Mad Men - Season 6 - Sundays on AMC

Status
Not open for further replies.
Don is going to lose peggy altogether if he keeps up his behavior. Peggy had done a decent amount of things for Don, but more than that she genuinely respected him and validated his performance. She was there for him when he was experiencing his literal darkest moment.

It's going to be heart breaking when Peggy severs their relationship altogether.
 
As always, I disagree with the majority of opinions in this thread.

This week its about the dynamic between Ted and Don. I've read some people in this thread that there is or will be a power struggle between them.

I don't see that happening at all. I think their business relationship will make each other both better.

Agreed. I think Ted and Don will end up working very well together, as they both teach one another their ways. I think this will be further bolstered by the fact that his most recent affair ended. Maybe it's time that he finally buries him self with his work. Lord knows it's been a while.



To take a stab at how the series ends - Don is wealthier then ever, is divorced but is surrounded by beautiful women. The money, the women, none of means anything. He sits and drinks alone and stares off into the distance. I see him as a tragic character with tragic flaws. He will be successful by the worlds standards and have everything anyone could want but will always feel empty and worthless inside.
 
Off-screen where she belongs. Completely flat and uninteresting character.
tumblr_lunt92GhbX1r6984go1_400.gif
 
My original prediction was that the show would end with the death of the agency.

But I don't see that happening now.

I could see this. I'm sure it has been talked about in.here before but the car they are working on for Chevy doesn't last that long. They could slowly lose business because of things like Pete's BS and then losing Chevy could be the final straw.


What are their accounts now anyway?
 
Lol, was just rewatching the episode and when Chaough meets Joan for the first time in the episode, you can totally see that Ted got a cup of coffee from Bob Benson because they're both carrying the same coffee cup! Little touches like that just crack me up.
 
I thought I heard one of the receptionists saying "... Draper, Price, Cutler, Gleason..." during the commotion of the offices moving. I think SCDPCGC is the real name lol
 
I thought I heard one of the receptionists saying "... Draper, Price, Cutler, Gleason..." during the commotion of the offices moving. I think SCDPCGC is the real name lol
They likely haven't figured out a new name yet, especially given that the P & G are both likely to be soon deceased.
 
Mad Men was overdue for a critical cooling off. I believe The Sopranos went through a similar phase, though in my opinion, The Sopranos actually dropped off quite a bit more in quality than Mad Men. I honestly don't think Mad Men has dropped off that much, in spite of some slight wheel spinning this season.

I do think Mad Men could have been wrapped up in six seasons, but I'm mostly fine with the decision to go to seven.

weird. this is my favorite season so far.
 
I don't like this that much tbh. Apart from Bob "the man" Benson, everyone is so damn unlikeable. Joan has been a mess since the baby, Peggy really works better with the old gang (so maybe some good will come of the merger) and everyone else is either in a diminished role or is boring. I really hate Don right now. Like shit, what a scumbag.

And I'm gonna need Ken to get a bigger role ASAP. He's always been the best in that agency.
 
weird. this is my favorite season so far.

I'm mainly referring to the Sylvia stuff. I still think the show is ace is pretty much every respect, but I think even the most diehard MM fans will admit that some of the Sylvia storyline feels a bit repetitive.

I don't like this that much tbh. Apart from Bob "the man" Benson, everyone is so damn unlikeable. Joan has been a mess since the baby, Peggy really works better with the old gang (so maybe some good will come of the merger) and everyone else is either in a diminished role or is boring. I really hate Don right now. Like shit, what a scumbag.

And I'm gonna need Ken to get a bigger role ASAP. He's always been the best in that agency.

I think I suffer an aneurysm every time I read the word "likable" (or any derivation of it) in a TV thread.
 
I agree about the Sylvia stuff. I'm not sure I'm gaining any more insight into Don that I didn't already know. I learn more about him from other interactions.

What did we learn last episode, he likes to be in control, the centre of attention, etc...we already knew that.
 
I'm mainly referring to the Sylvia stuff. I still think the show is ace is pretty much every respect, but I think even the most diehard MM fans will admit that some of the Sylvia storyline feels a bit repetitive.
Yep. It'd be better if she were developed better.

At least Rachel had some scenes without Don, like her conversation with her sister - little things like that made her less two-dimensional. But since so much of what we know about Sylvia is tied to her interactions with Don, she seems more like a narrative device than a plausible character.
 
Lol, was just rewatching the episode and when Chaough meets Joan for the first time in the episode, you can totally see that Ted got a cup of coffee from Bob Benson because they're both carrying the same coffee cup! Little touches like that just crack me up.

Too funny. Good eye.

JAGngqG.png
 
Bob Benson is a great character. They probably taught him the whole "two coffee" thing at business school (Wharton I think it was).
 
Thanks for that--great write up, spot on.

Meanwhile Ted, with Don in his office, belittles creative over the meeting he scolded Don about for being absent to.

In regards to the conversation he had with Gleason: If this analysis is right, Ted is entering into a losing battle. Don doesn't see Ted as an enemy. Its obvious from my perspective by the way he handled Ted's criticisms on missing the meeting with creative. Don views Ted as an equal.

