Category Archives: Mad Men

Series Finale: Mad Men – “Person to Person”

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“Person to Person”

May 17, 2015

“A lot has happened.”

I spent part of Sunday afternoon watching the Mad Men marathon on AMC. I haven’t written about any of the seventh season thus far, which means it’s been nearly two years since I’ve . And the marathon made me glad for this, in its way: I realized that I hadn’t really properly oriented myself to the first half of the season before diving into the first, struggling at times to connect what we were seeing to the big picture.

That was definitely the biggest issues with these final episodes, which often spurned traditional seriality. The show has always been a balance of episodic and procedural engines, but the jumps in time and the revolving door of characters has made these final seven episodes scattered. However, it has also made them distinctive, such that revisiting them reminded me how much each had connected in some way or another. Although the purchase of SCDP by McCann-Erickson has ostensibly been the season’s arc, we never saw its initial implementation, and when the characters tried to turn it into an arc on the level of SCDP’s founding McCann-Erickson stepped in to tell them it wasn’t going to happen. This wasn’t going to be that season. Don, Peggy, Joan, Roger, and everyone else are not going to ride off into the sunset on stallions—they are more likely to fade into the distance like normal people, living normal lives.

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Mad Men – “In Care Of” and the Narrative Engine of Place in Season 6

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“In Care Of” and the Narrative Engine of Place in Season 6

June 24th, 2013

“This is where everything is.”

Mad Men began with a spatial divide. In the series’ pilot, we are introduced to Don Draper in Manhattan but only get the full picture when we follow him onto the train to the suburbs, and to the family life he leaves behind every day he travels into the city. The show was invested in exploring the distinct ebbs and flows of those two spaces, and on Don’s ability to travel between them. While we would come to learn that Don had been living a double life for most of adulthood, initially we watched a man live two lives separated by the train ride between them.

The show evolved beyond its urban/suburban divide, adding enough complexity to both Don’s family life and Sterling Cooper as a setting that it would seem reductive to boil the show down to this dichotomy. And yet although Don was no longer traveling to the suburbs since separating from Betty, the spatial divide stuck around thanks to characters like Pete, who began the season in his city apartment that would become his primary residence after he proved less agile in his duplicity than Don was. And as Betty explored the life of young runaways or as Peggy let Abe talk her into living in a nascent neighborhood, New York City was no longer confined to the offices of Sterling Cooper, gaining diversity and perspective as the turmoil of 1968 played out over the course of the season.

Mad Men’s sixth season was far from the first time the show has become invested in the meaning of space and place, but “In Care Of” highlights how central the idea of “going somewhere else” has been to this season in particular. For a season that began in the escape of Hawaii, and jetted to Los Angeles and Detroit and to upstate New York in a very tiny plane, it ends with multiple characters imagining what life would be like away from New York. In the process, we can imagine a final season spread across the country, even if we can also picture a season that remains tethered to the Manhattan Mad Men has over time embedded into the fabric of its storytelling.

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Mad Men, The Americans, and Brushes with Everyday Terror

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“The Crash” and The Americans’ “Trust Me”

May 21st, 2013

Of the shows I fell behind on earlier this year, The Americans is what I’ve considered my first priority to catch up on, although even that has been a slow process; I just finished “Trust Me,” the sixth episode of the FX series’ acclaimed first season, last night.

However, sometimes timing is fortuitous, as I watched it after having watched—and podcast with the folks at the Mad World Podcast—about Mad Men‘s “The Crash,” and I was struck by a shared interest in how the normal manifests within the sensational. Obviously, “Trust Me” isn’t a trippy drug trip, but it nonetheless juxtaposes a form of psychological struggle or torture with scenes of danger that at first manifest as part of the game but eventually appear to be simply a coincidental brush with everyday terror.

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Present and Past: “The Phantom” and Mad Men Season 5 in Review

“The Phantom”

June 10th, 2012

“This may be our last chance.”

I was having a conversation with some friends the other night, and we were discussing the character of Paul Kinsey. My colleague Alyx expressed an affection for Paul, but admitted that the character simply wasn’t talented enough to meet his aspirations, directly alluding to the character’s return this season. However, while she was aware of what was happening this season (albeit through reading weekly reviews as opposed to actually watching it), the other friends at the table were at least a season behind, which meant that we didn’t get a chance to continue the conversation.

