Lost in the Movies: viewing diary
Showing posts with label viewing diary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label viewing diary. Show all posts

April 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Breaking Bad season 2 viewing diary (second part) + Advanced narration audio (& bonus still image) for Journey Through Twin Peaks


A couple months ago, I shared the first half of this Breaking Bad season's viewing diary (the previous season was covered for the public many years ago). I intended to wait until June to finish the season but other plans fell through and I decided that last month's patron pick podcast (on Penda's Fen) was enough of an interruption. The time had come to conclude Walter White's journey through season two. As much as I enjoyed the first seven episodes, I was even more bowled over by the last six, from the introduction of one of TV's most memorable supporting characters (eventually a lead in his own spin-off) to the grand, novelistic season finale teased from the premiere's first moments. Above all, the fleshing out of Walt's immensely compromised ethos alongside his flinty focus (and the way these two qualities interact) impressed me deeply. I was also struck by the structure the show develops while pursuing its multifaceted storytelling strategy. There was certainly a lot to discuss in these overviews and in the process I stretched my two-paragraph-per-episode format to its limits. I'm not sure yet when I'll watch the next season - not to mention the two after that - but I hope to resume the series later this year. For now, I want to focus on Journey Through Twin Peaks and other video projects, which this month yielded a couple advances: the audio recording of my narration for the upcoming 37 as well as an image which will be used in that chapter (an "in memoriam" mosaic of actors who passed away before The Return). I also conducted my usual bimonthly patron poll to determine next months' podcast topic for the top tier - a close contention resulting in the first runoff poll in six months.

What are the April rewards?

belated February 2025 Patreon round-up: EXCLUSIVE - Breaking Bad season 2 viewing diary (first part) + Lost in Twin Peaks season 2 illustrated companion advance


Years ago, I launched several months of first season viewing diaries by writing about each episode of Breaking Bad up to that season's finale. Other shows introduced to my site during that period - specifically Mad Men and Veronica Mars - were eventually completed, but others were never resumed (including The Wire, The X-Files, and - considering its subsequent revival - The Kingdom). Of these, the suspense-driven Breaking Bad was one of the hardest siren calls to resist. Although I'm not currently publishing any non-Twin Peaks material publicly, my need for monthly Patreon $5/month tier exclusives provided a good opportunity to finally continue the series. With the first season - presented publicly - having established the premise for Walter White (cancer-stricken chemistry teacher turned meth manufacturer), the second season is keen on worldbuilding, revealing a whole community of criminals (and at least one memorable attorney), and I had a great time exploring that world when I viewed the season last spring. Since then I've kept this viewing diary in my back pocket for the proverbial rainy day - which February proved to be. I published the first seven episodes at the beginning of the month with plans to present the other half of this season (already written) in June, with hopefully more seasons to come after that although I haven't watched them yet. To refresh your memory of what's in those episodes - which I'm not just engaging with but watching for the very first time - I've included some screenshots at the end of this round-up as well as in the image above.

At the other extreme of the preparation spectrum, my work on the illustrated companions for my Lost in Twin Peaks public podcast release - which I advanced to the $1/month tier as their monthly reward - took way, way longer than expected...hence this February cross-post appearing halfway through March. I shouldn't have been surprised; in all its various capacities, from applying images alongside various episode categories to re-editing what was originally recorded for patrons, that public presentation has proved to be my most laborious project ever since it was initiated back in 2021. (At this point, the re-packaging has already taken much longer than the underlying episodes took to create which seems mindboggling.) Now, at least, one more step has been completed. Patrons can enjoy - with or without the audio context - vivid screenshots from each Twin Peaks second season episode, accompanied by in-the-weeds statistics (like which characters have the most screentime in each episode), and images from the historical context of the time: what was in the news, on magazine covers, or on rival channels. (To view the already published - and public - illustrated companions for the first and third seasons as well as Fire Walk With Me, check out this page.)


What are the February rewards?

Now on Patreon: True Detective: Night Country viewing diary through February 25


Although pieces of it will be shared in the January and February round-ups (and the larger True Detective directory will be updated as each part is written, as will this post), I wanted to create a separate public announcement for a bonus feature on my $5/month tier. In addition to this month's official reward - currently being decided between Punch Drunk Love and The Red Shoes in this poll (ends tomorrow at noon) - every week I am going to publish a response to the new episodes of True Detective: Night Country, the fourth season of the HBO show I've covered extensively in the past. This time, the series stars Jodie Foster and Kali Reis, is written and directed by Issa Lopez rather than the show's creator Nic Pizzolatto, and follows a couple investigations in a remote corner of Alaska where the sun disappears for months at a time in the winter. My format will be slightly different than those older entries, adopting the summary/response approach I used for Mad Men and other viewing diaries, and I'm hoping these reviews will be relatively short although I did not succeed in that effort when discussing last week's premiere. Here is that entry, published yesterday, with more to come following tonight's Part 2 and Parts 3 - 6 in the coming weeks.

Mad Men - "Person to Person" (season 7, episode 14)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 17, 2015/written & directed by Matthew Weiner): The finale of Mad Men begins with a natural landscape and a close-up of Don Draper, and it concludes the same way. But these symmetrical bookends couldn't be more different. The opening vista captures the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, a dry, parched desert most notable for lacking any obvious signs of life. When we see Don's face, surrounded by his Chevy muscle dragster, he's covered by a helmet and thick goggles (inside of a shell which is inside of a shell). And he is racing outward - "moving forward" - happy for the moment but with the implication that he must maintain motion to stay so. The final image features an idyllic, grassy hillside in Manzia, near Rome, but the scenery is overwhelmed by a crowd of people, men and women, all young but drawn from every corner of the globe, singing joyfully as the camera swoops overhead. This verdant location is teeming with human life. And the calm close-up of Don which triggers this vision stands in stark contrast with our introduction to the speed demon, who is facing inward this time rather than outward (the camera movement even accentuates this inner push in marked contrast to the past six episodes, which all ended with more distanced shots of Don, often accompanied by a backtracking dolly). Don smiles in both shots, but the joy here is relaxed, not intense. His eyes are gently shut rather than staring straight ahead, but otherwise his body language is completely open rather than closed in, surrounded by meditators on the cliffs of Big Sur, basking in the sun, waves rolling behind him, even the collar of his white shirt popped open as he leaves his body unguarded against the penetrating flow of "Ommmmmmm....."

Are these first and last visions of liberation to be weighed and judged against one another? Is one more lasting or profound than the other? And why does the series end not with Don's ambiguous inner revelation but with the infamous 1971 Coca-Cola "hilltop" TV commercial and its catchy jingle ("I'd like to teach the world to sing, in perfect harmony..."), implicitly the end result of our hero's Esalen epiphany?

Don's arc is central to the episode but not totally unique. In fact all six of the series' most consistent protagonists are featured throughout "Person to Person", with Don's morning meditation the capper to a montage depicting each of their end-states. (I'd say "their end-states for now", but then the series appears quite determined to place a definitive narrative frame around what we see - welcome as an occasional eighties, nineties, even twenty-first century check-in would be over the decades to come.) Unlike Don, the others all end up sharing their last screen space, but Joan at least - who is buzzing around her home office with her child's babysitter Maureen (Amy Ferguson) as her only companion - has, like Don, found satisfaction in a form of solitude. Her newfound business will keep her in contact with others - she may even end up partnering with Peggy, two women with their names on the door of a commercial production company (although Peggy leans toward staying at McCann when the episode ends, there's plenty of time for her to change her mind). And Roger intervenes in his and Joan's final, warm scene together to ensure that Kevin will be his heir. There's a support network around her to be sure, but Joan once said she'd rather die hoping for love than accept an arrangement. She hasn't found love yet when the curtain closes. Richard, who made his peace with her family but can't can't abide the escalation of her busy work life, walks off when she chooses the ringing phone over him. Was this love she rejected, or merely its own sort of arrangement, sacrificing career for romance rather than vice versa?