Its then quite bizarre how the show is depicting Ted. That conversation with Gleason is interesting. Ted mentioning that Don appears to be taking an interest with himself over the work is a curious statement. Is there a malicious motive behind this scene that the writers are communicating with us?

One thing is certain: Ted entering into a power battle with Don is a mistake. I don't think Don would put up with that sort of betrayal the way he dealt with Pete. Pete was young and ambitious. Ted has made a name for himself that Don seems to truly respect and admire in a way.

Ted betraying that confidence might stir something awful in Don. In fact, after writing this I'm nearly certain it would lead to Ted's destruction in some form. That direction would open up the doors for new conflicts and developments regarding Peggy and the firm so its possible.

However, I'm hoping that doesn't happen. I'm a fan of the Don, Ted working dynamic and I want to see how that turns out in a positive way.

A darker turn is equally as good as I suggested above, however I don't see the agency spiraling downward, I think the agency will start conquering accounts. The focus is and always has been on Don's personal life, dual personality and ability to cope with life outside of work. Don's character in the office has been the only consistent aspect of his life from day one on all aspects from his tardiness, to drinking habits, to working late and alone, assertive, quite dismissals, and afternoon naps.
 
Finally saw the episode. Knew that Two Coffees was going somewhere, but didn't expect that. Would be interesting. How quickly he could have lost his job was also interesting.

Plane scene was excellent.
 
He hasn't had much screen time, but I forgot to mention how much I enjoy all of the scenes with Jim Cutler. He doesn't take shit.

cutler-psd.jpg
 
I think there was a conscience decision after the first two seasons to focus more on Don and less on Peggy. In the seasons 1 & 2 Peggy and her home life are very much on display. That changes in season 3 when the cast in the office is expanded. But even in those first few episodes, I've always considered the show being about Peggy as much as it's about Don.


He hasn't had much screen time, but I forgot to mention how much I enjoy all of the scenes with Jim Cutler. He doesn't take shit.

http://fashionista.com/uploads/2013/05/cutler-psd.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]

Perseus doesn't play that.

Seriously though, Harry Hamlin has been fantastic.
 
I think there was a conscience decision after the first two seasons to focus more on Don and less on Peggy. In the seasons 1 & 2 Peggy and her home life are very much on display. That changes in season 3 when the cast in the office is expanded. But even in those first few episodes, I've always considered the show being about Peggy as much as it's about Don.

There was an interview with Weiner where he said that Mad Men is as much Peggy's story as it is Don's.
 
Man, this episode. I mean, last weeks's EP was glorious, and now this one continues that run.

Gotta love Mad Men. And I'm gonna miss the hell out of it when it's over :(
 
My prediction?


The final scene of the show is going to take place in 1976. His wife (Megan) divorced him the episode before, leaving his apartment empty and his wallet emptier. Earlier in this episode, Pete walked into his office and told him to pack his things. Peggy will be the new creative lead. Now dejected, old, tired Don leaves work for the last time and decides to go check out the new "discotheque" for a drink. He walks in, and the camera shows a look of sheer horror on his face. His cigarette falls out of his mouth. The song "More, More More" by the Andrea True Connection is playing. As the camera slowly pans around to the stage, the music gets louder and louder. With the stage finally in view, we see a beautiful, smutty looking 22 year old Sally Draper dancing on a stripper pole. She mouths the words "how do you like me, how do you like me" to the crowd. Credits roll.

Yeah, Don's going to be getting a huge karmic payback.
 
In regards to the conversation he had with Gleason: If this analysis is right, Ted is entering into a losing battle. Don doesn't see Ted as an enemy. Its obvious from my perspective by the way he handled Ted's criticisms on missing the meeting with creative. Don views Ted as an equal.

That's why he's the enemy. Don Draper doesn't have any equals. In fact, he really can't, because if somebody could do what Don did, they'd almost certainly be easier to work with and handle as a partner, as indeed Ted is, and then Don has nothing to contribute. Which is exactly what's going to happen this season, if you want my prediction. But make no mistake, Don knows it could happen. That's why he tries to undermine Ted.
 
Will Peggy get her IFT moment?

Pete is on a roll. Of course, the episode after he calls Harry a racist he goes on about his father in law being with the "biggest blackest" prostitute he's ever seen or something. And then no sympathy for his poor senile mother. Has the downward trajectory for Pete ever been this extreme (I suppose losing his wife for the most part would suggest no.)?
 
Just saw last week's episode. I assumed the Chevy car is supposed to be the Camaro, but Peggie reminded me that this is 1968. So is it just the chronology being compromised a bit for convenience, or is it another model?

This season has been pretty dull for the most part and inferior to Season 5 in pretty much every aspect, but last week's ep really starts to show the fracturing that had been foreshadowed.
 
Just saw last week's episode. I assumed the Chevy car is supposed to be the Camaro, but Peggie reminded me that this is 1968. So is it just the chronology being compromised a bit for convenience, or is it another model?

This season has been pretty dull for the most part and inferior to Season 5 in pretty much every aspect, but last week's ep really starts to show the fracturing that had been foreshadowed.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevrolet_Vega
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom