What does a waffle party, a melancholy performance review, and a CIA sabotage manual have in common? They all help us understand the strange, satirical—but strangely familiar—corporate world inside Apple TV+’s Severance.
In this episode, inspired by The Future of Commerce article The grim barbarity of optics and design: Severance quotes for work, we explore how the show’s unsettling one-liners shine a light on:
- The cult-like elevation of founders and company values
- The dissonance between perks and real well-being
- The emotional toll of performance reviews and layoffs
- The hidden rebellion in “corporate wellness” language
- And how “office sabotage” might not be accidental after all
We’ll also unpack some of the most striking (and hilarious) Severance quotes—from “The work is mysterious and important” to “They cannot crucify you if your hand is in a fist”—and ask what they reveal about real-world work culture today.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
1. How Severance Became a Cultural Mirror for Modern Work
- The show’s core premise and how it reflects the fragmentation of personal and professional identity
- The psychological (and existential) impact of dividing your “innie” and “outie” self
2. The Three Layers of Corporate Dissonance in Severance
- Praise Keir: Worshipping founders and flattening criticism through “values”
- Perks and Rewards: When waffle parties replace fair pay
- Workplace Realities: Absurd performance reviews, layoff rituals, and inauthentic feedback loops
3. Subversion Through Self-Help: Ricken’s Book as Rebellion
- How empty-sounding inspiration becomes radical within a closed system
- Quotes that double as calls for resistance (“A society with festering workers cannot flourish...”)
- Why Severance is secretly about solidarity, self-awareness, and autonomy
4. The CIA Manual Connection
- How Severance mirrors tactics from a real-life WWII sabotage guide
- The power of passive inefficiency as rebellion
- Bureaucracy as both enemy and weapon
5. From Dystopia to Diagnosis: What This All Says About Work Now
- How satire helps us process the absurdities of everyday office life
- What performance reviews, jargon, and fake empathy reveal about workplace power
- The thin line between fiction and reality when it comes to corporate culture
Key Takeaways:
- Severance may be sci-fi, but its commentary on modern work hits close to home.
- Corporate perks can distract from deeper dissatisfaction—but employees see through the charade.
- Language matters: What seems harmless can reinforce systems—or help break them.
- Fiction like Severance gives us a vocabulary to critique, reflect, and maybe even rebel.
- You’re not alone in your workplace confusion—sometimes the most radical act is asking, “Why?”
Subscribe to our podcast for more cultural commentary on the future of work and technology. Visit The Future of Commerce for deep dives into how culture and commerce collide. Share this episode with a colleague who’s ever sat through a performance review and asked, “What is this really about?”