
Our check from Diane cleared, so now we can say nice things about her collection.
[Photo: Courtesy of frillr.com]

re ever Rachel's biggest fans in the world before this show but now all we want to know is how we can get our resumes to her. Seriously, Lorenzo weeps at this show in a "What have I done with my life/it's not too late to join the circus" manner that Tom finds vaguely disturbing.
warrant them, but all too often have deluded themselves into thinking they're more interesting than they actually are. You know which ones we're talking about.
really thinks that, her sense of humor about the insanity and inanity of her life is funny and surprising. "When I started in this business I was 21 years old. I was the girl trying to break through security and trying to get in and even getting a standing seat let alone a seat. Seating in the front row at fashion shows that 's a big part of the dream for me." Lorenzo, whose favorite movie is Working Girl, cheers her through his tears.
whom are straight out of Central Casting. Taylor is from the "angry, unapproachable rock/punk/goth chick "file ("Taylor doesn't have friends. She doesn't like people.") and Brad is of course a page straight out of "acerbic, high-strung queen." The thing with the genre of reality television that can best be summed up as "follow a rich/famous person around all the time," is that more often than not, the rich/famous person in the title isn't all that interesting on their own and the key to making them pop off the screen is giving them a strong set of sidekicks. Mission fucking accomplished.
If we had to sit through an hour of Rachel complaining about...well, everything, and saying "I die!" every time something pleases her, honeys, we'd be fighting over the remote in seconds. Think of it like this: if you've ever watched Absolutely Fabulous (and if you haven't, what the HELL are you doing reading this? Go!), Rachel is basically Edina and Taylor and Brad are Pats and Saffy. That's pretty much all you need to watch the show.
need and return the rest to the stores." That's Lorenzo's idea of heaven.
get to look at their collections while still in the studio -"There's only one sample. Nothing has been produced for sale purposes, for stylists, for private clients, nothing has been produced for buyers. There's literally one. Everyone needs to share that collection and it's next to impossible." - darlings, by that point, Lorenzo is curled up on the floor and questioning his own fabulosity.


We have to suppress our knowledge of the sometimes seismic events that occurred throughout the '60s when we watch this show because for the most part, events happen far off camera and are only obliquely referred to by the characters, more often to provide ambiance than any sort of reflection. For the most part, Mad Men looks at an era not through its major events but through the eyes of normal people reacting to the millions of minor events in their day to day lives. It is, in some sense, a more accurate take on history or at the very least, it's a take that does a good job of faking the feel of accuracy.
got bored with it: scenes of characters waking up. From Betty and Freddy passed out on their respective couches, to Joan in Roger's office, to Don being woken up by an angry Mona in his office, the message seems to be that everyone's waking up to something. This being Mad Men, we're not going to be told what, but it felt to us that this moment, for these people, is when The Sixties started.
Roger, crackles and spits sexual tension while slogging under the weight of an ended affair), she might still be in love with him - or coming to the realization that she actually did love him once.
Everyone else was either laughing it off or trying to explain it away, but Pete reacted with extreme revulsion and Peggy reacted with a tenseness that makes us think she's not gotten this far in life without knowing at least a couple drunks along the way. She is appalled but immediately wants to fix and forget. Her reward for being the only prudent and empathetic person in the firm is a promotion so big that it left our heads spinning. Taking over the Senior Copywriter's accounts is a HUGE leapfrog for Peggy and we hope two things: 1) that the men in the office don't give her TOO much shit for it and 2) that she'll get a big enough raise and take Joan and Bobbie's advice and get herself a new damn wardrobe.
riage to Don, Betty would drift too far away from the Sterling Cooper universe to still remain in the show and we just don't see that happening. Betty's deteriorating even further and when she's not dazedly wandering around in a housecoat with a glass of wine, she's setting her friend up to do the thing she herself doesn't have the nerve to (and for the crime of having a seemingly happy marriage). Still, she doesn't seem inclined to invite him back and he came right out and admitted to Roger that he's not sure he even wants to. Of course Roger being the needy, immature man that he is, he took Don's statement in the worst possible way. The Sterling marriage always served as a prediction of where the Draper marriage is heading but in another huge leapfrog move, Roger chucked it all and went for Joan II, Jane. We didn't see that one coming at all and we can't WAIT to see Joan's reaction.










