I still think Peggy (and maybe Stan) created the Coke commercial, with help from the last dying gasp of Don Draper, just before Dick Whitman was reborn.
Never occured to me. And now that you've mentioned it it still doesn't click for me.On another complete non sequitur note, am I the only one who looked at the guy wearing a red jumpsuit in group therapy (with Supergirl no less) and kept thinking of Harry Mudd?
Hamm's interpretation: Don wrote the Coke ad. http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2...icmst=1409232722000&bicmet=1419773522000&_r=0
"In the wake of what will likely go down as one of the best (and better received) series finales in television history, one bit of Mad Men analysis has baffled me: the cynical take on the ending — that Don Draper didn't experience any personal enlightenment and merely came up with a way to sell soda to hippies.
Not only is that view slightly blind to the evidence presented in the actual finale, but it's also willfully dismissive of all the episodes that came before it."
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/bastard-machine/mad-men-series-finale-tim-796826
Indeed. makes a good case for the "enlighterners" as opposed to the "reverters" (as in, reverted back to old Don).Tim Goodman makes the case for Don's spiritual enlightenment:
Worth the read."In the wake of what will likely go down as one of the best (and better received) series finales in television history, one bit of Mad Men analysis has baffled me: the cynical take on the ending — that Don Draper didn't experience any personal enlightenment and merely came up with a way to sell soda to hippies.
Not only is that view slightly blind to the evidence presented in the actual finale, but it's also willfully dismissive of all the episodes that came before it."
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/bastard-machine/mad-men-series-finale-tim-796826
No, the "cynical" element would be that all Don got out of the his journey starting with the Hershey meeting meltdown and ending on the mountaintop at Big Sur, was an idea for another commercial.On the other hand, I don't think it's necessarily cynical to engage in creativity and craftsmanship.
Kor
This is actually a more interesting sounding scenario than his calling Peggy and "giving" her his idea --I mean, IF you believe Don had anything at all to do with the commercial.It's also possible that Don later communicates his new sense of enlightenment to Peggy who picks up on the sentiments in it and puts it into the Coke ad. With Don feeling somewhat reborn he could think he needs to reconnect with those important to him such as Peggy and his kids. He could do this without returning to McCann and advertising.
In this scenario he is the inspiration for the ad without actually creating it.
Tim Goodman makes the case for Don's spiritual enlightenment:
"In the wake of what will likely go down as one of the best (and better received) series finales in television history, one bit of Mad Men analysis has baffled me: the cynical take on the ending — that Don Draper didn't experience any personal enlightenment and merely came up with a way to sell soda to hippies.
Not only is that view slightly blind to the evidence presented in the actual finale, but it's also willfully dismissive of all the episodes that came before it."
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/bastard-machine/mad-men-series-finale-tim-796826
Worth the read.
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