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Out of the Box: Look of the Week

28 Jun

One of the shows that has featured on almost every “Look of the Week” is Mad Men and this edition is going to be a Mad Men special; celebrating some of the best costumes from the season 6 finale “In Care Of.” The costuming on Mad Men has always been exceptional and Janie Bryant’s work this season continues this tradition as picking an era appropriate outfit isn’t the endgame and clothes can help define a character. They can also help shape the conversation as we saw when Megan wore a t-shirt that had also been worn by Sharon Tate and the floodgates of conspiracy theories were opened.

Winner: Peggy Olson 

Peggy Power PantsuitIt was a tossup between this and Peggy’s cleavage enhancing mini dress and Channel No.5 combo; ultimately the Pantsuit of Power (thanks Tom & Lorenzo for that excellent name) felt like the Peggy Olson we have been waiting for. Both the seduction dress and this pantsuit are outside of Peggy’s usual costuming wheelhouse and she has definitely matured this season as she has progressed in her job and grappled with a complicated romantic entanglement. Peggy ends the year working in Don’s office and she looks incredibly comfortable in this environment; this is the first time we have seen Peggy rocking a pantsuit at work. Ted has shown that he isn’t exactly the great guy she has been telling Don he is, but I hope that season 7 is going to be the year Peggy shows what a dominating force she can be. This Pantsuit of Power is just the start.

Runner Up: Stan Rizzo 

Stan Mad MenOne of the stars of this season has been Stan Rizzo and his beard (this photo is courtesy of the Fuck Yeah Stan’s Beard Tumblr) and Stan turned up to work in his best suit and well cared for facial hair to present an idea to Don. That idea was to open a small office in California while dealing with Sunkist and Stan would run it; Don said no thank you and then stole the idea for himself. Poor Stan. It doesn’t end there and the California office became the beacon of hope for all cowardly men (ok just Ted). Stan isn’t going to California and so hopefully he will still be around next season to join Peggy and show everyone else how to get things done.

Runner Up: The Draper Family

MM_613_JT_0416_191It’s not every day that your father takes you to the house he grew up in so be sure to wear your Thanksgiving best, oh right your father grew up in a whorehouse. Despite Sally’s recent rebellion and being thrust into an adult situation thanks to witnessing her father’s indiscretion, she’s still dressing like a young girl. I’m expecting that to change next season and Sally will start wearing more daring outfits that we’ve only really seen on Megan, or she’ll look like the 1960s version of Blair Waldorf. Bobby’s jacket reminds me of Henry Jennings’ rainbow coat in The Americans and is something I would wear if it came in an adult size. Gene looks as adorable as ever – will he finally get the chance to speak next season? Don looks as he always does but he’s finally revealed another piece of his past to his children.

Runner Up: Bob Benson 

Bob Benson Pinny Mad MenOne of the highlights of this season has been the mystery of Bob Benson and while his motivations are still relatively unclear he does know how to rock a mini Thanksgiving themed apron (it’s almost as good as the short shorts). One thing we do know is Bob is willing to humiliate the man he claimed he loved to save his job and he’s also not going to listen to Roger; he’ll hangout with Joan all that he wants to. The addition of James Wolk to the cast has been wonderful (and not just because of that charming smile) and hopefully his new show on CBS won’t stop Bob Benson returning next season.

What was your favorite Mad Men look in the season finale?

Mad Men 6.13 “In Care Of” Review: California Dreamin’

24 Jun

At the end of season 1 of Mad Men Don Draper gave one of his best pitches and then returned to an empty house for Thanksgiving; the final episode of this penultimate season also occurred post election (with Nixon as the winner this time) and Don used nostalgia once again to sell a product but spills a little more of his soul in the process. This has been a tumultuous year for these characters and the trauma that the country is experiencing both overseas and at home has impacted the tone. While this season has been a tough slog in places thanks to the darkness that it has tapped into, it has also been highly rewarding even if Don is no longer a character that is easy to defend.

