The best scene of all time? Mad Men - Lost Horizons

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  • čas přidán 6. 05. 2015
  • "Don sits in a meeting, listening to the description of a Miller beer drinker, described as a man from Wisconsin. It's the meeting he's wanted his whole career, a chance to really impress a big client.
    But his heart isn't in it. It's obvious from Jon Hamm's face. And then he looks out the window." www.vox.com/2015/5/4/8542087/m...

Komentáře • 979

  • @acyrus4032
    @acyrus4032 Před 7 lety +2690

    "but in the end, none wants to be one of a hundred in a box"

  • @AdamG1983
    @AdamG1983 Před 6 lety +947

    Ted was already ready for the 70's

  • @JBJones66
    @JBJones66 Před 7 lety +2593

    I love Ted's expression at the end. It wasn't a judgmental scoff as some might think. But more of a "go find what works for you Don. Good for you." Almost like he's proud of him.

    • @RobChristianson
      @RobChristianson Před 6 lety +174

      Amazing what a good actor can do with no lines at all. I love this show.

    • @TheReubenKincaid
      @TheReubenKincaid Před 6 lety +162

      3 expressions, the way Ted always felt, hey wait a minute, not my problem anymore, then a knowing admiration

    • @tbk29
      @tbk29 Před 5 lety +96

      like "now that's the Don I always admire" too

    • @YaLittleFriend
      @YaLittleFriend Před 5 lety +87

      Always respected Ted and he was awesome with Don, he knows he could never tame Don only learn from him.

    • @jaredhinton5662
      @jaredhinton5662 Před 5 lety +49

      Envious even. Too scared to have done it himself.

  • @Shaqstheman000
    @Shaqstheman000 Před 6 lety +1560

    This is the scene that finally made me realise exactly why Don was always so reluctant to work at McCann Erickson. It was never about freedom or liberty, but the powerlessness and lack of recognition associated with a big corporation. Don needs to fee wanted and valued because Dick Whitman never was, and in a company like McCann Erickson, he'd never feel like a respected individual

    • @Deadlyaztec27
      @Deadlyaztec27 Před 3 lety +97

      I think there's also a sense of being disposable. I think it's less of him knowing he's not the star of attention, but knowing he can't be a maverick anymore because he's simply an automated piece that is expected to work as equally as all the other people, and with no deviation or liberty.

    • @Shaqstheman000
      @Shaqstheman000 Před 2 lety +18

      @@truthhandler6828 Don can't have NPD, he exhibits massive self-loathing and has the capacity to view himself objectively, be humble and admit he was wrong

    • @Shaqstheman000
      @Shaqstheman000 Před 2 lety +6

      @@truthhandler6828 I would rather rely on the DSM definition of narcissists over a fucking CZcamsrs

    • @Shaqstheman000
      @Shaqstheman000 Před 2 lety +1

      @@truthhandler6828 damn boy maybe you're the narcissist

    • @JesusPerez-iw3ey
      @JesusPerez-iw3ey Před 2 lety +39

      Interesting, i see it similar but a bit different: Don grew up in a box. A box of expectations of poverty and low status. His whole adult life he has been trying to escape a box, a mental prison. Went to war to try to escape. He even stole a brand new persona to try and escape some. He does not like to feel in a box, inprisoned, controlled. I think the box lunch and conformity in that meeting triggered him. Then he saw outside the window for freedom. Thats why his personal life he is always alone. Thats why he refused a written contract till practically forced. He started breaking down in last season when all that running, and acting finally caught up to him. He had to go crazy some and ended up in that yoga place resort. There he finally learned he did not to physically be anything to escape the box(rich, pretend tough, married, women, liquor, cars, business), but could let go and escape mentally by breathing and being more in the moment, instead of always having to act and feel he was not worthy of life. He was able to let go of himself and feel some real compassion for another human being suffering when he cried with and hugged that dude. That last shot of the series where he is meditating, breathing, just enjoying the moment he learns to finally escape his mental self torture, and has his best artistic idea yet coming from calm, instead of desperation like his past business life, which makes him smile.

  • @KilleenMeSoftly
    @KilleenMeSoftly Před 7 lety +1090

    The more time went on, the more I liked Chaough.

    • @ChippyBlane
      @ChippyBlane Před 7 lety +63

      I liked it better when he was a dick. After they teamed up, he became harmless and annoying.

    • @eoinMB3949
      @eoinMB3949 Před 7 lety +48

      Andy Killeen I was the same. He turned out to be a cool guy

    • @SCharlesDennicon
      @SCharlesDennicon Před 6 lety +2

      He was a bit of a douche with Peggy.

    • @Wytych
      @Wytych Před 6 lety +30

      Roger's idea of selling out to McCann wasn't about the money at all but rather about trying to save SC&P from Cutler's vision of a more sterile and data-driven agency - starting with getting rid of Don. Roger knew he couldn't convince the other partners (especially Joan) to vote against Cutler regarding Draper, unless there was money involved.

    • @ardenaudreyarji
      @ardenaudreyarji Před 4 lety +1

      Well, Ted was never a creative genius in advertising like Don so he has no power over him when they merged.

  • @dallasviolante2301
    @dallasviolante2301 Před 3 lety +653

    The scene where he looks out the window to see a plane.
    How many of us when we were in school, when we were fortunate enough to sit by a window, looking up to watch a plane/contrail go by, thinking about where it was going, or wishing we were on it looking down upon the ground, while not paying attention to the teacher?

    • @inigo7780
      @inigo7780 Před 3 lety +25

      I remember my classmates (and me) watching the dump truck empty the dumpsters outside the classroom window. Our teacher wasn't impressed.

    • @davebob2884
      @davebob2884 Před 2 lety +12

      I did it and I still do it. Dreaming of the freedom that can await me. Unfortunately unlike Draper I can’t just walk out of the school and disappear

    • @darraghkelly1744
      @darraghkelly1744 Před 2 lety +5

      I still do it. Even when I see busses that would take me halfway across the country and more I’m just like 🤔

    • @CC3193
      @CC3193 Před rokem +4

      I remember when this aired people were saying it was a sign Don would become DB Cooper / Dan Cooper

    • @voodiethemoody
      @voodiethemoody Před rokem +8

      When I was experiencing hell at home, I called my uncle and he told me that the world is more than what happens in my house. After the call I looked up at a plane just like this, knowing I’d soon be able to live with other relatives in a better environment.

