PlasmaDogPlasma
Footballguy
I'd still do Joan, but now it would be angrier.
Which one of them kept birds?It's not like any of the male characters in this show have been prone to outright avarice.![]()
Yeah but she's a woman.It's not like any of the male characters in this show have been prone to outright avarice.![]()
Wait a minute. There's no Tvs at burger chef! That was Peggy's whole pitch!I don't watch this show, but my wife does. She was telling me about the Burger Chef account they were talking about on the show and the landing on the moon that was being shown during this show I guess and said in 1969 she was sitting in Burger Chef watching the moon landing in Columbus, Ohio. I suppose she thought that was strange.
Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.
I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.
[joan]The guy who may have been the biggest reason for the companies success and the one person who was against her whoring herself out, she turns on because he cost her money.Only person in that room who was thinking only about money. As soon as she heard the figure she went all goo-goo eyed. Doesn't care about her role, doesn't care who runs what. JustYeah, and I no longer like Joan.Joan loves her some money![]()
I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.
I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.
They didn't have to buy out Don.I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.![]()
Buying just Don out was prohibitive prior to this point.
They all want to be wealthy.I can't imagine why a woman, who's never been treated like an equal to men her entire life, and has a kid, would want to be independently wealthy. Just makes no sense.
STIFF UPPER LIP, JOANIE!
Joan has been mailing it in ever since she became partner. The first few seasons she ran the office as much as anybody. Sucks to see a good character go soft. But IMO the show has a lot of characters without a whole lot of purpose anymore.Not sure what the big deal is. If I'm Joan or any one if them I'm taking the deal. All of them can mail it in at that point career wise.
Best thing she ever did. Millionaire for one lay.The other partners can treat her nicely to her face until the cows come home, but it's difficult to see her as anything but a whore.
Not at the final scene we saw.They didn't have to buy out Don.I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.![]()
Buying just Don out was prohibitive prior to this point.
Seriously. I would have slept with that dude for $10 million (her share in 2014 dollars).Best thing she ever did. Millionaire for one lay.The other partners can treat her nicely to her face until the cows come home, but it's difficult to see her as anything but a whore.
What does that have to do with what we're discussing?Not at the final scene we saw.They didn't have to buy out Don.I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.![]()
Buying just Don out was prohibitive prior to this point.
But in an earlier episode they talked about the impact of doing so (before they offered him the zero tolerance option).
I believe Joan said that it would put them in a very tough financial position.
Has to do with the financial strength/weakness of the firm.What does that have to do with what we're discussing?Not at the final scene we saw.They didn't have to buy out Don.I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.![]()
Buying just Don out was prohibitive prior to this point.
But in an earlier episode they talked about the impact of doing so (before they offered him the zero tolerance option).
I believe Joan said that it would put them in a very tough financial position.
Yet, nothing to do with Don sacrificing for his partners.Has to do with the financial strength/weakness of the firm.What does that have to do with what we're discussing?Not at the final scene we saw.They didn't have to buy out Don.I'm not sure about that though...if Ted goes they have to buy him out and I'm guessing they also have to buy out Bert's piece. Im not sure where Cutler comes up with that money especially after seeing his reaction to the buyout. They didn't do a great job of showing it, but the partnership would probably have been very cash poor in short order.Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.![]()
Buying just Don out was prohibitive prior to this point.
But in an earlier episode they talked about the impact of doing so (before they offered him the zero tolerance option).
I believe Joan said that it would put them in a very tough financial position.
Which had a significant part in the final episode we saw.
IMO, counsellor.
I would agree with this but then we'd both be wrong.I think that episode is the last we see of any of the characters at the ad agency or doing anything related to work. I think the last 7 episodes will be about closure to the personal lives/stories for all of the characters.
there's literally a 0% chance this is correct. I mean, why do people do this?I think that episode is the last we see of any of the characters at the ad agency or doing anything related to work. I think the last 7 episodes will be about closure to the personal lives/stories for all of the characters.
Rogers sell to Don was that, sure he'd be fine, but the others wouldn't...which Don must consider. Obviously he did.Christo said:Sacrificing for his co-partners? If the deal didn't go through he was out the door.Ok, ok...I will sort of admit you convinced me you were right.I don't think Don is ok overnight with working for McCann still, but Berts song about Life is Bigger than Business fits with sacrificing for his co-partners.What Matt Weiner says about the final scene.... (skip to 5:00)
TA-DA!This fantasy is in his (Don's) mind, its a message from his subconscious that in the wake of all this, they've actually lost somebody very important to them.
Cooper's loss is really about life itself, it's not about money or anything like that. What is the real value of success? You still have your life on the other side of it.