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The Carousel presentation is probably still Don’s most touching pitch as he used nostalgia to sell a product – “the pain from an old wound, it’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.” Don uses a similar tactic for Hershey’s, first telling a made up story about his father buying him a Hershey’s bar and he even has the perfect tagline to accompany this fake tale “Hershey’s is the currency of affection, it’s the childhood symbol of love.” After all the lies Don has told he can’t let the Hershey executives leave without revealing the truth about why he has such strong feelings for this brand of chocolate. This season has had multiple flashbacks to Dick Whitman’s whorehouse living past and while a lot of this has felt superfluous, in this moment it made sense as to why there has been so many. Quite often the flashbacks feel like they should be on a show like Boardwalk Empire and while we probably didn’t need quite as many (the one in this episode only felt necessary because of the final shot) it gives further context as to why Dick became Don.

Don has come across as vulnerable in previous pitches, it’s part of the charm and heartbreak of the Carousel speech and this technique of making it personal is part of the great Don Draper show. This season Don’s work has taken a new direction; imagery of death has been rife and the product they are selling has been absent from the art work on several occasions. Don doesn’t want Hershey’s to even consider advertising so while he doesn’t have a say in his taking leave from work, his heart really isn’t in the game at the moment. This is the most honest we have seen Don at work and the story he tells makes him vulnerable in the eyes of his co-workers and clients. The Hershey executives don’t really know how to respond to Don’s second pitch (they love the first one) and even ask if Don wants them to use that suggestion (this comment caused me to snort laugh, possibly as a reaction to my own horror/wonder at what Don had just revealed – this episode has a lot of hilarious lines underneath the dark overtones).

It has been hard to feel sympathetic towards Don this season as he is the maker of most of his misery, but the meeting on Thanksgiving morning that’s part intervention, part firing might make me retract some of my “Falling Out of Love with Don Draper” statements. It’s an ambush and while it has been a long time coming and he probably deserves it, it is a shame that a rare moment of honesty is what tipped their collective hand; at least when Freddy Rumsen got put on six-month leave he was taken out for a night on the town as part of his send-off. For Don he gets a lot of concerned faces but no follow up, other than an awkward moment with his replacement and Duck (who is clearly relishing this downfall). Where does this leave Don and SC & P? For a start they’re probably happy that they left the D out of the new name. Don has no return date and Peggy looks good in his office (and in an amazing pant suit, is this the first time we have seen Peggy wearing pants in the office?) and once again Mad Men ends a season with the future looking uncertain.

Stan and his magnificent beard came up with the idea of setting up a Californian office, an idea that soon gets taken by Don much to Stan’s dismay. California soon becomes the beacon of new hope as several characters believe it will provide them with a fresh start; Don tells Megan that they’re going and so she quits her job. This looks like it could be place to make their marriage work, much like the hallucination that Don had when he was last in LA. Instead he gives up his chance for sunshine and doesn’t become the monster that Peggy called him as he lets Ted have his spot; Don ruins his marriage to save Ted’s. Don’s marriage has been over for the whole season really and a new climate would probably only act as a band aid for a much larger wound (to borrow a line from Pete Campbell). While it isn’t clear if Megan has left him permanently, she’s finally come to terms with what a sham their relationship is and she’s in the same drifting boat as Don’s children. The main difference here is that Don is with his children at the end of the episode and Megan is nowhere to be seen, so while Megan didn’t meet the violent end that some had predicted she isn’t present in Don’s life in the final shot of the season. I’m a big Megan fan (a sentiment that I know isn’t widely shared) and while I know it’s been hard to work her storyline in this year (mirroring the past issues with getting Betty into episodes), I do hope that this isn’t the last we see of Jessica Paré on Mad Men.

