Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Mad Men Season 5, Episode 11 Recap: The Other Woman

"Jaguar, the mistress who'll do things your wife won't."

Well, that is subtle.  In 1966 there was no thought of selling cars to or for women.  The pitch was clear.  Men, do you want to get laid?  Get a Jag.  Do you want to feel like a stud, the envy of all around you? Get a Jag. Do you want to own something with sexy lines, something a little dangerous, something totally impractical yet totally desirable? Get a Jag. It was a not-so-secret selling point - Jaguar was the naughty car.  You drive the wife and kids around in your Buick, but you take your girlfriend out in your XK-E.


It's no surprise that a room full of men could only see that angle - sell the sex, sell the danger, sell the naughtiness.  Jaguar is the Holy Grail to SCDP and They have a packed conference room where they're working around the clock to come up with the ideal approach to winning the account.  Yet do they have their best and brightest on the pitch?  Sure Ginsberg is there, and every freelancer available, but star copywriter Peggy Olson is literally on the outside looking in.  She gets Secor laxatives, the men get the luxury car. 

But that's not Peggy's only problem. Don is becoming increasingly abusive towards her, first ignoring her and dismissing her, then moving on to open hostility and petulance.  He views Peggy as a tool, like his dictaphone or his pens - fungible, utilitarian, unfeeling.  He forgets that you have to treat even inanimate objects well to keep them working.  That is even more true with living, breathing human beings.

Part of landing the Jaguar account is getting the approval of the large dealership owners in the region.  So Ken Cosgrove and Pete Campbell wine and dine Herb Rennet, the largest Jaguar dealer in the northeast.  Herb knows that he is being wooed and he makes it clear that to get his vote, to get the Jaguar account, Ken and Pete are going to have to make him very happy.  Pete doesn't see that as a problem.  "We're open to anything your heart desires."  Unfortunately, it's not Herb's heart that has desires.  Herb wastes no time letting them know just what it will take to get his approval.  Joan.  He saw her at their offices and right then and there he thought, there's no way a girl who looks like this would give the time of day to a guy like me.  Unless I had something that her bosses needed very badly.  Make my dreams come true and I can make yours come true too.

So Ken and Pete jump up from the table, each slap him across his fat face, and tell him they will not be prostituting their office manager.  No car company, no business, no amount of money is worth that. 

Except that's not what happens.  Ken develops a nervous laugh and tries to steer the conversation away from Joan but Pete's eyes get wide at the thought that they are one step closer to landing this account.  The company, as we've been reminded, needs a car account and needs a big infusion of money.  Jaguar can give them both.  Pete sees a way to make this happen and all it will take is selling Joan's body and his own soul to the devil.  But it is for a car, after all.

Over at Casa de Draper, Megan is whining about something.  Because that is her default method of communication.  Wait, no, she's actually happy.  She has an audition that she's excited about!  But she knows her acting career is of little interest to Don, so she switches the conversation to his work.  And he tells her that they're all out of ideas for how to sell a car that doesn't, actually, drive.  She offers help, which he wants and needs, but then he bites her head off when she tries to help.  Because that is Don's default method of treating the important women in his life if they dare to engage him intellectually.


The next day Pete Campbell strolls into Joan's office under the pretext of telling her the "bad news" about Jaguar.  His motives and intentions could not be clearer.  He wants Jaguar and is willing to do anything have Joan do anything to get it.  But rather than coming right out and asking Joan to sleep with that sleazebag Herb Rennet, he tries to guilt Joan into agreeing to do it.  It's low even for Pete.  It's bad enough that Herb made the request, worse that Pete didn't immediately shoot it down, but even more despicable that he wants Joan to agree to it rather than let the company down. It's only one night, haven't we all done things we've regretted for free?  He equates sleeping with Herb Rennet to her becoming a queen, a la Cleopatra. Joan is understandably mortified at the request, but when Pete is about to leave, he asks her what would it take.  When she says, you couldn't afford it, Pete can't stifle the smile.  That wasn't a no.  We're negotiating.

 We see a brief scene of Peggy Olson being her amazing self, selling the Chevalier Blanc client on a new approach to their commercial.  It is advertising from - gasp - a woman's perspective.  And note how Harry wanted to introduce Peggy to the client as Ginsberg's subordinate or, at worst, equal, when she is his supervisor.  But Ken properly introduced her and then sat (and later stood) in awe of her creative talent.  Peggy is a superstar, but she's also a woman in a man's world and it's 1966.  And so rather than kudos and a trip to Paris, she gets another dose of Don's seething hostility.

