Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce (Mad Men) : The discussion

Great show, so well written. It's not for everyone tho either you love it or you probably hate it. I really don't see this merger lasting much longer and i think Pete wont be back next season. A couple episodes ago i actually felt sorry for Don that was GREAT acting.....:cool::cool::cool::cool:

FUCK Don! He's a complete idiot....
 
I feel sorry for anyone who had a miserable childhood - was listening to a story about Richard Pryor and his self destructive behavior comes from a very similar background as Don Draper (raised in a whorehouse, physically abused, etc)

I love Betty's analysis of Don that the quickest way to lose him is to love him.

The tapestry is so dense and rich with this show that you can do talk about the show for hours and still not touch the surface.

Matthew Weiner is doing television his way. He has taken a lot from the Sopranos and The Wire.
 
Great show, so well written. It's not for everyone tho either you love it or you probably hate it. I really don't see this merger lasting much longer and i think Pete wont be back next season. A couple episodes ago i actually felt sorry for Don that was GREAT acting.....:cool::cool::cool::cool:

I think they open an office as the west coast branch and let Harry leave with the ted and cutler to run it. That way they are basically a single agency in name and billings only.
 
Peggy gets more annoying by the episode, she put Ted on a pedestal and told Don he should be more like him only to find out Ted is just like Don:lol: I hated Pete last season but this season he's been one of the more interesting characters, his trip down the steps is still my favorite moment of the season.
 
I have never watched this show! Should I ? Honestly...seems like a bunch of CACs at an office. What is the draw ???

:hmm::hmm::hmm::hmm:
 
the show really isnt for everyone and is a slow burn.
very rarely do you get those 'o shit' moments like you get in other shows.

but the characterization and plotting is unlike anything else on tv
this is one of the few shows on tv where characters grow and develop
 
In one episode we get 2 references to Pete & Peggy’s past. Havent heard it mentioned in years. Peggy almost shit herself when Pete’s mom mentioned the baby.

Oh shit Bob Benson is gay. Thats the secret. Ginsberg asked if he was a queer last episode and he paused when Pete called the nurse a degenerate based on him being gay. And then he throwing mad shade at Pete. Pete showed alot of retraint but got the message across loud & clear. Joan aint got a new man but a new gay best friend.

Oh shit Don got caught with his fucking pants down. Lol. This motherfucker never fucking learns. He wont stop until his life is ruined. Don feeling like absolute shit, everyone telling him how great he is from Megan to the father/son of the women he is fucking. Only Sally knows the truth and she too smart for Don’s bullshit.

Pete all alone eating ceral for dinner and Peggy on her way to becoming a cat lady.
 
Bob sending a message to Pete

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Oh Shit Bob Benson is a gay Don Drapper. Suprised Pete gave him a pass but i guess he remembers how shit turned out when he tried to expose Don and just used it as leverage to keep Bob outta his life & his mommy away from the nanny.

Don is salty as fuck Peggy & Ted got something and he has no fucks to give about Megan. That meeting was the 1st time Don as ever been early. Ted & Peggy shitting his pants in that meeting. But was he right? Was their ‘relationship’ bad for the company or is he so miserable and wants everyone else to join the pity party?

Damn Sally is her mother’s daughter. Insuiating rape just cause she wasn’t getting attention from Glen. Now they have something to share, their hatred for Don.
 
Oh Shit Bob Benson is a gay Don Drapper. Suprised Pete gave him a pass but i guess he remembers how shit turned out when he tried to expose Don and just used it as leverage to keep Bob outta his life & his mommy away from the nanny.

Don is salty as fuck Peggy & Ted got something and he has no fucks to give about Megan. That meeting was the 1st time Don as ever been early. Ted & Peggy shitting his pants in that meeting. But was he right? Was their ‘relationship’ bad for the company or is he so miserable and wants everyone else to join the pity party?

Damn Sally is her mother’s daughter. Insuiating rape just cause she wasn’t getting attention from Glen. Now they have something to share, their hatred for Don.

I think a scp branch is going to open on the west coast and Don't is going to bounce to work on Sunkist . The office is too tiny in NYC and he has fewer reasons to stay. Kids are going to boarding school, ted and him keep bumping heads, and he is genuinely miserable. Meghan's career and a new branch is an excuse for him to bounce like he needs to to find happiness.
 
