‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 7 Recap: Finally, the Gemma Backstory
The music dance experience is officially canceled—but Severance has returned. After three long years, the macrodata refinement crew is back on our screens. Follow along each week as we break down each episode of Severance Season 2. In the process, we’ll try to piece together what the heck is going on at Lumon Industries. Next up: Episode 7, “Chikhai Bardo.”
FINALLY!
Thanks to Mark’s reintegration-fueled lapse into his memory palace, we got the Gemma backstory at long last. There was a meet-cute at a blood drive! A thoughtful, if misguided, gift of ants! A wedding, and dancing, and houseplants, and a house full of books, and excellent southern exposure. A love story, in short.
And I do mean short. In the wake of a miscarriage and the turmoil of IVF, Gemma started getting interested in Lumon. “I think I got onto the mailing list at the clinic,” she remarks to Mark, showing him a set of chikhai bardo cards that look very similar to the one Dylan pilfered from the optics and design suite in Season 1. A bardo is a principle in some schools of Buddhism that refers to one of six states of being; the chikhai bardo—which is also the episode’s title, a.k.a. highlighted and triple-underlined—is the bardo that immediately follows death.
That’s a pretty clear reference to Gemma’s death—or, that is, “death.” Mark’s memories take us back to the night of Gemma’s supposedly fatal car crash. We still don’t know how exactly she and/or Lumon faked her death, complete with Mark identifying what he believed was her body. But it does now seem like Gemma was in on it: As she headed out that night, she shot a distracted Mark a look that felt much more “I’m going away for a long time” than “See you in a couple hours.”
While Mark’s brain was working its way back toward the present, we finally discovered what Gemma is up to at Lumon. Sure enough, she is living at Lumon HQ and is apparently a sort of in-house guinea pig. Her days consist of a battery of physical and mental exams interspersed with visits to rooms with names we’ve seen before denoting different Lumon projects: Cairns, Dranesville, Loveland, Lucknow, and so on. Each contains its own bizarro nightmare fuel, ranging from turbulence on a circa-1980s plane to the forced drafting of thank-you card after thank-you card in a mid-century Christmas tableau. The Wellington room might be the worst of all: Gemma spends two hours in a dental chair for who knows what. Making all this better (for Gemma) and worse (for empathy) is that each room causes Gemma to enter a severed state—though seemingly not the one where she’s Ms. Casey. (Given the option to partake in this very specific severance use case, I would absolutely go full Helena Eagan. Oh, my innie’s reality is composed entirely of visits to the dentist, a life spent between scraping for plaque and closing for suction with nary a Skittle to break things up? Whatever! You are not a person! Get back in the chair!)
It looks more and more like at least part of why Gemma is at Lumon is to test the efficacy of the severance procedure. “Are the severance barriers working?” Drummond asks during a flashback to Ms. Casey’s day monitoring Helly in the MDR office, which she did from right behind Mark. Indeed, the barriers were working: Neither Mark nor Ms. Casey appeared to know who the other really was.
Back in the before times, Mark was less than supportive of Gemma’s burgeoning interest in Lumon: “Why are you wasting your time with this?” he asks. That dismissal makes his decision to undergo severance after her “death” that much bleaker: He knew of Lumon and thought it was nonsense, and yet.
More ‘Severance’ Coverage
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 6 Recap: Relationship Status: It’s Complicated
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 5 Recap: Your First Performance Review
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Kier’s Fourth Appendix
And, willing participant though she might be (or at least have been), things aren’t looking great for Gemma. All of the severed rooms we saw are occupied by a creepy Lumon minder, Dr. Mauer, who alternately serves as dentist, flight attendant, and scolding husband and whose slow whistling indicates he was probably the same guy who was pushing the cart at the beginning of Episode 5. Mauer is overly invested, to put it mildly—despite Drummond’s reminder that they’ll have to “get rid of” Gemma as soon as Mark wraps up his nearly finished work on the Cold Harbor project.
When Gemma expresses her desire to go home, Mauer lies, telling her that Mark has remarried and now has a child with his new wife, and intimating that Gemma’s innie—or rather, one of Gemma’s innies—might have moved on as well. Gemma doesn’t buy it. She clubs Mauer in the head with a chair and makes a break for it, only to end up back on the severed floor. There, Gemma’s Ms. Casey innie activates, and Milchick—of course—promptly sends her back down to the residential floor. At Lumon, no one can hear you scream.
What’s a mystery box show without them? Here’s what we can’t stop thinking about.
