tomshipley--disqus
tomshipley
tomshipley--disqus

So annoying that Harrison references its annoyingness in a song on the same album: "what's sweet now turns so sour/we all know Ob La Di Ob La Da…"

I kind of like Old Brown Shoe, mainly because I have a peculiar fondness for the line "I want a short haired girl who sometimes where's it twice as long."

In his defense, the finale is a bit maudlin.

The problem with this list is that it's not a sincere attempt to list the beatles most skippable tracks, not when they choose Let It Be over tracks like Love To You or Little Child. And I Am The Walrus is chosen over I Me Mine or I'm Happy Just to Dance With You.

No Reply will never be skippable in any plane of existence that I currently occupy. Just for the bridge alone.

Yeah, I was kind of thinking that.

That's your answer for everything.

Actually, the full title is "U Never Give Me Ur Money, LOLZ"

And don't forget "Hey Bulldog" for H.

And "Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" would be on it.

"Most-skippable" would make a more interesting list.

I was hoping he landed a gig writing for Night Gallery.

I think that's half true. You're ignoring his "epiphany" in the new-age support group thing. I think he did grow as a person and may have found some sort of peace within himself that will allow him to be happy both at work and outside of it.

I agree. I think it's just one last Roger joke.

Ah, well there you go.

I think it fits the show. Mad Men has always had big developments happen quickly, especially in season finales. The difference here is that there were just more of them. The great thing about Mad Men is that you could see a seaon 8 picking up these threads. The only difference is that the Coke ad at the end jumps

She was married prior to the series beginning. It's briefly alluded to early on.

The other reason i think Don came up with the ad is that it's so "him." Throughout this episode, season and series, Don has tried to make other people happy by giving them money (his "last fling" at the beginning of the episode, Megan and the million dollars).

I think the little "yoga" ding bell strongly suggests a moment of inspiration for Don that ends up being the Coke commercial.

I love how the final few episodes end up being Don's rebuttal to the Miller research guy. The latter gave a vague, cliched description of a "very specific" middle American male, most likely gleaned from lazy phone interviews.