I think a scp branch is going to open on the west coast and Don't is going to bounce to work on Sunkist . The office is too tiny in NYC and he has fewer reasons to stay. Kids are going to boarding school, ted and him keep bumping heads, and he is genuinely miserable. Meghan's career and a new branch is an excuse for him to bounce like he needs to to find happiness.

thats why i cant root for him as a character anymore.
He doesnt want to be happy and continually sabtoages himself. He like a fiend always looking for a quick fix (an affair, marrying Megan on the fly, the merger) but his happiness can only last for a minute before he is miserable again.
 
thats why i cant root for him as a character anymore.
He doesnt want to be happy and continually sabtoages himself. He like a fiend always looking for a quick fix (an affair, marrying Megan on the fly, the merger) but his happiness can only last for a minute before he is miserable again.

don-draper.jpg
 
the right path? when was he ever on the right path?
Megan is still around? He still has his kids? Why doesnt he love his kids? Why does he treat Peggy like shit and ignore Megan? Why doesnt he fight to win his daughter back?

why because he is a coward and incapable of being happy
 
FYI

Inferno opens on the evening of Good Friday in the year 1300. Traveling through a dark wood, Dante Alighieri (Don Draper) has lost his path and now wanders fearfully through the forest. The sun shines down on a mountain above him, and he attempts to climb up to it but finds his way blocked by three beasts—a leopard, a lion, and a she-wolf. Frightened and helpless, Dante returns to the dark wood. Here he encounters the ghost of Virgil, the great Roman poet, who has come to guide Dante back to his path, to the top of the mountain. Virgil says that their path will take them through Hell and that they will eventually reach Heaven, where Dante’s beloved Beatrice (Betty? Peggy?) awaits. He adds that it was Beatrice, along with two other holy women, who, seeing Dante lost in the wood, sent Virgil(Pvt Dinkins? Ted? Henry?) to guide him.


It is obvious to all that Don is lost and has been for years - he now deep in the Woods and unable to reach the light so he is dragged deeper into hell - but he needs a spirit guide (who knew Renaissance Italians were into Native American Culture)so he now has purposely been taken himself through the 9 circles of hell but who is his Virgil to guide him out because without a guide he is forever stuck in the Hell of his own making.
 
I have never watched this show! Should I ? Honestly...seems like a bunch of CACs at an office. What is the draw ???

:hmm::hmm::hmm::hmm:

Fuck the haters. I thought the same thing,then gave it a chance. Now i'm hooked. For my money, if you liked the Sopranos, you would like this. It is complex, but for the purposes of this post,I would compare Don to Tony. A likeable boss who usually wins, but is constantly struggling against himself and his often counterproductive behavior. I think the literary guys call it "man against himself" conflict.

I am not keen on the scarcity of black folks and I do not think it is a small thing, but the fact is that the show is good.

Hold your nose and check it out. And fuck the undercover CACs on this board
 
DAMN Don...
he finally does the right thing by trying to save Ted & come clean (obviously at the worst time possible) and he gets hung out to dry. Didnt see that shit coming at all. Next season is proably the last season but where does he go from here? Not only did he lose his job & passion but it looks like Megan is done with him.

straight ether seeing Duck come in with his replacement and Peggy look like she was getting very comfortable in the that office
 
DAMN Don...
he finally does the right thing by trying to save Ted & come clean (obviously at the worst time possible) and he gets hung out to dry. Didnt see that shit coming at all. Next season is proably the last season but where does he go from here? Not only did he lose his job & passion but it looks like Megan is done with him.

straight ether seeing Duck come in with his replacement and Peggy look like she was getting very comfortable in the that office

^^^

He gonna win an Emmy for that boardroom scene...

Funny thing is how EVERYONE owed don and they all cut his throat.

Peggy especially.

She is so quick to judge Don like she BETTER but remember she slept with a a married Pete got pregnant and the one sitting by her side and took care of her was Don. He gave her promotions opportunities and knowledge when NO ONE ELSE would. Then SHE hates HIM when she wants to sleep with a married man and kids and plot to have him leave them all?