I found myself returning to it watching “The Phantom.” Paul Kinsey got left behind by the narrative, becoming a symbol of the consequences of the development Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce agency and eventually returning as a man chasing dreams of love and fame without the means to achieve either. But while Paul is in a pitiable situation, off to Los Angeles on Harry’s dime with nothing but a terrible Star Trek spec script to his name, are we exactly meant to pity him?

Or is our pity instead for Lane Pryce, the man who had the means for success but did everything he could to sabotage it? He’s the man who got swept up in this agency when he could have instead been sent to India, who was given this opportunity to be a name partner long before he could have dreamed, and yet he ends his life a broken man whose choice to hide his shame and suppress his desire to life the live before him results in his end. Is it a greater shame to lose the life you want to lead and aspire to something greater, or to live the life you want to lead while denying yourself the pleasures and thrills that come with it?

Of course, it’s hard to avoid the specter of Lane’s death (especially compared to Paul’s futile journey to Los Angeles), and “The Phantom” could in fact refer to his empty chair at the partners meeting (which the camera lingers on). But on a larger level, this season of Mad Men has been (for me) an investigation of those moments that give us a tinge of doubt, those moments that won’t leave our minds except with the help of electroshock therapy, and those moments that make us ask ourselves when our last chance might be. In other words, it’s about the characters treating their own lives like we treat the show they’re a part of: just as we look back to piece things together, to ponder over narrative moments and psychological motivations, so too has Mad Men’s cast of characters taken to viewing their actions as matters of cause and effect.

It’s a dangerous game for them to play, and it results in a finale that is not quite subtle in its thematic material. My notes for the episode are filled with lines and details that scream out to be applied to the characters’ storylines as the season comes to an end. After sitting out much of the season, I could easily spend hours poring over those notes and pulling out every thematic thread, but I want to focus on a single question: what does it take for us to be able to turn the present into the past, to forget something or someone? It’s a question that drives much of the season, calling attention to the weight of what happened in a season light on plot but heavy on consequences, and a season that builds rather impressive momentum for a show entering its sixth season.

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Mad Men – “Far Away Places”

“Far Away Places”

April 22nd, 2012

Given that I still have a half dozen things to finish before my evening comes to an end, I am risking falling into a deep hole responding to this episode of Mad Men immediately after it airs, but there was a point I wanted to make that I decided wouldn’t fit comfortably into even a shorter series of tweets.

Accordingly, presenting this as a “review” of the trippy “Far Away Places” is perhaps a bit disingenuous, but I hope that a few thoughts about the structure of tonight’s episode will be worth your time despite not being surrounded by another two thousand words.

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Mad Men – “A Little Kiss” & “Tea Leaves”

“A Little Kiss” & “Tea Leaves”

March 25th/April 1st, 2012

When James Poniewozik announced a few weeks ago that he wouldn’t be reviewing Mad Men’s fifth season week-to-week, I quietly made plans to follow suit given a busy semester with a whole lot of Monday deadlines. The idea of covering Mad Men without screeners in addition to covering Game of Thrones (for which I have screeners), all on the night before my busiest day of the week academically-speaking, was simply inconceivable until at least the end of May.

However, a few people sent emails and tweets wondering where my coverage was, at which point I realized that I had never exactly made these plans public. While I’m sad to be in a position where writing about the show weekly isn’t a feasible option, I’m also a little bit glad, if we’re being honest. I didn’t get to watch “A Little Kiss” until Wednesday night, but there was something freeing about watching it without a computer on my lap.

This doesn’t mean that I didn’t have opinions, and I want to share a few reflections on the first two episodes after the jump, but there’s a point at which the exhaustive writeup becomes, well, exhausting. As has become clear this year in particular, I no longer have the time to write post-air reviews of every show I watch, but I also think that with time I lose the inclination. Between the long hiatus and the weight of writing 2000+ words per episode for four seasons, Mad Men has simply transitioned into a show I enjoy more when I don’t feel the need to stake my authority over each episode in the hours after it airs.

However, as noted, I do want to offer some thoughts on the season’s beginnings, and would like to write with more regularity (if not necessarily on a weekly basis) once the semester ends and the season moves into its final episodes.

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Mad Men the Morning After: Critics visit “Tomorrowland”

Mad Men the Morning After: “Tomorrowland”

October 18th, 2010

It’s been a while since I’ve been able to stop in with an installment of Mad Men the Morning After, but with my students writing midterms this morning and more critics than usual getting their reviews up late last night, I figure it’s as good a time as any to return. I’m not going to be able to offer as much detail as I ideally would, as I’m still quite busy, but I think we still need to compile the collective wisdom of the online television critics on the divisive, yet unquestionably compelling, “Tomorrowland.”