But for once, we can understand part of what is making Don angry.  Pete called a partner's meeting to discuss the Jaguar account,  Or, more to the point, how the only thing that is standing in their way is not coming up with a great pitch, but one night for Herb to have his way with Joan.  Pete sees it as a simple business proposition.  The others, to differing degrees, see it for what it is.  But Pete is clever.  He lets the partners think that Joan was not horrified by the very suggestion, he lets them believe that she's amenable for the right price.  Don, who's had his own sordid experience with prostitution, wants no part of this and storms out.  But the others, well, the others can be talked into it if they can be convinced that Joan is on board, if they can spin it to themselves that it's for the greater good, if they can ignore what they're sacrificing of their integrity and of her dignity.  It's only one night after all.  And it is, at long last, a car company.

Pete may be the scum who bubbled up from the primordial ooze to present this idea, but don't kid yourself.  Aside from Don, none of the other partners say no.  They say they're disgusted, they say it's unseemly, they say let Joan know she can still say no.  But none of them stand up for what's right. Pete sees himself as the savior of the company, the only one with the nerve to roll up his sleeves and get dirty to do what has to be done.  But the others, they're too desperate to do anything but huff and puff and them quietly, oh so quietly, let it happen. In some ways, they're worse than Pete.  He knows he's pimping her out and embraces it, the others pretend it's not happening at all.  Just like Harry and Ken pretended that Don didn't throw a wad of bills at Peggy's face just for standing up for herself.  There are those who do awful things and there are those who sit quietly by.

Lane has his own demons to deal with.  While he is attracted to Joan, and wants to stand by her honor, his more pressing concern is the money that he took from the recent advance to pay off his tax bill.  He knows he can't go back to the bank and ask for another advance to get the $50,000 Pete thinks will buy a night of Joan's time.  So he goes to her and plants a seed that if she were to go forward, it should be for a partnership interest and not simply a one time payment.  Joan is offended knowing the partners all sat around discussing whether she should sleep with a potential client for business and is particularly hurt that Roger was part of that discussion.  She believes that the partners want her to make this small sacrifice and will reward her, the only question being how well.

A little heavy-handed juxtaposition here. We get it, Pete's a hypocrite.

Megan and her actress friend Julia come to the office and break up the all-nighter.  Both women are shown in sexual poses, Megan atop Don in his office, Julia prowling atop the desk in the conference room. They have the full attention in the rooms they occupy.  Earlier, in contrast, Peggy stood alone in her office looking out the window wondering what she has to do to get any attention and respect. Megan is Don's trophy wife, the pretty young replacement for his pretty first wife.  She was once one of the gang, another copywriter, but now as Ginsberg notes she comes and goes as she pleases.  But does she?  When she talks to Don later about her audition for Little Murders, he's fine until he finds out it will inconvenience him.  She'll be gone for two to three months for rehearsals and that's not where she is supposed to be.  He wanted her at work with him, but if Don couldn't have that, then she should at least be waiting patiently for him at home.  But running off to chase her dream and leave him alone with his thoughts, that's not what he wants.

After a testy conversation with her mother about her ex-husband and finances and cleaning and every other part of daily life that bothers her, Joan starts to think that money could solve many of her problems. So she takes Lane's advice and goes to Pete demanding a 5% stake in SCDP in exchange for her services in helping to land the Jaguar account.  Pete all of a sudden acts like a bumbling schoolboy, confused about the actual mechanics behind pimping out this married mother to the sleazy mouth breathing Herb Rennet. It's not a good look.  Joan puts him in his place and retains as much dignity as she can under the circumstances, but it's a jarringly disturbing scene.  What he suggested, what she agreed to, what she'll ultimately have to do.  It's revolting and they both know it.

Peggy meets with her old pal Freddy Rumsen to complain about Don's treatment of her, yet she's in the bind that many young workers, male and female. find themselves in.  She's been promoted, she's working on many accounts, she has copywriters under her - in many ways her career is going gangbusters.  For someone who started as a wide-eyed secretary, in just a few years she's really moved up.  And she's done it without having to play grab-ass with her boss.  But she's also hitting her head against the glass ceiling and being treated like a second class citizen at best, and like garbage when Don has one of his hissy fits.  It may be time for her to stop complaining and actually start looking for another job.

