Mad Men: Pete Campbell Is Just a Failed Don Draper
They have everything in common. So why is Pete the bad guy?
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They have everything in common. So why is Pete the bad guy?
Plus: Roger's bare butt, Megan's pajamas, and more from last night's finale.
"Who wants to be naked in front of a camera?"
Season five's nonstop intimations of death, separation, violence, and dread finally pay off.
What happened last week (or last season), what's happened since, and what to look for tonight.
"I'm sorry if people were disappointed," says Matt Weiner.
And the likelihood that we'll actually get any kind of resolution.
Commenters got pretty angry when we said the number of divorces weren't era-accurate, but allow us to submit some more stats just for fun.
"I'm just trying to figure out why he blew up the suburban family."
In 1967, it was only 11 percent in the northeast. And yet it's splits aplenty at SCDP.
Three key first-year episodes have remarkable parallels to season five.
Her co-star says she's off the show ... sort of.
A compilation of his best moments, from Pete-punching to pubis-mentioning.
They're more of an uptown crowd, wouldn't you say?
"[Matt Weiner] offered me some extremely expensive brandy, and that’s how you know you’re f*cked."
Remember when we asked "Why Is Mad Men's Season Five Obsessed With Death?" Well.