I should have stuck with the short version, "Harry is an oblivious asshat."
I think that asshat is way too strong. He was very clearly grateful to Joan for helping, thanked her several times. He just never realized that she liked what she was doing, he just thought that she was filling in until he found someone.
He annoys the crap out of me. He gives off this vibe of entitlement that just makes me want to smack him.
He gives off this vibe of entitlement that just makes me want to smack him.
Unlike...Roger? Pete? Any other white guy on the show?
With regards to his work, yes. He wanted to be Head of Television so he could have lunch with his TV buddies, and when he discovered he might actually have to work in the position he created and demanded a raise for, he whined until he got Roger to hire someone to do the work for him.
Pete is at least willing to try. He goes to meetings he doesn't want to go to and he does his best to win business for the company. His entitlement issues come out in his relationships, not so much in the workplace.
He annoys the crap out of me. He gives off this vibe of entitlement that just makes me want to smack him.
He's one of the characters that I'd love to know exactly what happened in the fourteen months between the seasons-- because to go from having cheated on his wife to still together and expecting a baby is probably the largest jump any character made in that time period. All of a sudden, especially with the promotion/creation of the head of television, he's moved away from the Kenny/Paul/Pete group and closer to the strata of Roger/Don/Duck. Caught between two worlds, as it were.
Huh.
I don't really see Harry that way. (eta: err, to Jessica, not Barb. I agree with Barb.) I read the work overload as him being overwhelmed by the role, but because the firm doesn't acknowledge the scope of television.
The episode where he becomes Head of Television, wasn't that pushed partially by his wife, by him trying to stand up for himself amongst the herd? Which is a sentiment that I can appreciate, and I like that he's seeing where things are going.
I definitely read his interaction with Joan as obliviousness, not as trying to run over her. And Joan never did assert her interest in the position verbally.
Which reminds me, about the secretaries...how does a secretarial pool work? I know the bigwigs each have their own, but the rest--do they belong to the departments? How does their work get managed? Does anybody who needs anything go to Joan and then Joan assigns it out? Or does a secretary just do whatever when someone grabs her by the arm and demands it of her?
I think that if you need a secretary Joan assigns one. (At least that is the way it seems to work and this firm - could work otherwise in other places.)
Does anybody who needs anything go to Joan and then Joan assigns it out?
This. That's why Joan has some power in the office.
Which reminds me, about the secretaries...how does a secretarial pool work? I know the bigwigs each have their own, but the rest--do they belong to the departments? How does their work get managed? Does anybody who needs anything go to Joan and then Joan assigns it out? Or does a secretary just do whatever when someone grabs her by the arm and demands it of her?
I think that some higher ups have a dedicated secretary (or groups of people have a particularly). Everyone else submits their work to a central "office", probably Joan, who decides who does what, and there are several secretaries who work for everyone.
That seems like it would be a frustrating way to work.