Industry: Season 4 Episode 2 – Recap and Review
Things shift in focus to Henry and Yasmin’s relationship, and so comes the question: can they get you to care about two characters known to be fodder for others?

Spoiler Alert: This summary and review contains spoilers.
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Episode 2 “The Commander and The Grey Lady” Recap and Details
- Director(s): Mickey Down, Konrad Kay
- Writer(s): Mickey Down, Konrad Kay
- Public Release Date (HBO Max): January 18, 2026
- Check out more of our “Industry” coverage.
Failing Upwards: Jennifer, Henry, Yasmin
In the gap between the end of season 3 and the beginning of season 4, Henry became an MP, largely thanks to his Uncle Alexander, and for 6 months, he did well. He was even promoted to the prison minister for 72 days. However, when the election came around, while Henry got 16,454 votes to be re-elected as the MP for Wakefield, Jennifer Bevan, of the Labour Party, defeated him with 17,892 votes, breaking the Conservatives’ hold of the district.
As you can imagine, this was devastating, and it seemed to destroy Henry and Yasmin’s marriage as he spiraled in such a way that Yasmin became more of a caretaker and monitor than wife. With no benefit towards her besides the empty, lavish life that Henry has made into a protective shell to hide his feelings of inadequacy.
Marriage Always Did Benefit Men More: Yasmin, Harper, Henry, Norton, Otto, Cordelia
With her father dead, and her treated as a bit of a pariah, Yasmin finds it frustrating that her only friend is Harper, since they have such a love/hate relationship. So when her aunt Cordelia becomes a last-minute RSVP to Henry’s 40th birthday party, she initially is excited. But with hearing Cordelia cheating on her husband, catching her having sex with Otto, and them having a bit of a row, the excitement dies by the end of the night.
But Yasmin is coming to accept and expect the worst from her association with Henry. Norton and her want better for him, but how to convince a man who is growing apathetic towards life is hard to say. Never mind, Yasmin hasn’t been touched in a long time, Henry is damn near impotent, and she is falling out of love with Henry by the day, and threats of divorce do little to get Henry on track.
The Second Act: Whitney, Yasmin, Henry, Norton, The Commander, Jennifer

Luckily, Whitney offers a CEO position, and while Henry isn’t initially for it, he comes around. Why? Well, because he hits rock bottom. He decides to get high, and seeing Jennifer at his birthday party, he embraces himself and Norton. You see, like many a good wife, Yasmin is working behind the scenes not only to put Henry into a good position but also to ease Norton, who, as legacy media, struggles with the Labour Party not trying to kiss the ring. So, she arranges a private meeting between Jennifer and Norton, leading to Henry calling them both out.
But it might be less Jennifer at his party, or the drugs, as much as it is the appearance of “The Commander.” This person is an enabler of the worst Henry can be, and they leave the party, get drunk with the locals, and Henry finds himself even getting into a fight. But by the end of the night, he is ready for it all to be over. Not just the madness but his life, and with this, it is revealed that “The Commander” was his father, who also died when he turned 40, and Henry was going to follow in his footsteps.
However, one notable difference is that Henry doesn’t choose to die with an audience. His dad killed himself with Henry watching, but Henry planned to die in a garage, killed by the fumes of his car. But with hearing Yasmin’s voice, he has an epiphany, decides to accept Whitney’s offer, and even has sex with Yasmin, outside on the hood of the car he was going to die in, as Norton watches from a window. Both consider this a win, but it is clear that while Henry may have made a turn in his life, there linger some old issues he may never shake off.
New Characters in Episode 2
The Commander (Jack Farthing)

- Character Summary: The Commander is Henry’s father, who hung himself on his 40th birthday, with Henry watching it all happen. It is noted to have had a profound effect on Henry, and has acted as both his driver and what sometimes made him think his fate was sealed.
Cordelia (Claire Forlani)

