Well, a gathering is brie, mellow song stylings; shindig, dip, less mellow song stylings, perhaps a large amount of malt beverage, and hootenanny, well, it's chock full of hoot, just a little bit of nanny.

Oz ,'Beneath You'


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

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


sumi - Aug 31, 2007 10:56:01 am PDT #444 of 11998
Art Crawl!!!

Well, perhaps his family's circumstance's changed after that time.


Liese S. - Aug 31, 2007 11:05:29 am PDT #445 of 11998
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

It definitely wasn't the sort of warm supportive family one might dream of for oneself, though. But there must have been more than that to incur the sort of vitriol Don voiced about Adam's mother.

The mom is definitely absent in his past. And it would take an odd circumstance, wouldn't it, to place the child with his father if it had just been a split? So dead, insane, illegitimate, or the wrong race. And now that I think about it, even illegitimate would probably place the kid with the mom so that dad could ignore him, eh?

I wonder about class status. We tend to pretend we don't have classes in America, but we definitely do, and we definitely did then.


Tom Scola - Aug 31, 2007 11:12:38 am PDT #446 of 11998
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

We tend to pretend we don't have classes in America, but we definitely do, and we definitely did then.

What was Pete's salary? $75 a week or something? And yet, untouchable because of his Mother's maiden name.


Vortex - Aug 31, 2007 11:14:05 am PDT #447 of 11998
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Unless that flashback wasn't accurate for some reason, the family (to me) looked rather well off and not the kind of childhood I'd be ashamed of. Except for the hair cut.

Maybe his mother worked for the family? I definitely get the impression that Don grew up working class.


askye - Aug 31, 2007 11:16:56 am PDT #448 of 11998
Thrive to spite them

I saw the flashback as Don being introduced to his new half brother. How old is Don? When do we think he was born?

There was a fairly high mortality rate at the time (if I remember correctly) it wouldn't have been uncommon for a mother and child to die in childbirth, or his mother could have died from some illness. It's not a far stretch from that for Don's father to favor his new wife and son over Don. Especially if he considered Don to be a "difficult" child after his mother's death and thus be distant to him.

Or Don could have been sent to live with relatives until his father remarried and had made a "suitable" home for him. It wasn't uncommon for children to be sent to live with relatives. Both my parents had cousins live with them for various reasons.


amych - Aug 31, 2007 11:23:05 am PDT #449 of 11998
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I definitely get the impression that Don grew up working class.

Yes. The fact that Adam is a janitor points to this as well.


megan walker - Aug 31, 2007 11:37:23 am PDT #450 of 11998
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

Ahh, thanks. So the two are partners, not Boss & Underling.

I'm now 3 episodes behind, but I think it's Boss and Former Boss/Partner's Son. In the second or third episode when Don and Roger get called in to Big Boss's office, they reference a picture where it seems that Roger is a little kid on someone's lap so I took it to be that Roger's father founded firm with Big Boss.

Also, I'm loving their attention to detail. Peter's "old money" family vacationing on Fishers Island is spot on in and of itself, but the fact that that's where the the Bethelem Steel heir's mansion actually was (way back when) is just perfect.


Liese S. - Aug 31, 2007 11:52:19 am PDT #451 of 11998
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Ah, megan, that would work for the dynamic we see.


Jon B. - Aug 31, 2007 12:39:49 pm PDT #452 of 11998
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

I think it's Boss and Former Boss/Partner's Son

Thanks, Megan. Makes sense.


Jesse - Aug 31, 2007 2:18:23 pm PDT #453 of 11998
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Yeah, that's got to be it -- Roger is definitely the junior partner, so that explains "his" name coming first.

I knew something was up when they gave us the shot of Don's hands and the money as the elevator doors closed,

I totally missed that! Possibly because I was getting dip in the kitchen.

This is taking place in 1960, right? Too bad it would have to go four seasons before The Feminine Mystique comes out in 1963.