Roger's major plot development has to do with Joan (changing his will), even though his future is with Marie. That tempestuous relationship may or may not go the distance; they bicker in bed when Roger laughably "forbids" her from seeing, let alone sleeping with, her mopey soon-to-be ex-husband, but it's precisely this equally matched immaturity-in-maturity energy that suits them. Joan initially assumes that Roger has chased another youthful short-skirted underling to the altar, but this time he may have truly met his match, or as Joan puts it, "I guess someone finally got their timing right." His delivery of the revelation is priceless: "Nah, I met her through Megan Draper. She's old enough to be her mother." (pause) "Actually, she is her mother." If Roger is mostly tying up loose ends, the other major character whom Joan intersects with has a more substantial storyline. Granted, Peggy's professional climax either arrived in the previous episode (with the one-two punch of her Sterling Cooper skates and McCann swagger) or remains on the horizon ("Harris Olson...you need two names to make it sound real"). And for the entire series, Peggy's arc has been all about the professional, with her sad succession of disappointing boyfriends playing a decidedly second fiddle. Until now: what's left for Peggy is to discover that the one she's meant for has been in front of her all along - or at least for the four seasons since Stan showed up and sparked their undeniable chemistry.

Not, of course, before the two screwballs in question exchange a few more insults: Stan shoots down her ambitions to start a new business ("stop looking over your shoulder at what other people have"), while Peggy sneers at his complacency ("spoken like a failure"). It's Don who brings them together again; when he calls Peggy in desperation and hangs up, she reaches out to Stan in a panic. Over the phone, he reassures her and offers sound advice: "You've got to let him go. It doesn't mean that you stop caring about him." Peggy apologizes, Stan confesses that he mostly just doesn't want to see her go, and then everything finally spills out. They drive each other crazy in more ways than one, and when she reveals to him - and herself - that she loves him too (after only responding "What?" several times, with delightful incredulity, to his initial declarations) he disappears from the other side of the line...and jogs right into her office for an embrace. This is the episode's great crowd-pleasing moment and a beautiful swan song for the character of the most (perhaps surprising) importance next to the more obvious cable drama lead Don. It makes perfect sense, doesn't it? Of course Peggy would find personal, romantic fulfillment in the very place that always kept her from finding it anywhere else. Maybe she really can have it all.

Interestingly, the other central player Peggy shares the screen with in "Person to Person" besides Joan and (sort of) Don is Pete. These two were linked from the beginning and there's a well-earned sweetness to Pete's farewell to Peggy - in which he offers her a cactus that's supposed to represent Kansas and tells her "Keep it up, and you'll be a creative director by 1980". Probably the true apex of their distanced but deep relationship was the moment in "Time & Life", which I didn't even find space to write about yet, when Pete is shaken by the sight of a little girl hugging Peggy and invites her into his office to tell her that SC&P is going under. Here, he's mostly just making an appearance before jetting off to the Promised Land, his big moment wrapped up in the previous episode. Others at, or formerly of, the office also get to wave goodbye; Ken is the one who offers Joan her path into commercial filmmaking, Harry pompously parades offscreen in a very early seventies fur-collared coat, and a cheerful Meredith accepts Roger's dismissal - given that her boss never returned - by hoping Don is in a better place. "He's not dead," an exasperated Roger asserts. "Stop saying that!" But Meredith has the impossible-to-beat rejoinder: "There are a lot of better places than here."

Don may not be dead, but death plays a large role in what drives him back to California for one last fling with his desperate dreams. A routine phone call with Sally finally reveals what Betty demanded her daughter withhold. Phoning his ex-wife to talk to her for what both tearfully know will be the last time, Don can't do a thing for her, or for himself. He certainly can't save her, but he can't even convince her that she should trust him to raise their children; she's made arrangements for the boys to reside with her brother's family because she wants them to be in a two-parent household (even Henry gets the cold shoulder here). "I want to keep things as normal as possible," she informs him. "And you not being here is part of that." Even their final words to one another are loving lies. "I'll talk to you soon," he tells her. "OK," she chokes out before hanging up. This is Betty's only real scene in the finale (a later scene in the Francis household shows Sally arriving home from school but Betty is already bedridden, and Bobby knows why). All that's left is the closing moment with Sally washing dishes as the dying woman smokes her last cigarettes at the kitchen table.

When Don shows up at Stephanie's doorstep in Los Angeles, he really has nowhere left to turn. It was a visit with Betty that sent him down the exit away from New York to begin with, and this chat is the final rocket boost he needs to fling him all the way to the end of the line. Washed out of his leadership position at the agency he helped found, dumped by his second wife after a long, numbing wind-down at his moment of greatest professional vulnerability, bluntly if still fondly warned off from returning to the bedrock of his original nuclear family- almost all of the official Don Draper ties have been severed. The Whitman curse has fully poisoned the Draper redemption, and will continue to do so when "niece" Stephanie (who puts that relationship back into quotation marks) invites him to a yogic self-realization retreat up north. Distressed by other members of a group therapy session who judge her for abandoning her child, Stephanie in turn rejects Don's attempts to comfort her. "You're not my family, what's the matter with you?" she sputters. When he delivers his usual pep talk - the one he gave Peggy, the one he gave Lane, the one he gives himself all the time - she looks astonished. "You can put this behind you," he insists. "It'll get easier if you move forward." All she has to do is observe the messenger to know this message is wrong. When Stephanie leaves in the middle of the night, stranding him on the precipice of a final breakdown, he finally calls long-distance to Peggy. The phone booth is a one-way confessional: he can spill his shame, but she cannot provide absolution. Who can?

Invited back inside the circle of the sad, Don listens - either raw or numb, it's hard to tell the difference sometimes - as seminar participants share their pain. One man, Leonard, a nondescript, balding fortysomething with a light blue sweater and a plain face unvarnished with pretense or pride, takes his turn. He speaks for three minutes before he is weeping so hard that he cannot finish, and then Don stands up, crosses the circle, falls to his knees and hugs the stranger in an embrace as enveloping as any he's offered - to himself as well as the recipient. This is what Leonard says:
"My name's Leonard and, uh, I don't know if there's anything that complicated about me. Which is why I should be happier I guess. ... Well, [what you said about 'should' to Daniel] is good for him. He's interesting. I've never been interesting to anybody. I, uh, I work in an office. People walk right by me. I know they don't see me. And I go home, and I watch my wife and my kids. They don't look up when I sit down. ... I don't know. It's like no one cares that I'm gone. They should love me. I mean, maybe they do, but I don't even know what it is. You spend your whole life thinking you're not getting it, people aren't giving it to you. Then you realize they're trying and you don't even know what it is. I had a dream I was on a shelf in the refrigerator. Someone closes the door and the light goes off. And I know everyone's out there eating. And then they open the door and you see them smiling and they're happy to see you but maybe they don't look right at you. And maybe they don't pick you. And then the door closes again. The light goes off."
My Response:

Mad Men - "The Milk and Honey Route" (season 7, episode 13)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 10, 2015/written by Carly Wray and Matthew Weiner; directed by Matthew Weiner): Not for the first time, but possibly for the last, Mad Men focuses on exactly three stories, each centered around a single character - Pete and Betty and Don - with not a second to spare for characters who aren't directly pertinent to those three individual struggles. (No Peggy or Joan or Roger, to name just the most prominent absences.) One protagonist rises, one falls, and one goes roundabout.

Let's start in the middle with poor Betty, whose fall is quite literal. Collapsing on the steps of her college, the student housewife discovers why she's been feeling so tired and weak lately. An X-ray reveals that she has advanced lung cancer; adding insult to injury, she's only informed of the details by eavesdropping on Dr. Barton's (Doug Simpson's) conversation with her husband nearby. Treatment will be palliative. She is going to die - done in by the very product her ex-husband was selling when we first met him (and which, as this episode reminds us, played a significant role in Don's own origin story in Korea). Only Betty, it seems, takes this news in stride; everyone else is a wreck. Henry shocks Sally in her dorm room at Miss Porter's, where she can't bear to hear him and instinctively covers her ears. Ultimately, however, it's Henry who breaks down in sobs as Sally comforts him. He wants her to persuade Betty to pursue radiation therapy; of course, this is not within the adolescent's power. Instead, her mother hands the young girl detailed instructions to be opened after her passing. Sally of course disobeys, reads the letter, and begins to cry, overwhelmed by the distance between the gravity of her grief and her mother's prim and proper descriptions of a photo from a Republican fundraiser, which she would like to use in her memorium. Meanwhile, Betty herself marches back to school. "Why are you doing that?" a baffled Henry asks. Betty, books nestled under her arm, shrugs and smiles. "Why was I ever doing it?" In impending death, Betty finally discovers the orderliness that escaped her in life, however doggedly she pursued it.

