Fred: The size and depth of the wound indicate a female vampire. Harmony: Or gay! Fred: Um…it doesn't really work like that.

'Harm's Way'


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, 2010 4:20:25 am PDT #6553 of 12003
Art Crawl!!!

I think they are meant to parallel each other but Jesse is right - Don is a more active player than either Roger or Danny. (Both Roger and Danny essentially have their jobs because of family, no?)

I wonder if we will ever find out what happened on Don's lost weekend.

(You guys will understand if I sometimes accidentally call Danny "Jonathan", right?)

Rubicon: watched it last night and it is oh so much less murky when well-written. Plus, the dialogue was better - and everyone has more personality.


§ ita § - Aug 31, 2010 7:43:31 am PDT #6554 of 12003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I hacked history!


Zenkitty - Aug 31, 2010 8:15:34 am PDT #6555 of 12003
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

Parker auctioneering was hysterical. And talking to the artifacts she's stolen before, like they're old friends, so adorable. Hardison's arms are gonna be wanting a line in the credits, soon.

"You don't wanna know how they wet the rags..." BWAH!


SuziQ - Aug 31, 2010 10:28:10 am PDT #6556 of 12003
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

Just rewatched and I'm still stuck on Hardison. Arms. Oh baby.


Liese S. - Aug 31, 2010 12:38:15 pm PDT #6557 of 12003
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Mad Men: I believed Don right up until they get on the elevator and Don gives Roger that little sideways "Is he buying this? He's buying this!" glance from behind. Don totally conned Roger. But I thought with the flashback that far that we'd see a different dynamic for Roger, what with the dad and all. When did Roger's dad die?

Anyway, I loved Peggy in this episode. "One little thing..." Hee.

Peggy's struggle for equality in her career doesn't end. It's going to be a battle with every new person, and she's willing to stand her ground. I also liked that she didn't bustle around to get Don shipshape after delivering her news. She doesn't have to anymore.

Leverage: ARMS! Also loved "I hacked history!" Love. I liked Sophie a lot in this episode. I might have thought there would have been more Parker empathy in the establishing bit of this con, too, though. And how much reveal did we actually get about Sophie's backstory? I don't want this season to be over. What am I going to do all winter?


Jessica - Aug 31, 2010 1:31:14 pm PDT #6558 of 12003
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

It's interesting to me how everyone she meets assumes instantly that they know what her relationship with Don is, whether or not they think the relationship is sexual.


Liese S. - Aug 31, 2010 1:53:01 pm PDT #6559 of 12003
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Yeah, definitely interesting. It's clear that she couldn't have gotten where she is on her own, so it must be her relationship to Don...which is true in that he allowed her to have the opportunity, but a lot of what Peggy has in her career is what Peggy's carved out for herself. I'm thinking about her ballsing up to ask for Freddy's office, that kind of thing. But it's assumed that it must be relationship and not merit based.


Jesse - Aug 31, 2010 2:09:31 pm PDT #6560 of 12003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Unlike Roger, or Danny...

Stupid Old Boys' Club!


DavidS - Aug 31, 2010 2:31:40 pm PDT #6561 of 12003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Just thinking about it friendships between men and women who had no familial ties weren't that common. Or at least, I can't think of many instances in movies or books of the era.

One of the things I do love about Mad Men are the odd ties of loyalty and friendship which exist in the show which are almost invisible to other people in the era and culture. Because there's no need for an adult man and an adult woman to ever be friends in that universe. Nobody can imagine that's what exists between Peggy and Don. Or Joan and Roger for that matter. Or Peggy and Pete. Or Joan and Don.

Admittedly there's a lot of sexual history involved but some of my favorite Mad Men moments are when those moments of friendship are acknowledged: Joan and Don at the hospital after Guy's accident; Don having to go beg Peggy to join the new firm; Roger turning to Joan to run the new firm; the curious bonds between Peggy and Pete which still persist despite everything.


Liese S. - Aug 31, 2010 2:33:11 pm PDT #6562 of 12003
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Okay, so Mad Men from last week.

For obvious reasons, this was a difficult episode for me to watch, and the interesting bits for me were not at all related to Betty. I have trouble separating my visceral reaction to Roger's slurs from my critical assessment of a piece of pop media.

I think the show thinks it did an equitable job of presenting the issues and portraying the racial tensions of the time. Roger's carefully backgrounded outbursts are countered by the others and delicately frowned on. But as the viewer, I'm clearly supposed to understand the pouting Roger with Joan afterwards. I'm supposed to respond to the war trauma that caused his prejudices and feel like he's been hard done by and be back to empathizing with and supporting him next episode.

But I don't. Roger's epithets are the same ones that accompanied countless atrocities against Japanese people, both those from Japan and Japanese-Americans. Don't get me wrong. I'm not discounting war atrocities committed by the Japanese, as they were copious. But I had an aunt watching the planes fly over Pearl Harbor and one watching the planes fly over Hiroshima. War's not happy fun times for anyone.

And yet, racism is not the correct response to it. One of the greatest ills of racism is that its assumptions prevent us from getting to know one another as individuals. Roger's attitudes prevent him from being willing to do business with a nation.

So. I now carry a grudge against Roger, a bias against him because of his prejudice.

Now let's turn to the show. The show slaps Roger's hand, but has Joan pet it. Then the entire rest of the episode, the work based bit, is Don successfully manipulating the Japanese businessmen based on the assumptions made in a book written in wartime about how to understand an enemy.

For me, Don's gleeful superiority (purportedly against his rival company, but effectively directed against the Honda execs) exploits as prevalent a stereotype as Roger's more blatant insults. That this gambit is successful indicates to me that the show sees this as fine.

Things the show did get right, at least: the names were correct and the actors portraying Japanese characters are apparently Japanese-American. So there's that, at least.

I think I'll stop there. I'm clearly still processing on this.