Power Book Ii: Ghost S01e04 Libvpx May 2026

The Godfather Part II (the Michael Corleone darkening arc), Snowfall (family-run drug empires), or Ozark (ordinary people becoming killers).

The title isn’t just decorative. Professor Milgram lectures on The Prince , specifically the idea that “it is better to be feared than loved.” The episode then cuts between Tariq applying that lesson (executing the dealer) and Monet living it (intimidating Vic with her lawyer’s retainer). The show finally leans into its Ivy League crime-drama hybrid concept effectively. power book ii: ghost s01e04 libvpx

Would you like a comparison to other episodes in Season 1, or a breakdown of the real Machiavelli themes used in the show? The Godfather Part II (the Michael Corleone darkening

Title: The Prince Director: Hernán Otaño Runtime: ~55 minutes Key Focus: Tariq’s attempt to play both sides (the Tejadas and the law) begins to fray as loyalty is tested, and Monet Tejada asserts her true authority. Plot Summary (Spoilers ahead) The episode opens with Tariq and Brayden scrambling after the failed drug heist in Episode 3. Their professor, Carrie Milgram, begins to suspect Tariq’s extracurricular activities are more than academic. Meanwhile, Monet forces Tariq into a dangerous new role: she wants him to be the middleman between the Tejada operation and a new, volatile connect—a gang led by a man named Vincent “Vic” . The show finally leans into its Ivy League

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.

The B-plot follows Saxe and Tate as they continue building a RICO case against Monet, using Tariq’s father (James “Ghost” St. Patrick) as the historical link. Zeke’s basketball future becomes a bargaining chip between Monet and her estranged husband, Lorenzo (still in prison), revealing that the Tejada family’s power is more fragile than it appears.

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.”