Here’s one of the reasons: the creator of this series is very proud of his period accuracy, but doesn't try hard enough. I was a teenager during the 60s, so I enjoy seeing many of the vintage-looking props, costumes and sets. However, I spotted two glaring anachronisms in just one of the two shows I viewed:
(1) Don Draper has a
constant five-o-clock shadow. A very stylish look today, at least for Hollywood
types. But unheard of for a business executive in the 1960s.
(2) In the second show I
viewed, one character remarks blithely, “It is what it is.” A very common (you
might say hackneyed) saying today. But I never heard this saying before this millennium.
The second reason I don’t
love the show is the way it portrays relationships between males and females.
In the first episode I viewed, a new secretary goes on the Pill because her
boss has made it clear what he expects of her. With the intention of providing
services, she knocks on his door – and he’s to be married that weekend.
In the second episode I
viewed, a grandmother connects flirtatiously with a man at a social gathering, and
immediately provides fellatio – all viewed (accidentally) by her pubescent grand-daughter.
This show brings me down. I
was too young to be aware of how things were for adult women during the 60s. If
that’s how it was back then, all I can say is YUCK. Seriously, it makes me feel
like puking. I’d rather watch almost anything else.
No comments:
Post a Comment