- Character Summary: Cordelia is Yasmin’s paternal aunt, who had a very weird, if not alarming, relationship with Charles. But it should be noted that many of Cordelia’s relationships seem to be rather weird.
Question(s) Left Unanswered & Predictions
- What in the world was Otto talking about regarding Cordelia having a better mouth than her brother?
- When Cordelia was talking about what saved Yasmin from being aborted, was it because Charles wanted to have an incestuous relationship with her, like he did with his sister?
- Should we expect more episodes that move the story forward, but also fill in that year gap in between?
Review and Commentary
Highlights
A Reminder Of How Alone Yasmin Is [82/100]
Yasmin has always struggled with building genuine connections. Either people wanted access to her wealth, her network, or her body. In terms of her intelligence, what she brings beyond what she was born into? Less so. Hence why Harper is kept around like an abusive ex (non-physical) with whom she shares a kid. I mean, beyond her father, who has said more cruel things to Yasmin, at the worst possible time, than Harper?
So when it came to Cordelia showing up and her excitement, it felt genuine, just as much as Yasmin’s willingness to share a bed with Whitney’s assistant. You can see this desire for friendship, not just for Henry to do well and be someone worth her investment. In a way, it is heartbreaking, since you see how vulnerable and capable Yasmin is. Yet, as much as you have to note how terrible the people are in Yasmin’s life, you can’t ignore that she has a pattern of choosing people like Harper, Henry, and others, who don’t even share the same socio-economic or even cultural background, yet generally treat her as less than.
Actually Investing In Henry’s Success [85/100]
Because Henry is so privileged, it can make it an uphill battle to want to invest in him. As he admits, he has failed upward, and with Yasmin and Norton by his side, he continues to do so. Yet, there is something about either the performance or writing of this episode that makes it so you want to see Henry succeed. He has lost his father in a horrible way, is a bit trash as a partner, but reminds you that you can’t be there for others when you struggle to be there for yourself.
Never mind, unlike some you may occasionally love to hate, like Harper, Henry’s sins don’t feel as malicious. He isn’t a saint, but he isn’t the worst sinner in Industry, and for that, you want to see something good come from all of this. Even if it is just him playing a part in Whitney’s comeuppance for how he treated Jonah.
Because, let’s face it, Industry, especially with Robert now gone, doesn’t star good people (in terms of the characters). So it is really about rooting for the lesser of all evils or evil characters who are quite entertaining.
Fleshed Out Jennifer, Mention of Lisa Dearn, And Expanded Henry’s World [84/100]
The politics of Industry, as noted in the last episode, is an untapped resource. We’ve had a political figure each season, but they haven’t gotten to shine and really establish themselves as notable players in the financial world. This makes the mention of Lisa Dearn, who hopefully will make more than an appearance, major, for she was not only a major foil for Henry last season, but with his stint in politics, they could have more history together.

Then, with Jennifer beating Henry for his seat, Uncle Norton wanting to reassert his influence, and the role Jennifer can play in Henry rising from the ashes, it all makes for a perfect cocktail. Add in the previews, making it seem Harper is going to bet against Tender, thus causing drama between her and Yasmin, this is a powder keg. The type where, with losing so many due to Pierpoint being dead, we can now swoop in a underserved part of the financial world without this becoming bloated.
Overall
Our Overall Rating [83/100]
It’s strange how Industry, which has never been nominated for the major American awards (Emmys or Golden Globes), has slowly crept its way into becoming damn near a flagship program for HBO. Not only that, it is the epitome of being a slow-burning show that needs and deserves multiple seasons to get to where it needs to be. And I would say, based on how it handled Henry in this episode, it also reminded us that, as we saw with Rishi in the last season, it can make any character someone to root for or push to feel like the star. Because things are just that well curated here.
What To Check Out Next
Visit our main TV shows page! There you’ll find other shows we’ve covered, or look below for more of our coverage for this series:
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Industry: Season 3 – Review
“Industry” remains one of the most consistent shows on television, with a 3rd season which reminds you why HBO has been a stable brand for decades.


