Yasmin Goes Full Ghislaine Maxwell in Shocking Industry Season 4
Marisa Abela as Yasmin Kara-Hanani in BBC Two and HBO office drama Industry. HBO/BBC Two

The Season 4 finale of HBO's Industry has sparked intense discussion among fans, as the ending focuses on a decision that draws heavily on one of the most controversial and infamous cases in history.

In the final episode, which aired last Sunday, Yasmin Kara-Hanani made some questionable choices that viewers quickly compared to those of Ghislaine Maxwell. According to the creators, the resemblance is not presented as a direct retelling of real events, but the parallels are difficult to miss.

Here's how the finale unfolds and what the comparison signals heading into the confirmed fifth and final season.

What's Going On in Industry's Season 4?

Created by former bankers Mickey Down and Konrad Kay, Industry began as a drama about graduates fighting for survival at London investment bank Pierpoint & Co.

'Industry' season 4 Tastemaker event at Regal Union Square Featuring the cast of the show.

By Season 4, the story has shifted beyond the trading floor. After Pierpoint's collapse, the focus moves to fintech venture Tender, political alliances, fraud investigations, and widening rifts between the core characters, particularly Yasmin and Harper.

The finale, titled 'Both, And', jumps forward six weeks after Tender's implosion. Yasmin divorces Henry Muck and begins working with Hayley to host exclusive salons for powerful figures, including far-right politician Sebastian Stefanowicz.

The Controversial Turn That Had Everyone Talking

At these private gatherings, young women are introduced to elite men. The episode implies that some are vulnerable or underage. Rings a bell? Things get interesting from there, and soon it's hard to separate what's fiction from what's real.

Actor Marisa Abela as Yasmin in Industry
Actor Marisa Abela, who plays Yasmin in the show, has described the arc of her character as consistent with Yasmin’s long-running instability rather than a sudden rewrite. HBO/BBC Two

Hidden recordings are used as leverage. When Harper confronts Yasmin at a Paris fundraiser, she urges her to stop, but Yasmin refuses. She argues that what looks like exploitation can also be opportunity — 'both/and' as she puts it — and says she finally feels 'necessary.'

The episode ends with Yasmin alone in a hotel room, replaying a voicemail from her late father, Charles Hanani, who died after falling from a yacht named after her.

The moment ties her present choices to earlier trauma.

The Maxwell Parallel Is Not Subtle

The comparison to Ghislaine Maxwell centres on biography and behaviour rather than direct plot recreation.

Maxwell's father, media tycoon Robert Maxwell, died after falling from his yacht, Lady Ghislaine, amid a financial scandal. In Industry, Yasmin's father dies under similar circumstances on the Lady Yasmin.

Both women are portrayed as moving within elite circles after their fathers' disgraces. In the finale, Yasmin becomes an organiser who facilitates access between powerful men and young women, using recordings for leverage.

Down and Kay have said the connection was discussed in the writers' room during Season 3. They describe it as a psychological mirror, not a one-to-one depiction, rooted in Yasmin's established need for power and control after years of instability.

Meanwhile, fans are divided on the 'Maxwell' verdict. Some see the turn as a natural extension of her trajectory; others question how far the series is willing to go.

HBO has confirmed the fifth season will be the show's last. The creators have indicated the story will expand rather than narrow, with Yasmin and Harper's fractured bond likely at the centre.