Every Monday morning, Sloane Crosley and Logan Hill will be offering their post-âMad Menâ analysis here. Read on and in the comments share your reactions to the charactersâ reactions to the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.:
Logan Hill: I feel as if I have been defending this show against its critics: âRemember âThe Suitcase,ââ I say. âRemember Season 3,â I say. And then, this? I think this may be the worst episode of a great show.
Sloane Crosley: Wow, coming out of the gate with that, huh? I actually disagree. I think the pipe of âHow to Fictionalize a Historical Tragedyâ is so deeply laid, the show has painted itself into a trite corner at times. But I demand a GIF of that awkward Joan-Dawn hug.
LH: At its best, âMad Menâ has struck at the core of all these historical nerves â" but this episode just seemed so scattered and distracted. It sounds like we may disagree, but I felt like the show just struggled to incorporate this enormous moment of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.âs assassination in a way that made dramatic sense.
SC: You couldnât possibly be talking about the âHave You Hugged a Black Person Today?â undertones, could you? Which is to say yes, I cede the point that there was something tonally off when there didnât need to be. Remember the Chicago rape-murder case last season? Thatâs not an event everyone knows and it felt less forced to make it the focal point. Or compare this episode with the stunning Kennedy assassination episode. Actually ⦠Harry wanted to keep watching TV then, too. What do we think? He gets fired any minute, right?
LH: Thanks, Sloane â" Iâm glad youâre noting some of the moments when this show has taken huge historical moments and made something surprising of them. That off-kilter unpredictability is what I love about âMad Men,â but this episode? I felt it was scrawled onto Sticky Notes. And Harry? Yes, heâs a moron. But I worry that heâs less a human at this point and more of a straw man stand-in for all that Matt Weiner (aspiring film director) hates about the TV executives who have made him a star.
SC: When he and Pete have that duel-paced fight, I kept thinking of that George Bernard Shaw quote, âNever wrestle with pigs. You both get dirty, but the pig likes it.â And up until Pete makes his race-free âKing was a family manâ argument, I wasnât even sure which one of them was the pig. But itâs Harry. Which is saying something because Pete canât even order Chinese food without making us loathe him.
LH: Yes â" and Rogerâs flippant reply was no more respectable. His line about how he thought King could have talked his way out of trouble was almost too typical for Roger, too cutesy and too obvious.
SC: Too in character for an ad guy, right?
LH: Yes, it was like a caricature: Roger, as weâve seen him develop, is actually smarter than that.
SC: Actually, everyoneâs smarter than that. What about Ginsberg?
LH: Why Matt Weiner decided to pair his weak date story line with this moment is beyond me. Narratively, it just felt willfully bizarre to me. I love Ginsbergâs character and I was hoping to see more of him. But not like this.
SC: To your Post-it note point, you know who just came unglued and fell beneath the fridge? Sylvia and Dr. Rosen. Now you see our concern, now you donât. Youâd think she was one of Donâs children. Do we buy that Don started up and loving Bobby because Bobby busted out with Donâs magic word? âSad.â
SC: Can we talk about Randall, Rogerâs insurance friend (played by William Mapother)? Nice insider âWouldnât want you to get âLostââ line, Roger.
LH: Oh, that line â¦
SC: I would also like a GIF of Stanâs face during that meeting. Iâm gonna need several GIFs.
LH: His pseudo-hallucinogenic query was fun, but so rushed. Really, they just skipped right over it. The whole episode seemed scattershot to me. When I love âMad Men,â the characters are embodying the contradictions of the times. This week, they seemed to be acting them out.
SC: Well, we still have that problem of not caring about the couples that take up the most real estate. Or I do. Do I care if Henry runs for office? If Betty fits into her old dresses? If Meganâs father persists in his Canadianness? Nope. But do I care that Peggy breaks up with Awful Abe for Stan? Very much.
LH: Peggy deserves better. And that reminds me: Are two references to Marx too many for one hourlong drama about Kingâs assassination? I think one Marx reference is a good rule of thumb.
SC: Or one should be Groucho. Also: two viewings of âPlanet of the Apesâ in one episode is too much.
LH: True. If half the episode had been performed by Harpo Iâd have been happier â" less ponderous, deliberate talk.
SC: Right now, Iâm sensing youâd gladly replace the last line, âHenryâs not that importantâ with âThis whole show is not that important.â Perhaps next week will turn it around for us both?
LH: I hope so, because I am â" despite appearances â" really optimistic about this show: Iâve never loved a show more. But this episode felt like a placeholder: King. dies, characters react. The black characters remain on the fringes. Everyone reiterates what a clueless jerk theyâve become. And it culminates in Donâs mopey monologue to Megan, which I didnât buy.
SC: Basically, Donâs no longer allowed to have heart-to-hearts with brunettes in bedrooms. Nothing good ever comes of it. I have a feeling that if youâre waiting for suspense to return to this show, the Second Avenue subway line will come quicker. What weâre looking at is an ever-beautiful baby-sitting job on these characters.
LH: Yes, Iâm critical, though Iâm also bit irritated with all the fans who complain that Don is not changing enough: I mean, he hasnât changed for five seasons and just because he sells aspirational dreams is no reason to believe that any such aspirational dreams are achievable. Itâs just marketing. And thatâs just Don.
SC: Heâs the control in the experiment, the blank piece in Scrabble. I donât want to see change in him. I would actually argue that what fans are looking for is a reversion. They want a less watered-down Don. The old Don. But it seems like the price we pay for complexity is ⦠bedroom monologues.
LH: So, commenters, what did you think about Donâs monologue delivered to Megan? About Peteâs fight with Harry? Ginsbergâs date? And about Peggyâs thwarted gentrification dreams? And what did you make of the way the show handled the assassination?
Sloane Crosley is the author of âHow Did You Get This Numberâ and âI Was Told Thereâd Be Cakeâ; Logan Hill is a journalist who has contributed to The New York Times, New York, GQ, Rolling Stone, Wired and others.