And Roger with the women and drinking judging Don? Joan?...Don was the OPENLY defending her and DIDN'T want her to sleep with the client, and notice it was Peg that called her whore just like Pete and the TV Ad guy.

I think this is great though, breaking Don down to nothing so he can FINALLY appreciate what he has NOW and stop running from his past and embracing it. And love the parallels with the Bob Benson even the double B vs. double D.

We are seeing how Don is actually on a road to redemption, but now he sees everyone around him for what they REALLY are and can stop living up to the facade.

this was an outstanding season...

Don is gonna come back on FIRE!!! next year watch.

*got a feeling Pete's mom aint dead, the Pete in California thing confuses me, Sally and Don are gonna reconnect slowly, Roger is gonna get his son AND Joan back and the agency is gonna suffer greatly without Don.
 
And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. John 8:32

Damn - More to come later - still soaking it in
 
http://tvline.com/2013/06/23/mad-men-season-6-finale-don-fired/


Mad Men Finale Post Mortem: Creator Matthew Weiner Talks Don's Ouster, the Peggy-Ted Fallout and How the Show 'Struck Gold' With Bob Benson
by Kimberly Roots

Now that Mad Men‘s Don is done, Megan is alive and Bob is… yeah, we’re still not entirely sure what Bob is, we figured it was time to hear what creator Matthew Weiner has to say about the AMC drama’s sixth season.

“I always say, it’s not a history lesson. How much does history really impact us every day? It has to take a really big event,” he tells TVLine. “Well, 1968 itself was a really big event.”

Read on for more of Weiner’s take on the just-wrapped season, including Sally’s moment of truth, the meaning of Don’s hashish dream, Megan’s killer t-shirt and Bob’s short-shorts.

RELATED | 100 Best TV Shows Ever: Where Does Mad Men Fall on the List?

TVLINE | Let’s start with the biggest development: Don is out of the firm?!
Yeah. We felt that, considering the fact that he fired their biggest clients, impulsively drove them into a partnership, ruined their public offering and then waged war on his partner, that Hershey pitch or no Hershey pitch, the business had to take action.

TVLINE | Well, when you put it that way…
Seriously. I think creatively, he’s been on top of his game, but I don’t think he’s an ideal partner.

TVLINE | Don seems like he’s been in a very bad place all season, and that’s saying a lot for that man.
Yeah, he has been… I never want to repeat stories, but people do repeat their habits in life. And what’s different about [this season] is he said, at the end of the premiere, “I want to stop doing this.” And the anxiety created by his activities and his lack of control and us learning more about his past and why he is the way he is… I wanted him to see through his double — and through what was going on in the world, and obviously what happened with Sally and Betty – it’s been a bad year. And he might be the problem.

TVLINE | Let’s talk about that look between Sally and Don at the end of the episode. Does it herald more understanding between the two of next season?
I’m not gonna talk about the coming season, because I don’t really know. But I can tell you that I hope the audience can take that for what it is: a mammoth moment in both of their lives. Sally seeing Don with Sylvia is the worst thing that ever happened to him, as far as I’m concerned. The shame — for both of them, for Sally and Don — has been devastating… I’m not being coy, but I hope the audience gives that moment its due.

TVLINE | Let’s talk Megan’s storyline this season, especially her relationship with Don.
She’s a very modern person, she’s the most [modern] of the people in the show — especially as a woman, to be pursuing a career and have that level of independence. I think she’s on the outside of this thing… She doesn’t know what happened with Sally, but Don obviously is in bad shape. He is drinking more than ever… But we felt she’s not a doormat… [Megan is] an independent person. And we saw what his fantasy is for her when he was on hashish. He wants her to be a hippie who is not working, who is pregnant and who doesn’t mind him fooling around.

TVLINE | What was going through your mind when you saw people making Sharon Tate comparisons?
First of all, I don’t see them posted. I heard about it from my brother. I don’t see anything on the Internet at this point. The only thing that’s predictable about [the speculation] is there’s gonna be a conversation, and that is a gift to someone in my position…

I think it’s been revealed now that the reason why she’s wearing that T-shirt is because we were trying to find evidence of a woman in a T-shirt from that period… Sharon Tate was in Playboy, she was an international sex symbol. The fact that she died the way she did – I didn’t even think about it. I love that people know that we infuse things with meaning, but in this case, I just really wanted people to think that Megan was wearing a period-correct T-shirt and that she looked really sexy when Don came back from being with Betty.

