Showing posts with label Alexis Bledel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alexis Bledel. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

MAD MEN Partners' Meeting - "The Phantom"

Welcome to the Mad Men Partners' Meeting -- a roundtable discussion of this week's episode from your friendly neighborhood LowBrowMedia savants.
This is a spoiler-heavy zone. You have been warned.



airdate: June 10th, 2012

Mark: Damn. Well, Jon and Mike, I guess we have an answer for you regarding Don’s place on the spectrum of Goodness. With the final scene of season 5, Weiner seems to suggest that Don is getting back to his old tricks, and that the flashes of a compassionate, supportive and emotionally available Don Draper that we got over the last 13 episodes were not signs of an evolved cad but rather part of a larger routine of selfishness that keeps perpetuating itself over and over again. There have been suggestions here and there that Don had once been as loving and present with Betty as we have seen him with Megan, and it was only when Betty gave up her career in order to embody the picture perfect housewife stereotype that Don both demands and despises in equal measure that their relationship started to sour. Megan striking out on her own as an actress seemed to threaten Don, but when Megan lowered herself to ask Don for a part in a commercial, her dependence on him was almost a worse fate. Don doesn’t know what he wants. He wants the dream, the excitement and possibility and glamour promised by the campaigns he, Peggy, Stan and Ginsberg dream up. But life is always messy. It’s the same with Peggy as with Megan. Don wants Peggy there, he wants to mentor her and nurture her creativity, but the minute she challenges him or threatens to surpass him, she’s a stranger. Now that Megan is “just somebody’s wife”, she has compromised herself, like Joan with Mr. Jaguar, and tarnished the perfect veneer that Don craves. This is certainly not the final nail in the Don-Megan marriage, it’s more like the first trip to the hardware store to buy nails. And while I hoped Don and Megan would build something nice with those nails - like a birdhouse or a garden shed - I’m afraid it is going to be just another coffin, as the saying goes.


This was all very upsetting, but I have to say I was a little taken aback with overt nature in which a lot of this stuff was presented and explored in the script and through Weiner’s direction. Usually this show is a little more elegant in its treatment of symbolism and subtext. Many times in “The Phantom” I felt as though I was being hit over the head with Weiner’s laptop, and as a result the finale was a little dissatisfying for me. It’s fun to speculate on what is going on under the surface with Don, what impulses and fears are guiding his actions, and to be able to draw your own conclusion that there is a void within Don that can’t be filled. It’s not quite as fun to be told point black that Don has a big, rotting symbolic tooth that he tries to ignore and convince himself will go away but that is causing him incredible pain. Sounds a lot like all of those pesky emotions the characters are repressing all the time. Furthermore, I suppose leaving us on a bit of a lingering note was better than cutting straight to Don having a threesome with the two girls from the bar, but do we have to have Don go straight from the commercial set to picking up chicks? The season has been building Don up very deliberately all season, to knock it all back down so quickly felt a little uneven. However, I will say that the shot of him walking off of the soundstage and into a pitch black void of negative space was a striking image, and half-way subtle in its symbolism. Half-way.


There were some pretty on-the-nose moments, too, in the story of Pete Campbell, the saddest little boy in the world. The whole thing with Alexis Bledel and Pete’s train buddy being such an over-the-top monster is pretty brutal. I don’t doubt that things like this happened in those days, but having this guy go so far as to force his wife into electroshock therapy so that he can carry on cheating on her and keeping her as essentially an indentured servant? Villains are all well and good, even necessary in good fiction, but maybe they could have given this guy some shading. And Pete’s grand speech to an amnesiac Bledel about his “friend”, while very well-acted and certainly moving, was another case of Mad Men telling and not showing. Great dialogue, great performances, but let us do some work as viewers, you know? Am I crazy? This episode just seemed out of character for a show that pretty much shows everything and tells next to nothing. Pete getting knocked around never gets less funny/sad, though. It all just ended on such a note of defeat. Even as Sterling Cooper Draper... Campbell? expands to a new floor and new possibilities, the partners seem mostly burnt out. Even Roger’s LSD enlightenment seems to have worn off. Or has it? I know not to come to Mad Men to be uplifted, but whereas previous seasons have gone out with a big push forward (“Shut the Door. Have a Seat.”), this finale just seemed to signal decay.


