le nubian was it her finding out she was pregnant by going into labor!? or was it something else? I did happen to catch part of that episode if it's the one you mean.
'Objects In Space'
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Quester, please don't use <font color="white"> for spoilers. Instead, use <span class="spoiler"> or use the s quickedit. With the css flexibility we've given users, not everyone is using a white background anymore.
I found them unlikable, but the writing was so sharp and the casting so brilliant that I stuck with it. I think you see as the series goes on that though the women may be hurting more obviously, EVERYONE is suffering because of the rigid social mores of the era.
quester, yes. I couldn't get over the fact that Peggy went into labor and didn't know she was pregnant. What the fuck did she think was the baby kicking? I just don't get it. Yes, people have talked about women they know not realizing they were pregnant, but come on.
Yeah, Scrappy, it does seem that Don suffers from having to be The Man all the time. And it's heartbreakingly easy for him to be a total fake because nobody's supposed to get close to him anyway... or is that too "Behind Blue Eyes?"
My take on that, le nubian, was that I think people in that era thought the pill was infallible, so the pregnancy might have seemed inconceivable (no pun intended - ok, maybe a little) to Peggy. That with a heavy dose of denial, and a ton of conflicting feelings about Pete, makes it a twist I can deal with.
Franken,
yes, I think that was what we were to conclude as an audience, but I'm still not very happy with that.
And yet, there are documented cases in real life of that happening. You may not be happy with it, but it's not unrealistic.
Pictures from the Mad Men season 2 premiere.
but it's not unrealistic.
Not at all.
I knew one girl (of 18) who didn't realize she was pregnant until she was 6 months or so along and her command forced her to go to the dispensary and get a pregnancy test. All because her boyfriend told her she couldn't get pregnant if they only screwed during the week (or the weekend, something ridiculous like that.) Now, we're talking someone raised in rural Alabama during the 70s when you can believe there was no sex education in schools and kids only knew what they heard from their peers. And they heard very strange things. I can only imagine what it was like in the late 50s, early 60s.
ETA: whitefont for questor as this post could give an idea of what has been whitefonted so far.