Ginsberg has a Ginsbergian epiphany and comes up with the perfect pitch for Jaguar.  It's not vulgar, but gets the message across just the same.  All your hard work men will finally pay off, this car is something beautiful you can actually own. Not like that mistress that you rent for a few hours a week.  This you can keep in your garage, around your kids even!  Don loves the pitch and feels confident heading into tomorrow's presentation.  But then Pete brings his smug face into Don's office, a little canary feather popping out of the side of his mouth, to let Don know that there won't be any "impediments" to them getting the business.  If you know what I mean.  He might as well actually say "wink wink."  Don is furious.  But as Pete reminds him, the vote doesn't stop just because Don walks out of the meeting.  Don storms out of the office and heads to Joan's apartment to stop her.


Don arrives at Joan's apartment and she comes out to greet him, just before heading into the shower.  He tells her not to go ahead with Pete's plan.  No client is worth that and who wants to be in bed with people like that.  Literally or figuratively.  Joan is taken aback.  Pete had told her that everyone was in agreement and she's just now learning that not only is he a sleazy little scumbag but a liar as well.  He told the partners that Joan was amenable and told Joan that the partners were all for it and yet neither was true.  Finding out that someone stood up for her (unfortunately followed by walking out and missing a vote!) really touches Joan.  She and Don have always had a good relationship, one devoid of the sexual power politics that Joan dealt with every day on the job.  He had always treated her with respect and that respect meant more than landing Jaguar.  Don leaves, feeling a bit like Superman, having swept in and saved the day.

Only....

The next day Don is suited up and ready to work his old magic.  He's confident and on the top of his game, ready to seduce the clients with his charm and style and Ginsberg's words.  He's going to land this client the old fashioned way.

Only....

We see Joan at Herb Rennet's hotel room.  And we hear Don's words describing the sleek, stunning piece of art on four wheels that men covet from a young age and dream about possessing.  But this thing, so beautiful, so exceptional, can be yours for a price.  And we see Herb.  And he's looking at this beautiful woman who ordinarily wouldn't give him the time of day and she's there, and he can have her.  Bought and paid for.  At first it's jarring, why would Joan go ahead with this after that talk with Don?  We experience the degradation, the objectification from both perspectives.  The balding overweight schlub who ordinarily would never get a woman like Joan, and the curvaceous, beautiful woman whose body is treated like a commodity. He wants her and for a price he can have her.  Don's words spin around as the couple in the hotel do their own dance.  The parallels between the car and the woman are hammered home until you forget that the car doesn't have feelings. 

And then the reveal.   The scene between Joan and Herb took place before Don got to Joan's apartment.  He was too late.  And her reaction to his words was not just surprise but regret.  The next day Don comes into the office after his impassioned pitch, excited that they may win the business.  But he doesn't know that it was Joan who made the pitch that counted.

At her audition, Megan is put on display before a couch full of leering men who believe it is necessary for her to turn around and show off her body rather than, say, read her lines.   Ultimately she doesn't get the part and she's upset, but she doesn't tell Don about the audition, what she as a young woman has to go through just to have a chance at a part in an off-Broadway play.  She knows he's happy she didn't get the part and knows that what she wants is not what he wants, and that is almost as troubling as what she might have to do to get what she wants.

Peggy takes a clandestine meeting with Ted Chaough to discuss leaving SCDP.  Like Freddy, he's always been a fan of her work. And he'd love to stick it to Don.  He admits that as a woman, she'll be asked questions a man wouldn't be asked.  Are you married, planning on having kids, willing to work for a fraction of what the men are.  But all he cares about is that she's a good copywriter.  He asks her what she wants and he makes sure to lock it down right then and there by offering her more than she asked for.  Ted tried to get Pete not long ago, but Don probably wouldn't have shed a tear.  But he knows how valuable Peggy is and what a loss it would be. 

