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Mad Men: Three Sundays

by Bob Sassone, posted Aug 18th 2008 1:30AM
Mad Men
(S02E04) "That was beautiful. Are you going to say Grace now?" - Peggy's mom, to the priest

This episode brought a big smile to my face for one reason: Pete was wining and dining the Gorton's people! I grew up a few blocks away from the Gorton's headquarters, so it was great to see them as the latest client of Sterling Cooper. Hopefully we'll see them in the future too as we've repeatedly seen Belle Jolie, Utz, and Mohawk Airlines.

The rest of the episode shows how intricate this show is. It sort of worries me in a way. How can people who didn't see the first season get into this show, the characters, the rhythms, the seven different stories that each character is carrying around with them? How does the show grow in viewership? I don't know. I just know I love it and other dedicated fans do too, and I hope that's enough for many years to come.

So this episode of Mad Men is all about how everyone spends their Sundays. The first season was all about Don's family and the goings on at Sterling Cooper, so it's great to see the stories of the other characters expanding. I like seeing the gang in casual clothes (well, Harry still wears a bow tie on Sundays). I don't think this is exactly casual Fridays, but it's interesting. Over at the Olsens, I got that strange feeling that not only did all of the Olsen women want to get to know Father Handsome (Colin Hanks) they wanted to get to know him. If this show goes that route - Peggy and the Priest - it will out-wow the scene with Don and Bobbie last week (not that I think it's going there). And speaking of Bobbie, I truly don't like her. Assertive and greedy is one thing, but here's a woman who gets that done to her by a man and then still comes back later and throws her jacket on Don's office floor so she doesn't, um, get her knees all dirty.

Some other observations:

- I'm confused by the timeline of this episode. It opens on Sunday, April 8, 1962. Then when Pete and Roger are talking to the head of Gorton's and his "wife," the date on the board is April 16, eight days later. But later in the episode Father Handsome is giving his Sunday sermon, which he told Peggy was in "one week." How could that be? And then later it's April 22, which is Easter?

- So on Sunday, we have Peggy's family hosting Father Handsome for dinner, Don and the gang working hard on the American Airlines campaign, and Roger...in a hotel room with a prostitute. Everyone has a different idea of the perfect Sunday I guess.

- Was Peggy's sister's confession a calculated move?

- On weekends, Pete is apparently Rod Laver.

- Roger's daugther, the one getting married: is that the same teen who was all snarky in an episode last season?

- Roger's look at Ken after he offered the woman's number: no one gives a look like John Slattery.

- I want Sally to make all of my drinks for me. 9% tomato juice, 91% booze. (But she's drinking too already?) And speaking of Sally, her "Is that your maid?" line literally made we wince.

- Book club alert: Betty is reading F. Scott Fitzgerald (as suggested by horny horse guy). Not sure which book it is the title is kinda blurred. But I'm sure everyone will be rushing to Amazon to buy something by Fitzgerald too, which would be a great thing.

- Bobbie's idea sounds like something FOX would do today. I truly love Don's line about the show: "It's derivative, with a twist, which is what they're looking for." Don Draper predicted the way 2008 television executives think.

- Don's handling of the broken record player was perfect, just telling Bobby he believed his mom that he did it and knowing that he was going to take any of the kid's BS. (Side note: odd that we have two people with the same name, Bobby and Bobbie. Shows don't usually do that.)

- Is it just me or are Joan's boobs Holloway-bigger than usual in this episode?

If there's one thing I haven't liked about this season is that we haven't seen Midge or Rachel. Don mailed the Frank O'Hara book to someone in the season opener, so hopefully we're going to see at least one of them later this season. That will be a nice surprise.

I was thinking that Joan wouldn't be able to find a replacement secretary for Don, and that would lead to all sorts of intrigue with her finding out his secrets, and maybe Don being tempted by Joan, which would cause him to clash with Roger. But next week's sneak peek showed another secretary outside of Don's door ...

