Well, first you have to understand the concept of privilege and know that you have it. Many people do not.
Whether you understand the concept or not, that's what the show is exhibiting. It doesn't show the white guys misbehaving as outliers or socially unacceptable. It shows that their dickishness (I use the word advisedly) is the culture. It also shows how the women - Joan in particular - both supports and suffers from that system. How everybody participates to maintain that status quo; that's pretty much this season's subplot about the friction between Peggy and Joan.
Whether you understand the concept or not, that's what the show is exhibiting.
I agree, but that doesn't mean that a large portion of people watching it are missing the point. This board evolved out of a shared love of overanalyzing a TV show - we are not a representative sample of the general viewing population.
we are not a representative sample of the general viewing population.
Judging from the active fora I've seen eagerly awaiting in-depth analysis for Mad Men (AV Club, Sepinwall, Goodman, Coates, Tom & Lorenzo...) I think most people watching the show are in it for the complexity.
I don't see people talking about it now the way they did in the first season when there was much more interest in the look, and Don Draper as Superstud.
9. When will the 800 pound elephant in the room be dealt with: There is something amiss with Sally. She is oddly adult at times and is clearly the victim of more than parental dysfunction and divorce. The signals are all present: I would suggest that Sally was in fact molested by her grandfather. Thus, the root-spring of her sexual acting out earlier in this season.
I keep seeing this suggestion (that Sally was molested by Gene), and I have to ask if any of these bloggers remember being that age. Being "oddly adult at times" is what puberty IS. Figuring out masturbation? Ditto.
I concur, Jess. I see a lot of projection in those statements and assumptions. I don't think that's where Weiner is going at all.
Sally's not even particularly messed up. She's a pretty normal kid going through a divorce.
Plus, Sally has supersmart parents, and that tends to rub off.
I just hope the child psych can actually help.
I tend to think that most of Betty's damage came from her mother's actions.
Judging from the active fora I've seen eagerly awaiting in-depth analysis for Mad Men (AV Club, Sepinwall, Goodman, Coates, Tom & Lorenzo...) I think most people watching the show are in it for the complexity.
Anyone in a forum to discuss a TV show is quite probably in the minority. That's just not how most people consume the medium.
But hardly anyone watches Mad Men, right? I'm sure the analyze-y portion of the audience is relatively large, since the numbers are relatively small.
In some ways, the surface reaction to Don Draper kind of reminds me of the way a lot of fans are about Ari Gold(keeping in mind that I haven't really watched MM, in what? A season and a half?) but it seems like the casual fans of both characters just want a character who struts around in a suit "pwning" in whatever way. Ari needs to bring the vulgar tonguelashings and Don needs to bring all the girlies to the yard. Personally, I think both Piven and Hamm do better work when they have to be vulnerable, but it seems to disappoint the dudebros.