Mad Men - Season 6 - Sundays on AMC

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I don't watch previews and avoid all spoilers.
I use an app to keep track of the shows I watch... I was scrolling through it and accidentally saw the episode title for next week...
 
He means the show is constantly referencing historical events

Ah, that makes sense. But I like that, if they do it in a subtle way as last weeks episode it's just fine. Just a little sidenote on history and it allows to easily figure out where they are in time.
 
That may have been the worst Mad Men episode to date. The only remotely interesting and engaging story line was Joanne. Don's story line was so banal and redundant. And mother of got, the last scene and the music queue, probably one of the top 10 worst uses of music in TV of all time. I love Mad Men, but the show is fucking clueless on how to effectively use music.
 
That may have been the worst Mad Men episode to date. The only remotely interesting and engaging story line was Joanne. Don's story line was so banal and redundant. And mother of got, the last scene and the music queue, probably one of the top 10 worst uses of dmusic in TV of all time. I love Mad Men, but the show is fucking clueless on how to effectively use music.

Who is this character named Joanne
 
Who is this character named Joanne

Sorry, the Joanne's I knew spelled it that way. Here "Joan." Did that help? Or do you need me to paste a picture of Hendricks next to my post? I am sorry, I should have accounted for readers with deductive reasoning disabilities. Thank you for providing the thread such an invaluable service of solving the Great Mystery of Mad Men of "who is Joanne?"

Still stands as my least favorite episode to date and so far the weakest season to date. Doesn't have my confidence up that this show will be wrapped up well.
 
Bob Benson is such a sweetheart and darling. Also what was it that Peggy said to Don, 'Move Forward'? How oddly specific to the B story that Don has. :P
 
Does anyone have a video to the first time Roger fired Burt? Cant remember that scene at all!
Don't have a link. Best I can remember, he gets called into Cooper's office after the the first acquisition by PP&L, and the three (Don, Roger, Bert) let him go. He comments he thought he had survived the purges and they note they let him hang around out of deference to his dying wife (cancer). The latter was referenced this season when Peggy and CGC had to deal with the mini crisis about a Super Bowl ad, I believe.
 
Finally saw the episodes and loved it. Don and his relations with women is such a deeply layered and disturbing problem.

Loving the merger.
 
Didn't you see the scene where Don's action lead directly to Kennedy's assassination?
Haha. Exactly. I don't want to e one of those gaffers that attacks anyone who criticizes their favorite show/game/hobby, but come on. Gump was all about his role in history. Mad Men is a period piece that is showing how the characters are affected by actual events from that time.
 
The post episode interview about this episode made it clear that Don was exerting extra alpha on Sylvia because he was losing power in the workplace. Watch how quickly stone-cold Don crumbled into a pleading Dick once she made it clear she was done with him.

I sympathize with people who feel like it's old news but this time feels different because he really is trapped now and has nothing to escape with. Despite (and now because of) the merger and all the radical moves and changes he has made he is now going to have to learn to live with decreasing power or he is going to crash and burn fantastically.

His deviant and conflicted behavior, without an outlet, will fuck him over in some way soon enough.
 
I sympathize with people who feel like it's old news but this time feels different because he really is trapped now and has nothing to escape with. Despite (and now because of) the merger and all the radical moves and changes he has made he is now going to have to learn to live with decreasing power or he is going to crash and burn fantastically.

His deviant and conflicted behavior, without an outlet, will fuck him over in some way soon enough.

Yep. Dude's gonna blow, in a big way.
 
The post episode interview about this episode made it clear that Don was exerting extra alpha on Sylvia because he was losing power in the workplace. Watch how quickly stone-cold Don crumbled into a pleading Dick once she made it clear she was done with him.

I sympathize with people who feel like it's old news but this time feels different because he really is trapped now and has nothing to escape with. Despite (and now because of) the merger and all the radical moves and changes he has made he is now going to have to learn to live with decreasing power or he is going to crash and burn fantastically.

His deviant and conflicted behavior, without an outlet, will fuck him over in some way soon enough.

He could turn it around at work if he just stopped being a fucking cockbag...and it was his idea to merge, so if he feels like he's losing power then it's something of his own machination.
 
That may have been the worst Mad Men episode to date. The only remotely interesting and engaging story line was Joanne. Don's story line was so banal and redundant. And mother of got, the last scene and the music queue, probably one of the top 10 worst uses of music in TV of all time. I love Mad Men, but the show is fucking clueless on how to effectively use music.

