"Veep returns Sunday to an unnecessary and clamorous chorus of wags who wonder if the HBO comedy can, in its seventh and final season, approximate anything as remotely absurd as Washington’s daily news cycle," says Hank Stuever. "Those folks have been watching Veep all wrong, treating the show like it’s a mirror rather than a portal to an alternate — and joyfully wicked, irreparably rotten — political universe." As Stuever notes, going back to the Obama era, Veep "is and always was a cruelly satisfying, fully original journey into Washington’s darkest behaviors." In its final season, he adds, Veep "could certainly rest on its laurels and multitude of Emmys, rehashing old insults and revisiting Selina in her unhinged campaigning mode...But the show has smartly zeroed in on what will be its character’s greatest and lasting flaw (among many), something absolutely topical that was there all along: Selina is a woman who hates other women."
Showrunner David Mandel on Veep's legacy: "So much of everything is through a Trump lens that I think one of the great things about the Veep lens is that we are balanced. There is no Trump counterpart: Selina’s Trump, Jonah’s Trump. They both have Trumpian qualities. They both have Hillary qualities. They both have Kamala (Harris) qualities. They’re not any particular person. And so I think Veep’s unique, cold, vicious, un-partisan attack on what politics is in general is one of the many things that it will be remembered for."
Mandel made a Veep series finale that he wanted to make: "I’m aware that there’s a pressure. I try not to think about it. I hate to reduce it to this, but I made the finale that I wanted to make. One I thought would be really cool and really 'Oh my God' and really funny, but also sad, shocking and interesting. I know I liked it and I know Julia liked it. Someone’s going to hate it. But I think someone’s going to love it — besides us."
Read Veep's oral history: "My agent, Mike Rosenfeld, said HBO was developing a show about a female, unhappy vice president," says Julia Louis-Dreyfus. "I said, 'I want that.' I liked the word 'unhappy.'"