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The Crash also reminded me of that Star Trek episode from season 1 where most of the crew gets infected with a disease, with the wild way they were behaving.
Can't say that I have any firsthand knowledge of drug use in NYC ad agencies in the late 1960s, but I can offer that some illegal (and legal) drugs carried a certain cachet then (due in no small part to their novelty, I suppose) that eventually wore thin. Perhaps people in "creative" fields were likelier to jump in. Seems plausible.
If this past Sunday's episode did anything to glamorize drug use, it was wasted (har har) on me. Whatever "mild stimulant" that quack administered to the staffers may have kept them up and jumping for a couple of days, but, as the Jim Cutler character observed once the crew crashed (the episode was titled "The Crash"), what they produced over those speed-fuelled days was mostly gibberish. And it turned them erratic, reckless, and creepy.
What I'm not seeing is much of the downside of alcohol and tobacco use (excepting the Roger Sterling character, whose smoking and drinking pose the real likelihood of putting him in an early grave). But then, we mostly ignored (or denied) the consequences of those habits, even as recently as, say, 20 years ago. Having once worked in a place that ran on booze and cigarettes, I find the show's portrayal of that sort of thing quite credible. It would be even more credible if they were to check in with the characters 20 years down the road, to see how many of them had emphysema and/or heart disease and/or cirrhosis and/or cancers of one sort or another.
I dont think Don or Roger would have lived to see the 1980's.
Quite a few interesting twists and turns to this episode.
My favorite part, of course, was a glimpse at Don's current Cadillac and Betty's wagon.
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My favorite part, of course, was a glimpse at Don's current Cadillac and Betty's wagon.
Sad that it's leaving the golden era; it's segueing into what I remember. (I'm Kevin Harris' age.) The first car I remember was a '67 Galaxie wagon.
Another enjoyable episode. And even though they were both cheating, I was "happy" to see Don and Betty together.
What's your opinion on that Bob Benson guy?
Oh - and poor Peggy! When I saw that knife on the end of the stick, I knew something bad was going to happen...
Agreed - they telegraphed that one. That said, away from a quaint (hopefully not on this board) disdain for cheaters, if ever there are two people who should not just sleep together for "fun," it is those two. Beyond their ugly history with each other, they have two new families that they could blow up (and kids that would get tossed hard in the resulting storm). In a joking-to-make-a-point-way, I said if they needed to cheat, have a fling, whatever, they should have chosen anyone else in the universe but each other. Not that Megan or Henry would be happy finding out that they were cheated on, but they would really go nuclear if they find out that it was with the old spouse. I know its TV and it needs drama and conflict, but my God, that was really stupid.