As for the episode's rising character, you wouldn't think Pete needed it. He's the one SC&P alum fully at ease in McCann. And Duck Phillips is the least likely redeemer one could imagine, yet here he is jamming his shoulder right up against Pete and driving him all the way back up the field to...win the World Series (apologies for the mixed metaphors but we had to end up where Duck does). On a manic binge mixing business and booze, Duck convinces Pete to meet with Learjet rep Mike Sherman (Currie Graham) who is dazzled by the "real Knickerbocker who can rap his ring on the table and let everyone know they're with a friend." Supposedly Pete was invited to talk up Duck but in fact the crafty headhunter was scheduling an on-the-sly job interview; Pete and Mike chuckle at the subterfuge, but Mike is genuinely intrigued by the prospect. Uninterested in attending the second meeting that Duck schedules, Pete stands Learjet up for a dinner with big brother Bud. They muse about their own father's philandering, and wonder if they were always destined to inherit his ways (Bud seems fine with it, Pete less so). Indeed, Pete's wistful visits to Trudy and Tammy are of far more importance to him throughout the episode than Duck's aggressive recruitment... until he finally realizes the two could be connected. Without even trying, Pete falls backwards into the job offer of the century if he can stomach leaving cosmopolitan New York for "wholesome" Wichita. He can. Bewildered by this "supernatural" deliverance, he races to Trudy in the middle of the night, pours his heart out, and convinces her to renew their lives together, bonded by love, the prospect of a fresh start in the Midwest, and access to a private jet. It's off to Kansas - there's no place like home!

And Pete is not the only one arriving in the heartland via "The Milk and Honey Route". As if to deny all the options I considered in my last review, Don's story involves neither Diana nor California. Instead, he breaks down in Oklahoma and finds himself stranded at a dead end motel run by Del and Sharon Hill (Chris Ellis and Meagen Fay) and staffed by, it seems, only the restless, eager-to-please Andy (Carter Jenkins). The scenario has a tinge of the surreal to it, especially since we're used to watching Don march through Madison Avenue in his slick suits. There is a slightly Carnival of Souls-esque feel to this narrative limbo, but with a flair for the sort of detailed realism you'd find in a midcentury novel, carefully etching a portrait of a forgotten America, the one that hadn't changed nearly as much as sixties cities would have you believe. Quite uncoincidentally, the episode opens with Merle Haggard's infamous "Okie From Muskogee," the 1970 anti-counterculture anthem which may or may not be tongue-in-cheek; for most of the time he's stuck there, Don does little except watch TV and read paperbacks (The Godfather anticipates the much more low-rent mob beating he'll face by episode's end). That said, he is also able to rustle up some liquor from Andy in this mostly dry environment, and he does fix a typewriter and a Coca-Cola machine, and of course he stumbles across a beautiful woman sunbathing by the pool. ("How does he find them everywhere?" a fellow viewer marveled.) But this moment exists - like the Neve Campbell cameo at the other end of season seven - as a teasing red herring, a reminder that the writers want to take Don into new terrain rather than explore his womanizing ways yet again.

Overstaying his intended pitstop due to an invitation from the Hills, Don attends a fundraiser at the American Legion where he gets drunk, listens to Floyd (Max Gail) tell his tale about murdering a group of ragged surrendering Germans (and maybe...eating them...?!), and confesses his own secret about killing, however accidentally, his own CO. (This is the moment when I finally realized the further significance of that young private's cigarette lighter in season six, because I'd forgotten, until this episode reminds us, how the real Don Draper died.) The night ends with this shabby crew (including also Larry Cedar and David Denman) chanting "Over There" and pounding their fists on the table in beersoaked camaraderie. It appears that Don has finally found catharsis in the unlikeliest of places...until these same belligerent drunks burst into his motel room to accuse him of stealing the evening's donations, beat him senseless with a phone book, and threaten him with worse if he doesn't turn up the cash by morning. Don knows immediately that Andy is the real culprit; shaking him down, Don also shakes some sense into him. And when giving the would-be con artist a ride to the bus stop, Don goes even further - trading places by allowing Andy to drive off in his Coupe de Ville. This is many things at once: a grand dramatic irony since Don only spent that week rotting in Alva because he couldn't dream of parting with that very same Cadillac; a redemptive turn for the one-time farm boy who recognizes himself in Andy; an on-the-ground manifestation of the usually more ethereal advertiser/consumer relationship (but with material exchange, the entire point of that transaction, removed); and an echo of how another Don Draper's privileges were assumed by a young up-and-comer long ago.

"You just do what you have to do to come home," Don's drinking buddies/bullies murmur as their mantra. But for both Don and Andy, the name of the game is putting home in the rearview mirror.

My Response:

Mad Men - "Lost Horizon" (season 7, episode 12)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 3, 2015/written by Semi Chellas and Matthew Weiner; directed by Phil Abraham): How many ways can you read an airplane crossing the Empire State Building? A mythic escape certainly, coded in particularly American terms, but indicative of a fall as well as a liberation. Such a sight instantly conjures historical trauma familiar to the story's audience but not its characters. And the passenger jet's trail makes the sign of the cross with the skyscraper's needle, anticipating a line delivered to Don near the end of "Lost Horizon". We will ponder the origin of the episode's title, I promise... But first, there is another thirties Hollywood movie evoked by those two elements (the airplane, the Empire State Building) in this particular context (a defiant giant surrounded by mere men who nonetheless overwhelm him). King Don is knocked off his perch for following a dream; beauty slays the beast every time.

We see this iconography through Don's eyes while our ears are bombarded with the words of a slick corporate guru (Eric Nenninger). Don happens to glimpse that stirring vision because he'd rather look out the window of the McCann Erickson conference room - packed as it is with shirtsleeved creative directors leafing through research portfolios - than listen to Bill Phillips, Connelly Research (whose name and occupation he'll promptly steal in a time-honored Whitman tradition). Or is Don listening to Bill after all? The pompous consultant's monologue describes an Everyman in the Midwest ("Maybe Wisconsin") who lives his simple, sturdy life and drinks the same beer his father drank. Don himself could never be this man but within a day he'll show up at one such man's door...even if Cliff Baur (Mackenzie Astin) is not actually the person Don is looking for. Presenting himself as a representative of Miller Beer to Cliff's wife Laura (Sarah Jane Morris), claiming that "Mrs. Baur" won a prize for a write-in contest, Don is coming full circle to the primeval state of his current millionaire status: a humble salesman at an ordinary door, with little onhand to offer other than a card, a smile, and a promise that his customer is winner. (There is also a Twin Peaks parallel, as in this moment Don is a suited man pursuing a runaway waitress to what he believes to be her home, only to be greeted by a stranger who says she lives there and bears a familiar last name - and hell, now that I think about it, a familiar first name.) When Cliff does return, he sees through Don immediately, tearing off his mask as a salesman and then dismissing his more plausible claim to be collections agent. "You think you're the first man to come looking for her?" Cliff asks. Not knowing any more about Diana's whereabouts than Don does, the husband tells the lover, "You can't save her. Only Jesus can. You know, he'll help you too. Ask him." With that, Don is kicked out of Racine.

And we're off...