  • @nightflight83
    @nightflight83 Před 7 lety +1372

    I like that he takes his sandwich with him.

    • @SkylaneGuy
      @SkylaneGuy Před 7 lety +69

      nightflight83 yeah, that was a nice touch. Means I ain't coming back, bitches!

    • @frankdodd3355
      @frankdodd3355 Před 7 lety +45

      Love that touch. Might as well grab a sandwich.

    • @vincentrobinson9645
      @vincentrobinson9645 Před 6 lety +37

      nightflight83 I might as well take the “ take out” lunch, to at least get something out of this pointless meeting

    • @TheMaverickanupam
      @TheMaverickanupam Před 6 lety +26

      System is designed to serve me, not the other way around.

    • @pedrohenriquebianchi2802
      @pedrohenriquebianchi2802 Před 5 lety +7

      you was there, dude, you was the plane

  • @philipheubeck
    @philipheubeck Před 5 lety +402

    Mad Men must have at least a dozen best scenes of all time. Cooper’s last dance, the carousel pitch, “New York is a marvelous machine, wound tight”, Lane firing everyone, Peggy & Don all-nighter and he learns of Anna’s passing, Rodger bribing Peggy, Betty finding out his secret past, Lane & Pete fight.. Connie Hilton... anything Cooper is in.. man, it goes on and on and on. It’s gotta be the greatest show of all time.

    • @vickjr98
      @vickjr98 Před 4 lety +10

      Brilliant show, arguably the most well-written show ever

    • @silencekit
      @silencekit Před rokem +4

      It is modern Shakespeare

    • @JJJ-io6sc
      @JJJ-io6sc Před rokem +9

      Roger defending Don when the partners were trying to get rid of him.

    • @pamhlaing2662
      @pamhlaing2662 Před rokem

      Lane and Pete fight is the best

    • @rockturtleneck
      @rockturtleneck Před 11 měsíci +2

      I completely agree--I'd specifically add the scene with Connie Hilton where Don hops over the bar at the country club and makes them a couple cocktails, even though Don has no idea who he is.

  • @csmelen
    @csmelen Před 7 lety +247

    No reason to waste a free meal.

  • @rickvoss4791
    @rickvoss4791 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Bertram Cooper: "A man is whatever room he's in right now." Don looked around and knew he wasn't in the right room.

  • @willywonka2164
    @willywonka2164 Před rokem +150

    This scene resonates with me so much in my work life. The corporate uniform, the canned laughter; the everything.

    • @carbonking53
      @carbonking53 Před rokem +11

      All the canned terminology and predictable BS as well. I got out of a successful sales career because I couldn't take the fakeness any longer. If I heard the phrase "low hanging fruit" on more time I was going to blow a gasket and cause someone bodily injury....lol

    • @sjp6341
      @sjp6341 Před rokem +4

      @@carbonking53 Or "robust" aaarrrghhh!

    • @profilercms
      @profilercms Před 11 měsíci +3

      Glad I left that world 5 years ago

  • @seanhandron-obrien4276
    @seanhandron-obrien4276 Před 7 lety +3074

    sanitized board room, sanitized people talking about "stimulating imaginations" when doing precise opposite. attempting to narrow thoughts by placing this supposed "man" who there are a million of within a neartly defined box, and Don seeing the essence of his beloved industry boiled down to a horrific science, while he begins feeling like the very man being described in the presentation before him. because he's now one of many totally indistinguishable creative directors, nameless, faceless, and being trapped inside a behemoth corporation without a soul. he's inside the boxed lunch "with his name on it," with a laminated sterile set of facts that are marketing to a simplified caricature robbed of any inner life. he sees the plane flying above and chooses that route instead, leaving his ubiquitous can of coke untouched, he's flies away. the one place he could express himself at least occasionally in fleeting moments of connective brilliance disguised as an ad pitch -- that world is now gone. he's a living relic of a time abruptly and unceremoniously past.

    • @iloveyellowducks
      @iloveyellowducks Před 7 lety +182

      Sean H that was great! Please do the CZcams community a favor and keep writing your analysis of shows (especially mad men!).

    • @iii-ei5cv
      @iii-ei5cv Před 7 lety +42

      nailed it

    • @cdemps8384
      @cdemps8384 Před 7 lety +12

      Sean H well said

    • @gb546733
      @gb546733 Před 7 lety +12

      watch office space.

    • @ChippyBlane
      @ChippyBlane Před 7 lety +95

      Yet, tragically, he ultimately returns to McCann Erickson to bring them the winning idea for Coca-Cola. He's trapped in this life forever, unable to escape the vacuum that is corporate America, realizing that the "American Dream" is a hoax - as much a lie as his own name. The handsome Don Draper has become synonymous with the deeply flawed, beautiful land of America.

  • @PrincepsComitatus
    @PrincepsComitatus Před 6 lety +353

    Don aspire to what any great man does. To live life on his own terms.

    • @markofsaltburn
      @markofsaltburn Před 5 lety +13

      PrincepsComitatus But that's not what transformed him. His transformation started when he was broken down to nothing, when he was forced to atone for his egotism. His journey was only complete when he connected, when he brushed souls against a man whose life was radically different from his own. Don found himself by confronting his failure and powerlessness, and by learning that in reality, we never do anything meaningful alone.

    • @christianhuston897
      @christianhuston897 Před 5 lety +11

      @@markofsaltburn look at who you're trying to convince lol. The nuance is going to be lost on a wanna-be macho Roman Empire fanboi. He's part of the Trump-supporting school of madmen fans who see superficial strength of will and confidence and uncritically admire it, as they do with Donald.

    • @dschoenewald7320
      @dschoenewald7320 Před 5 lety +3

      Only way to live

    • @normawilliams7550
      @normawilliams7550 Před 3 lety +2

      Your comment is the only one I read who got it. He has seen and done that, and he is not impr at all. He just wants to live now.

    • @mightisright
      @mightisright Před 2 lety +3

      And sell Coca Cola. This show was sweet poison just like the products they sold on it.

  • @LuckyRabbit234
    @LuckyRabbit234 Před 4 lety +455

    In this scene, surrounded by like-minded lookalikes and soulless sophisticates, Don realizes he’s become what he’s been selling this whole time:
    A product.

  • @tubekxb
    @tubekxb Před 7 lety +162

    Nothing more obnoxious than a well-heeled executive giving a talk about the "average" man.