You were completely uninterested with Ted's dying partner, and his battle with Don? Pete's mother's onset of alzheimers and him losing his place in the office? Arne moving to Minnesota and Don being dumped by his mistress?

But you were engaged by Joan and Bob? Not much really even happened there yet. I had a completely different experience watching this episode, and thought the music at the end was right in line with the show's sense of humor.
 
The related articles are really cool as well. Apparently Cooper's actor was pretty charming and talented in his youth. Roger is married in real life to George Clooney's ex wife who also happens to play Mona. Pete is engaged in real life to the girl who got electro shock therapy to forget him.

Also this was cute:

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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.

omg.

loved bob and ginsberg in that episode.

the scene with don and ted in the plane was nice but don and sylvia isn't interesting me much.
 
omg.

loved bob and ginsberg in that episode.

the scene with don and ted in the plane was nice but don and sylvia isn't interesting me much.

I've found Don and Sylvia to be the least engaging storyline of the season. Hopefully it's mostly finished now, although I did like the doctor husband character.
 
I've found Don and Sylvia to be the least engaging storyline of the season. Hopefully it's mostly finished now, although I did like the doctor husband character.

i quite liked the dynamic they had between don admiring the doctor and the doctor admiring don. would like to have seen more of them together.
 
Don/Sylvia was mostly interesting to me in terms of how little real fire it had. That last episode was sexy in a way, but mostly it's been lurid, ugly, and tepid.

It's exactly what's wrogn with Don this season, and foreshadowing a big fall, IMHO.
 
- Warming Glow: 25 Fun Facts, Theories, Callbacks, And Easter Eggs In AMC’s ‘Mad Men’

We've discussed a few of these here already.

12. Matthew Weiner had originally planned to kill Harry Crane off in the first season. He was supposed to leap from the building to his death. In the fourth season premiere, there’s a subtle joke about that, when Harry says that he wishes his new offices had a second floor so he could jump out of it.
WHAT!? Is there any interview about it? I can only find TV Tropes link when I try to find it through Google, what the hell?
 
WHAT!? Is there any interview about it? I can only find TV Tropes link when I try to find it through Google, what the hell?

I dunno about any interviews, but it makes sense—wasn't that right after he cheated on his new wife, and then told her?
 
- Warming Glow: 25 Fun Facts, Theories, Callbacks, And Easter Eggs In AMC’s ‘Mad Men’

We've discussed a few of these here already.

12. Matthew Weiner had originally planned to kill Harry Crane off in the first season. He was supposed to leap from the building to his death. In the fourth season premiere, there’s a subtle joke about that, when Harry says that he wishes his new offices had a second floor so he could jump out of it.

Read more: http://www.uproxx.com/tv/2013/05/fa...gs-and-references-in-mad-men/2/#ixzz2TJzFWkd9

Interesting.
 
Someone on GAF pointed out the coat hanger thing pretty soon after that episode aired I think, blew my mind then.

That plane crash is certainly an interesting theory.
 
That was a fun little read. But.....

13. I didn’t know this, but according to DVD commentary, the general rule of thumb is that, if the actor playing a character has been a smoker (or still is a smoker), then the character is a smoker on the show. If the actor never smoked, then his or her character is not a smoker, which basically suggests that every actor on Mad Men besides Vincent Kartheiser and Rich Sommer (Harry) has been a smoker at some point in their life.

Harry is a smoker on the show and always has been.

large_mad-men.jpg
 
Is it me or was that scene in the hospital between Ted and Frank Gleason a really, really great scene? My favorite of the episode. The closeness of their relationship further contrasts Ted with Don and his utter loneliness, and I loved the sage advice from Frank, seemingly made wiser because of his condition.
 
as much as i love Jim Cutler how he is, I couldn't help but imagine a version of him that more resembles Bert Cooper than Roger Sterling.

would've been fun to see two old men, buddies, wandering around the office space and understanding each other.

maybe throw in a side-plot where they get super competitive about keeping their respective bonsai trees in the best shape and then some tom-foolery/tampering/heisting/hijinks ensues
 
Is it me or was that scene in the hospital between Ted and Frank Gleason a really, really great scene? My favorite of the episode. The closeness of their relationship further contrasts Ted with Don and his utter loneliness, and I loved the sage advice from Frank, seemingly made wiser because of his condition.

yeah i loved his advice to give don the early rounds
 
Incidentally, what happened in that last episode with Bert's speech? He gets to the ending of the page and realizes he doesn't have the concluding paragraph. Is this just a throwaway joke about him losing half the speech? Or is he actually going a little senile?
 
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