First off, my own review here at Cultural Learnings.

Season Finale: Mad Men – “Tomorrowland” [CL]

“And there’s your central irony: in an episode named after an amusement park’s glimpse into the future, “Tomorrowland” is devoid of any clear sense of where this is all headed. Last year was, in many ways, simpler, but there was an upward trajectory: the agency was new, certainly, but there was unrealized potential. At the end of the fourth season, however, most everything seems to be headed in the opposite direction: Joan is about to start really showing, Don and Megan’s relationship could implode at any moment, and Betty and Henry’s relationship is more tenuous than ever.”

However, I also wrote up a short piece for Antenna, where a collection of scholars have been writing about the show all season – I link to all of their posts within my finale piece, and I definitely think they’re worth a read if you’re interested in more academic readings of race, music, history, gender and other themes prevalent in the series.

Mr. Draper’s Wild Ride: “Tomorrowland” [Antenna]

However, what I find most interesting is those moments trapped between action and reaction: was Don’s New York Times ad a confident action, or a desperate reaction to Lucky Strike’s departure? And was his decision to marry Megan an action to regain control of his life, or a reaction to the short-term stability she offered and its potential role in solving his identity crisis? When we start pondering Don’s motivations, we get trapped in a vicious cycle wherein his true purpose seems hopelessly lost, but this has always been the case. Don’s actions in the finale are just as confounding and complex as they were before, and so we can still frame this finale – as disruptive as it first seemed, to me at least – in the context of previous seasons.

Meanwhile, Alan Sepinwall continues his great coverage of the show (which will continue in a podcast with Daniel Fienberg later today) in his review – I specifically enjoyed his unpacking of Don’s romantic claim as he and Megan are engaged.

Mad Men – Tomorrowland: I spill your milkshake! [HitFix]

“He doesn’t seem well-adjusted so much as he seems like Stepford Don. Look no further than the moment, after proposing to a stunned Megan, when he asks, “Did you ever think of the number of things that had to happen for me to get to know you?”…[Here Alan delves into just that]… Don looks at this chain of events as some evidence of romantic destiny, where others (including me) might see him in that moment being not unlike Tony Soprano, a narcissist viewing other people’s suffering as necessary for his own personal growth.”

Not surprisingly, Don was the prominent subject of conversation for just about every critic, including Time’s James Poniewozik who makes a fitting allusion in his description of Don’s marital mind.

Mad Men Watch: Put a Ring On It [Tuned In]

“From a 21st-century perspective, the choice between Faye and Megan is, on the surface, one between a more enlightened version of Don and a more traditional one: the professional versus the secretary, the outspoken, tough woman versus the sweet accommodator. But Don’s picking Megan over Faye in this version of Bachelor ’65 is not just about his making the less feminist choice. It’s about him rejecting someone who really knows him and who he’s been for someone who knows “who you are now”—an idealized, and carefully fictionalized, version of him.”

Now, I don’t think many of us saw this much development happening this quickly for Don and Megan, but Keith Phipps at The A.V. Club speaks to how the unexpected contributes to the show’s success in his great review.

TV Club – “Tomorrowland” – Mad Men [The A.V. Club]

“The fact that I never know where Mad Men is going is part of why I love the show. But it’s not that I love the unpredictability of it, if only because the word “unpredictability” implies a much wilder ride than we usually get. It’s that these characters, so intimately realized in every detail, never seem like they’re being pulled along by anything so mundane as plot mechanics. There always seem to be bigger forces at work.”

Those bigger forces were pretty big this time around, though, and that raised some concerns. While there has yet to be an outright negative review of the finale, these concerns have been a topic of most reviews, although Maureen Ryan at AOL quite nicely demonstrates the thematic value of these forces.

Mad Men Finale – ‘Tomorrowland’ [TV Squad]

“The magic of the lyrical ‘Mad Men’ finale was that it beautifully conveyed that sense of falling in love — the feeling that time stops and the world only consists of two people who share an exquisite connection. In this hushed, quietly paced episode, we were inside Don/Dick’s head and heart as he fell for Megan. The finely calibrated moments, the pure intimacies — they all disarmed us just as Megan unwittingly disarmed her man. Who could resist?”

I would personally resist using the word lyrical to describe the finale, being that it was more a siren’s song than a beautiful lullaby in my books, but I certainly agree that Don and Megan’s romance had a powerful force behind it. As Jace Lacob points out, that force was obvious as soon as a certain object entered into the fray.

Tomorrowland: Facing the Future [Televisionary]

“Anna’s engagement ring was the marital equivalent of Chekhov’s gun: it had to go off before the end of the episode. In a way, it’s fitting that Don should choose to give Megan this particular ring, its weight heavy in his pocket. Just as he had stolen Don Draper’s identity so many years earlier, Anna makes his transformation complete, obliterating Dick Whitman not only with her death but with this final boon. But while Don came clean to Faye about his past and his mistakes, Don starts out his new life with Megan with a lie, saying that the ring has been in his family for a long time. Yes, he corrects himself by saying that it belonged to someone he cared for deeply, but the damage is potentially done.”

However, it is possible that this intense focus on Don within the episode was perhaps too powerful, in that other characters played only a cursory role. This was perhaps especially true with Joan, as Ryan McGee laments (in an overall quite positive review) that there wasn’t enough explanation for why Joan would make this decision within the text itself.

Mad Men – “Tomorrowland” [Boob Tube Dude]

“…in typical “Mad Men” fashion, Season 5 will probably start with Joan already a mother. Kudos to those that accurately predicted this, but I hate not that I was wrong so much as the choice to have her lie in the first place. It’s not like she’s lying about how many licks it took her to get to the center of a freakin’ Tootsie Pop, people. It’s a bit bigger than that, and while I’ll reserve final judgment for how the show deals with this in the future, I can’t say I’m particularly thrilled with this choice overall.”

Meanwhile, Nick at Monsters of TV has some interesting insight into the title, arguing that the scenario constructs an image of Don’s future he cannot refuse.

Mad Men – “Tomorrowland” [Monsters of TV]

“Don Draper has his own little Tomorrowland going. The moment he walks into the restaurant and sees his family in the booth, he looks at it almost like a model of his future. This is the paradise, the peace, the comfort he seeks. And while there are differences from what he knows, ultimately, this is just a relic from the past he sells to himself as the utopian future. So while you think about how Don’s actions in this episode are sudden and without motivation, consider his discussion with Anna when they first started discussing Betty in the Christmas flashback sequences. Seem relatively familiar? When Betty handed him the key to his house, she might as well have said, “Congratulations. Here is the key to the detritus of your past. You can match it to the building blocks of your future.”

Maybe my mind is failing me, but I remember a different Disney World ride where you see the model of a nuclear family, some sort of constructed image of who you are supposed to be. Disneyland (or World, take your pick) is the ultimate simulacrum, to the point where Mad Men is able to develop a fairly complex metaphorical meaning with only an episode title and a brief discussion of the park. It is the place which makes the commercial lyrical, and in some ways California as a whole serve a similar purpose for the show in terms of the dream-like state it creates.

However, that’s enough from me – I’d now like to turn it over to two critics who have been making some great observations about the show but who don’t have a direct home for their work. First, The A.V. Club and L.A. Times Showtracker’s Todd VanDerWerff (who is also, of course, a friend of the blog) offers his glimpse into “Tomorrowland”:

“Tomorrowland” struck me as the most Sopranos-esque finale yet. The Sopranos is the most significant touchstone when looking at earlier series that have influenced Mad Men. It borrows that shows “collection of short stories” structure, and it has a similar love of anticlimax. (The reason “Shut the Door. Have a Seat.” felt so SATISFYING was because it allowed a bunch of stuff we didn’t expect to have a climax to have a climax.) In that sense, “Tomorrowland” is a nice callback to the show’s most important influence. Like most Sopranos finales, it promises a bunch of big, climactic moments that then fizzle out. The firm almost falls apart. Then it doesn’t. Don and Faye are having a great relationship. Then they aren’t. It’s an episode about what people do when they’re up against the wall and then abruptly realize the wall is no longer there. It’s also a pretty great reverse of the Sopranos season four finale, “Meadowlands.” In that episode, a relationship crumbles. In this one, a new relationship forms. Above all, “Tomorrowland” made me as nervous as the show ever has. I’m willing to give the Don and Megan thing a shot, since I think Jessica Pare is a fine actress and I liked that scene where the milkshake spilled and she didn’t freak out. But there’s even more of a sense of foreboding overhanging everything on the show now. I’ve found that the show doesn’t like to comment on the historical events surrounding the characters directly, but have the show’s emotional mood roughly parallel the nation’s emotional mood at that point in time. In that sense, the foreboding is appropriate. I wouldn’t say “Tomorrowland” was my favorite episode of the show, and it’s probably the weakest finale the show has done up until this point, but there are moments in it as strong as anything the show has done – the final scene between Don and Betty (funny how the seasons keep ending with scenes between these two), Joan and Peggy getting “real,” Peggy and Ken’s pitch to Topaz, etc. And I liked the continuing portrayal of California as a kind of heaven on Earth, where you probably shouldn’t trust how you’re acting, but you give in to how good it feels anyway.

And then, I was very pleased to get some thoughts from EW’s Jeff “Doc” Jensen, who has been writing weekend Mad Men posts at EW without any other outlet to analyze the respond to the series directly after it airs. As a result, I asked him he he would offer his own insights into the finale, and he was kind enough to oblige with some really fantastic analysis:

Why I’m Dreading Don Draper’s Tomorrowland…

Why Don’s Proposal Was Genius: Because of the variety of viewpoints its inspiring. It seems a lot of people have different opinions on whether or not Don’s proposal was a fulfillment of Dr. Miller’s cynical prophecy earlier in the season about Don (he’ll be married within a year) or a fulfillment of her exhortation in the early scene of the finale (make peace with the past; fresh start for the future). Is Megan yet one more escape or the expression of born again living? If it’s the latter, their relationship could still fall apart for a varety of reasons.

Why Don’s Proposal Wasn’t Genius: If this was the set-up for next season–a season in which Don will be married to Megan and we get episodes devoted to their relationship and its unraveling (or flourishing)–I find myself dreading, not anticipating, next year. I simply don’t know if I find that story promising or interesting. I feel almost deflated by the thought, actually. Which is disappointing. Mad Men finales usually leave me feeling elated, ‘I can’t wait for next year!’ Not this one. See James P.’s line: “… Mad Men somewhat returning to scenarios and conflicts we’d seen play out before…”

I really kinda believe that Matthew Weiner will end the show with the fifth season. If he does, I bet the first ep of next year is constructed to mirror the pilot, in which we spent a day in the life of Don, building to the “twist” ending that this man who seemed to be a raking bachelor actually had a wife and kids in the suburbs. The season premiere will do something similar. It’ll be set 6 mos-1 year in the future, and we’ll spend a day in the life of Don, building up to him returning home… and we find out he’s living alone, or with Dr. Miller, or even with–eek!–Betty.

I guess this is me saying I didn’t like “Tomorrowland” or didn’t like the turn it took, even if we were prepped for this all season long. As shocking as Don’s decision was, I get it. KINDA. I do think, to some degree, Weiner sacrificed character logic for theme here. (I think Joan’s decision to keep the baby–a sort of analogous “change for change sake” move–was more credible.) But if we were to learn right away that Don quickly sobered up from his California high and recanted of his rash, impulsive, idealistic proposal, we’ll all be revisiting “Tomorrowland” and reconsidering it. In fact, I find myself taken with the notion of rewatching the finale with exactly that frame of mind, and processing it less as forward-spinning set-up for next season and more as a stand-alone piece that comments on Don’s season 4 journey. I think it’ll work better for me–because as much as I like Megan, I really don’t want to spend 13 episodes next year–or even just a few–waiting for it to all fall apart.

Megan. Finally, an “other woman” that succeeds in doing what no other “other woman” has done before: Inspiring Don to leave his blonde bedrock. And yet, she has married him knowing he’s a cheater. I have to think that suspicion and paranoia will quickly settle in for her–especially after that first biz trip.

I haven’t really considered the role that guilt may have played in Don’s proposal. Early in the episode, we saw Don dreading his visit to California. There could be many, California-specific reasons for that dread, but one thought I didn’t consider until this morning is this: Don knows what happens to him when he travels. When he travels, he becomes unsettled, as we all do. But when Don gets unsettled, he risks becoming utterly unmoored, and he is tempted to stray. And so, going back to the beginning of Tomorrowland, we saw and heard Don acknowledge that he had a good thing going with Dr. Miller; I wonder if his is dread had something to do with knowing that he was putting himself in a position where he could easily sabotage his own happiness. After all, he knew he was heading right toward that Cal-Berkeley girl that had tickled his fancy earlier this season.