    • @JulianAlpsNews
      @JulianAlpsNews Před 3 lety +19

      There's one thing more obnoxious than a well-heeled executive giving a talk about the "average" man: a well-heeled politician giving a talk about the "average" man.

    • @thewatcheronthewall8532
      @thewatcheronthewall8532 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JulianAlpsNews well said!!

    • @JulianAlpsNews
      @JulianAlpsNews Před 2 lety +1

      @Jericho Kilmanja Precisely.

    • @ericschwartz1669
      @ericschwartz1669 Před 2 lety +1

      Zolensky Auto Parts

    • @damiengates7581
      @damiengates7581 Před měsícem

      Yes there is, a woman talking at all.

  • @fknclarky
    @fknclarky Před 5 lety +180

    2:51 Ted's thinking "damn, this show just keeps getting better!"

  • @michgoblue43
    @michgoblue43 Před 7 lety +1019

    Never was much of a Ted fan but he nailed that last look at the end there as he sees Don leave. If I remember correctly, that was his last scene on the series.

    • @Pat4ever.
      @Pat4ever. Před 6 lety +116

      It is not, he's in the finale. But it is a pretty poignant moment.

    • @HiddenWen
      @HiddenWen Před 6 lety +165

      A look that says he knows exactly who Don is and what he's doing. He gets it.

    • @lawrencelewis8105
      @lawrencelewis8105 Před 6 lety +25

      admiration.

    • @ronoccc
      @ronoccc Před 5 lety +124

      Ted was a legend. He was basically Don without the asshole tendencies and baggage. Don had his major plus points too don't get me wrong

    • @BucketOfMarbles
      @BucketOfMarbles Před 5 lety +87

      @@ronoccc Ted doesn't have the baggage, but he also lacks the brilliance. He's a perfectly serviceable ad man, but Don is lightning in a bottle.

  • @JordanMgordan
    @JordanMgordan Před 5 lety +99

    I always loved the underlying joke of this scene "I'm going to describe to you a man of very specific qualities"
    *Proceeds to give the describe the most generic everyman description*

    • @isidroguzman9815
      @isidroguzman9815 Před 8 měsíci +2

      And, you know, of Don in a way. But not Dick Whitman.

  • @starr0401
    @starr0401 Před 6 lety +37

    I like that the guy doesn't even stop talking and nobody turn around to see him as he leaves. The whole room seems dead disguised as focused.

  • @benfeld4058
    @benfeld4058 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Peggy Olson and then Don when he pitched it, said it best. "...none wants to be one of a hundred in a box".

  • @thomasjordan5049
    @thomasjordan5049 Před 6 lety +46

    Ted knew. Ted knew this was it for Don, and he was happy for him. Amazing what a look and a smirk can convey.

    • @nationalsocialism3504
      @nationalsocialism3504 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Ted knew that Don would be back... Don always comes back & always has some world class award winning idea when he does, hence why Don is always accepted back when he shows up after running away. Ted is impressed with how quickly Don doesn't even pretend to change/fit in & just automatically stays true to his nature and modus operandi... when Don is uncomfortable or unhappy then Don always runs away, Ted is excited to see what Don comes back with

  • @cdemps8384
    @cdemps8384 Před 7 lety +282

    I think this scene reverts back to the lipstick meeting. Don doesn't want to be one of just the regular creative he wants to feel special to be the guy and that's what that plane illustrates freedom from fear happiness

    • @SatorMoon
      @SatorMoon Před 2 lety +3

      And also the first conversation of the series with his server, the Old Gold Man… “I can’t get you to try any other cigarette, like my Lucky’s”. “Ohhh no” he says,

    • @ericsteinert4953
      @ericsteinert4953 Před 11 měsíci

      Bingo! It is the second take on the lipstick scene that Don headlines. And that is what gets right to him! He’s in a commodity business where you can’t fantasize the customer’s uniqueness.

  • @fonebook
    @fonebook Před 6 lety +58

    I love this scene so much, particularly the shot of the plane. It really puts things in perspective sometimes when you just watch a plane fly by.

    • @Kevin-sr8yx
      @Kevin-sr8yx Před 9 měsíci

      Don thinks, how does the plane stay up when it flies so slowly?

    • @lizardquinn
      @lizardquinn Před 9 měsíci

      Reminds me of Don seeing the fly on the ceiling in the pilot episode which everyone thought had some symbolic meaning but I believe Matthew Weiner said he put in there because it’s familiar and everyone has done that in an office. Same here for this airplane I would surmise.

    • @Teeveepicksures
      @Teeveepicksures Před 7 měsíci +1

      He misses that TWA flight attendant

  • @kristopherryanwatson
    @kristopherryanwatson Před 2 lety +16

    there is nothing worse than a new creative director joining an agency and on his first day, attends a meeting only to discover, he is in a meeting with a dozen other creative directors.

  • @Moo01100
    @Moo01100 Před 7 lety +430

    It's fitting that Draper, realizing that if he is to make a difference in a place like mccann, he has to do something to elevate he and his position beyond the mcdrones he is now surrounded with. Retaining his dignity he quietly slips out of the meeting and hits the american highway, chasing ghosts and reliving his youth, only to end up in some new age hippy retreat for broken souls, of which he has become one. Only to return to mcann as the man who writes The Coke ad. Like any conquering hero, he has to get down before he gets back up. After all this is Don Draper we are talking about.

    • @georgebennett3197
      @georgebennett3197 Před 6 lety +35

      Hi Moo01100 - yeah - you get it and tell it well. It seems that not many people realise that the last scene of the last episode is the fact that Don sees that the new age Hippy scene is just as vacuous as anything else and goes back to Macann and writes the epic Coke Ad.

    • @peanutjelly727
      @peanutjelly727 Před 4 lety +1

      @@georgebennett3197 But how do you know he was the one who did the Coke ad?

    • @georgebennett3197
      @georgebennett3197 Před 4 lety +22

      @@peanutjelly727 I don't - it's fiction - but that's what the writers are suggesting.

