Don sees… dead people!
Don sees… dead people!
Do it. Walk out. Just make certain to use the Peggy strut and dangle a cigarette from your mouth when you do. We shall all be with you in spirit.
Add some avocado green and copper orange and we enter the Brady Bunch Zone.
I must admit, it was nice to see Roger, in a way that only he can, pass along something useful and empowering to Peggy.
That coffee scene should make us all get down on our knees and be thankful for microwave ovens
Now we know that Roger can not only juggle, but he can also play the organ. If he leaves advertising all together, we know that he can create a new life for himself as a reasonably decent street performer.
Her inner confidence blooms just as her new peer acceptance goes indifferent. I hadn't picked up on that. You're right.
Next time I come across a garden snail in my front yard, I'll be a little friendlier.
Roger knows about Don/Dick's poor upbringing, but I don't think he knows about the identity switch.
I will never look at an octopus or other mollusk the same way again.
My question is, could you really train an octopus to do that?
Maybe that's why Miss Blankenship was known as the "Queen of perversions."
Now that's a thought hard to wipe from my head. A naked Cooper, sitting alone in his office, testicle-free and staring at the cunnilingus mollusk.
Didn't AMC lower the show's budget? Maybe it was a way to lower set design costs. (I'm only kidding, of course)
We had the same chair at our house. A matching sofa as well.
At some point in the series, couldn't Roger be identified as being mad to live, Pete as being mad to talk, and Peggy as mad to be saved? All three have demonstrated a desire for many things at the same time.
With that scene, Jon Hamm will finally win the Emmy that has eluded him.
It's barely the dawn of the 70's. Hideous outfits are sadly destined to be everybody's future for the next few years.
Going from being raised in one to marketing and owning one.
According to GQ, Jon Hamm has been the actor to know about the ending the longest. He referred to it as being "very poetic."