From Deseret News archives:

'Mad Men' is cool blast from the past

Published: Friday, July 25, 2008 12:14 a.m. MDT
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My father didn't work in an advertising agency and I can't remember 1962, but walking into the Sterling Cooper offices brought back memories of my father's office in the 1960s. Everything from the desks to the phones to the wall decorations to the cigarette butts in the ashtrays looked amazingly accurate.

"It does help when you're dressed like we are and you're working on this set," Hamm said.

And a quick trip to an adjoining soundstage and the Draper house was like walking into Grandma and Grandpa's house, with more than a few items that could be found at Mom and Dad's, too.

"It's very important to me," Weiner said. "Maybe I'm too obsessive, but it's part of what we're doing here."

The second season doesn't pick up right where the first season left off. It's subtle, but the time line has jumped ahead about 14 months; it's now 1962.

"In the life of the series, if it continues, I would like to cover this period of people's lives," Weiner said.

"And that's a five-year plan and not a 10-year plan."

He was also aiming to keep up the show's "energy."

"I kind of thought — why don't we just go ahead and I can start the story fresh?" Weiner said. "And at the same time there will be all these events that happened in between that will provide an additional storytelling energy.

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"You've heard me say that I don't think people change (but) the world was definitely in the process of changing. And this gave us a chance to sort of accentuate that."

First-season fans are not, however, going to get all the answers they want in the first couple of episodes. Yes, Peggy is back on the job. And, yes, she had her baby. But where that baby is and what exactly happened is unclear.

"Trust me," Weiner said. "I will give you the information as you need it in the most entertaining way."

Kartheiser said there's "a lot of trust among this cast" in Weiner and the writing staff because of how great it's been so far."

And, given the quality of Season 1, it makes it pretty easy to trust him in Season 2. (Well, that and seeing the first two episodes of the new season, where are great.)

"You sort of sign on in the beginning knowing what a good writer Matt is, and you hope for the best," Slattery said. "And then each week, these scripts just keep getting better and better. We are all texting each other, going, 'Do you believe that? Did you see that coming?' ... It's an unbelievable surprise every week.

"And I think that's what's also so good about the show is that it's so unpredictable. The characters go places you did not expect them to go that you don't see it coming."

You can't ask for much more.

If you watch

WHAT: The second season of "Mad Men"

WHEN: Begins Sunday at 8, 9 and 11 p.m.; repeats Monday at 9 a.m.; Thursday at 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.; and Sunday, Aug. 3, at 8 a.m.

CHANNEL: AMC


E-mail: pierce@desnews.com

Recent comments

More disfunction wrapped in historical sets and costumes to make a sale.

S.A. | July 25, 2008 at 3:39 p.m.

Image
Craig Blankenhorn, AMC

Jon Hamm stars as Don Draper in "Mad Men."

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