Jackie smoking, and reading. [link]
eta: My memory was that she was pretty much a chain smoker 2-3 packs a day. Not in public of course.
Spike ,'Same Time, Same Place'
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Jackie smoking, and reading. [link]
eta: My memory was that she was pretty much a chain smoker 2-3 packs a day. Not in public of course.
Perhaps I'm odd, but that's honestly the most attractive photo I've ever seen of Jackie. Not the prettiest, but the most appealing.
Whoot!
Nothing like a crowd-pleasing rendition of "My Old Kentucky Home" to bring in the advertising dollars!
Not only that, it's the SECOND anachronism in two weeks!
Zimmer noticed yesterday that on Sunday's episode of Mad Men, sitting on a shelf behind Sterling Cooper's CFO Lane Pryce was the three-volume edition of The Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, which, as everyone knows, was first published in 1987 — 24 years after the show's current season supposedly takes place. Explaining the egregious anachronism on his fake Twitter feed, Pryce says, "Regarding my office library, I was asked to hold on to those books by a nervous young man named McFly."
Well that's it, I'm never watching this show again. The magic is GONE. GONE, I TELL YOU!
"Regarding my office library, I was asked to hold on to those books by a nervous young man named McFly."
HA! Awesome.
Prop anachronism discovered in Mad Men! ZOMG!!!!
Pfft. They've been on shaky ground with me ever since they made a big deal reveal in the pilot on the latest in office technology and gave a loving closeup on the IBM Selectric II. (Which didn't come out until the seventies.)
I know! That Selectric II.
I didn't notice the Zildjian, but I'm pretty sure it's because I found it physically impossible to look at the screen at that point.