Mad Men: Episode 12 “The Grown Ups”
Reactions. I live for them. Maybe it’s because I grew up watching Donald/Daffy Duck cartoons. I’m not exactly sure the reason why, but I love seeing the many reactions of people from various situations. Mix that in with my whole JFK fixation and you’ve got my most fascinating episode of Mad Men this season.
I knew this was coming, I just knew it! I wish this episode could’ve been two hours. The thrill I got in anticipation of the news hitting everybody was great. And when it hit, I felt like I was there in that moment. Obviously, that was more to do with me, than the show itself. As it turns out though, the one reaction that hit me the most and literally gave me chills down my spine, was Betty’s scream after Oswalt gets it in the gulliver on live tv. Oddly enough, I kinda started laughing when she frustratingly yelled “What is going on?!”. However, that quickly subsided when she opted to bounce and hit up you-know-who.
I get ahead of myself though. Grab a drink and get ready to delve into this episode with me. It’s not as long as you think, so don’t get intimidated by its size. Just think, it could’ve been waaaaay longer.
Speaking of dependence, at the start of the episode, the heating in the Sterling Cooper building wasn’t working. It was either too hot or too cold in the offices. I wasn’t quite sure what that was about until it occurred to me that the workers in the building were just waiting for someone to take care of it. Somebody would fix the situation, so that, like the porridge in the Goldilocks story, their building would not be too hot or too cold but just right. They just assumed that someone would attend to the problem for them.But nobody could tell them how to react to JFK’s death. And massive tragedies force people to re-evaluate their lives. They make people really look at what’s important to them and what isn’t.
- Via Maureen Ryan
And here I just shrugged off the whole A/C thing as some randomness within the episode. I should know better than that. I suppose it had something to do with my desire for the episode to get to the good stuff. It still doesn’t seem as important to me, but it is something to think about.
Then Duck finally comes back into the fray, with “Pee-Wee” and this really upset me. First of all, why did he un-plug the television? He could’ve just turned it off, but he (and the show) made a point to un-plug it. Maybe i’m just looking too deep into these things, but something is up, and I wasn’t the only one who noticed:
Duck? He’s finally back. He will remember that this was the day he seduced Peggy with the cheesy promise of a Monte Cristo sandwich, and then melodramatically yanked the TV power cord out of the wall so as not to disturb his “nooner.” Despite her roommate’s reservations about Duck’s aftershave (and, probably, his general skeeziness), Peggy will remember her no-hickey-attached fun in the sack with Duck, and then his rush to turn the TV back on. “I gotta call my kids,” he says. Will she also remember his nervousness? Chain-smoking and jittery, Duck seems like a man who’s hiding something. Decades later, will Peggy tell friends that on the day Kennedy died, she was having a “nooner” with the man who eventually (might) become her boss or (gasp) husband? Or that she was being used as part of a cynical power-grab? Our money’s on the latter.
- Via Logan Hill
I wonder what Peggy would say about where she was when she heard the news. Assuming her character doesn’t die anytime soon. It’s kinda funny to think, of all the people to be doing any thing, it was Peggy getting her intercourse on. Like I said, this whole Duck thing upsets me, ‘cause I think Peggy is better than all of what has and will happen to her concerning him. She rarely makes mistakes, but when she does, they’re huge.
And then there was the wedding. I was so wrapped up in the whole events & reactions, that I too thought the wedding was an inconvenience. However, it led to more Roger being a smooth mutha on that mic, which is excuse enough:
Is any format better suited to Roger Sterling’s strengths than the wedding toast? I loved his ode to his ex-wife—a “lioness”—and his genuinely moving words about his bratty daughter: “To Margaret and Brooks Hargrove. The adults—we all wanted to be strong for you. But your spirit, your love, your hope: It’s giving us strength. If you can make it through a day like today, marriage is a cakewalk.” The toast seems even more Sterlingian when we learn, later in the day, that he actually thought the wedding was “a disaster,” which suggests his sweet lines were about as sincere as his encomiums about Don at the Sterling Cooper anniversary party.
- Via Julia Turner
The rapport Roger has with Mona showed so much with so little. You could see how they worked so well together, and even though that relationship had run its course, and even though he went to Joan at the end of the night, you had to respect what he and Mona had. The phone call before the wedding was awesome to me, mainly because of Mona stepping to her daughter and not being that weak supportive mother that most women would resort to. She handled Roger & Margaret like a champ, and I respect that kind of woman.
