rigoriv
RigorIV
rigoriv

I hope you're right. I'd say 1970-maybe '71 would make the most sense with the primary theme of the show (how the 1960s turned 1950s America into 1970s America, more or less). Basically, that would be a way to get a taste of what these characters are in for heading into the real "modern" world. The shit hit the fan

You have the right to feel that. You have the right to be wrong.

The worst!

To be fair, that'd be a pretty big Risk for a studio.

We mutton be too hasty to disparage it!

pretty sure that was LBJ.

Ooo, good call. Now I'm wondering if there are others I took for granted to be period-appropriate…

Fair enough. Though one thing that just came to mind is that Pete is descended from a very (formerly) wealthy family, and what man from old money have you seen who wasn't bald? (Rhetorical question; I'm sure there are plenty, but the stereotype fits my argument conveniently)

Maybe? As I said above, I just got on the bandwagon a few months before Season 7 started, so anything that happened outside the show itself before that, I have no idea about

I dunno, ol' Archibald Whitman had a pretty solid head of hair on him. I don't think baldness is anything for Don to worry about.

**Lane Pryce removes spectacles, rolls up sleeves**

I only started watching Mad Men about a year and a half ago, so I missed out on most of the speculation that took place before season 7, but yeah, It's looking like that may be the case.

I can't say with certainty that this is true about ads for the show, but as far as I know within the show itself they haven't used music released after the time of the respective episode's setting. And "Love Hangover" is from 1976, so that's probably where they got that. I always kinda thought the show would end at

Did you know the original title for War and Peace was Deceased Celebrities' Memorabilia, What is it Good For?

Hear, hear. I've tried both on multiple occasions, and it never, ever works.

I just read this in the voice of Murray Hewitt.

Zoinks!

absolutely. There's nothing bad about it, per se, but it lacks almost all of the…whatever it is that every other Beck album has, however different they all may be. That being said, I do love "Soul of a Man"

This beloved children's book author has this one weird trick for saving lives, and Jenny McCarthy hates him!!!

I wonder when it's slated to premiere?