Peggy wants to talk to Don, but before she can words starts spreading that Jaguar is about to announce what agency landed the car.  And it's looking very good for SCDP.  All the partners are invited into Roger's office for the phone call and that's when Don sees Joan and understands what happened.  And he knows that whatever the outcome, it had nothing to do with Ginsberg's words or his pitch.  They get the news they were all hoping for and it's champagne for everyone.  Only Don is not in a celebratory mood anymore.   And neither is Peggy.

Peggy starts her speech and Don thinks it's a typical "I want more money" presentation. He's amused and feeling flush with the new car account, let's Peggy know that there is more money for her.  But he's completely oblivious to the fact that he's been treating her like crap and not giving her any respect.   He blandly admits to taking her for granted, but throwing money in someone's face and snapping at them whenever you're in a mood is not taking them for granted.  Plus, for anyone who is mentored in their first job, it is difficult for the boss - even if he wasn't an abusive alcoholic - to ever seen you as anything but that newbie, all wet behind the ears.  Sometimes, you have to go where someone didn't see you take your first steps to finally be treated like an adult.

Don begs, cajoles, insults, and ultimately accepts that Peggy is leaving him.  He wants to be a tough guy about it and tells her not to hang out for the two weeks.  But as she offers her hand, he grabs it like a life rope and holds on.  He kisses her hand and tears fall from both their eyes.  This is not easy for either of them, but it's necessary.  They both know it.  As Peggy says, it's what Don would do.  It's ironic, Don was so focused on not losing Megan that he ended up actually losing the one woman who meant the most to him.



Peggy struts confidently out of the office, living her own Mary Tyler Moore "you're gonna make it after all" moment years before that show aired.  There were no rule books for women in the workplace back then, not many role models for how to move up and get ahead.  Peggy represents the trailblazers of that time who had to rely on men to hire and promote them, navigating the sexist waters by themselves.  Those with mentors who saw them not just as women but capable coworkers, were the lucky ones. Those who knew they deserved better and found a way to make it happen were the smart ones.

We celebrate Peggy's independence and her courage to leave the familiar for the unknown.  But how do we treat Joan's choice?  After thirteen years at SCDP, was it wrong for her to take a situation that presented itself and use it for her financial comfort and security?  Is this a case of her body, her choice?  Or should a woman not even have to make that choice - one no man has to make? Is using your body a slippery slope, so that the Joan we saw Season one flirting for a free lunch was the natural precursor to the Joan we saw tonight, parlaying one night for a partnership for life?  Or was this the patriarchy telling her that she only has two assets that matter and she might as well use them if she wants to get ahead?  Regardless, what's done is done and Joan is now a partner, like Pete, sharing in the future successes of the firm.

But another partner, Lane, is not thinking about future success, only Bert Cooper's repeated mantra that bonuses can wait.  Lane has to pay back the money he took from the bank and without his bonus, where will that money come from?

Quotes

Ken: You have to be excited about this car.
Herb:  Oh, it's a red-hot number. l'm excited about that. But l'm a hard man to please. l always feel like someone should go the extra mile.
Pete:  We're open to anything your heart desires.

Ken: Was that what l think it was?
Pete: Yes, it was.
Ken: Why didn't you just let me tell him she was married?
Pete:  Because so is he. And he already knows that.
Ken: Well, we wanted to be in the car business.

Pete: She was a queen. What would it take to make you a queen?
Joan: l don't think you could afford it.

Roger: Don't fool yourself. This is some very dirty business.
Bert: Let her know she can still say no.

Lane: Every time someone's asked me what l wanted, I've never told them the truth.

Pete: It's an epic poem for me to get home.

Gail: His wife won't let him come here anymore.
Joan: l don't want to talk about that. We can afford to have someone else fix the refrigerator, for God's sake.
Gail: Why won't anyone believe me? Apollo and l are just friends.

Joan: l don't want you talking that way around Kevin.
Gail: He's a baby. He doesn't know that we all wish his father was dead.

Joan: Which one is he?
Pete: He's not bad.
Joan: He's doing this.

Herb: l feel like a sultan of Araby and my tent is graced with Helen of Troy.
Joan: Those are two different stories.

Don: What behavior would we forgive? If they weren't pretty, if they weren't temperamental, if they weren't beyond our reach and a little out of our control? Would we love them like we do?

Megan: Well, you get to disappear for work whenever you want. And if l have to choose between you and that, l'll choose you. But l'll hate you for it.

