Mad Men thoughts, Season Five, Episode Two: “Tea Leaves”

* Where do you come down on Fat Betty Francis versus Fat Peggy Olsen and Fat Lee Adama in the Fat Versions of Characters from the Great Post-Millennial Dramas? I actually think she ranks at the top, but we’ll see where things go from here.

* Heh, nice to see that the show’s not above a little DIRECT CONTRAST BETWEEN THE MRS. DRAPERS GETTING DRESSED. Megan could have turned to the camera and winked and it wouldn’t have been any less subtle. In fact, that was just the first of several moments that felt a bit too on-the-nose: Roger actually saying the words “When’s everything gonna get back to normal?”, about four quarts of sad string music poured all over all of Betty’s scenes, particularly the (otherwise beautiful) scene with the boys running around with sparklers on (I presume) the Fourth of July, and a death-dream that would otherwise have been creepy as hell. It’s okay, Mad Men, you can trust us!

* And then there’s Michael Ginsberg — excuse me, MICHAEL GINSBERG!!! I will say the following things about him here and then move on:

1) I find that schticky mid-century New York Jewish wiseacre accent fun to listen to.
2) The character is talented, and this show does good things with the idea of talent.
3) We went from his elderly European Jewish father blessing him in Hebrew to a showtune sung by a Nazi in under two minutes.
4) The jury is very much still out on this guy — however strong he came on in this episode, this is a show that hasn’t bellyflopped yet, not to a significant “new character developed over multiple episodes” degree anyway, and I’m willing to see where they take it. I mean, why would you watch a show if you weren’t?

* Is it just me, or are the scenes in Pete and Roger’s offices being shot in such a way as to complement their Kubrickian decor and color scheme of orange on black and white? Keeping everyone low in the frame so that the big fields of white can show?

* Dawn and Don, haha! I noticed that before it became a topic of discussion for the characters themselves, perhaps because I’m married to someone who isn’t from New York and for whom, therefore, the pronunciation actually would be confusing. (Where I’m from, Mary, marry, and merry are pronounced three different ways, which has blown many a non-tri-state-area mind.)

* In the Rolling Stones episode, Betty asks the doctor for a mother’s little helper. LOL

* If Director Jon Hamm’s primary visual contribution to Mad Men is the unusual use of fades between scenes, then put him in the director’s chair more often. I’m not sure what meaning we’re supposed to draw from, say, the fade between Betty in the bathroom and Betty in the clinic, and I’m glad of that. It feels gooey, somehow, like the link between the scenes isn’t neat and precise at all.

* Have we seen many, or really any, scenes with just Roger and Peggy before? They seem to have developed a rapport almost like Roger and Don.

* Something about Don in a public, dressed-down setting makes him seem menacing. Visually, he’s so different from the Rolling Stones fans at the concert it’s like he’s dangerous.

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9 Responses to Mad Men thoughts, Season Five, Episode Two: “Tea Leaves”

  1. rob says:

    ”Something about Don in a public, dressed-down setting makes him seem menacing. Visually, he’s so different from the Rolling Stones fans at the concert it’s like he’s dangerous.”

    The fact that he was twice as old and taller than everyone else there helped. Personally i’m looking foward to season 7 (8? 9?) old and fat Don. The first time he tries to flirt with a young girl and doesn’t get a response is going to be such a great dramatic momment. I just hope the show doesn’t end before that point.

  2. jeffk says:

    I love that when I googled “Betty Draper Fat Lee Adama” this morning, you were right there at the top. Wavelengths, Sean. Wavelengths.

  3. I loved that backstage menace too. I wonder if we’ll see that girl pop up again via Don’s business card. Seems like there was more set up there than Harry blowing it with the Stones.

    I also enjoyed the subtlety of Betty’s exaggeration of Don’s marriage. She said Megan was 20, later Megan says she’s 26.

  4. Chris says:

    Anyone catch that little dig at Mitt Romney’s pops? Clever girl.

  5. madeleine says:

    Nothing beats Fat Lee Adama in my book.

    It never occurred to me that other people might pronounce marry, merry, and Mary the same way. Whhaa!!?

    I also didn’t realize Jon Hamm directed that episode. Nice.

    Yes, Don totally seemed sort of dangerous during the backstage scene. My first thought was, “Oh, they are going to look so square at a Stones concert in their businessman suits.” But let’s be honest, Don looks good anywhere, no matter what he’s wearing!

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