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This is not a performance for customers; it is a ritual of self-exorcism. By stripping away dialogue, the episode forces us to watch Mercedes feel every grind and split. When she finally collapses and screams in frustration, it’s the first real sound she’s made all episode. It’s a brilliant metaphor: the dancer’s body is a vessel for others’ pleasure, but here, Mercedes reclaims that vessel, even as it breaks down. Uncle Clifford (Nicco Annan) is forced into a role they despise: the politician. The “VP” of the title refers to the revolving door of corrupt council members. Clifford must charm Councilor Hightower, a man who sees The Pynk as a blight, while simultaneously placating the new gangland benefactor, Haiku.
The episode excels in showing Clifford’s linguistic dexterity failing. Their usual poetic, gender-fluid vernacular is useless against cold, hard real estate law. The scene where Clifford reviews the city’s eminent domain maps is heartbreaking—watching a queen realize the castle is built on rented sand. “V.P. III” argues that in Chucalissa, you cannot win by staying neutral. Clifford’s forced handshake with Haiku’s muscle is the moment The Pynk becomes a trap, not a haven. If Mercedes’s story is physical tragedy and Clifford’s is financial, Keyshawn’s (Shannon Thornton) is psychological horror. Episode 7 refuses to let us forget that Derrick is a monster in sneakers. The scene where Keyshawn facetimes him from the tour bus is a masterclass in domestic terror: Derrick’s voice is sweet, but the subtext is a razor blade. p-valley s02e07 vp3
P-Valley has never been a show that simply strips for shock value. In Season 2, Episode 7 (“V.P. III”), creator Katori Hall and director Cierra “Shooter” Glaude deliver a masterclass in tension, positioning the episode as the true penultimate catalyst before the finale. While the title playfully nods to “Vice President,” the episode is ultimately about three distinct power struggles : Mercedes’s battle for her body, Uncle Clifford’s battle for The Pynk, and Keyshawn’s battle for her life. 1. The Structural Genius: The Silent Rehearsal The episode’s most daring choice is its opening: a nearly dialogue-free, extended rehearsal sequence. Mercedes (Brandee Evans) runs her farewell number, “The Clap,” alone on stage. The camera loves her weariness—the grimace behind the smile, the hand checking her herniated disc, the muscle memory betraying her pain. This is not a performance for customers; it
Brandee Evans’s face in the final 60 seconds of her rehearsal—an entire career’s worth of pain and pride told without a single word. It’s a brilliant metaphor: the dancer’s body is
“V.P. III” is not about climaxes; it is about the quiet moment before the explosion. Mercedes prepares to die on stage (metaphorically), Clifford prepares to sell her soul, and Keyshawn prepares to run. The episode’s thesis comes from a single line of voiceover: “You can’t be a vice president if you ain’t willing to do the president’s dirty work.” By the credits, every woman has been handed the dirty work. The only question is whether they will hold the rag or breathe through it.
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