Lifestyles

Think You Know How 'Succession' Ends? Want to Bet?

Who will succeed media mogul Logan Roy at Waystar Royco, the global entertainment juggernaut at the center of HBO's "Succession"?
Posted 2023-04-09T19:11:14+00:00 - Updated 2023-04-10T21:09:02+00:00

Who will succeed media mogul Logan Roy at Waystar Royco, the global entertainment juggernaut at the center of HBO’s “Succession”?

It is the perennial question that the show has tried to answer since it premiered in 2018, and amid its fourth and final season, it’s one that Sophia Meng is betting on with five friends, who are each wagering at least $200.

“I’m betting on Kendall, but with devastating effects on his personal life,” said Meng, 24, an illustrator in New York City, referring to Jeremy Strong’s character. “A hero’s journey, ending back home, but the home is different. Like, you got everything you wanted, but you’re still nothing.”

Meng is one of several “Succession” viewers hoping to find out, and cash in on, who will be the next heir of the show’s media empire, with rewards reaching as much as $1,000. No longer limited to sports, betting has become a part of the viewing experience for both popular television shows like “The Bachelor” and fictional dramas. (While wagering on TV shows on some websites can run afoul of gambling laws, “casual social betting among friends” is legal in most states, said I. Nelson Rose, a gambling lawyer and expert.)

“Succession” has earned acclaim for its depiction of the fictional lives of the megarich, power-hungry and venal Roy siblings (Connor, Kendall, Shiv and Roman) as they vie for control of Waystar Royco. Almost every component of the TV series has found a second life elsewhere in culture, inspiring a Twitter account with more than 255,000 followers that posts out-of-context scenes from the show, weekly commentary about the cast members’ fashion and even a remix by rapper Pusha T of the series’ catchy theme song.

It is this kind of fandom that has culminated in a “mini version of a Super Bowl” for the show’s finale, said Meng, who is in the running for a $1,000 jackpot. “I might spend it on a trip to Tuscany” — the location of the drama-filled Season 3 Italian wedding of Caroline Collingwood, Shiv, Kendall and Roman’s mother.

Jayson Buford, who placed a $20 bet with nine of his friends at his “Succession” watch parties, said betting was “a fun activity to do to supplement the idea of the show, which is very communal. It’s a show about a family, people have watch parties, people gather, and it plays within that.” Buford predicts that Waystar Royco is going to dissolve and that nobody will take over the company. Logan “thinks Kendall is an addict, and he doesn’t think Shiv is smart,” he said.

Some “Succession” viewers are placing noncash bets to bond with their co-workers.

“It’s a team-building exercise,” said Colm Phelan, 30, a digital public relations manager in Dublin. “Everybody was watching ‘Succession,’ and we thought it’d be fun to start an in-house gambling game for the team.”

About 25 participants place pretend $10 bets every Monday, Phelan said. Contestants can change their guesses based on the outcome of the latest episode each week, but by the end of the series, only the person who correctly chooses the successor the most times will be named the winner.

The prize? “TBD,” he said. “It wouldn’t be a cash prize; it would be a gift voucher.”

Shruti Marathe, who started wagering money on TV shows with her group of seven friends from college when “Game of Thrones” aired its sixth season in 2016, has expanded her casual betting game to a somewhat time-consuming hobby that now includes more than 60 participants across five social circles, three rounds of predictions and an elaborate survey that goes beyond the question of who will come out on top.

The groups include Marathe’s work friends, college friends, noncollege friends, and her family and their friends. There’s also one she calls “The Waystar Royco Executive Training Program.” Who’s in this latter group? “Friends of friends,” said Marathe, 25, a development manager in Los Angeles. “For example, people who were sitting at my table at my friend’s wedding.”

The 15-question “Succession” form requires players to forecast several potential plot points: whether Logan or Kendall will die before the series finale; if Gerri Kellman, Logan’s long-suffering counsel, will “proactively initiate a romantic or sexual” relationship with Roman; when Shiv will confront her husband, Tom, about his betrayal in the finale of Season 3; and whether Connor will drop out of the presidential race.

Because of the survey’s detailed responses and number of participants, Marathe said, she chose not to collect money from players, so there will be no official cash prize. But winners will receive something priceless: “You get bragging rights.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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