Peggy: l want you to know that the day you saw something in me my whole life changed.
And since then, it's been my privilege to not only be at your side, but to be treated like a protege and for you to be my mentor and my champion.
Don: But?
Peggy: But l think I've reached a point where it's time for me to have a new experience.

Don: Well, let's pretend l'm not responsible for every single good thing that's ever happened to you, and you tell me the number or make one up and l'll beat it.
Peggy: There's no number.


Observations:

Ah, the 60s.  When sexism was alive and well and men were kings of their castles.  What do you mean it's fifty years later and nothing's changed?  That's ridiculous.  There is no way today that a business deal would hang on whether or not a woman would agree to sleep with a rich and powerful man.  Or that the creator of this very show would be accused of sexual harassment just a few years after this episode aired.  Oh, whoops.

Sexual politics in the workplace is a hot topic today.  But Joan has been on both sides of the issue herself.  Let us not forget how she instructed then new hire Peggy Olson on the proper way to dress and adorn herself to get a husband, back in the pilot episode.  How she schooled her on the men to avoid and the men to enjoy.  It's dangerous to even discuss how Joan might have used her substantial physical assets to her advantage as it raises issues of power imbalance, slut shaming and demeaning women.  Has she flirted to get things she wanted, for herself or the company?  Is that any different than Don flattering the wife of a proposed client?

Little Murders was a play that debuted off Broadway in 1967, then quickly shuttered, only to be rediscovered for the satirical gem it was.  Written by Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist/satirist Jules Feiffer, it told the story of the absurdity of suburban life in the crowded, filthy, steamy, crime-ridden New York of the mid-century. It was a successful play in 1969 and then released as a theatrical film in 1971.  Feiffer is still alive (as of this post) and recently wed his third wife at 87!

My favorite line was from Joan's mom.  After she said that the superintendent's wife won't let him come to the apartment any more, we all assume it was because of Joan.  And then Gail springs on us: "Why won't anyone believe me? Apollo and l are just friends." 

Always great to see Freddy Rumsen back and on the wagon. He's always been a staunch supporter of Peggy's, really the first one to spot her talent.  I wonder if he will follow up now that Peggy is gone and try to get some work at SCDP. 

1966 was a pivotal point for women's empowerment.  While Megan is being ogled and Joan is being pimped out, elsewhere the National Organization for Women is being founded by Betty Friedan, author of the ground-breaking "The Feminine Mystique," and others seeking gender equality and fighting discrimination.  They fought for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment and came within three states of ratifying the law that provided: Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.  It failed to garner enough support when Phyllis Shlafly lead a pro-traditional values/gender roles opposition to the law. 

Don sure wants his wife to be, if not barefoot and pregnant, at least at home whenever he wants.  She can have her own interests only to the extent that they don't interfere with his life in the slightest. Maybe he should have stayed with Betty, someone who at least pretended to be content with sitting at home waiting for her man to return.  But these younger girls, they have some crazy ideas about having their own identity and their own dreams. 


*******************************************************************************
Spoilery Observations (Don't read until you've watched the whole show!):

Compare the picture of Peggy leaving SCDP with her much Gif'd exit at the end of the series.  Here, she's a little nervous but a lot excited about this new adventure.  There, she's a certifiable bad ass.

Freddy will be back not only free lancing for Don, but later acting as Christian de Neuvillette to Don's Cyrano de Bergerac.  Ted also will be back not as a foil for Don but as a partner and even friend.  But what we didn't see coming, and maybe we should have, was that his feelings for Peggy would go beyond professional respect and appreciation.

In retrospect, we can see the building desperation that Lane is feeling.  All he can focus on is the fact that he has stolen money from the firm and without the bonuses his misdeed will be discovered.  He doesn't care that Joan gets more than just a one time payout, he only cares about not having to write her a big check on an overdrawn account.  And he doesn't care that she's about to prostitute herself, all he cares about is that it doesn't implicate him in the theft.  While everyone else celebrates, he continues to worry about the ax falling. 

Megan could not have been clearer.  She'll do what Don wants, she'll abandon her dreams, but she'll resent him for it.  And she was right.  Living her dream was inconsistent with being Mrs. Don Draper and one had to give.

Pete's talk about wanting a place in the city is another sign that Pete is getting restless.  He's tiring of suburban life and wants something more exciting.  He thinks it's Manhattan, later he'll think it's in Los Angeles, only to come full circle and see just how good he had it all along.

