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Mad Men - Lost Horizon - Review: "Fateful Decisions"

5 May 2015

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As the team from SC&P moves into their new offices at McCann Erickson, we get to see how the transition goes for everyone. And it definitely does not go smoothly for the key players in “Lost Horizon.” Peggy doesn’t have an office, Roger feels guilty for how things have turned out, Don can’t stand to be one of many at the agency, and poor Joan is treated like crap. The transition is a bumpy one. For Roger and Peggy it eventually gets better but this espoused new beginning isn’t looking so good for Don and Joan. They both make decisions that may drastically change their futures.


Something More

For Don, things start off well at McCann Erickson as the bosses treat him like gold. They bought an agency in Milwaukee so he can work on a Miller beer account and they tell him to ask for anything he wants. But he sees where he really stands when he walks into a room full of creative directors. He is just one in a crowd now, a talented creative director amongst many. Suddenly Don loses interest in his work. It wasn’t surprising – Don likes being needed. And as his daughter recently pointed out, he doesn’t respond well to not being the center of attention. So when he sees a room full of assembly-line employees all acting the same, he immediately loses interest. If he isn’t going to have a special role at the company, he doesn’t want a role at all.

At this moment he looks out the window and sees a plane on the horizon. As he watches, the man giving the presentation asks the group, “How do you get him to open his mind? You better have something more.” The words are purposely placed. Don is thinking about something more. This is not really the life he wants. So why pursue it? Good timing has never been Don’s forte. He doesn’t wait for just the right moment to act. If he wants something, he takes it right then. And in this moment he doesn’t care about his job but only what else could be on the horizon. So without even thinking, he gets up and walks out of the room.

But it’s interesting to see where he goes to find the meaning he’s searching for: Diana’s home. I was a little shocked to realize Don has become almost obsessed with Diana. She is a symbol of his past, someone he identified with because of their mutual pain and past mistakes. She’s also a hope of true connection. But there’s no denying his actions are sad and desperate, tracking her down when she doesn’t want to be found, proving he had no one else to turn to. Even his old pal Bert Cooper tries to talk him out of going after her. (What a fun surprise to see Bert again!) Bert straight up tells Don he shouldn’t be following a waitress who doesn’t care about him. But Don won’t listen to the voice of reason.

At the house Don takes on another new identity to get the information he wants, claiming to be Bill Phillips, the man whose beer pitch he walked out of (and who had given Don his card when he met him). But Don’s ruse doesn’t last long. The husband knows right away Don isn’t who he claims to be. I love watching Don when he gets caught. He never flinches. He is good at pretending because he has a lot of experience. So he just takes a breath and gives another false identity. But the husband knows why Don is really there. He lets Don know he isn’t the first one to come looking for Diana, a “tornado” who leaves a “trail of broken bodies behind her.” The husband says he’s just now getting over everything that happened, losing his daughter to God and his wife to the devil. (What a great line.) He advises Don to stop trying to save Diana, which is good advice for a man who likes to save women.

The trip is a failure. Don is left with a sad picture of the daughter and family Diana left behind. And he retains no hope of finding her. With that sliver of hope gone, he doesn’t know what to do with himself. He has nowhere left to go. So he picks up a hitchhiker and drives him to his destination out of the way. Don would rather drift aimlessly with a stranger than go back to New York. He has lost the vision of his horizon. By the end of the episode I was left with a new thought: Would Don start over again with a new identity? Suddenly the thought felt comfortable. I could easily see Don repeating old behavior by re-making his life in a new city with a new job and a new name, trying desperately not to repeat his old mistakes.


Change in Status

The episode pulled a bait-and-switch when it came to Peggy and Joan. We start off realizing Peggy may be the one at McCann Erickson in danger, not Joan. Peggy has a “mixup” that leaves her without an office and she’s being lumped in with the secretaries. Suddenly I was considering what would happen if Peggy was the one left behind. If Peggy gets forced out, she wouldn’t have much left. She doesn’t have a personal life to fall back on, and she’s banked on this job happening. But just when it looks like Peggy is out, the writers pull the switch and we’re back to being worried about Joan. (Although I’m still not convinced Peggy is fully safe at work.)

