September 20, 2010
4.9: Girls, Girls, Girls

While I didn’t love this episode,  the young versus old, male versus female conflicts we’ve been observing all season come into full focus. And as Walton mentioned, the season-long “the education of Peggy Olson” continues…

I was especially struck by what Walton observed in his “wounded knee” post regarding the gradual disappearance of people like Bert and Roger this season. Just last week he wrote:

It is significant that Roger and Cooper have been absent, invisible. They are part of the fading, receding mode. 

And in this episode, good ol’ Ida Blankenship (who we were all getting sick of anyway) ACTUALLY ‘RECEDES’ in death. How prescient of our gimpy co-blogger to basically predict this. And my god, watching the secretaries put the blanket over her in the background of that  meeting - what a great use of the glass conference room.

But this episode was really about the girls. Photographer Joyce describes at the end of the episode the idea of a woman being a container for a man. But finally,  now that we’re in 1965 and in the midst of great social change, women get a chance to turn their backs on being someone else’s container. But with great difficulty or sacrifice. Faye can’t deal with children well because she chose work over family (signaling that she believes it’s a linear choice); Peggy compares her professional struggle with the plight of blacks, and she’s not wrong.

Ever the traditionalists, Ida spent her life answering phones for other people and dies in that position. Joan was the “container” to Roger’s “vegetable soup,” holding him and warming him all these years, but what did she get out of it in her real life? He married another secretary while she got stuck with an absent failure of a doctor who will  probably die in Southeast Asia.

Sally’s story is sadder than ever; her situation has basically set her up to be someone who either hates men or seeking the attention of men for the rest of her life. Sure is tough being a girl.

STRAY OBSERVATIONS:

-Besides that rum-topped french toast, Don didn’t have a drink all episode, did he?

-Is anyone actually going to publish Roger’s book?

-Let’s say the mugging didn’t happen. Would Joan have hooked up with Roger? I wish we knew how their affair ended. It seemed she basically let Jane have him, but would he have left  his wife for Joan as he did Jane? I realize I’ve fallen into a  hypothetical abyss here…

To devoted caretakers everywhere,

Elise

August 9, 2010
4.3: Only the Lonely

This was like two episodes packed into one: Don in California with the one woman grownup who really loves him, and Don back in New York, on his unforgettable drunken man-date with Lane Pryce. Joan’s story arc is placed throughout, and that intersection with Lane and the flowers… pure gold. That Lane Pryce kills me!

THE SAD STUFF

Anna Draper, who said so herself in this episode, knows “everything about [Dick Whitman/Don Draper] and still loves him,” but we find out quite suddenly that she’s dying. Her sister isn’t going to tell her, because the doc says she doesn’t have much time left. Don’s compelled to tell Anna, but can’t bring himself to do so. As I watched this part of the episode with my hubby Matt, he said out loud, “There he goes again, letting down the people he loves.”

But would it have been appropriate for Don to say something? Her sister points out that he’s just a guy who bought Anna a house. The real question that emerges here, and it’s an existential one for Don, is, is it better not to know the truth?

Don admits himself in part one of this episode that he knew that once he told Betty the truth, she wouldn’t be able to look at him anymore. And that’s exactly what happened. And that’s precisely why he hid his truth from her for so long.

In the same vein, if Anna really is dying, then would she be better off not knowing? Is it selfish to tell her? There’s no telling how much time we have left.

It’s true for Joan, too, who’s husband is likely headed to Vietnam just as she’s ready to start a family. Neither of them know how much time they have before he’s shipped off to the military engagement America wants to forget. (Well, prior to the current military engagement that we’ll also likely want to forget.) There’s that lack of control again…

THE MAN DATE

Don doesn’t go to Acapulco, because he’s too depressed. Lane doesn’t go back to London for the New Year, because his cold wife has finally left him. They both wind up in the office, where they proceed to get pissed, as the Brits say, and gallivant around town until winding up with a pair of hookers (Don’s usual plus her friend.) Jared Harris’ acting was sublime. When he nearly smashed his face into that big steak and then got up and proclaimed how large his belt buckle was, I laughed out loud.

Devoid of relationships with women, the relationship with Don and Lane finally comes to life. Here we see the two men actually connecting personally for the first time, and I like it. I hope there’s more of this sort of interaction, as depraved as it may be.

So, what did y’all think?

To fiddling about in Los Angeles,

Elise