What do you guys think? Am I being a crabapple? A stick in the mud? A grouchypants? A complete and utter moron who should be taken out into the street and shot? Did I miss something? Did Weiner stick the landing? Am I just grumpy because this finale featured zero Sally Draper? What’s the verdict on the season overall?

Jon: Mark, you certainly aren't alone in your displeasure of the season 5 finale among Mad Men internet fandom. And I don't blame you for feeling that way, because not a whole lot happened in this episode when it came down to it, which gave me fits when trying to assess it. Usually I try to stay away from the pundits until after having written my peace on the episode in question, but this week I couldn't. "The Phantom" was a tricky bastard to write about. However, I think expressing too much disappointment in it overlooks how much crazy shit went down in the two preceding episodes. I mean, between Joan becoming partner, Peggy's departure the SCDP and Lane's suicide, we haven't exactly been short on monumental shifts in the show's dynamic. Now, that said, big goings on in previous episodes do not make this a good finale. As finales go, it was on the weaksauce side. But I began to appreciate "The Phantom" a bit more when placed it in context of the entire fifth season, and while it's far from a season highlight, it caps off a couple of storylines we've been following over the last 13 episodes.

In my mind, "The Phantom" serves as a sly intro to season 6 as much as it was a capper to season 5. There are constant hints of Lane's void, from his empty office and conference room chair to Joan's sudden transition into the financial prude (because someone has to bloody do it). I think it was smart to tackle this now; they'd have to address it eventually, and showing us the group mourning and moving on in their individual and collective ways while the audience is still coping with a world without Lane Pryce gets that unpleasant but important business out of the way instead of months from now when the show returns. Also, they're expanding! Man, that gorgeous shot of the five partners gazing out from what will become the second floor of SCDP (or whatever they end up calling it post-Lane), does anything point to a triumphant future more than that? Gets you pumped up for next season already. But before I get too far ahead of myself, there a couple of other matters to wrap up.

Plotwise, we get the conclusion to Pete's doomed tryst with Beth and Megan's first acting job since leaving the advertising game. Mark, you totally nailed it by pointing out how overt Weiner and company was with their intentions this time around. And no moment was more explicit than Pete's admission of the chronic unhappiness of his "friend" to Beth in her hospital room, now devoid of any memory of their brief affair, so extreme that he comes to the conclusion that "life with his family was some temporary bandage on a permanent wound." I mean... damn. That's harsh, bro. I too would've preferred the show's usual elegance in delivering such a message, but at least it all let him getting his bitch-ass face decked again this year, not once but twice in a span of two minutes!

Now let's talk about Megan's latest acting defeat. Things have gotten continuously worse for her prospects at work, and we get a literal explanation from her mother for the episode's title as Megan chases the phantom of her dreams. I was a little surprised she reduced herself to stealing her friend's idea to get Don to pull strings to cast her in a commercial. We've never seen her so petty before. And his initial reaction was the appropriate one to me, but Megan really is just that desperate to take the next step in her career that she'd ask this of him. We know she can turn on the magic in a moment of inspired desperation, like the Heinz dinner when she and Don salvaged the account at the last moment, but really we have no idea if she's actually any good at acting. Every moment we've glimpsed of her acting has been part of a montage, spinning around at a casting call, or a silent film reel. But that reel did its job, because it sold Don. If his marriage to Betty disintegrated when she stopped modelling and became a suburban housewife, one has to wonder if helping Megan jumpstart her acting career will allow their marriage to strengthen or just push them to the same fate. After all, as Megan Calvet, the actress, her double life has now begun. And Don, as Nancy Sinatra reminds us, is no stranger to living twice. Can they make it work? I guess that all depends on whether or not Don decided to take up the two girls at the bar up on their offer in the closing seconds of the episode. Many online people assume he'll steal a few moments away with them, but I'm not yet convinced. Guess we'll have to wait until next season. Hopefully it won't be another 18 months like last time!