Poor Joan. She has come so far to reach another blockade, another wall of jerks pushing her down. All throughout the episode she had to deal with men who didn’t respect what she’s achieved for herself. Dennis, the idiot who offends a man in a wheelchair, has the gall to imply she has no right to be pissed off. Ferg then blatantly offends her while hitting on her at the same time. He expects Joan to show him a “good time” but implies she would have no purpose there if she lost her accounts. When Joan realizes his intentions, she looks like she is about to cry. And you want to cry for her. Again, she’s being demeaned and devalued. When she finally goes to see Jim Hobart, he outright tells her that her status has changed, implying the only way she could have gotten her partnership is if someone left it to her in a will. (This reminds us that Joan slept with someone to get that partnership. But in every moment since then she’s proved she deserved it.)

It was tough to watch Joan get screwed from all angles, with no one able to step in and help. She truly feels trapped. But she still fights with everything she has, at least initially. I loved watching Joan stand up for herself with Jim. As usual, she was fearless. She stuck it to Hobart and didn’t back down, dishing it out as hard as she could. But she realizes she is up against a wall. When she tells Roger it’s not about the money, you understand it’s now about how she’s been treated. And even the full amount of money won’t make up for that. But Roger points out she doesn’t want to end up with nothing. As he encourages her to take the deal, you see her resignation. She can only fight an uphill battle so long, especially with no one backing her up. It was awful to watch. You want Joan to win the fight. You know what she deserves and you want to see her get it. But now I’m interested to see what she does moving forward. After getting the job she’s always wanted, will she take the money and stay home with her son or travel with Richard? Would she be happy with the domestic life? Or will she look for another job? Could she possibly change her mind and fight them in court? I am eager to see what comes of her crossroads.


A Little Push

Some of the best moments in the episode came between Roger and Peggy, a fantastic unexpected pair like Pete and Joan last week. Roger and Peggy each have such different perspectives and approaches, yet they complement each other. It was nice to see them helping one another as they reminisced about what they'd experienced, letting down their defenses in sharing that bond.

I loved Peggy stating exactly what she was thinking, telling Roger she wasn’t enjoying herself and that this was the most attention he’d ever given her. Then she tells it like it is when she lets him know he had a place in what happened and he was supposed to look out for them. Of course Roger doesn’t need her explaining the obvious. He already feels guilty for his part in everything (a reflection you hear later when he tells Joan it was all his fault and he was trying to take care of it). But Peggy helps him move forward, even if she’s just a sounding board for his thoughts. In some ways Peggy is like a stern mother, telling people things they don’t want to hear. But it forces them to deal with those thoughts. Soon Roger is telling a story of jumping off his cruiser after receiving a little push. It was a reminder to both of them that they could do this. Roger’s optimism complemented Peggy’s pessimism.

At the same time, Roger’s teenage-boy peer pressure lured Peggy out of her shell. In this case, he was the bad influence that she needed. Roger was hilarious as he gave a shocked Peggy the picture of an octopus pleasuring a lady and then disputed the fact that she needs to make men feel at ease. By the time these two were drunk and Peggy was rollerskating to Roger’s organ music, I had to laugh at the brilliance of their scenes. Roger can loosen up anyone, and Peggy was the perfect choice. Their encounter clearly gave her all the confidence she needed with her new job. When she finally shows up to move into her offices, I laughed out loud. As she comes down that hall with a cigarette in her mouth and the octopus painting under her arm, we see a Peggy ready to conquer the world. I think this may have been my favorite Peggy moment ever.


Additional Observations

- What a great scene between Betty and Don. Betty’s newfound maturity is still surprising me. She stops Don’s massage because she doesn’t need it. In the past she would easily have encouraged Don to stay while they were there alone. But the thought doesn’t even seem to cross her mind. She’s too engrossed in her studies and her excitement. Despite his outward smile, you get the feeling Don would really have liked to be wanted and needed in that moment. But Betty didn’t need him. She was doing fine on her own. He’s disappointed but still lets her know how proud he is with his final words of encouragement. He may not find the comfort he needs from her, but he gives her the support and respect she’s always craved. This was a nice moment.


- It seems Don has picked a new place to live. I’m not sure if we’ll ever see his new digs but it was pretty funny that Meredith will be decorating it. And it was amusing to learn he had been living at the Plaza Hotel in the meantime. Meredith also impressed me with her loyalty, sticking up for Don to Jim Hobart, acting like there was nothing to worry about when she was clearly worried herself.

- I enjoyed the scene between Don and Joan on the elevator. It was nice to see them both yearning for the way things used to be and trying to reconnect with one another. I am so happy their relationship is not strained any more. It’s so much better to see them appreciate and respect one another.

- Roger had a great line with Joan: “You started something that could leave you with nothing.” It’s a sentiment that could be applied to many of the characters, especially Don.