    • @afonsosousa2684
      @afonsosousa2684 Před 4 lety +53

      @@peanutjelly727 The real life ad was a McCann-Erickson creation, but several things in the final episodes point to that. Coca-Cola is mentioned as this sort of holy grail of accounts as soon as the SC&P crew is moved into McCann, and you can see Coke gradually gaining a larger presence as a set piece. In this scene, for example, everyone at that table is offered one. Later on, when Don hits the road, the Coca-Cola machine at the motel where Don stays is also very conspicuously placed, especially since the owner asks Don to fix it. Don't forget that during his final phone call with Peggy, one of the ways she tries to entice him is by asking him if he isn't excited by the prospect of working on the Coke account. Peggy also reassures him that McCann would welcome him back with open arms; after his wording suggests to her that he might try self-harm or suicide, he deliberately ends the phone call with a "see you soon". If you recall, the two of them have a conversation in an earlier episode in which Peggy mentions her ambition to create something of lasting value, which Don is sceptical of due to the ephemeral and very artificial nature of advertising.
      As far as the ad itself goes, its placement is extremely specific: seconds after we see Don meditating and a smile coming to his face accompanied by a bell indicating a light bulb moment. The fact that some of the characters he meets resemble the people in the ad seems to be a very conscious choice for the writers, and the show is known for its attention to detail. Both Weiner and Jon Hamm interpret the ending in this way--Don's reconciliation with who he really is, an ad man of exceptional talent. This moment of clarity gives him the idea for the ad, which can be interpreted cynically as him commodifying the sense of communion at the heart of the hippie movement, but there's also a kernel of sincerity to it.

    • @brianhughes3312
      @brianhughes3312 Před 4 lety +3

      Coke cans everywhere. Red and white painting on the wall. The big idea is working its magic.

  • @MikeLowryOdyssey
    @MikeLowryOdyssey Před 6 lety +48

    This was a great scene but nothing beats the entire episode, "The Suitcase".

    • @minarik01
      @minarik01 Před 4 lety +1

      agree. that episode is tv perfection

  • @kdmdlo
    @kdmdlo Před 4 lety +59

    The research guy's speech sounds like George Costanza: "The sea was angry that day, my friends."

  • @gavinvalle5653
    @gavinvalle5653 Před 3 lety +25

    The real greatness of this show was not just in the stars, but also the secondary characters, like Ted, or Duck, or Freddy, or Megan. They had depth, they were real, and they added so much to the show. Man, I miss this show!

    • @gavinvalle5653
      @gavinvalle5653 Před rokem

      @Duty and Accountability Media Exactly. Don was the definition of a narcissist.

    • @user-pt5lh9qy7p
      @user-pt5lh9qy7p Před 9 měsíci

      Every actor role had depth. There were no incidental characters.

  • @TheStuport
    @TheStuport Před 5 lety +16

    The fact that Don had the presence of mind to remember to take the Box Lunch shows he was in fact " Paying Attention" to what was important in that room which was The Voice in His Soul telling him to Get Up and Go

  • @asburyfox
    @asburyfox Před 7 lety +33

    Love that happy, good for him look that Ted gives at the end of the scene.

  • @adamrobinette6832
    @adamrobinette6832 Před 7 lety +386

    Best scene of all time is a bit steep. But I loved everything about it. The guy speaking is essentially Don in season one. And you see him creating a fake scenerio, a fake guy, a fake life, to drum up genuine emotion. All for the purposes of selling beer. You can tell Don is having an out of body experience watching this guy, and it's the catalyst to pushes him to leave to find what he should have found years ago: The free things that are the key to true happiness.
    Teds face was great too. He knew Don wasn't coming back. And there was this look of admiration that Don was going to drop it all to do what he needed to do.

    • @cesarrodriguez8893
      @cesarrodriguez8893 Před 7 lety +1

      Adam Robinette Great insight! I just saw the episode "Marriage of Figaro" and the guy perfectly describes Don in that episode.

    • @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg
      @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg Před 6 lety +43

      Don sees it as the commoditization of what he created. It became impersonal -- it's a research guy giving the presentation, not a creative. Don hated statistics because there was no human insight to them. He's seeing the technique he used to employ so well become appropriated and corrupted by the same kinds of guys who could never understand him ten years ago. It's not special anymore. He has no interest in being a part of that, so he walks out.

    • @paulbeen459
      @paulbeen459 Před 6 lety +15

      Adam Robinette But Don eventually came back since he created that Coca Cola ad

    • @peanutjelly727
      @peanutjelly727 Před 4 lety +5

      @@paulbeen459 But why is everyone so sure that Don created the Coke ad? Why are people so sure that he even went back to advertising at all? Yes, there were parallels between his experience at the retreat and the ad itself, but why would he go back to living in an identity that wasn't his? Wasn't that the cause of his inner turmoil in the first place? He was using Don Draper's identity to run away from his past. Wouldn't his ultimate goal be self-acceptance in his true identity as Dick Whitman?

    • @paulbeen459
      @paulbeen459 Před 4 lety +3

      @@peanutjelly727 You should look at analysis videos. He did this ad because he found peace in his inner self and came back to his old way of life, but apprehended it in a different way

  • @nicholasmohamed3293
    @nicholasmohamed3293 Před 4 lety +16

    The way I saw this scene was the guy was describing Don too well, cause the more we think we’re different from the people around us, the more we really are just the same. Don looks at the plane as a sort of escape, wants to feel like he matters above the grand scheme of life. When Don escapes and gets to California he hugs the guy while they’re both crying even though the guy Don is hugging is the complete opposite of Don, but on the inside they faced the same issue, the inability to love themselves. When Don cracks a smile while he’s meditating it reminds of the scene where Ana Draper is reading him based on the tarot cards and says “The only thing keeping you from being happy is the belief that you are alone”. That’s when Don realizes no matter how tragic his life was, everybody eventually deals with the same things, in the matter of life and death. It’s where he gets the idea for the coke commercial and even though I don’t think it cures him entirely, I think he’s better off learning what his place in the universe really was. Don has always been good at creating the perfect ideal life in his ads, always channeling his inner Dick Whitman for moments of vulnerability, but he always turned in Don Draper for all the relationships that really mattered to him. The end of the series is just him realizing he’s going lose everyone he’s ever loved and they have no idea who he really is and the only way he can connect to them with is to be honest. Throughout the series he’s been losing the frame of Don Draper slowly and slowly because the women he cared for never really knew Dick Whitman, they’ve only seen Don Draper. That’s when he calls the three most important women in his life, Betty, Peggy and Sally, and has an honest conversation with them. Throughout the series you can also notice that when Dons back is against the wall with Betty, he tries explain his past and she doesn’t care anymore. Then he meets Dr. Faye and he tells her about his past to ease his guilt and his mind when the feds were doing background checks on him for the business Pete brought in. Then with Megan she knows everything in the beginning of season 5 already and we only know this through their conversations. Dons inability to let people see the real him is what keeps him from being happy, because he subconsciously chooses to be alone, chooses to be the strong silent type which brings people closer but never too close. The last season when he meets the waitress, he treats her with his most vulnerable side, and she still leaves, causing him to go look for her to understand why she didn’t like him being Dick Whitman. You can tell the frustration Don goes through is needed for him to reach a level of enlightenment. He just needed a second to breathe and reflect, theres no going back and he’s reached a comfortable level in his life and chooses to be okay. Most of the show is about how the characters have a lot but it’s never enough, they always look at each other (most of the time at Don) as the grass is always greener on the other side. I think when Don realizes he needs to stop chasing and just start living is when he realizes what true peace and happiness can really mean for him. I’ve watched Mad men about 3 times and I safely say it’s the show that’s has the biggest impact on how I view things in my life now. This, the sopranos and the wire are incredible shows.

