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

Well there were industrial chimineys in the background, which suggest it was in a polluted industrial waste part of town not fit for human habitation, rather than a nice tree-lined suburb.  It's the 1960s, urban centres in the US were still reeling from 'white-flight' to the suburbs, and too early in time for urban

Personally I would put 5 ahead of 4, otherwise I'd agree with you.

@avclub-7ee8e2fdc6652f2351e0bf3cd9a1a4be:disqus Don dumped Jaguar, but they quickly picked up Chevy, so the final result was a win all around, and Joan did not have to suffer through any random visits from that fat creep from Jersey.

The Ted-Peggy scenario reminded me of the Roger-Joan scenario in season one, the mutual affection, 'sneaking around', man talking about leaving his wife, the woman being trapped like a 'bird in cage' and the termination of the relationship, with the man going back to his wife.

You mean that narcissistic overpaid high school dropout with a messiah complex and a ridiculously hot pole-dancing girlfriend who he ditched in order to commit some Rosenberg-level treason who won't be born for another fifteen years?  Well that makes sense.

True, Pete fobbing off the guy who he had on speakerphone right before the guy was going to give him and his brother a figure for bringing their mother's supposed killer to justice seemed like a casually spiteful but totally plausible thing to do, given the Campbell family's tightfisted nature and misanthropic

So you could say that Don had 'A snowball's chance in hell'.

Except what was he doing outside a dilapidated house in industrial wasteland Pennsylvania?  I would have expected him to be frolicking on the beach in the background during PFC Dinkins's wedding ceremony in the first episode of this season.

"Trains, Planes, and Cruise Ships".

I like to think that Don cleans up his own act, and regains his position at the top of the food chain at SC&P, while a concluding montage plays to the sound of this: http://www.youtube.com/watc…

It was a glorious act of catharsis, relieving the burden of many years of living a lie and covering up his torturous upbringing, but yes, it was also an act of professional self-immolation.

To his credit, he knew how to stick it to Pete Campbell with the Camaro incident. Well played I say.

Chauncey's dream?

You could call it 'Fifty Shades of Grey-Flanneled Suit"

Do they serve Paella and Sangria also?

He's the one who got sent home from summer camp, right?

Dr Lyle Evans says hello!

and when these photos are posted on Facebook, they will be accompanied by several hundred comments lacking in both quality and mercy.

Irish tax loophole??

Yeah, he just lost the plot and self-destructed.  Even his funeral was a punch-line delivered at his expense.