In an earlier episode Sally mentions that she doesn’t know anything about her father, so when he shows his humble beginnings the look that is shared between father and daughter suggests that while their relationship is broken, it isn’t beyond repair. Sally has barely been at her new school for a month and she’s already been suspended for buying beer with a fake ID. While Betty despairs about this, blaming herself Don does a good job of reassuring her that this isn’t her fault. Kiernan Shipka is only in a couple of scenes but shows once again what an exceptional young actress she is; from the disdain in her voice on the phone to her father to that look in the final moment. This is a complicated relationship and one that isn’t going to get fixed instantly by revealing the dilapidated house where he grew up, but it’s a moment of real honesty between Don Draper and his children. It isn’t the first time this has happened; Don took Sally and Bobby to Anna Draper’s house and they asked who Dick was and while he didn’t tell them the whole story he’s beginning to reveal more of who he is. Don’s children are more receptive to this than his colleagues are; this is what unconditional love is and while his revelation leads to what looks like the loss of his job, it might help heal his fractured relationship with his children.

Don Draper 2.0 or Bob Benson as we know him played his hand in a bold manner after Pete confronted him with the news that Manolo might have murdered his mother. Instead of running Bob uses his knowledge of Pete’s shaky driving skills and humiliates Pete in front of the Chevy executives, acting before Pete could ruin Bob. Bob has essentially got the Chevy account to himself and Pete is heading to LA with Ted. Pete isn’t the only person who confronted Bob as Roger also had words concerning Joan and Kevin. Roger only sees the smile and handsome face and doesn’t believe for a second that Bob just wants to be buddies with Joan, but Roger doesn’t get to dictate who Joan spends her time with.

It’s unclear if Manolo is complicit in Pete’s mother’s death, though the evidence suggests that he could have been after the money she doesn’t actually have. Pete is unhappy about his new destination (he is a New Yorker through and through) but Trudy has some wise words for her estranged husband “It’s going to take you a moment to realize where you are.” Trudy tells him that he is now free of everything – of his mother, of that office, of everything. Will a new coast and city be the new start that Pete needs?

“Aren’t you lucky to have decisions” is a line that really cuts through the core of Peggy’s story; while she’s risen to a position of power and responsibility in the office (over at The Cut they have a great clip package of Peggy’s journey), her personal life is still in disarray. Don’t worry this isn’t the start of a “Can Women Have it All?” debate but rather how Ted looked at Don Draper and saw the ghost of Christmas Future and ran to California. Ted isn’t the terrible person that Don has been trying to convince Peggy he is all season, but he’s also not the great man she put on a pedestal either. Ted dreams big and says he’ll leave his wife for Peggy, but deep down that’s never going to happen instead he sees California as his chance of redemption and he needs to put distance between himself and Peggy to quell his desires. While I’ve enjoyed having Ted around, I’m also looking forward to seeing what Peggy can do with her new position of responsibility (plus hey Stan’s still here for late night phone calls and beardy goodness). It should also be remembered that Peggy stepped out on her own at the end of last year to end back at the very office that she had left thanks to a decision that was out of her control.

Other Thoughts

–  While Don has hit rock bottom before, a night in jail after he punches a minister is what motivates Don to make some big life choices.

– If Megan does leave Don and goes to LA without him this might fuel the Sharon Tate theories even further, especially as next season will most likely start in 1969 (there’s only a month of 1968 left). Or they could try and make the bicoastal relationship work, which will still leave her alone in LA.

– Peggy has been the other woman in the past and had an encounter with a very pregnant Trudy Campbell in the bathroom of the office (in “The Suitcase”). Her relationship with Pete was long over by the time this happened so there was no need to play any mind games, with Ted she responds to his wife and kids in the office with a dress that shows off both legs and cleavage and it sends him running to her door (also it’s a nice detail that she makes sure she locks her front door even in the throes of passion, Peggy is still very much afraid of her neighborhood). Was anyone else worried that Ted’s wife would mention Chanel No. 5?

– Bob Benson carving in a pinny. There is nothing left to say about this (until Friday and “Look of the Week”).

– James Wolk is starring in The Crazy Ones on CBS this fall, but there’s nothing to say he can’t pull double duty like Alison Brie has with Community and Mad Men. Hopefully he will be back as Bob Benson has been a season highlight.

