tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post3215670521993727173..comments2024-03-11T02:18:33.966-05:00Comments on Kritik: Mad World on Kritik: Mad Men Season 7.1 "Terminally Uncool, Unfunny, Lame" Guest Writer: Bruce RobbinsAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13200566567765991464noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-14724609610909550802014-05-04T10:45:36.969-05:002014-05-04T10:45:36.969-05:00Rather disastrously, I missed the season-opening e...Rather disastrously, I missed the season-opening episode and so have skipped the later ones until I figure out how to catch up—no DVR here. But I do have an opinion on the proposed Accutron taglines.<br /><br />"Accutron. It's not a timepiece. It's a conversation piece" is simpler and more direct than Peggy's revision, and it would work in the absence of any graphics. You could hardly fail to realize that this is an assertion about a watch, just as "It's not TV. It's HBO" lets you know pretty well what's being talked about even if you've somehow never heard of that cable channel.<br /><br />That the show can invite us to consider the relative merits of such fine points seems to me proof of something central and double-edged about advertising, though I'm not sure how to say it: perhaps just that we're fascinated by its basilisk-like lure despite knowing its intent. (I don't think the basilisk is the proper image but can't recall what is.)<br /><br />Incidentally, the subject of the Accutron watch makes me more eager to see the episode, as I own an Accutron, passed down from my father.John Branchhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12323569021826786444noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-90482559625426967542014-04-20T14:33:05.818-05:002014-04-20T14:33:05.818-05:00Awesome comments Lisa. I really liked this opener...Awesome comments Lisa. I really liked this opener too (though nothing will ever take the place of Season 2's "For Those Who Think Young" in my personal hierarchy of MM premieres). It's worth noting too that (IIRC) Peggy changes her mind and likes the original pitch best herself. Your take on what happens in between is great!MPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08984136164543370547noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-62325778547998990202014-04-19T08:38:08.744-05:002014-04-19T08:38:08.744-05:00Lisa said:
Just in reference to the above questio...Lisa said: <br />Just in reference to the above question: <br /><br />"Accutron. It's not a timepiece. It's a conversation piece." The "Don" version, as performed by Freddie Rumsen.<br /><br />"Accutron. It's time for a conversation." Peggy's altered version, or, as Freddie later suggests, the one she pees on to make her own--because when Freddie Rumsen is in the room, mention of urination can never be far behind. <br /><br />This was probably my favorite opener to a new season ever. Yet in spite of the fact that I am usually a de facto member of Team Peggy, I think the Don version actually sounds better, particularly with Freddie's delivery. I wonder if that really is the point, though: aren't both versions combining to form another riff on Don's "change the conversation" mantra--one that Peggy has been prone to stealing and utilizing in the past? In the imagined boardroom of the watch ad, voices are engaged in conversation, but they're muffled and fall before the "Is that Swiss?" conversation-opener that the time piece creates. Whereas Don had formerly suggested, via the NYTimes ad refusing to pitch ads for tobacco, and a previous ad, that "if you don't like what people are talking about, change the conversation," now it seems like nobody's actually even having a conversation in the first place, until the ad happens: there's no such thing as conversation, in other words, until the watch creates the opportunity for one. So, in a sense, Peggy taps into that as well, with her revision. <br /><br />I think the "conversation" motif also returns to "The Suitcase" episode (still my favorite), the first and only time in which the topic of "having conversations" comes up between Don and Peggy. In that episode, having conversations (in the office, the diner, the bar) becomes the way to fill up and kill time so Don doesn't have to call California and find out that Anna Draper has died. It's also the conversation that reveals that Don's "visit" to Peggy after she gives birth wasn't actually a wishful dream she had, but did in fact happen; and, it recalls the "move forward" advice he gives her then, still the most bracing antidote that the show's writing has come up with against the insistent "Don's whorehouse past still MATTERS and must be DEALT WITH!" storyline that dominated last season. Conversation kills time, and moves things incrementally forward, whether the talkers want it to or not. Professor Fluet's Spring 2013 Course Blogshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10445877787254515144noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-34019588899288639882014-04-16T11:46:59.544-05:002014-04-16T11:46:59.544-05:00Thanks!Thanks!MPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08984136164543370547noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-65951065696253365412014-04-16T06:57:30.372-05:002014-04-16T06:57:30.372-05:00Lauren, thanks for the correction on the Nixon dat...Lauren, thanks for the correction on the Nixon date. For more on Don and Nixon, see the column in the Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/act-four/wp/2014/04/14/on-mad-men-richard-nixon-is-the-key-to-understanding-don-draper/?tid=hpModule_6c539b02-b270-11e2-bbf2-a6f9e9d79e19Greg Jayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15444403871772601320noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-17283815389247196342014-04-15T14:16:33.321-05:002014-04-15T14:16:33.321-05:00Great comments Professor and Robin and welcome to ...Great comments Professor and Robin and welcome to Kritik. <br /><br />One small correction: I'm pretty sure it's Nixon's first inaugural address, meaning that it is January 1969. <br /><br />Here's the full text of that speech:<br />http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres58.html<br /><br />Jez (I assume this is Jez B.) welcome back to Kritik!MPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08984136164543370547noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-2499690551491733552014-04-15T11:34:40.134-05:002014-04-15T11:34:40.134-05:00Ahh, that balcony! I'll admit that every time...Ahh, that balcony! I'll admit that every time Don goes out there I wonder if this is the time he will fall. And he does, metaphorically anyway. And symbolic images of doors again. How about the balcony door being stuck open letting the cold air (of his addiction/dispair?) in to his meeting with Freddie who is staying sober in spite of his worry that the sausage sandwich will make him think of beer. And the unexpected and therefor slightly ominous knock at the door when the Don's "expensive gift" of a gigantic TV invades Megan's "back to nature" canyon retreat bringing with it lame Shangra-La but also the war, riots, men on the moon, Woodstock, ...the future . Robinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14299872770132990796noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-8300668942746765272014-04-15T10:17:32.544-05:002014-04-15T10:17:32.544-05:00Terrific analysis.
