Waterloo was so good that it could have been the series finale. I can't even imagine what they have up their sleeves for the actual finale.
Waterloo was so good that it could have been the series finale. I can't even imagine what they have up their sleeves for the actual finale.
The first tweet that I saw last night was someone saying that Mad Men had jumped the shark. I've been around long enough to know not to even engage in that sort of idiocy.
And my world ceases to change one bit in spite of it.
I thought that either Peggy's mother or sister was raising the baby. I could be wrong though.
Don Draper would not have approved.This is Lou all the way. Scout's honor!
A Hollywood exec was overheard saying, "Sure, those other studios may have the rights to Carrie, It and The Shining…but we have Gerald's Game!"
If it makes you feel better, I don't even remember that scene. But then again, I read SOS when it was released on hardback, so I barely remember anything aside from the major plot points.
I've never heard of it, I thought it was a West Coast thing. We had McDs, Burger King, Geno's (which left and then came back), but no Burger Chef.
"Everything ends! Except not really, because this decision to split the season in two is really weird!"
"What a little prick that guy is! [TV]"
Pitchfork gave this a 9.2, which is way better than a 9.1, but sadly, it's no 9.3. Disappointed!
News Flash: IG-88 will not appear in Star Wars VII!
Leftover Kubrick reference from last week: Ginsberg reading Cutler's and Lou's lips 2001-style was priceless!
Cue Fan Outrage….GO!
I think that Roger is more of an enabler. He starts to offer Don a drink even though it might get him fired.
After reading some Mad Men reviews at other sites, I'm really appreciating the quality of the both the AV Club reviewers and commentators.
All this video did was make me want to go home and watch the entire run of Mad Men again.
I would go see a movie called "All You Need is Kill", but not a movie called Edge of Tomorrow. Leave it to Hollywood to take an awesome title, run it through the Gereric-ization machine, and come out with a something truly forgettable.
"A group of young environmental extremists (played by Jesse Eisenberg,"
Mrs. Doubtfire is actually a man, by the way.