TVLINE | Did you have any idea that Bob Benson would intrigue the fans so much?
I knew when we cast James Wolk that we had struck gold, in terms of getting a great actor. The only inkling that I had is that the crew, and James himself and the cast, were really, really intrigued with [Bob]. In [writer] Erin Levy’s episode ["The Better Half"], when Joan and Bob are getting ready for the beach, James called me and he said, “What am I doing here?” [Laughs] And I was like, “You’re friends! You were just at the hospital, and you’re friends.” “Uh, OK. Why are these shorts so tight?” [Laughs]

TVLINE | Pete’s reaction to learning about Bob’s deception was surprising. I expected him to blow up. Vincent Kartheiser has said he thinks Pete is someone who learns from his mistakes. Do you agree?
I don’t know if he has in the past, but that’s part of why Bob Benson was in the show. That’s part of why that character was created, to show that Pete had learned something. Vincent played it beautifully… To see Pete not pursue [taking down Bob], to me, was a great moment of growth.

On the other hand, in the finale, when Trudy says, “You’re free,” and Pete says, “This is not the way I wanted it,” she says, “Well, now you know that.” Will he learn from that? It’s one of the most stinging things that’s ever been in the show. And the way Alison [Brie] did it was amazing. I directed that episode, I got to watch her do it. To see the two of them and to know that the whole season, this guy was realizing that he had ruined his life… And what do you do? You wait till you can get up and go on? Maybe.

It’s very exciting to work with the writers, deliver these scripts and then see the dailies, or if I’m lucky enough, be on the set and see what Vincent does with it, what all of them do with it… I mean, Jon Hamm… That Hershey pitch? That’s one take. The whole thing. We’re cutting in between other people, but that is one take of it. He was so amazing in that speech and that breakdown, with two cameras there, that when we were facing him when he was doing it – Roger and Jim Cutler, they’re supposed to talk at the end of it. And they forgot to say anything!

TVLINE | I would be remiss if we didn’t touch on Peggy and Ted. In your mind, is Ted actually the good guy she thinks he is?
He’s in advertising, no offense. I don’t know how good he really is. [Laughs] He is the same guy who called Don up and pretended to be Bobby Kennedy, remember? He’s not a saint… Peggy’s real story from the beginning of the season was the idea that she doesn’t have any choices… She was forced to work where she didn’t want to work, she was forced to buy an apartment she didn’t want to buy, she was forced on some level to be in this relationship that she had no control over. She ends up sitting in Don’s chair, so I think something’s OK.
 
I thought it was great the second Don realized he wasn't going to run that he couldn't help but confess the secret that is the thing he's been running from since the beginning. I hope he bounces back and find some purpose for himself. The partner meeting to me showed him what was what and that deep down none of those motherfuckers cared if it was going to cost them money. Not even Roger

Also Rogers daughter is the biggest cunt on the show
 
I have never watched this show! Should I ? Honestly...seems like a bunch of CACs at an office. What is the draw ???

:hmm::hmm::hmm::hmm:

The 1st season caught my interest...I caught it late one nite and that particular ep had a war scene that pertains to one of the characters I don't wanna say too much but it was enough to make me rewatch the whole 1st season...I started watching season 2 but aside from Don Draper's character I had a strong dislike for pretty much everyone else so I got bored and bailed out...try it you might like it...but yes ultimately it's about spoiled privileged white folks for the most part
 
^^^

He gonna win an Emmy for that boardroom scene...

Funny thing is how EVERYONE owed don and they all cut his throat.

Peggy especially.

She is so quick to judge Don like she BETTER but remember she slept with a a married Pete got pregnant and the one sitting by her side and took care of her was Don. He gave her promotions opportunities and knowledge when NO ONE ELSE would. Then SHE hates HIM when she wants to sleep with a married man and kids and plot to have him leave them all?

And Roger with the women and drinking judging Don? Joan?...Don was the OPENLY defending her and DIDN'T want her to sleep with the client, and notice it was Peg that called her whore just like Pete and the TV Ad guy.

