morefoolme
The Fool
morefoolme

Hah!

He only got dibs on that nickname because most 15/16 year old stoners can't even poke a hole in a plastic bottle correctly, let alone roll.

All the reluctant smiles are contrasted pretty heavily with Peggy and Ted's middle-school shenanigans, which dominate so many scenes they honestly annoyed me, and I LOVE seeing Peggy happy. So much better than those "EMMY PLEASE" moments like discovering Don&Ted's merger or acknowledging how shitty her relationship

Given how emotionally stunted Betty is, I'd say that's the moment Sally becomes equally mature to her mother.

After losing in a direct confrontation with Don, Pete realizes his only weapon against frauds with nothing to lose is his own status and position in the company.

Don: *Drinking coffee* "What's in this, anyway?"

Despite all the arguments over Sally's inherent "rightness" in her situation, I think the scene was effective in showing her ability to be manipulative as well as her receptiveness to Glen's honest, protective actions.  Given how divided viewers seem, I'd say the show intended the conflict to be ambiguous and for

Was that the first time we saw the finished product of Megan's fake twin portrayal?

I think the dislike of Glen stems from how unappealing his "default" face is, especially when he's in frame but not the focus, so he's just making this 'blah' expression in the distance.

I thought the most telling part of the Pete/Ken scene (other than Ken eluding death) was Pete's offer to take over the account.  At first, it seems like Pete is using the empathy that separates him from so many of his coworkers to discern that Ken is quite shaken, maybe to the point of giving up his job or entire