avclub-68e2d80b9b9b5fb87b80f88eff74eece--disqus
Troll-LookingFucker
avclub-68e2d80b9b9b5fb87b80f88eff74eece--disqus

Randy Quaid was in 'Moving' with Stacey Dash, who co-starred with Brittany Murphy in 'Clueless'.  STARWHACKERS?!?!?!

Don't forget her performance as the love interest of Eminem in the film '8 Mile'.

I was thinking exactly the same thing as I read this newswire piece.

also:

Heck Yes!  It would have a killer soundtrack!

Three generations blowing Roger, under one roof?

Gene's like the younger Soprano sibling who shows up intermittedly.

Innovative work, sadly, doesn't 'keep the lights on'.  After losing the Lucky Strike account last season, the wheels started to fall off the firm and clients started to abandon them (notice how Don trashes his Clio award after Glo-Coat quits), so I guess now they have to be more receptive to what their clients want,

SCDP should not be too upset about not getting the Dow business from Ken's father-in-law, as it would backfire on their 'ethical stance' when Agent Orange and Napalm start raining down on Vietnam. Not all clients read the New York Times and would be oblivious to the 'quitting tobacco' ad, as they are from other

If they do take Mad Men up to the present day, I want to see Roger outlive the rest of them in and residing old folks home, physically and mentally sharp as a tack, throwing out witty one-liners to the hired help and hitting on sixty-five year old women.  Implausible, sure, but awesome nonethelesss.

Old habits die hard for an ol' skirt chaser like Roger, as he says "Don’t you love the chase? Sometimes it doesn’t work out, those are the stakes. But when it does work out, it’s like having that first cigarette: Head gets all dizzy, your heart pounds, knees go weak. Remember that? Old business is just old business."

I saw parallels between Abe and Peggy and Megan's mother and father.  Abe and Megan's father are both very vocal, self-righteous leftists and when they have an argument with their respective spouses, those spouses go away and sexually pleasure random strangers in public places.

I am assuming that the radio announcer was referring to September 1965, as that particular scene was a flashback to season four where Don, Megan, and Don's kids have just returned from California, just prior to Don proposing to Megan.

Given his resentment of Don's role as an 'agent of capitalism', his material wealth and career success, Emile's 'legs' remarks comes off as really spiteful, especially as it was said while Sally was still in the room.

Post-LSD trip Roger is willing to scheme and flatter in order to win friends, influence people and get fellatio, rather than lazily throwing cash around.

'But there's a handsome prince……nah!'

Why Cooper came back seems largely irrelevant, considering he has a diminished role in the day-to-day business.  But just as Lane Pryce told the Jaguar man in the last episode 'My name is on the door', I speculate that Cooper shares this sentiment.  Cooper, whatever function he has now, still has a stake in the

I thought he was addressing the professor at the party in a disparaging way by calling him Timothy Leary, in that Roger thought he was a middle-age intellectual trying to be hip by dropping acid, just like Timothy Leary.

Or his depression-era flame?  That woman from last season who had the Pet Food Company.  Then again, she did seem kind of pathetic.

Exactly.  It echoed the pitch Don did last season to the two prudes from the swimsuit company.  When Don saw they were inflexible and resistant to his innovative ad ideas, he promptly threw them out.