Yes, we saw her make a break for it this week. But we now know that, at least as long as she’s not in a severed-specific room, Gemma is still Gemma—with memories of Mark and her life outside Lumon. (“So I’ll see Mark?” she asks excitedly about a potential visit to the as-yet-unseen Cold Harbor room.) Gemma is the one doing her daily reading and calisthenics and submitting to day after day of ominous severed-room visits. So—why?
We saw her get interested in Lumon, and that feels like the likeliest explanation: She believes—or at least believed—that Lumon is doing something good and important, and she’s agreed to (at least temporarily) sacrifice her own comfort for the mission. But what mission is worth making your spouse think you’re dead and giving up your normal life and freedom for two years and counting?
Her patience with the project is finally wearing thin. “So what happens once I’ve been in all the rooms?” Gemma asks Mauer.
“You will see the world again, and the world will see you,” he replies. “Mark will benefit from the world you’re siring. Kier will take away all his pain, just as Kier has taken away yours.”
“Can you please just talk like a normal person?” Gemma snaps. Well—no. Now that Gemma’s had it with her Lumon residency, it’s clear that she can’t free herself. So who is going to save her?
Devon has worked out that the cabin where she met another expectant mother in Season 1 transforms people into their innies and pitches Reghabi on bringing Mark there to awaken his innie self. Reghabi insists it wouldn’t work, but—especially now that Reghabi has stormed out of Mark’s place at the prospect of Devon calling Ms. Cobel for help—this is starting to feel a bit like Chekhov’s cabin.
Reghabi insists that Cobel is a Lumon lifer—and indeed, we know that she used to have a literal shrine to the company (and Kier) in her home. But her feelings have gotten a lot more complicated since her Season 1 firing (and her rejection of Helena’s offer to return). If Devon reaches out, would Cobel help Mark with his reintegration woes, or is she more likely to turn the pair in in the hope of (re-)currying favor? I’m inclined to think the former is more likely. It’s not clear how much Cobel could help with Mark’s warring brain states, but she knows Ms. Casey is Gemma and thus might have an awfully good sense of how to access her domicile turned prison.
When we last saw Mark’s would-be colleagues, Bob Balaban’s Mark W. was being escorted out of Lumon by security as he groused about his abrupt dismissal. But you don’t hire Balaban and Alia Shawkat to film a scene or two and then depart, severance (sorry) checks in hand. It seems all but certain that we’ll be seeing them (and, yes, Stefano Carannante’s Dario R.) again. But there’s not a lot of show left. Come back! Hurry!
First of all: rude. I’m partial to this theory—written under the (divine?) influence of cold medication—that all the characters on Severance have some version of the word “in” hidden in their names. Except, that is, for Mark and Gemma Scout ….
OK, so hitting your colleague (supervisor?) over the head with a chair is not typically considered positive workplace behavior (at least this side of SummerSlam). Nor is stealing their ID to access forbidden areas of the office—though I will grant that the intended forbidden area was, uh, “outside.”
But for two years, Gemma has been grinding away at Lumon Industries. In the Wellington room, she was informed that her last visit was just six weeks earlier. That is a lot of dental work, particularly for her poor Wellington room innie, whose panic at the sight of the dentist chair suggests that that’s all that particular innie consciousness gets to experience. One good thing about having a job: dental insurance. One very, very, very bad thing about having a job at Lumon: mandatory extensive dental work. Also: invasive health monitoring, zero freedom of movement, the emotional evisceration of a spouse, frequent perms—and did I mention all those thank-you notes? (“You hate writing thank-you notes,” Mark remarked in a memory of their marriage. I bet that feeling hasn’t softened!)
And yet Gemma has endured it all, seemingly without incident till now. Who knows what other quotidian nightmares she’s been enduring all this time? Get this girl a raise.
Severance isn’t just a story; it’s an atmosphere. Each week we’re highlighting our favorite looks captured by the show’s eerily gorgeous production design and cinematography.
Babe, wake up, a new sinister Lumon surveillance room just dropped:
Really, though, the star of “Chikhai Bardo” was Gemma, whose work at Lumon seems to be one part baroque torture and three parts fabulous outfits:
Dichen Lachman: flawless in any era.
End of article
Yep, we have one too
Most Read
The NFL Scouting Combine Anger Translator
‘The White Lotus’ Season 3, Episode 2 Recap: You Need a Lawyer, Like, Yesterday
Inside the Spectacular Rise and Fall (… and Rise Again?) of NBA Top Shot
Ode to “Big Country,” an NBA Expansion Folk Hero
Is Milchick Actually Bad at His Job?
Latest in Severance
‘The White Lotus’ Season 3, Episode 2 Recap and Character Power Rankings
‘Severance’: When a Hit Show Goes Over Budget, Who Pays?
