1960s-related stories
Posted Nov 4th 2009 8:02AM by Jane Boursaw
Filed under: OpEd, Reality-Free, Mad Men

The assassination of JFK on
Sunday's episode of Mad Men may have been the catalyst for Betty Draper's "awakening," but it's been a long time coming.
Here comes my rant: I, for one, am sick and tired of seeing the women in this show get walked all over! I know it's the way things were back then, but the times they are a changin', so I'm hoping we'll get to see more women stand up and take charge of their lives.
I was cheering when Betty stood up to her lying, cheating, skank of a husband Don and told him she didn't love him anymore. Bonus points for driving off to meet your lover, Betty. Hopefully, he won't cheat on you.
Now if Joan would leave her loser fiance who raped her at the office and then went about his business like nothing happened -- that'd be the icing on this women's movement cake. I'd say that she and Roger Sterling belong together, but she's too good for him.
Posted Sep 18th 2009 5:02PM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: OpEd, Video, Reality-Free

One question I've had with the
Disney acquisition of Marvel is how the House of the Mouse is going to deal with certain un-P.C. franchises. The one which came to mind was the comic series
Marvel Zombies, which deals with an alternate Earth in which all superheroes were turned into flesh-eating undead and consumed the rest of the world's populace.
While I don't think I"ll be getting my answer anytime soon (perhaps the zombies will simply get locked in the Disney vault), some animator decided to redo the introductions to the 1960's Marvel Comics television cartoons in the zombie style. The original cartoons were essentially stop-motion comics of the original Lee/Kirby works. It's rather impressive how accurately the animator duplicates and parodies the original intros.
These videos can either be taken with humor or disgust as Zombie Captain America decapitates several soldiers and the heads of Norse Gods are thrown around. I leave it to you to judge for yourself. The videos are after the jump.
[via
Topless Robot]
Continue reading Why Disney trembles in fear
Posted Aug 16th 2009 10:03AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Video, Web, Reality-Free, Mad Men

Hey, did you hear
Mad Men's third season debuts tonight at 10 on AMC? Actually, when the show is this good, I don't mind the hype.
To prepare for the third season, here are some more web goodies for you (in addition to
avatars,
sneak peeks and
recaps).
The New York Times has an article on the
cocktails of the Mad Men era, and if you want to make some of your own AMC has the
drink recipes. AMC also has a
Which Mad Man Are You? quiz. Or how about buying
some of the era's items for your house?
There are also several interviews to read before the premiere, including
Jon Hamm (
here too),
Christina Hendricks,
Elisabeth Moss, and
Vincent Kartheiser.
Oh, something from the other night, after the jump...
Continue reading One more big post about Mad Men before tonight's season premiere
Posted Aug 9th 2009 4:15PM by Jane Boursaw
Filed under: TV on DVD, OpEd, Reality-Free, Mad Men, Jane After Dark

First of all, I have to say that I'm terribly distracted at the moment, because my daughter is watching
Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Even though
I just watched it a few months ago, I wouldn't mind watching the entire series again from start to finish. But, alas, there are other things in my stack o' DVDs, so I'll have to be content with hearing it in the background while I work. She just watched the first two eps, and I had totally forgotten that Darla showed up in the very first episode. Interesting. Anyways...
I'll get back to
The Wire -- I still have season five to watch -- but this week's
Jane After Dark is all about
Mad Men. Sometimes I fall deeply and madly in love with a TV show, and that's how it is with AMC's love letter to the 1960s. I raced through season one right after it was released on DVD, but stupidly waited for season two on DVD. I bought it last week and watched the entire season, devouring it like a hearty tenderloin that's perfectly cooked, so I'd be caught up for the season three premiere on August 16. If you haven't watched season two yet, spoilers follow after the jump...
Continue reading Jane After Dark: Mad Men, season two - Meditations on a stylish TV show
Posted Jul 28th 2009 3:00PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Reality-Free

I was reading a
story over at Entertainment Weekly about whether or not 1984 was the greatest year for movies ever (answer: no). It got me thinking: what's the best year for TV show debuts in history?
There are a lot of choices. In 1994 we saw the premiere of
Friends,
ER, The Game Show Network,
Due South,
Touched By An Angel,
My So-Called Life, and
Inside The Actors Studio. Or how about 2000, which saw the debuts of
Survivor,
Ed,
CSI, and
Curb Your Enthusiasm? And 2004 wasn't too shabby either, with the launches of
Lost,
Rescue Me,
Entourage,
Veronica Mars,
House, and
Desperate Housewives.
Continue reading What's the greatest year for debuts in TV history?
Posted Jul 27th 2009 4:31PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Web, Reality-Free, Mad Men

