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Must be the cross Atlantic thing of Tum-ate-O..etc. Not to worry *sigh*...so MadMen will be ending soon. Hopefully Boardwalk will be showing next
Must be the cross Atlantic thing of Tum-ate-O..etc. Not to worry *sigh*...so MadMen will be ending soon. Hopefully Boardwalk will be showing next
The saddest line of the night: "Only 3 episodes left."
I never heard it pronounced Jag-U-AR until the latest round of car advertising within the last few years. Since the sixties, it was always Jag-waar here in the States - both the car and the big cat.
It was very fun to watch Don and Joan in the bar, most fun I've had watching Mad Men in quite some time.
Ladies, did any of you swoon ever-so-slightly when Don draped his coat around Joan's shoulders before they grabbed an elevator? And his note on the flowers at the end was so touchingly thoughtful. It must have given her some of her old pluck back.
Tonight's episode was devastating. Not only the Joan/Don stuff but the Peggy/Don scene just about did me in. I've never seen a more moving hand kiss!
What, oh what do the next two weeks hold in store? I'm not sure I can take it!
Hey, I'm in my late fifties and also lived through the period - admittedly, at Sally Draper's age. But my parents were pro photographers, and I knew lots of NYC-based ad execs and commercial artists, and I recognize a lot of the behavior. Of course, as I observed back near the start of this tread, everything on the show is very heightened and compressed for dramatic purposes, and certainly it is primarily a (very) classy soap opera. But I don't think it's as far off reality - at least NYC ad man reality - as you seem to think.
The Peggy and Don scene...I actually cried. I thought Don was going to start crying, too. Wow. Powerful stuff.
To Mr. Stratford: Well, it seems to me that the 1960's were indeed the beginning of decay. However, it was just the beginning, and a great deal of traditional decency remained intact. The notion that the typical businessman of early 1960's America was a philandering, chronically drunk lout, which is central to the depiction of most of the male MM characters, is simply ridiculous. The idea that women were easy marks for office creeps is simply ridiculous. To the extent that men had their affairs they were shrouded in secrecy and privacy. I knew one guy who had an affair, which he tried everything he could to hide. Never, never, never was there any open sex on company premises. Never! Many companies had a no-alcohol-on-premises policy -- the fastest way to the door at IBM or AT&T in the early 1960s was to have an open bottle in your desk. Never, never, never were women treated in such a humiliating and disrespectful way as shown on MM (quite the contrary, in my opinion, although I agree that women's opportunities for professional advancement were limited). In the upper-middle-class corporate culture of the time, Black people were never openly insulted (behavior in private may well have been different). And so forth. The cultural aspect of MM regarding middle-class-and-higher corporate life is, in my opinion, completely wrong on all of these counts. All that notwithstanding, I must say that I enjoy the program very much. It's just not cultural history. Maybe I was just lucky to have had such a good 1960's experience . . ..
...Well, it seems to me that the 1960's were indeed the beginning of decay. ...The notion that the typical businessman of early 1960's America was a philandering, chronically drunk lout, which is central to the depiction of most of the male MM characters, is simply ridiculous. The idea that women were easy marks for office creeps is simply ridiculous. ...All that notwithstanding, I must say that I enjoy the program very much. It's just not cultural history.