when it comes to the characters.
For those who do not know, Industry tells a story involving young ambitious graduates as they navigate the cutthroat and high stakes world of a prestigious London investment bank called Pierpoint & Co. The series explores themes of power, greed, sex, and drugs as the characters Harper, Yasmin, Gus, Robert, and Hari compete for success while blurring the lines between friends, associates, and enemies in a world defined by deals and desperation.
The second episode of the season dives into Henry Muck’s loss at being MP. According to Deadline, Kit Harington (Industry, The Family Plan 2) had to to say regarding the character during the episode, “‘He was a really good MP, like he was a really conscious, conscientious, moral, good, conservative MP — the sort of MP you would want — and it speaks to the good, the kind of sympathetic side of him that he wants to do good, actually,’ Harington tells Deadline about his character’s dogged pursuit in making something of himself, his wealth and his birthright. ‘He wants to do well by people; he realizes, on some level, he’s privileged and that he can give back. He’s just so wrapped up in self that he makes these big mistakes and errors along the way.’”
Despite all the hoops that Yasmin and Henry go through during the episode with Henry slowly relapsing to his cocaine habits and eventually tells Yasmin about the center of his trauma which involved his father taking his own life in front of him. The episode concludes with Yasmin and Henry embracing each other with love. Marisa Abela (Pride & Prejudice, Black Bag) had this to say to Deadline regarding Yasmins choice to have sex with Henry, “‘I think it is an act of love,’ Abela says of Yasmin orchestrating Henry’s CEO role at Tender, ‘that’s how she intends it to be. But I also think it’s an act of survival, not to re-secure her status, but I think she genuinely believes that Henry will die if he has no purpose, and this is how I’m giving him purpose. I think that, genuinely, the beginning of Season 4 is the most altruistic version of Yasmin that we’re ever going to see, like she is genuinely trying; she knows that her happiness kind of now hinges on her husband’s ability to feel happiness and experience happiness and be an active participant in the world and all of these things, like bringing Jennifer Bevan into the house; she’s trying to create a hub of activity around her husband, whether that’s helpful or not — throwing an addict a big 40th birthday party, probably not the best idea, but this is what she does. She brings people around, she creates buzz, she creates energy.'”
The cast consists of Abela (Pride & Prejudice, Black Bag), Myha’la (Swiped, Dead Man’s Wire), Ken Leung (Last Days, Joker: Folie à Deux), Harry Lawtey (Words of War, Mr Burton), Sagar Radia (Comedy Playhouse, An t-Eilean), David Jonsson (The Long Walk, Wasteman), Caoilfhionn Dunne (A Thousand Blows, Andor), Sarah Parish (Piglets, Curfew), Indy Lewis (House of David, King & Conqueror), Adam Levy (Tribunal Justice, Safe House), Freya Mavor (Dalloway, Marie Antoinette), and Infran Shamji (Shardlake, The Walk-In).
New episodes for the series come out on every Sunday, up until March 1, 2026 where the season will come to an end.
