Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

New ‘Silicon Valley’ season 5 photos bring the gang back together

Add as a preferred source on Google
Silicon Valley | Season 5 Official Trailer | HBO

The Pied Piper team is headed back to the small screen soon, and HBO has released some new images from the return of its award-winning series Silicon Valley.

Recommended Videos

Scheduled to premiere at 10 p.m. ET on Sunday, March 25, on HBO, the fifth season of Silicon Valley picks up where the previous season left off, with Richard Hendricks and the rest of the Pied Piper team attempting to give the world a “new internet.” The latest trailer offers a preview of the weird obstacles he’ll encounter as he attempts to navigate this new project with his eccentric team — which has gotten considerably larger since the season 4 ended.

HBO debuted a set of photos from the fifth season in mid-March, just over a week before the season premiere.

The network previously paired the announcement of the premiere date for season 5 of Silicon Valley with the first trailer (see below) for the award-winning series’ next story arc.

Silicon Valley Season 5 Official Teaser (2018) | HBO

The team’s ambitious new goal creates more than a little stress for lead actor Thomas Middleditch’s introverted CEO, Hendricks, who is shown having some trouble inspiring an office full of employees in the trailer. Also of note in that first trailer is the rise of Jian-Yang, who now appears to have taken over as the owner of the team’s former incubator office and living space. A second trailer was released in February 2018.

Created by Mike Judge, John Altschuler, and Dave Krinsky, Silicon Valley follows a group of five programmers who create a startup company in California’s tech-savvy Silicon Valley. The series premiered in 2014 and went on to earn more than 30 Primetime Emmy Award nominations, and win two Emmy Awards over the course of its first four seasons. It has also received considerable praise from critics.

Along with Middleditch as Hendricks, the series’ regular cast includes Zach Woods, Kumail Nanjiani, Martin Starr, Josh Brener, Amanda Crew, Matt Ross, Suzanne Cryer, and Jimmy O. Yang (who plays Jian-Yang). Actor and comedian T.J. Miller (Deadpool) played a featured role in the first four seasons, only to depart before the fifth season.

Miller’s departure is likely to echo throughout the fifth season, as his character was a major part of the series up to this point. The actor’s exit from the series was initially credited as a mutual decision, with Miller himself suggesting he wanted to devote more attention to other projects — his burgeoning film career, the most likely culprit — but subsequent interviews revealed some friction between Miller and show producer Alec Berg. The fourth season (spoiler alert!) bid farewell to Miller’s character, Erlich Bachman, by leaving him stoned out of his mind in an opium den in Tibet.

Updated on March 15: Added images from season 5.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Christopher Nolan’s personal take on smartphones is surprisingly practical
Christopher Nolan says not owning a smartphone helps him think better
Christopher Nolan sits in front of an IMAX camera.

Christopher Nolan has spent his career embracing cutting-edge filmmaking technology while resisting one of the most common gadgets on the planet: the smartphone. The Oscar-winning director behind Oppenheimer, Inception, and the upcoming The Odyssey says his decision isn't about rejecting technology altogether. It's about protecting something he believes has become increasingly rare - time to think.

In an interview with The Telegraph ahead of the premiere of The Odyssey, Nolan explained that he still doesn't own a smartphone, despite living in a world where QR codes, digital tickets, and messaging apps have become everyday necessities. His reasoning, however, is far more practical than philosophical.

Read more
Letterboxd could find a new home at Netflix, but Sony is fighting for it, too
Netflix wants Letterboxd, but Hollywood isn't letting it go without a fight
Letterboxd

Letterboxd, the fast-growing social network for film lovers, could soon have a new owner. According to a report by Puck News, the New Zealand-based platform has been exploring a potential sale, attracting interest from several major entertainment companies, including Netflix, Sony Pictures Entertainment, and Paramount Skydance.

While no deal has been confirmed, the discussions highlight how valuable online fan communities have become as streaming platforms compete not just for viewers, but also for the audiences that influence what people watch next.

Read more
Disney+ is exploring a free tier to fight back against YouTube’s growing TV dominance
Disney is eyeing a free tier as YouTube keeps stealing its TV audience
The Disney+ app on a TV screen while blue lights illuminate the wall behind.

Watching Disney+ without paying for a subscription could eventually become an option. According to Business Insider, Disney is considering a free tier that would let people watch some content without a paywall.

The idea is still in the early stages, with no timeline or launch details, but it reflects a growing challenge. YouTube and other free, ad-supported platforms like Tubi and Roku are attracting more TV viewers, forcing streaming services to rethink how they compete.

Read more