    • @MisterMoreno10457
      @MisterMoreno10457 Před 3 lety

      You said it bro. Mad Men, The Soprano's, The Wire and lets not forget Breaking Bad. Respectfully.

  • @Ben-bb7mi
    @Ben-bb7mi Před 3 lety +101

    it's hilarious how Ted goes from extremely unhappy with the duties and responsibilities of being a partner to loving life at the end of the series when just being a creative is his only responsibility.

  • @stevek6518
    @stevek6518 Před 5 lety +39

    The scene where Don returns to New York from California, and pitches the famous Coke ad, exists only in our imaginations. But we can picture it. What a great bookend that pitch scene makes when paired with this one shown here.

  • @johnciummo3299
    @johnciummo3299 Před rokem +3

    When Don is looking out the window at the plane flying over the skyscraper, that scene is a direct hommage to the scene in the movie, The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit. The movie starred, Gregory Peck.

  • @deeshan9844
    @deeshan9844 Před 7 lety +61

    lol I can't get over Ted's face at the end...like "yep, that's my Donny. the finest asshole I've ever met"

  • @blueforrester8459
    @blueforrester8459 Před 8 lety +158

    how I wish I could do that in my company's sanitized boardroom meeting and just "walk away" and drive to the west coast. :)

    • @MrMickeyQ22
      @MrMickeyQ22 Před 7 lety +48

      “I always wonder why birds choose to stay in the same place when they can fly anywhere on the earth, then I ask myself the same question.”

    • @chrisrawls8328
      @chrisrawls8328 Před 6 lety +4

      Blue Forrester you can. I make 80,000 bucks per year. Its not great money and not bad. I always looked out the window though and I was never told how to think, how I should react. I'm 36 years old and I also have not answered to a supervisor in over 10 years. It feels glorious 🙂

    • @chrisrawls8328
      @chrisrawls8328 Před 6 lety

      It's not easy to live the way I do. Most humans don't have the balls. I never cared if I had to stay at a homeless shelter a day or two. I can do things mentally, that most people won't. Therefore I work for no one. Not a single boss. Now my life is easier at 36 years of age, because I got tougher over the stretch of things. Come and go as I please and pay my bills with a descent salary...

    • @rds990
      @rds990 Před 6 lety +1

      You can. It's YOU making the choice not to do just that. YOU.

    • @ReubenModeXXX
      @ReubenModeXXX Před 5 lety +1

      @@rds990 Well at this point Don had millions of dollars coming his way anyway

  • @justindchaney
    @justindchaney Před 4 lety +16

    At the end, Ted was like “there he goes”

  • @shrapnel77
    @shrapnel77 Před 6 lety +59

    I can't help but think back to Don's conversation with Ken Cosgrove after Ken's firing. Ken was sitting in the phone booth afterwords when Don came up to him. Ken told Don it was a sign that he was fired. "The life not lived," as Ken said and that his firing was a sign. When Don looks out the window to the airplane, I think he remembers Ken's words and then walks out. Wish I could do that.

    • @Seattle-2017
      @Seattle-2017 Před 3 lety +3

      But then Cosgrove takes a job for a major McCann client, for the sole purpose of walking all over Pete Campbell and Roger Sterling, as payback for firing him.

    • @mummyjohn
      @mummyjohn Před 2 lety +1

      well, you can, and the wishing is part of the illusion you're selling to yourself that you can't. Once you truly see that, the pain of not doing will be greater than the fear of doing, and doing will finally occur to you as the easier & obvious path.

  • @ball3677
    @ball3677 Před 4 lety +55

    Lol Ted's face at the end "Thats my boi"

  • @heyafnan
    @heyafnan Před 6 lety +209

    I think this poem by Walt Whitman also helps understand the scene really well:
    "When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer"
    When I heard the learn’d astronomer,
    When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me,
    When I was shown the charts and diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them,
    When I sitting heard the astronomer where he lectured with much applause in the lecture-room,
    How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick,
    Till rising and gliding out I wander’d off by myself,
    In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
    Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars.

    • @kiwikakashi
      @kiwikakashi Před 6 lety +22

      That poem reminds me of a scene in season 2 or 3 where people sneak into Cooper's office to check out the Rothko painting he bought. Everyone has an intellectual take on it except for Cosgrove who is the only one who understood that sometimes you just need to 'feel' something in order to understand it.

    • @christopherrivas4403
      @christopherrivas4403 Před 6 lety +29

      Let’s cook

    • @AbeedHossain
      @AbeedHossain Před 4 lety +4

      @@christopherrivas4403 Walter White + Dick Whitman...

    • @joshkier
      @joshkier Před 4 lety +7

      And this is what comments should be like

    • @ball3677
      @ball3677 Před 4 lety +2

      From W.W.

  • @YaLittleFriend
    @YaLittleFriend Před 5 lety +8

    That look on Teds face always gets me. That’s the look of “wish I kinda had the guts to go with ya bro...but go get ‘em”.

  • @Smiirffable
    @Smiirffable Před 7 lety +39

    I love all the different interpretations people have of this scene, keep them coming

    • @user-gt1wc8lu5u
      @user-gt1wc8lu5u Před 2 lety

      Don trolling hippies, czcams.com/video/KoZDujXuDY0/video.html

  • @UnLockedProductions
    @UnLockedProductions Před 5 lety +8

    Just noticed that the plane crossing the tip of the Empire State Building forms a Cross. Mad Men is the most genius show ever created.

