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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Mon May 18, 2015 5:40 pm 
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I thought this show should have ended 3 seasons ago. The one finale when Draper is asked "are you available?" by some sexy bar floozy would have been a fitting series finale. That being said,I enjoyed this finale even though I haven't watched the show in a few years.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Mon May 18, 2015 5:47 pm 
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Curious Hair wrote:
Early '90s Mimi Rogers was something to behold, huh.


I like that movie where she gets a full body massage from the Australian flair bartender from Cocktail.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Mon May 18, 2015 7:10 pm 
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speaking of "cocktail" it's been running a few times lately on cable. the guy you're thinking of is brian brown. but man alive elizabeth shue was out of this world.


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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 6:47 am 
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These guys routinely had the deepest analyses of the show. Great stuff:

Quote:
The central question surrounding the ending of the story of Don Draper is what happened to him after his moment of enlightenment on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Did he go on to write the most famous and arguably most influential advertisement of all time? And if he did, what does that mean, both for him and for the world he inhabits? Or did someone else write that ad and its inclusion at the end of the story indicates that the monolithic entity known as the advertising industry will always and forever package people’s fears, hopes and experiences into catchy moments to sell products; like some sort of eternal zeitgeist engine? The answers come down to whether you think Mad Men is a Freudian reality or a Jungian one.

All we mean by that is, when you look at what we’re going to show you, you have to decide if the universe itself was repeating messages and symbols over and over again (Jungian) or whether Don was doing what creative people do: picking up bits and pieces of inspiration along the way until you have enough of them stored up in your subconscious to spur a “Eureka” moment (Freudian).

Put simply: Is Coca-Cola the God of this world? Or is Don?

. . .

But – and here’s where we get Jungian on your asses – the Coca-Cola colors have been haunting everyone:

. . .

But did Don create the Coke ad formally known as “Hilltop?” After all, there were plenty of costuming calls to Coca-Cola imagery throughout the episode, in scenes that Don had nothing to do with. Some people have indicated a theory that Peggy wrote the ad, but first, there’s no way she’d be working on an account that large when she’s fighting to keep a small account like Chevalier. Second, there’s nothing in the filming or the story to indicate such a thing. She’s typing at the end, sure, but she spent half the series typing.

So was the universe calling out for this ad to be made, by constantly dressing everyone in red? Or is it more likely that Don, like all creative people, picks up bits and pieces of life, redresses them, and comes up with something inspiringly beautiful, but decidedly different:

(and at this point the critics knock it completely out of the park)

Now obviously, no one here is a direct analogue to the singers in the ad except for the girl in the braids. And while it’s a bit offensive to compare two women based solely on the fact that they’re both Asian, that’s kind of the point. That’s how inspiration works, especially from Don’s perspective. He sees one non-white person – the ONLY one in the entire retreat – and recasts that as this uplifting, multicultural experience it never really was. He took a week of depressed middle class white people and turned it into a minute of hopeful, ethnically diverse teenagers. He went from selling cancer to the American public to selling obesity to the American public and he did it using a message of brotherhood and tolerance that he himself would never experience because of his upper middle class trappings. This is what we mean when we say the ending is a cynical one. We don’t necessarily mean that as a bad thing. Mad Men has always been a particular combination of capitalist-fueled cynicism and family-based hope. For Don to have an emotional breakthrough and use that to sell soda pop to the masses is a perfectly Don thing to do. And like Stan and Roger said, he does this sort of thing. He has breakdowns, runs away, and comes back renewed. No, he doesn’t really change, but he gets a little better each time. That’s always been the point of Mad Men. People don’t necessarily make sweeping changes to themselves, but they can learn who they are and work within those parameters to improve themselves.


Brilliant. Hats off.

And then at the other end:

Molly Lambert wrote:
I liked the little touches of Halloween décor in the finale, because Halloween is a holiday that dredges up feelings of melancholy nostalgia about the passage of time.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 4:24 pm 
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I have read dozens and dozens of post finale reviews, and I find the various opinions fascinating, but the ambiguity that I perceived when watching the finale live, is gone. The ending and result is crystal clear to me.
I find myself still thinking about this show alot though...

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 7:24 pm 
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This is from Dawn Weiner himself.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/m ... hew-797302

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 8:54 pm 
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Holy shit am I glad this show is done. I hope some or all of you would consider replacing these hours in your life with something worthwhile. Not even just the watching. The analyzing, too.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 8:57 pm 
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Telegram Sam wrote:
Holy shit am I glad this show is done. I hope some or all of you would consider replacing these hours in your life with something worthwhile. Not even just the watching. The analyzing, too.


GET YOUR MOUTH SHUT!

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Thu May 21, 2015 11:06 pm 
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Good post finale interview with Jon Hamm.