But let's back up for a moment. Don's odyssey ultimately leads him away from home rather than towards it (despite his poignant last stop in Westchester to find Betty alone but content without him, reading Freud in the kitchen). Yet this is is only one among several of the most memorable situations Mad Men has ever placed its characters in, crafting some of the most striking imagery of the entire series in the process. Of these stories, Joan's is presented the most simply - no tricky shots or bold flourishes, just a series of escalating confrontations with close-ups and medium shots presenting her predators in subdued yet menacing fashion. First she's greeted by the welcome wagon of Libby Blum (Jama Williamson) and Karen Schmidt (Jennifer Hasty), eager to let her know that their barroom bitching sessions aren't women's lib; "we are strictly consciousness-lowering," one of them jokes while downing a mock shot. If this cheerful spin on McCann's misogyny doesn't convince Joan that she's been demoted, her eyes are certainly opened by subsequent encounters: first with Dennis, who is supposed to "help" with her accounts (instead, he disrespectfully blunders his way through an Avon conference call), then with Ferg, who's supposed to rescue her from Dennis (instead, he none too subtly makes it clear she'll have to sleep with him to keep her accounts), and finally with Hobart, who's supposed to rescue her from Ferg (instead, he ends up offering half of what she's owed just so he'll never have to see her face again). Initially threatening a feminist lawsuit, Joan is convinced by Roger to take the payout and exit almost as soon as she walked in. This is an incredibly grim, ruthlessly executed depiction of how unusual and fragile her success at Sterling Cooper truly was, while also recalling the dark underbelly of even that accomplishment.

As is often the case when they are contrasted, Peggy too struggles with sexist condescension, but has personal and professional alternatives to Joan's confinement. McCann initially assumes Peggy is part of the secretarial pool and she refuses to make the move until her assistant Marcia (Jill Alexander) finally secures her an office. This forces her to spend several days in what's left of the mostly-dismantled SC&P office, first with a bemused work-limbo'd Ed, then all alone with the electricity off (spilling coffee on the floor, she shrugs and walks away), and finally with an unforgettable companion who is gazing down his long career from the opposite side of the age spectrum. Peggy is drawn to Roger by the sound of the organ he's playing; coaxed into tipping back tumblers of old Vermouth and listening to his war stories, the two bond in a way they've never had the opportunity to before. ("This is more attention than I've ever gotten from you," she observes, when he gifts her one of Bert's prized canvases, depicting an octopus fucking a Japanese woman.) Peggy has already heard from Marcia; the new office is ready, so what does she have to gain by hanging around for one last night? The Peggy/Roger pairing reminds us of many past moments when she received just the sort of frank but shrewd advice she needed from an older, outside party (be it Freddy, Don, or Bobbie), after which she'd summon the confidence to assert herself just a little more boldly. This combination of inner struggle and outer influence is how she's always taken one more step up that ladder from timid secretary to businesswoman with her name on the front door.

This particular nudge pays off in two sublime flourishes. The second of these was hinted in the previous review: Peggy marches down the hallway of her new headquarters in slow motion, dark glasses over her eyes, cigarette hanging from her lips, and horny octopus under her arm. The first may be even more delightful; as Roger bellows, "Come on, once more, from the top!" and begins playing "Hi Lili, Hi Lo," who enters from stage left but Peggy Olson, ebullient on roller skates? A wonderful YouTube comment left by Jackson Bridges describes this as "a jolly captain enjoying his final moments on a sinking ship." It's also a young passenger leaping confidently from the capsizing craft, not to fall but to fly.

My Response:

Mad Men - "Time & Life" (season 7, episode 11)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 26, 2015/written by Erin Levy and Matthew Weiner; directed by Jared Harris): A few minor storylines dance around the edge of the big black hole at the center of "Time & Life". Don learns that Diana left him a couple messages, told his service not to deliver them, and fled her apartment, which has now been rented to a gay couple (Anthony Gioe and Scot Zeller) who've already sold off her furniture. Little Tammy Campbell has been waitlisted at Greenwich Country Day despite a family legacy going back generations (turns out that the head of admissions has a family feud with the Campbells going back even further, to seventeenth-century Scotland); the boisterous meeting results in Pete punching the vindictive Bruce MacDonald (William R. Moses). Pete and Trudy draw closer together, as she tells him the difficulties she's having as a single mother in the suburbs. Peggy and Stan are in charge of a brood of juvenile actors auditioning for a commercial; when it comes to dealing with them, she's a stiff and he's a natural, grumbling "You hate kids," which she takes to heart. The day ends with little Susie (Ava Acres) accidentally stapling her finger under the creative team's not-so-careful watch, before Peggy tells Stan her whole sad story of maternal sacrifice. He apologizes and consoles her.

Oh, and Lou Avery is going to Tokyo to adapt Scout's Honor as a Saturday morning cartoon with a Japanese studio. Anyone else have "Lou Avery exits stage left to create an anime" on their bingo card when he showed up at SC&P as a lumbering stick-in-the-mud replacement for Don? Just me? Ok, I think that does it for the peripheral stuff.

The nuclear explosion of this season begins with what looks like a microscopic matter - even if it does almost result in the firing of three loyal employees. When Roger realizes that Dawn, Caroline, and Shirley didn't actually forget to pay the lease for the Time-Life building, that in fact McCann Erickson gave notice in writing to the landlords that SC&P would be moving out, the partners are (mostly) horrified. The day has finally come, far sooner than expected if expected at all. Hobart played them all for fools and they are going to be swallowed whole and dissolved on their way down gullet of one of the biggest names on Madison Avenue. Clinging to any possible shred of hope, Don concocts one more escape hatch, as is his specialty (Lou, in fact, provides the inspiration). Why not grab all the clients who would create potential conflicts for McCann, secure their loyalty over the next twenty-four hours, and then create a dazzling presentation for Hobart: introducing Sterling Cooper West, relocated to the now-abandoned L.A. office to conquer the new frontier. Ken has way too much fun saying "No" to Roger and Pete for Dow to be onboard, but enough others sign on for the plan to be successful. The music perks up, the confident crew marches in tandem, and Don puts all of his charisma to the test.

And then Hobart shuts it all down. The deal is done, client casualties are no worry, and he wants them all to think of it as reward: "You've died and gone to advertising heaven," he assures them, promising five of the most plum jobs in the industry and listing off potential clients climaxing with "Coca-Cola" as he looks straight into Don's eyes. "This is the beginning of something," he promises. "Not the end." But it doesn't really feel that way as the five partners - experiencing that disorienting, bittersweet mix of resignation, relief, disappointment, and at least a twinge of excitement - gather at McSorley's Old Ale House. (I initially thought this was an error on the writers' part, since I'd always heard that this infamous New York pub was closed to women until the nineties, but in fact the script is right on the money; the court case that allowed Joan inside was decided in 1970.) It's hard to believe it's all over, and even harder to believe how easy it is to move on, even if they didn't go down without a fight.

Is that all there is?

My Response:

Mad Men - "The Forecast" (season 7, episode 10)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 19, 2015/written by Jonathan Igla and Matthew Weiner; directed by Jennifer Getzinger): As a quintessential midseason episode, "The Forecast" takes stock of where things stand but is unable to glimpse where they are going. Indeed, that's the very theme of Don's low-key storyline which lends the episode its title; Roger assigns him to write a "Gettysburg address" to be delivered (by Roger, not Don) at a Bahamas retreat for McCann. The story has no real outcome because Don can't for the life of him figure out where they'll be in a year or, worse, where he even wants to be. A performance review for Peggy turns into a withering interrogation of her own careerist ambitions ("Why don't you just write down all of your dreams," she finally snipes, "so I can shit on them"). A conversation with Ted, who has mellowed into permanently checked-out bliss at this point, reveals nothing more than bigger and better clients on the horizon. Sally, on the other hand, fears the future; if her friends have childlike big dreams she only wants to prove that she can shake off her parents' legacy. "You are like your mother and me," Don asserts while sending her off on a twelve-day cross-country bus tour. "You're beautiful. It's up to you to be more than that."

Sally is concerned not just after watching her "fast" friend Sarah (Madison McLaughlin) flirt shamelessly with her dad but also when she sees Betty warm up to a fully grown Glen on his first visit to the Francis household. This observation only further complicates her reaction to Glen's news: he has enlisted, and plans to go fight in Vietnam motivated by a convoluted mixture of newfound patriotism and concern that poor minorities are shouldering the burden while wealthy whites party at home. Sally reminds the fickle eighteen-year-old that not so long ago he was vowing to join the antiwar movement before she flees up the stairs. Later she calls his mother on the phone to apologize, pleading that Ms. Bishop pass her regrets to Glen before it's too late. It's Betty, however, who bids the final farewell. Glen shows up when she's home alone and awkwardly tries to embrace her in the kitchen, but she shuts him down, firmly if politely. He reveals that he only joined the Army to assuage his stepfather's wrath after flunking out of college. Betty takes the young man's hand one more time, as she did when he was a boy, and assures him that he's going to make it out.

