All the other sites that lets you watch Mad Men, force you to do a survey before actually gettin access to the site. Well, not this one.
Betty sees a specialist about her ongoing physical problems; a managing partner leans on Don to get involved in the Richard Nixon presidential campaign; Peggy gets some unwanted attention from a copy writer.
A candidate makes an impression on Don; Peggy's taste in men proves questionable; and Pete faces a major decision about his career. Sterling Cooper welcomes back a prodigal client; Betty and the children take a trip; Joan and Greg make plans for their future. The firm celebrates as they hit a milestone. Peggy and Paul compete to secure the same account.
Set in 1960's New York, series follows the lives of the ruthlessly competitive men and women of Madison Avenue advertising, an ego-driven world where key players make an art of the sell while their private world gets sold. The story revolves around the conflicted world of Don Draper (Jon Hamm), the biggest ad man (and ladies man) in the business, and his colleagues at the Sterling Cooper Advertising Agency. As Don makes the plays in the boardroom and the bedroom, he struggles to stay a step ahead of the rapidly changing times and the young executives nipping at his heels. Starring Jon Hamm, Elisabeth Moss, Vincent Kartheiser, January Jones and Christina Hendricks. Created by Matthew Weiner.
They who live in glass houses (or multi-million-dollar mansions) shouldn't throw stones.
The Art Director in the series, Salvator Romano is interesting not only because he is the only apparent gay character but because he is stands out as being truly creative among a group of so-called creative people at Sterling Cooper. Additionally, no matter how big or small changes are required by others at the ad agency or their clients, Salvator seems always ready to please. He delivers what is needed and by when it is due to keep both the clients and his co-workers happy.
If you haven't caught madmen yet, don't even start now. Go rent the DVD for season one madmen and record anything that comes on now on the AMC network. The reason I recommend this is because, not unlike the Sopranos, every episode is full of layer upon layer of character building, relationship complexity, and intriguing dialogue and settings.
They weren't looking for talent to put on the show. They could find that a lot quicker and easier than dragging out a contest for nearly an entire summer. It was never about rewarding the loyal fan with the compelling performance or the most creative video. That was all smoke and mirrors. The huge majority of contestants had never stood a chance, regardless of the quality of their submissions. Granting a walk-on role was just their way of throwing a bone to one of the highly networked stooges who could promote their show for them by granting AMC access to their network. Rumblings in the blogs suggested that the contest had lost all credibility. Contestants had begun to feel duped by their beloved show.
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