I think this is great though, breaking Don down to nothing so he can FINALLY appreciate what he has NOW and stop running from his past and embracing it. And love the parallels with the Bob Benson even the double B vs. double D.

We are seeing how Don is actually on a road to redemption, but now he sees everyone around him for what they REALLY are and can stop living up to the facade.

this was an outstanding season...

Don is gonna come back on FIRE!!! next year watch.

*got a feeling Pete's mom aint dead, the Pete in California thing confuses me, Sally and Don are gonna reconnect slowly, Roger is gonna get his son AND Joan back and the agency is gonna suffer greatly without Don.

Though I agree with a lot of what you said Don has been completely fucked up this entire season when it comes to business (and everything else obviously).

Though Don looked out for all of them as you say, and the it was fucked up how cold they were about letting him go, in terms of business the right decision was made.

On a personal level though they could have handled that a little better, maybe even letting Roger tell him one on one and not having him walk out like that.
 
Peggy especially.

Peggy's an opportunist...I only needed one season to see that...white bitches like that will sell anyone out and convince themselves it's the right thing to do as long as they land on their feet
 
Peggy's an opportunist...I only needed one season to see that...white bitches like that will sell anyone out and convince themselves it's the right thing to do as long as they land on their feet

Man that bitch has been extra grimey this season. She was ok to me in previous seasons but this year that chick has been really feeling her self.
 
Man that bitch has been extra grimey this season. She was ok to me in previous seasons but this year that chick has been really feeling her self.

I said from the jump that Peggy was no good, Peggy & Betty are 2 of the most vile people on tv. Peggy as a poster previously mentioned is nothing but an opportunist and Betty cares more about stature than family. Remember when Don and the kids were robbed and she felt it necessary to tell Don that Henry was running for office:smh:
 
Pete Campbell is a funny dude. Every episode he says or does something funny. How many episode were there this season. It seemed really short.
 
Though I agree with a lot of what you said Don has been completely fucked up this entire season when it comes to business (and everything else obviously).

Though Don looked out for all of them as you say, and the it was fucked up how cold they were about letting him go, in terms of business the right decision was made.

On a personal level though they could have handled that a little better, maybe even letting Roger tell him one on one and not having him walk out like that.

you are correct...he missed up some HUGE accounts AND messed thm up when they were going public.

But that needed to be ADDRESSED.

He has also saved them on numerous occasions.

Look how Pete has been trying and FAILING miserably to imitate Don...

has so jealous and always felt so entitled (saw how he caught his father in law with a hooker and judged him and made PETE the bad guy!!!)

now he has nothing...that line from his wife hurt MY HEART:lol:

Unlike Roger and Pete he STILL has his family since he made up with Betty.

And its not like Roger didn't mess up that account too (but got back in power because of that stewardess, Joan too just 2 weeks back, Pete missed up Ford...

And Ted is such a scumbag...NOW you know why Don always hated him.

Shit...Bob Benson MAY HAVE gotten Pete's Mom murked by that Latino dude???

But I like this WHOLE season message...great work
 
'Mad Men': Matthew Weiner dishes on the season 6 finale

mad-men-jon-hamm-04_612x612.jpg


[SPOILER ALERT: Do not read until you have watched Sunday night's season finale of Mad Men.] When the penultimate season of Mad Men drew to a close, we witnessed the break of Don: Jon Hamm’s enigmatic ad exec snapped out of an alcohol-fueled haze of shame-spiraling and self-sabotage by deciding to get honest with himself and shine a light on his past, even if this dismantling of his inauthentic life might have very well cost him his job and his marriage. In the final moments of “In Care Of,” he brought his three children to a dicey part of town and showed them the rundown whorehouse where he spent his early years, and that’s how we would leave him (as late-60s hit “Both Sides, Now” played on): Down but not necessarily out, on the precipice of… hopey-changey stuff? Dare to dream for a year while we wait for the answer. Season 6 of the Madison Avenue drama, set largely in the tumultuous year of 1968, offered up trips to Hawaii and St. Mark’s Place, a slimmed-down Betty, an embarrassing upchuck into an umbrella stand, a thief posing as a grandmother, a conman posing as a corporate brownnoser, an affair-discovering Sally, a brief sexual reunion for Don and Betty, a merger with too many letters, a society in revolution, and a war on Ken Cosgrove and Abe Drexler, among other things. EW spoke with series creator/executive producer Matthew Weiner about the finale, season 6, and the final season, and your highlights follow in two shakes of Don’s hand.