What's left to do at the workplace, once the acquisition goes through? The partners are rich, they have job security, the agency has autonomy, there's no worrying about a fledgeling agency possibly going under because they lose a big client, etc.there's literally a 0% chance this is correct. I mean, why do people do this?I think that episode is the last we see of any of the characters at the ad agency or doing anything related to work. I think the last 7 episodes will be about closure to the personal lives/stories for all of the characters.
Well you've convinced me.What's left to do at the workplace, once the acquisition goes through? The partners are rich, they have job security, the agency has autonomy, there's no worrying about a fledgeling agency possibly going under because they lose a big client, etc.there's literally a 0% chance this is correct. I mean, why do people do this?I think that episode is the last we see of any of the characters at the ad agency or doing anything related to work. I think the last 7 episodes will be about closure to the personal lives/stories for all of the characters.
They are really going to spend time during the last 294 minutes of this show with plotlines involving McCann trying to control their creative pitch to Tupperware? A three-episode arc of them trying to land Buick?
I just think the way they ended the mid-season finale leaves very little at stake when it comes to the agency. They closed the book on the agency, now it's time to see what happens with everything else![]()
The characters exist outside of the office. It's certainly plausible they do the usual time jump of at least a month, but most likely after the acquisition. By that time, exploring the Don & Megan's divorce, a Pete and Trudy custody battle, Peggy coming to grips with her maternal void and starts a family with Stan, Henry's turning into a wife beater and Betty going Enough" on him, Roger reconciling with his daughter, Ken becoming a successful pirate-genre writer, Ginsberg's labotomy, Harry starting his own venture with Kinsey, Bob Benson meeting Sal at the Blue Oyster, etc.so in a 7-episode stretch, we won't see any more of the agency or characters that the entire series has been about up to this point?
Don's just going to retire to Hawaii and drink Mai Tais for 7 episodes?
That scene had one of the great lines from the show, Bert to Don - "Sacajawea carried a baby on her back all the way to the Pacific Ocean, and somewhere along the way that baby thought he discovered America."He used it to get Don to sign a contract because Conrad Hilton wouldn't do any business with SCDP without one.Didn't Cooper basically blackmail Don once because of that knowledge? I forget the circumstances.
Don spent a whole year showing up at work ####-faced. He screwed them over with any tobacco business. He fired Jaguar. He pissed off another client by talking out of turn about the war.(HULK) said:Teddy practically kills some clients and no one slaps his wrist. Don admits he was raised in a brothel and he's Satan.
Also, Pete was more excited about the money than Joan was IMO. Calling Cutler greedy for obstructing the deal had me in stitches.
Yeah, well. I guess I wasn't paying attention during those parts.Don spent a whole year showing up at work ####-faced. He screwed them over with any tobacco business. He fired Jaguar. He pissed off another client by talking out of turn about the war.(HULK) said:Teddy practically kills some clients and no one slaps his wrist. Don admits he was raised in a brothel and he's Satan.
Also, Pete was more excited about the money than Joan was IMO. Calling Cutler greedy for obstructing the deal had me in stitches.
Don was a pain their ### for a long time...
Don has done plenty for the company though too. More than Teddy C imo.Don spent a whole year showing up at work ####-faced. He screwed them over with any tobacco business. He fired Jaguar. He pissed off another client by talking out of turn about the war.(HULK) said:Teddy practically kills some clients and no one slaps his wrist. Don admits he was raised in a brothel and he's Satan.
Also, Pete was more excited about the money than Joan was IMO. Calling Cutler greedy for obstructing the deal had me in stitches.
Don was a pain their ### for a long time...
84? Even I don't like the show enough to watch a slide show of 84 Peggy faces.
I'm sure there's a slideshow of Duck Dynasty you could watch somewhere.84? Even I don't like the show enough to watch a slide show of 84 Peggy faces.
OMG 6 months!Took me months to catch up to this show. I FINALLY caught up last week. Goto watch it last night and im like wtf? Come to find out it doesnt come back until 2015![]()
Would've been good shtick to have a wild-eyed CGI'd Charles Manson wandering around at Megan's party.

I guess the whole thing where she tried to land the Avon account, independently solicited business advice from the professor and when Cutler pointed out that she had 2 full-time jobs never happened.Joan has been mailing it in ever since she became partner. The first few seasons she ran the office as much as anybody. Sucks to see a good character go soft. But IMO the show has a lot of characters without a whole lot of purpose anymore.Not sure what the big deal is. If I'm Joan or any one if them I'm taking the deal. All of them can mail it in at that point career wise.
I am still into the show but I'm also kind of hanging on just to see it end.
Wait, McJose = Officer Pete Malloy, right? Man, his being-horrible-at-TV shtick goes back a long way.I do, friend.This is the best drama on TV right now. It's one of the best shows to come around in years.Who Cares?!?![]()
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