I'm not obsessed with this show at all. Nope...not me.

http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/05/18/mad-men-finale-jon-hamm-interview/

Jon Hamm Talks About the ‘Mad Men’ Series Finale
By Dave Itzkoff May 18, 2015 7:12 pm May 18, 2015 7:12 pm

He has been Don Draper, the singularly suave advertising executive of the 1960s (and early 1970s), whose cool and in-control exterior hid an insecure man unsure of his place in a rapidly changing world. And he has been Dick Whitman, the son of a prostitute mother and an alcoholic father, who saw a chance to create a new life for himself by stealing the identity of another man he accidentally killed in the Korean War.

Now, Jon Hamm is neither of these characters. On Sunday night, his eight-year, seven-season journey on the AMC period drama “Mad Men” came to an end, along with the series itself. The instantly provocative last minutes of the show’s concluding episode, “Person to Person,” found Draper (or was he Whitman?) at the end of a cross-country trek, at an Esalen-like retreat in California, experiencing what looked like some sort of moment of transcendence as a smile unfurled above his lantern-like jaw. With a final ding, the screen cut to the 1971 Coca-Cola “Hilltop” commercial — a sign that, depending on how you read it, either Draper had found the enlightenment this famous ad was trying to commodify, or was responsible for creating the ad himself.

Freed from the dual responsibilities of Draper and Whitman, Mr. Hamm spoke on Monday evening about the end of “Mad Men,” and what that last sequence meant to him. These are edited excerpts from that conversation.
Q.

Those last few moments of the episode, and that transition from Draper’s bliss to the Coke commercial, has raised many questions about what it means. Is there a correct answer to that question?
A.

I think there probably is. But I think, like most stories that we go back to, that it’s a little bit ambiguous. We had talked about this ending for a long time and that was Matt [Weiner, the “Mad Men” creator and show runner]’s image. I was struck by the poetry of it. I didn’t know what his plans were, to get Don to this meditative, contemplative place. I just knew that he had this final image in mind.
Q.

Do you have an interpretation of it?
A.

I do. When we find Don in that place, and this stranger relates this story of not being heard or seen or understood or appreciated, the resonance for Don was total in that moment. There was a void staring at him. We see him in an incredibly vulnerable place, surrounded by strangers, and he reaches out to the only person he can at that moment, and it’s this stranger.

My take is that, the next day, he wakes up in this beautiful place, and has this serene moment of understanding, and realizes who he is. And who he is, is an advertising man. And so, this thing comes to him. There’s a way to see it in a completely cynical way, and say, “Wow, that’s awful.” But I think that for Don, it represents some kind of understanding and comfort in this incredibly unquiet, uncomfortable life that he has led. There was a little bit of a crumb dropped earlier in the season when Ted says there are three women in every man’s life, and Don says, “You’ve been sitting on that for a while, huh?” There are, not coincidentally, three person to person phone calls that Don makes in this episode, to three women who are important to him for different reasons. You see the slow degeneration of his relationships with those women over the course of those phone calls.
Q.

Was it odd to be shooting these scenes away from your co-stars January Jones, Kiernan Shipka and Elisabeth Moss, and disconnected from the cast members you’d worked with for so long?
A.

Don’s journey over the last few episodes was a tricky experience, as an actor. To be set adrift for the last few weeks, really experiencing that aloneness, that self-exile that Don was experiencing, it was very disorienting, which hopefully played. It was thematically kind of perfect. The world carries on, and that’s a big question about Don. Did the place fall apart without me? Well, no. That’s not how it works. Everybody picks up and thinks, oh, that’s too bad — that guy had a nervous breakdown.

[With January Jones and Kiernan Shipka], we shot those on set. So you can actually have the person sitting right off camera, reading the lines to you. [For Elisabeth Moss], we were three and a half hours up the [California] coast, on the edge of a cliff. When he hangs up with Peggy, that was an incredibly difficult scene to shoot. We were in the middle of nowhere, and they were going to just have someone else read the lines, off-screen, for me. Elisabeth wasn’t there, but both Elisabeth and I suggested that it might be better if we could have an actual connection on the phone. So she was on the other end of the phone. I’m sure there are other takes of that scene where I’m much more emotional, and Matthew chose to use the ones that are a little more confused and restrained. He’s completely bereft, and because of that, he is then open to hearing this information and this story from this stranger.
Q.

Did you know what was fated for all the other characters, too?
A.

Yes, I had been at a big table read last summer, so we all knew the story. I liked the misdirection of Joan striking off on her own and inviting Peggy to come along and Peggy having the confidence to say, “That’s what you want to do, not what I want to do.” Selfishly, I think if she took anything away from being mentored by my character, it was that — her confidence in her ability to say, “There’s something better out there for me, and I’m going to stick it out here and try to find it.” The romantic stuff with Stan is nice and warm and fuzzy, but to me, Peggy’s larger resolution was in the penultimate episode when she walks into McCann, the cock of the walk, and takes what’s hers. And it was pleasant to see Joan recalibrate from that and say, I’m doing this anyway. I don’t need a savior-man to come in and do a bunch of coke and live in paradise. I’m going to work, because I’m good at this.
Q.

