HOME / tv club: Talking television.

Mad Men, Season 3

Week 7: Duck!

Posted Sunday, Sept. 27, 2009, at 11:08 PM ET

Dear Julia and Patrick,

I am writing to you from my fainting couch, which is where I landed after hearing Duck Phillips tell Peggy that he wanted to take her clothes off with his teeth. This is not the Uncle Herman I thought I knew. Last season, he showed up stag to the couples night the Drapers hosted for Crab Colson and his wife; now he's telling Peggy he wants to give her a "go-round" like she's never had before. Perhaps even more shocking than Duck betraying his libidinous side was the fact that Peggy was receptive to his advances—and after fielding one of the worst come-ons in the history of come-ons: "I was just thinking of all the times I walked by you and didn't even notice."

Peggy, of course, has arrived at the Pierre fresh from a brutal dressing-down by Don. "You were my secretary," he reminds her, and she could go back to being one, as far as he's concerned: "There's not one thing you've done here that I couldn't live without." Yet even after suffering through Don's tongue-lashing, Peggy doesn't seem ready to leave Sterling Cooper for Grey. Why, then, accept Duck's offer to dentally remove her clothing? It made me think back to her previous tryst, with the guy she picked up at a bar earlier this season, which also came on the heels of a rejection by Don (of her ideas for Patio). Confronted by the limits of her power in the workplace, perhaps Peggy finds some reassurance in the power she has over men in the bedroom. In this instance, though, she did little more than acquiesce to Duck's wishes; she seemed less a man-eater than wounded, vulnerable prey.

I'm curious what you guys made of Don's lashing out at Peggy. Her inquiry about the Hilton account wasn't any more forward than Pete's had been earlier in the episode. Don is prickly to Pete, as is his wont, but ultimately suggests that if Pete lands North American Aviation, Don might consider him for Hilton. Did Peggy just catch Don at a really bad moment? Or does he actually believe that she's only moderately talented and an ingrate to boot? ("You're good. Get better. Stop asking for things," as he puts it to her.)

Peggy's timing was really bad. If there's one thing guaranteed to put Don Draper in a lousy mood, it's talk of a contract. It was his lack thereof that allowed him to thwart Duck's coup last season, and as he impatiently explains to Betty, "no contract means I have all the power—they want me, but they can't have me." (To her credit, Betty makes clear that this is a "business" strategy her husband has made her all too familiar with.) But now Conrad Hilton wants Don, and Hilton's lawyers want him to be secured. Don is so rarely caught off-guard, it was nice to see his preternatural poise shaken in this episode. Having Connie Hilton in his life is indeed going to change things, and not in the way he—or I—anticipated.

It's telling that Don twice finds himself on the wrong side of his own desk in this episode—the first time when Connie shows up at Sterling Cooper unannounced. Patrick, Julia, I wonder whether you guys also found this scene perplexing. Connie tells Don he wants to discuss a matter not fit for the phone, then goes on to describe that matter in terms clearly meant to imply that it's an illicit affair: "I have this involvement"; "I have significant needs—you catch my drift?" It was as if he were testing Don, whose moral makeup he doesn't seem to trust. Yet if this was a test, what exactly did Don do to pass it? His response, essentially, is "Why bring this problem to me?" Was Connie just making sure Don wouldn't say something to the effect of "I know this guy who can make troublesome broads disappear?" Or was this merely the Hilton eccentricity that Bert Cooper mentions later in the episode, his stocking feet propped comfortably on the coffee table?

Bert was the other man to commandeer Don's desk this week, and we were treated to a whole new side of Sterling Cooper's pudding-loving senior partner. Lane tries to get Don to sign the contract by citing its generosity, Roger by making trouble for Don at home. But it's Bert who succeeds in getting Don's Hancock on the document, by playing the trump card he's been patiently holding since 1960, when Pete told him that Don isn't who he says he is. It's thrilling to see Don's tenuously held secret come back to the fore, though I'm concerned about this "no more contact with Roger Sterling" rider Don mentions. Here's hoping that doesn't make it past the lawyers.