In California, Joan initiates a romance with Richard Burghoff (Bruce Greenwood) after a mistaken identity meet-cute in the L.A. office. He follows her back to New York; a wealthy retired real estate mogul who got divorced after his kids left home, Richard is the kind of guy who can pursue a fancy as far as he likes. He's dismayed, however, by Joan's parenthood, just the type of dead weight he's trying to shake off after a lifetime of such obligations. Still, there's a draw. He shows up to SC&P the next day with flowers, an apology, and a vow that he's going to buy property in the city and welcome her - and her family - into his life. Joan, it seems, is the only character who can answer Don's inquiry with any optimism. As for Don himself, he gets entangled in a creative department dispute when Mathis embarrasses himself in front of clients, asks Don's advice for how to put them at ease, and then stupidly follows Don's advice. This results in removal from the Peter Pan campaign and, after a confrontation with Don, termination. To hear Don tell it, he's just better at pulling off the "I'm not the asshole, you're the asshole" bit than Mathis is. To hear Mathis tell it, Don isn't better, he's just "handsome" - and it didn't hurt that Lee Garner, Jr., the subject of Don's story, was in love with him. This plays out neatly in the conversation Don will have with Sally as she sets off on her adventure.

And then at home...Don finds out he doesn't have a home anymore. His realtor Melanie Davis (Rachel Cannon) has been on his case all episode to spiff up his depressing digs, to which he's retorted that she needs to get better at her job instead of blaming him. To their mutual surprise, she gets a couple to sign on and cheerfully tells Don it's time to find him a new place. Maybe now he'll have something to write about.

My Response:

Mad Men - "New Business" (season 7, episode 9)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 12, 2015/written by Tom Smuts and Matthew Weiner; directed by Michael Uppendahl): Three women circle Don, and he ends up on the outs with all of them. The woman from Don's past (now distant), Betty Francis, finds him with his sleeves rolled up in her kitchen, making milkshakes for the boys he babysat while she and Henry attended a posh event. She tells him she's decided to get her Master's in psychology at Fairfield University - that people like to come to her to share their problems. Don, however, cannot do this and so as the fancy couple returns, he leaves his own family behind in their cozy kitchen. He and Betty are at peace but they severed their connection long ago and it looks like she wound up with the bigger half of the wishbone. The woman from Don's present (soon-to-be), Megan Draper, comes to New York to make some final moves toward divorce so Don casts the lawyers aside and signs over a check for a cool million after she berates him for being an "aging, sloppy, selfish liar." She is also scheduled to get her last things from his apartment. Her mother, in town to help (and of course judge) her wayward daughter, takes this to mean literally every single item but the carpet, emptying the place completely while Megan attends a disastrous meeting with Harry Crane (she's looking for an agent but he'd rather take her upstairs to the hotel room he's already booked). Worse, Marie invites Roger over to pay the movers' bill and then takes him to bed - defiling as well as robbing Don's abode, as Roger puts it (not that he refuses). By episode's end, Megan's blubbering sister Marie-France (Kim Bubbs), a sad housewife trying to enjoy her momentary escape to the city, informs Megan that their mother is now going to leave their father. "She's been very unhappy for a very long time," Megan scolds. "At least she did something about it."

Finally, the woman from Don's future (he hopes), Diana Baur, is tracked down by Don at another restaurant and invited to his apartment. They spend the night - several in fact - and she spills the beans. She came to New York from Racine, Wisconsin, after flipping a coin (it was Manhattan or San Francisco, and the east won). She was married for twelve years, no children. Well, actually, come morning and her discovery of Sally's empty room, she confesses that she did have a daughter who passed away. And, as a matter of fact, come evening and Don's visit to her own shabby apartment, she reveals that she also does have a second daughter, whom she abandoned in her grief. "I know you think you deserve this," Don insists, realizing that Diana is trying to punish herself. But it isn't clear that Diana views this fate as punishment. She does not want to forget about her dead child in Don's embrace. And so he exits the room and leaves a woman behind for the second time in the ironically-titled "New Business". (Megan, on the other hand, left him alone at the table with her engagement ring, or rather Anna Draper's...which is about all she left him with, as Don will discover when he finally gets home after a long day.) Of course, the episode title is literal as well as ironic, given the more light-hearted subplot about Peggy bringing legendary art photographer Pima Ryan (Mimi Rogers) onto a project. Pima ends up seducing the vulnerable Stan, who attempts and fails to impress the older woman with his own photos of girlfriend Elaine (Erica Piccininni). Pima then proceeds to flirt heavily with an uncomfortable Peggy. The scene in which Peggy and Stan find out they've both been hustled is exquisitely timed and delivered, with copywriter Ed (Kit Williamson) sealing the deal by his bemused reaction. Here we have a wacky threesome (with, perhaps, some important implications) to complement the three-way split that Don encounters in his own lonely odyssey.

My Response:

Mad Men - "Severance" (season 7, episode 8 / part 2 premiere)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 5, 2015/written by Matthew Weiner; directed by Scott Hornbacher): The first half of season seven ended with a spectral Bert Cooper crooning, "The best things in life are free." The second half opens with a very much in-the-flesh model, Cindy (Rainey Qualley), smoldering in a Chinchilla coat and little else while Peggy Lee muses, "Is that all there is?" Don directs her activity while ashing a cigarette into a coffee cup before a larger audience is revealed: a small assembly of eager admen and clients (for Wilkinson razors) gathered in a side room of the SC&P office. The setting is not so glamorous, nor the context as exciting for Don, as we might have imagined but if this is where the tumult of the past decade has landed him he doesn't appear to be complaining. The next scene finds him and Roger in tuxedos, beautiful women dressed to the nines under almost every arm, in a cheap diner where Don laughs about a toaster his stepmother got as a gift in the whorehouse where he grew up. Roger cracks that Don likes to talk about growing up poor to get out of paying the bill, but he's not poor anymore. If Lee's question is pressed, the answer so far seems to be a gentle shrug: "If that's all there is, my friend, then let's keep dancing, let's break out the booze and have a ball..."

Of course, there are seven episodes to go before the final moment (or "final disappointment" as the singer sighs), and Don quickly finds something else to pursue. In this case, it's a sad-eyed waitress named Diana Baur (Elizabeth Reaser) with a John Dos Passos book tucked in her apron pocket. Something about her appears familiar to him but he can't quite place it; intrigued, he returns to the restaurant alone. Silently presuming that he's the one who left a $100 tip (it was actually Roger, as apology for teasing her relentlessly), she meets Don out back for an unexpected quickie in the alley. When he's drawn back a third time, she gives him the boot, gently; he confesses that he's experienced loss recently and saw the dead person in a dream before he heard the news, so Diana tells him, "When someone dies, you just want to make sense out of it. But you can't." And then he's left alone at the counter, on what she's encouraged him to think of as his last visit, pondering the implications of Diana's wisdom.

Don's loss pulls us back into the first season, or rather reminds us of how much time has passed since then. Re-living the fur-draped casting call of the opening scene in his sleep, Don witnesses onetime mistress Rachel Menken parade through that door and gaze in that mirror, encouraging him to rave, "You're not just smooth. You're Wilkinson smooth." At the office, still haunted by this dream, he asks Meredith to call Rachel's workplace and schedule a meeting, ostensibly to discuss a new Topaz pantyhouse strategy (Joan and Peggy are trying to move the product into department stores to contend with rivals). Instead, Don discovers that she left the store months earlier - and died of leukemia just last week. Rattled by this revelation, and what it says about his own subconscious, he visits the apartment where Rachel's friends and family are sitting shiva and runs into Rachel's sister Barbara (Rebecca Creskoff), who is confusingly listed as Barbara Katz, the same married name as Rachel - are their husbands brothers? She has little patience with Don's grief (albeit maybe a little pity for his loneliness), and wants him to know that Rachel "lived the life she wanted to live. She had everything." Don, seeing Rachel's small children, hearing her sister's words, and believing that she carried on better without him than he did without her, can only respond, "Good."

