Top 3 easter eggs in Black Mirror Season 7 that many missed 

Black Mirror     Source: Netflix
Black Mirror Source: Netflix

From obscure volumes to spectral melodies and threatening insignia, these hidden clues do not depict mere references to the past; rather, they depict a concealed reality that requires exploration.

Black Mirror has transcended the boundaries of a mere sci-fi anthology. It serves as a profound meditation on our most depraved impulses, our rampant tech addiction, and the tenuous oscillation between order and disorder.

With Season 7, creator Charlie Brooker takes us even further down that rabbit hole - not just with new standalone shorts but with concealed links that connect them to other episodes within the Black Mirror universe.

For some long-time viewers and fans, these Easter eggs serve as clever jabs no more. They transcend the borders of mere references and serve as illustrations, narratively speaking, reframing ideas portraying a complex mythology blurring timelines, tech, and tragic events interwoven into one coherence.

These clues serve the purpose of visuals, sound, and other symbolic forms. However, each clue aids into converging into this notion: nothing in black mirror is ever blunt.

Here’s a list detailing the top 3 favorites from Season 7’s easter eggs the observant viewers could have missed and the implications for the series’ themes moving forward.


1. A Song That Transcends Time: “Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)”

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No other song is as deeply intertwined with the Black Mirror mythos as Irma Thomas’s 1964 ballad “Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand).” In “Common People,” the track from Season 7 is played live in a lounge; not only is it crucial to the plot, but it encapsulates the emotion of the scene, shadowing the moment of emotional collapse with deep sorrow.

It debuted in “Fifteen Million Merits” and has been featured in “White Christmas,” “Men Against Fire,” and “Crocodile.” The presence of the song across episodes set in distant timelines indicates a rather vague form of continuity, as though the song is a single piece that exists beyond the bounds of space and time within the Black Mirror universe.

Its purpose in “Common People” serves to ground the storyline — unifying humanity in a world filled with artificial elements. However, it could imply that the worlds, though different, are governed by the same simulation, multiverse, or collective unconscious. With every instance the song pops up, it marks a significant moment: love faded, reality challenged, or freedom taken away.


2. The Return of Bandersnatch: A Book That Knows You’re Watching

Black Mirror Source: Netflix
Black Mirror Source: Netflix

When it comes to Black Mirror, its most chaotic symbol is Bandersnatch. The episode from 2018 was revolutionary for the show and a franchise-definer. An experience that shattered the fourth wall and took the audience through timelines that felt like a tech-infused Möbius strip.

Season 7 ends up incorporating Bandersnatch again, but now as a physical book, and not only once. It shows up in four different episodes, some featuring it resting on a desk, tucked away on a nightstand, or concealed amongst the spines on a shelf. Its most glaring appearance is in Bête Noire, where the protagonist’s perception of reality is already nuanced.

This kind of repetition can't be attributed to carelessness regarding set design. This is a quintessential Black Mirror tale. In Episode 3, Brooker explores Bandersnatch’s core theme: free will versus determinism, which is prevalent throughout the show.

By featuring this book throughout episodes, Brooker is reminding the audience how these tales, and their respective characters, are meant to be seen, controlled, or even manipulated by the exceeding powers. Like in Bandersnatch, they assume they have pathways to take, when, in reality, they’re all following a pre-written script.

So do we, for that matter.


3. The White Bear Glyph: A Chilling Symbol of Surveillance and Control

Black Mirror Source: Netflix
Black Mirror Source: Netflix

During “Common People,” that symbol is back, although very discreet. It can be seen on a flag hanging over Juniper Lodge, which acts as a backdrop to a slow-burn relationship drama. But with the glyph’s presence, that peaceful veneer fractures. Juniper Lodge is no sanctuary — it’s surveillance in disguise.

Beyond Juniper Lodge, those who look closely will see what lies beneath the surface. This is where the intense suggestion lies. The White Bear logo can now serve as an emblem within the Black Mirror universe. With the glyph’s reappearance, the overlying structure exposed the threads of punishments and control embedded in the institutions put in place.

With scarier control over your shoulders, anything dynamic you do can be constituted as a crime. The glyph serves as a clearer mark that memory, guilt, freedom, justice, and privacy can be tracked. Black Mirror did an amazing job at branding this as a panopticon.

The subtle reintroduction of the glyph had a deeper meaning than defining control and punishment. Its tactical yet apparent placement is the reason it’s hailed so frightening. Once you have seen it, you can never go back.


Closing Thoughts: More Than Just Easter Eggs

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These details are not simple callbacks or fan-service polishes. Instead, they are clues for an interwoven story–a story that connects each episode, season, and character in deeper, complex ways, with a narrative structure we are just starting to understand.

As we progress from Black Mirror being distinct narratives to a collective universe of dystopian features, some hints are emerging that convey something important: we are not passively observing Black Mirror anymore; it has engulfed us.

The next time you hit play, make sure to look a bit more carefully.

You can never know who is observing you.

Edited by Sohini Biswas