***All photos courtesy of AMC.


What did you think of "Lost Horizon?" Do you think Don will go back to New York? What do you think will happen with Joan now? How much did you enjoy the Peggy and Roger scenes? Sound off in our comments below.


About the Author - Tonya Papanikolas
Tonya Papanikolas is an online, print and broadcast journalist who loves covering entertainment and television. She spent more than 10 years as a broadcast news anchor and reporter. Now she does everything from hosting to writing. She especially loves writing TV articles and reviews for SpoilerTV.

25 comments:

  1. First time time in a while I was really reminded what decade the show is in.

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  2. Seeing the episode before the penultimate episode, my thoughts:

    Great cameo by Robert Morse as the ghost of Bert Cooper. He does seem to be Don's guardian angel.

    The scene of Don with the current (1970) Mrs. Bauer was Don in some ways at his best and worst. Obviously, he cares about Diana and that is what's driving him here.

    For a series that Matthew Weiner has no intention of a continuation, they sure certainly are setting it up so if someone other than Weiner wants to develop one and Weiner allowed it, there can be a continuation.

    I would have the scene where Roger tells Joan he could not help her for now with McCann be the moment when Joan and Roger realize they are each other's true love. As much as Joan might like Richard, she realizes Roger is who she should be with, especially with his likely needing her more than ever, and they wind up marrying by the summer of 1971. I also would have them over time having two more children in addition to Kevin that when I would start a continuation of Mad Men set in the 1990s (January 2, 1990) are 17 (born in 1972) and 16 (born in late '73). At the same, what makes them finally realize it was time for them to marry was something else: PO'ing Joan like McCann-Erickson did may work in the short run in 1970, but the blowback from doing so, even if paying her off to leave in turn slowly PO's everyone else, with Joan quietly behind the scenes being able to plot her revenge while being Mrs. Roger Sterling.

    What I have happening on that front sometime in 1971 take what at first would be a small office on the top floor of 2 Penn Plaza for her own purposes, doing some consultant work and the like with women, but that really being a cover for what really would be going on there: Laying the groundwork in what would be "The Secret Plan for 1975." This would have Joan and eventually Margaret (who I have returning very quietly on her own shortly after Bert Cooper's death in July 1969 and by 1971 having already completed two years of college trying to be a better role model for Ellery) working behind the scenes and under cover, away from McCann-Erickson along with others helping very quietly. The end result would be at the end of 1974 having the by then-former S C & P partners and former McCann-Erickson employees AMBUSHING McCann-Erickson in a very legal way to where they would be NOTHING McCann-Erickson could do about it. This involves on January 2, 1975 the opening a new firm with Roger, Don (who is long since back), Peggy and Pete along with Joan, Ted and Margaret the seven original partners of S-DOCC (Sterling-Draper-Olson-Campbell-Chaough) that begins operations barely more than 24 hours after all non-compete clauses expire at the stroke of midnight on December 31, 1974 (when 1974 becomes 1975). McCann knows there is nothing they can do because of by 1975 the rise to prominence of the New York Daily News and New York Post making it so McCann could not squelch things as easily as they may have once been able to (including what happened to Joan in 1970). In the process, almost instantly the new S-DOCC takes back most of their former S C & P clients with McCann-Erickson helplessly watching not only those leave, but a several smaller McCann clients also going over to the new firm.

    By the 15th anniversary on January 2, 1990 (when a '90s continuation I would do would start), the firm would have expanded greatly, with SC West (which laid dormant during the McCann years) rebooted with the launch of S-DOCC and being S-DOCC West. There would also be offices by 1990 in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and San Francisco to handle regional clients, with the third incarnation of Sterling much bigger than even the original version.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tonya Papanikolas5 May 2015 at 07:23

    It's so true - it really served as a big reminder. That was awful!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Tonya Papanikolas5 May 2015 at 07:34

    Wow, Hoops and Horses, I love how much thought you've put into what you'd like to happen! That's really awesome! So my thoughts:


    I think you're right - Bert Cooper has become Don's guardian angel. And I totally see how you're saying that Don with the current Mrs. Bauer was him at his worst and best. Love that.


    Yeah, it doesn't seem to be coming to an end very easily or quickly. So it does leave it open for a new series to continue out of it. Wouldn't that be cool? I absolutely love your idea of picking things up in the 90s when they have kids and their revenge shoot-off company is in the throws of success! I know a lot of people who want Joan and Roger together. Following their kids would be cool. I wish your idea for "The Secret Plan for 1975" would really come to pass. Then Joan would finally get what she deserves!! To heck with all those McCann Erickson cronies! Love your detailed plan for the future! Thank you so much for giving us a glimpse into your great thoughts!