This is Don's (half-)season premiere, puncturing long-awaited contentment by opening up old wounds and sending white rabbits across his field of vision. Others have more concrete troubles to navigate. When Peggy and Joan try to push their Topaz strategy with the leering jackasses at McCann Erickson (who work with Marshall Fields, owned by Macy's, and could provide an opportunity), they are humiliated by Dennis Ford (Greg Cromer) in particular - with Joan his favorite target. A tense elevator ride with the two SC&P women finds them turning their weapons on each other, Peggy implying that Joan dresses provocatively and Joan insulting Peggy's looks. Later, Joan will ignore Dennis' calls and go shopping for a shapely dress - might as well lean into her image for the rewards if she can't dispel the trouble it brings her. Peggy attempts to rebound by accepting an invitation to dine with Stevie Wollcott (Devon Gummersall), her co-worker John Mathis' (Trevor Einhorn's) brother-in-law. They get drunk and impulsively make plans to fly to Paris but she can't find her passport, declines his overtures so that this hot date can result in more than a "fling" (though it seems likely it may dissolve into even less than that), and finds herself completely embarrassed by all of it the next day.

Ken's McCann-fueled crisis has the happiest ending - forced out of the now-McCann-owned SC&P by vindictive former employer Ferg Donnelly (Paul Johansson), he tells an intrigued Don that this may be his opportunity to pursue "the life not lived" by becoming a novelist full-time. Cynthia, whose own father just retired from Dow Chemical after a lifetime of corporate service, has certainly been pressuring Ken to do just this, even before the firing. Instead, Ken takes the old man's now open job which means he will be Roger's and Pete's very demanding client going forward. Revenge tastes sweet, even if Ken may be cutting his own dreams short in order to pursue it.

My Response:

Mad Men - "Waterloo" (season 7, episode 7 / part 1 finale)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 25, 2014/written by Carly Wray and Matthew Weiner; directed by Matthew Weiner): "Waterloo" begins with liftoff. Bert - our oldest character - is glued to his TV as the Apollo 11 rocket launches from Cape Canaveral; upon ignition he's practically purring like a cat. Everyone has the moon on their minds in this mini-finale (Mad Men would only resume again after another year, although the official numbering marks this as a continuous season). On the night of July 20 as Neil Armstrong takes his one small step, we watch not just alongside Bert - who murmurs, simply, "Bravo" - but also the Francis clan (plus Betty's old college pal and her family) in Henry's Rye estate, the Burger Chef team in their Indiana hotel, and, back in New York, Roger's mixed-up family (an ex-wife, a soon-to-be-ex-husband-in-law, and an abandoned grandson). Don, Harry, Pete, and Peggy are particular worried about the fate of the astronauts on the eve of their big pitch meeting, and not just for the sake of national/humanitarian honor; if something terrible happens in outer space, their fast food deal will be completely soured the next morning. As it turns out the Apollo 11 crew will be just fine, but plenty of more earthbound drama will unfold by episode's end.

Wray and Weiner supply several fake-outs and surprises to keep us on our toes; one of the smallest but most delightful belongs to Sally, who appears to be making eyes at the jockish Sean Glaspie (Charlie DePew) who arrives for a visit with father Richard (Barry Levy), mother Carolyn (Kellie Martin), and his nerdy, space-obsessed little brother named, naturally, Neil (Elijah Nelson). The shot/reverse shot cutting may be messing with us, however. Ultimately it's Neil who Sally kisses after gazing through his telescope. This is a cute analog to the broader reversals and left turns in play in the central story. Don is, from all appearances, on his way out of SC&P. Cutler - best to refer to Jim by his last name now given the other Jim in play - even tries to boot Don by arguing that his disruption of the Commander meeting placed him in breach of contract. However, this plot is botched when Cutler claims the other partners are behind him but only Joan is (even she smirks, "You shouldn't have done that" while he sputters). Nonetheless, Don is a marked man and something that happens the night of the moonwalk seals the deal. Bert passes away while serenely watching the lunar landing, and Cutler wastes no time in declaring that now he has the votes to cut Don loose. Only Roger has the wherewithal to play the cavalry.

Before he dies, Bert has a few things to say to Roger including the titular reference. ("Every time an old man starts talking about Napoleon," Roger remarks, "you know they're gonna die.") He also wounds Roger by telling him that he has talent and skill but is not a leader; Cutler, on the other hand, does have "vision" even if he's not on Bert's team. It's no accident then that when Roger meets with the other Jim - the devilish Hobart of McCann Erickson - he cites his own vision for the company, which involves rescuing it from Cutler. Hobart wants the whole Chevy team under the McCann umbrella in order to keep Buick from bolting, and Roger suggests that they buy a 51% share in SC&P as an independently operated subsidiary. Don, Roger, and Pete are of essence to the deal alongside, more troublingly, Ted, who has been taking clients on near-suicidal skydives and pronouncing to anyone who will listen that he wants to quit advertising. This is where Don comes in handy. With a stunned Cutler playing the devil on his other shoulder (or is it vice versa), Ted listens as Don coaxes him into acceptance by recalling the downfall of '68, and what it took Don to climb back. Dump the responsibilities of partnership, Don pleads, and return to the pleasures of pure creative work at the agency. "Does this mean I could come back to New York?" Ted brightens up. He's in and, ultimately, so is even Cutler ("It's a lot of money!"). Don's job is saved.

And Peggy is just getting started. When Don learns of Bert's passing and his own imminent departure, he decides to flip Pete's plan back again. Peggy will make the presentation to Burger Chef after all, so it will be easier to keep the client if Don goes. After a nervous night, she speaks from the heart as she only could with the new strategy she's invented, even adding a touching note (which takes Don and others who know her by surprise) about a 10-year-old who will be waiting in her apartment, watching TV, when she returns. She's not lying. Julio has visited her, weeping, before her departure to the Midwest to let her know that his mom is moving to Newark and he'll miss the landlady he bickered with for several years. She'll miss him too. Pulling at the heartstrings by evoking familial bonds for her prospective clients (while drawing upon nonconventional "familial" bonds of her own), Peggy knocks it out of the park. "Family Supper at Burger Chef" is a hit (I love the way the camera dwells on the Middle American-looking George Payton's absorbed expression as the barometer of her success). If this is her Waterloo, then she's the Duke of Wellington.

The episode ends on a bubbly note, following the thread of Don's redemption and Peggy's ascension rather than Megan's final farewell (more on that in my response below) or Bert's demise. That said, this cheerful conclusion involves Bert directly. Popping out of the ether for an apropos song-and-dance number - "The moon belongs to ev'ryone!" - a spectral Bert serenades a stunned, bemused, and ultimately queasy Don. This is a gorgeous spurt of surrealism, as much a winking tribute to the boss of all bosses over seven seasons - or at least the actor who played him (Robert Morse is a Tony-award winning musical man going back to the era that Mad Men takes place) - as it is an ambiguous if momentarily uplifting message for Don. It's certainly a marked contrast to the words Cutler spits at him early on: "You know, Ted and I, whenever we would hear that your agency was involved, we'd always be so intimidated. What was that man up to? Such a cloud of mystery. Now that I've been backstage, I am deeply unimpressed, Don. You're just a bully and a drunk. A football player in a suit. The most eloquent I've ever heard you was when you were blubbering like a little girl about your impoverished childhood." The venom's been removed, but the bite still stings.

My Response:

Mad Men - "The Strategy" (season 7, episode 6)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 18, 2014/written by Semi Chellas; directed by Phil Abraham): It's to the side of the episode's central drama, but something is going on with General Motors. When McCann Erickson's Jim Hobart crowds Roger in a steamroom, needling him about Chevy and Buick, Roger makes a few homoerotic cracks - but a far more overtly gay storyline reveals what's really going on. Bill Hartley (Matthew Glave) is a GM rep who aggressively hits on Joan in the office but ends up calling Bob after getting arrested late at night for "attempting to fellate an undercover officer." Bill is certain that Bob understands his troubles and can be discreet, but he also wants him to know that GM is recruiting him to Detroit to handle their prized Buick account. Determined to cover his tracks, Bob proposes to Joan and when she turns him down ("You shouldn't be with a woman"), he drops the puppy dog facade to make a far more naked appeal to mutual self-interest. He needs a beard to fit in with the auto industry culture and she needs a way out of her sad single life with a mother and baby boy in a crowded apartment. "You're wrong," Joan corrects him. "I want love, and I'd rather die hoping that happens that settle for some arrangement. And you should too." The next day, the whole office discovers GM's next move - taking the XP inhouse and leaving SC&P with egg on its face. To compensate, Jim proposes making Harry a partner and aggressively advertising their new computer.