This could be the coolest thing you see on the web today.
AMC has teamed up with
Dynamoe (who creates some very awesome
Mad Men things) for
Mad Men Yourself, where you can create your own
Mad Men-inspired avatar for your sites and your iPhone and your Facebook page or whatever. That's me on the right.
Posted Jul 13th 2009 7:26PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Web, Reality-Free, Mad Men

Expect a lot of
Mad Men-themed posts here for the next several weeks. Not only is the second season being
released on DVD tomorrow, but the third season starts on August 16. Variety is getting into the mix too with a special archive of
Mad Men-era covers that fans of the show (and the magazine) can view at their site. Right now you can see
a preview of the archive here. It's not specifically about the AMC show, it's more a look at the entertainment industry in the 1960s.
Posted Oct 17th 2008 11:26AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free, Mad Men

This isn't going to be the most earth-shattering news of the day, considering it's the most buzzed about show on television and just won Emmys for Best Writing and Best Drama. But it's good news for
Mad Men fans: the series is THIS close to being
picked up for a third season.
The Hollywood Reporter says that AMC has told Lionsgate that they want to renew the show for a third season, though the terms of the renewal depend on what deal they make with creator/producer/writer
Matthew Weiner.
Continue reading Mad Men close to renewal for a third season
Posted Sep 1st 2008 9:05AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: OpEd, Video, Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Mad Men
(S02E06) "If we were to take you to see some women in their underwear, would that be too much like work?" - Fred, to the Playtex guys
Is it just me or is Don's affair with Bobbie nastier than his affairs with Midge and Rachel from season one? Not just that it's rougher and more blunt, but the
way that he's doing it. With Midge and Rachel, it seemed like a natural part of his life and it happened away from home and it was separate. This year it seems like he's making a lot of excuses to Betty about where he has to be, like tonight when he lies to her in the middle of the country club bash to call Bobbie. And there's also a meanness and a sadness to the entire relationship.
Having said that, I think I laughed more in this episode than any other episode of the show so far.
Continue reading Mad Men: Maidenform - VIDEO
Posted Aug 8th 2008 4:23PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Interviews, Reality-Free, Mad Men

When Matt Weiner was a successful sitcom writer -- CBS's
Becker -- he had this idea for another kind of show. He couldn't figure out how to pitch it, so he wrote a sample script.
The Sopranos' creator David Chase read it and hired him. After copping a couple of Emmys for his work on that HBO drama, Weiner finally got his spec script sold. Now,
Mad Men has earned 16 Emmy nominations and Matt Weiner is working on the second season of the show.
Recently, for
TV Week, I interviewed Matt about the Emmy nominations. Here are some other thoughts he shared with me about
Mad Men:
TVS: What's the show all about to you?Matt Weiner: A lot of the episodes are about "who am I." A lot of the shows are about what's embarrassing. A lot of it's about denial, about how we juggle our work and our private lives. A lot of the issues that came up in the early 1960s are really hitting us right now.
Continue reading Matt Weiner of Mad Men: The TV Squad Interview
Posted Oct 26th 2006 9:19AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, ABC, Lost, Short-Lived Shows, Web
The New People was a short-lived (17 episodes) Aaron Spelling drama that aired on ABC in late 1969/early 1970. It didn't have any name stars, but guest stars included Richard Dreyfus, Richard Kiley, and Tyne Daly. It was about a group of 40 college students involved in a plane crash and find themselves trapped on an island named Bomano. The island is deserted, but has buildings, supplies, and roads.
Some people wonder if Lost owes a little bit to this show. The setup is the same (a plane crash on an island where people start a new society), and weren't there originally 40 survivors of the Lost plane crash? The phrase "the new people" sounds a lot like "the Others." And Rod Serling created the show and wrote the first ep under a pseudonym, and J.J. Abrams has said many times that he's a huge Rod Serling/Twilight Zone fan. Alas, there is no connection. They didn't even know about the show before, and producer Damon Lindelof wishes he had known about it before so he could have named Charlie's band The New People instead of Drive Shaft. Heh.
After the jump, a video from the pilot episode. It's very 60s. Bonus: old commericals and the theme song, sung by The First Edition, with Kenny Rogers! Groovy.
Continue reading Is there a connection between Lost and The New People?
Posted Jul 14th 2006 10:26AM by Annie Wu
Filed under: Late Night, Video, Animation, Web, Adult Swim

... So I did. Yeah. Because I do everything the television tells me to. The search quickly led me to a YouTube video of a short cartoon that inspired Terry Gilliam's animations for
Monty Python. Created by
Bob Godfrey in 1961, "Do It Yourself Cartoon Kit" is extremely amusing. The sense of humor and animation is remarkably similar to Python's, so I really enjoyed it. Check it out after the jump!
Continue reading An Adult Swim bump said to look up "Do It Yourself Cartoon Kit"