Have you had any opportunity to digest other people’s reactions to the finale?
A.

There’s people saying, oh, it’s so pat, and it’s rom-com-y, or whatever it is. But it’s not the end of anything. The world doesn’t blow up right after the Coke commercial ends. No one is suggesting that Stan and Peggy live happily ever after, or that Joan’s business is a rousing success, or that Roger and Marie come back from Paris together. None of it is done. Matt had said at one point, “I just want my characters to be a little more happy than they were in the beginning,” and I think that’s pretty much true. But these aren’t the last moments of any of these characters’ lives, including Betty. She doesn’t have much time left, but damn if she’s not going to spend it the way she wants to spend it.

I had to leave right after the screening last night, from L.A., and fly back to Atlanta on the red-eye. I had two of the nicest flight attendants in the world, who said, “Why are you here?” I said, “What? I’m going to Atlanta.” And they said, “But why? You should be there.” I said, “That’s very nice.” I’m still a little stunned, really, by it all.
Q.

You said on Sunday, at a Television Academy event, that after “Mad Men” and after Don Draper, you will “fade into nothingness and no one will remember me.” Do you really think that?
A.

[chuckles knowingly] I think every actor thinks that when they end a job. You only hope that something else comes along. Do I think I will fade into obscurity? Hopefully not yet. But probably at some point, I will. Because that’s the nature of all things flesh. That’s how it works. It’s a hell of a thing, to end something like this. Is my melancholy seeping through enough? [laughs] In a much more healthy sense, we all put this show to bed quite some time ago, and said our goodbyes and cried our tears. Everybody’s moved on. I’m looking forward to seeing everyone else’s next things. As I said to someone, I’ll see you on “The Love Boat.” And if you print that, somebody, somewhere, is going to pitch that.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Sat May 23, 2015 1:06 pm 
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Tall Midget wrote:
In many ways, Don creating the "Hilltop" ad is the perfect ending to the show. As you suggest earlier in this thread, Don's social position--and the corporate ethos he embodies--was seriously threatened by 60s radicalism and the counterculture to which it gave birth. The challenge for those in power, then, was how to engage with the counterculture while maintaining a position of social legitimacy. Politically, this was accomplished in many ways, but most notably through "re-branding" the black urban revolution as a massive criminal threat: and so the Nixon administration gave birth to a "War on Crime" in which black youth were filtered into the penitentiary system at an astounding rate, effectively decapitating the vanguard of the radical movement. Similarly, American consumer culture navigated the challenge to its hegemony by appropriating the language of the counterculture to sell products. Ultimately, Don is the genius who saves corporate America by surrendering to the left--but this surrender is, of course, purely symbolic. And Don's genius--while exhilarating to witness--is nevertheless purely destructive.


You've seen Frontline's Merchants of Cool, right? I remember watching it in AP psych back in 03-04, so maybe it's aged a little, but still, good stuff on the co-opting of youth culture/counterculture. I'm gonna rewatch it now.

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 Post subject: Re: Mad Men
PostPosted: Wed May 27, 2015 12:24 am 
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AMC's 'Mad Men' Finale Hits Series Highs in Viewers & Adults 25-54 in Live +3 Ratings

NEW YORK, NY – May 22, 2015 – “Mad Men” ended its acclaimed seven-season run Sunday night with its highest-rated episode ever among total viewers and adults 25-54. The series finale of AMC’s Emmy® and Golden Globe® Award-winning drama delivered 4.6 million viewers, 2.5 million adults 25-54 and 2 million adults 18-49 in live+3 ratings, which include three days of time-shifted viewing.

“While it’s true that AMC’s ‘Mad Men’ ended with its highest-ever live+3 ratings, we believe the most meaningful metric for this iconic series will turn out to be live+forever,” said Charlie Collier, AMC president. “We hope Matthew Weiner and the many extraordinarily talented people who helped elevate his vision over the last decade are smiling and finding peace like Don Draper at Esalen. This incredible team has produced 92 individual works of art, and we feel so fortunate to forever be known as the birthplace and home of ‘Mad Men.’ To quote Roger Sterling from the show’s very first episode, ‘I don't think I have to tell you what you just witnessed here.’”

Sunday’s series finale also generated the most Twitter activity in the show’s history and led “Mad Men” to dominate as the #1 series across all broadcast and cable on Twitter that night with nearly 50 million impressions. “Mad Men” was also the most engaging cable drama based on the DAR-TV(TM) three-day window and the most engaging program on Facebook on Sunday night.

Key Nielsen Highlights for the Series Finale of “Mad Men” (L+3)

4.6 million viewers, up 41% from live/same day
2.5 million adults 25-54, up 46% from live/same day
2.0 million adults 18-49, up 48% from live/same day

Source: Nielsen Media Research, L+3. Nielsen Social Guide (ranked based on tweets, episode rank, all series), historical tweets go back to 2012 (5/17/15). ListenFirst Media (5/17-5/19/15). Excluding regional cable networks, sports networks and live events.

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