Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Joan said she was divorced twice? All I remember is the abusive ex husband who left for the military. Who's the other divorce?
I was wondering the same thing. I've watched every episode of Mad Men, most more than once, and don't remember her being married or talking about being married to anyone other than Greg. They would never make a continuity error like that on this show.
Me too. I can only think it was before her time at Sterling Cooper - there was always the fact that she was older than she said - in the first series she turned 30 and people (Peggy) were shocked and she was embarrassed. She had all her 20s to be married and then divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Joan said she was divorced twice? All I remember is the abusive ex husband who left for the military. Who's the other divorce?
I was wondering the same thing. I've watched every episode of Mad Men, most more than once, and don't remember her being married or talking about being married to anyone other than Greg. They would never make a continuity error like that on this show.
Anonymous wrote:Joan said she was divorced twice? All I remember is the abusive ex husband who left for the military. Who's the other divorce?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't Joan enlist Roger's help with her son. It is his baby, right?
Funny how the show just kind of glazed over that and then dropped it.
he tried. more than once. she deemed it would be confusing. probably knowing there's no way they'd really ever end up together being a family cause he'll never really settle down or know how to love.
Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't Joan enlist Roger's help with her son. It is his baby, right?
Funny how the show just kind of glazed over that and then dropped it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought it was a pretty good episode. Sally is one of my favorite characters. her eye roll and comment during the dinner when her friend came on to Don was just priceless: "I just want to eat dinner."
Sally ended up being the best character in the entire series.
I agree. I love watching Sally, especially her take-downs of her parents.
Anonymous wrote:If anyone remembers the finale to The Sopranos, they will know that MWeiner is happy to leave things not tied up neatly with a bow. And I'm happy with a open-ended finale too for this series actually. It means anything is possible.
Anonymous wrote:If anyone remembers the finale to The Sopranos, they will know that MWeiner is happy to leave things not tied up neatly with a bow. And I'm happy with a open-ended finale too for this series actually. It means anything is possible.
Anonymous wrote:It will end with Don sad, still trying to find himself. I can't see it all "coming together" for him, since it hasn't come together for him the entire series.
The last episode, to me, seemed to be adults wanting to be kids and kids wanting to be adults: Lots of childhood imagery: Tinkerbell/Peter Pan, World's Fair, the Play Park, Don drinking root beer, eating donuts, getting candy out of the vending machine. Then there was Joan wanting to "run away" without responsibilities like her new boyfriend; Betty going back to college; Glen going into the Army, the girls going off on their mult-state trip.
The teenage girls all knew what they wanted to be when they grew up (translator, senator) but the adults still have no idea.
However, I have no idea how all of this ties into how this shit ends.