On this season’s story for Don Draper:
“The story was about Don in crisis saying, ‘I don’t want to do this again,’ the idea of the society being in revolution, him trying to find a solution to his anxiety and the outside doesn’t look like the inside. It’s a simple thing but what is causing him to repeat this problem over and over and over again? His relationship with his downstairs neighbor (Sylvia, played by Linda Cardellini)—there’s so much self-destructive behavior. And what I really wanted to do was get him to a place where he would look himself in the mirror and see all those things about himself. When I brought this up in the writer’s room at the beginning of the season, everybody got this nauseous look on their faces. I mean, no one ever does that. Let’s see if we can make Don confront who he is.

The thing that happened with Sally (Kiernan Shipka) is the worst thing that ever happened to him. We learn about his childhood, we learn how he feels about sex, we learn about this shame that’s underneath a lot of this, and the idea was: Could you get him to the place that he would confess, even to the wrong people? We would hear him tell the story and it would be beautiful, and when that man says, “Weren’t you a lucky little boy,” you would know more than ever what this guy is dealing with. And there’s Ted (Kevin Rahm) in his life, as a double. Not that Ted is the best version of Don, he’s not a saint — but he seems to be more honest than Don, more at home with himself on some level. So that was what we tried to do — in the end, he would take a tiny step. And I know everybody thinks that the steps have to go somewhere, but the event of Don revealing to Sally and his children where he is from is an event in their life, and that look between the two of them – whether it’s the beginning of something or just that thing – a lot of us never have that with our parents. It’s a big moment for him to come clean.”

On the “purity” of Don’s motives in granting rival Ted his request and giving up his spot in California
“I wanted people to think that Don was giving up what he thought was his chance at happiness and that he was doing the right thing because he is a good man. And when Ted talked about his family, and he’s more explicit about it with Peggy (Elisabeth Moss), Don heard that and realized that he just couldn’t keep lying about all of this. He knew that Ted was right. And it is a sacrifice. We can see what Megan (Jessica Pare) means to him, and that’s in jeopardy. Here he is with his family at the end of the show. We really want to strip him away but for the best intentions, that he looked in the mirror and instead of seeing Ted there — this man that he hated — he knew what the right thing to do was.

On Don sabotaging Ted’s and Peggy’s work on the St. Joseph’s ad in episode 12
“Episode 12 is Don dealing with the shame of Sally catching him. And unlike most episodes, he starts and ends in the same place, in the fetal position. He doesn’t want anyone to be happy. He gave his word to Ted, and the minute he sees Peggy and Ted together at the movie theater, he goes back on it and brings in Sunkist. And then he ‘helps’ them by insinuating himself into this thing to destroy and embarrass and humiliate his enemy. To crush him. And I felt that was someone who had no control — the worst part of ourselves just acting out — and it’s obviously not very satisfying. But it’s the act of someone who is not willing to confront himself. Don has had some amazing creative work this season and although I think the audience sometimes takes their cue from how the clients feel, if they can look at it in the abstract, Don has pitched some amazing work that is very … it’s not faddist. Ted is more of a faddist, he’s more about the style of the times. And it is where advertising is going. But Don did not pay enough attention to advertising this year; he was too busy trying to destroy the person who was there to help him. (laughs)”

On Don choosing to confessing his past in the Hersey meeting and whether his line “If I had my way, you would never advertise,” was an expression of contempt for his industry
“His personal relationship with Hershey is something that I knew, and that the audience didn’t necessarily know. They knew when he was telling the truth because they’d seen his background. And what I wanted was for him to have that drink, and go in there and do what he always does, which was give a very convincing and beautiful speech about what it would mean to a person. It’s Don’s gift that he can create this persona and that it feels so personal, and that it was a lie and that Hershey doesn’t advertise and it is a form of self-hatred for him to say, ‘You don’t need someone like me, you shouldn’t advertise, you should stay pure.’ And that was definitely his relationship with the chocolate bar and his horrible childhood that he can’t undo.”

