No doubt.
'Time Bomb'
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Joan is really hurting, isn't she -- now she's the one falling apart. Her whole conversation with Peggy on the elevator was pure projection as to her real feeling about her position/life now.
It's a lot to unpack. I'm actually kind of into the Betty/Henry stuff. And it's good to see Francine again.
the Joan & Peggy stuff was interesting from a social commentary perspective, but didn't move the plot forward.
I think I disagree. Once again, Peggy and Joan are both right. Peggy broke with Joan's way of being a woman at work way back with "you think you're helping", but she still has to figure out what will work for her, and any kind of authority is new for her. It didn't resolve anything, but it moved.
I'm still pondering Don. I'm glad he wen to Gene's party, but everything else I'm not sure about.
I like how it was shot sort of like a horror movie, very deadpan and with almost no musical cues. I find Betty Draper a drag on any story, though.
I can't articulate what I want to say - just that I find Betty Draper irritating, clueless and v. Dog in the Mangerish re: Don.
She's going to be a really bad political wife for Henry, isn't she.
The behavior of the 3 Stooges was just so irritating. I was appalled at what they were allowed to get away with and didn't know how to take Joan's reaction to Peggy at the end. But what you said makes sense Theodosia.
I'm glad that Don is trying to remake himself (again). I hope that at least some of it sticks.
didn't know how to take Joan's reaction to Peggy at the end
Joan's position in the firm is very much wrapped up in her gender presentation - she's the Woman in charge of The Girls, and she deals with the non-secretaries as Men. Peggy throws a big fat wrench into that.
Peggy is not an experienced manager. But I don't see Joan has much of a point. Peggy gave Joey a chance to back down, fired him when he didn't. The others may consider her a bitch, they also now know there are lines they better not cross.
I would see Joan as more "right" if Joey hadn't been such a hardcore asshole with Peggy. Peggy did have to fire him because he was not respecting Peggy. He was being a complete idiot the whole time. Sure, Peggy might be thought of as a humorless bitch - but I agree with Theo, that was projection.
I appreciate the fact that Don told Peggy to handle her business. The problem is that Joan tried to handle hers and she wasn't getting it done anymore. Joan was the one who left work early and cried, not Peggy this time.
That's true. Joan's way doesn't even work as well as it used to anymore, and she's blaming Peggy for going another route.
They also hit two different breaking points. Joan lost it after the vending machine incident, when she realized that she doesn't really have any authority - Joey doesn't even pretend to care about her place in the office hierarchy. She's fine after the picture, and she's fine in the elevator. She's a little mad at Peggy for having some power and wielding it, so she's sharp with her, but I don't think she's faking her nonchalance at that point. She had her cry and she's over it, for now anyway. I don't think she was even telling Peggy she shouldn't have fired Joey, just that she shouldn't expect Joan to be grateful that she did. They aren't allies, their positions are too different.
I see what you are saying, though I didn't perceive that she was really fine after the picture. No one who says to a group of individuals that she doesn't like them and that she won't mourn them when they die isn't fine.
I think she decided to wait them out.