Joan doesn't let this experience tear her down. She embraces her new role as partner and in fact comes to side with the partners who sold her out and do battle with Don.  Later, she goes on to become her own boss, the ultimate in empowerment.  Every experience only makes her stronger and more focused on providing for herself and her son.

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Mad Men Season 5, Episode 10 Recap: Christmas Waltz

Lane Pryce is in a bit of a sticky wicket.  Seems he owes $8,000 in back taxes in the U.K.  If that doesn't seem like a huge problem, remember that in 1966 the average U.S. income per year was $6,900.00. And, more to the point, Lane does not have an extra $8,000 lying around.  He won't, of course, tell his wife there's a problem and that he had to cash in on substantial investments to cover his partnership fee when Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce was formed last year.  The taxes on that amount are now due and, simply put, Lane doesn't have it,


Now, Lane could go to the partners and explain his predicament and ask for their help.  But Lane has never completely felt at home in the firm that bears his name.  He knows he was given the partnership and his name on the masthead because he was instrumental in helping them extricate themselves from the old firm.  That is, alas, not the same as being a partner because you are considered an invaluable member of the team.  His spat with Pete Campbell was emblematic of his role at the company, he feels.  He's not one of them and never will be.

But Lane is the chief financial officer for the company and it is his job to, among other things, get extensions on lines of credit for the firm.  And so he devises a plan.  He gets their bank to extend a line of credit to the firm, based on anticipated future revenues; the company does well in 1967 and he repays the credit and no one is the wiser.  In the meantime, the firm will have an "extra" $50,000 which they can spend on bonuses and his share will be, coincidentally, just enough to pay his tax debt. What could go wrong?

Back in Episode 5, "Signal 30," Lane had tried to help the firm snag the Jaguar account.  Then, Lane had arranged a meeting with Edwin Baker from Jaguar to discuss business.  It did not go well, but a follow up meeting sans Lane and avec a trip to a local brothel went much better.  That is until Mrs. Edwin Baker discovered where her husband had spent his business dinner.  Well, Edwin is out and there is a new account exec at Jaguar and Pete Campbell has been hard at work getting Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce a meeting. A car client is the big white whale of advertising and every firm without a car wants in on Jaguar.  Don thinks its a pipe dream, but Pete thinks they have a real chance. And if they land Jaguar it would be thanks to Pete's hard work and not Lane.


Elsewhere, a blast from the past returns in the form of a be-robed Paul Kinsey. Paul, the former wannabe hipster, has now become a Hare Krishna.  Harry Crane thinks it's a joke at first, but then decides he understands Paul's motivation when he see the lovely Mother Lakshmi. Surprisingly, Harry actually gets into the chanting and later reveals to Paul that he had a vision of his daughter.  Paul is surprised and we eventually learn that he is not a true believer and he hasn't had a spiritual awakening.  He's there out of loneliness and desperation to belong.  But what he really wants to do is write.

At the partner meeting, to which Joan was not invited, Lane announces that the firm has a $50,000 profit.  Of course, we know the "profit" is a line of credit from the bank and not actual income, but Lane convinces the partners that they've had an outstanding year and are flush with cash.  Bonuses for everyone.  Immediately.  Like, now, cut the damn checks.  But Don thwarts his plan, suggesting they hold off on the bonuses until after the Christmas party.  The rest of the partners agree and Lane is shocked and shaken that this his financial troubles are not going to be erased as he had hoped.  Meanwhile, oblivious to Lane's problems, Pete wonders why no one is as excited as he about the prospect of landing Jaguar.

It's December 7th, the 25th anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor.  And with that solemn reminder, old memories boil up for Roger Sterling.  He found in WWII, in Japan, and he has carried the psychological wounds of battle with him in the form of strong anti-Japanese bigotry ever since.  On this day, he will drink too much and say things he shouldn't say.  Joan knows this and tries to get him to stop.  They are connected as never before because of her son, their son, but Joan wants her independence and does not want to be reliant upon Roger's largesse.