One final comment -- will this be the last we see of Ms. Olson, smiling in her Richmond hotel room in spite of the fornicating dogs outside her window? I doubt it, but I fear now that she's left SCDP, she could be regulated to guest-character status, much like Betty was this year. Sure, January Jones' real-life pregnancy may have forced Weiner's hand in that matter, but if you're not in Don Draper's inner circle in some capacity, you're not likely to get any screen time on Mad Men (unless I'm forgetting about someone). Anyway, hit us up with your thoughts, Mike!

Mike: A controversial episode, to be sure!  Like you both, I'm definitely questioning my responses a little bit to the finale here.  I've heard the "too on-the-nose" criticism about this from a bunch of different outlets, and you know what?  Sometimes a toothache is just a "hot tooth".  Sometimes seeing a vision everywhere of your brother who killed himself after being rejected by you, immediately following an arguably comparable situation with a co-worker is just... well, you get the idea.  In this case, though, could it be that Weiner and company don't trust us to figure it out?  Or are we, as fans and armchair critics, just getting too good at picking apart the stories?  Or, as a vocal minority have opined, have Weiner and the writing staff simply shifted their style to match the more loud, blatant, and unsubtle '60s?  I think that's a terrible theory myself, in that it is essentially stating that they wrote things poorly on purpose.  It couldn't be further from the truth, since in my opinion at least, "Mad Men" has been and is still a showcase for some very fine writing.

Yet, consider the opposite for a moment.  Is it possible that, despite an otherwise master-class performance this season (and, let's face it -- every season up until this point) they simply dropped the ball on this one and erred on the side of telling and not showing?  Sure, it's not outside of the realm of possibility.  But if that is the case, what happened to their quality control?  Is Matthew Weiner's hubris and white-knuckle grip on the steering wheel so great that nobody else on the staff would say something when his metaphors are getting a little too obvious on a finale, from which he's got to know that critics and viewers, detractors and fans alike, are expecting so much?

I, too, felt let down and a little disappointed at the end of this episode.  But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the answers to its puzzles aren't quite as cut-and-dry as they first appeared. My initial response was based on expectations for some kind of huge revelation or turnaround like the third-season finale.  When I started to try to understand the episode on its own terms, outside of what I thought I wanted it to be like, I started liking it a whole lot more.

I'm still in the process of trying to find a way to look at this episode that still trusts that the series creators know what they're doing.  While I'm probably giving it a little too much credit, there's actually a lot to like about this episode.  There were all sorts of small rewards, nuances and charater revelations about every one of our favorite characters here.  The explosive scene between the widow Pryce and Don was, well, dynamite.  Even the (possible) final appearance of Peggy was heartwarming and a little sad.  The callbacks to previous seasons, what with Adam Whitman's ghostly reappearances, and Pete's outright vocalization about what's been eating him this entire time, well -- I'll be honest, I didn't have a huge problem with those scenes. What I'm trying to say here is, if this was a lesser episode of the fifth season, perhaps it's only in retrospect because of the high points so many of the other episodes reached.

Much has been made of the HBO dramatic series model (cross-reference: "The Sopranos" and "The Wire", especially) wherein episode 12 of the 13-episode season is where the climax of the season arc hits, and then traditionally the final episode is a denouement of sorts.  Since the creator of the show has that sort of pedigree, it's not surprising that, like Jon mentioned above, this finale was more of a lead-in for the next season than an exciting conclusion to the swingin'-from-the-rafters (yeah, I said it) roller-coaster ride that was Lane's final downfall and suicide in the penultimate episode.

