In the strange, sterile world of Severance, every detail matters. And that includes the people orbiting Mark’s life outside of Lumon particularly his brother-in-law, Ricken, and his circle of eerily devoted friends. The keyword here isn’t just “quirky” or “weird”; it’s cultish. And the deeper we look at Ricken's friends in Severance, the more disturbing (and possibly symbolic) things get.
The Self-Help Guru Who Might Be More Than He Seems
Ricken, Devon’s husband and Mark’s brother-in-law, is presented as a well-meaning, self-styled intellectual. He’s written The You You Are, a new-agey self-help book brimming with confident nonsense that somehow resonates deeply with the innies at Lumon as it's the only other thing they've read besides the handbook.
But what makes Ricken especially intriguing isn’t just his earnest writing, it’s the way his friends react to it. They treat him with reverence, absorbing his words like doctrine. A mock Kier in the town outside of the Lumon building.
In Severance, everything is about control of space, time, memory. And in that context, Ricken’s dinner (or rather, “conversation”) parties feel a little orchestrated. His social circle fawns over his every word, creating an atmosphere that mirrors the cultish adoration of Kier Eagan inside Lumon. When Ricken’s friends listen to him read, it's not about connection, it's performance. It’s not dinner, it’s a talk.
Let’s talk about Rebeck, a friend so off-putting that even Devon remarks on her strange chewing and vaguely alarming smell. Why does this matter? Because in Severance, details that seem absurd usually mean something! Fans have jumped on this, floating a theory that Rebeck isn’t entirely human. Yes, really - some speculate she’s a goat, or at least was part of Lumon’s unsettling goat experiments. Sound wild? Sure. But remember: it's Severance!
Ricken's friends in Severance might seem like background weirdos, but their strange behavior, fractured names, and cult-like reverence are all clues.
This goat theory gets another layer when we consider naming conventions. Rebeck, like Jame Eagan (Lumon’s elusive CEO), has a name that’s nearly familiar but missing a letter. This is classic Severance narrative fractures. They subtly unsettle us. Their names have been severed. If one letter can disappear from a name, what else has been edited out of a person?
So what if the severance procedure isn’t confined to the basement levels of Lumon? What if Ricken's friends in Severance are part of a broader experiment, either as test subjects or ideological foils? Their glassy-eyed acceptance of Ricken’s philosophy seems less like enthusiasm and more like programming. Could Ricken himself be part of the system he's seemingly resisting? Or is he unknowingly parroting values designed to placate those who question the corporate order?
The brilliance of Severance lies in how it scatters breadcrumbs everywhere - even in a conversation party full of emotionally stunted dinner guests! Ricken's friends in Severance might seem like background weirdos, but their strange behavior, fractured names, and cult-like reverence are all clues. Whether they’re metaphor, mystery, or part of a broader conspiracy, they embody the show’s central fear: that under the surface of even the most benign social scenes lies something deeply artificial and possibly sinister.