floretta--disqus
Floretta
floretta--disqus

I suspect there was some alcohol involved and also this is not a new opinion and they simply do not care who knows how they feel. Their father's generation, yes, would never publicly act out like that even when less than sober. But the social mores have slipped since WWI even as their sense of entitlement has not.

But first disinherit them both and put them on a teeny tiny allowance so they will either have to actually work for a living or perpetually sponge off friends (if they have any) and whatever relatives will put up with them.

More likely the moon landing of July 20.

IBM = I've Been Moved was the joke I remember hearing when I was in college in Westchester County 1969-1973. IBM was a massive presence literally and financially at the time.

Sally is just about 15 now (her birthday is in June?) so that's about the right attitude for her at that age and given their history. Sally is very intelligent and somewhat more worldly than her age peers in small town America of this era but not by much. Having raised one child of each gender, Sally's backtalk is

Matt Weiner said no, there were never any incestuous issues between Betty and her father, current or past. It was his dementia that caused his confusion between Betty and his late (not current) wife whom she resembled. Betty and her mother however had serious issues re: appearance and Betty's place in the world.

Nope, Matt Weiner said that was not the case when speculation ran high about Grandpa Gene. It was merely his mental confusion and early dementia that had him thinking at one point Betty was his late wife and not his daughter. MW said there was never any molesting by Dad.

Only one problem with that - Bert still has info he can use against Don, the stolen identity. He used it once before to force Don into signing a contract and could easily try that again to force him out. Don needs legal assistance now to settle the matter quietly before "Dick Whitman" comes up - so he can tell Cooper

The thing about music in the 1960s is the VARIETY, all channeled to one place, radio. It hadn't yet devolved into specialized stations beyond "country" and everything else, and even then there was some cross-over. So everybody listened to the weekly Top 40 which could have everything from Iron Butterfly to Johnny Cash

"Is that hip enough for ya?"

By this point ECT was used far less frequently, and there were drug treatments that had been found useful like chlorpromazine.

And grilled cheese - and Sally probably taught her how to do that.

Didn't they use that office to put in the connecting staircase?

Maybe not so much. He may have enough time there to make waves (the good kind again) and if he's terminated, so is the non-compete clause and he can wreak havoc on SC&P from the outside with another company, or freelancing like Freddy.

It's Anna's place at the beach. He could be himself there, accepted as is, and loved. It is the only place we've ever seen him even remotely at peace. I still hope he buys the place back, or finds one like it (in Malibu?) and spends his days watching the kids learn to surf, and himself working on vintage cars,

I would not be surprised if Don consults with his own attorney on his legal options/contract or labor law about these stipulations. I feel one heckuva lawsuit in the wind. BUT he needs to legally clear up the Draper/Whitman business with the DoD because ol' Coop would not hesitate to pull that info out of his back

Microsoft is closer in time, 1975 when Bill Gates and Paul Allen started the company. Apple incorporated on January 3 1977. Not sure if Harry is aesthetically attuned to Apple and "personal" computing. His experience is with business uses, hence MSFT and Windows are more likely.

"Model Shop" 1969. From the New York Times review: "…specifically, the movie covers 24 hours in the life of a disenchanted young man (Gary Lockwood), whose affair with a staggeringly dense, would-be actress (Alexandra Hay) is breaking up. He meets Miss [Anouk] Aimée, falls in love with her, and after much coffee house

Not for the first time said by Roger then retracted almost immediately afterward. Imagine the chaos when Harry's clients call looking for the information he provides - and nobody else in the entire company has a clue what to tell them or how to find out. I worked for a company once that had its own in-house IT

Wasn't the entire phrase "no drinking in the office except for client set ups"?