– “It’s an opportunity to build one desk into an agency.” Don has been attempting to do this in one form or another since the show started and has done so with SCDP followed by the merger this season, he constantly wants to start at the beginning and turn something into a bigger, better thing. It’s all about reinvention and Don is still not happy with the model, so he wants to start again. What he gets is a different kind of opportunity and I’m so excited about the uncertainty of the final season.

– I’m putting my choice of Mad Men Music Monday in here with the track that closed out the episode (“Moon River” was a very close second as I love this song) and the Judy Collins version of “Both Sides Now.”

http://youtu.be/z8jGFu7ys64

Thanks for reading and I will be chatting with Kerensa once again later this week as we breakdown the last third of the season, make sure you stop by for that.

Mad Men 6.12 “The Quality of Mercy” Review: “You Like Trouble, Don’t You?”

17 Jun

There has a strong sense of doom and gloom on Mad Men this season with national events and personal experiences featuring fraught and violent moments. This might be why outlandish theories about Megan and Bob Benson developed traction and while the Bob Benson mystery has been solved, this foreboding feeling remains.

MM_612_JT_0325_0336The episode opens and closes with Don lying in the fetal position; first in his daughters bed at home and then on his coach in his office. On both occasions he is pushing those who were once close to him further away; Megan is trying to reach out to him but is having no luck and an argument with Peggy where she calls him a monster results in him curling back into this position. Don has been adrift all season, he is the empty suit in his pitch and after the incident with Sally last week he is even more despondent. Don’s job is all about connecting with a wide audience, but he is the one having issues with connections this season. It’s a bad sign when you’re sneaking vodka into your morning orange juice so I think it’s safe to say that Don is in bad shape. Outwardly he is still doing a relatively fine job at work and home; he ‘saves’ a pitch but also humiliates Ted and Peggy in the process and Sally hasn’t told her mother about what she saw.

Instead Sally has cut herself off from her father and thanks to some bad city experiences Betty does not suspect Don as a reason for Sally not wanting to visit. Sally wants to go to boarding school and like her father she is very good at selling herself; all those times that she made drinks for her parents comes in handy as she tells the girls at the boarding school that she can make a Tom Collins. Any Sally storyline that involves drinking, getting high and Glen is enough to cause concern but it turns out that Glen is not actually all that creepy anymore (ok he’s still a tad creepy) and he defends Sally’s honor after his friend makes the moves on her. When Sally is asked “You like trouble, don’t you?” she responds with a sly smile and in this moment it looks like Sally is having a good time. Sally is both out of her depth and in control in these moments and this dichotomy is apparent when Sally tells Betty why she wants to go to boarding school; she wants to be a grown up but also get a good education. Sally is still incredibly young, but she has also experienced the harsh reality of being let down by the one person who should protect her and so when she tells her mother “My father has never given me anything” it isn’t strictly true as he’s given her this new jaded outlook on life. What a gift to give!

Don’s relationship with his daughter is broken and at work he’s fallen out of favor with Peggy. Peggy and Ted are incredibly obvious in their shared attraction as they flirt and discuss creative ideas as if there is no one else in the room. While Ginsberg is merely annoyed by this as it means none of his ideas are getting heard, Don sees it as a much larger problem as Ted’s judgement is impaired. Don is partly right, but it also reads as petty jealousy as his former protégé no longer needs nor respects him. The way Don handles it is reminiscent of how he took charge by getting Ted drunk a few weeks ago; he does it in a public arena and hurts Peggy by giving credit to the now dead Frank Gleason. Don is convinced that Ted can’t be that virtuous and wants Peggy to see this too, but all this does is fracture their already fragile relationship. While they keep discussing working together as a team, the actions of both men don’t suggest that this is going to happen any time soon.

