Apple CEO Tim Cook has become Lumon's newest employee in a promotional spot for the second season of "Severance"
“Severance” stars Adam Scott as severed Lumon employee Mark Scout. In the second season, Mark and his co-workers learn “the dire consequences of trifling with the severance barrier, leading them further down a path of woe,” according to Apple TV+’s description.
The Apple CEO — "Tim C" — is greeted by Mr. Milchick when he enters the Lumon offices in a the season two promo.
Apple CEO Tim Cook visited the severed floor of Lumon Industries. Before exiting the elevator, Cook’s “severed” self grinned mischievously, walking the long white hallways to meet Mr. Seth Milchick (Tramell Tillman) for an instructional video.
With the second episode of Severance season two now available, Apple's CEO Tim Cook is promoting it in a different way than previous shows.
When the leaders of Meta, Google, Amazon and Apple were spotted together at church on the morning of Donald Trump’s inauguration, it was no accident.
Tim Cook has officially revealed his innie, Tim C., in the latest of many Severance promos for Apple TV+. Cook’s, I mean C.’s, acting chops just might top what we saw in the Mother Nature short before the iPhone 15 event in 2023.
The hit Apple TV+ workplace thriller "Severance" returned for a second season last week, and Apple continues to heavily market the show.
Cook (6-foot-2, 207 pounds) appeared in 47 games with the Tigers over the last five seasons, putting up over 9,200 passing yards, 50 touchdowns, 15 interceptions and a 143.7 QB rating. Cook completed just under 66% of his passes. He was also productive as a rusher, totaling another 1,262 yards and 21 touchdowns with his legs.
Apple's board of directors is set for some significant changes over the course of the next year, with two members reaching or exceeding the recommended retirement age of 75.
This week’s Apple headlines; iPhone 17 Air leaks, iPhone SE design, iPad Air specs, AirPods Pro hearing test for UK, Chinese iPhone sales, Nokia’s iPhone reaction, and