    ReplyDelete
  5. You're welcome. They have been unintentionally setting up the backbone for someone else to pick up the show somewhere in the future. 1990 to me is the perfect launch point because there while many things (including in a lot ways fashions) haven't changed too much since 1990, that time was also something many today may not realize so easily: That really was the last bastion of the pre-internet era and if a '90s continuation lasted as long as the original, we would see as the '90s progressed how things we take foregranted now like E-mail and faster internet were NOT part of our lives 25 years ago (I would in fact have Sally be one of the few people in 1990 having a computer, fax machine and a modem at home that allow her to operate from there at times).

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  6. And to have a little more fun with the "Mad Men-HATC" universe, I write it where by 1990 Bobby is married to Cameron Howe and is a big part of Mutiny while Gene works for Intel in San Jose.

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  7. Tonya Papanikolas5 May 2015 at 08:03

    Ah, very cool that you noted your crossover between the two shows. Haha. That's fun. Love that! Sally Draper married to Joe MacMillian? Oh my gosh, that is a very interesting thought. I can't decide who would give the other a better run for their money. Pretty funny! Love all the crossover ideas with the ads and everything. Nice!

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  8. And one of the reasons that the S C & P partners plot their revenge for what becomes S-DOCC in 1975 that by 1990 is bigger than even the original Sterling-Cooper.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Tonya Papanikolas5 May 2015 at 08:06

    And Bobby with Cameron? All the ties are cracking me up! Fun. :)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Yeah, I just thought that would have been perfect, with Sally knowing where Joe was and, learning from how the S C & P partners AMBUSH McCann-Erickson to start 1975 uses those tactics to ambush Joe when he least expects it.

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  11. popcultureguy5 May 2015 at 15:46

    I could watch Peggy swaggering into McCann Erickson like a boss all day long.

    ReplyDelete
  12. You have to wonder if a present-day Peggy would have walked into McCann-Erickson doing the Rap portion of Blondie's 1981 #1 hit, "Rapture" (video from YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHCdS7O248g )

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  13. Tonya Papanikolas6 May 2015 at 06:11

    Me, too. That was just plain AWESOME!!!

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  14. Tonya Papanikolas6 May 2015 at 06:12

    Haha - nice!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Some additional thoughts after reading a lot on this episode:

    Some have suggested the idea that for the end, MW might have dipped into the show he previously worked on in "The Sopranos" by having some of the older characters from that show (obviously seen more than 25 years before we ever saw them on "The Sopranos") possibly doing a mob hit that Don sees and Don winds up in the New Jersey Pine Barrens "in pieces" as a result or that (or if not, winding up in Witness Protection and in WP reverts to being Dick Whitman, but this incarnation of him being one with no ties to that other Dick Whitman).

    It would be very interesting if MW went this route, with it turning out Don was "killed" after witnessing a mob hit with it being reported he was killed and his "body" being taken to the morgue, but in reality he's in the WPP under his old name (since all of the relatives he had as Dick Whitman are now dead).

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  16. Tonya Papanikolas6 May 2015 at 09:44

    That's an interesting thought - but I'd be really surprised if Weiner did that. I feel like he values each individual series for what it is on its own. So I can't see him crossing over like that. But I guess we'll see!

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  17. And that's why I can see him having done that, especially with all the speculation that Don dies. Dipping into "The Sopranos" long before the actual series took place and having some of the older characters from that be the ones that cause Don's death (or cause Don to have to go into Witness Protection as Dick Whitman) would be the kind of shock ending that would rival the actual end of The Sopranos.

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  18. Don made an allusion to On the Road by Kerouac. “the only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars.”
    ― Jack Kerouac, On the Road

    ReplyDelete
  19. Since Kerouac's work is often alluded to and the next episode is called The Milk and Honey Route - what do you think about this?