After this week's episode, I think it's safe to say that a memo went around to Mad Men's writers and directors before this season began encouraging formal experimentation. Two weeks ago we had the horror movie feel of the hospital scenes, last week the B-movie gore of the foot-shredding. This week, the show opened with three flashes forward in time. What did you guys make of this move? I suppose you could argue that in an episode featuring an astronomical event that turned day to night, it's natural to play with chronology, but I wasn't sure how much this latest experiment really added. I am, however, looking forward to the surely forthcoming Rashomon episode.

Patrick, as the TV Club's resident lawyer who doesn't use it much, I'll leave it to you to dissect the Henry Francis plot. I'm also eager to hear what you make of the saucy Miss Farrell. Is Sally the only Draper with a crush on her?

I'm not bored,
John

Week 7: Duck!

Posted Sunday, Sept. 27, 2009, at 11:08 PM ET
Print This ArticlePRINTEmail to a FriendE-MAILShare This ArticleRECOMMEND...Get Slate RSS FeedsRSS
Patrick Radden Keefe is the author of The Snakehead: An Epic Tale of the Chinatown Underworld and the American Dream, which has just been published. John Swansburg is Slate's culture editor. You can e-mail him at and follow him at www.twitter.com/swansburg. Julia Turner is Slate's deputy editor. You can e-mail her at or follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/juliaturner.
Stills from Mad Men © 2009 American Movie Classics Company LLC. All rights reserved. Stills in entries 65-70 by Carin Baer.
COMMENTS

Series creator Matthew Weiner has stated he leaves nothing for future seasons and puts everything out there each season, like its the last, and this episode could almost double as a series finale. I think when Mad Men eventually ends its run, there will be discussion whether this episode was the proper series finale and should have called it quits right here, or will Weiner have new and interesting places to take us in season 4?

-- guyroy
(To reply,
click here)

"And the way that they saw themselves is gone." Julia, I think this pretty clearly refers to Peggy having her child and giving it away. Until Peggy told Pete about the baby, Don was only person on the show outside of her family and priest that knew her secret. Don was the one that visited Peggy in the hospital after she gave birth and had been out of work for a while.

-- BumblebeeMan
(To reply,
click here)

Who's in charge, Betty or Henry? Something that surprised me was the amount of involvement Henry had in Betty's divorce advice. Does it ring true for the period that Henry went to the lawyer with Betty and apparently also knew the lawyer and may have selected the lawyer for Betty? And, when Betty told Don that she would be consulting with a divorce attorney and Don should too, was she simply parroting Henry's words?

Certainly since Henry's divorced he knows the routine and I can understand him giving Betty the benefit of his experience. Last episode Henry was willing to give Betty the time she needed and he would wait. Now, things are fast-tracked to Reno. I'm sure that it's been hard for Betty to continue to live in the same house with Don who continues to deny Betty's feelings. But, seeing Betty sitting in the lawyer's office on the sofa with Henry, reminded me of Betty sitting on the sofa with Glen last season. Then, when Don confronts Betty about Henry, they seem to be having their first real fight.

Anyway, I wonder if Betty/Henry are the 'lasting love' mentioned in the Roy Orbison song at the end.

-- lkd711
(To reply,
click here)

I think season 4 will include a serious health issue for Don-perhaps lung cancer. Note the cough at the beginning of the last episode. Also the brief scene when Sterling's dog food heiress old flame states that her first husband died of lung cancer, there is a brief cut to Don lighting up another. Thoughts while I write an order for Don to get a screening cat scan.

-- ldbmd
(To reply,
click here)

What did you think of this article?
Join The Fray: Our Reader Discussion Forum
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES
TODAY'S PICTURES
TODAY'S CARTOONS
TODAY'S DOONESBURY
TODAY'S VIDEO
I want to hold your hand.89/091208_TP.jpg
Cartoonists' take on global warming.18/091208_TC.jpg
They shoot engineers, don't they?90/091208_TD.jpg