The penultimate stretch ofIndustryhas a way of making Sunday-night television feel like a hostage situation: you're not quite enjoying yourself, exactly, but you also can't look away. With only two episodes left in season 4, the show is doing what it does best—tightening the screws until everyone starts talking like a person who's slept three hours and has a Bloomberg terminal wired directly to their nervous system.

Episode 7, titledIndustry'Points of Emphasis', is the last stop before the finale, which means every conversation carries that particularIndustryflavour of dread: the sense that the room is on fire, but the characters are still arguing about who lit the match.

In the UK, viewers won't have to wait long.Industry Season 4 Episode 7is scheduled to land on Monday 23 February, following the BBC's Monday-night rollout on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

HBO's tease forIndustry Season 4 Episode 7is doing that classic thing where it reveals just enough to make you suspicious of everyone. The official synopsis says that 'after a surprising revelation, Yasmin and Henry must decide on their next move'. InIndustry, 'surprising revelation' is rarely code for a minor misunderstanding; it's usually a structural crack in a relationship, a career, or a self-image—and Yasmin and Henry are overdue for something to give.

The show has spent the season lettingHenry Muck's charmcurdle into something more desperate, while Yasmin circles the edges of her own story like she's afraid to touch it. Put a 'long-held secret' between them and you don't get a simple lovers' quarrel; you get a negotiation over survival, the sort of choice that can rewrite both their lives without ever feeling like a clean break.

And if you've been hoping for softness—some fleeting moment of sincerity before the bloodbath—Industryhas never really promised that. It offers intimacy, yes, but often as leverage.

Elsewhere, theIndustry Season 4 Episode 7synopsis keeps Whitney on a single-minded trajectory: 'Whitney continues to eye expansion'. That line reads almost polite for what's been brewing all season, because Whitney's vision has felt less like ambition and more like a compulsion—an insistence that if she runs fast enough, the consequences can't catch her.

Previews have framed Whitney as someone determined to hold something over Henry while doing whatever it takes to save her own skin. That's the interesting twist with Whitney: she's not just building; she's cornered, and cornered people are rarely ethical in ways that matter.

The same material also hints at something potentially volatile on the SternTao side, raising the question of whether Harper can really run the firm without Eric, and suggesting he's been setting the conditions for that possibility with documents that look suspiciously like an exit plan.Industryhas always understood that Harper's greatest skill is turning chaos into momentum; her curse is that she sometimes mistakes momentum for control.

The final run of the season has been framed in almost military terms—prepare for war—and there's a nasty little logic to it. In this world, when one person goes down, they rarely go quietly. They take names. They drag colleagues, partners, and so-called friends with them, partly out of spite and partly because mutual destruction is the closest thing finance ever offers to honesty.

Source: International Business Times UK