Megan drags Don to the theater where he is insulted by the anti-advertising theme of the play.  Or, Don and Megan attend the theater where they watch a new satirical play about excessive consumerism.  It's all a matter of one's perspective.  And Don's is that Megan hates everything about what he does except the money it provides them, and he's not a happy camper.  And Megan's is that she can't do anything without being criticized by Don and he doesn't care about what's important to her.  And she's not too happy either.



Paul isn't happy, even with his peaceful new religion and its consciousness expanding, spiritual awakening. He feels as unappreciated as he did as a young ad exec at Sterling Cooper.  Which reminds me of the old adage, wherever you go, there you are.  Paul is the same Paul, even with the shaved head, soothing demeanor, and flowing garb.  He still wants to be somebody, he still thinks of himself as an undiscovered genius.  He presents Harry with a spec script for Star Trek, a then-new series airing on NBC.  Harry has ins at the network and can get the script seen.  Paul asks him for that favor.

Meanwhile, after hours, alone at the office, Lane can only think of one solution to his dire financial situation.  With the agreement that the partner's bonuses will be delayed, and with the fact that he needs to send the money to England NOW to take care of his tax woes, he feels he has no choice.  He grabs a check from the firm account, finds an old check signed by Don, and forges Don's signature onto a bonus check to Lane.  He probably assumes that when the real bonus check comes in he can rip it up and no one will notice. So long as the real bonus check does come along.

Harry reads Paul's script and it's terrible.  He doesn't want to shoot down Paul's hopes and dreams but lying to him won't help either.  But while he's considering how to handle this, he gets a visit from Mother Lakshmi.  She seduces Harry who is naive enough to think that they had a "moment" together and she was there because of his irresistible charm.  After they have sex in his office, she drops the bombshell  She's not into him, she set him up to blackmail him from staying away from Paul.  Paul is one of their best recruits and she doesn't want Harry giving him a way out of the movement.  Tell him his story stinks and send him back to the Krishnas.

Joan is surprised by a process server who hands her divorce papers.  She doesn't even get the dignity of being the one to make it official.  She takes her anger out on the poor, sweet, woman-child at the front desk, Meredith, and then Don smartly removes her from the office to get her mind off of whatever provoked her.  They pretend to be a married couple looking at the new Jaguars then head off to a bar to drink and talk away their problems.  Joan thinks Don has it all, perfect wife, perfect life.  Don thinks that Joan is better off without her abusive husband and that things will get better for her, because women approaching their 40s who are unmarried with a child have it made in the shade in the mid-60s.



Both of them are wrong.  Don does not have it all.  Maybe he does, but he doesn't want it or appreciate it or nurture it.  He does everything in his power to push Megan away.  He comes home late, drunk, and Megan has been waiting for him for hours.  She doesn't care that he was comforting Joan or test driving the Jaguar, she does care that he never thought to tell her any of that ahead of time.  She does care that he thought he could just stumble home whenever he wanted, plastered, and she'd be waiting patiently for his arrival.  This is not the life she wants.

Harry Crane is not perfect, not by a long-shot.  He's arrogant and obnoxious.  He cheats on his wife.  He can be an ass.  But he doesn't have the heart to just shoot down all of Paul's dreams.  And so when faced with giving the harsh reality to Paul and sending him back to a woman who wants to use him and a movement that doesn't care about him, Harry can't do it.  So he lies to Paul, tells his his writing is brilliant and gives him some money to move out to California and live his dream of becoming a writer.  No one has ever shown any faith in Paul, no one has ever done him any favor.  But Harry doesn't want his old friend being used and having his hopes crushed any more.  And maybe he's spiteful that Lakshmi seduced and blackmailed him.  Whatever his true motivation, he sends Paul off to an uncertain future in Los Angeles that still looks a hell of a lot better than anything he has in New York.

While things are steadily improving for SCDP, of course there are stumbling blocks.  Mohawk Airlines is experiencing a strike which means they won't be flying which means they won't be buying advertising for their flights.  That will hurt the firm's bottom line and so the anticipated partner bonuses will have to be tabled.  Which is unfortunate for all but deadly serious to Lane who was hoping to have that money to cover up the bonus check he forged for himself.

It's time for the big announcement.  The staff and the partners are in the conference room and Lane lets them know that because of Mohawk, the partners agreed to forgo their bonuses, but the rest will be honored. Apparently, that wasn't in plain enough English because the staff showed no reaction until Roger said "you're all getting bonuses and we aren't."  That they understood.  And just to further hammer home how it's not the message but the messenger, but when Pete tells all that they're in the running for the Jaguar campaign there is zero reaction. But when Don does his Don thing and pitches to the staff that they will be sacrificing their next six weekends to try and land Jaguar, they break out in applause.


