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Mad Men: The Special Relationship

Television

Darren Franich

British jokes, this episode had plenty! Just as Season 2 of The Wire taught us that that there’s a whole world of Polack humor lurking in the urban enclaves of the eastern seaboard, and Season 3 of Deadwood taught us about lost race of Cornish people, so Season 3 of Mad Men has reminded us that, forty years ago, before the era of postracial humor and white-person self-deprecation, the most fertile ground for SFW naughty ethnic humor were our transatlantic neighbors. I’ve lost track of the number of references to the Revolutionary War, but Roger made a joke about the Union Jack. He also had the line of the night: somebody mentioned Guy might lose his foot, and Roger shook his head, “And right after he got it in the door.” Everybody had a good blood-drenched laugh about that.

Mad Men: Postpartum Repression

Television

Eric Freeman

Sweaty Betty Draper

Sunday’s Mad Men was about the way that people’s best laid plans don’t always work out the way they want. As usual, we saw all sides of the situation: plans in their inception, as seen in Peggy’s belief that Don’s life is exactly what she wants; plans on the brink of being realized and all the terror that comes with standing on that precipice, as seen in the case of prison guard Dennis Hobart; and plans that have already been realized but haven’t worked, and yet they still get trotted out again in the hopes that this time will be different, as seen in Don and Betty’s hope that little Eugene Scott Draper will make everything better.

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