I kept looking around for Andy Warhol in the scenes in Mad Men last night. He so sure was there in spirit....
Monty ,'Trash'
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Did JBD have a crewcut on 24 ? Because that would explain alot.
Yeah - that was Factory lite on Mad Men.]
Where were the Velvet Underground?
Where were the Velvet Underground?
On Lexington and 125, waiting...
Snerk, Tom.
Did JBD have a crewcut on 24 ?
Precisely. Plus, tight fitting clothes and oodles of muscles.
Not from 24, but makes my point...link. It's sweet that he has his mother's name tattooed on his arm. Anita Morris, who knew!?
We'll discuss it inside, Corwood.
That was a whole lot of episode.
Hee, I was getting ready to post that, -t. And yeah, you're not kidding. Lot of lot there.
"He doesn't own your vagina." "No, but he's renting it." We've come a long way baby, haven't we, Peggy?
And I loved that old school new school shot with Peggy and Pete looking at each other.
I think I always like the outsider viewpoints of this show best. It's good to remember that in their little cloistered environment, people (the people they're advertising to) don't think that much of them.
Loved Peggy peeking into Don's office!
John Slattery directed the ep and I think it was the best of the season so far.
Alan Sepinwall points out that the Velvet Underground started in 1966, so they're still a year away.
(IIRC, Lou Reed was working at the Brill Building in 1965 or thereabouts.)
no doubt Corwood or someone will be around shortly to correct me....
You're right, Theodosia. Lou Reed & The Primitives' "Do The Ostrich" was a 1965 release. I think those early demos on the Peel Slowly And See box with Reed and Cale figuring their way around a few of the classic songs date from early 1966.
Also wrong: Love's "Signed D.C." was recorded in 1966 in LA. There's no way that someone was covering it in NYC in early 1965.