You guys have already covered a lot of what happened in the show, and done a great job picking it apart. What I want to look at mainly is what this last episode is trying to say about Don. This whole season, I was expecting the very worst from him.  Despite some quite conspicuous flare-ups of "old Don," what we've seen until this episode is a man trying to be better than his instincts, even going against them in the name of love, and experiencing a lot of joy but also a lot of disappointment as well.  What is different between my interpretation of the final scenes in this episode and the consensus opinion seems to be that I don't believe Don has made up his mind yet about what he is going to do.  Yes, he is clearly disappointed in Megan's betrayal of his principles that he surely thought she had shared.  Yes, when he reached a kind of breaking point like this in his relationship with Betty, that is undoubtedly when the death knell for their relationship was first sounded.  But "new Don" has shown us time and time again this season that he has, at the very least, been attempting to learn from his mistakes.

As Don watched Megan's reel being projected onto the screen, I didn't feel like he was disgusted by her or what she was about to have him do.  I definitely sensed his admiration, tempered with more than a touch of sadness.  This expression, I propose, is not that of a man who has given up on his wife -- at least, not yet:

I mean, were we supposed to think Megan's rejected audition film was awful? I'm going to put myself out there and say that even though it may have lessened his regard for her a bit, Don submitted Megan's film for the audition process because he saw something there.  I did, too!  And then, it seems, so did the clients, since they ended up picking her for the part after all.  Megan's mercenary and disloyal tactics aside, she really looked the part in the tiny fragment of the commercial that we glimpsed.

Don may or may not have learned from his loss of Peggy and the slip of at least the initial iteration of his relationship with Megan through his fingers.  Seasons six and (I hope) seven are going to fill us in on that, I'm sure.  As for whether Don stays faithful to his wife when propositioned by an attractive female at the very end, I think that still remains to be seen.  As much as others have complained that they were spoon-fed information this episode and even a few before it, this episode's end did not provide a clear answer.  I think it goes without saying that Don was feeling a bit lonely, but did that mean that he truly was in fact alone?  Was that an innocent yet regretful smirk on his face, or the hum of the ol' charm engine getting started after a brief hibernation?

Dramatically, it probably makes more sense that Don would start to delve into his darker nature again. But as I've said before here, "Mad Men" for me has always been a show that swerves in another direction whenever I think it's going to head a certain way.  I'm crossing my fingers that Don doesn't take that path again, because there aren't a whole lot of terribly interesting storylines I can think of down that particular rabbit hole that haven't been explored already.  That said, I would certainly relish the opportunity to be proven wrong!

In conclusion, I'll just say this: to say I loved this season of television would be an understatement.  Nobody wants to see the quality of a favorite show go downhill, but I really think that we are all being a little over-sensitive on this one.  I'll agree that this was not my favorite episode of the season, but in the greater mosaic of what they're trying to do here, I think it will be an important piece.  Of what, only time, and the impending end of the series a few years out, will tell.

(P.S. Thanks to Jon and Mark for keeping this thing going all season long, even when I flaked out towards the end a little.  Great work, everyone involved.)

---------------------------
See you in season 6!


Previously:
Episodes 1 & 2 - "A Little Kiss"
Episode 3 - "Tea Leaves"
Episode 4 - "Mystery Date"
Episode 5 - "Signal 30"
Episode 6 - "Far Away Places"
Episode 7 - "At The Codfish Ball"
Episode 8 - "Lady Lazarus"
Episode 9 - "Dark Shadows"
Episode 10 - "Christmas Waltz"
Episodes 11 & 12 - "The Other Woman" & "Commissions and Fees"

Monday, May 14, 2012

MAD MEN Partners' Meeting - "Lady Lazarus"

Welcome to the Mad Men Partners' Meeting -- a roundtable discussion of this week's episode from your friendly neighborhood LowBrowMedia savants.
This is a spoiler-heavy zone. You have been warned.



airdate: May 6th, 2012

Jon: Welcome back, everybody. This week brought us an episode I really enjoyed for a bunch of different reasons, but kinda feels like it'll be one of those that becomes more obvious what it was doing once we wrap of season 5. That makes it a little tricky to review, but we'll attempt it anyway.

