
‘Mad Men’ Avoids Ambiguity in Stellar Series Finale (TV REVIEW)
[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s
[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s
Let’s have a roaring standing ovation for ‘Mad Men’’s penultimate episode, “The Milk and Honey Route,” which somehow managed to one-up last week’s installment in almost every way imaginable.
[rating=10.00] “I’m Don Draper from McCann Erickson.” It finally happened: the most heartbreaking words Don Draper has ever spoken. Though the moment felt somewhat like a contrived, allegorical puppet show
‘Mad Men’ offers the coup de grâce to SC&P in the season’s most nuanced episode.
While “The Forecast” packed enough content for contentment, it leaves fans wanting more.
Peter Campbell’s cynical, yet genuine, attempt to relate with Don about divorce and love resounds quite prominently throughout the entirety of “New Business.”
“Severance” seems to suggest a slightly different Don Draper altogether — though still warring against himself, his past, and the illusion of the present.
Stephen Mills highlights five of the most interesting, competitive, and potentially surprising races at this year’s Emmys ceremony, which airs on Monday, August 25th.
In the midseason finale: Don nearly gives in, Roger becomes a leader, and Peggy shines.
Each season, ‘Mad Men’ gives us at least one great Peggy/Don episode, and this week’s “The Strategy” is just that.