In Don’s eyes he is being merciful to both Peggy and Ted by throwing his weight around, but his phone call to Harry about Sunkist was out of pure spite after seeing Ted and Peggy at the movies together. Megan is excited by this development (and it’s adorable when Megan mouths “Oh my god” at Don) but Don uses it as an opportunity to go back on his word with Ted. Once again it makes more business sense to go with Sunkist as the billings are much higher, but this adds to the disharmony as we head into the final episode.  Don pretty much throws his toys out of the pram in this episode as he tries to get what he wants by stomping over Peggy and Ted’s idea under the illusion of protecting the business.

There is a battle of wills raging in creative but if we head to the floor above another power play is occurring and it takes an unexpected direction this week. Pete doesn’t want to work with Bob after Bob’s declaration last week – a declaration of admiration not love as Bob puts it – so Pete turns to Duck to find a new job for Bob. Duck looks into Bob’s past and finds that he isn’t who he says he is, no he isn’t an undercover agent or Don Draper’s illegitimate son but he does share a similar history with Don in that he has reinvented himself to get ahead. Pete mentions that he has been in this position before and while it looked like Bob’s days at SC & P are over, Pete instead shows him mercy and lets him keep his job. Why would Pete do this? With Don he attempted blackmail and when he went to Bert with the truth he was met with a “Who cares?” Pete’s earlier attempts this season to tell Don what was going on with the firm fell on deaf ears and Pete has used these prior experiences and weighed up his options.

I’ve watched this scene a few times, particularly Bob’s reaction as he is just as confused by Pete keeping his secret as I was at first. Bob shows what a chameleon he is as he shifts from fake smiling ‘I’ll get you a coffee’ Bob (“For one thing I want you to stop smiling”) to resignation as he realizes that Pete knows the truth. It gets tense as Bob tells Pete “You don’t respond well to gratitude” and he’s also incredibly protective of Manolo, emphasizing once again that he isn’t doing anything untoward with Pete’s mother. The mercy that Pete shows is delivered in such a bitter way that it’s easy to see why Bob is perplexed and needs Pete to clarify what is going on. It feels like Pete is talking about Don, not other gay people when he says “I don’t know how people like you do it” and “your kind of animal.” Pete has always shown distaste for Don’s big secret and how Don can so easily lie about who he is.

Like Don, Pete is also thinking of the business and this is most evident from this statement “Where you are and who you are is not my concern” because he knows that Bob is a good account man and as the agency is so divided he probably figures that he needs a strong ally. It’s also hilarious that Pete doesn’t even remember hiring Bob, it’s like he just appeared with two coffees one day. For Bob it’s the opposite as he claims it was the best day of his life. This Don Draper 2.0 story is compelling and I hope that Bob Benson gets to stick around for the final season of Mad Men.

Other thoughts

– Chevy are really putting Ken through the wringer and trying to turn him into a pirate in the process (first the injured leg and now the eye patch). Ken no longer wants to tap dance and who can blame him after all this account has put him through.

– Once again the internet delivers on the Mad Men gif front as here is Don’s amazing baby impression.

– The episode is full of baby imagery; the movie they watch (Rosemary’s Baby), Don’s sleeping position, Ken’s news and the ad pitch. Don’s recent hallucination had him projecting the idea that Megan was pregnant and mother imagery has been a repeated throughout the season. Is this a reaction to the chaos of 1968?

– The political ad Don watches uses imagery of fear about the level of crime in the country and it’s easy to see with material like this why there is a sense of doom at this time.

– If only Roger knew what Lee Garner Jr had asked Sal to do.

– For an excellent reading of last week’s Bob Benson revelation I would highly recommend the always incredible Tom & Lorenzo and their “Mad Style” article talks extensively about Bob and the “Best Little Boy in the World” syndrome, even if their theory doesn’t completely pan out.

– On the way to the boarding school interview Sally is eating fries from McDonalds and on the way home Betty offers Sally a more adult ‘treat’ as she gives her a cigarette which Sally takes. This is much different from the last time we saw Sally smoking (look how young Kiernan Shipka is in this video). Sally now feels very differently about her father than she did in this season 2 clip, though she’s still just as snarky towards her mother.

http://youtu.be/b9UT2ie5eMQ

Any predictions for the Mad Men finale next week?

