This is do silly. I thought this theory would lose steam over the years but some people just aren't deep thinkers I guess. |
Why would that be brilliant? That would be a real eye-roller. Might as well end with everyone doing the Peppermint Twist. |
| lol |
| Is this Sunday it then? |
In a recent interview with Matthew Wiener this was refuted 100%. He is NOT DB Cooper. |
There's two more episodes, no? Please tell me it's not just one more ... I'm having enough difficulty dealing with the end of this show.
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| I think Diana, like the schoolteacher, represents a woman that Don feels can be his authentic self with. She also is unmoored and living with regrets, like him. He'll chase after her only to have her reject him again. I see him living a lonely, hobo-like existence at the end. |
pp here. You really don't get the show. Go back and watch again. It was not at all like what Don would have done. The cadence of the voice made you think it was headed that way at first, and that we have only ever really seen Don in that role in the show. But then the guy droned on and on and Don started looking out the window. He kept providing factoid after factoid about this man who lives in another state. Every single one of Don's pitches is him talking about himself, one way or another. He didn't leave bc he realized he was identical to everyone there, but because he didn't fit in. http://tomandlorenzo.com/2015/05/mad-style-lost-horizon/ it's even in the costuming. They refute your exact position in there, too. |
I'm so impressed you can type clearly with that huge stick up your a**! |
Play nicely girls. This is a good thread without unnecessary spats. |
| It would be so sad if Don pursues a nomadic life - he has 3 kids (although at least Betty has grown up a bit). |
It would be sad but I think it would complete the Don's life circle perfectly, as hinted by the flashback given in "The Hobo Code". As summed up well in Mad Men Wiki.com: "We flashback to Don as young "Dick." He's outside of a farmhouse digging as his father Archibald Whitman is working on a truck and Abigail Whitman is hanging laundry. A hobo approaches and asks if he could work to earn a meal. Abigail obliges and at dinner discovers that the hobo has especially good manners and actually hails from New York. That night, Dick brings him some blankets, and they begin to talk. Dick reveals that he's "a whore-child," and the hobo admits he's actually a traveler who gave up the conventional life to be free. He even shares the chalk codes, a symbol for good food or a nasty dog, that hobos write on the houses they pass. Though the hobo was promised a quarter for work by Abigail, Archie simply tells him to be on his way. After the hobo leaves, Dick sees that on the gate is a picture of a knife: a dishonest man lives here. " |
| *link to above summary: http://madmen.wikia.com/wiki/The_Hobo_Code |
Oh this is very cool and very apt. Thanks for putting it in here. |
Sadly, no. This sunday is the last episode. |