We begin with Pete's insurance salesman friend from the train, Howard, who hasn't been brought up much in our discussions here, but has consistently affirmed my initial suspicions of his being a complete ass-clown in his brief appearances this season. He's so repugnant in his boasts of infidelity, even Pete, who's hardly offended by such behavior, is disgusted by him. Later in the episode we're introduced to Howard's wife, Beth -- played by Rory Gilmore! -- who is stranded at the train station. Pete gives her a ride home, and during their car ride, Pete all but confirms her suspicions regarding her husband's whereabouts. Pete follows her into the house, in part out of concern for her well being but mostly because he seems to want to lie about his lying to her, which rather abruptly escalates into a tryst in Howard's living room. He instantly becomes smitten with her, but for her it was one and done. But if we've learned anything on Mad Men over the years, it's Peter Campbell wants what he doesn't already, or can't, have. Unfortunately for him, Beth may be even less emotionally developed than Betty. Despite all his pursuits of her thereafter -- a midday phone call, a surprise visit to her home, a hotel room reservation -- she does little more than brush him off each time only to tease him enough in the process to goad him into trying again. Judging by her final message at the close of the episode, I doubt we've seen the last of Beth or Pete's chasing after her.


But the biggest event this week was Megan's departure from Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce to go back to an actress full time. Picking up where Mike left off last week, it really is a shame Megan doesn't enjoy working in advertising the way the rest of the folks at SCDP do. She's absolutely brilliant at it, as we saw during the Heinz dinner in "At The Codfish Ball." But that's probably because she's an exceptional actress when she has to be, and as we were shown by her father's scolding and her obvious unfulfillment after that wonderful Heinz deal closure, this is not what she wants to do with her life. I don't think she's playing a part when it comes to her and Don. I think they both genuinely love each other. That said, Don was certainly more enthralled to have her eating clients alive by his side, so we'll see if he falls into the same indifference with Megan as he did with Betty, which Joan kindly reminds us of. At the end of the day Don wants her to be happy (or at least he tells Roger as much), so maybe he just needs a little time to process it. But would anyone be surprised that this is what drives them apart?

Ultimately, this is just the latest example from this season of Don's resistance to change with those turbulent 60s swirling around him. While Megan has spent her first days away from SCDP cooking barefoot while enjoying the latest and most experimental album yet from The Beatles, Don has been trying to find an acceptable Beatles knock-off group so they can make their latest client happy. (Sidenote - I take a bit of issue with the inclusion of The Zombies with the other bands mentioned, only because their wonderful album Odessey and Oracle is hardly one-hit wonder fodder. But, to be fair, that album wouldn't see release for nearly another year after the events of  "Lady Lazarus." So because "She's Not There" and "Tell Her No" were their only hits of note to that point, they must have seemed as just another group riding the Fab Four's coattails in the summer of 1966. Also, AMC seems to be doing okay with that whole zombie thing lately, so maybe they were name-dropped for promo-spot purposes.) In the middle of the episode, a perplexed Don asks Megan, "When did music become so important?" From her point of view it's always been important, but Don has only ever seen it as an advertising tool, not an art form.


For me, the best part of this episode was the prevalence of music, particularly the inclusion of my favorite Beatles album, Revolver. I'm a massive Beatles nerd, becoming obsessed with them in junior high when all the Anthology stuff was coming out, and proceeded to get my hands on all their albums while devouring a number of biographies. That the earlier part of "Lady Lazarus" was spent by Stan, Ginsberg and Ken finding a song to replicate their A Hard Day's Night era sound, The Beatles themselves had already abandoned the sound that made them famous before becoming stale, which would eventually elevate them to the iconic experimental and inventive songwriters we now recognize them as.