On the ramifications of Don being put on leave
“In the corporate world, being put on leave is as close to being fired as possible. People do come back from it, but it’s a really embarrassing and serious activity. And it’s their only recourse because he’s a partner.… As Don said when he ran away in season 2 to California and came back and there was all the mail on his desk: ‘The world goes on without us. There’s no reason to take it personally.’… Freddy Rumsen (Joel Murray) came back, and I’m not saying people don’t come back from that and you’ll have to watch, but that shot of him going down the steps and Peggy’s in his office and there’s a replacement coming in — he was fired.”

On this season’s increasingly frustrating Don Draper
“I think people are always frustrated with Don. And when Sally catches him they felt badly for him. I have no control over any of that. When the premiere episode ends with ‘I don’t want to do this anymore,’ they know there is change afoot or at least an attempt at change. And I hope that they are always shocked and excited about it. When you find out in “The Crash” that he is actually working on winning Sylvia back — and not Chevy the entire episode? That’s the great gift of having these writers and these actors to be able to tell a story like that. I want people to be interested in Don. I can’t define what is positive or negative about that because I do not judge him or any of the other characters.”

On a turning point for Don to realize that his children — especially Sally — need him
“What really worked for me was that phone call [where] Betty says, ‘She’s from a broken home,’ and Don’s shame at knowing that is not the whole problem. He’s trying to fix things. I think there’s just so much shame. And he can’t handle it anymore.”… The children are woven through the entire season as a point of attention that people should be paying attention to. [It's] the one thing they can control in their lives. And I don’t mean just controlling it. There is an opportunity to have peace, kindness, joy — maybe that is what is important, because the world is a mess, as Ted says.”

On whether Weiner is setting up a “Can Don redeem himself’ for the final season
“I’m not lying when I tell you all I have is an image for the very end of the show, and I really use everything that myself and the writers can think of for this season. We painted ourselves into a corner but I always want the season finale to feel like the end of the show. So, can Don redeem himself? I’m not going to say if that’s even an issue. But I hope people feel a sense of joy or hope at that last moment because that’s what the season was working toward. And I’m not kidding: That event in itself, just looking in the mirror and saying that is a big deal for that guy. And for any of us…. I live with each season as it is. I started this season saying, “We should save that,” ” We should save that,” “We should save that,” and Maria and Andre Jacquemetton basically had an intervention with me — they’re the executive producers, second-in-charge here. They’re like, “Why are you doing this different than you’ve done it before? You should just use everything and we’ll deal with it later.” And that’s what we did.

On Betty’s story this season
“Our plan was that Betty (January Jones) is trying, and she is happy in her marriage and she is growing a little bit. And as soon as Henry expressed his desire to run for office — she’s been in Weight Watchers at this point for a year — there was a kind of ‘uh-oh’ where she realized she had to do something about herself because she was going to be in the public eye. Did she learn something? I don’t know. Has she grown? I don’t know. The first line I came in with was where she says, ‘I have three children,’ when the guy says, ‘I want to be with you.’ And he says, ‘I don’t care,’ and she says ‘No, look at me. Can you believe I’ve had three children?’ What we were heading toward is that this is a woman who has maybe not learned as much as she should have. Children teach us more than we teach them, and I think you can feel that Betty is always trying, and part of what the premiere was about was her having her own crisis as she’s getting older — and of course her looks were not a factor in those scenes in the Village — with how she’s seen. I guess any moment of consciousness for her is interesting to the audience, but she’s a fascinating character to me…. She’s got her own issues — she wants Sally to go to that boarding school and you can tell she’s living vicariously though her. Anyone who has a 13-year-old girl recognizes what’s up with Sally, and that is an equalizing force that Betty cannot do anything about. And maybe she has learned something.”

