I completely lost it.
Source: semisetadrift
INSIDE MAD MEN PRODUCTION
This Sunday, March 25th -9pm AMC- Season 5 Premiere after 17 months off
Eee!! I am getting so excited for next Sunday. There is an old theater in town that is going to show them every week, plus for the opening night, they are having a costume gala, with cocktails, mad men era clothing, a DJ, and prizes.
Source: consequenceofsoundss
Source: scarygrant
Matthew Weiner: the man behind Mad Men
From the interview with Matthew Weiner, creator of Mad Men:
…“People are rootless and the theme of this season is, ‘when is everything going to get back to normal?’ because that’s what everyone is wondering right now.” …
“The show’s about the issues of everyday life for regular people: divorce, marriage, love, beauty, jealousy. But I’ve always felt that its success is really down to the fact that, like theSopranos, nobody knows what the ending will be. That means you have this tension in your gut as you watch.” …
“Let’s just say that I have a picture in my head of what happens in the final scene of season seven,”…
People tell you who they are but we ignore it because we want them to be who we want them to be.
Source: princessziggy
Don Draper says, “What”. Season 5 starts next Sunday. One more week…What?
MAD MEN - Sunday, March 25th Season 5 Begins!
Betty - Joan - Peggy
Source: modernnostalgic
What was your first reaction to “Mad Men”?
Quite honestly, I was very surprised by how accurate it was in terms of the costumes and the sets and the props, and how everybody looks exactly how we looked. It was “déja vu all over again,” in that sense. But I was almost equally shocked by the fact that it didn’t feel like Ogilvy & Mather felt to me in 1964 when I joined. The people in “Mad Men” don’t seem to like each other very much, [whereas] we were a band of brothers — as most agencies were. In most agencies, there was a certain amount of jockeying for positions, but people really liked each other, and everybody worked very hard to make the agency win. But “Mad Men” is a drama. And so they need to have tension, of course.
–Jane Maas (billed as a “real-life Peggy Olson”) talks about her new book “Mad Women” at Salon
(via jonhammsome)
Source: madfemmes


![madfemmes:
What was your first reaction to “Mad Men”?
Quite honestly, I was very surprised by how accurate it was in terms of the costumes and the sets and the props, and how everybody looks exactly how we looked. It was “déja vu all over again,” in that sense. But I was almost equally shocked by the fact that it didn’t feel like Ogilvy & Mather felt to me in 1964 when I joined. The people in “Mad Men” don’t seem to like each other very much, [whereas] we were a band of brothers — as most agencies were. In most agencies, there was a certain amount of jockeying for positions, but people really liked each other, and everybody worked very hard to make the agency win. But “Mad Men” is a drama. And so they need to have tension, of course.
–Jane Maas (billed as a “real-life Peggy Olson”) talks about her new book “Mad Women” at Salon](http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m03xwqsaJC1rq8wjgo1_500.jpg)