Mad Men Women Honored at the 2013 Crystal & Lucy Awards

13 Jun

Last night the women of Mad Men attended the 2013 Women in Film Crystal & Lucy Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles and received the 2013 Lucy Award for Excellence in Television. January Jones, Elisabeth Moss, Jessica Paré and Kiernan Shipka collected the award on behalf of the show and this is Moss’ second award of the week as she received the Critics’ Choice Award for Top of the Lake.

Mad Men womenIt has been a big week for Kiernan Shipka’s character Sally Draper as she caught Don sleeping with Sylvia, Shipka showed once again what a remarkable actress she is as she reacted with horror, repulsion and disbelief at her father’s actions. While this season has been light on the Sally appearances this is surely going to leave its mark on Don and damage their relationship for the time being. Shipka once again looks age appropriate in a black star patterned dress and this is another red carpet hit for her.

It’s rare that we get to see all four of these women in a scene together (possibly the only time is in one of my favorite episodes, season four’s “The Beautiful Girls”) but all of them have being doing great work this year on Mad Men with January Jones being the big surprise as Betty has been a highlight rather than a hindrance.

When they took to the stage Elisabeth Moss said “Mad Men has taken an unintentional political stance by simply treating women like human beings.  Our show is a truly special and spirited place in Hollywood.”

Mad Men 6.11 “Favors” Review: What Do You Expect in Return?

10 Jun

Last season on Mad Men Sally referred to New York City as “disgusting” after she witnessed a very adult act between Roger and Megan’s mother Marie, after “Favors” she might never want to return to her father’s apartment again. There are many secrets in the SC & P office (getting used to the new name) and it is easy to forget some of the personal relationships that have long since ended; this episode did a very good job of highlighting this and showing just how lonely these characters are. It would be so easy for everything to come crashing down around them if every truth was to come out, which is why favors are such an important commodity. Even when nothing is expected in return, the knowledge that comes from knowing a person’s darkest secret can becoming a bargaining chip in the future.  The Ted/Don conflict which has really existed in them bitching to others about their situation is addressed, but even if everything is well in business the same could not be said for the private matters of these characters. The doom that has permeated this season has led to discussion of what violence might befall a certain character, but the real horror on Mad Men is when dark truths are revealed.

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The episode opens with Peggy – still living in the apartment she hates – being given another reason to want to flee this abode as she sees a rat. The rat makes a return later in the form of a blood trail across the floor (conspiracy theory doom alert) and when she calls Stan he doesn’t take up her offer to come over, he’s not her boyfriend after all. Peggy can’t ring Ted, because of his wife and kids situation and she doesn’t really have anyone else to turn to – Peggy you need to get yourself some better, ok some actual friends. One relationship that has long since changed and dissolved is between Peggy and Pete, it’s easy to forget that they were once intimate and have a child. The conversation between them while they are drunk and at dinner shows how familiar they are with each other and Pete reiterates that Peggy really knows him, echoing his statement from the end of season 2 when he confessed his love for her and she first told him about giving up their baby. It’s moments like this that remind me why I have been a Pete defender in the past and the effectiveness of these Pete and Peggy scenes is because they are so few. These scenes remind us that Pete isn’t just a weasel of a character, even if his own mother tells him that “You’ve always been unlovable.”

It turns out that someone is in love with Pete and the mystery of Bob Benson is revealed; it isn’t one of the many nefarious or soapy suggestions, instead he is gay and is in love with Pete. Pete’s disgust at the suggestion that Manolo is gay (he calls him a degenerate) doesn’t prevent Bob from giving a misguided speech “Couldn’t it be that if someone took care of you — very good care of you — if this person would do anything for you — if your well-being was his only thought — is it impossible that you might begin to feel something for him?” Pete rejects this and Bob’s knee touch rather emphatically by telling him to let Manolo go and that Manolo (read Bob) is “disgusting.”  Poor misguided Bob, now we know why he was so happy to do everything for Pete, but this approach is no way to make someone love you. Later on we see Pete alone in his dreary apartment with not even enough cereal to have for dinner; this is part of a montage of the SC & P at home; Peggy has got herself a cat that she can rely on, Ted returns home to his family and even if they don’t give him the satisfaction of work he is trying and then there is Don arriving back at his apartment drunk and disheveled.

