đ§ âSilicon Valleyâ Creators: Tech Bros âDonât Give a Flying Fuck About Humanityâ
Mike Judge and Alec Berg on their HBO comedyâs prescience about AI and Big Tech
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Silicon Valley was supposed to be satire. In 2026, it plays more like a warning.
In a look back on the iconic 2010s HBO comedy, co-creator Mike Judge and exec producer Alec Berg reflect on how âincredibly intentionalâ they were in making tech startup life feel plausible. But whatâs wilder is how close to real-world worries some of their storylines would become â especially in the series finale in which Richard Hendricks (Thomas Middleditch) and the Pied Piper gang race to stop the AI they created from causing global destruction, thus forsaking their own personal wealth in the process.
It all lands very differently today.
âPeople may find it more relevant now, actually, with all thatâs going on with AI,â Judge tells Elaine Low in a bonus episode of Ankler Agenda.
For Berg, the showâs core thesis about Silicon Valley hasnât changed â only its manifestation. âThe premise of the show, satirically, was always: These people claim to be making the world a better place. But the secret is that theyâre actually just ruthless capitalists and theyâre just doing this to enrich themselves,â he says. âWhatâs changed is like, I donât think anyoneâs even pretending anymore.â
The conversation also revisits Silicon Valley as a defining artifact of the 2010s tech boom, as Judge and Berg recall the real-life tech titans who informed the show, the Stanford math professor who helped them construct academically sound dick jokes, and the making of the seriesâ mockumentary-style finale.
As Berg puts it: âItâs beyond satire.â