If I remember correctly, the Ni...Terrific analysis.<br />If I remember correctly, the Nixon clip is from the beginning of the second inaugural address, in 1972. Reading back through that, it seems a defining context for the episode and the season. The peace being sought for the post-1960s of America, and Vietnam, will be elusive; Nixon will not preside over this new era, but instead be driven from office in disgrace. As Don sits on the balcony in despair at show's end, out in the cold, he seems to be a forecast of Nixon's sorry end. Will Don share Nixon's fate, and thus not achieve redemption? He seems more and more out of tune with the times, his modish 50s outfits a jarring contrast to the hip clothing now so gorgeously on display in the show. And, speaking of clothes, what are we to say about the alarming rise in the hemlines, which my wife noted with a combination of startled memory and comic enjoyment? As you and Lauren note, the role and fate of the women in the show constitute it's most interesting theme, and the detail of their skirts seems to speak to the double burden of sexual appeal and fashionable career success they struggle to negotiate (or, in the case of Megan's astounding blue outfit at the airport, exploit--Don's startled gaze at her speaks volumes about his feeling of being lost in a Shangri La he wants to escape).Greg Jayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15444403871772601320noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-50389971660030748692014-04-15T07:11:57.870-05:002014-04-15T07:11:57.870-05:00I would have to go back over the sequence where Pe...I would have to go back over the sequence where Peggy comments on Freddy's idea, and I can't right now. My first impression--maybe just pro-peggy prejudice--is that she simplified in the right direction. "Its more elegant." But I could be wrong.<br /><br />Yes, the broken vessel could well be the golden bowl! Time will tell…<br /> <br />BruceBruce Robbinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03320091346383142213noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-44005499663244850862014-04-15T05:29:04.994-05:002014-04-15T05:29:04.994-05:00Excellent post and glad the series is back, thanks...Excellent post and glad the series is back, thanks. JezAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-74838919207836499302014-04-14T19:38:52.661-05:002014-04-14T19:38:52.661-05:00A wonderfully thought-provoking piece on a premier...A wonderfully thought-provoking piece on a premiere that seems to me to have laid a lot of groundwork, all very carefully woven in the ways you bring out, Bruce. I so totally agree that we don't want Peggy to fall into the cliche of the career woman who sacrifices all (like Joan Crawford's character in *The Best of Everything*). Joan somehow evades the trap and even her failures often draw me closer to her character. We like Roger's flaneurie as his character has never suggested that there was anything deeper at stake. I also appreciated your thinking through the political aspects of Don's taking on a front (and seemingly rising to peak form through this guise). <br /><br />And as Caroline said on facebook, the idea of Mad Men as itself time piece/conversation piece is so spot on.<br /><br />Two questions and an additional observation. Question 1: do you think that Peggy improved upon Don's idea? I may not have watched closely enough to spot your precise reference. My own sense (prior to knowing that Freddy was ventriloquizing Don) was that Freddy's tagline was better as it was: "I'ts not a time piece, it's a conversation piece." Nice rhythm and unmistakable wordplay. Peggy's version loses the pun.<br /><br />Question 2. And here I exhibit my one-track mind. The question about the broken vessel. Is it the golden bowl?<br /><br />Observation: loved the use of music in this episode. Just by accident we had a few friends over earlier in the evening and we were listening to Stevie Winwood and so heard the Spencer Davis number. <br /><br />Thanks again for this great start!MPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08984136164543370547noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8617857852696675419.post-24133488168407684942014-04-14T19:32:53.642-05:002014-04-14T19:32:53.642-05:00This comment has been removed by the author.MPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08984136164543370547noreply@blogger.com