Of course this isn’t a new state for Don to arrive home in and he’s even passed out with the police in his front room this season; this is a whole different scenario as he really doesn’t know what he will find when he opens the door. Don has spent most of the episode harping on about how important his children are and this is why he is trying to help his friend’s kid get out of his 1A (eligible for military service) situation. There is another reason of course and that is his feelings towards Sylvia, I also think he is doing this out of a sense of guilt as Arnold is a friend who he has wronged. The conversation between them in the bar and how broken Arnold is about this draft news is enough to quick start Don’s favor asking and I actually don’t think getting back with Sylvia is his intention (am I being too naive?) Of course this is what happens and Sylvia’s way of saying thank you is through sex. Sylvia explains that she ended it because she was frustrated that Don had fallen in love with her. I thought it would be due to Don treating her like crap in the hotel, but apparently not.

The huge moment is when Sally sees them and as soon as Sally got the keys to all of the apartments I started watching through the gaps in my fingers as if this was a horror movie. This is the kind of horror that Mad Men excels at, not the kind that we have been expecting since Megan wore the Sharon Tate t-shirt. Sally’s feelings towards her father fluctuate from “I don’t know you” to using him in a scoring battle with her mother, but this cements the former and will likely mean that Sally will stop doing the latter for now. Both Kiernan Shipka and Jon Hamm are excellent in their reactions in this scene and later on when Don tries to explain that what she saw wasn’t really what she saw.

Don rarely loses the facade of cocksure Don Draper to broken Don Draper, but one such time was when Betty confronted him with the Dick Whitman box of information and he could barely get a cigarette out of its packet. The way Don acts in the foyer of his building after Sally has run out is like this and he looks completely lost about what to do or say; he looks like he has been stabbed. Sally has gone and there is nothing he can do to stop her from telling Megan or her mother about what she has seen. So he does what Don always does and goes and gets wasted. When he returns Sally hasn’t said anything and Megan is oblivious, it gets even more fraught when Arnold and Mitchell turn up to say thanks to Don for all he has done and Megan praises him. Sally looks like she might throw up during this entire scene and she finally yells that Don makes her sick.

This can neatly get explained by Sally’s friend Julie (who is also pretty oblivious) telling Megan that Sally has a crush on Mitchell. The conversation between Don and Sally as they stand on either side of the door is Don using his best sales pitch to try and make Sally think that what she saw was in fact something very different. Sally is both too old and smart enough to know that this a lie, Don must realize this too but there are so many unspoken secrets in Don’s life that adding another to the pile is probably not going to do much. Don’s big Dick Whitman secret is mentioned in conversations with both Megan and Pete (I always forget that Pete was the first person to find this out) and his service is referenced in his bar chat with Arnold.

Other thoughts

– Ted says what we have all been saying all season “Don’t be an asshole, Don.” Now that things are settled between Ted and Don (that handshake is a binding contract) will Ted be more at peace when he goes home or will he still want something or someone (Peggy) more?

– Anytime there is an indication that Sally likes an older boy I get worried, Sally brings out the great protector in me. I’m also happy that Sally thinks that boys will not be that into girls who come across as dumb (like her friend Julie). Don’t ever change Sally.

– When Pete’s mother mentions the child that Peggy has with Pete, she thinks that she is talking to Trudy but Peggy reacts like she has been sucker punched; it’s a small moment from Elisabeth Moss but the emotion that she delivers in this scene at this point and when she realizes that Mrs Campbell is confused is fantastic. As is her reaction when Mrs Campbell starts talking about the passion with Manolo.

