View Full Version : RIP Mad Men, a show that was not only watched, but absorbed


TMC
05-15-2015, 11:44 PM
http://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/a35013/mad-men-end-tribute

"More than the characters, dialogue, or auteurist details, what I'll miss most about Mad Men (http://www.tvinsider.com/article/1815/report-the-good-wife-conspiracy-is-true--body-doubles-helped-fake-alicia-kalinda-reunion-scene/) is the way I, and perhaps many of you, absorbed it," says Jen Chaney. "This was not a show that we merely watched. We studied it. We hit pause to verify the names of the books that popped up in certain scenes … We scrutinized the costumes, not only for their period accuracy and textural gorgeousness, but for their deeper meanings. We connected the dots from things that happened all the way back in seasons one or two to the moments unfolding in seasons six or seven … Sure, during each hour that unfolded on AMC, we enjoyed Mad Men for its entertainment value. But during that hour, and for hours afterward, we also treated it like the focus of a senior thesis, a rich subject of inquiry worthy of analysis and discussion. To paraphrase that ad for Accutron pitched by Freddy Rumsen at the beginning of season seven, Mad Men wasn't just a TV period piece. It was a conversation piece."