Well, he was tempted, but by what Megan represented, and he succumbed. But it could be a measure of how far he’s come–and how far he still has to go–that he responded to his latest infidelity/indiscretion by trying to redeem it, trying to make it “mean something.”

To put another way: He felt guilty. And Don doesn’t like feeling guilty; he doesn’t want to even believe in the concept. And so the way he rationalizes away this latest wrong is to make it gloriously right. Hence, these epiphanies that run absolutely counter to Don’s allegedly nihlistic, utilitarian ethos. And so now he loves her. He has always loved her, for as long in fact! And suddenly, it seems something like fate has conspired to bring them together…

From this perspective, Don’s latest manifestation of “Donnishness” doesn’t seem as egregious; from the “rationalizing guilt” perspective, I am left feeling kinda bad for him, actually. If there’s a story to be told about the Don/Megan marriage, I hope it’s one in which Don realizes the real reasons for wanting to marry Megan, but doesn’t let that epiphany defeat him, but rather let it reveal to him that he actually believes in something, and wants to believe in something. I just hope he can have that epiphany without totally ruining that girl.

There’s been a lot of love thrown the way of the Peggy/Joan scene. Allow me to be a slightly contrarian voice. I as amused by the scene and thought it added to the whole. At the same time, upon reflection, it feels forced, and I find myself thinking this thought: Was Matthew Weiner calling out and responding to some criticisms regarding the season’s treatment of women with that scene and the whole episode? The whole episode both seemed to promote and subvert its female characters at the same time. Peggy landed an account; her success was overshadowed. Joan got a new, fancy title; but no real substance to it, certainly no money. Megan got engaged to golden boy Don–but may have also just said “I do” to much future pain. Betty let go of the house, yet burned every possible bridge and was confronted by the fact that she is utterly alone. With that as context, the Peggy/Joan scene stands out provocatively and oddly. The scene basically had them bitching about being marginalized, and when Joan tried to rationalize her disappointment, Peggy called bullshit. That seems ripe for some discussion about the possibility that Matthew was being meta about his own show and the growing disatisfaction with its depiction of women. That scene, to me, seemed to be Matthew trying to say, “I call bullshit on your criticism of my female characters! My show’s depiction of women is honest to the period–but yes, I hear you, it’s getting frustrating to watch.” (I reserve the right to refine the point Weiner may have been trying to make; this is being written under duress of needing to catch a flight pronto!)

As promised, the rest of the reviews as I read them:

Heather Havrilesky [Salon]:

“Thank God for the brief scene where Peggy and Joan bemoan the stupidity of men marrying their secretaries. Finally, Peggy calls Joan on her lies, and Joan laughs in response. It would be so nice to see these two actually join forces – but of course, there are a million and one ways that the norms of the times will keep them on opposing teams.”

Linda Holmes [NPR]:

“The matter of Don’s identity has always been one of bifurcation: Dick Whitman or Don Draper. He was pretending to be one, when in reality, he was the other. But this season was not about the dichotomy between Don and Dick, but about the fact that there are not, in fact, two men — there is one man, a man who is neither of those men exactly, and that one man still has to figure out what to do next. Choosing between his names is utterly beside the point.”

Ginia Bellafante [New York Times]:

“An hour after viewing and mulling this over, though, I still can’t come to a resolution over whether Don’s decision to make Megan the next Mrs. Draper is reasonable or insane.”

Eric Deggans [The Feed]:

“I have been told by much more accomplished storytellers than myself that this season was among the series’ best. But I have been deeply ambivalent about the episodes, and Sunday’s finale left me more convinced than ever that we have seen a gifted TV showman dazzling us with misdirection and craft when the actual story falters.”

Matt Zoller Seitz [The New Republic]:

The whole episode had (for me, at least) a pleasurably off-kilter feel. It was written and performed as a straight drama with comedic interludes, the show’s go-to mode. But the courtship-to-engagement story played out so fast—and came about so suddenly, as Don’s finger-snap solution to Betty’s depriving him of child care by impulsively firing Carla—that by time Don hauled out that ring, “Tomorrowland” felt a couple of degrees removed from farce.

Tim Goodman [S.F. Chronicle]:

One of the interesting issues here, of course, is what she’s worried about with Glen. Maybe she thinks he’s creepy and, since he couldn’t have her, is now after her daughter. Or maybe it’s the other way around – Glen pursuing an interest in Sally is another rejection of Betty.

