Zoe: So you two were kissin'? Book: Well. Isn't that... special?

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


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

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


-t - Sep 02, 2010 8:11:10 am PDT #6618 of 12003
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

You've made me very thinky, Liese.

Most of thinking is ongoing, but I have reached one conclusion. The few times that I've read behind-the-scenese interviews and whatnot regarding Mad Men, they made me like the show less, so I pretty much stopped reading them. But I think the reason for that is that the show's intent and what I get from it are very different. In part because I don't see these characters as first-person past. And partly because things that are widespread are not necessarily universal and I feel like that distinction is not made in the universe building.

Which I don't exactly mean as a ding, just that, I don't think they are doing what they think they are doing, but what they are actually doing is worth watching, to me, anyway.

Well, that's a nice muddy thought that doesn't say much. Back in the oven with you, idea.


Jessica - Sep 02, 2010 8:22:28 am PDT #6619 of 12003
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

How is that more or less stereotypical than getting whores for clients in Manhattan?

Because for every time the show gives us something cliched about American business culture, it also gives us the exception to that rule - we're shown over and over again that not everyone is like that, even in this time and place.

By contrast, every Japanese exec we've seen so far has been a confirmation of stereotypes rather than an exploration. And since clients in this show tend to be foils for the main characters, I'm guessing we're not going to see Don's assumptions challenged any time soon.


Barb - Sep 02, 2010 9:49:46 am PDT #6620 of 12003
“Not dead yet!”

Because for every time the show gives us something cliched about American business culture, it also gives us the exception to that rule - we're shown over and over again that not everyone is like that, even in this time and place.

Well then, I suppose it's possible we'll still see the exception to the rule, especially in a very unexpected manner. That's something the show has been very consistent about.


Zenkitty - Sep 02, 2010 10:09:34 am PDT #6621 of 12003
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

Parker's foster parents were in the house when it exploded.

He did say "she blew up her foster parents" didn't he? It took me a second to realize he'd actually said that.

Christian Kane performed the stunt where he got hit by the car in The Boost Job himself.

I watched that scene about five times saying, "That sure LOOKS like him. It can't be; they'd never let him do THAT. No, I think that's really him!" As we'd say affectionately back home, that boy's crazy.


Beverly - Sep 02, 2010 4:51:59 pm PDT #6622 of 12003
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Hoodsurfing. IJS.


Liese S. - Sep 03, 2010 6:47:21 am PDT #6623 of 12003
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Mad Men: Yes, Jessica, thank you so much! That is exactly what I was trying to posit. The show discusses Japanese stereotypes by Roger`s attitudes, but then exhibits stereotypes by the actual marketing plotline.
 
If it were about presenting Japanes business culture as highly formalized, that`s one thing. I was okay with the "did we get a gift?" bit. But the plot hinged on Don outsmarting the Japanese execs with a move calculated to make them forget a repeated insult. (Which I kinda doubt would work anyway; I know I wouldn`t want to work with someone with Roger`s complete disdain for me.) He was smug because he was tricking his rival, but it took the guise of him tricking Honda.
 
The tactic Don used was directly out of the book; he shamed the Japanese execs into giving him business. The book is all about guilt culture (us) vs. shame culture (Japan) which I think is so much bullshit, but was highly influential and sadly self-referential for the Japanese in later years.
 
That the ploy worked says to me that the authors buy into this wartime view of Japanese culture.


Jessica - Sep 03, 2010 7:11:45 am PDT #6624 of 12003
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Jessica, thank you so much! That is exactly what I was trying to posit.

Oh, whew! I didn't want to put words into your mouth, but since I agreed with the point I thought you were making I went ahead and posted anyway.

(Which I kinda doubt would work anyway; I know I wouldn`t want to work with someone with Roger`s complete disdain for me.)

This, I don't know. My guess is that if Honda wanted to do business in the US in 1965, they'd have a hard time finding an ad agency with no bitter WWII vets among the partners. But maybe other agencies would be better at keeping That Guy out of the meetings.


-t - Sep 03, 2010 7:19:11 am PDT #6625 of 12003
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

SCDP didn't get the Honda account, did they?


DavidS - Sep 03, 2010 7:21:31 am PDT #6626 of 12003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

SCDP didn't get the Honda account, did they?

No, but because of Don's strategic maneuver they'll get first crack at Honda's car business.


Liese S. - Sep 03, 2010 8:04:51 am PDT #6627 of 12003
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Right, because Honda "never intended" to leave Grey (Grey?) with their motorcycle business...because they`re tricksy and false? I dunno what the point of that premise was.
 
And you`re probably right about that, Jessica; even in the eighties it was hard for a Japanese company to do business without That Guy somewhere in the company, so Honda would likely have been used to that treatment at this time.
 
By the time I was working for the big Japanese manufacturer in the 90`s it did not appear to be as big a deal. Although I was export sales, so I was mostly dealing with, say, how New Zealand perceived they should do business with a Japanese company.