    "Praised be Man"
    by Jack Kerouac

    mexico city blues 228th chorus

    Praised be man, he is existing in milk
    and living in lilies -
    And his violin music takes place in milk
    and creamy emptiness -
    Praised be the unfolded inside petal
    flesh of tend'rest thought -
    (petrels on the follying
    wave-valleys idly
    sing themselves asleep) -
    Praised be delusion, the ripple -
    Praised be the Holy Ocean of Eternity -
    Praised be I, writing, dead already and
    dead again -
    Dipped in acid inkl
    the flamd
    of Tim
    the Anglo Oglo Saxon Maneuvers
    Of Old Poet-o's -

    Praised be wood, it is milk -
    Praised be Honey at the Source -
    Praised be the embrace of soft sleep
    - the valor of angels in valleys
    of hell on earth below -
    Praised be the Non ending -
    Praised be the lights of earth-man -
    Praised be the watchers -
    Praised be my fellow man
    For dwelling in milk"

    ReplyDelete
  20. "Praised be Man"

    by Jack Kerouac
    mexico city blues 228th chorus

    Praised be man, he is existing in milk
    and living in lilies -
    And his violin music takes place in milk
    and creamy emptiness -
    Praised be the unfolded inside petal
    flesh of tend'rest thought -
    (petrels on the follying
    wave-valleys idly
    sing themselves asleep) -
    Praised be delusion, the ripple -
    Praised be the Holy Ocean of Eternity -
    Praised be I, writing, dead already and
    dead again -
    Dipped in acid inkl
    the flamd
    of Tim
    the Anglo Oglo Saxon Maneuvers
    Of Old Poet-o's -
    Praised be wood, it is milk -
    Praised be Honey at the Source -
    Praised be the embrace of soft sleep
    - the valor of angels in valleys
    of hell on earth below -
    Praised be the Non ending -
    Praised be the lights of earth-man -
    Praised be the watchers -
    Praised be my fellow man
    For dwelling in milk"

    ReplyDelete
  21. More from On the Road by Kerouac

    “What is that feeling when you're driving away
    from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing?
    - it's the too-huge world vaulting us, and it's good-bye. But we lean forward
    to the next crazy venture beneath the skies.”

    ― Jack Kerouac,
    On the Road

    “I was surprised, as always, be how easy the
    act of leaving was, and how good it felt. The world was suddenly rich with
    possibility.”

    ― Jack Kerouac,
    On the Road

    “I woke up as the sun was reddening; and that
    was the one distinct time in my life, the strangest moment of all, when I
    didn't know who I was - I was far away from home, haunted and tired with
    travel, in a cheap hotel room I'd never seen, hearing the hiss of steam
    outside, and the creak of the old wood of the hotel, and footsteps upstairs,
    and all the sad sounds, and I looked at the cracked high ceiling and really
    didn't know who I was for about fifteen strange seconds. I wasn't scared; I was
    just somebody else, some stranger, and my whole life was a haunted life, the
    life of a ghost.”

    ― Jack Kerouac,
    On the Road

    “I was halfway across America, at the dividing
    line between the East of my youth and the West of my future.”

    ― Jack Kerouac,
    On the Road

    I realized that I had died and been reborn
    numberless times but just didn't remember especially because the transitions
    from life to death and back to life are so ghostly easy, a magical action for
    naught, like falling asleep and waking up again a million times, the utter
    casualness and deep ignorance of it. I realized it was only because of the stability
    of the intrinsic Mind that these ripples of birth and death took place, like
    the action of the wind on a sheet of pure, serene, mirror-like water. I felt
    sweet, swinging bliss, like a big shot of heroin in the mainline vein; like a
    gulp of wine late in the afternoon and it makes you shudder; my feet tingled. I
    thought I was going to die the very next moment. But I didn't die...”

    ― Jack Kerouac,
    On the Road

    “As we crossed the Colorado-Utah
    border I saw God in the sky in the form of huge gold sunburning clouds above
    the desert that seemed to point a finger at me and say, "Pass here and go
    on, you're on the road to heaven.”

    ― Jack Kerouac, On the Road

    ReplyDelete
  22. Tonya Papanikolas11 May 2015 at 11:45

    Thank you so much for all the excerpts from On the Road. I haven't read the book and didn't know the significance but knew it must have been very meaningful. After reading all these quote and excerpts, I see why! It was the perfect book to incorporate for Don. Wow - fascinating. That "burn, burn, burn" is especially poignant for him.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Tonya Papanikolas11 May 2015 at 11:50

    Fascinating tie-ins with the milk and honey references. Thanks for this! I loved this part when thinking about Don: "Praised be delusion, the ripple -Praised be the Holy Ocean of Eternity -
    Praised be I, writing, dead already and
    dead again." The title "milk and honey" really made me think of the biblical reference to the land of milk and honey. But this has some interesting illusions, too!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Tonya Papanikolas11 May 2015 at 11:51

    So many quotes are fitting for the show and Don! Thanks for pulling all of these!

    ReplyDelete
  25. Thanks. It was fun!

    ReplyDelete

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