    • @brucewayne5891
      @brucewayne5891 Před 5 lety

      Trevor Locke foreshadowing his soon to be born again moment.

  • @mcd3379
    @mcd3379 Před 3 lety +7

    He'd been there, he'd done that. Don was an "ideas man", who loved the rush and excitement of a big idea. He was now reduced to being a small cog in a big company on a mindless ad campaign for beer. It's a wonder he didn't run, instead of walk out of that conference room full of drones.

  • @frankdodd3355
    @frankdodd3355 Před 6 lety +12

    I love how Don takes his lunch.

  • @danwalsh6728
    @danwalsh6728 Před 4 lety +29

    As a sales manager for PepsiCo and Kraft I sat through hundreds of these meetings in 30 years!
    Once a VP suggested that our sales could be stimulated by a “stack in the back” meaning extra inventory in the back room!
    The sheep erupted into applause, I am so sorry I didn’t have Don’s courage and walk out or better yet, jump up on the conference table and take a shit!!

    • @RedGoobler
      @RedGoobler Před rokem

      Such a short term, unsustainable strategy. Quite disappointing. Looks like this is what Estee Lauder literally just did

  • @66Bunn
    @66Bunn Před rokem +6

    I love Ted’s smirk seemingly thinking, “lucky bastard…I wish I could be like that and just get up and leave”

    • @gdawg4666
      @gdawg4666 Před rokem +5

      nah, at this point Ted was desperately wishing for less stress and in this environment he gets what he wants

  • @willwarden2603
    @willwarden2603 Před 6 lety +46

    That is how you handle a boring meeting

    • @ardenaudreyarji
      @ardenaudreyarji Před 4 lety +1

      Only a man in Don's caliber can walk out like that with the sandwich.

  • @riddel2617
    @riddel2617 Před 2 lety +3

    I know this feeling too well, just another nameless faceless suit, a one-of-1,000. Thank God Don left. A true creative

  • @rajsingharora26
    @rajsingharora26 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I agree just saw Mad Men the 5th time around & this time i totally got S7....& this moment I knw what it means deep in my soul.

  • @seasideboo2
    @seasideboo2 Před 2 lety +4

    I think about this scene almost every day at work

  • @Piotr_Szyba
    @Piotr_Szyba Před 4 lety +5

    I love how he gets absent and disconnects and abandons the reality that's not his.

  • @John_Greek
    @John_Greek Před 3 lety +6

    The best part is how no one notices Don leave other than Ted, it illustrates them and also why Don had to go

  • @davidfisher5599
    @davidfisher5599 Před 5 lety +10

    I worked for an international architecture firm for years.
    I don't know how many "Box Lunch" group design meetings I had to sit thru.
    I would love to have the guts that Hamm's character had....and just walk out.
    (And take my lunch with me...)

    • @wolfgangi
      @wolfgangi Před 5 lety +2

      David Fisher lol when you have fuck you money you could

    • @Seattle-2017
      @Seattle-2017 Před 3 lety

      It's not so much the guts as it is the money, as lifelong financial security allows you to do things you can't do when you're just getting by. But yeah, I've been there, too (without the $/power to walk out).

  • @WillieDuitt1
    @WillieDuitt1 Před 7 lety +16

    I did like the scene...I always wondered what was in that box lunch, I loved that Don didn't just walk out he made sure they were going to feed him too!

  • @dajosee
    @dajosee Před 5 lety +60

    McCann-Eriksen essentially received Peggy, Stan, Ted, and Roger.
    Joan moves on to become a Commercial Producer.
    Pete leaves for far greener pastures.
    Don breezes out to find his true self he's been hiding his entire adult life.
    It's funny how McCann chased them for so long, but did not understand who they were dealing with.

    • @Ben-bb7mi
      @Ben-bb7mi Před 3 lety +18

      but Don then returns with the greatest ad in history

  • @Valkyrist
    @Valkyrist Před 5 lety +5

    I need to rewatch this series. This is giving me chills.

  • @bernardwalker1874
    @bernardwalker1874 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Why Don takes his boxed lunch with him is an important element few recognize.

  • @emiliegilles7016
    @emiliegilles7016 Před 3 lety +5

    "I'm going to describe to you a man with very specific qualities"
    *begins by listing off a bunch of states the guy* might *live in*

  • @davidhutchinson5233
    @davidhutchinson5233 Před 6 lety +9

    Those of us who have worked in companies....large companies especially....haven't we all felt this detached at one time or another?

    • @Seattle-2017
      @Seattle-2017 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, like in half the stupid company meetings, annual reviews, social media photo ops, etc.

  • @bza069
    @bza069 Před 7 lety +8

    Don was über independent and creative... He hated the formulaic approach the big company was taking....the airplane represented what Don considered himself to be...high flying, unrestrained and in control. .

    • @markofsaltburn
      @markofsaltburn Před 5 lety +1

      bza069 But Don only found himself by losing control, by realising that we can only become whole again by cultivating our relational capacity, by learning that we are made complete only with love. Mad Men is a critique of the myth of rugged American individualism, not an uncritical celebration of it. Tony Soprano never fully embraced this and he duly perished, Walter White forgot this and everyone in his life had to pay, Don Draper accepted this and rose to greater heights then he ever could have imagined.

  • @JamesOceanic
    @JamesOceanic Před 3 lety +5

    I always saw the moment with Ted was more about how Ted saw Don as always trying to personally undermine him when they merged companies like when they had two juice companies or Don was late to his meetings. To Ted those always seemed to be personally directed towards himself.
    I think the moment he saw Don walk out during the meeting and do exactly the same things he used to do to him, he realized and felt a sense of relief that it was never personal between him and Don. Don was always treating him like he treats everyone. It was just who Don was.

  • @MichaelPReid-db5wv
    @MichaelPReid-db5wv Před 8 lety +102

    Thank you. I have been searching all over on CZcams to see this again and finally I can. One of the best scenes of the entire show, sad and beautiful when Don looks out the window and wants to escape from that room, from the top of the corporate advertising latter where they've reducing so many lives to an idea of a market of a man. Even after this airing of this episode, as of last month, Miller, even as big as they were, were just acquired by AB InBev (the merger after the Dutch company InBev acquired Anheuser-Busch) for $104 billion in the largest beer corporate acquisition ever. It's an endless subsuming of smaller companies by larger and fewer ones. Sad state of affairs, but I hope it will reverse if people awake and use the internet to its full potential. Anyway, thank you for uploading this clip; it's the only upload on CZcams and I'm glad that you made the time to put it up.