It's curious that Megan would direct Don to listen to "Tomorrow Never Knows" first. Not only is it the final track on side two, it's probably the least likely cut off the album he'd enjoy (that or George Harrison's "Love To You," a droning sitar number). Obviously he didn't have the patience to finish it.

I gave Revolver a listen this week while thinking how it relates in terms to the current state of Mad Men was quite enlightening. Roger would likely enjoy "Doctor Robert," a song about a Dr. Feelgood who has a pill for whatever ails you; Lane would appreciate "Taxman," Harrison's tongue-in-cheek critique on the British tax system; I suspect Ginsberg would be drawn to "Eleanor Rigby," a sublime tale of a lonely woman who's funeral had no attendees, save for the priest; and Pete, at least this week, would identify with "Got To Get You Into My Life." But the song that has really been hard to ignore is "For Know One," Paul McCartney's somber ballad that with lyrics such as And in her eyes you see nothing/No sign of love behind her tears/Cried for no one/A love that should have lasted years could be a harbinger for Draper marriage.



Because Mad Men never sticks any of the characters directly in a monumental event of the time Forest Gump-style, it's easy to forget exactly how much the world is changing around them. But subtle examples are sprinkled in, like the evolution of The Beatles from a mere pop group to the most influential rock and roll band ever. Of our main characters, Peggy and Megan have always been driving toward change and embracing the new, Pete and Joan generally seem to welcome it but are just old enough not to completely abandon the previous generation's ways, and Don and Roger (and the rest of the old coots) have actively resisted these newfangled ideas for the most part. Roger's LSD trip may allow him to be ride this wave of change to a safe harbor of success, but Don seems poised to be headed down a path of diminishing success at the office and a divorce from his young bride all stemming from either his inability to adapt to his surroundings or his mere stubbornness to pine for the good 'ol days. He's going to have set his dreams higher than indoor plumbing if he's going to be able to morph into yet another version of Donald Draper. If he doesn't, then he's likely to have quite a bit of hardship in the coming years.

Random thoughts...
-- Catty Joan is back! I missed her.
-- Pete may not be as down as he was at the close of "Signal 30" a couple of episodes ago, but he's still an incredibly depressed individual. If the internet rumor mill about a death during this season of Mad Men turns out to be true, I'd say he's our most likely suspect. He just purchased some extra life insurance after all...
-- Ginsberg really works up a sweat during presentations. That was intense!
-- Poor Peggy. When will she learn that staying late at the office alone is little more than a surefire way to get mixed up in her coworkers' relationships?
-- I'm a little surprised I'm saying this, but I'm kinda going through a little Betty withdraw. It's been six weeks.
-- Speaking of absent cast members, I know he's been causing havoc as David Robert Jones over on Fringe this year, but Jared Harris has been missed as well. Would it kill him to use some of that mad scientist tech to transport back to 1960s Earth Prime so I can have a little Lane action?
-- Man, life outside of Bayside High is hard. Mr. Belding is even fatter than when he on Always Sunny a few years a go, Screech is a complete disaster of a human, and Lisa Turtle looks like this now.
-- I never liked Vincent Kartheiser much when I was introduced to him as Connor on Angel, but now having to watch him be miserable with Alison Brie and actually get mad at Alexis Bledel for being a little difficult, he's gotta be among the greatest actors of our time. (I kid... mostly.) 

 Mike: Really laughing at that last one, Jon.  (But also, I gotta agree!  And nice work on the Beatles song character analogies.)  You know, now that I said that, there's actually a lot I agree with in your write-up above.  I think you were spot-on when you said that the significance of this episode won't really be revealed until we get a better idea of where the story is going this season, for any of the plot threads that it follows.  I've got to say that at least initially, I didn't find a lot that I needed to write about for this episode.  It was reasonably entertaining, and moved the pieces around on the chessboard a bit, but it's still difficult to see where all of this is going.