Observations:

According to Wikipedia (and why would they lie to us?): "America Hurrah" is a satirical play by Jean-Claude van Itallie, which premiered at the Pocket Theatre in New York City on November 7, 1966. Directed by Jacques Levy and Joseph Chaikin, the play was an early expression of the burgeoning 1960s counterculture, expressing discontent with American consumerism and involvement in the Vietnam War.

We finally got the answer why Don never went after Joan.  There is undeniable chemistry between the two of them and they're make a gorgeous couple, but I think Don was telling the truth when he said Joan scared him.  Especially when we first met Don, he was with a more subdued, traditional woman and not a firecracker like Joan.  

Aly Khan was a socialite who was once married to red headed actress Rita Hayworth, with whom Joan shares some familiarity.  It was a nice touch that Don finally sent Joan some flowers, signed by the late Prince.

Pride goeth before the fall it is said and Lane Pryce is in perpetual need of someone to feel proud of him.  He never had that with his loathsome father, he doesn't feel it at SCDP despite all that he's done for the firm, and he's hasn't felt it with his wife either.   He has been a great disappointment to his wife, forcing her to give up her life to live out his dream of living in Manhattan.  But with the little white lie that he has to stay in New York to help land the Jaguar account, that he is indispensable, he for the first time hears her say that she is proud of him.  

There are usually through lines, themes, connecting each of the storylines.  But I'm not sure it's that clear here.  Perhaps it's un-fulfillment and dashed dreams.  That things do not turn out how we imagine they will and how each of us handles it when that reality hits home.  Joan will not live happily ever after with Mr. Right.  Roger will not get that fountain of youth woman he's always dreaming of.  Don and Megan won't get that perfect marriage.  Harry will never be the sexy guy that some woman throws herself after.  Paul will never be a famous writer.  But those are the normal realities we all face, that live is messy and not perfect.  But for Lane, it's something more.  His failure is at a deeper level which is why, out of all of those un-fulfilled souls, he's the one who fails to open up, to try and connect with someone else, but instead keeps his demons locked deep inside.  

Quotes:

Harry:  l don't know what the Russians are going to do.  We may be living underground by Lincoln's birthday.

Don: l don't mind picking up the check for your friends, but not if they insult me first.

Don: No one's made a stronger stand against advertising than you.

Joan: Do you understand having you out here is the same as having no one?

Salesman:  l'm thinking about paying to have you drive around in this.

Don:  Those flowers God, my first week here l thought you were dating Aly Khan.
Joan:  My mother raised me to be admired.

Joan:  And who do you think's waiting at home?  l bet she's not ugly.  The only sin she's committed is being familiar.

Harnry:  You don't understand what it's like out there.  This failure, this life it'll all seem like it happened to someone else.


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Spoiler-y Observations (Don't read until you're watched the whole series):

Poor Lane.  In some ways maybe what ultimately happens to him was foreshadowed from the beginning.  He never fit in, he was never happy in his own skin, and he was constantly searching for someone to tell him he was special.  He was not valued by his original bosses, nor by his new partners, nor by his father, nor by his wife.  It was completely understandable that this would take its toll and that the facade he created of a happy life would crumble.

Joan does eventually learn that she doesn't need a man in her life and that she can be happy and successful all on her own.  And Roger does learn that he doesn't have to keep chasing youth or someone to save and that he can have a happy mature relationship with an equal.

This is but the start of many fights between Megan and Don.  He drinks too much and holds on to anger too long.  She isn't happy with the role society wants her to play, the dutiful wife.  Don is only really alive when he's making a pitch and in that brief speech to the staff at the end of the episode, he is more alive than any other time in recent memory.  Would they have lived happily ever after if she'd been content with working as an ad exec? Who knows.  Don has a self-destructive streak that can't be ignored and Megan wasn't satisfied with being great at things that came naturally.

Let's talk Meredith.  The sweet, simple receptionist who goes on to be the best secretary anyone could ask for.  Devoted, sincere, lovable, we're all very lucky she didn't quit after the airplane incident.