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 5: Is the Real Helly R. Back?
The Eagles Win! Plus, Super Bowl Trailers and ‘Severance’ S2E4.
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 4: The Lumon Work Retreat From Hell
Grammys Recap, ‘Severance’ S2E3, and What’s Going on in ‘Paradise’?
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 5 Recap: Your First Performance Review
Shipping Mark and Helly From ‘Severance’ Is Not Easy, but Someone’s Gotta Do It
‘Severance’ Gets the Internet
‘Severance’ Season 2, Episode 4 Recap: Kier’s Fourth Appendix
Yep, we have one too
We’ve been around since Brady was a QB
Newsletter
Continue Reading
Keep Exploring
Crunching the Numbers
Unanswered Questions
Reddit Theory of the Week
Employee of the Week: Gemma Scout
Design Porn
Newsletter
Archive
Why is Gemma doing this?
What’s up with the Damona Birthing Retreat?
Whose side is Ms. Cobel on?
Speaking of long absences: Where the heck is the replacement MDR team?
‘Severance’ Season 2 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Land On Apple TV+?
By Dessi Gomez
Severance Season 2 will delve deeper into corporate culture and the concept of a work-life balance.
The sophomore season of Dan Erickson’s thriller series, which centers around a surgical procedure that separates the work self from the off-hours self, has taken a long while to complete with the dual strikes in Hollywood.
Read on for the full Severance Season 2 release schedule:
The second season of Severance debuts Jan. 17 on Apple TV+.
Season 2 of Severance will contain 10 episodes. This is one more than Season 1’s count of nine.
New episodes are targeted to roll out on Fridays after the first one premiered. Each episode will become available to stream Thursday nights as has been proven by the earlier-than-planned release of episodes Thursday evenings (6 p.m. PT and 9 p.m. ET) so far.
Friday, Jan. 17: Episode 1 – “Hello, Ms. Cobel”
Friday, Jan. 24: Episode 2 – “Goodbye, Mrs. Selvig”
Friday, Jan. 31: Episode 3 – “Who Is Alive?”
Friday, Feb. 7: Episode 4 – “Woe’s Hollow”
Friday, Feb. 14: Episode 5 – “Trojan’s Horse”
Friday, Feb. 21: Episode 6 – “Attila”
Friday, Feb. 28: Episode 7
Friday, Mar. 7: Episode 8
Friday, Mar. 14: Episode 9
Friday, Mar. 21: Episode 10
Season 2 will continue Mark and the team’s quest to fully unravel the mystery of what it is they actually do at Lumon. They sort macrodata, but beyond that, they don’t actually know what it is they sort and what the outcome of their work is. This could ultimately bridge the “severance” procedure around which the story is centered, because the operation separates work and personal lives.
RELATED: ‘Severance’ Season 2 Trailer: Adam Scott’s Mark Gets To The Heart Of Lumon Industries As Innie And Outie Worlds Merge
Season 1 had several big reveals that will likely come into play in Season 2. Towards the end of Season 1, Mark S. (Adam Scott) made the connection between his work self and out-of-work self that his supposedly dead wife Gemma (Dichen Lachman) is actually alive. Her severed self worked as the Wellness counselor at Lumon in Season 1. Another discovery that took place during the Overtime Contingency initiated by Mark, Dylan (Zach Cherry), Helly (Britt Lower) and Irving (John Turturro) was that Helly is actually an Eagan, or a member of the founding family behind Lumon. Kier Eagan established the company, and Helly, who goes by Helena when not in her severed self, is the daughter of Jame Eagan, current CEO of the company.
Adam Scott, Britt Lower, Tramell Tillman, John Turturro, Zach Cherry, Jen Tullock, Michael Chernus, Dichen Lachman, Christopher Walken and Patricia Arquette will return to their roles from the first season.
Those boarding the series for Season 2 include Alia Shawkat (Search Party), Robby Benson (Beauty and the Beast), Stefano Carannante (Mirabilia), Ólafur Darri Ólafsson (The Tourist), Gwendoline Christie (Game of Thrones), Bob Balaban (The Chair), Merritt Wever (Godless) and John Noble (Fringe).
RELATED: Ben Stiller Likens ‘Severance’ To Hollywood Today: “Constriction And Choices That Are Safer”
Get our Breaking News Alerts and Keep your inbox happy.
Comments On Deadline Hollywood are monitored. So don’t go off topic, don’t impersonate anyone, and don’t get your facts wrong.
Comment
Name
Website
Been looking forward to this for a long time. I’m glad it’s getting such great reviews!
This show is incredible.
I binged season one last week and can’t wait for season 2.