    • @Fan_Made_Videos
      @Fan_Made_Videos Před 7 lety +6

      The good news is that people who appreciate good beer have responded by supporting more local breweries and brands. That's what I've seen lately in stores where I buy beer and at my favorite pubs. In fact, InBev's distributors have been raising their prices across the board from retail to restaurants and those places have responded by diversifying their offerings to customers instead of just raising prices and maintaining the status quo.

    • @cesarrodriguez8893
      @cesarrodriguez8893 Před 7 lety

      Michael P. Reid What? You are delusional and indoctrinated. This show is an indictment against consumerism and you write as if it can be pure and holy.

    • @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg
      @Dr.TJ_Eckleburg Před 6 lety +3

      This show is absolutely not an indictment against consumerism. Watch an interview with Matthew Weiner sometime.

    • @emanuelb.2559
      @emanuelb.2559 Před 6 lety

      People making money, buying and selling... soo sad!!

    • @JMizz0323
      @JMizz0323 Před 4 lety +1

      Miller was not bought by AB InBev, but whatever you have to say to make yourself sound smart.

  • @timb4012
    @timb4012 Před 7 lety +11

    He took the boxed lunch with him on the way out.

  • @325xitgrocgetter
    @325xitgrocgetter Před 2 lety +3

    I love that Don took his box lunch...might as well get something of value from this meeting...

    • @user-qo5fd7db3o
      @user-qo5fd7db3o Před 2 měsíci

      Or maybe it's a sign that he may hate advertising, but it has been the only thing that has fed him his whole adult life, literally and figuratively.

  • @drnotebender6442
    @drnotebender6442 Před 2 lety +2

    Don can't function like the individual that he is in that environment. Some look at that boardroom and see comfort with the big machine. Ted saw it as a place where he could just be an idea man and not have all the pressure and relax. Don saw it as a prison that cramps his style and stifles his creativity. It's why he turned them down twice earlier in the series, and then staged a coup to actually start another company rather then go work for them.
    Ted's expression at the end is so good. It goes from "what the hell is he doing" to "of course that's what he's doing", from surprise/shock to admiration. Ted doesn't really like his job, but is willing to trade that for the safety of McCann. He admires Don's IDGAF attitude and his willingness to throw it all away if he can't be himself...even if that means giving up what most people in that industry would consider a dream job.

  • @ryanmclean1620
    @ryanmclean1620 Před 3 lety +4

    This scene builds up off of so much of Ted and Don's interactions and comments about one another and from those around them. Ted is constantly in Don's rearview, as said by Don specifically at one point and shown in Ted's aspirations at one day outdoing him. One of the major crisis that occurs for Don and co. is back in Season 3 when they sell the firm to PPL and Don refuses to sign the contract that they try to box him into. Much to the consternation of everyone around him. He knows that people want him, and he's not willing to tie himself down. This is reflected in his private life and his business. When Don shows up to the meeting, his surprise isn't at the number of people around him, it's him knowing that they don't want him. He's just another emissary in the tie. Ted meanwhile tries to reassure the employee from Miller by agreeing that the hackneyed promise he's been told by everyone else in the room from every different agency is also accurate with them as well. It's unoriginal. Uninventive. It's Ted. When Don looks at the plane and decides to leave, he's doing so because he knows no one will notice nor care. Ted meanwhile just smiles to himself because at the end of the day, Pete was right. He's just another sheep. He's happy to go with the crowd and keep his head down. He's not creative. He's not Don Draper, and when he tried to be it ruined his life.

  • @Consume_Crash
    @Consume_Crash Před 4 lety +3

    Absolutely phenomenal scene in the context of the whole show.

  • @Marcovisc11
    @Marcovisc11 Před 8 lety +9

    masterpiece scene of art and meaning.
    Two worlds collides in a moment of trouth (cit.)

  • @takamineman5884
    @takamineman5884 Před 7 lety +121

    Did you notice that most of them just wore white dress shirts while Don wore the grey suit?

    • @alexwelshko
      @alexwelshko Před 6 lety +5

      the man in the grey flannel suit?

    • @billyaugust
      @billyaugust Před 6 lety +10

      That's all Janie Bryant, the costume designer. He is dressed to separate himself from the other ad men. Check out the Mad Style blog from Tom and Lorenzo, it gives some great insight into the costume designer and how it compels the story.

    • @TheWinterShadow
      @TheWinterShadow Před 6 lety +2

      The declining of civilization...

    • @paddyb7216
      @paddyb7216 Před 6 lety +5

      You may notice too, that Don's pen is red while the others are black

    • @michaelluciano1980
      @michaelluciano1980 Před 4 lety +2

      @@billyaugust Don Drinks " Old Fashions " for a reason. Just like his style from season 1 with the grey flannel suit never changes and his approach to advertising stays true to his personality. He was never ready to change much like when he turns the Beatles album off or most interactions with Meagan.

  • @comedychannel7691
    @comedychannel7691 Před 2 lety +3

    If you're the smartest person in the room, you're in the wrong room.

  • @ololiver92
    @ololiver92 Před rokem +3

    Imagine them doing the Bud Light account!

  • @bucksdiaryfan
    @bucksdiaryfan Před 3 lety +3

    Besides showing that Don is just a cog in a machine and no longer a "big shot", the most devastating line is said by Ted when he basicallty confirms the pep talk given to Don earlier that made him feel important was given to everyone "take us up a notch"

  • @Pww642
    @Pww642 Před rokem +2

    Eric Nenninger, the actor who plays Bill, absolutely nails this monologue.

  • @phillipmccauley3663
    @phillipmccauley3663 Před rokem +1

    The look in dons eyes says "I finally gave in. There is no more frontier to push forward on now"
    Without dons ability to grow uncontrollably, he knew there was nothing for him in an office building.

  • @DoctorKandosii
    @DoctorKandosii Před 7 lety +5

    I've been in so many meetings like this. I've gazed out of the window and wished I had huge dragon wings sprouting out of me to just fly away from all the bullshit.

  • @moneyatslander
    @moneyatslander Před 6 lety +3

    When Don sees that plane fly past I was almost convinced of the hype at the time that he would be revealed to be D.B. Cooper in the final episodes..