Meanwhile, Pete, Don, and Peggy overcome their personal frustrations over the "family table" at Burger Chef. Pete begins the episode cheerfully triumphant, flying back to New York with Bonnie and even joining the mile-high club en route. But things quickly fall apart. Showing up with a Barbie doll for his timid daughter Tammy (Arya Lyric Lebeau), who barely seems to remember him, he ends up staying at Cos Cob late into the night until Trudy returns from a date. Scolding her but also impressed that she appears to be showing off for him, he's further thrown off his game the next day when Bonnie calls out his distractibility (by the end of "The Strategy" their hot affair appears to have cooled off completely). Megan also flies to New York, visiting Don to make breakfast on their balcony, pop into the office to catch up with old friends...and pack her things away as if she made this trip mostly to tie up loose ends. She acts surprised when Don mentions flying out in her direction a few weeks later; they are on different wavelengths. Peggy, happy to stick to the Burger Chef strategy by focusing on busy moms who need a way to bring the family together, unravels when she realizes that she doesn't connect to this perspective. And she reels Don into her distress until the two of them are up late into the night brainstorming - Don mostly egging her on rather than inserting his own ideas. Finally she realizes what appeals to her: not the contrived, overly-researched concerns of the prototypical hectic mom, but the impromptu assembly of a makeshift family in a public space. This trio of the discontented - the three stars of the pilot eighty-plus episodes down the line - meet at a Burger Chef somewhere, who knows where, to manifest this very concept in the process of discussing it. Always striving for and stumbling around personal happiness, they never seem more satisfied than when they're just doing their job.

My Response:

Mad Men - "The Runaways" (season 7, episode 5)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 11, 2014/written by David Iserson and Matthew Weiner; directed by Christopher Manley): "You know who had a ridiculous dream, and people laughed at him?" an incensed Lou Avery asks, after his employees discover his secret monkey-in-the-army comic strip Scout's Honor. "You?" Stan deadpans. I watched this scene twice, somehow forgot about his retort on re-watch, and burst out laughing both times - but as that flippant insult echoes throughout the episode, it carries quite the sting. Michael, Stephanie, Megan, and Don all strive and fail, some more spectacularly than others. Even Betty, in a far more modest (and conservative) manner, falls on her face when she opines on the Vietnam War while hosting a round-robin house tour - shocking her neighbors and enraging the more cautious Henry with her hawkish opinion. Sally, who shows up with a battered face from schoolyard shenanigans, is more defiant in her defeat; "it's a nose job, not an abortion," she spits in her scandalized mother's face. Later, her warmhearted heart-to-heart with Bobby when he sneaks into her bedroom will lend the episode its title.

Michael, of course, has the starkest downfall. We - alongside Peggy and his other colleagues - have tolerated and even chuckled at the neurotic creative's eccentricities for several seasons. So if he starts to cross the line here - insisting that the office's new computer is turning the men of SC&P gay, racing to Peggy's apartment to type up his work and then trying to seduce her - it's easy to brush it off as Michael being slightly more "Michael" than usual. (The computer's constant hum agitates him so much that he stuff his ears with tissue paper; maybe that's all that has him on edge?) Ranting his conspiracy theories as Peggy's nonchalant ten-year-old tenant Julio (Jacob Guenther) marches into the apartment to watch TV, the whole situation just looks like another lark. Eventually, back in the office the following morning, it's not so funny. Calmly informing Peggy that he loves her, and that he's removed the pressure valve that was causing him so much trouble, Michael hands her a gift box containing...his severed nipple. The next thing we know he is being carted off on a stretcher. In a sudden, alarming crash it becomes apparent that Michael is severely psychotic and maybe has been for a while. This is an unforgettable shift of perspective.

Don's drama is less violent and shocking, but no less potentially consequential on both the personal and professional front. Stephanie, his "niece" (eager to play the benevolent uncle, he conveniently forgets how he once tried to bed her), calls from L.A. to ask him for money; she's seven months pregnant, a countercultural dropout at the end of her rope. He insists that she visit Megan and stay there until he can fly out. Initially Megan welcomes her warmly but a few missteps - most fatally Stephanie's offhand comment that she already knows all of Don's secrets - spoil the bonhomie. Megan coldly writes a $1,000 check to the guest she now regards as a rival, pretending (and maybe half - ok, a quarter) believing that she's asking her to leave for her own good. She even deflects blame onto Don for being too meddlesome, judgmental, and controlling. With her disappointed husband all to herself, Megan throws a party for her acting class in their (?) home, dancing in a manner reminiscent of the bohemian shindig Don attended in season one before breaking up with his mistress. She then entices him into a menage a trois with her flirtatious friend Amy (Jenny Wade). Whatever Megan thinks this will achieve, it doesn't - they are more estranged than ever the next morning, especially after Stephanie calls to say she promised Anna that she wouldn't disrupt Don's life.

In one rare triumph, however, Don does accomplish something in California. Running into Harry at Megan's place by surprise, they go drinking and Harry spills the beans. Lou and Jim are plotting to sign Commander, the Philip Morris cigarette brand, which will force Don out of the company given his infamous letter. Don races back to the East Coast and triumphantly swoops into the Algonquin just in time to screw up the meeting for his fuming would-be executioners. Who's laughing now?

My Response:

Mad Men - "The Monolith" (season 7, episode 4)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on May 4, 2014/written by Erin Levy; directed by Scott Hornbacher): The primitive and the technologically advanced both feature prominently in "The Monolith". Roger chases his daughter to a hippie retreat that has shorn itself of all (well, most) electronic advances in order to follow the rhythms of the sun, while the SC&P break room is torn apart to make room for a large computer much like the ones currently propelling man to the moon. Roger's adventure will be less successful than Neil Armstrong's although initially Margaret - sorry, "Marigold" - welcomes his openminded approach to her new home on the commune. Roger and Mona materialize at this upstate farmhouse dressed in a three piece suit and fur coat, but only Mona will play her assigned role as uptight square. Roger sticks around when Mona leaves, proceeding to smoke grass, peel potatoes, and ogle the locals in their billowy burlap dresses. At night he and Margaret sleep under the stars, but when she sneaks off with a lover, he decides he's had enough. Roger literally tries to drag her away in the morning and when she fights back, he ends up soaked in mud: a besuited parody of the Woodstock audience later that summer. Then Margaret tells her father the horrific truth: she isn't rejecting his legacy, she's living up to it - fleeing her responsibilities as a parent by getting back to nature rather than doing so by living the hypocritical high life in the city. Dripping muck on his long walk back to the highway as she watches him go, Roger has never looked more defeated nor more like the author of his own defeat.

Back in the Manhattan office, Don is undergoing his own humiliations. A new campaign is taking shape out west as Pete woos fast food upstart Burger Chef; his contact is George Payton (Josh McDermitt), a former Vick's rep (who casually informs an alarmed Pete that Pete's father-in-law/nemesis has had a heart attack). Seeking to twist the knife by finally offering work under demeaning conditions, Lou places Don on Peggy's team for this trial run. Tasked with typing up twenty-five taglines, Don would rather toss his typewriter into the window, mock his new boss by playing solitaire and reading Portnoy's Complaint on the couch, get stinking drunk while chugging straight out of a fifth of vodka, and then - inspired by Lane's old Mets pennant - demand that Freddie take him to Shea Stadium. Freddie takes him home instead, and gives him the talk when he wakes up hungover in the morning. "Fix your bayonet, and hit the parade," the recovering alcoholic orders the repeat offender. Don dutifully goes back to work, just as the new computer is rolled in behind him - an ominous sign, or a close call showing that he's come to his senses in the nick of time? Over the week, Don has been chatting with Lloyd Hawley (Robert Baker), the machine's owner, even pushing Bert to woo him as a client. Bert sets the former hot shot straight: "You thought there was going to be a big creative crisis. In fact, we've been doing just fine." Has Don become obsolete?