To take it from the top, then, Pete's initial success with Alexis Bledel's underappreciated cuckquean (per Google, a female cuckold) housewife was a striking scene, fraught with undercurrent that I hope I never really come to understand in my personal life.  Now, we've got a now rather well-established cheater in Pete cheating with the cheated-on, while her husband is in the city cheating on her.  On a show where Don Draper has become the poster child for marriage fidelity, I've been trying to figure out who else has been faithful.  (Maybe Ken?  Is Bert even married?  Oh yeah, I forgot about his wartime groin injury.)  C'mon, Mad Men and Women, you need to learn to keep it in your pants!  If only the cheating wasn't so fun to watch, at least most of the time.

Now, Bledel's character Beth clearly doesn't have Pete's best interests at heart, but on the other hand, her husband Howard is a complete piece of insufferable trash.  Even poor, blind Pete can probably tell that the situation he's putting himself in will never end well.  But he still buys the champagne and rents the hotel room anyways.  I'll say this for him: in his seemingly endless search for -- what is it, anyways? stability? love? fulfillment? -- he's persistent.  And that will probably be what does him in, in the end.  Now, it could very well be that this unrequited romance is just another bump on the road for poor old Pete, but it doesn't take a Master's degree in following TV storylines to start to see a throughline over these episodes.  And unless there's a major course correction in his life, I'm not so sure that things will ever be any better for him.

Along these same lines, I got a little chill when Pete was talking with Howard about his family history, and the early, accidental death of Pete's father came up.  I had completely forgotten about that.  With any further lack of caution and his increasingly more frequent affairs, or at least attempts at them, Pete stands a pretty good chance of losing his family.   The Campbell family and his in-laws already can barely stand him, as far as I can tell.  Will Pete be able to even muster up the strength to get out of bed in the morning if he loses the two, possibly only, real fans of his that he has?  I suspect we are going to find out this season, one way or the other.  I'd wager that Pete simply doesn't have the strength that Don did, to bounce back after his first family fell apart.  Even a man like Don, skilled in personal reinvention, almost didn't.

The other big happening in this episode is Megan finally giving voice to her desire to leave the advertising field, not to mention SCDP, in favor of her acting career.  It happened so quickly -- a tearful goodbye to the other copywriters, a lunch with "the girls," and she's not even coming back for her box of stuff afterwards.  After Megan's initial truth-bending about her audition callback, Don is surprisingly understanding, and I am choosing to believe he is sincere in this.  He's seen what having unfulfilled passions has done to Betty, and he understandably doesn't want his new wife to go down that road.  And perhaps even a little selfishly, he doesn't want to go through all of that again himself.  What this means for his recent career upswing, in conjunction with a Megan who has just found her copywriting and client-wrangling feet, remains to be seen.  But I think the looks on Don's face speak a thousand words:




Don and Megan's perhaps overly cutesy, but effective, Cool-Whip routine owned the room.  But after Megan's ill-timed departure, and Don and Peggy's disastrous (and stomach-churningly hilarious) second Cool-Whip demonstration:


Don and Peggy's exchange after this, in front of the awkward lab personnel, was particularly revealing as well.  Has anyone ever spoken to Don like that and not been fired?  The problem was, Peggy was right -- Don was mad at Megan, not her.  (Though seriously, Peggy, you really did blow the whole thing.)  The Cool-Whip contract will probably survive.  The strain on Don's marriage is a whole different story.  It wasn't that long ago that Don was saying that he only liked going to work so that he could be with Megan all day.  All of his recent success could reasonably be attributed to the synergy of both Don and Megan working together.  So, which Don will emerge from the rubble of this latest development?  That remains to be seen, and I'll be tuning in next week, for sure, to find out.

Previously:
Episodes 1&2 - "A Little Kiss"
Episode 3 - "Tea Leaves"
Episode 4 - "Mystery Date"
Episode 5 - "Signal 30"
Episode 6 - "Far Away Places"
Episode 7 - "At The Codfish Ball"