Oh, no, oh, no! Spontaneous poetic exclamations. Lord, spare me college boys in love.

Dr. Walsh ,'Potential'


Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...

To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])


sumi - Nov 03, 2009 2:52:14 am PST #3547 of 11998
Art Crawl!!!

I don't see Henry marrying her - but then, I don't see the point of her leaving Don only to marry somebody else. . . somebody that she only has the most tenuous connection to, you know?

On the other hand, she probably feels like she has no other option.

(Do you guys think that Don is feeling - maybe not in a way that he could articulate - that Betty doesn't love him because of who Dick Whitman is and not because of everything else in their marriage?)


Jessica - Nov 03, 2009 4:08:40 am PST #3548 of 11998
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I think Henry thinks he wants to marry her, but they've had what - 4 conversations? Maybe a grand total of 90 minutes together?

OTOH, she and Don have 3 kids together and I doubt he knows her any better than Henry does, so maybe it's a toss-up.

(Do you guys think that Don is feeling - maybe not in a way that he could articulate - that Betty doesn't love him because of who Dick Whitman is and not because of everything else in their marriage?)

Yes, absolutely.


Jon B. - Nov 03, 2009 4:56:35 am PST #3549 of 11998
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

I'm not sure that it's because of who Dick Whitman *is*, but I definitely think he thinks it's because of his hiding his past.


Jessica - Nov 03, 2009 4:59:18 am PST #3550 of 11998
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I think he believes Betty doesn't love Dick Whitman. I don't think it's occured to him that she also doesn't love Don Draper.


sumi - Nov 03, 2009 7:37:15 am PST #3551 of 11998
Art Crawl!!!

Jessica - that is exactly what I meant.


le nubian - Nov 03, 2009 8:28:52 am PST #3552 of 11998
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I'm with Jessica. As fucked up as Don is and his terrible behavior, I really felt sorry for him. He probably is thinking that she seemed into him in Rome, so it has to be Dick.


Liese S. - Nov 04, 2009 7:02:13 pm PST #3553 of 11998
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Yeah, that's part of what's so painful about it. When you think about the carrot that got taken away from Don (London) and how Betty'd responded when he mentioned it to her, Rome makes it really clear about what kind of life she really wants. Modeling could have given that to her. And for a while it seemed like Don could. Maybe now she thinks that Henry can.

But I feel like Henry is, for Betty, a conduit. He's a way to see her out of her marriage to Don. I don't think that Betty necessarily has a long term plan for Henry. I think he's a means to an end with her, just like pretty damn much everything else.

Betty, for Don, is part and parcel of his whole identity, though. Those closing scenes were just heartbreaking because it's clear how lost he will be without her and without the kids. All his affairs are just him reaching out and touching other ways of life, things that aren't his. It interests him, because it's different from him. But Betty is his image of himself. Betty is part of the fiction that Dick created to make himself Don.


Jon B. - Nov 08, 2009 6:28:00 pm PST #3554 of 11998
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Mad Men: Don, with the scheming! Joan! Pete leaving with the rifle! That was... fun! (except for the divorcey bits, obviously). It was odd seeing so much action take place in one episode. How long 'til the next season?


Jessica - Nov 08, 2009 6:29:43 pm PST #3555 of 11998
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

WOW.

WOW.


Vonnie K - Nov 08, 2009 6:44:12 pm PST #3556 of 11998
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

THAT WAS SO AWESOME.

My favourite scene was probably the one between Don and Peggy at her apartment. Don's always seen himself in Peggy, and I liked seeing him acknowledge that, and move beyond that. He was manipulating her, too, of course -- "I'll spend the rest of my life trying to hire you" -- but she saw that, and she saw that he was being as genuine as he could be and found herself moved by it. And the other layers underneath, Don trying to salvage his relationship with the other main woman in his life, coming from the wreckage of his marriage, and Peggy, trying so hard to ascertain her independence, yet still desperate for Don's approval. Maaaan.

I might have done a fist-pump and yelled YES! when I realized Roger was going to call in Joan. That was SO satisfying.

I thought we were going to have harrowing despair and lives in ruin (well, we got some of that) but this ended on a lot more hopeful note than I was expecting.