The wedding was important, but we’ll get to that in a sec. Right now, we’ll discuss Henry & Betty vs Roger & Joan. Though the assassination of JFK & Oswalt was the catalyst for Betty to re-direct her life, the real secret is that Betty is a female, and as we all know “girls can’t swim”. Before she jumps the Draper ship, she needed to secure a life raft, and whaddya know, Henry and his ridiculous marriage proposal/offer comes floating along:
The man isn’t after anything tawdry or tragic. He wants to marry Betty. He wants to make her happy. He wants to take her to the movies and hum ‘Singin’ in the Rain’ on the way home. He doesn’t want to meet Betty’s needs, he wants to make her believe that she doesn’t have any. In some sense, I think this is why Roger chose Jane instead of Joan when he had the chance. Jane represented tipsy giggles and carefree romps in the hay. I don’t believe that Joan, despite her effervescent script for Peggy’s Want ad, was ever just a silly girl looking for laughs. She’s no Pete, that’s for sure. She is the epitome of poise and competent grace. But she gloriously met Roger’s needs, which meant he had to acknowledge that he had some. (We know now he gave that up after Annabel broke his heart.) With Joan he would have had to be a grown-up. Likewise, Don and Betty have serious, deep, grown-up rips in their marriage quilt. Enter Henry, and his offerings of chaise lounges and movie musicals.
- Via Karen Valby
No one can help themselves when it comes to that late night phone call between Roger & Joan. Yes, we know she’s the one. It was obvious from the beginning. His coronary pretty much killed the whole thing, in kinda the same way Betty’s finding of Don’s shoebox ended Don’s whole teacher affair. Also, as we discussed already, Mona was no slouch. It’s obvious Jane isn’t superior to Mona, she’s just younger and different. She was also willing to get hitched to Roger, which is not to say that Joan wasn’t, but well, ya know that whole coronary business.
So how does Don figure into all of this? Glad you asked:
Here’s where the greatness meshes. Part of Don’s near-unblinking acceptance of a monumental moment in American history had more than a little something to do with last week’s episode, where his life was turned upside down by Betty. That was its own kind of emotional beat down for Don. Yes, you could say he’s in the world’s biggest doghouse and that’s why he’s in there pulling his parenting weight with Baby Gene. But this doesn’t seem, in the near term (which is all we know) as some kind of emotional fakery on his part. Don realizes his family is coming apart. It never scared him like it does now. He realizes how emotionally tethered to that part of his life he is - how that safety, ultimately, gives him the, ahem, strength to go out and toy with his second life. Confronted by the lies of his life, he’s holding on dearly. Kennedy gets killed? Alright, I’ll be in my office. He’s focused on Betty and getting through. At Margaret’s wedding, when he says it’s going to be alright and Betty asks him how he knows, there’s no answer. Because Don doesn’t know. It’s him hitting the snooze button on acceptance per usual. He’s trained not to allow negativity to creep in. But having Betty take a pill or move past it is not going to happen. Don doesn’t realize what’s going on in the big picture.
- Via Tim Goodman
I love that whole “snooze button” phrase. It works so well. There’s so much wrong with the whole Draper marriage now, that keeping them together would be ridiculous. Once Don failed in front of Betty, it was the beginning of the end. Failing in front of women in general is usually the kiss of death, and with the type of woman that Betty is, it’s basically law. I mean, in her defense, she did marry Don Draper, not Dick Whitman. Also, it seems as though Don has been acting a bit more like Dick around the house, which I think is a bad idea. It has to be weird/awkward for Betty, plus, now they have a huge secret to keep from the kids.
There’s no way their old relationship can work anymore. It’d have to be torn down and started anew, which is a bit tough to do with 3 children in tow. When they kissed at the wedding, my stomach turned. The way Betty kissed and the expression she had before, throughout, and after…man, I just, I’ve seen that expression before. Bad times is all I can say about that.
There’s still one more episode this season, and I clearly should stop making predictions. But no matter what happens next week, I think we’ll look back on this season as having been defined by two parties: Derby Day, which as Betty notes, now seems like it happened 100 years ago, and Margaret Sterling’s wedding. The parallels between the two events are numerous and surely no accident. Both are hosted by Roger Sterling, both end with Jane Siegel Sterling fall-down drunk, both feature a charged moment between Betty and Henry Francis outside the ladies room. (What is it with this guy?) Yet these parallels serve mainly to point up what’s changed. Pete and Trudy, the life of the Derby Day dance floor, refuse to attend Margaret’s wedding. Roger, so eager to speak of the happiness Jane has brought him in May, has soured on her by November. Betty first met Henry at Derby Day and seemed from the start to be intrigued. Yet that day ended with she and Don sharing a passionate kiss. At the wedding, Don kisses his wife, but it doesn’t have the desired effect. “I didn’t feel a thing,” she tells him the next day.
