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Why Mad Men?

November 10, 2009 | RSS | EMAIL | PRINT | 3 COMMENTS

George Packer has a good short essay where he tries to unpack people's fascination with Mad Men. I'm not really a fan of the show (I watched the first five episodes or so and was too bored to continue), but I am always interested in the things other people find interesting and Packer does a nice job of offering an explanation:

"Mad Men" shows the last years of a social order in which middle-class American men were little kings--slimy, anxiety-ridden, petulant, lifeless, but kings nonetheless. It's all about to come undone--Peggy is the harbinger of the change--and soon give way to an age of confusion and improvisation, which is the age we still live in. Watching "Mad Men" might be what it was like for Americans of an earlier age, around the time of Lincoln, to see an eighteenth-century European costume drama: this is what the world looked like just before the old order fell. The roles were rigid and constricting, but they had the advantage of being roles, ready-made for men and women to put on and live in. You didn't have to spend your energy inventing a way through the bewildering maze of unfamiliar social relations. It is no longer our world, and a good thing, too--but beneath the makeup and hair, the costumes and masks, this period piece still means us.

Read the whole thing. It's good (and include no spoilers).

Tags: culture, history, television


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COMMENTS

1Michal Migurski

I have to assume that George Packer wrote this article before last night's season finale, but your excerpt is a fairly dead-on summary of the plot to the point where Don Draper says almost these exact things in the wake of the JFK assassination. "People's self image is about to change..." Give the show another shot, it does get ridiculously good.

November 11, 2009

2Michal Migurski

Did I say "last night"? This is the problem with asynchronous television viewing.

November 11, 2009

3Abe

Man that Packer piece is painful to read. Mad Men is a big soap opera, a highly enjoyable, nuanced and well rendered one, but a soap opera none the less. I love it, no reason to deny it. Reading peoples elaborate justifications for why they enjoy a soap opera on the other hand, is just not my cup of tea...

November 11, 2009