Signup for Breaking News Alerts & Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Get our latest storiesin the feed of your favorite networks
We want to hear from you! Send us a tip using our annonymous form.
Sign up for our breaking news alerts
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Deadline is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2025 Deadline Hollywood, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
FOLLOW US:
site categories
BREAKING NEWS
Services to share this page.
When does Severance Season 2 premiere?
How many episodes are in Severance Season 2?
Are new episodes of Severance released weekly or all at once? What time are they streaming on Apple TV+?
Here’s the full Severance Season 2 release schedule:
What is Severance Season 2 about?
What happened in Severance Season 1?
Who is in Severance Season 2?
Must Read Stories
READ MORE ABOUT:
Subscribe to Deadline
2 Comments
Sidebar
Newswire
Site
Related Stories
‘Severance’ Season 1 Recap: What To Remember For Season 2
‘Severance’ Season 2: Everything We Know So Far
Watch on Deadline
Death At 95 Ruled “Suspicious”; Obit, Tributes & Career In Photos
Krysten Ritter Joins ‘Dexter: Resurrection’ For Flashy Guest Arc
Saoirse Ronan & Austin Butler To Lead ‘Deep Cuts’ Pic For A24 And Sean Durkin
Showbiz Unions Launch Campaign To Bolster State’s Film & TV Jobs
Submit a comment
Trending on Deadline
Latest TV News
‘Ghosts’ Star Brandon Scott Jones Dissects Isaac’s Gripe With Alexander Hamilton & Teases “Beloved Returning Characters” Before Season 4 Ends
Ella Purnell Details Working With “Poop Finger” On ‘Fallout’: “Bane Of My Life”
L.A. Wildfires: Property Damage Estimated At Between $28B-$53.8B; Full Recovery Will Take At Least Until 2029
Sweetened New York Production Incentives Take Stage At State Budget Hearing
Marketplace
Deadline
Legal
Sitemap
Connect with Us
Have a Tip?
Stay in the Know
When is the next episode of ‘Severance’? Here’s the show’s episode release schedule
OUR START TODAY BOXES ARE ALMOST GONE! SCORE SKIN CARE, ACCESSORIES AND MORE FOR 67% OFF
The second season of “Severance” has viewers theorizing, philosophizing and wanting more.
After wrapping up its first season in April 2022, the Apple TV+ series recently returned for more uncanny workplace intrigue.
Before the season premiere on Jan. 17, “Severance” star Adam Scott and executive producer Ben Stiller stopped by Studio 1A to discuss the series. Stiller explained the show’s out-there premise.
“It’s about a guy who goes to work at this corporation where they put a chip in your head. And when you go in this elevator and go down to work, the chip activates a part of your brain that makes you forget everything about your life on the outside. You work all day and then when you go back on the elevator, you forget everything that happened at work, so thus, severed,” he said.
When asked why it took so long for the second season to come out, Stiller offered up an explanation.
“We got hit with the (SAG-AFTRA) strike in the middle and it takes a little while. I’m so happy we’re back and the fans stuck with us from the first season,” he said.
Now that Season 2 has arrived, fans are tuning in once a week to see how all the action unfolds. Wondering when the next episode premieres and how long this season lasts? Here’s everything you need to know.
Season 2, Episode 7 of “Severance” will officially land on AppleTV+ on Friday, Feb. 28.
Entitled “Chikhai Bardo,” the episode synopsis reads as follows: “The origins of an old romance intersect with a deadly present threat.”
In a statement to TODAY.com, AppleTV+ clarified that the new episodes will be available at different times around the world.
“It would be safe to assume that the first episode of Season 2, as well as new episodes of ‘Severance’ thereafter, will become available to stream Thursday evenings PT and ET, and Friday around the world,” the statement read.
All episodes of “Severance” Season 1 are available to stream on Apple TV+.
Episodes of Season 2 are available to stream on Apple TV+ as they premiere.
Season 2 of “Severance” premiered on Jan. 17, 2025, with new episodes airing each Friday. This season includes 10 episodes, with the season finale airing on March 21.
Here’s the full schedule of upcoming episodes:
Season 2 is still going strong, but “Severance” fans are already wondering if they can expect a third season. When he stopped by Studio 1A last month, Stiller offered up a bit of hope and joked that it could be ready by 2034.
“We’re going to try to make it happen sooner than that if it is in fact happening, which we think it might. But I can’t say anything because officially, nothing has been said,” he said.
Chrissy Callahan covers a range of topics for TODAY.com, including fashion, beauty, pop culture and food. In her free time, she enjoys traveling, watching bad reality TV and consuming copious amounts of cookie dough.
© 2025 NBCUniversal Media, LLC