Power Book Ii: Ghost S01e04 Libvpx |best| 🎯 💎
Tariq washing blood off his hands while Professor Milgram lectures on Machiavelli in voiceover (“The ends justify the means…”). Worst scene: Cane threatening Tariq in the stairwell—generic and forgettable.
Cane’s jealousy of Tariq is one-note. In this episode, he literally snarls and punches a wall. For a show aiming for nuanced antagonists, Cane’s “dumb muscle who hates the new guy” trope feels beneath the writers. He needs a motivation beyond “I don’t like him.” power book ii: ghost s01e04 libvpx
He attends class, deals drugs, executes a man, launders money, and still has time to study for a midterm—all in 48 screen hours. The show’s refusal to acknowledge time passing (is this week one of school? Month one?) breaks immersion. Tariq washing blood off his hands while Professor
Brayden’s comic relief fades here. When he watches Tariq clean blood off his hands, his reaction isn’t horror but fascination . There’s a subtle beat where Brayden doesn’t flinch—suggesting the wealthy party boy is more sociopathic than naive. This episode seeds his evolution into a true partner-in-crime. Weaknesses / Criticisms 1. The Saxe/Tate Subplot Drags While necessary for the RICO arc, their scenes feel like filler. Tate’s constant scheming to become Lt. Governor is stale, and Saxe’s weasel routine hasn’t evolved since Power Season 2. Their dialogue is exposition-heavy: “If we can tie Tariq to Monet, we tie her to Ghost’s murder.” In this episode, he literally snarls and punches a wall
The episode climaxes with Tariq forced to execute a young dealer from Vic’s crew to prove his loyalty—a pivotal moment where Tariq stops imitating Ghost and starts becoming him. 1. Mary J. Blige’s Dominance as Monet This is the episode where Monet transforms from “scary mom” to a full-fledged kingpin. The scene where she calmly dissects a rival’s weakness while ironing clothes is masterful. Her line, “You don’t become a queen by asking permission” , encapsulates the episode’s theme. Blige’s physicality—cold, still, but coiled—is terrifyingly effective.