My Response:

Mad Men - "Field Trip" (season 7, episode 3)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 27, 2014/written by Heather Jeng Bladt and Matthew Weiner; directed by Christopher Manley): Although the episode's most significant event is Don's return to SC&P (in an unusual brown suit which only underscores an out-of-place impression), "Field Trip" takes its title from Betty's more low-key storyline. After lunch with working pal Francine (remember her?), Betty begins to wonder how much time she has left to mother her quickly growing boys - especially now that Sally has become more distant and rebellious. Bobby is thrilled when his mother volunteers herself as a chaperone the following day, visiting the farm of his teacher Pam Keyser's (Kandis Fay's) father. This idyllic sojourn into a rustic corner of New York State takes a sour turn during the picnic, when Betty discovers that the boy traded her sandwich for a bag of gumdrops. An entirely, disproportionately harsh scolding ensues and that evening when Henry asks how everything went, Bobby mutters, "I wish it was yesterday," a poignant sentiment that could be shared by quite a few characters in this episode - Betty among them. Convinced that even adoring little Gene will hate her in a few years, she's unable to see the role she plays in alienating her own children.

In Hollywood, the second Draper wife is being driven frantic by her own regrets. Megan's agent Alan Silver (Jonathan McClain) calls Don and begs him to come out in the middle of the week to calm her down; Megan embarrassed herself by badgering a casting agent, weepily insisting upon a second audition after she felt she screwed up the first one. In her marriage, however, assertion and frustration take a less pleading tone. Megan is giddy when Don shows up unexpectedly, becomes furious when she finds out why, and is deeply wounded when Don finally reveals that he's been on leave for months and didn't tell his own wife. As was the case with him and Betty, Don's personal withholding may cause greater damage than infidelity (or suspicion of such). Although Don later apologizes and even suggests returning to California for the second time in a matter of days, the inexorable drift continues. On the other hand, that same night Don receives two or perhaps three distinct invitations, only one of them anticipated. First, at the meeting with representatives from Wells Rich Greene, Don gets an apparently enticing offer to switch agencies (although he doesn't even open the envelope in front of them). Next, the attractive Emily Arnett (Brandi Burkhardt) passes by their table, says Don knows her, and shares her hotel room number; he assumes this is a perk being offered by WRG, but they claim ignorance. Finally, Don does visit a hotel room and finds Roger, ready to welcome Don back to work. Was a call girl part of a ploy to woo him back and show Roger was keeping an eye on him? I don't think so, but the links between these scenes had me confused.

Unfortunately for Don, Roger (a no-show until halfway through the Monday he tells Don to come in) doesn't tell anyone else that the embargo has been lifted, leading to a series of tense, awkward, and occasionally even hostile encounters (the most hostile being the one who probably means it least, as Peggy spots Don sitting by himself in the lunchroom and snipes, "I can't say we missed you"). There are other matters onhand - Harry flat-out lies to clients about a secret computer that of course the office doesn't have (although this is as much a request to Jim as a fib to them) and Peggy is fuming after Lou declines to submit her work for Clio award consideration. But Don, simply by walking through those doors again and then doing literally nothing while others buzz around him, quickly takes center stage. Most of his colleagues are stunned by what they view as a brazen gesture; behind closed doors, almost everyone except Roger is incredulous about even considering the option of allowing him back. "We fired him," Jim insists, with both Bert and Joan backing up his intent, but no one wants to buy Don out. And despite his Hershey humiliation, they don't have contractual grounds to fire him. So they draw up a new set of stipulations: his position is demoted to senior copywriter, his client contact will be severely curtailed (no solo meetings or new business), there is to be no drinking outside of client social occasions, and he's going to be ominously shoved into the late Lane's since-unused office. If the SC&P partners have a message for Don, it's clearly more "Fuck you" than "Welcome home." But Don has a message for them too, and it's far more ambiguous: "OK."

My Response:

Mad Men - "A Day's Work" (season 7, episode 2)


Welcome to my viewing diary for Mad Men. Every Monday I will review another episode until the series finale. I have never seen this series before so there will be NO spoilers.

Story (aired on April 20, 2014/written by Jonathan Igla and Matthew Weiner; directed by Michael Uppendahl): Don's hunt to get back into SC&P takes a turn...away from SC&P. He meets with Dave Wooster (David James Elliot), the slick Wells Rich Greene man who is eager to bring Don on board, if he's interested, although he also has some concerns about the rumors he's heard. Jim Hobart - the McCann Erickson bigwig who put Betty on a Coke campaign to woo Don back in season one - doesn't seem to have any such concerns, picking up the check for the luncheon in an effort to scoop Don in the middle of a meeting with his rival. ("I almost worked there...twice," Don notes, to which Dave jealously responds, "But you didn't.") The biggest surprise, however, comes when Don returns home. Sally is waiting for him in his apartment; she came to the city for the funeral of a roommate's mother, lost her purse, and went to her dad's office only to discover a complete stranger in his place. Don quickly finds out what happened but holds his tongue, as does Sally - both know the other is lying, but only Don knows that she knows that he knows. As he drives her back to school, he ends the standoff and it all comes out. She reminds him of what she saw last year and he admits that he screwed up at work and doesn't know how to get back to it. Between this honest confession and Don's joke (?) about running out on a restaurant bill when they go out to eat, the tension between father and daughter finally begins to thaw. Back at their destination, Sally casually tells him, "Happy Valentine's Day. I love you." And, as he once told Megan it would, Don heart quietly breaks.

Aside from this personal redemption and his professional prospects elsewhere (which he'd probably rather not pursue), things are not going well for Don. Most of the episode takes place on the holiday Sally references, but the opening sequence, set the day before, depicts Don staggering through an aimless day at home: sleeping in, wandering around the apartment unshaven and unable to get anything done, before finally suiting up in the evening to cut a dapper figure when Dawn pays a visit to convey information on the day. She's working for two bosses now, keeping Don in the loop while still trying to man Lou's desk. In fact she's out buying a gift for Lou's wife when Sally shows up and pisses Lou off, leading to a reshuffling as Meredith (Stephanie Drake), the endearingly daffy central receptionist who's been around for several seasons, switches places with her at Lou's request. In the process, Lou comments that he knows Joan can't fire Dawn - implicitly because of her race - and then Bert adds insult to insult by requesting that Joan move her away from the front desk ("I'm all for the advancement of colored people," he coos, "but not all the way to the front of the office.") Meanwhile, Shirley (Sola Bamis) has to walk on eggshells around her boss Peggy, who mistakenly believes that Ted sent her the flowers actually sent by Shirley's fiance. The humiliating fallout results in Peggy begging Joan to move Shirley as well (this secretary ends up, it seems, working for Lou; I'm not sure where that leaves Meredith in this roundelay).

Jim Cutler, of all people, comes to Joan's rescue. Noticing how stressed out she has become, he asks, "What skills are required down here? Organization? Fortitude? Lack of concern for being unliked?" Positioned as the archvillain by the end of season six (even in this episode, he ominously states to Roger, "I'd hate to think of you as an adversary"), Jim in this moment at least swoops in to the rescue. Joan moves upstairs to be, as Jim puts it, "an account man, not head of personnel," and this opens up a spot for Dawn who is grinning ear to ear as she assumes Joan's position at the end of a hectic, unnerving day. It's no less stressful in California for Pete, who is excited to land the West Coast Chevy dealer's association but dismayed by Jim's insistence that they run the new client by Detroit and Pete's nemesis Bob. When Roger brings up Don in the chaotic bicoastal discussion, Jim snaps, "Don who? Our collective ex-wife who still receives alimony?" Roger ultimately sides with Jim and hangs up on Pete when he pushes back. Furious that he's being disrespected, Pete seeks solace in Bonnie's arms but she too pushes him to put business first; after all, it's what she finds most attractive about him. All over this episode, characters are placed in positions they don't want to be in but by persevering they find themselves redeemed, or at the very least, surviving.

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