What did you think of this rather different episode?
Great, as usual!299 (86.4%)
Fair41 (11.8%)
Not my cup of vodka and tomato juice6 (1.7%)

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13 Comments

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KD

Did anyone catch Betty's line about Bobby breaking the washing machine as well? If you remember last season, you can guess who actually broke it.

August 20 2008 at 4:23 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Greg

"Assertive and greedy is one thing, but here's a woman who gets that done to her by a man and then still comes back later and throws her jacket on Don's office floor so she doesn't, um, get her knees all dirty."

In order to get a woman to throw her jacket on the floor like that, sometimes you have to motivate them.

"Did any of you catch Don Draper's violent acts against women?"

My girlfriend once asked me "if I'd ever hit her?" I replied by saying "not if you don't hit me first."

Thank you for this blog! I tried to talk about Mad Men with my wife and friends, but no-one I know watches it? This show made me realize that the early sixties was probably the best time to live in America. The fifties were too stuffy, and after 1965 the U.S. really went down hill.






August 20 2008 at 3:25 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Michelle Kenyon Brown

Did any of you catch Don Draper's violent acts against women? He not only physically pushes his wife but violates his current mistress in order to get her to order her husband to do what he wanted him to do?

August 20 2008 at 1:30 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Joyce

A smart column with astute reader comments as well. OK, a question for those of you who never miss the slightest detail: could any of you see what image and/or title was on the book, possibly a coloring book, that Don's daughter was carrying as she entered the office? Darned if didn't start to trigger a childhood memory, so I'd be thrilled if someone could fill in the blanks.

August 18 2008 at 10:38 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Joyce's comment
brad456

it looks like a coloring Book, in one scene his daughter is marking a book, that consists of black & white pages.

the cover title appears to be Evelyn Rosie or Evlyn Rosie.

heres a link to the image of the book.
http://img147.imageshack.us/my.php?image=madmenqo4.jpg

August 21 2008 at 5:33 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
reverenddebby

The Three Sundays of the title are not just 3 random sundays, but Passion Sunday, Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday. The priest gives Peggy an egg, the sign of fertility and life, as an affirmation of her life, on Easter Sunday, the day of Resurrection.

August 18 2008 at 2:23 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to reverenddebby's comment
DK

Or he just snarkily points out her illegitimate child.

August 18 2008 at 11:12 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Chip Douglas

Peggy's sisters confession was a calculated move. She was trying to bring her down to her level of misery. But it backfired. Father Handsome gave Peggy the gift of the egg as symbol of life and an aknowledgement of her son. Peggy's sister's husband is laying on the couch, and she is responsible for taking care of everyone in the family. She does not have a lot of happy moments in her life. And she can not stand anyone else doing well. She is a sad person with a sad little life. Peggy an do anything. And she knows it.

August 18 2008 at 1:27 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Allison Solow

I picked up another pop culture reference, I think. In 1962, Robert Morse won the Tony for "How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying" -- set in an office like Sterling Cooper. He rises to the top as a young neophyte. The big boss was played by Rudy Vallee -- and he wore knit sweaters just like the one Morse was wearing in the Chinese food scene (with the chewing gum). I think Weiner cast him, in part, as Cooper because of the "HTSIB" connection.

August 18 2008 at 11:35 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Liz

Liked it much better than last weeks ep. If for no other reason for the tiny moment at the end where Don actually told Betty something about his childhood, and Betty responded accordingly.

August 18 2008 at 11:06 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
JAC

The gum Don talks about his father liking is this one (I think)

http://www.chowardcompany.com/products.htm

August 18 2008 at 1:59 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to JAC's comment
tin

He said violet "candy," not necessarily gum.

August 19 2008 at 8:31 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Andrew

I enjoyed this episode, especially the scenes with Don and his son. I think Peggy's sister's confession was definitely calculated. I also thought Don's daughter at the office was pretty hilarious from commenting on Joan's boobs to asking if the girlfriend (not maid) laid on top of him.

August 18 2008 at 1:48 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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