Cory Barker [TV Surveillance]:

I think I can objectively say that this is one of the most, if not the most frustrating hour of the series yet. But how or if does that influence the analysis, which in the case of this series, seems much more interested in extracting themes, making connections and doing more, I guess, analysis than criticism?

Cultural Observations

  • The lingering question: where do we place this season? James Poniewozik suggests that it slots in just behind Season One, but it’s interesting that “Tomorrowland” has the opposite effect of “Sit Down. Have a Seat.” That finale made the entire season look better than it was, while this finale might make this season seem comparatively worse if you are displeased with the results.
  • For even MORE discussion of the finale, the Firewall and Iceberg AND Talking TV with Ryan and Ryan podcasts both have episodes about the finale (the latter featuring Todd VanDerWerff), the new Extra Hot Great podcast covers the finale in their second episode, and I participated in the Mad World Podcast‘s finale episode earlier today, which will go up sometime soon.

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Season Finale: Mad Men – “Tomorrowland”

“Tomorrowland”

October 17th, 2010

“Are you kidding me?!”

I’m extremely glad that Faye Miller actually said this during the episode, so I could pull quote it instead of saying itself myself. But, seriously: is Mad Men kidding me?

“Tomorrowland,” like its namesake, was supposed to be about potential: it was supposed to show us a way for Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce to survive, and a way for Don Draper to reconcile his identity crisis and move forward. It was about charting a new path after tobacco, working with the Cancer society and making plans for whatever the future might hold.

Instead, “Tomorrowland” drops us off with ten weeks of no business, a vacation conundrum, and a series of circumstances which is precisely the opposite of last season’s closer: instead of building excitement, “Tomorrowland” builds nothing but dread, creating scenarios that test our patience with these characters, and even the show itself.

Unless you’re a huge fan of total uncertainty and absolute chaos, chances are “Tomorrowland” was more disturbing than enlightening – the question, of course, is whether it is still good television.

And I think that answer, despite my frustration, is yes.

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Mad Men – “Blowing Smoke”

“Blowing Smoke”

October 10th, 2010

“Not no; not now.”

As the penultimate episode of the season, “Blowing Smoke” has to do more than, well, blow smoke; while last season demonstrated the ability for a finale to offer an exciting climax without much direct plot momentum carried from the previous episode, the fate of Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce has been developing for a few weeks, and the worst thing that could happen is if its impact is lost.

What’s interesting in “Blowing Smoke” is that the show mirrors its characters: still somewhat in shock from the new of Lucky Strike’s departure, they find themselves sitting around with nothing to do. They can’t bring in accounts thanks to concerns over their longevity, they can’t make dramatic changes without seeming to be in crisis mode, which leaves almost no options to feel as if they’re really making a difference.

This episode is about that circumstance, what it drives Don Draper to do, and whether trading certain doom for an uncertain chaos is the right path to take – in other words, it’s about the danger of a situation where it’s not no, but it’s not now, and how a person like Don Draper lives within that liminal space.

The answer is different depending on who you ask.

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Mad Men – “Chinese Wall”

“Chinese Wall”

October 3rd, 2010

“I thought in the end you wouldn’t want to throw it away.”

The balance between business and personal affairs forms one of the central tensions of Mad Men, but the show’s characters all approach the issue from different perspectives. For some, it takes the form of large-scale conflicts, such as Peggy’s pregnancy back in season; for others, it takes the form of family conflict, such as Pete’s relationship with his father-in-law; for yet more, it takes the form of the simple fact that a dinner out is interrupted by a colleague who stops by with news about the business.

For Don Draper, however, it has always been an elaborate balancing act: desperate to keep his true personal affairs out of his business, he created the ideal life for a businessman: wife, two and a half kids, house in the suburbs, etc. And yet that was never Don’s personal life, not really: if anything, Don’s lack of identity meant that he had no true personal life, and what he had was lost when Ann Draper passed away earlier this season.

The tragedy of “Chinese Wall” is not the loss of Lucky Strike hitting the fan, or the departure of the client who brought Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce its greatest honour. Instead, the greatest tragedy is that Don’s search for a personal life has become indistinguishable from his business one. While I would argue that “Chinese Wall” is almost as consistently themed as last week’s “Hands and Knees,” what sets it apart is that it is a theme that has been central from the very beginning, and in the “last days of Rome” it becomes more important than ever before.

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