- Via John Swansburg
And there it is. One more episode left and Season Three will officially be in the books. Just one thing before I let you go: I totally recommend clicking and reading all of those articles I’ve linked to/quoted. You get some varying perspectives and other highlights that I had to cut from this post for the sake of space. One of which has to do with Kenny being the happiest character in the series. Another to do with the opinion that Pete & Trudy seem to have the strongest marriage of everyone. However, if that’s too much for you, I suggest at least reading Maureen Ryan’s. It’s pretty comprehensive and gets all of the important points/ideas/opinions across best.
Thanks for hanging in there with me kids. Stay tuned for the thrilling conclusion of Mad Men’s third season!
The whole theme of the show is that there was no loss of innocence. We weren’t at that innocent of a place. I can’t imagine what it was like when Roosevelt died. I can’t imagine what it was like when Lincoln was murdered. There’s a lot of violence in this country, a lot of things being solved through violence. Yet this season is about change and expectation. It’s certainly living in the distance, and definitely I’m doing that on purpose. When the season’s over, you’ll see how everything falls into place. Hopefully, you’ll see what I’m up to when you get to the end.
- Read the full interview with Mad Men series creator Matthew Weiner over at PopCandy
Mad Men: Episode 11 “The Gypsy And The Hobo”
So that happened. All the stuff we’ve been building up towards mostly hit the fan this episode. Namely, Betty finally stepping up to Don about his shoebox/past. To me, there was so much more than just that last half hour to dwell on. However, I will say, that it was played as best as it could, although since we all knew this was coming, it didn’t really hit me like a ton of bricks as it will most people. Don’s hand going limp. The dropped cigarette. Betty’s reactions. Those were what got me. As far as Don breaking down, well, obviously it was superb acting, I just hate to see people of power brought down/crying. I hate it, like I hate death speeches characters give in movies.
What I wonder, is if the confrontation scene was the moment “the whole series has been building toward,” then where do we go from here? Can Mad Men retain the kind of dramatic tension that has made it so compelling for three seasons when the question at the heart of the show—will Betty learn Don’s secret—has been resolved?I don’t mean to suggest that Don is reformed. On the contrary, when Suzanne asks if she’s going to see him again, he replies, “Not right now,” which to me, anyway, suggests that he’s planning his standard period of penitential monogamy, followed by a return to form. And Betty is too pragmatic to divorce Don purely out of grievance. But the more interesting possibility, it seems to me, is that once her initial sympathy wears off, Betty will want to move on, not because she’s angry with Don Draper—but because she’s not in love with Dick Whitman. “All this time I thought you were some football hero who hated his father,” she says. “I knew you were poor. I knew you were ashamed of it. I see how you are with money. You don’t understand it.” Betty and Don have confected a certain aspirational lifestyle, but they come from very different backgrounds. Betty’s a snob and always has been. There’s a deep strain of Yankee classism in that “You don’t understand it.”
When Don realizes the game is up, it’s as if he physically transforms into Dick Whitman. Betty might be able to mother a backwoods orphan, a connoisseur of horse meat who can’t keep his wits about him long enough to light his own cigarette and pour his own drink. But can she love him the way she loved the strapping, silver-tongued football hero Don Draper?
- Via Slate (1)
What I really dug from this episode, was Joan, of course. If you gauge reaction, you’ll find people were really excited about her stuff. Not only was it good, but fuck, it was Joan. I hate that they pulled her from the office, I don’t care what they’re trying to accomplish story-wise. The sooner she’s back, the better for all of us.
Finally, I relished Roger’s screen time this week. From day one he’s been up there as one of my favorite characters, if not my flat out favorite. Even when he’s despicable, full of shit, a prick, a coward, a liar, a cheat, etc… So when he handled Ms. Mathis in this ep, I was practically cheering for the man. You know he would’ve taken her to task anywhere he could’ve, but the woman broke his heart. He didn’t forget. Only when her situation was dire, did she come a-callin’ his name. You don’t handle my boy like that. He wasn’t a sucker (in fact, apparently he was a boxer?!) and if anything, I hope some dudes out there watching the show learned that (myself included).
This was also a great episode for Roger fans, and Patrick, I’m eager to hear what you thought. We met Roger’s first love, Annabel, whose name evokes the Poe poem about childhood sweethearts torn asunder. Ostensibly, she’s come to Sterling Cooper looking for a new ad campaign, but it turns out she’s mostly looking for Sterling himself: Her husband has died, and she’s realized that she’s still pining for Roger. Their love unfolded in Paris before the war, and it sounds like it warrants a show of its own: There was “eating in cemeteries” and, on Roger’s part, boxing. But Roger holds her at arms’ length. “You want to know if it was a great time? It was. You want to know if you broke my heart? Obviously.” John Slattery’s delivery here is amazing; you can hear the years of scabbed-over heartbreak in the line, and suddenly we see the root cause of Roger’s barbed insouciance. But when Annabel declares he was “the one,” Roger replies, “You weren’t.” Did the exchange leave you wondering who is Roger’s one and only? Annabel assumes it’s his new wife, Jane, but his brief, charged exchange with Joan suggests that he may have hopes of once again roaming those “magnificent hillsides.” As he notes in a call to a friend when trying to find her a job, “She’s important to me.”