  • @jamesr141
    @jamesr141 Před 3 lety +2

    After this meeting they invented Miller Lite.

  • @mattyepez
    @mattyepez Před rokem +2

    Reminds me of the belle Jolie lipstick campaign, “i don’t think anyone wants to be one of a hundred in a box.”

  • @Hendrixdh
    @Hendrixdh Před 6 lety +19

    I don't think the board room is sterile or the pitch is sanitized. It's not even an especially formulaic approach, at least not any more so than Don would have taken. In fact, it sounds a lot like a pitch Don would have given if SCDP had given the opportunity to pitch for this business. I think Don comes in that room already feeling lost. He's already lost almost everything dear to him, except maybe Sally, but things will never be the same there either, and his ability to do great work. He's had that almost the entire length of the show and he's been complimented on it and reminded it of it pretty constantly. And then he realizes that supposedly your greatest skill and accomplishment is not nearly the thing he thought it was. They at McCann agree he's great, but it doesn't really matter. It's a machine that has a shiny new little part, and it just keeps going.
    I think is just kind of the straw that broke the camel's back. Don realizes that he's a broken man and no amount of work is going to fix his true problems, and so he leaves.
    Anyway, I just finished the show last night, it was great.

  • @antoniocovitti2419
    @antoniocovitti2419 Před 7 lety +9

    this is my all series favourite scene. then "the best things in Life are free". then Sterling on acid.

  • @dicksavage5746
    @dicksavage5746 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I had to re watch this scene to really get its brilliance

  • @godzilladude22
    @godzilladude22 Před 8 měsíci

    I don’t know why exactly….. but the shot at 2:06 …. I just keep coming back to it. They’re can be many explanations to the deeper meaning of it… some true, whether there is a “right” answer or not… but just the way that moment makes me feel, with the music and the shot and the tone, context not necessarily even needed in that span of a few seconds, I just FEEL something that I cannot explain. And I truly appreciate that feeling even though I admittedly don’t fully understand it. Mad Men does it better than any show I have ever encountered. I hope someone feels what I feel and what an accomplishment by the people who worked on this.

  • @cuccamunga
    @cuccamunga Před 9 lety +9

    Such a great scene! That presentation is how the Don of 1960 would be. Any chance you can upload the ending of this episode with the hitchhiker?

    • @filippog2143
      @filippog2143 Před 6 lety

      czcams.com/video/8C2XlbsBzqo/video.html

  • @ahsenkayani187
    @ahsenkayani187 Před 2 lety +5

    Instead of the usual take which is to speak on Don's need to stand out, be an individual, etc. I think it would also be cool to compare this scene with one of the final scenes when Don is in the therapy circle with the man who doesn't feel heard. In this room, in advertising, they're describing 'a man that everyone knows' almost like a statistic, they look at where he lives and other mundane facts, but they don't care about that man as a person. In the therapy scene, that man has a nice car, couple kids, wife, the American dream, but alas he doesn't feel heard or recognized. To the advertisers in the conference room he's just another type that can be reduced via some stats and that's all that matters, but he's more than that and is complicated and, most importantly, he wants to be heard. I think comparing the scenes you see how these advertising agencies cater to consumers in such a robotic and impersonal way. Would add to the plethora of reasons why Don resonates with him so much because his whole career was based on only understanding these statistical facts of the man instead of listening to him as another complex human.

  • @bottomupengineering
    @bottomupengineering Před 3 lety +2

    Ted had some closure to see Don storm out like that. He knew then that that's Don and it was never personal with him.

  • @wyganter
    @wyganter Před rokem +1

    Prescient Coke cans on the conference room table. “I’d like to teach the world to sing…”

  • @Locateson
    @Locateson Před 2 lety +3

    Compared to the creative freedoms Don enjoyed before, this meeting must have felt incredibly depressing. At least it was depressing to watch.

    • @operator91210
      @operator91210 Před 9 měsíci

      Don always avoided wanting to join a larger agency but the buyout gave him no choice. The taller the building the harder it is to climb to the top

  • @richardfilanderer
    @richardfilanderer Před 2 lety +3

    Holy shit the dude who made the speech is Francis’ military friend in Malcolm in the Middle lmaoooooo

  • @lisamena874
    @lisamena874 Před 4 měsíci

    Every little thing is perfect and real in this scene, from Ted´s look (he understood immediately) to Don leaving with the meal (obviously!). And the definition the MCE guy is giving is the beggining of the modern day "buyer persona".

  • @ivanpb1983
    @ivanpb1983 Před 5 měsíci +1

    When this show was on, Millenials despised Don -now they've begun to understand him.

  • @jarredanderson207
    @jarredanderson207 Před 3 lety +5

    "Despite that mellifluous pile of facts an inclement figures in front of you, I don't look at this as a presentation of research. Let's look at it as, a presentation of minds"

    • @jamesstrohl6124
      @jamesstrohl6124 Před 3 lety +3

      The Miller Lite ad meeting, whatever happened there

  • @timovangalen1589
    @timovangalen1589 Před rokem +14

    I always loved how Don Draper looked more and more like a man out of time as the series went on. From the beginning, he looked like a marketing committee's idealization of the perfect man in the 50s and early 60s, and he never changed. The world changed around him, and he was left behind.

    • @jcbreed77
      @jcbreed77 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Totally. And a perfect metaphor that his drink order is an "old fashioned." That's what he is.

  • @mattheusser1390
    @mattheusser1390 Před 9 měsíci +1

    That smile from Ted at the end made the scene.

  • @PaulGodkin
    @PaulGodkin Před rokem

    I show this to my research class as an example of how to make a research presentation interesting. Such great storytelling.

  • @dannyhicks8653
    @dannyhicks8653 Před 5 lety +8

    I was really glad when Shaugh came around and became friends with Don in the end.

  • @moniquedurant2289
    @moniquedurant2289 Před 7 lety +6

    I thought this would be the carousel presentation or the Ann Margaret scene. Hmm

    • @damianbegley
      @damianbegley Před 6 lety

      Agreed, Monique Durant. The Carousel.

  • @spencerkindra8822
    @spencerkindra8822 Před rokem +1

    Don: Is this every creative director in the agency?
    Ted: It’s only half of us.
    Don: 😐😑

  • @gesalt8835
    @gesalt8835 Před rokem

    God damn I love this scene an entire character arc resolved without a word