On Peggy winding up without Ted — but in Don’s chair
“Peggy’s story this season was that she does not have any choices. She was forced to buy an apartment where she didn’t want to buy it. She’s in a relationship [with Abe, played by Charlie Hofheimer) without a wedding ring but it looks like it's going to have kids in it so she's interested in that. Then she's in this relationship with Ted she has no control over, she's forced to work in an agency -- it's like The Godfather, they keep pulling her back in. And what I wanted to say is it's definitely to feel gradual change. All of a sudden, you start one place and you end another. She's finding her way at the beginning of this season, her management style, and then it ends with her in a pants suit. Thank you, [costume designer] Janie Bryant, I was waiting for the right moment to do that, in a pantsuit. And she says to Stan (Jay R. Ferguson), ‘This is where everything is.’ And I think that is in a nutshell what’s going on in Peggy’s life. It’s not like there is no joy at all, but her work has become everything.”

On Pete’s decision not to expose Bob Benson
“Duck (Mark Moses) says ‘I’ve never seen this before,’ and Pete (Vincent Kartheiser) says, ‘I have.’ We’re expecting him to go in there with guns blazing and the fact is he learned something. And when he says ‘I’m off-limits,’ he means ‘Keep your hands to yourself. I don’t care if you love me, I don’t know what you’re up to, but I have learned something in these eight years, which is that I tried to go up against Don Draper and it was a mistake and ‘Im just going to submit.’ Unfortunately it doesn’t last very long (laughs), and we see that Bob is as formidable as Pete feared. But Bob Benson’s presence in this show — every character has their own story and God knows I’m so grateful that we found James Wolk and he just killed the part — but he was there to sort of show what was happening to Pete. Don’t forget, this season Pete had the affair with the woman on his street, and he lived very recklessly and even on the verge of the public offering and getting back together with Trudy (Alison Brie), the entire thing fell apart. And what an interesting thing for us to see if we could pull off this story where it seemed like Pete actually grew.”

On the twist that Pete was going to California (…with Ted?)

“Yes, that’s what it’s supposed to be. That’s one of those things where the writers were like, ‘We could waste screen time which we don’t have that much of, by seeing that decision get made, or just reveal that he’s going.’ Because the story is really about what Trudy says to him. He has nothing, he is free now, and Pete has this moment where he says ‘That’s not the way I wanted it,’ and she says ‘Well, now you know that.’ And you feel the sting of a guy who has irrevocably changed his life. But we saw with Pete in the past, he’s not scared of California, maybe it will be good for him. We know what New York means to him.”

On Megan finally standing up for herself
“She’s really the most modern character in the show. She’s an independent woman, she’s busy and she is with this very somewhat traditional man. We saw Don’s fantasy in California when he was on hashish, that he wants her to be pregnant and not working and excited about him being with other women. (laughs) She, like a modern woman, is really independent and interested in her career, and feels that he is distant. She knows something is wrong. And what we wanted to show was her evolving to the point where she can’t take any more of it, where she realizes that she is either, in the modern terms, enabling him or she loves him. And I think we can say at the end that he loves her and he knows how lucky he is to have her, but she is the sacrifice at that moment. And once her career is being affected, she is like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ And I think Jessica just killed that scene. Just being there watching her do that scene where she talks about the kids and how she identifies with the kids, you’re just like, ‘Of course.’ How great to have the blinders pulled off to some degree? I think she’s been tolerant of him, she knew he was drinking too much, she knew he was screwed up, she was trying to help him through it, but she really doesn’t know what is going on.”

On whether there will be any part of Ken (Aaron Staton) left at the end of the series
“He received the full Dick Cheney treatment. The story that we heard about working on a car account in Detroit, I mean, this is the mild version, that’s all I can say. I don’t know what their reaction has been to their treatment in the show, but there’s no one who has come up to me who was there and not said ‘You think that’s bad, let me tell ya…’ Ken is okay. He did not lose his eye. His foot heals and he’s got an eyepatch. If anybody could be helped by an eyepatch, he’s even more handsome than he was.

On his favorite weirdest theory he heard this season
“Bob Benson was Peggy’s baby come back from the future in a Terminator thing to illuminate and set things right. That was the most ingenious one. I hope what really happened in the show didn’t disappoint people — that’s not a vernacular we usually work in.

On approaching season 7
“It’s going to be a new experience for me and I’m as usual terrified and excited by it but I’m trying not to think about it for a couple weeks. I can tell you we will continue to make the show the way we always have but there’s extra stakes and extra pressure and an emotional process for myself and the writers who have been here.”
 
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