- Via Slate (2)
In all, a pretty excellent episode. I refrain from calling it the “Best So-Far” or “Amazing” because the previous two episodes were so lackluster. So obviously, it’s going to be great by comparison, but I won’t be fooled. Don’t forget we still need to find out what trouble Peggy, Duck & Pete are up to. And of course, there’s always that whole JFK thing…
Tell us what you think, but this was our favorite episode of the season: sharply written, beautifully acted, and almost overwhelming. Thematically, you have to ask: Why does Don have such a wild, gothic backstory? Here’s one partial theory: Mad Men has always been obsessed with mirroring and self-perception, and maybe self-delusion. Almost every single character — Betty, Sal, Pete, Joan, Roger, Peggy — is struggling to embody some idealized self-image, and always falling short. Don is at the center of this story because he’s the only one who discards his old self and constructs an entirely new one from scratch. “You’re a very gifted storyteller,” Betty tells him. He’s the living promise of advertising, which always says that if you buy this (or that, or another thing), you can be different. Almost all advertising (and especially advertising of this era) promises aspirational change, and whether the result is a happier you, a sexier you — or a more glamorous you, a more powerful you — it’s a different you in the end.
- Via Vulture
Mad Men: Episode 10 “The Color Blue”
You can tell when a show is losing it’s interest/steam, when everywhere you read, people are repeating themselves or others from week to week. Even the kitties are over it. All this feels like is set-up, set-up, set-up. The moment where Betty finally gets into the desk wasn’t even as exhilirating as it was expected to be. Weiner must really have a great closer this season, because he’s risking quite a bit leading up to the final episode. Only 3 episodes left people.
Don’s definitely returning to his bad habits: attracting drifters, losing interest in his home life, and falling down the rabbit hole of an affair that’s obviously trouble. Just like last season, he’s taken his eye off work. But this time his distraction might hurt him, with the company’s future in limbo. Shacked up with Miss Farrell, he seems clueless to Betty’s unhappiness and glib about the marriage. After their recent fights, he ran away. Now Betty is about to blindside him.
- Via Vulture
*Bonus: Here’s a mini-interview with Elisabeth Moss (Peggy)!*
Heads up! January Jones is on the cover of the latest issue of GQ. It’s weird, because it seems like you get pretty intimate with her as she starts drinking mid-article, however, when it’s over, it feels like you didn’t really learn much about her, if anything at all. The photos are by Terry Richardson (ugh) and story by Mark Kirby. I’m an Esquire man, so I’m not familiar with GQ’s modus operandi nor Kirby, so I can’t tell you if this result from an article is par for the course with him. Still you do get some facts about whom she’s dated, the amount of beer she’s drank in one sitting, her formal training (or lack thereof), how she got her name, what kind of music she listens to, and much more.
January is just as friendly and funny this morning as the night before, but without the weird enforced intimacy of the flight—the close seats, the drinks, the dim lights—our meeting feels businesslike. For the first time, I can see why, in other interviews, she often comes off as distant: the aloof pretty girl, unfailingly polite but also self-protecting, a little more Betty Draper than the woman who, after her fifth round last night, picked up the digital recorder and announced: “Dear men of America, I like beer, I like football. I’m probably the most interesting girl you’ll ever meet.”
- Via GQ
I guess today is unofficially Mad Men day. Oh well, I suppose it could’ve been a lot worse. Here’s a pretty nifty story about Draper Daniels, the dude Don Draper was based on. It’s written by his wife and details their work relationship & subsequent personal relationship. It’s actually a pretty good story whether it has to do with Mad Men or not. Here’s an excerpt:
One day, after he had been with us for about two years, Dan came into my office with a card in his hand. By this time, the firm had been through several buyouts and mergers and I had a funny feeling that he was about to tell me of another one. I asked, “Are you going to sell me with the next merger?”“Not exactly,” he said.
He showed me the card. On one side, he had written out his own best character traits. Then he turned it over. On the other side he had written out mine. Mine were better than his, so I knew he wanted something. I thought, What in the world has got into him?
“I’ve been thinking about this for nine months, Myra,” he said, “and I think we would make a great team.”
I said, “I think we are a great team. Think of what we’ve accomplished so far this year.”
He said, “I’m talking about a different sort of merger.”
“Oh.”
“Yes, I’ve decided I’d like to marry you.”
- Via Chicago Magazine
Even Christina Hendricks is crazy amazed by the magnitude of her rack. On a side note, she got married in real life. To this guy (not the dude in the above photo). I don’t know if I should be hopeful. Or if I should be weeping.