The show, from the creator of MTV's "Beavis and Butt-head,"
about the travails of programmers launching a start-up has
received praise from critics and Silicon Valley executives alike
for its authentic portrayal of the quirky culture that few have
dared to tackle for television.
The 30-minute show is in HBO's strong Sunday line-up along with
medieval fantasy "Game of Thrones," which has been renewed for
fifth and six seasons, and political satire "Veep" starring
Emmy-winning Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
HBO, owned by Time Warner Inc. said on Monday it was also
renewing "Veep" for a fourth season.
Season four of "Game of Thrones" kicked off on April 6 with an
average of 6.6 million viewers, the largest HBO audience since
the 2007 finale of mafia drama "The Sopranos." The debut of
"Silicon Valley" on the same night drew an average of 2 million
viewers and season three of "Veep" averaged 955,000.
(Reporting by Mary Milliken; editing by Piya Sinha-Roy and
Andrew Hay)
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