– Ted mentions that the dinner that he shares with Pete and Peggy is the agency he hoped for, this contrasts with the forced meal he shares with the Chevy guys later. Both are dripping with subtext, but one is a lot lighter and less tense than the other.

– Peggy has noticed that Stan sometimes uses a sexy voice.

– There are only two episodes left of Mad Men this season, is it all going to come crashing down around Don?

What’s in a T-Shirt? The Mad Men Megan Conspiracy Theory

30 May

Coming this Sunday I will be joined by Kerensa Cadenas to follow up our last Mad Men chat (“Falling Out of Love with Don Draper“) and one thing that we will definitely be talking about is the Megan Draper as Sharon Tate conspiracy theory that set Twitter alight yesterday. I just want to address it prior to this longer discussion as it seems to be part of the big Mad Men chatter that follows on from last season’s ‘Pete Campbell is going to kill himself’ clues. This ended with Lane hanging himself instead; is this another misdirect?

Megan balconyLet’s start with the t-shirt, which on a first watch I thought nothing more than “it’s a cute shirt” and it must be a warm night for Megan to be standing out on the balcony in so little. While I’m assuming that it is what Megan will be wearing to bed it’s very different to the formal nightwear that the female characters tend to wear on this show and Megan’s clothes in this episode were the most modern that we have seen so far. This isn’t in an ‘out there’ fashion forward way as with some of the other pieces we have seen this season, but as casual clothes that wouldn’t look out of place on the high street today.

While none of these things point towards the idea that Megan is in danger some eagle eyed viewers over at Reddit noticed that this t-shirt is one that was modelled by murdered actress Sharon Tate (who was killed a year later in 1969 by the Manson Family). Mad Men costume designer Janie Bryant then confirmed on Twitter that it was “no coincidence” and this set in motion a chain of theorizing. Aspects that might point to a violent end for Megan include; the loud sirens in two of Megan’s scenes, both of Abe’s stabbing incidents, the mention of shootings in Central Park, the intruder in the previous episode, Megan is an actress as was Sharon Tate and Megan’s Sharon Tate like appearance in the promo photos for this season (Tom and Lorenzo are as usual producing some exceptional costume analysis on their weekly “Mad Style” feature and were the ones to originally mention this).

Other signs that point to a potentially grizzly end for Megan include the key art for this season, featuring a heavy police presence in the background. This could just be a reflection of the unrest that is being felt across the country and as I mentioned in my review I thought the sirens could be a sign that all of New York is experiencing a rise in crime; with the foreshadowing pointing to her co-star Arlene’s future and not Megan. I also thought it was interesting that neither Megan and Don mentioned the sirens, mostly likely because they have become used to them. Megan has become increasingly isolated as the season has progressed and if a suicide hadn’t happened last season then this might be part of the discussion instead of murder.

Megan tshirtAt The Daily Beast Jace Lacob has spoken to Janie Bryant about this choice of shirt for Megan and instead of pointing to Tate’s fate she explains that “It’s the Vietnam star. We saw a little bit of how Megan was so upset after Bobby Kennedy was shot, it really is so much a part of the turmoil happening during that period.” This might be Bryant attempting to deflect attention away from what could potentially be a huge spoiler (and we all know how creator Matthew Weiner feels about those) but it does also tie in with the amount of crime that is happening in the city and the political unrest nationwide.

So is this one conspiracy theory too many? Sunday’s discussion will also feature the enigma that is Bob Benson and plenty of theories have been popping up about this character as well. This is part of the fun surrounding Mad Men discourse; the subtext could be pointing to something completely different and thanks to the lack of spoilers (I know Weiner is a bit over the top with this but I also think it works for this show) it means that conversation like this can develop. It’s reminds me of watching Lost when we were all trying to understand the smoke monster and the numbers; it’s these aspects that can bring an audience together as we try to collectively figure out what these clues mean.

Is this t-shirt a sign of Megan’s doom or just a sign of a turbulent time? Should Megan’s co-star Arlene be worried about her future? What are the most outlandish Mad Men conspiracy theories that you have heard?

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